E. B.,HAWLEY, Proprietor. Bnsinesß Cards. J. B. ct A. IL AreCOLL U.ll, •rvernrve sr Law °Mrs, over the Bank, Montrose Pa. Montrose, May 10, 1071. If D. Tr. SEARLE, "TORT LAW. °Mee over the Store of A. Lathro NS p. In the Seek Block. liontrote. Pa. Lee! CI w. 5117Thr, okinrisr A DmNHAIR MANDFACTURIRS.—Poo. of Halo meentrcne, PA. 3aug. 1. MO. C. SUTTON, auctioneer, and Insurance Agent, •at 69tf Prlendaville. Pa. C'. S GILBERT, tr. 19. Ba.aciticsaxecor. ant 690 Great Bend. Pa _ rl3lI E L ILia.csticortoer. Aug. 1. lea. Adetreno, Brooklyn, Pc TOILT ISSEMONABLE TAILOR, Montrose, Pa. Shop over Chandler's Store. AP orders tilled In drat-rate style. Caning done on short notice. and warranted to St. J. F. tiIIOEMAKER, Attorney Lao. Montrose. Pa. Office next door to R. DeW Ite• Store. opposite the bank_ afontroers. JOn. 17, lell.—no.l-Iy. B. L BALDWIN, AirrossitY AT L. Morays., Wiles with James Llirassit. Esq. Montrose, August $O, Int. ti. A. 0. IVARRE.Y, TToRNICY A V LAW. Bounty, Beek Pay. Pension ..d Exem , Clair. attended to. °dire flr, .4...be10w Boyd's Store, 31ontrose.re. [Au. I.'o IV. , A. CROSSMON, Attorney at L. Oak< at the Noun Honer. in the comnniesionre• Olney, W A. entinsene. Itentroina Sea. nth. in7l.-1.1. Mr KENZIE, If: CO. Dealers in Dry Goode, Clothing, I.olles and Massa lee Sham also, agent. for the great American Tea and Coffee Compel. [Montrose, Joty IL DR w W. SMITH, DIMWIT Rooms at blo dereilinn. neat door em•t of the Republican printing office. Other Amin, from 9a. R. to 4 r. 9. Montrose. May a. Ib7l-4( LAW OFFICE. TITCRWATSON, Auorory• la L. at the old Mlles of Rsntley Fitch, Montrose. Ps. L. r. FRO, Van. it. "LI w. J. SA UTTER, TASIIIONABLR TAILOR. Shop over J. R. DeWitt . ' Montrose Feb. 19th 1971 ABE!. TURRELL Denier In rinavi. 31c.11cInes, Cl/cmlcals, Palnl•. 01114 Dye .tufln. T.-a.. oplecc, Fancy O••od•. Jeorrlry. I'er• Inincry, lc., Brick Block, Mouton°, IS B•inhll•bed IS4. IFcb. 1,10 IS. DR. W. L. RICHARDSON, ETSICIAN at SURGEON, trader.. hbprof«selons ..r•lre. to the citizen@ of Roam,.e and vicinity.— °rice at hierveldehee, no the cancer cool of Say, ft Poardry. Alai. I, WSJ- CHARLES N. STODD.IRD Nailer In Moorland Shoe*. Hate and Cap*. Leather line ?Jading.. Main Street. Ist d..•r below Royd tttore. Work nude to order. sad repairing done neatly. Ilouttoae. Jan. 1.1670. LEWIS KNO SDAVI:CG AND HAIR DRESSING. ?bey 1a t►a aew Peetofßee bandine. where ha tern ay (amid ready to attend all who may want anythoty I. ►ta Rua. Dontrope Pa. Oct. 13. lase. IR. S. W. DA TTOY N 8 SIIEGEON. tender,. his aervieer to the e , tin .as of Brut Bend and vicinity. Belee at hie rsaid. se oppoalte Barnum House, in. Bend village. Sept. lot. Ida).— tf DEL D. A. LATHROP, ♦ll.elafaters &Acme Menem. 11...111.1. et the Foot of Cbesteut street. Call and e,msult le all Chronic Dlereset. 3leatroee. Jam. Cr. '72..—n0.1—a. THE BARBER—Ib! Ha ! ! ! 'barley Morrie I. the barber. who eau .have your face In order; Cuts brown, black and grbtaley hair. to ht. olleejust ap stairs. There you will end him, over fiers'e store. below MeSeuzlee—)net one door. ll...trope. Jane 7.11(71.-1I C. 1110ItRIS. IL BURRITT. Paler on Staple and Fang Dr, croo,ry. vale. Ire., Stores, Drage. 011.. .1.1 Pun[.. Boul• &ad 5b,... Ilataaud Cap., Fire. Iterate Hubei, CI re rl••• Prevlelans.de. • 7ele-Mtlierd.li a.. Na., BICHAYGE HOTEL. D A McCRACIERNI. trlnhee to Inform Ito/public that haring rmttod the Exchanze limn! In Memnon. Yte Is no ir prepared to accommodate the traveling public la Ono-clean style Neutrons. Ong. 21.. BILLINGS STRO UD. /IRE AND LIPE CIII76ANCB AGENT. AI: I. •intossatended to promptly, on fair terms. Often Ind door, ant of the book or , W. 11. Cooper & Co. Psl.llc Aeonne, Montrose, Tn. A ag.1.1869. ]sly 17, 1872.] BILLINUS STROUD. J. D. f - A./ L., Iloaeorprsrtc Persicie# AND SUTIACOS. Liar permanentle located htmarl(to lanntroPe,Pn, whet' , ho "rin-..enpt iy attend to all olls In his professlo: - ,, whktrhe moJ I'Moste,v7Lesr of the Cowl Montrose. Febrcutry 8.1871. F. CHURCHILI, )..rice of the Peace: office over 1.. R. Lenhelne• More. Great Bead borough, Snemachanos County. Penn's. Pa. the act lenient of the docitem of the late Isaac Iteckboa. deceased. Odlee boom from 9to 19 o'clock • m and from 1 to 4 o'clock: p. m. /areal Dead, Oct. gd, 15.3. B URNS tt NICHOLS, 41.1. £RI in Drug*, Medicines, Chemicals. Dye. st ran, Pa lilts, Of Is, Varnish. t,iquors, Spices. Panel Ifia./1111.Plitartt Medicines. perfemeryand Toilet Ar 4Cies. lir Pmsceptlons carefully compounded.; jilriejcalock, Montrose, Pa. A. 6. Bums Fah. 11,131. GET 4L.0 KINDS Or JOB PRINTING, ETC., SILLIITZD AT TM DEMOCRAT 'OFFICE, Wzgr Bum 0/ Ptrauo Aititt the goefo onut. CASTLES IN THE AIR. -o 'llls world Is but a bubble, Them is nothing here but woe, Hardship, toil and trouble, No matter where you go. Go where you may, do what you will, You're never free from care, For nt the best this world is but A castle in the air. We're tossed upon the sat of life Just like n little boat, Where some get cast upon the rocks And never get afloat, But come what may, we'll do our best, And never more despair, Usurp the place between us and Our castles In the air. There is a name known over the world, To Englishmen most dear, And well they do to honor him— Their nature bard Shakespeare, Yet when his plays tame on the stage They made the whole world stare, For they were all composed while building Castles In the air. If you take the work of Shakespeare, And study them well through, You'll find each saying so wise, Each sentiment so true. It will make you feel, while reading them, As it you had been there; Yet the immortal Shalespeare built Ills castles in the air. The Irish had their poet, too, They loved him well, I'm sure, He was a true.born Irishman, His name was Thomas Moore. And of this world's sorrows We know he had his share Yet Moore was always happy building Castles in the air. He sang the rights of Ireland, Hu sang against her wrongs, And many a true-hearted Irishman Still cherishes his song. He bade the Irish heart rejoice, And never more despair, And tor Ireland in the future built Bright castles in the air. And yet there is another name To Scotchmen dearer mill, And turough each &WWI heart 'Twill (wise the blood to thrill The name of Robert Burns, Yet he had his care. When but a simple shepherd, Building castles in the air. His home a lonely plowman's rot, Where attire was never seen, nappy and contented Bid he saunter with his Jean Down by the banks of Bonny Avon, Nntr to the town of Are, Nature poet, Roble Bunts, Built castles in the air. And yet there is another name Americans adore, A stalminan when in time o r pence, A lion when in war. Whether stunning Bunker Hill; Or on the Delaware, His genius make his soldiers build Bright castles in the sir. In Ida country's darkest hour, Hr wilily Ind the ran. And filmy,: to make America The best of any land, Though he was not a poet horn, lie planned AVith skill nil care, It was our Immortal %Vaaliington Built bright castles in the air. Zhe ffitorg Ellin.. _ TUE SMARPER'S PERIL. r -a- No wonder you an• ast,mished—said Dick— to sec such an ariele as that in my possession, but if it is a strange this g for me to have a the way I cams by it is a st'runger. I have hail it for three years; and I shall keep it as long as I live. Three years ago I was living by my wits in the city of St. Paul. Peirhaps I gambl ed some ; perhaps you will call it swind ling. At all events there was a chap out tl el!, a rich young scapegrace, who lov. ed to fleece hun better than Dick. One day he mine to me looking very misera ble. “Dick,” said he, "I've lost my watch. a poor old turnip; but the old woman gave it to me just before she died, and I wouldn't lose it for a farm." I made inquiries and soon found wit that the watch had gone into the Virginia backwoods settlement. How I found out is nothing to you. I told Tom about it. • "Well," he said, as tickled as a child, "all we have to do is to put an officer on the track—" " 17 ... m must be a sweet traby," I Inter• rent, " .. %1 uy, up there they shout an otticer ou si.ht." "I would give five hundred dollars," said Tom passionately, "rather than loose that watch. "Done," I said, and the nest morning I started fur Like Howard, forty-seven miles in the dreary woods, dressed like a backwoodsman, with a couple of Derrin gers in my pockets, and mounted on an animal that was once a horse, which was bought for $25. A dreary ride it was.— To say nothing of the awful roads, the . backbone of my noble steed was a source of constant misery, for I had no saddle; that Would have excited suspicion at once. So I was glad, at the end of the second day, when five miles from the lake, to stop at a log hovel by the roadside. The family were just preparing their evening meal—making it into mush—when I,en tered and I Will abut to take a seat at the table when the old man looked at me sadly. " Young man," said lie, "I see by your looks that you don't know the Lord." "You are right there, old man," I said. "Ile's a stranger to me." At that the old fellow groaned, and immediately produced the identical Bible you see before you. -"Hear the words of wrath," he said, be ginning to read, and queer work he made of it, kicking his mental shins against all of the big words. I paid little attention to him, but I got somehow a vague im pression that his mind was not on his' reading. Still I did not set him down as a hyprocrite, as I should instantly, had lie been anywhere else but there, where hypocrisy seemed so superfluous. Wicked as I was, I was rather pleaselfthan other wise to find symptoms of piety to that God-forsaken place. The reading and the supper over, the old man said in . quiringly. " Naybe re rinil I=l MONTROSE, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1873. settlement ?" " That's just where lam going," I re plied. "Then if you take that ring with you, violence will be done you. Them people don't know the Lord." Sure enough, like a confounded fool. as the wisest of ns may be at times, I had worn my emerald ring all the way. "Young man," said the old fellow again, "what are you driving at ? Never be a hppocrite ; yon are deceiving the people ; you are no laborite man. The Lord be merciful to you." • "Right again, old stick-in-the•mud," said I, "I am no laboring man ; I never did work for a living, and I never will. I don't mind telling you on the account o`f your remarkable piety, that I am here on a Tittle business for a friend. Perhaps you can help me, in which case you can earn a dollar or two. Perhaps you don't know such a fellow as Merriman—Austin Mer riman." "A desperate fellow," said the of I man with a shudder, "who knows not the Lonl." "Perhaps," I said, "he's a sport, a gny and festive sort of a wood-chopper. May be he traded a little once in a while in jewelry." -Ile hes been a trying to trade a watch for a pair of steers," and us this,of course, was what I wanted to know, I pulled out my wallet and gave the old manktwo HOW sharp he looked at the other "The Lord does provide," he said turn ing to his wife ; "why sir would you be lieve, we haven't a morsel of pork in the house !" Little did I think how that old boy, with his piety had pumped me. I am ashamed to this day, jo think how he came it over me. "I hope the Lord will bless you," he said, as I started next morning. "Ile sure you stop here when you come back." I told him I would—l rather liked his mush and Milk for a change. I had hardly got out of sight of die hovel,when a deer smutted across the road ; I fired one of my pistols ut il, and I neglected to Iwnl it again. Very foolish, but I was a little reckless. I suppose I was about five miles front time old man'eplace, when all at once I came in sight of the very man I teals after ; he was spitting rails by the roadside. I knew he %vas the num t was after, because dangling from the pocket of his plush .vest was Tpm Vincent's watch ebain ,• but what was my astonishment to lied, on second look, that 1 knew him. Why, sir. he was one of the worst horse thieves that inverted lit? "big wooek" hill Strahl ' was the name I knew hint by. Ile knew me at once. “Ita'o," he saifl, "what 1 you do here ?- As he suid this he picked up his rifle; he and I were necer. friends. "What do you think ?" said I, putting me hand in my pocket. No psol," he said, "yon infernal bent. - asd with this he made a mutton to raise his nil,. In an instant I whipped nut my Der ringer, and gave loin an excellent up p , dtunity to look square down the tnuz "Von arc covered," I said, "drop your gun. Ile dropped it and began to tremble. If lie had knout' how I trembled inside, he would not have been so seared. The sense of deatly pain is not easy to get its,tl to. I dismounted. tired Ilia gun into the ground. broke the stock against a tree pod threw it into tl.e brush, and tied my horse to a stamp. "Now, my friend," 1 said to Merriman, "be kind enough to march," •Where ?" Radii Ir. "Into the woods," I replied. "You bean't going to kill me?" he said. "No,"I responded."though.you deserve it; I am going to tie you to a tree, gag you, and leave you there." "That will be ten times woes!" he said piteously. How pleasant it is to be cruel! It is a temptation that kw men, one way and another, can resist. As my victim and myself penetrated the forest, I begged him, sarcastically, to seh•ct the tree he world like; and when I hid secured and gaged him, I marched off a dozen yards or so and aimed my Derringer at him ; it was a jolly eight to see him writhe and squirm and ma 4.! th ,:tz,h; for mercy ; finally I fired the weapon over his head and ho fainted. My pistols were now both empty. I 'blazed the tree," so that his friends would find him before night, and made the best of my way back to the road. What was my astonishment to find my horse gone—stolen without a doubt. "Whew!" I soliloquized. "this is a mor al neighborhood," and immediately thought about loading up. • What was my further astonishment to find that I had lost my box of catridges! So mach fur carlessuess. And there I was, sir in the midst of a township of notorious 'thieves, without a weapon, without a horse, and with over a hundred dollars in money in my possession. The thing dik look a little dubious. "Thank my stars," I though to my self, "there's oue highly conscientious Christain in these"—referring to the old man, of course ; and at his house, a lit tle after sundown. I arrived, pretty well tired out. The old fellow was on the look ono for me. "Ah " said he, as I entered, "I knew the Lori would blet you. I have been praying fur you all day. 'Thanks," I said, 'but never mipd, about the blessing; all I want is some mush and a blanket, and your horse iu the morning to take me to Watertown. "You shall have 'em," he said, "but I read a chapter? a llo. o "The Lord has blessed von ?" said the old devil inquiringly. "Yes," I said, "lie has: I have done whatl wanted and got rid of my horse besides," and these were the last words I said to the old man until about two o'clock in the morning. About that time, sir, I was dreaming of having gay old times, I was awaken by a sharp pain in my cheek, and a load "thud" on the floor besides me. I clapped my hand to my cheek and felt blood; between me widow rogi go osi WAllll_ O.IUI. Why, sir, a streak of lightening is noth ing to a man's nerves at such a time?— Before you could say "Jack Robinson ; before there was time to form a single co-' herant thought, I found myself doing the best thing I conkt—clutching the old man by the throat, and pressing the muz zle of my empty pistol to his temple—he shaking like an aspen leaf. " Oh, don't shoot !" he screamed, "Jesus was always merciful I" "Was he ?" said I, giving his throat an awful squeeze. " Oh, don't kill him," wailed the old woman; "the Lord will bless you if you don't." Get, up you Jezebel, and strike a light, or I will send him and you, too, to the l'rii.ce of Darkness," I growled. The light was struck. What did I see? Oh, nothing in particular—only the floor torn up and a grave dug to put me in, where the wolves would not disturb me. I had noticed that the boards were loose when I first mime in. As I saw this I could not help knocking the old man down with the barrel of my pistol, and pitching him into the hole, I put his Bi ble in my pocket as a memento; and in three minutes was mounted on his horse and on the road to Watertown. N'A quite unmolested, though, for as I turned the Corner of the fence a bullet whizzed spitefully by me. I turned a round. The old she-devil was standing in the door way, with a smoking rifle in her hands. "You dareat come back," she scream "You're right, old gal, I darsen't," thought I, plunging into the darkness. A weary midnight ride was that to Watertown. Not that the pain of my wound was so much, fur the ax had but scraped the skin. But the unutterable melancholy of a night in the almost vir gin forest, the indescribable sounds, the coyote's yell, the sad wailings and the rustling of the leaves, filled me with a blueness that was awful blue—set me to thinking of things almost forgotten, and that were sad to think of thou—of days that were different from these days— well— When Tom Vincent, like a man, paid me the live hundred dollars, I went into the picture agency business, and have not touched a card since. 130:11 C3ll a Man a Liar _o_ Never tell a m in that he is a liar unless you are certain that you can lick him, for, as a general rule, when you say that, it means tight- I have arrived at this conclusion through sad evperience. I know that is not safe to give the lie to a tun:eular Christian. 1 dal once. lam sorry fur it now, as I never grieved for anything c'se in the whole course of my life. - We WerestandiU,l on the sidewalk in taint of She club, when I made the state ment. We had been talking politics, and men who talk politics and get hot over it are—to put it mildly—lunatics, or else want otliee, or have some friend who wants •ui onii:e. This man made an as sertion, touching the fair fame of my fa vorite e indidate, which I believed to be untrue. It is probable that if it had been trite as it was false, I should have taken the mine tours , ., because, you understand a man has no sense who talks politics, anyhow I think 1 sad that before, but it is all the same. I want to make it strong, and get you to understand how I got my oroamental eve. - . I mildly suggested that a man who would make such a statement as that was lot to all sense of shame, and would be guilty of any base crime. lie disagreed with me upon that point. As for himself, be never made a state ment except upon the most simple proof. My candidate was the meanest villian yet mlting. I told him he lied! I have been kicked by a mule! have fallen out of a second story window on a hard pavement; eaten green persimmons; heard Miss Blow read poetry for two hours and a half; skated; hunted; rode a sharp-backed horse of mustang paren tage, an adapt in the art of "bucking;' sulfe•red grief of various kinds, and still clung to life—but all these are feathers in the balance as compared with the result of that little word, liar I fintrice.iutely after saying it I sat down —not in the way people usually sit down. I sat on the rim of my right ear, about I ten feet from the spot where I had been standing when I made use of the expres sion quoted above. lam not used to sit ting in that position and do nut think it agrees with me. I have heard of people who "got upon their ear" and walked Mt Wish I knew how to do it, and would have propelled myself away from the spot immediately if I had possessed this happy faculty. I pro c•-eded to bring myself to a perpendicu lar, fully intending to use the means of locomotion which nature has given me; but when I came right side up, some thing heavy ran against my nose, and as I fslt very tired I sat down upon my oth er ear. I like a change; it is too mono tonous doing the same thing over and over again. Somebody took my large friend away, and I was quite pleased when he wasgone. I have concluded to look twice at a man before I give him the lie again. My eye is in mourning, my nose swelled to the size of a citron with the color of a blush rose, and my store clothes look as if they had been run through a patent sausage machine. I Would not have that man's temper for anything in tho world. Penis is nearly as bad off as London as far as the price of coal is, e.oncerried.— Parisians are paying at ttnintatO of forty four shillings a ton, and the'-'progress of the strike of the colliers in Wales is watch ed with great interest. Tire Deena is a new India shawl. It is made of a single piece of caihmere, in stead of many small pieces joined togeth er, and Is not so expensive as the real camel's hair. A yourrn of seventeen W 413 married to a woman of 50, at Bagdad, Kentucky, re. Gently, • Lost and Found. —_o— In searching outside of books for strange romances no more interesting is ever found than the following vicissitudes of real life extending over various widely separated parts of the globe. Twenty years ago an English merchant at Rio Janeiro, Brazil,who though going to that place a poor boy, had acquired a fortune, went home on a visit. While there he met a beautiful orphan girl whom he wooed, won and married, and the two re turned to Brazil,where two children were horn to them, and for years they lived in the relations of trust and affection, which should always exist iu the best assorted ' marriages. They occasiNially made visits to England, and on one of their tripe, the merchant heard rumors prejudicial to his wife's fidelity, which by degrees fann ed the flame of jealously within him, and he directly and openly accused her of what report had whispered to him. Al though the lady denied the fault and challenged him to his proof, which he was unable to produce, coldness and dis trust so grew upon them out of the rup ture, that by mutual consent they separa ted, he fixing an annuity upon her. Weary on his part of old associations he made his way to North America; did con siderable trading in the West, and had his herdquarters at St. Paul, Mimi, where though grave and taciturn in the extreme and avoiding close intimacies lie made many friends by his consideration for other people and strict honor in all his business transactions. By the laws of Brazil his wife was allowed to marry again, and this she did after a few years, although by such step she forfeited her annuity. Her husband, and educated,but poor gentleman in feeble health, soon died, and she with the two children by her first husband, was left in destitue cir cumstances. Knowing nothing of her husband's whereabouts, she following some mysterious impulse, came to the United States, and in the fall of 1869 found herself in St. Paul. There the long separated met once more, and in spite of the crosses that had been borne, and the suspicions that had been excited, the old love was renewed;aud a new wed ding was the result. Since then they have lived more happily than ever at the \Vest until the other day, when they left New York fur England to end their days in their old home. A Penitentiary Romance —o— The following story, furnished by a correspondent of the Chicago (Illinois) Journal is hard to believe. If true, it is a disgrace to the state of lowa that such gross injustice should have been done to die old couple, who manifestly erred only through ignorance: There are now in the State penitenti ary at Fort Madison an aged couple who are serving out a term for the crime of merest, they being brother and sister. The story is this, which is true: At the urn, of twelve years the male lelt his father's house to seek his fortune and no more return. He, in time, came west, grew to manhood and married, raised a family of children, and finally his wife died. His sister grew to womanhood, was married, and with her husband came west, and to lowa. Her hunsband died, and in time she received an offer of marriage from man who was a widower. She accepted the offer and they were married. Her husband was wealthy, and after a time one of his sons wished to have the father give him some property, but the father refused to accede to his demands. I The son, one day, while looking over the family record of the stepmother, which had been laid aside and forgotten, dis covered that there was a kiuthip between the families, and a further investigation roved that his father and stepmother were own brother and sister. To avenge himself for his father's refusal to give I him the bulk of his property, lie brought snit against them both for incest. They I were tried and convicted, and sent to the penitentiary fur one year. They are both I over sixty years of age, and as innocent I of intent to commit crime as the new born babe. As exceedinglji eccentric man has just died at Hinesburg, Vermont, in the per son of Augustus McEwen, aged eighty four. He hail his grave dug twenty years ago, and stoned up and filled with earth that it might be in perfect condition whenever needed. Last fall he had the earth dug out of it, saying he expected to be laid out there before the winter was over. His coffin was in readiness seven years ago, and so arranged that he could he on his side with his knees up, as he said ho slept in that condition in life and wanted to sleep so in death. All his plans for the funeral were made in advance, and among the rest he selected lour colored boys who had worked.for him more or less, as had their fathers before them. as pall bearers. They were to carry the body to the grave, which was on his own farm, lower it to its last resting-place, till the grave with earth, and then walk hack to the house, where they' were to find a letter sealed and. directed to them iu which was the money to pay for the last service which he had required of them. His friends took good care to carry out his pe culiar wishes. A DANGEROUS maniac, says the Paris Soir, ente:ed the house of a Madame Bonnean, who-lives in the Rue Descartes, a few days ago, and announced himself ns a great doctor, able to cure headache's. He produced a razor and told the terri fied lady that he intended to cut her head off, and then replace it on her shoulders With great presence of mind she express ed herself willing to sibmit to the opera tion, but asked him to wait till she went in search of a towel, to prevent the blood from staining her dress. The madman allowed her to leave the room. She quick ly locked him in and summoned assis tance. THE only man in Troy who didn't get a gold-headed cane as a ehristmas present explains it on the ground that ho refused to contribute nine-tenths of the am ount. Curawa bellee—the rectoeslauillters. VOLUME XXX, NUMBER 12. •'To See Our.elves as Others See Us." Bill Baker owned a fighting dog, A d brindle coarse-haired brute, Whose chief delight was 1,0 cngao n canine dispute. A n tll.eonditiuned, vicious, crass, Stub tailed, bare-liped, crop-canal And red-eywl, canine nuisance, By the neighboring ermines feared. Bill's dog came down the street on a Diagonal dog trot, A looking for some other dog, For whom to make it hot; . When, on a scrubby-looking brute, Ills vision chanced to fall, /haring fmm out a looking.gloss That leaned against a wall. Bill's dog surveyed that strange canine With sinister regard, And doubted if h&c ever seen A dog look quite so hard. The more he gazed, the Tess respect He felt within him stir, For that demoralized, rows-grained And hang-dog looking cur. TLat stranger dog returned Bill's dog's Insulting stare, in kind, Which tended to still more disturb Bill's canine's peace of mind ; With every bristling hair along Ills back he fiercely frowned, And curled his tail until it raised His hind feet from the ground. And showed his teeth and cocked Lis ears And otherwise behaved Impertinently, as dogs do Whose iicstinets are depraved; But all his hostile signs were met By signs as hostile, quite, Anti Bill's dog felt himself compelled To slink away or fight. He flew into that looking glass With all his might and main— Filled with chagrin, and broken glass, Hu soon flew out again. Reflection showed Bill's dog that ha Had gut into a scrimmage, Through indignation at the sight ' Of his owrodious image. The knowledge of his aspect quite, Destroyed his self-esteem; For the hideous reality Surpassed his wildest dream. Life lost, at once all charm for him, So mournfully he steacd, Into a neighboring sausage-shop, And never re-appeared. The &oral of this doggerel Is obvious, I trust; (For there Is a moral lesson in Bill Baker's dog's disgust.) If some men knew how they appear To others, they would hide - Themselves within a sausage-shop— That is, they'd suicide. Bewitched. ——o— For some time past we have been in possession of the fact of the occurrence of strange incornprehensiole doings— called, commonly,spiritnal manifestations —at the house of one of the most respec table families of the conntv. The family of which we speak consists of some tire or six members, all well re- spected. The mystery, witnessed by many of the neighbors, consists of an indescrib able• and unaccountable noise, as of some one knocking, slapping, scratching and scraping upon the sides, ceiling, floor, windows, etc., of the room. The ghost,. goblin, spirit, or ghoul—call it what you will—seems to have connected itself with a young lady member of the family, aged about eighteen years, an'd who strange to sav, knows nothing of its presence, or of its coining and going. At night, when she seeks repose, and just as her eyelids are closing in slumber,three distinct raps, as a person striking soniethingsoldid with their lingers, may be heard, she seems to be thrown into a trance, Or sleep, from which nothing can aronse her, as repeated attempts have been made to do so, but proved unsuccessful. During the trance, or fit, her limbs contract, her body, writhes, and groans escape her lips, as though she were undergoing some great bodily pain, and during the trance the rapping continues by loud knoking upon some part of the house, and on the fur niture, lifting the bed clothes, rattling the bail of the water-bncset, and even upon the water, making a noise similar to a cat lapping water, answering ques tions, etc., the eame as any other well - reg- ! 'dated spirit would ; and, stranger still, this mysterious power follows the person of the young lady, even when she passes a night away fruin home—wherever she sleeps at night there is heard the knock ing, which, however, is never heard only when she is in an unconscious state. The young lady, when awake says she has felt no pain, saw nothing in her dream—in fact, had no dream—and complains only of a feeling of weariness and lassitude. In all other respects she seems in perfect health. These manifestations are as mys terious to her as to any one else, and a great source of mortification. A number of neighbors have spent frequent nights at the house endeavoring to ascertain the cause of the mystery, but as yet no satis factory conclusion has been arired •at.—• Benton county (Mo.) Democrat. • A sixotaan and exciteini incident occurred recently on the Cayuga Lake RailrOad. Engineer Ricks Hiker, was hauling a load of iron from Ithaca to Ludlowville. When near Mc Kinney's, where perpendicular rocks begin to rise from the water, a fine fox leaped on the track some distance ahead of thelocoMo- tive and stetted ahead northward. A few leaps took him beyond the point where it was impossible for him to leave the track and escape, except by climbing the high wall of rocks or tumble Into the lake. The engineer 830 i ng the situation pulled out the throttle anti gave chase. The locomotive took advantage of the smooth rails, and soon made considerable advance on the poor fox. Finally becoming dis gusted with the rough way between the rails, the fugitive sprang on ono of the rails and made off at a wonderful speed, never tottering or missing a step for over ten rods. At than movement the engineer, who had become wrought up at a high state of excitement, opined his throttle wider, determined tO.overhaul tharfox or tear every tire off froni his drivers. -Soon the fleet animal left the rail again. and went stmnbleng over the ties for some distance, when hejumped clear off the road on the lake side. At 'this, the en gineer let,go inceession of otttrageons screams from the *whistle, which fright ened* the panting fox out of his wits, for. hemped back on the track just in time to ha struck by the cowcatcher and crash- ed beneath the nsercilejui wlieels.—Syra , • cusel Staidars,•• 13rtenets. ' —o— la., makes soap of frozen hogs. Hs who talks. sows; be who listens, reaps. THE Qneen of Denmark wears calico in public. FLIEi have a use. It is found that they spread small-pox. . . IN Germany, when the jury is a tie the prsioner is acquitted. TROY, N. Y., has 40 paper collar'fac tories, employing 5,000 girls. BENI:Err, Jr., has an idea of starting e live daily in London. lu 75 years 70 theatres have been burn ed in this country. Curious ? MILWAUKEE has a small pox patient with a pit on the sight of his eye. THE wolves are "resurrecting" the bodies in Kansas graveyards. SIIALL-PDX is an essentiall pustulate in half the premises of Boston. Curucti fairs in 111, are now, supresed by mush and milk festivals. LOUISVILLE justice exacts $2O if you bite man's ear off. THE milk in an English child's stom ach turned to speese, fatally. lx 1860 the Reading road owned $20,- 000,000. In 1872 it owned $110,000,000. THE next Episcopal bishop in. this country will be the 100th. y FIFTEEN lIDDISIDId buffaloes are yearly slaughtered in Kansas. A DEER tried to swim a Wisconsin er and froze in the'ice. Tun muskrat crop is said to be winter killed in the far northwest. Tun Vermont baby was so heavy thit out came the bottom of the scales. Tue fashionable overcoat of Gotham extends from the ear to the heels. , Faeeroffr, 111., turns sixty-five tons of beets into sugar daily. A COLORED woman in Georgia has been blessed with 33 children. Morro for the coal men : "Free trade and seller's rights!" Tus Bey of Tunis punishes dishonest tax collectors by impaling them. • Ix costs $2OO to whistles for, your dog in the Mobile Court room. THE glass eye factory in Paris turns out four hundred eyes a week. • A mare squirrel and a white opposimm are among the wonders of Texas. THE Courts in Ohio granted 1026 di vorces last year. A Pm-ammo magistrate kicked a law ? yer out of the conrt-room. A New YORK undertaker advertises "Get your holiday coffins of J. Grimstone." FRANcIo. has lost Mc, millions of ,her population during the last six years. Iv is stated that 80 divorces were plied for in Allegheny county, Pa., last year. OVER 23,000 white children in Sonth Carolina do not att;nid any school. TH E Qnarker village of New - Sharon, lowa, charges $l,OOO fora license to sell liq nor. A DEPOSIT of eps nu salts has been dis covered at Mineral Lake, iu Gnat coun ty; Minn. •-• THE Emperor of China is, about to make a a bridal tour over his domin ions. • lowa has ninety woolen Mills, hun dreds of flour Illiiid, and gin mills with. out witubvt. . . IN Buffalo, recently, avrvant girl held a burglar by the leg until ttio police came. THE nainrall in England last year was' an over-supply, estimated at 22,000,000, 000 ton& TUE Cushier of the New Haven Bank has hid his, position for forty-seven, years. EMI] r thonsatul emigrants left'Bremen and 56,000 left Hamburg last year for the United States. A tocxt, journal complains that in Brownsville, Texas, the- street lamps are stolen with aggrivatedl regularity. •-• BILK-nest jokers in London find amusement in sending wooden turkeys in hampers to clergymen. AN inmate of the Pennsylvania peni tentiary has occupied a solit&ry call for thirty-four years without seeing the sun. l'uc patients in the Alabama Insane Asylum issue a weekly piper. Ithilmasx rats by the hundreds are said to cross Lake Superior-on the ice. • • A pgruorr youth has 'no forehead • at all, and the hair grows close around his eyes. If s chespektrilress warmly than to buy throat gogles. THE Boston Transeiipi tells of mos quitoes still flying about them ,in well warmed houses. EunorEAN diamond merchants now look upon the United States as the best market in the, world for their gems. A Rtcuuoma Woman hos . had tine teeth draw by a stomach pomp; .She swallowed them in moment. of pomp. A t lIICAGO man I:as invented - a trunk which can be converted into -a life-boat or a coffin 'rug Scino inundation destrojed 12,- 000 rats, and there is now •a corner fa the market. ATILENS, prosperously begini the new year with itsurplus of one cent in; treasury. A Istrrcnca's shop for the the man of hone-flesh has twen opened , at Gentle, Switzerlaud. - . . . • - At; Albany N. Y. man is in jail on the charge of stealing a canal' boat. When ar rested, it was net found on his, person. A Tex/vs boy, 10, years old, is six feet high, and weighs 300 ponds. There are g i ants in these dap; - - - THE Danbury Yews safe that ehumami mother in . that place chloroformst her boy befoio shipping hits. - -1. -..