THE AsIONTI.fISE DEMOCRAT. VOLUME XXX. E. B. HAWLEY & Co., Proprietors. linsizoas Oath. ✓. 11. & A. IL MeCOLLU.V, A 11311qtl, L•.• (Mire ever the Rank, Montrose Aluntevae,)Lay 10. 1071. if " p. it ShARLE, A , TORNRY AT LAW. °Mee over the Store of M. nxuer, In the Itrick Meek. hiontroae, Pa. [ant GO W. SMITH, CABINET AND CHAIR MANUPACTL'RSRIR—You• of Mats street• Montrose, Ps. Jane. 1. 15119. it C. SUTTON, Anctionaer, and Insurance Agent, .at ever Friend...rill.. Pa. C S. GILBERT, Q. ES. 812..oticmuocm. augVatr Great Dew". Ps .I.lfl ELY, ""O'. S 9. Auc 1. 1,119, Address, Llrooklyn , jolly GROVES ASIIIONABLE-TALLOR, Alontrhaw, Pa. Bbnp over Chandler's Store. AP orders filled In Fret-rateltyk Lut;ing done on abort notice. cod warranted to4t. J. F. SIIOII.IIAKEII, A: tomer at Lew. Montrone, Pa. Office next door to J !••••V 1t1•..0.'. opp.oite the hank. Nl,,i.trope, Jan. 17. 1h72.—n0.1-17. B. 1.. Ili W/N, ATTrIAVTT AT I. Muutroso, Pa Office with James Carnvalt E-q. Mont,,e, Augilot SO, -I. a WARREN, ATTORNEY A L A Bounty, Bast Pay. Petition and kmm on Clainit attended to. Order dr below Boyd'. Store, Idontrt.ec. Pa. (An. 1, '69 Ir. A. cßossitoY, nt Law. Olen at the Court 110na.% Is the mminnion.r'. Weer. W. A. Cattanntes. Montrone. sent fah. ISlL—tt. ENZIR; ,f CO. D•mium In Dry Gouda, Clothing, Ladies and Sni.sop Mug. agents for the greet American Ter and Coireer ompany plantrese, July 1., DR. W. W. SMITII. I , zrerler Ronm. at hi•theellino. next door elle of the 'icor blicnn priotior, °Mee. °faro hooro from 9 Ltt.4 r 0 Monte., May 3, 1911—If La 11' OFFICE. IT t 1 WVNOV, Attorneys 41 Law, at the old oMce 0: 81,1,1 a. Fitch, Altman's.% Pa. L r 1 , 11".1. 1.1. y. .71.[ W. W. warsow. J. SA UTTER, )" , ,811IONAP.LR TAILOR. Shop over J. ft DeWitt's Fib. 19th 3911. ABEL TUBBELL 1 , -11er in Drur. , ..). Ctarliiterds, PIIIIII(t, 0112, IkC) (rr—r.od4. Jesrviry. Pcr ru . Bn.k 11.twk. Montr,oc, P E-tair.rtird 1.4 [Feb. D. 7. TV L. LVIVIARDS,93 PITYIcIAN t WO; E"',ndcra Al.prat..lona ..ices In !lie of Vontrt.oe and vicinity.'— 01:1,•...:(1..nce, nu Inc carat . r cart of Sayer A U•ns Pod ado. (An: I. 180. rILIRLF:S Come and Stoma. lint. and Cops, Lenart non r rl•nre. Ham street. Ist door below Cold's Store. W•rk. nyrde t order and repalrto; done :mitt,. 111.2.trose. Jan. 1. Lilt/. LEIrIc KNOLL. %RAVING AND HAIR DRESSING. Shop tn the ri,qir Po•tnfllee where ha will be fauad ready o attend all who may want anything lu Ma I me. Noutrose Pa. Ott. 13. 1863. DR k. W. DAYTON, d ST • ROV.OSr, tender. 124 percirer to ,I.re ri• of Gre {tend •fild vidulty. Ofire•t Sr••stience. akNott! Barnum Holum. Bend 'Blare. Sept. 1.1, 1R73 - If D: D, A. LATHROP, A A al•' A• •••• Er.et-rx.o Tatum Atli.. et the Pool of este.:t street. CALI and cousolt iu all Chronic . .. cualru.r. Can. 17. '72.-13aS—tf. _CHARLEY MORRIS, THr.ISIITTI BARBER. has moved hls shop to the Lso:tirr.g or-copied by J. R. DeWitt, whers he tr pro pel-ad to do ail kinds of wort in hi• Ilne. sock as me. km; switches. puffs. etc. All work dons 'on short Dot ice wad prices low. Please rail sod see me. BrI?RITT. Dealer at Staple and Fancy Dry Goods. Crockery. Plard• oats, Iron, Strove, Drop. OIL, an 4 !loots .u 1 Shoe*. Hate and Caps, Fors. Marais. Robes, Uro• Prcrisiota Sc. Ise...MOWN, I a., Nov, G. EXCIL4EGE HOTEL. k. NterMACKYCN. wishes to inform theorthlle that to in: rented thu Exchenze Hotel In Montrose. ha 1 now oreparud to aneuxonuolsto the trasellog phblle $n first Maas style Montrose, Mal:. MI, urn. BILLINGS STROUD. FIRE AND LIFE INS7AANCE AGENT. AI! boo Inese attended to promptly. on fair term.. Ornee firm door el.( or the hank or Wm. tl. Cooper & Co. venue, Montrose, Pa. titt2.1.1869, 17, 1,172 Btauttee beano!). J. D. VAIL P PISTWICIAN am SCIIO£O‘. Etas permanently loatrtl hiumelfin Montrtmr, Pa . erherr he will prompt '. attend to all rade In his proheminu with which he may hr rat orett. Office and residence west at the Court [louse, near Fitch X Wateon's office. i'ebruiu7 e,1871 F. CIIO2CItILL, J.iter of the Peace: office over 1.. 8. Lenbeines store, crest Bend borough. susquetronas County. Penn'•. ITS. the ott• felucca of the dockets of the Into lour ;;:rkbow. deceased. Office hours from Ile 15 o'clock • m , Brld from 1 to 4 o'clock p. M. ‘lrezt Itand, Oct. Id. 1872- D Ull.ll - 8 41 YR-VIOLS, ARO 1a Drags. WattlAtucs. Chen:o6oc Dye la. Ye I nts , o3L, Vunton. [Agora. Spleen Fancy in.. Patent XoA:slnu , Pectstocaralut Toilet At r!".1."..'44.0PP• cataintly nacsy.aanded.— ik , ck BIack,I44ACAA.O. Pb A LI, 64.4aLa. Aagos • r.A. el, ' OPT ALL RINDS OP JOB PRINTING, Era, FL6VI7TED AT Tllll DEMOCRAT OFFICE, WEST BIDE OF PUBLIO AVENUE. Site faro gortur. FLORAL FANCIES. Welcome, gleams of green—of amber! Children t playmates I out and see, Floating &um her lee-bound chamber, Spring, the flower-crowned spring, set free! Sea her blue eyes, glad to weeping, O'er the wan world open anew O'er the meadt, fresh waters leaping, Silvery-stepp'd, and tuneful, too Singing, ringing, wildest measure, Wild as if gone mad with pleasure. Now the warm rrtys' noonday brightness Wakts the sleepy flowers below— Some like gentleghosts, all whitenms— Borne like maiden cheeks that glow— Jonquils pale—how pale, but sweeter, Bieber than the rose of June; Daffodils whose day is fleeter, Born-like smiles and Inst as anon, Pansies clad In wondrous glory, Rare us kings in Eastern story. Yonders' where the sparkling showers Fall like music heard in sleep, There have burst the crocus flowers, Laughing out while cloudlets weep, Time of beauty—time of blessing— Sunny childhood of the year, Earth, so torn ere thy caressing, Blooms like one whom angels cheer; Kiss her, clasp her, tend her kindly She has sorrowed long and blindly. Surrow'd childless, bloomless. blighted, Like a mother gone distraught— Alt! that young smile rapture lighted, Nestling there new life has a nought; Lilies weave her brow's soil splendor, Crown'd with grms—the jewel dews, Violets dark her mild eyes render, Almond pink her chtrks sulftist.! Kea her, clasp her—soundest slumbers Soon must melt at such warn' numbers O'er her shoulders thickly sire:fining Mac, laburnum knots of gold; Ringlets rich in radiance gleaming, As were Ab>olt•nt•s of old , Now she wakes—slur pants—she rises— Standing midst the milk-while boughs, Bride-like I full ut sweet surprises, Bride-like hushing while she vows, Now she walks the world in beauty— Now sweet love becomes a duty. AT TEIE -0— , 1 heard the woodpecker peeking, , The bluebird tenderly sing; D tchi . to look out of the wit/tit/ST And ID, it mu - spring A brim:di - from tropical borders, Just n tipple, flowed auto sir room, And washed any facet-lean of its sadness, Blew my heart into blown. The loves I have keep fors lifetime, Sweet buds 1 have shielded Iron, snow, Break forth into full leaf anti tassel When Spring winds do blow. For the sap of my life goes upward, Oheying the tame sweet la to That waters the heart of the maple Alter a thaw ; I forget my old age and grow youthful, Bolting in wind-tide, of spring, When I hear the wood .meker pzcidng, first bluebird sing. ea he story TOM FOSTE lI'S WIFE I had just returned from a two years' stay in Europe, and was sauntering down Tremont street in the golden ;September morning, when sity my old frimul, Tom Foster, get out of a horse ear a few steps in advance of me. I knew him in a moment, thongh we had hardly met since we were at Eater Academy together. ten years before, room mates and blithe com panions until me parted—l :to go in Harvard-and he to enter his father's store, the well known house of Foster & Co. "Why, John Italston I Is this yon? Where did you come from? I am glad to see you my boy. Why I haw n't set eyes on you since we made the trip to !4ahant in your Frodiman year. The troth is, father was so poorly for a long time then that I had everything to see to, and felt as if the world was on my shoulders. I did hear, though, about your college honors and your going to Germany; and I've often thought of you lately and wished to see you. Why Jack. in spite of my weight and your beard and broad shoulders, I can't realize that ten years hare gone since we were ut Ex eter together. We must talk over old times and new. When did yon get back and what are your plans ? "Welk now, this is Saturday, and you can do nothing after 3 o'clock. Conic and upend Sun day with me in the coun try. I want to show you my wife." "Your wife! Are you married Tbm ?" "Married nearly a year," said he, with a smile. "Iron don't look very soleAn over it." "Solemn? It's the Colliest thing I ever did in my life. Meet me in the Eastern Depot at 4 o'clock, and 11l tell you all about it on the way down." We parted at the Winter street corner —he to go to his store, and I to the Park er llOuse. "How handsome Boston has grown," said I, glancing at the fine buildings and the Common beautitul as ever in the September sun. "We think it a nice town," he replied, oticaking with the moderate words and the pm - feet assurance of the Bostonian, to whom hie city is the sum of all excel lence and delight. "Remember-4 o'clock." And he disappeared in the crowd. "Tom married!" I said to myself, as I walked along. "I dare Fay it's to his father's pretty wrrd, Clara Maitland, whom I saw when I spent the day there, eleven years ago. I remember what long curls she had and how fond she seemed of Win. Yes, I dare say it's to Clara.. I hope though, she hasn't grown up Into one of those delicate young ladies, good for nothing but to display the latest fash ions, and waltz a little, and torture the piano. Better some rosy, sturdy German Gretchen than a poor doll like them. It would be a shame for Tom, with his splendid physique and vigorous brain, to be tie for life to such a woman ?" And then, turning down School street, my thoughts wandered off ton blue-eyed,giri I had loved for many a year—a girl who . mitts not satisfied with the small triumphs of the croquet•grounds, but who could send an arrow right borne to the mark ; and clitiab hills with me, bee step light and free as the deer's in the glade below ; and bold a steady oar in our boat on the river; nod swim ashore if need should be ; and then,. when walk or row was "TRUTH AND RIGHT : GOD AND OUR COUNTRY." MONTROSE, PA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1873. over, who could sit, down to a lunch of cold meat and bread-and•butter 'with an appetite keen us a young Indian's after a day's hunt; yes. and who knew how to be efficient in the kitchen and the ran est ornament of the parlor. How im patient I aas toffee her, the bewitching maiden whom a prince might have been proud to marry. And again I said to mpelf, as I went up the Parker House steps: "I do hope Tom hasn't made a fool of himself!" Four o'clock found me at the station ; and a moment later in walked Tom car rying a basket tilled with Jersey peaches. "They don't grow in Greenland," said he, tucking the paper down orer the trait. - Come this way!" I followed him, and we had just seated ourselves comforta bly in the car when the tram moved off. "Now for the story, Tom," said 1, as we crossed the bridge and caught the breeze cool from the tirn. "But 1 can guess be forehand the girl you married. It was Clara Maitland." A shadow pusse'd over Tom's face.— "Clara has been di ad (our years," said he. •"Shu inherited consumption frotu her mother. We did trey % thing for her— took her to bliones , ;ta and Florida; but it wa.4 no use. She didn't live to see her eighteenth birthday." "Poor Cksra! She loved you dearly.— Then I suppose you chose some Bo s ton girl of your ucquaintenance "Jack, you couldn't tell who Mrs. Toni . Foster was if you should try from non till morning. I shall have te' enlighten you, - and moving the basket to tune sid e .; rind settling himself in his seat, he went on. “Von know I have the misfortune to be an only child. After I was twenty one father and mother began to talk about my marrying. I have plenty of cousins,' you know, and we always had young la dies going in and out of the house ; but hile ('lam hind she was company for me and after she died I aas full of business, and didn't trouble myself about matri mony. To tell the truth. Jack, I didn't fancy the gills. Perhaps I was unl'or- Num& in my acquaintances; but they seemed to me all culls cud flounces and furbelows, and I would as soon have thought of marry ug a ft.l:ion•plate as one of thus• elaborate creatures. I don't object to like it. But you can see line gowns and bonnets any day in the Washington street a indows. and un• ideal of a woman was one whose dress Ss her least attraction 'l).. you recollect father's former part ner, Adam Lanc ? clever old gen tleman, and a minion:tire, and father has th e gria. est liking mid respect for fie has [we daughters, one married long ago, and thelother. much young r, lath. r !ivied npati :411 &suable wife f.ir me. I rather thtnk'the two families had uili,ll it over together; ut any rate Miss Maul ii&eutno,to.C;reenlmid fur a long summer visit. She is tut ninialile girl. lint she is so petted and spoiled that she's fir eli t e,' in mind ur inwir She looked %cry g"'. in the evenings; nt tirLd nt laiest importatious. But she %Va., alll ayB live at breakfast ; she didn't dare to ride horseluick ; she couldn't take a walk without stopping to rest on et err stone; and once 1 asked her if she had read the account of the battle of Sedan, she looked op in her childish way and said "No Mr, Foster, Newspapers are so tiresome." Bless me, what should I have tune with such a baby ? ".1 year a ago this summer I was very much confined at the store ; and, is hen August came, instead of 6p-fiding the whole month at horn?, f thought I would have a little change, and so I went for a f'ortnight to the Cliff Honda on-- Beach. It's a quiet, pliasatit resort, and you'll always find fifty to one hundred people there durini , ' the season. The landlord is a vod•fellew; and a distant relative of mite. I thought he looked flurried when I went in,und after a few minutes he took me one side and said: `•Tom, yon have come at an unlucky time. I had a very , good cook. that I gut from Boston, at twenty dollars a w-ek ; hut she's a high tempered woman. Last evening she quarreled with her assistants, this morning the breakfast was all in con fusion, and now she's packing her trunk to lave by the nest triin. In two or three days I can probablsget another ene down in her place ; hut what we're to do muanwhite I don't know." "BLit, Norton," said I,"lsn't there Some one pear by or in the house who can take it ?" "I don ht it," he 7eidieil. "I've half a dozen girls from the vicinity doing up stairs woi k—one of them from your town the best waiter in the dinning room.— But I suppose all of them would either be afraid of the responsibility or think it beneath them to turn cook, though they would have plenty of help, nod earn twenty dollars where they now get three." "Who's here from Greenland r I ask ed, for I knew something of almost every h:Sue in the place. "Mary Lyford." "Mary Lyford ? A black-eyed, light footed girl, about twenty years old, with two brothers in Colorado. and her father a farmer over toward t.it ratham ?" "Yes, the very same." "Why, she's the prettiest girl in Green land—at least I thought so two years ago when 1 danced with her at the Thanks giving party in the village; and I heard last fall that she took the prize at the 11auchester Fair for the best loaf of bread. But why is she here?" "Oh, you know farmers haven't mneli ready money ; and I suppose she wanted to earn something fur herself, and to come to the Beach. like the rest of us. You say she took the premium for her bread. - I belieVe I'll go into the dining-room and propose to give the cook's place to any one of the girls who would like it, and feels competent, to take it. I must do something," und, look ing at his watch, he went out. Ten minutes later he came back, clap ping his hands, and exclaimed: "Mary Lylord says she'll try it." fur Greenland," cried I. "Isn't that plucky? By Jove I hope she'll suc ceed, and I believe she will." "You nmsn't expect mach to-day," said Norton. , •Thiegs are topsy-turvey in the kitchen, and it'll take some time to get them stritight4med out" Just then a new arrival claimed his at tention, and with a serener face he turned away. Dinner was poor that day ; supper was a little better. And iu spite of Norton's caution, I began to be afraid that Green land was going down. But the next morn ing,what abreakfast we had—juicy steaks, hot potatoes, delicious rolls, and corn bread, griddle-cakes, that melted in your mouth, and coffee that had lost none of its aroma in the making. Thenceforth every meal was a triumph. The guests praised the table, and hastened to their seats at the first sound of the bell. Nor. ton was rudient with satisfaction, and I was as pleased as if I had been landlord or cook myself. Several times I sent my compliments to Mary ; but she was su constantly occupied that I never had a glimpse of her till the night before I was dancing in the parlor, and had lust led a young lady of the Matilda Line stamp to her tn mum.. when I saw Man standing with the dining-room girls on the iiiaza. I went out, and shaking her cordially by the hand, told her how inter ested I had been in her success. and how proud I was to lied a Greenland girl so accomplished. She blushed and thanked me, and said. in a modest way, that site was very glad if we were all suited, and then Norton came up and expressed his entire satisfietion with what she had dune. As she stood there in a white Intiue dress, with a scarlet how at her throat. and her dark hair neatly arranged, he looked every inch a lady. "Du nie the hi‘or, Miss Lyford," said I "to dance the next cotillion with mc." "Alt! Foster," she replied, looking areldv at Norton, "that isn't expec:tl of the help." "The help'." I said indignantly. "You are the queen 01 the establishment, and 1 incite you to dance, and so dues Mr. Nor ton." "Certainly I do," he answered. "Go and show the company that you are at panic in the parlor as well as the kitchen." S o smiling and blrqhing, she took my arm. Didn't we make a sensation when we went in. Perhaps there nos no fellow there with a better "social positron" (you know the phrase) than I ; and I had been ( i rat e a tat °rite with the ladies. You should have seea them when we took our place on the thaw Sine laughed, some frowned, some whispered to their neigh hart; but I paid mot the slightest attem tine to It all, and Mary looked so protty, and wont thron2h the dance pith such geace and d•gmty, that before it was our all reizarited . her n ith admiration. I didn't wait for comments, but emorted her out as if she Itad been the belle of Boston. "G.hl night. Hiss Lvford," I said when we remmed the hall. -I am ,g..ing in the morning. but I shall see ,yoti again when you get lock to Green "Good night, Mr. Foster," she replied, thank you for your kiudnem." Then 'he langbiog: "lima you any or .I.•1 s fat lireak fas• s. I should like to remember ' you by . a plate of such imialas as we had yesterday." -You ishall have them, sir," she said, as she disappeared to the doorway. And • hate them I did. Three weeks later M.try came home to Greenland, with more than a hundred dollars in her parse, and u tunic that was worth thou:ands. I went to see her at her father's house. I round her in every way excellent tad lovely ; and the end was that at christtnas we were married.' -1.1oriousl" I exclaimed, Giye me your hand, Tom! I was afraid you had been taken in by some Matilda Lane." ' ••Go von think I'm a fool?" said he. Then . I told him my choice, and I was still talking when the train stopped at Ureenland station. We soon arrived at his hospitable home. Ills wife was all he had pictured her; a refinee, intelligent and handsome woman who would develop and grow in attrac tiveness every year of her life. After it ! merry evening in their pleasant parlor, I went to bed and dreamed the millenium had come, and that all women were like my blue-eyed girl and Mrs. Torn Foster. How Much the Hog Weighed. A bin IT looking man, in a farmer's work ay costume entered a railway car at a way station. The car was well filled,and all the seats being occupied but one which was half tilled by a finely dressed exquisite. 'fl'e farmer seeing his only chance fur a seat, asked the exquisite if (other half of that seat was "took." Receiving a neg atire answer, he responded : "Waal, then I reckon I'll squat." Like most of our hardy yeomanry, he was inclined to he sociable. "Sung winter rnornlng," eaid he No rreponee. "Shouldn't w mdcr if we had some more snow afore night." Still no, response from exquisite, who looked out of the car window, evidently much annoyed. - After several futile attempts to elicit some reply the farmer gave a yawn, and quietly remarked, "killed a hog yesterday, but you can't guess how much he weigh ed." Driven almost to desperation, the poor fellow said.smartly. "Four hundred pounds." Yawning again. '•i'o. didn't weigh that." "Well, three hundred and fifty then." Another yawn—"No, didn't weigh three and a hall:" . - Very impatiently—"three bu nd red." Yawning,still—"no, not that much." Almost ready to explode—" How much did Your old hog iFeigh Anyhew ?" "Waall, he want much of a hog, and didn't weigh him." A report was circulated in Chicago that a lady was running a sewing, machene by mule power. On investigation a local re porter ascertained that the power wus that of a person who bad been married to the lady. A Kentucky pater, in reporting a wedding, says that the bride was not particularly bandsonie, but her father throw in seven mules, and th 4 husband was satisfied. A Story of Real Life --o To Lonisana, in the beginning of the last century, came an old German emi grant, with his only daughter, and set tled there. She was young and very beautiful, and attracted much attention especially that of one Dauband, an offi cer iii the colony. Phis officer had been in Russia; and what struck htm, upon seeing the young lady, was the very re markable resemblance which she bore to the late wife of Czarowitz Alexis, sol of Peter the Great. 'The history of this princess had been a very sad one. Though sister-in-law to Charles VI., she had been treated by her husband 'as though she bad been his slave. He had attempted to make away with her by poison, and at last he struck her with such violence, when fur gone with child, that he caused the death both of herself and her infant. After a great lapse of time, the Czarowitz himself died, and to Dauband's watchful eyes it seemed that the intelligence of Prince's decease was received by his fair lodger riith suspicious interest and ex citement, that took her with being in truth the unhappy lady whom the world thought to be dead and buried. If such was the case, lie declar ed himself devoted to her service and prepared to sacrifice his prospeets in the colony, in order to escort her to Russia. Theo tieharlott Cushman Sophia do Woolfenbuttel (for such had been her maiden name) personage she had imag• iced, and had made use of a fraud to es cape from the cruelties of her late hus band. The blow that had been given her had almost caused her death, but she had recuNered. By the help of Conn , ess Kloigsmark, mother of Marshall Saxe, she gained over the woman of her bed chamber, so that it was given out that she was no more, midi' inneral was arranged accordingly. Then being conveyed to a secret place, she was carefully attended, and when strong enough removed, in the guise of a peasant girl, to Paris, under the guardianship of a trusty German, who was passed as her father, and finally from France to Louisiana. • Having hard her story, Dauband re newed his offer to furnish the means of her return to that sphere from which she had fled under such pitiable circumstan ces ; but the young widow thanked him, and said the only service she required was that he should maintain an absolute se crecy regarding her. He endeavored to ob. y her, but his affection for her was nt,' stronger than his loyalty ; he was young and handsome, as well as impressionable, and perhaps the ex-princers was nut sor ry when her pretended father dying, Dan bard offered himself to her as her hus band. If sho really had renounced all thoughts of resuming her rank, he ar gued, why not wed an honest man who loved her:' Though not a Queen, m him she should ever have a devoted sub ject. She consented, and, in so doing, afforded one of the strangest vicissitudes of fortune that history has -recorded— the marriage with an humble officer of infantry of one who had been destined for the throne of ThisSia, and whose sister was actually occupying that of Asutria. Tile marriage was a happy one, and bore fruit of an Qui, daughter. Alter ten years, Dauband being troubl ed with sonic disorders which the prac titioners in LouisarAitould not cure, re moved with his wife and child to Paris to get medical advice, and on his recov ery obtained from the Government an appointment in the Isle of Bourbon— While in Paris the wife and daughter went to walk in the Tuileries, and con versing in German, were overheard by Marshal Saxe, who stopped to consider them. Mme. Dauband s embarrassment confirmed his suspicions, and his reco,g -n t ion of her was complete. She persuad ed him to promise secrecy. He culled on her, however, the next day, and often afterward; and when she had departed fur Bourbon, informed the King of what lie had discovered. Orders were sent to the Island that the King of Hungary was also Made acquainted with the posi tion of his aunt. He sent her a letter invitiug, her to his court, hut on condi tion that she should quit her husband, Mihail she refused to do. In 1747 Dan band died, having been preceded to the grave by his daughter, and the widow came to France with the intention of taking up her residence in a convent.— In place of doing so, however, she lived in great retirement at Vitri, about a league from Paris,where she died in 1772. —Chambers Journal. No Effect. ——o— A German paper contains a reply from a clergyman who was traveling, and who stopped at a hotel much !requented by what are called "drummers." The host, not being used to have clergymen at his table, looked at him with surprise ; the clerks used all their artillery of wit upon him, wltliont eliciting a remark in self defense. The worthy clergyman ate hie dinner quietly, apparently without -ob serving the gib e s and sneer of his neigh bors. One of them, atlast, in despair at his forbearance, said to him . "Well, I wonder at your patienes ! Have you not heard all that has been said against you. -Oh, yes, but lam used to it. Do you know who I am ?" EMS "Well,l will inform yon. lam ohapluin of a lunatic asylum; such remarks hare no effect upon me." A LADY who was urging some friends to stay to dinner felt disgusted when her 8-year old boy came in and said: "Mrs. Jones says she can't spare tio bread, and Mrs. Fos ain't at home, so I didn't get any butter," The friends thought they had better dine elsewhere, and the lady thought so, too, but she taught that boy that the way of the transgressor was hard before evening. As Italian music* has invented a big fiddle, with metulic strings going all around it. which is said to .make four times as much noise as the instruments now in use. in basi•violation. of all, the rules of harmony. A NOTOPIOIIS eavesaropper—Rain„ J TWO DOLLARS PER VASS IN ADVANCE{ Ternieg I, NOT PAID IN ADVANM, 10 CM EXTUA. An Intruder. --o Baby has been here, It seems, Baby Annie on the wing— In my little library, Plundering and reveling. Annie near, the darling witch— See how innocent she looks— But she has a world of wiles _ . When shu gets among my books. Half the time I own she seems Less a being than a star. Then agnial cry,.--"qty books, Annie, what a rogue you aro!" "No, no—" papa cries in vain; Down the dainty volumes come; Papa, lore you are no king, I am queen in babydom. Stately Johnson Iles in grief Under laughing Rabelais ; Emerson is flat for once; thumbing Thackeray. Whittier, 0 poet rare! Thou hast many pages less, But if all were gone but one, That would hold and charm or bless. Baby with the doubly crown. . And the laughter - taunted eye% Papa's sanctum, volume.autwn, Is to thee a Paradise! I forgive thee when I feel Breath and lips upon me pressed, Sweet as any alien alr, Down from harbors of the blest. "Papa," something whispers me, "Better every laden shelf Emptied by her baby hands Then the house all to thyself." What Shall We do With our Sons and Daughter% It must be evident to any observer that the difficulty for middle-class families to provide their children with the means of earning a livelihood is increasing. In a country like this, provided with such boundless resources, this might at first seem incredible, and in fact, there is no necessity that it should be so. The fault Fes not with the country, but with the peiple. All the young men want to be capitalists, speculators, merchants, law yers,or to follow some other genteel occu pation requiring little manual labor. The &earn of our young girls is to be simply ladies, contract rich marriages, and have foreign servants to wait on them. The inevitable result is approaching. Genteel occupations have become an American speciality, they are the worst paid and most uncertain of .all kinds of tabor ' be cause the market is overstocked. One bookkeeper has a salary of five thousand dollars a year, straightway a hundred in cipient does delude themselves with the idea they can reach such a position. Ev en in Europe there is too much of this gentility, but it is in a great measure coun teracted by millions of workingmen.— There, a collier makes more than a bank er's clerk, just as a common laboring man will make as much as au ordinary clerk in this city; more, iu fact, if we take the difference of stations and exigencies of dress into consideration. To look for an ordinary clerk's place is really a desper ate undertaking, and the young stranger who comes to this city will find it a north pole expedition in search of an uncer tainty. Parents too often delude them selves with the belief that their children have extraordinary capacitiei, and are bound to succeel in life "anyhow." A great deal of stuff has been written on the advantages of education, energy, etc., as if the education which is not practical, and the energy which is not well directed, ever achieved anything.' Every day we see foreigners, ignorant even of our lan guage, commence at the bottom of the scale and work upwards, while genteel men nre fast where they were years ago. If young men would do as many Ger mans do, devote their time to some. man ufacturing speciality, and obtain a prac tical and scientific knowledge of it, they would find a large field before them in a country like this, where special talents in so many branches are panting. Parents may find it difficult to provide their sons with even an ordinary education, but making "book-keepers," or shopmen, or salesmen of them is abnnt the worst thing they can do. The market is full, and will be "fuller"---ungmmmatical though the phrase may be. Too many try to cling to metropolitan life, and thns they waste away their talents in the over crowded hive. There is a crying need for reform in ed ucation of youth. We see evidences of this in the army of place-seckers,who be come politicians at first, and often settle down into gainblers and rowdies - after wards. We tee in the' hundreds of brief less lawyers, and the "patient-less" if not impatient physicians, i.e the vast multi tude of gentlemen who live by their wits, and who so often complain that they know nothing practical. Men of brains may always get along, though often with difficulty, but the mediocre ones will go to the wall—unless they turn to some thing practical. The future of girls is still more uncer tain and • dangerous. . Without natural supporters in a city like this it is beset with difficulties, the more so that they seldom know anything practical-. The extravag,anea of the average young lady and her false ideas as to respectability, etc..kcep many a young man from marry ing; and as housekeeping is onerous enough under the most favorable circum stances, it becomes almost impossible un der such conditions. , , . The movement startedby certain ladies would be productive of great benefit if properly directed, but certainly it is not in competing with men in . the fields which require muscular strength and en ergy that women can hope to succeed. There are several branches monopolized by men which could•be as well filled by women, and it is toward these that steps should be first taken.—N. Y. Witness. A noon stoz is told , of the students of an institute w la is located' in a New England State: - A yerF or two' since.just before Lent, the Principal of . the school lectured the boys upon the propriety or abstaining from some accustomed article of diet during Lent, and , desired each one to write the name of the article upon a slip of paper, and band them to him next morning at the opening of the school.--'• The papers were handed in, and upon sv cry one was written the significant word, "Hash." NUMBER 3 6. All ikoWIL A TALE of misery—The cock•taiL • CARBON county is one of the wealthi est in the State. Sic Francisco receives $25,000 a year from Chinese gambling licenses. A FEMALE student of medicine out West, wrote borne to her friends fur Ind to boy a man to cut up. LOUISVILLE policeinen are provided with wheelbarrows foe the comfort and convenience of the citizens. AN' Indiana women laments that her husband had not better sense thaw to take the best sheet to hang himself. TUEILE are three ex-confederate getter- Os in the United States Senate, Itansoniand Gordon. KANSAS lawyers are lined for profanity and contempt of court when they under take taluoto Latin to,the Judge. A NEW England newspaper, speaking of itself ; says its "every tone is a daily illustration of the little hatchet and cher ry-tree story." HENET Ward Beecher has returned from his Western tour of seventeen lec tures with 812,600 in his pockets. MORE money is spent annually for ad. missiou to circusses and menageries than would support the churches. A 311.NwEscrrs youth bit his horse with a guu to make him go. The horse wont, the gun went. and three fingers went too. SOUTHERN papers are beginning. to urge the removal of Jefferson Davis' dis abilities, so that he may be sent:. to Con gress. THE PhDs&lphia Press says Pittsburg and Allegheny ought to consolidate and he a greater city than St. Louis. A LADY thinks it very strange that whenever she goes to the theatte with her husband be always goes oat between the acts to get cloves to chew. Iz was wittily said at the beginning of this century that the discoveries in astron omy had obliged the theologians to lengthen Jacob's ladder. A 31Aii at Easton has sued the mem bers of a fire company for trespass (or getting oil the roof of his house to exting uish the flames on an adjoining bnildirg. A REAL strike is impending_ amongtbo carpenters, end masons of New York, which unsettles nearly every branch of industry, especially building and manu facturing. WARRINGTON'S tomb is adorned with one of the neatest cod liver eil signs that a fence dauber ever shipped on any-prom inent object in that vicinity. • A errrriox is circulating among tho citizens of Wisconsin, praying its Legis lature to pass a law prohibiting railroad companies from issuing free passes to its members. A CsTrensars farmeroshen be had/ read the miracle of turning water into wine, said old Brown, his neighilpr, could turn water into milk, and self it right along. SEVERAL new companies are organizing m the east fo: manufacturing sewing ma chines, and it is predicted that sixty-five dollar machines will vell at thirty-five dol lars within a year. A ST PAUL jurfhas brought in a ver dict that a husband and his wife have each suffered cruel and inhuman treat ment at the huuds of the othe:, and that consequently each is entitled to a di vorce. A PRISONER in the Tennessee State Prison ate a piece of bar soap - evety,day for a year, aud got to looking so eon sumptivethut he was pardoned ont,when he left off the soap and grew fat again, IT is reported from Boston that since the fire many firms have been surprised by the payment of forgotten and out lawed debts. Z hero is some good in hu man nutue after all. A xor.7lco widow &mu i.l Kennebec, Me., remarked at the frineral:".l hopo you'll excuse my not crying, but the fact is, crying always makes my nose bleed." She will make an excelleni mother-in law. A PROFESSIONAL robber of hon sliest', in Ohio recently testified ie court that he could wring two chickens' necks.with each lend at the same time, and never permit a single "squawk" to escape the vie:. tim. Tnn gentleman who led ono of tho ICES Rothschilds to the altar lately is a victim of dissapointed hopes. She is worth only tun millions, and ho was led to believo her wealthy. A PIOUS young man paid $llB for a pen w iper a a .church fair in Brooklyn, N. Y., recently; and though he smiled sweetly on the girl as she took the trope', his room mate says he cussed like Captain Kidd that night after ho had retired to his couch. • AT Danveis,llass., a boy of fourteen played hanging, last. Saturday with fatal results. lie used. a wheelborrow as a platform, and the barrow canting over left him suspended. lie was discovered soon afterward, dead. PitorEssos James F. Ilabcock,sa noted chemist, testified before a Massachusetts legislative committee, Tuesday, that liq uors were manufaCtured so near like the genuine article. that it was difficult to distinguish between the two. WE hare often looked for a soutane° that-would clearly explain it. A West ern paper kindly supplies the want in this simile. "You might as well at tempt to shampoos on elepbat _with a thimbleful of suap ends as to attempt to do a successful business and ignore ad vertising." A VETIIIONT farmer sent to an Orpban Asylum fora boy that was smart, active, brave, tractable, prompt,iudustrious s elean, pious, intelligent, good looking, reserved, and midget. The Superintendent, =du back tllrit'utifortiinately: they had only I Midrib boys in tbat institution:- •