. .•. . . _ ~ ' ..., .m.' ,-, . • - ~ ..., - ...,_., , 5,- ~ 7 - , i.:5.i...%'..' - . 1.. , .; . :,:,, ~ •,., l's , . . , . . . . , . .. • , . . . . . . _ ._.... _ . . , • , . . . . .. . . . .., - r . . . ~.., ~ . . . , .-.. k.,:,,.,. ~.iff 11 . 11 . . , .: SA . - ..... : . , .. . .. es . . . . . . . - .. 4 i .: . ... . ...ow //1 1 1 ,t. . a.._...,. . . . ._...• . . .. .., •.. . , E. B. HAWLEY,, Proprietor. Business .Garda J. B. & A. If. ~ VeCOLLUIf; ►rroaan• at. Law Mare over am Bank, Montrose -M. Montrose, May 10. 1571. D. W. SEARIX, TTORNET AT LAW, office over the Store of A. Lathrop. to the Bert Block, Montrose. P. taqVCS W. W. SMITE; CABINET AND awn mANuPAcTuftima..l.o ,,, of Mato street. Montrose. Ps. )stiz. 1. 1809. IL C. SUTTON, auctioneer, and Insurance Agent, ■il elf Frlendsvllle. Pa, C. S. =BRUT, Cr. 19. .A.l2.ipticoctoor. soil MI Brest Bead. Pa. AM I F.L Y, v. .A.szoticanooor. Am I, Imo• Address, Brooklyn, Pa JORN GROVES, rASIIIONABLETAELOR, Montrose, Pa.• Shop over Chandler's Store. Allarders , allodtn Ilrst-ratentyla. Cittins done on short notice. and warrnutod to dt„ J. F. 8110E.H.4KEIZ, Attorney at La*. Montrme. Pa. Oftlca next door to J R. DeWltt's store, olipsualte the Montrose. Jan. 11, 1874.—n0.2--117. • B. I— BALDWIN; ATTOICTICT AT LATI. Montiose, Pa 031 e, with James K. (...rmalt. 11.1. WV-rem dar.tat 30, 1871. • tr. AO. WARREN, • ATTORNEY AT LAW. Bounty, Rack Pay. Pension • aad Ezemo: Claims attended to. °Mee dr, 401,1 . below Boyd's Store, blontroae. Pa. [An. I,'G9 W. A. CROSS3IO7, An.raity at lAN. Ocoee It the Coati Roue, to t►e Cealcolesionee• oQke. W. A. Clsussaox. Moutrose, Scut_ Oh. IS7l.—tf. McKEYZIE. & CO. I/Wars In Dry Goods, Clothing. Ladles and Misses to• Shoes. Ulm. agents for the great American Tsa sad Coffee Company. [dootroae, July 17, '7l,] DLL W. W. SMITH, Datrrtrr. nOWILI at his orxt door east of the Itepohlican priottog once. Waco hours from 9A. ft. to 4 P. Z, Montrose. May 3, 1811—tf • LA ir OFFICE. ir mit r. WATSO, Attorneys at Law, at the old °tare of nontley Filh, Montrose, l'a. Pan.11„ • 71.( w. w. wsesoar. J. SA UTTER, TASHIO:fABLR TAILOR. Shop over J. R. Do Witro nom. Room°. Feb. 19th , URA. ABEL TURRELL, Dealer to Drage, Med!eines, Chulnlotla, Paint•, OMB, Dya stuffs. 'has. Spices. Fancy 11..0r1a. Jewelry, Per hinery, Jtc., tirlct Block, MontYww, Pa. Hatalillaheal 1343. 1, Ira DR W. L. RICHARDSON, MYPICIAN d sURGEON. tenders his profrosiona melees to the citizens at Montrose and •Icini iy.- 0 Mee at hismaidenea, on the cortieresst of Snrr. Bros. Poneder. f Ay. 1. INEA. CHA RLES ..V. STODDARD, _Neer ha Boole end %boas. Hats and Cape, Ll:tuber and Finding., Vain Street, let door below Boyd'e Store. Work made to order. and repairing done neatly. Nouvelle. Jan, 1.1170. LEWIS KNOLL gIIkVINO AND lIAIR DEESSING. They la the ladle Postedgee ballding, where he will he Nall& ready le attend all who clay grant anything I. his fine. Montrose Ps. Oct. 13. MI. DRS. W. D. 4 TTOY. riIYSICIAN *. SURGEON, tender. bi. services la Ise citizens of Great Bend odd 'vicinity. Office at WS ,residence, opposite liornoni [loose, tri„Bend village. Sept.lst. ISOS.— tf DR. D. A. LATIMOP, Ain1114(21 . 4 &AC?sa n.ng., at the Foot of Chestnot most. Call and consult In all Chronic hiaasaes. dierrtresa Jan. n. '7l..;n43—tt. THE B.IEBER--11a.! ll4= lia:! Illaselay !with la the barber. who eau dome your hiceit o ..wrd•u. tOsas brown, black nod criusley hair. rue his wiihmlioi. to stairs. There you will fiod m ver Allem'. atom te•low hielieuziai—jult me door. lilwittosit. Jane 1.13:L—117 C. mounts, 11. BURRITT. Dale Staple and Fancy Drr Goods. Crockery. Hard ee.. Irou, Stores. Drn:s. OM. and PS(UM 8.01.11 ua aboos, Hats and Caps, Fora, BoCfslo Hobos. Gro ceries, Proviedons. E.TC2L4.IVOO HOTEL. D. b. lieClthell.E.N., wishes to Infortn the rahlie that haring rested the Exchange Hotel in Janeiro,. he U ows prepared to accommodate the traveling pablle Is erst,lass style. *Wettest Ang.lhl. ISM BILLINagSTRO UD. - FIRE AND LIFE triTJAANCE AGENT. AU Vastness &treaded to promptly. on falr terms. Otsee inn doer shot of the bulk o , Wm.. IL P.nrwr lb Co. "shhe Avenue, Montrose, Ps. I Aug . 1,1868. all 17. Irti BILUNGIS hamocm. J. D. VAIL. ll•taorarntc PirralCien ii.lnSunocolr. IT.. permanently Wasted bim•elf In Montrose, Pa., where he will prompt ly attend to al calls In ble profession with tab kb he any be Savored. Office and residence Irma or the Court Hw►a, near Fitch .t Watson's office. Montrose. Febramy BURNS & NICROLS iILARS In Dnigs, Mediclnet, Chem'elle. Dye sf se., Paints, oil.. Vitro led. LI quora,, Spices. Fancy Patent Medicines, Perilrmeryand Toilet Ar 12P-Prescriptions carotally componsuled.— Slick Block, Um:di-Ate, PA. A. B. Bream. - kares ZitanaLs. 12TEMI PET ALL Ithi7lB or JOB PRINTING, ETC.; irsacimm Tnie "lIRAT DEMO. Wpy or PUBLIC Anon% Ziti.Niftflifigvuct, . . . • .cutaarr.coe:vs sTonv.. Chnectiiil, - theblackstalthiAli Ugly and fast growing old; Lfing in 'landau's the livelong day, By the forge when the nights are I look across at the little house, - The door where Insed to wait For ekschooltboy.shouva inerrtleca. To meet me within the gate. My master, the smith, remembers, too; I see on his grlaincheck,. „ Elf heolikittcrointtibt Cottager dad?, A pitithl, tear-drawn streak. Unstopping, lays in &trembling wan • Ills band car my lifted.hend; • - I look &nil whine; but we understand— Each thinks of the school boy dead. Prince Is the taWity and handsome hound That comes with the hunting Squire„ Smooth and Well4ed, with a amble bed; And a place by the kitchen are, The Squire is piing away tie said; lin waited an, hour, . While myinasteicarefully /hod his mare In his slow and uld-tosltiont.sl way. . . . I heard Win say, with an oath =two, "Pat arrant' nithat sorry cut: - Better buy my priucc, he's a noble beast," 'I heard but I did not stir; For rknt , ti I was only n worn out thing, Not. bright, like the tawny hound, And I felt I would gladly go and' le, On's% short, new grate-yard mound. "Well, Squire," the brawny arm rose and fell, The sparks fi-om the am-110m— "I epose the critter that's lying there lanot much account to you; But while I live and can earn his kegp, Old ChamoaltriThvon'tilart ; For, squire, I really. think soructimus That dog has a human heart. My little .lacky,- he loved bin .0,,, And danky,"he's One, ylni see; And so St opposes as If Charcoal knows That he's more titan folks to me." The Squire is gone with his horse and hound, And master and I still wait Together, and side by side 1 -.0 In At night-through the lonely gate, Bat bpatrd-by one Menlo out aldne - One only be letb.at three . To pass the gate and the cottage door— Alas ! It should be me ! TIRE VOICELESS -0- We count the broken lyres that rest Where the sweet wailing singers slumber, But o'er their silent sister's breast • The wild floWers, who will stoop to nnmber Alen . may touch the magic. string. And noisy fame be proud to win them ; Alas! for those that never sing, But idle with all'their music in Clem. Nay, grieve not for the dead alone, Where song has told their sad heart's story; Weep for the voiceless who havulnown The erdss without the crown 44 glory, Not where Leucadial breezes slip O'er Sapplio'sk memory hunted pillow, But where the glistening night dews weep. O'er nameless sorrow's church-yard willow. 0 hearts that break and give no sign, Save-whitening lip and faded tresses,. 7111 death pours out his cordial mine, Slow th - ,cipped from misery's entitling presses, If singing breath or echoing chord, Tea every hidden pang were given, What endless melodies were poured. As sad as earth, as sweet as heaven I tic ffitorm UGLY DOGS" --o "Splish--splash Went that wretehetl dog through the mud; his ears hanging &mu, and his tail between his legs. "Oh! the ugly dogr cried two young girls who were carrying home clothes trom 0 . . e wash. Oh , the ugly brute '.'• shouted a cart. cr. and he gave, his whip a loud crack to frightened him. But the dog took no heed of them. Ile ran patiently on, only stopping at the crossings when there were too many carriages for him to .pass, but nut seemirig.too busy himself at all as to what people said,or what they thought about him. tie ran on,so for a long time. No doubt of it, he was'an ugly dog. He was lean and scraggy. His coat was of a dirty .grercolor, and in many places the hair war 'worn off in patches. Neither were there ane token that he had ever been a handsome dog, and that his pres ent state of Wretchedness wasowing•mere ly to sudden misfortune. lie looked, ou the contrary, as though lie hail always been an ill-fed dog, haring desultory ha bits, no home, to ga to, and seldom ar.y thing better to eat than a chauce bone or, a crust picked up . in the gutter. Yes, he was. certainly a nuaerable dog. But I wondered to see him rat so oh— stinately iu the Middle of the toad, when there was room in plenty for him on the' pavement. Ile was a - small dog; and, by trotting-close under the shop- *Outs, he could have iiiipped unnoticed through the crowd, and not have etposed himself (o' be run over by the cabs and-whipped by' the carters: But no, he preferred the road, where the mud was, mud be ran straighe befere him, without looking to the right 01'1(44 just exactly' as if he knew his way. '1 might hare paid no more ottani:lento thisldow, for there are enough of whom - I take no notice, but I uhserved that herbed a collar round his neck, and that to this . collar was attached a basket. This set .rie thinking; for 'a dog who carries a basket is either a dog sent out on an er •rarid, rat/away dog who has left his master al;kdoes not know where to go.— Now, w hich could this one be? If be was a dog"that ran•oa errands, why did , not his owner feed him better, 50 that his i ribs should. look ; lies bare ? But if ho I was a dog who had left his master, and ,ran away into the world to face care and trouble alone; what In.rdshipirce.wrbat crud i ties had he hadlto suffer, that ho should have taken such a step% despair? I felt - Warl'ilieluld like to 13 ayirilbese' questiMis'inswerdt for there. Vas Some• thing of mystery in "them; I therefore followed the dog.: • • We'.irere hi - Orford street, in that part of it *hicitTlei bettreo the Muth, Arth and•Dokestreet, and the dog „its. •ron.- ' sing in-the direction of: the 'Regent ctis ,it Wasa - dull, wet day in-sidtir;' the mitt had *en A. 'grey, .f(ig: was vapors along tha Mid Pala and uncomfortable.-- ' 4, 4itat -tip- hire eferfl3llP4°" _ . A ter ighbpt wereibewg .;- and there, for evening was setting But the contrast between the glare Of the ' 'MONTROSE; PA., WEDNESDAY; MARCH 5; 1873. gas -land- the;,oceasional glow of, the red-hot catit-fireibarninicheerily :in the grates. of the round-floor 4 arlore_only served to make theateettinilirtharkland dreary.— And yet the dog went pattering on, ge l:twist-wort 16r qutok-jog-trot-pace, keep ing the ears always down ! and paying no' attention either:Us:this omnibusses that rolled by bim,.• the costermongers who swore at him, or the other dogs who stop ped at times• with a puzzeled air and gaz ed at him with silent wonder. f had to step out fast to keep up with him. It is astonishing how that squalid dog could trot! I wasafraid more than once that he would-distance me, but, thanks to the knack he liad*Oralways keeping to the middle of the road, I was yrevenjed from losing sight. Of hirer: We passed North Audley street, and, We then came opposite a small street which fomrs a narrow and, ; dirty thoroughfare at the end which is nearest Oxford street. Here the dog PIM& (9-r o . l flon :appeared to hesitate as to what he should du. • Ile made a t few steps _forward, then, receded, but, finally, seemed to make up his mild and entered the street,still trotting. There was. no one there. The dim, drizzling rain, which had begun to tall again, the cold and the fog, had all soared away, the habitual frequenters of the one or two 1 1 sordid cook-shops that line both sides of the way. There Was only a rag-arid-bone man sorting broken bottles at his door and coughing wheezily fron4tl age and misery., The dog went oar 'The street grows wider. as :one proceeds. and the I. houses I)eedmes. :better • and _eleauer. _ ._ asked myself whether the dog could pos sibly have his !bone about here; and • whether he wouldoot suddenly disappear down an area, in which case the romance of the thing would have been ended, ail(' I should have had my walk for nothing. But: no, he turned abruptly oaf at a mews and, after a few seconds of the same ap parent hesitation-as before, slackened his pan . Mid stopped opposite -it public ha use. A mews is never quite empty. Tlfere are always grooms loafing about iii the doom ways, or stable-boys going in and out of the wash-houses. At the moment when the dog and I appeared,. a coachnrad wits htichiii two borsci fo a broughams, and a couple of men were helping him. Oppo site; and exchanging remarks with then, from the threshold of the public house, stood a servaiit in breeches, smoking a lungclay pipe; the dog was tdaudi rig still, but all at once, before I had time to sus ' peel what was going to happen, be rose up on his hind legs and commenced walk ing:around in circles The man with the breeches and the clay pipe uttered w cry of surprisi: The two others and the' coachman raised their heads., arid, upon seeing tb e strange sight, left their work and cliistercd up to look. .1. few more people. attracted. by the noise, maue•and joined us. We soon .formed. a ring. —Happy Mum It seemed, ttr Rlpasertp dog - to see us all arountilihu, for Ihr grafelf bagged his I tail once to and fro, and tried to put more Tirit, into jtis ext:ruise. walked, lIVe hales round on his'liiud legs, looking ft- I edly before him, like a soldier on duty. d rig-h s that—to make us laugh. For my part seeing the others rendaio speechless in their listen ish men t, I laughed /dond to en-' . cournge ltim'; 'hut ihail 1. say the- en th ? I Mt more ready to cry. 'I here was some thi.igirrepmsibly said in , the sections ex pression of this lonely dog, performing be himself ir Few tricks that some abseial master had taught him. and doing so of h is,c t svii accord, with some ,a,,e.:tret , And: i viesvqllat lie himself could only know of. After taking a moments rest he set to work again, but this time on his f ire feet, pretending to stand ou his head. And what a poor, intelligen‘ head it was, as, almost shaving the ground, it looked ap pealingly at us all, and seemed to say. "Please do pot play auy tranjui with me, for really I am not doing this for fun."— When he had walked round on his head until he was weary, he lay down the midst of the ring and made believe to be dead., ventthrough all the convul- SiOni of a dying dog, breathing heavily, panting, suffering ,his, ; lower jwy to fall, and then turned over motionless. And he did this so well that a stout, honest faced womar, who hid - been looting on 1 without laughing, exclaimed,: "Poor beast!" and drew her hands across her eves. The rain continued to fall, but not one of ns thought of moving—only the dog, when be had lain dead a minute, got up, and shook himself. to show us all the'per,' farmitheeKwassehrled. - Hien - ills : Played the extent of what be knew;.and now came forward to receive his 'fee. He stood up on legs again, end, walking to each of us Sepanstely,assumed the pos ture }hat is popularly known as "beg,- giag.".. I was the first•to whom be-came. He gazed at me inquiringly, with his soft eyes wide open, and-.followed my hand patiently to my waistcoat pocket. The basket - rmnd his neck was a round one with a lid to it tied down with a string, and a little slit in the lid through which to puyirenindey: 4rMwAi p and arobped doirn to read a hit of crum pled paper. I tmvilianging loosely from the'' collar. le bore these Word's', w-itteif in a shaky hand "This is the dog of a poor' man wilt, is bed-stricken ; he earns, tiled bread of tie master. Good people. do not keep himl Satetrf 7 returning ;to' his bome. 4. The dog thanked; me for, my offering by wagging his tail, and then passed on :to my' 'neighbor. human nature' Must be kiridgr. than people- think, for ..there was not one of the spectators—not even he with the breeches and clay pipe. whose face hat iMmspettrive_tinfavolynbrit -who gave fhe 4s for Itina.when gone' his rotind be tediked'twoOiAree tithes to say.zo.O4-4ye, and tfiMi i 'plate riff Oti filen IY n'tyay, at, tote same jog-trot hale he 'hadeonie. - • Ite/seentap the Stied 'Mid I foll Owed him, btit-wh-en-heitaehed,';Oxforti street heliniekened •sirddeily; . and began to,run hard.. as if his -day„ was ended and ho wanteirto 'get •home. - -Erening hod qquite fnlleo,by.t.his time, arid .r it, would be 'useless tar , after !ay .ton riegpd' mystery on f00t;50..i...0411ed. . . And ;Said that dog," mach r to 1 the drye'r's ' • .•; leas way frOV' • thw'lart of - • It Thu 'Oxford atmet, in which we : were ,to Tot tenham Court road, where the small dog It ad me. But I should have ,undeestood the journey bad it not been made at such furious pace. Thu dog never,ouce look ed round. Twenty times • f.thought, :he 'Would be crashed .by passing vans or gar. riageile• but somehow he got through $e had e uextraordinary tact ,for,fintl- Wig a passage, between horses' hoofs, and' like a true London dog as he was, he shoWed intuaiate familiarity with . all the' Ititticaciea of crossing, Still, it Was" some relief to me, LOth oa his own accountant! On Mine, When Lriiw' him branch off at' last. I was -beginning - tit fear 'that ,he *Mild never ston, thatti° had something' of the Wandering. ew in.hitn. It seemed impossible that, without taking any rest, without even pausing 'bar an instant to draw breath, such a very lean dog should seep on going ati long. Tottenham Court I road . (this wag "about eighteen months"' ago,) used to bea sort of fide, at..night. time. It is a lengthy highway running amidst a tangled net-work of-sorry streets, the population. of which, from dusk to the hour when , the public houses close, used to spread hungry and kite among the countless booths which had then not yet been sweptaway, and where shelfish, sour fruit, and indigestible-looking meat were sold by yelling Oostermongers. On the' night in question, when I went there in pursuit of the dog, I foresaw that I should be led to one of those sickly nests of\ fever, where 'poverty, disease, and mis ery) have their abodes set up in permit eyries" ; and IW - fieliyot: wrong., a Phe dog, runiiinglaseeitlan ever now, as if lie felt more afraid for .his basket amongst these ravenous crowds- than he Mid done at the West End, bolted sud denly up a narrow side street, where there was no room for a cab to pass. I paid the driver and jumped out. It was a filthy street, but that was a secondary matter. Where the dog went I would gu,l and thus I dodged after him, first dowu a crooked alley, then through a foul court, and lastly up a pane where it was pitched dark. Hero I groped my way along a damp wall upd stumbled upon the first strp of a staircase. Being a smoker, however, I had some vesuvians about me: I strucr one, lit a piece of twisted paper with it, and by the moment's flame I thus obtained described the dog making 1 ' his way up a creaky flight of wooden hatiered in placeicand rotting from' mould. lie harked when hesaw the light, and growled uneasily. But I softened my voice and cried out. "Good dog! good Idog Tr , trying thereby to appease. I sup : pose his instinct tom him that I was not I an-enemy, for be turned round to sniff Imy trousers., and when I ;truck a second vesu ian he consented to my accompany : ing him without doing anything else but continue his sniffling. We.weot un-three stories in this way until We reached the garrot floor. There were two doors to face, and one of them bad a latch with a piece of string tied to ' it: The string dangl'd, with a loop at its end, to within a few inches of .he ground. The dog ra i se d o ne of his forepaws, pressed it on the loop, and by this means opened the door. We both walked in together. There was a roshlight burning in the neck of a ginger-beer bottle. There was an empty saucepan in a grate without the fire. Sonic tattered clothes were hanging on the back of a broken chair, and some bits of plaster, .fallen from a cracked ceiling, were encumbering the ' floor. On the splintered deal table was a plate with a solitary bone on it, and next; to it a cup with a handle gone. I turned _from the sight of these things to a. mat, 'treat; laid iir u corner of the room. The light was rendered so flickering by the gusts of wind that swept through the window—to which bits of paper had been pasted. for waist of glass—that I could not at first distinguished very_clearly-wherc I wae r falid *hat 4 sate I could nn ly hear the affectionate whining of the, dog, and vaguely see him leaping upon some one against whom 11Q waturubbing his head, and whose face he was lickicg with an exuberance of love. I beard a voice too —but a voice so husky and broken that it resem bled,a whisper—r3peat• Cboil dog:goo:l . SM] !" and then I saw a hand untie the basket, and heard the sound of money poured out on the couch. "Good Jilin! titled l" *tilt on the cracked voice, and it began counting "One, two. Oh, good Jim! good Jim here's . a shilling; 'One and three . ,.penee, one and nine pence, two shillings. Oh. good dog! three and a penny three and," But here followed ft terrified sh rick. • • "Who's that r cried the' Man, covering np the money with his sheet-, and he look at me, livid and haggered With the 'tight of fever. "Don't bC t "I am conic to do-you no harm. Lam a friend. I have.collowed your dog home, and I do: sire to help you if you are in need. lle seemed tu,bo a-atau üblAut fifty, for his link Was hot lallgnly hollowness of his cheeks, the emaciated condition of his bodyiand, above all, the gleam of disease in his burning eyes, made,hiru•older thap ty man .of-,ninety,for they told more plainly than words could have told that he had already one foot within his grave. My toutrni3d my ap pearance seemed to reassure him ; but he continued to hide his Miniey. • - ' . "I nm a poor man, sir," he gasped—"a very poor man. I have nothing but what my dog earns me, and'that's'nothing: Ire goes out to idle,; and if he pieka.np a feyy pence" (here , the mauled a fit of hectic corighing)—"if he.do pick up a few pence• it's all he'ilo pick tip!' I felt inz heart ache; Toi' I th4t` truth. , r,,, Al ' !Ile's not an o dog,",sai "Has I he not earned:lon more/ than ,three soil Hugs te•lday;??, - - • : `Oh;,Piiii SW-0o; sir;.tkrelienoo." 'protested-,the- miser, trembling. threepencomothreepencei -sir. -Look -k-and . And 11;beld up . ,!ire.coppor co ' - frO m otit,iit his covering., "YouAtire yersi preaching his mattress. 'You must let me send y,on'a doeter:"' "011,.sirr no;ne; 1-I'ie'no money to give them. Let .me : alone, please. ,l i m not ill.; titian he well to-morrow. It's nothing but a eold--6 , —scOld. ' His dogmas continuing to lick biz; face. I remembered that the' poor brute ,had not. eaten. "Your dog must be hungry," I observ ed ; "shall I give bins this bone? lie has earned It well ?" "Oh, God.! oh, God I Let that bone alcule,", faltered the unhappy wretch, try ing to rise; "it's my supper for to-night. Jim doesn't want anything : he picks np plenty in the streets. Oh oh! I shall starve if you give him that bone." "I will buy you something to eat," lan swered,taking up the bone, on, which Dot a particle of flesh was left. "Here, Jim," said 1, holding it out. But the dog, in stead of accepting the hone,' looked wist fully at his master to ask fur leave. "No .l no! Jim," panted the miser fear fully ; and the dog turned away bis bead, refusing to be enticed. "How long hrve you been laid up like this?" was my next question. I was lug aluk ut !mad. "Ten weeks, si r—oh, ten - weeks." groan ed the man—who had caught the bone out of my hand and thrust it under his pillow—"ten weeks.; and when I fell ill. the dog went out one morning and brought me back a penny in bis mouth. Since then, I bought him a basket, and he goes out every day—but he's—he's idle, sir—he's idle ; he brings.me nothing to what he used to do when we went out together.' Yes—oh, yes! he's an idle dog I" a * But why prolong such a dialogue ? Is there anything more depressing than the eight of moral infirmity coupled with bpdily disease? This palsied miser was a rich man, at least rich comparatively to his station. He had Made himself a small fortune by the-tntelbgence of his dog, and his sudden illness, instead of reducing him to poverty, had, on the contrary, only added to his means. The dog earned more alone than he had earned with his master. Each morning, at the break of day. he went out with his empty basket, and ev ery night, at sunset. ho returned with it half fall. I learned this from the. miser's neighbors; honest people, though poor. who pretended to believe in the fevered wretch's.tale of want in order that he might not have cause to dread them, and so refuse their necessary services. There is a great deal in this innate, unsuspected delicacy. in the hearts of the working poor. These rough anduncouth bnt kindly natures tended the graceless miser ir, his aicknes's: They. brongh t his food for him, they waahetrhis linen, and they asked for no payment for anything they did. As for the unhappy man's gold, it was at their mercy, het the thought of touching it never seemed to cross their minds. "Only," said one with a native accent. "T think, sir, 'twill be better when. he's laid in the ground. His money mightbe good then to some re would make of it." "And the dog?" I murmured •reflect ively. "The dog's his friend, sir," was the laighbor's answer, "and he won't live long when his master's gone." And these words were prophecy. I sent for a doctor, for a nurse, and for nour ishing' food to battle against death ; but our effort were melee. The miser lived a week, and npou each of the seven days the dog went oataccording to his habit, with his basket round his neck, and re mained out for ten or twelve hours, till dusk, Sometimes followed . him from morning till awning; seeing which; and remembering my fact as that.which stood daily by his master's bedside, ho wagged his tail at my approach, and Consented to walk at my heels. One night-.the miser died, and on the morrow Tim did not go out He had missed his master the niabt before, and guessed that they had put him in the long black box that stood in the middle of the room. When the. men. came to carry away this long black bCisi the dog went after them and:cried. He followed the coffin to the temetry.- where he and. I were the only, speetators,,be sideaShe curate,the sexton and the under . taker'e men. When the earth was thrown in, he looked at me 'plaintively to know ' what it meant, and, when the burial was over, he wished to remain near, the open 'tomb, waiting till his master ehonld rise. I took him home with me, but he. would' ,not eat, an I next mornitv , at sunrise- he howled for his basket. It was; no use keepi❑g him,.so.l tied the basket round , his neck, and sent him out. , That evening, forseeing. what would happen, I went to the cemetery.. The dog arrived at nightfall, • hie basket: full of penee,and I turned them all out. upon the -grave. "Come home,. Jitn,".; said, with the tears rising-to my eves; but he whilied. mournfully andlried to Scratch up the earth. Twice morn he•• went out like this all-dUy. and brought back money' for his master; but on the third evening, finding.that the pence 'on "the grave re, maioing untouched, ho suffered Inc, with- out resistancelo takeoff his , collar, aid lap down at his frill length near the mis ei's last resting place. The next morning he did not go on hip rounds, for ho was dead. . , In James time, when Popqy.was road.tp preferment, Ehe notorious ,wit, Joe Haines, among ,other's„woresse4 bituself a Convert, and declared: that the. rVirgip had appeared to him. Lord Sptlierland for, Ilains, and a4lzeil, iiml about the truth of leis conversion. and Wifkiie'r; had really seen the „Virgin. ~.,”Yes; my lord • I asinra Ton it is a fact." "Hoiv was ?", "Why, as. I.,pra.s . lyingfin .tny,hei 4 the.Yiecin appeared, pod said. "You lie, you regal?? - Said Alio - Sarl'i "if it hail been the. Virgin; she iwonldhaVe said Joseph, if it 'had only been out of respeeLtoz.lerimsband." • • - 1,: : A Isfortn et. map went 'Oft, §atil rtidy noon for day of 'fiehing.;.Whenhe tettirnedl'e had ,Walked thirteen, milek l'o4t a, forty-live sprained bial,h Mill), spoiled ,dollar pair. ofpante hp pitting down on,bis hinehean.itoa"oiunJit'it'kur, mu d -turtle.punnil ..,11e 'got "bank in Unie theto u~lp doctor ant,out from life oldest boy's Nit One,of the veveral.4lsh heoki be had left at - home. lie took 'a eilesOry view of the situation and. went to bed!! DzscrY is a abort lived tyranny. The Quaker's 'Golden Wedding The snow looks in at the window In a bold and frolicsome way,' Not lighter the new-born snow drifts Than Iclmhod's locks of gray ; • Not.purcr, the new-horn snow drifts From worldly taint and sin, . Than the life of Margaret Taylor, , Icliabod's wife, bath been. "Hither Margaret; ble, dice, - I have a thought to tell; Nay never mind the theater*, The night (loth please me well, Margaret, can thee tell me " Apw Many,years it is Since thee and Imenimartied . On 4 winter's night line this! "Think once: again, my good wife; I know thee-neyerwould guess, The days go by so swiftly. , That only are bonito 'bless ; Thy mother heart Will tell thee • • 'Tis eight and forty yenta • • . Since our tirit born came to thrill us, 'With tenderest; hones and fears. • • • Drargaret, elm has guesaed it; Full tatty yeankhave sped !So allently'and so softly• We Beare° bay(' felt. their tread. But, watching the gliding 0p.....f1411.en The hickory coals anti thee. The memory of that evening . Ceme wandering back to me. "True, llargarot, we were happy, Trustful and very glad, And•proader was I, I fear me, Than • becometh a qualcer. lad ; Yet„not for the good years vanished, If the right of choice Were given ; Would I change this peace; my darling, Fur the pleasure of that even. C:=:=3 "We have had.our trials, good-wife, We have shed some bitter tears, But a sure, dear hand bath led us Through all these precious years, Ile bath kept us long together, And I've been bold to pray That our meeting in the New Land Be a golden wedding day," The snow looks in at the window, And what de the snow-flakes ace But Quaker Ichabod Taylor With Margaret on his knee. The hickory coals In the fire place Sleep in their jackets white, But the love of tried and true bearta Steadily burns to-night. . An Entertaining Sale. An auction of vary unusual, character recently. took place in London, the arti cles offered for sere - being the magical ap aratus, wardrobes, curiosities'auil-proper ties.of Prof. Anderson, "the Wizzard of the North." In the co urse of the auntie:, as the various conjuring -tricks .atid. op pamtes swore' offered fur salt, Th. u Pro fessor explained the method of - working the illusions, and expoSed the - whole sip tern by which magicians deceive the whole audiences. A dish-Cover, for the prodUC - - • tion of rabbits in any quantity, was sold for only f3s;; a magic blunderbus with its wonderful balls, realized 10s, 6d; a large oak plate chest, that had travelled twice around the woild with tha Pr,ofessor,"' was - Soldler'l3s, 6d; a leathertriiiikydescrib ed ea About 360 pears old, .and, said to have been the very' one in 'which Mary Queen of Scots was said to trave packed her clothing when she left 'Fiance for her native contrtry, was knocked down to gz"• Samuel Ilague for 345; a aainberot trays said to be a pressnt - froui the Tycoon of Japan, went for 4s 6d a pair; ana o large Shield, desCribed as a present, from the Emporee of RUSEria, was 6014 far ;£.5 108. ' The magic "rapping table" 'used, by the Professor for - the exposurei 'of the, tricks of the Spiritualia% wan.'inhf - fur 355., ' while ir three-legged table fly' whichth,c sphyn'T illusion; showing s'pea - hingr head without a body, was knotked*.dotirn for .E 4 15s. The use of the - riiiirora by which this illusion, first introduced by -Col. Stodare, is etfccted,svas - shown to the an.: diende in attehdance ; but the. PrOfessor withheldllie secret-attached to - the #ork ing of a jaige -rnagie• cloek' swpended over thercentre of the stage, .which' sold for .EIS. The Line et the see- Bleekade, • 'Accounts from regions south of ' this latitude show that an almost impassable ice blockade exists in the Susquehanna, Patapsco, and Potomac, riv'ers, Ishe, Sus" , qualiannais frozen over with' ee six inehes in thickness from Port Deposit down ,as far as the mouth of the river, ia' some places great ,ice. ii - oi•gesi;;; korn.fifteen to twenty- fi id feet in lieight, appeprinkaboye the wiiter.• 'At Baltimore the ice ni 'the Patapsco several inched . thick, and shipping and steamers - are kenerally ice boontl•in harbcr: At different points a-, long this river flume ro cs vessels to and ii•o Baltimare are firmly fattened" in the int.,. and have-gone into' involuntary' "winter quart:ere 'The it•O', extends down - the Potomac frim' Washington to the lfitiutti of 'the stream, and the' steamers itivlnk at 'Baltimore froth that city . •Toinid„ gieat difficulty in -shaking their Way." - ,'llie river is entirely closed- atf'Greorgetokli, Washington; and Aleinadfitt tinhr towns along, the rivers named stagnation' in business prevails, owing to. the thick ness of the ice aid the impossibility . Of sailing•-vissels• making headwa!Fithrough tne caked niatsca,cif f f signs or- Death; .41. , . The Amulemy.of Science of Paris in 1870 offert3l o prtze •of twenty thousand francs-for: some simpleand positive' signs of death,. whielc , any....notilrefe'ssional 'person .understand, and .apply.- The most 'practical and satisfactcir 'one' given' (says the British 31edical...Preks'and '(ircular) is meutioned in aAatc. '.number ot.lrirchaw's ..It, depends' npo& the fact that no matter how profaned the syncope or how deathlike the person ma y: appcart;if: circulatiOn contusuea,.hoiv ever feebly the person, is not deal,: All thai•ls necessary.. therefore,:. is_ to. tie string Grady,. around • the;,finger*. of the 39PP9sed:corpse; if. the 1 . 4104. circulates in the least, the; whole, : finger,:,front the string.to the tip,.will swellnntl , generally -- ' turn a bluish red.. This test is exceedilig ly simple and conclusive..„;. /i „. N,0141 . German, whilion his waY4orn In to Latayrtl6,, frozO his Aose. While i t.paning,thO .of.lbOt i6rY, nec, friary memter, be reiurrlceil": „illy 40511 I no underatend_aiel_lef - airy dat nose tertpeilrewyeareyend :be freezed Woolf before." VOLUME XXX, NUMBER 10; Suitr. portable stoves for curial:oi' ire need In New, York. • • : Sostn of Napoleon's wine sold. in 'Un don, lately, at 810 a bottle. . .'• - "Goan: where ths•groani.iltog taibeth" is an Indaaapolis aphoFism. Bowers are-tendirrg again to the old cylindrical -form, aod a•resiscal:Qf:th&'coal scuttle shape is immulcut. 'isaz pliii4delphin, courto haying,deoid ed that steam whistles must not, be bloym Its this city; the. worbsliops . sh,o)vtug tbeir "mettle" by puttiiig brraort youth or tender,years bend to throw a Enialler otit'of • the window, because he wouldlnoegolerbtid first and make it warm.) vi -- A Batirnronuart who Was refoliedls .nights lodging in .watatiiin - hOuset , tha .other evening, iminediately,,,seenredAbo desiieir acConiinodation by goipg,out, and throwing bricks at a railway train.' A POND husband, in Michigan lately left a will bequeathing to hig_willow. the rope'with Which fie hail committed',ani eide; feeling, perhaps, that nothing would be likely to inspire her with. pleasanter associations. Bins. Mary Anti Reichert, living. at Ashland, Pa., is 35 years old,-atid•iretghs a little over 690 pounds She-it 15 . feetl4n height,- measures 29 inches :rolnid the arm, and 5 feet Binchei round the,,waist. She is a native of Selvitylkill county. •, • • • . • • - • A BALTPWRE physician, now in. Tien:L- I:is, 6hs.inyenteit an instrainent' . fii pre cross and Squint-eyes. It has tett:Vitt troduced-ip to the hosiiital et-Victilia;isid is well received by the prolCsaion. BAIGIITER days itro,cciming . 7 —just think of it ' Blue' bircig,' dendelioni“tayttihns, scissor-grinders, hand-organs, will 400 U ling; shine, - show, sharpen, shrick that spring- Pas, come,: ,„ A B WXRIEL. Y woman; sued - vindef taker for injurieg received-by-being thrown from a carriage owned by jaim,,whilo funeral' procession. On the defendant - 7a allowing that the woman had vidatedthe contract by leaving the probessioillbethii purpose ;of making: a-, i3bort , cat toi:thb burying, ground, the court granted a;nort suit. : : A INsroN merchant who paid a.doltar for a statui-up seat in thO top gallery ,p._t the opera recently,' was mneh.gratiffed see seyeral young men'Oceopyingilf,4 seats in. the parquette, with; lady-frieddi at their sides, .iyho had: owed-him bills. for Many months, and who always pracasc4, to be unable to pay„.. AND :now the spirits have taken : the matter, in band, , eo„ t tbe q u estion soon be settled, ; spiritualist' , p_f si n gburt; New Vorlt,Mtendeiriretty soon-to tell where the beanie stOlth free! the Waterford k ' are seareted.L They will,.tell, whett,tbe,spititalteltthettt. 4 eONDL:CaiII on ,niglit : „traincretS ping between .lln4f4id.A ll 4: Nerlf ../lereely more than a year ,ago r receiVed.A..theth slinirdollar bill from a-poeeenger , tpstayi. meet, of .the fare. The conductor pewit em saying ha,lVonW'mtrini,AmmeentAy Wjth, the change,wlien ha ;Matto the Map, detiied h:tvingspresenleil the is itipposed tho man, viiie ttliet gavAthe money by Mistake; and . was, stfraid4 o4 %* Wilt, The bill 'still - retemns at the - ien , ductor's- credit of One' of the IlsfrOard A GREAT many instances might:lit ilbt , l et lected tcrithistrate Mr: 431Weley'a . ti - glees tit,;epartee: z There _used- to be o- , lit New Yaili;, called , the ..ETtning - ilTarti. edited ili it - eeitaia:ifiratii,Thiller f atftele, Ward a-blatant - hilt hoe danVerons- Keay ? Monist; la .Li little sheet to be thembstiipperrtaiit - proe: nat in the city, and I.casia.the habit of asking hiatiqqpai*i)act , s,;••• •1111 . 0 5 you read the Mirror, to-day I . '" it ao Id ltori al dinner fie tiddi4ased - this . ' , qu'eetimi ' to Mr. Greek:n-4i my pi-elence.' Thieliti,e? with, mt . indeseribablo.: drawl, alitioat%tii whine , 41 , 404 .`'Why, 49 /. I ,neve.r-bayi the Virror ;. I'm afrajd :of exhatOng,t4. &MIMI . t'' [Bayard T4ypir:" -. . i ,tY ~..~ : ... 7, /44- 01 49rP,Tktlg .plAlipz Atoftift,:ift. n i Denver, reeently i " tared. a rather-.lnia imietg man from' the - States Co 60 .ali t ; "6iipin ng" He 16bn - stated' it hurt!. it' of rustic dress and manners,-Irifelcis fo,r all the .svorldt, like an honest :lima man from down,thoPlatte ' and , just:Vivi mounting Nat n - ..,wagon load.nf potatneat a omtw here round, the corner: ' Thetatipar drew hint intoc onversation;and:that Int« . tic Mropped" on the gatne:at!bneo, Arne. plied with uumerous!glasses; atid•Drathert grad tl tilj end.expenst rely4inyeigled the luir, of the tiger; ;.When =genial: l lb youth quite(' the e ; attention- of old: Kings Pharolth himself to thp„prizella, had: vv. tars .that:Votenttite* ask t; in 'Chief P94cf , in -." • '••A lattaroithe*imOstien• •• l A:tetired eletgyitialf.iteitits ; iir'stint! •of 'a little ads 't hat happened in hii It eppearsthat there 'wairteioting womanv i a fine•spiritedigirlengtigedid'a - waslititb k l , opposite an Open door.- Jut behind was a young man, as is geneitillytlici eaSe„,t .anditt the yard was - ati• old beck, that item ,allowed the- freedotti is not always the ease, tret.re glad :Weil, ttice.e*lth back cam& to. the door and )ookcd in, and the ;'oung ir:nan" be-`' v pind the young urchntin'pointed bis at-the bnok, and' the old foltintlrecogitized' ii,t'once the pressing ellen:tad of this mute ' it mitation, Tint down Ili* bead and dashed forward, and the miserable man bleprielp ime,sideund fltid,'end 'this yoe„ng- treo. - man, unconseions of the .arrattgentfits,' itoeived - the awful shook witberdwarrang andpassed drer the tub, and tlie•airjor an Instant appeared to be. full of:slippers' , and wet-cloths, and Soap,' and :hot water, and-.suds. - 'And Jbe• next'-minute that goat Lame flying ont tif the: idiot • d readful Speed, bald the whole:. length , ' et his spine and with-.a wild look,in bis-eyet.- ' And for an-.hotir afterward ills stood if the:barn Watching bie• - ehin, and tryuD jag to recall all tha carcninstancee :-ickh." . unforinute atrairet-DaibtorliOniti -** • r 3 ~. V4HOuilt: