THE MONTROSE - DEMOCRAT: VOIUME XXX. E. B. HAWLEY & Co., Proprietors. Business Cards. 41. B. & .4_H. MeCO U.V, ♦rrettreeiV ke'taw Oillee over the flank, Montrose ?a. MoDtrerse, May 10, IS7I. It n. 11". SEARLE, "TONNE AT LAW. other over the Store of IL Dewtourr. l ! kt.hc Beek Block. kloutro•o. Pa. (00l CS W. W. Sin Tif, CA BINET ICND AIR MANVPACTI:REEIL—Irew of Main stOtet. Montrose. Ps. )sog. 1. 1869. SUT7'ON, Auctioneer, and Insurance Agent, Frieradsvllle, Pa C. GI LIIF:RT, U. fag. 4012.40ticErlec.r. augl o.r . Greng Bend. Pa AM! EL T, U. IE3. .4.m.aticoltickor. /toe i, I[ol9. Adirese, Brooklyn, Pa JoILV GROVES, kSIIIONA#LR TAILOR, Montrose, Pa. Shop over Chandler'', Store. Altordera tlrst-rate Cum ng dor). on short notlee, and warranted to at. J. F. sifbEMSKER, Attorney ei Law, Montrose. Pa. °Mee next door to J It. De it drt. Wore, oppywite the bank. W tett Vow. JAW. IL ISM—no-3-Iy. 13.. L BALDTILN &T Lew. bIOIIII . OIM. l's Office with Jiireoe seq. out rose, Acgast r, tf. A. O. W. 4 RRE.V, A TTORNITT A t LAW. Bounty, Rack Pay. Penaton and Sediani OA. Claim attended to. OfPee 9r 100 T Leto* Boyd's Store. AI onL rove, Y.. [Au. 1,'69 IV. A. CRC/SSA/ON, 1. ttral.ey et Law. Office at the Cott rt Hen., In the oat msestortre• W. A. Crtuasauxt. !Wu trit.. Stet. 601., 15;L—If. McKgSZIE. S CO. ~;,, !t1 Wry Goods, Clothing. Lndle• and Wean. eve •tinee. Usu. adento IN.r the great nlnertran Tea and colree Company [Montrose, Joly •Vt.l •• _ _ D& Ir. Ir. SMITH. n .„,„ ruplz. at hia dwelling, nest door ust of the Republiralipriatlag oMee. Ofttee hewn. from N. to 4 r. a. Montroee. May 1, IS7l—tf qq LAW 01716'E. rorcn l w arneys at Lace. at Ilia old office et Brniley . ftle4 lifoticrorr. Pa. r rtTca. Glen. It. - 11.[ r. w. wacaos. J. SA UTTER, T &SUM N AXIL*T.ULOE. Slop over J. B. De Vl lit's 411 EL TC1:1:1:1.1. Dwer in nrnts, Medicines, Cll.-mire!, ralnis, Oh Is, Nplcen, rnney o.oll...Jewelry: Ver loom. tee, Wick Montr.be, I's E•iatati.h , d 1.11 tree 1, Idn Dn. W L. RICILIEDSoN TOT VOCIAN & 'WEUEON. tenders hi. proferOcnn goo to the cal Lt . l.• *.' , .• , ru. and vicinity (Ogees, ,. hisrsvicluncc, •n the corn., rno sayre Fon advr. (Aug. ( - a:Antics TODDA I:D. n Zoete rd Xhosa. Ileln and Cape. loather .en tlaia ',tree% et dolor I.loe , Store W•rt made Ln °rear. and repeirang dune oleat,y. entre.e. Jan. 1. 1110. LE WIN KNOLL. • %IRVING AND GAIT: DRESSING. Sh•p Is toe u. ,, r Postunlc• building. when b• rill sc fnueld to ►head ail vriau may vont ►nrthin= his line. Montru•e Pa. Oct. 13. 1.543. ,S fr PAYTON, rnrau•t.+v s SrPOICON, tenter , his .ere+er6 tt,eeitiss.."( ttrnd and v,rin try (Mire at Ills r..ddene..oppoo — c "Mud ~ilage Sort ist,l6.9.—if D A ~TARO/'. •l ni.isters TanavaL Befll4. at 11. Pool •f haVeo: atrect Call and consalf In all Chronic IP' lliaatrasa. Jan. 11 . , 'll.-13,4—tf. CifCifARf.RF .VORRIS, THE lIITTI WARNER. has moved his shop to the Iptilldfng occnpled by;/. Q. tteMl7t. where F. Is pro• parel t ih.e.l hinds or wart In Wens... ouch .. ma. king .Irltchto. pers. etc All work dono on short starts and prices loss. Pletee tail sod eel tem. IL 11172RITT. !War .• Staple and Panay Dry Gouda. enrkery, Hard • Iroa. More.. Drugs. 0.11, and P•i.ta. Gouts ••1 lists and Vap, Fora. La7ab Robes. ro rent. Provisions. Near. 11 iliurd.lo., NOV. EXCHANG E 110 TEL. Nir , tArKEN. trlehes to Inform thettuhlle that relsted'iba Erchtture lintel In liontruge. he Ito pr.dared to sccetua 'lite the trarcllng pub;:r erst,loo.ttyle Moutrotte, Au= 21, 1872. BIT L rvG s STROUD. FIRE AND I.IFB I::SId.ANCR ACSN'T. AI! bovinesestiendetilopromptly.no DOT term. ofpee Arc door rvvvi of the bank n. Wm. H. emlP , hi I venne, Mai:an:roc, Pa. (Auk I. MO. tly 1371 ) Btkursos J. D. VAIL !lON torirvi:c PUTS!, ix AND SintGlSX`i. HIP permat.ntly WAlrd hlinoelf in Motor... Pa where he trill prom.. at 10 tall. in his protenelon mitt, wt.l4 too war office and roeidence west of the etaart llonse, near Fitch & Wat•on'e rase. Moutr... February 11.1R71. F. CH URCHI L L lastlre nf the Peace: strike or, L. S. Lonhadm's ptnre, t.seat Rend borough, Stotquettanna Connie. Peon', llas the pet lenient of the docket. of the late lease Iterlhow. deresmed. Oftlee hours , from Is to It o'clock m and trout lln 4 o'clock p. W. • Great Send. Oct. td. tilt_Vti d• NICHOLS, r“,t,. rate In Drugs, Medicines, Chemicals. Dye. s- oti.. Varni.h. Fa.'" vt r les. estera gedicloe•. Psrfurrleryand Ullet Ar- L , r , •• rlr — Preseription• earotally compounded.— Drlrk block, Moatr.e,Pa. d. p Rum. Fib 71,111 .agr 4L 41NDS OP JOB PIINTING, ETC., irtzeifirsD £T nib DEMO'CIIAT OFFICE, Warr Sea 'ior Pus Lie Arsrtra. Zhe Negro 6anur. —o— The sun sinks in the west ! The stars ure shinirig now, to sing amain ; The moon, that hides beneath a Needy vest— ' But all to rise again. The dowers in autumn dio The vemant leaves wither, and dnrx)p and fall ; What is most bright this morn, to night may lie Beneath Death's sombre pall. But aprlng will bring again The flowers to hfc from out their winter bed, And o'er earth anow-clad,cireary,trackleas plain Fresh beauty will be shed. Ton stalwart, sinewy form Now pulsing proud with manhood's noble trust, Ziow thrilled with bonne* smile, so rich and Must low lie in the dust. Ton beauty, proudly rare, With cheeks like heart of young roan in the sprang. Whose brow Is like the Idly-petal fair. Whose sweet lips gladly sing, The heart's MD songs of joy— As do the birds amid their native treft— May in another world her voice employ, Ere comes the spring tide brzak. Yon little cherub gay With waxen arm that wields a monarchs strength, Must have the deed leavvi o'er its tomb to play Must sink to sleep at length. Yon eye of sapphire blue, With smile in which a myriad stars are set, With look of lore-light, tender, pure, and true 3lust told in darkness yet. Yes, all must sink to sleep, Must sink to sleep in Death's remorseless gloom The hearts that joy, the eyes which, aching, weep, All, all !Imp in the tomb. But spring's warm breath will call Dull Nature from it, long night of repose; Thu kr-hound rivulets will full In showers upon the rose. The naked, shivering trees Will smile Again in sunstuer's robe of green, And fling their hr , tivltes to the laughing breeze Bright in their dewy sheen And though I lay Ina down, And sleep niv sleep beneath the mwourous main And mermaids weave for me a coral crown, 1 yet shall rise ❑gain. Wherever I may make My final bed upon this earthly mould, There comes a time when 1 from sleep shall wake, When Death shall loose its bold. Why should we quake with fear. And t rctubline cling to thi. poor, stttrering clay N•hen I in•• • . huly down to runt us here, Itc•rcals etertud day? nesurgain, spirit frail, SA) , to thy heart when shrinks it sore with pain ‘V.ben close the eyes upon tile's changing rale. "Tts but to lire aitain Zhe ftorg TWO LIVES IN ONE -0- More than fifty rears ago me brother Stephen and I lived tog-titer m a village about ter. milos sou: ii of London, where he was in prac!iee as a surgeon. Ste phen was thirty-two, I sogh teen. We hid no relations but a stater, use or six years older than mye,ir, and %ell married to London. stephen was a solitary and studious man, living somewhat apart from his neighbors, and standing almost in a fatherly position towards me.— Through the year we had lived together, no one had thimght of his tnarrying.— Thus it was when the events I have sto tell began. The }loose next'to ours was taken by a Mr. Cameron, a feeble looking man, rather past middle age. with one daughter, Marion by name. How shall I descrihe her, the most beautiful creature I ever saw? She was, perhaps, twenty years old; I never knew, precisely. A tall, slight form, fair complexion, dark chestnut eyes and hair, and an expression more like that of an angel than a human being. Though I was much.struck with her appearance, Stephen did not seem to notice it, and we might have retna:ned unacquainted with them forever but that he was required to heip Mr. Cameron over an awkward stile opposite our houxe. Acquaintance on :e that' soon grew familiar; fur they had two feelings in common—a love of tobacco and Swe denborganisin. Muir a summer even *: did they pass smoking the one and talkino the other. Marion snrtietim is joining in. for she generally walked with them, while my chest, which was weak at the times. kept me at home, One day they quitted Stephen at the gate, and as he entered the door I said to him: "How lovely Marion is! I am .uever tired of I yiking ut her." "Look at her while you may," said he "she has not, three years to live." It was only too true. She bed some dreadful complaint—anenriem,l think it was—which' must carry her off in the flower of her days. Stephen told me that he had consulted the most eminent doctors without getting any hope ; and the emotion, rare enough in him, that he displayed, told me that he loved Marion. Amos Fscuo. I said no word to him about, it; I knew better; hut I saw with what dreadful doubts ho was perplexed. 'Excitement might shorter! Marion's life--such an es • citement as a declaration of 14) . 0 from him might be of material injury ; and even if it did not prove so, how could he condemn himself to the prolonged tor• tura of seeing the life of a beloved wife ebb away day by day ? Besides she did not thlnk lie cared for her. I, who had watched ber earlessly, knew that she lov ed him with her whole heart. He strug gled with himself fiercely, but he won the fight.. He left_,,home for some weeks, and returned looking older and paler; but he had learned to mention her name without his voice quivering, and to touch her hand without holding his breath hard. She was pining away under the influence of his changed manner, and I dared not help my two darling, to be happy. An unexpected aid soon'oitirre,--, Mr. Cameron, who was in bad 'health when we first saw him, died suddenly.— Poor Marion's grief was terrible to see.— Her Father was dead, Stephen, as she thought. ,gstoriged ; and them was no one else in the intrld-who eared whether lIESIURGAIII. "TRUTH AND RIGHT : GOD AND OUR COUNTRY." MONTROSE, PA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 1873. she lived or died, except myself. through t her home with me, and was with her hourly till Mr. Cameron's funeral. low we got through that time I hardly know. Then came the necessary inquiry into his affairs. lie had died, not altogether poor, but in reduced circumstances, leav ing Marion an annuity that would scarce ly give her the luxuries her eats. of ,health required. And where was she to live, and what to do? Stephen was the sole executor, the one adviser to whom she could look. Ile took two days and nights to consider, and then offered her his hand and home. At first she could not believe that his offer arose from any thing but pity and compassion ; but when he had told her the story of the last, few monthe, and called me to bear witness to it, a great light seemed to come into her eyes, and a woneerful glow of love, such as I had never seen, over her face. I left thorn to themselves that even ing, till Stephen lapped at the door of my room, and told me all—nothing, in fact, but what I knew long before. Is their case there was little cause for. de lay. Trousseaux were not the important matters in my day that they are in my grandchildren's; and Marie was married to Stephen, in her black gown, within a month of her father's funeral. The neat few months was a happy time for all of us. Marion's health im proved greatly. The worried, frightened look she need to wear left her face us she recovered from the depression caused by constant anxiety about her father, and the logs of rest she suffered in attending upon him at night. It seemed as if she were entirely recovering, and Stephen, if he did not lose his fears, at least was nut constantly occupied with them. How happily we used to look forward to the future, for Stephen was beginning to save moviey; and how many were our day dreams about professional eminence for and fashionable lite in London, partly for Marion, but mostly f o r Tue.— !' have tried fashionable life in London s'nce, bat I never found it as happy as our days in that dear old Surrey vil lage. Well, our happy times did not last long. Marion caught a cold as the winter Caine on, and was soon so ill as to be taken to Lond.in for advice. Stephen same back nlane, with a weary, deathly-looking tic,'. Marion had broken a bliaal-vessel on the journey —not anythinf serious in atsalf tint ominous enough. They were to go at once to a warm climate—not a day to In. hest. Sorrowfully I packed up the neces sary things, and went with Stephen to Lltidwi the twat day to say g toil by to Marion, who had been forbidden to go home. The same afternoon they were mi board a vessel bound fur Leghorn. laicki ly, Marion was a good sailor, and well used to ships, for she had made more than 045 TOyag , to MaLlCira with her father. Machias I witbo,f to 'ais with theist, and mach ;.5 washed ii, too, it ass out 0! OP' qaestion. Stephen bad saved but little money, and could hardly see how h e a nd M areal were to lire. unless he could make himself a practice somewhere among the Est lith abroad, and Lis taking me also was nut to be thunglit of. I wai to live for the present with my married sister. It was very sire to part with Stephen, with whom I had lived all my ltre ; it was almost surer to part with M a rion, who had been more than a sister to me ever since I saw her. Stephen and I were nearly overcome with emotion ; but she was calm and silent, with an intent, wistful look about her lovely tau, that has haunted me all over my hfe since. I can see it now, when I shut my eyes, though it was fifty years ago. Need I say that I never saw titer again ? I went to ni sister's house and begun the fashionable life I used to wish for. It W 39 not all that I pictured it, though it was pleasant enough to occupy me in the day time; but at night I lunged sadly for my darlings. Stephen wrote letters full of hope, and talked of returning after wending two years in Italy. Marion. too, wrote favor ably of herself, and my anxiety begun to lessen. There was another reason for thin at the same time; my late husband, the friend and partner of my sister's hus band, was at the Bailie time beginning to pay his addresses to me ; and the tender troubles of my own case made me care less of others. Summer came around again, and one day as I was half wishing fur my country home a letter arrived from Stephen. Marion's complaint was at a crisis, and a great change would take place, one way or the other, 111 u few days, I was to go home, put the place in order, and he ready to receive them. I did not know till afterward that Marion had begged to be allowed to die at home, if the change were for the worse; if it had been for the better there would have been no reason for her staying abroad. Well,l went home, arranged everything, and waited for them. Three weeks pass ed (the usual intervals,) and no letter; a month, and I supposed they were travel ing slowly to avoid fatigue. On the day five weeks after I had received the last letter I was sitting alone, rather late in the evening, when a quick step Boarded in the road outside, and Stephen came to the gate, opened it, entered the house, and sat down in silence. lie was dressed as usual, and looked tired and travel stained; hut there was no sorrow in his law, and I felt sure that Marion must he safe. 1 asked him where she was. Ile said she was not with him. "(lave you left her is Italy ?" I asked. "She is dead," he answered, without a shadow of emotion. . . "flow ? where ?" I was beginning to question bioarbut he stopped me. "Give-meitunething to eat and drink." he said. "I have walked from London ead I want to sleep." "I brought him what ho wanted. Ho bade me good night, and, as I saw ho wished it, I left him and adilt to bed full of grief, but even more of, wonder, that he, who truly loved his wife; if ever a man did, could speak of her not a month after death without his voice faltering or his Ewe changing In the least, "To-mor row will solve the question," I said to myself, as weary with crying, I felt sleep coming over me. But to-morrow 4i4 not solve the question. He told me, as be- fore without emutiod, what he wished me to-know, sad from tbst momeat he spoke no more on the subject. In every respect hut this, he was my own Stephen of old—as kind and thoughtful as ever, only altered by a rather absent and eh , stracted manner. I thought at first that he was stunned by his loss, and would realize it more painfully afterward; but months passed on without a change.— I Ile used Marion's chair, or things of her work, or sat opposite OS her drawings, i not seeming to notice them; indeed, it I was as if she had dropped out of his life I entirely. and left him as he was before ho knew her. The only difference was that he, naturally a man lof sedentary habits, took a great deal of exercise, and I knew that he kept laud anum in his bedroom. At this time my lover was pressing me to marry him, and with much diffi culty I consented to tell Stephen about it, thoush I had no inteutio.a of leaving him. 'lo my surprise he seemed pleased. I told him that 1 would never leave him alone for all the huebaud4 iu the world; but he would not hear me. "I think it is your duty to marry him, Margaret," he said. "You hive him, and have taught him to love yon, and you have no right to sacrifice him to me." "My first day is toyou,Stephen. I will not leave von alone." "I see that I must explain to von," he said, after a pause. "‘N hen you leave me I shall not be alone." "Who will la: with yon ?" I asked,won deriug. ••Marion." I siarted as if I had been shot, for I thought he must surely he mad; but he continued quite calmly, and as usual, without emothm: "She died at mid-day. Till night I did not know what I did. I felt stun ned and broken and dying myself; but at last, worn out as I was with watching and siting up, I fell asleep; and by God's mercy she calms to me in my dreams, and told me to be comforted. The next night she came again, and from that time to this has never failed me. Then I felt that it was my duty to live; that if my lite was %aluless to myself, it was not to you; so I came. I dare nay it is only a freak or my imagination. Perhaps I even prx dneed an illusion by an effort of my will; hut however that is. it has saved me from going mad ur killing myself. Haw does die (wine Alw.iys an she was in that tirst summer that we spent here, or in our early time ir' Italy ; alwats cheerful and beautiful, al wii‘n alone, always dress ed an sli? used to Brest, talking as she used to talk--nit an angel but her self. "Sorra -times we go through a whole day of pleasure,, sometimes sire only conies. and goes. Out no night 113; ever yet been without her; and, indeed, I think that visits are longer and nearer as I draw near, rto her cid gigein i som e tim es ask which of toy two lives is the real one. ask myself now, and cannot answer.- 1 should: think the other was, it it were not that while I am in this I recollect the other. and while I am in the other' I know nothing, beyond. Anil tins is why my sorntw is not ate that of oth• ers in my position. I know that no night pass without my seeinr , " her, for my health is good andl never fail to sleep. Sleeplessness is the only earthly evil I dread, now you are provided. It is too Caerel a thing to be spken of with out necessity. Saw write to your husband that is to be, and tell him to comehere." I dal so, and the preparations fur my marriage began. Stephen was very kind, but his thoughts a-antlered further day by day. I spoke to a doctor, a friend of his, about hint, but it seemed that, nothing really ailed him. I longed almost to pain. to ask him more about Mariou ; but he never gave me an opportunity. If I ap proached the subject, he turned the talk in another direction, and my old habits of stibmission to him prevented me from go ing on. Then came my wedding day, Stephen gave mt away and sat by my side at breakfast. Ile seemed to hang over me more tenderly than ever, as he put me in to the carriage and took leave of me. The last thing I did as I leaned out of the carriage window was to tell him to be my first visitor in my own home. "No, Margaret," he said, with a sad Emile, "say good-bye to me note, my work is done." Scarcely understanding what he said, I bid him good-bye; and it was not till my husband asked me what he meant that remembered his strange look and accent. I then felt half frightened about him ; but the novelty of my first visit abroad made me soon forget my fears. The rest is soon told. The first letter I received from England said that on the very morning of my marriage he had been found cold and dead in his bed. Lie had died without pain, tbe doctor said, with his right hand clasping his left above the wrist, and holding firmly, even in death, a circlet of Marion's hair. The Weather In Minnesota. —o— Tne Minnesota papers are endeavoring to correct the impressions which have gone abroad of the extreme severity of the past winter in that State. They claim that but fifty lives were lost out of the many thousands exposed to the great January snow storm, and that these were frozen by long exposnre,growing out of the fact that they had missed their way in the newly and spaisely settled prune regions of the frontier, where there are no fences to guide the traveler and houses dot the coulAry at very distant intervals. The statement of the MinUesota papers is worthy of consideration by those intend. ing emigration, especially ns the agents of land-grant railroad companies are making use of sensational stories con. eerning the Minnesota climate to divert emigration to Arkansas, Kansas and oth er regions. Sous Detroit bterglara entered a Jew elry store reoently, and "stole a bushel of gold and diamonds," wording to the Union, but as the looser& estimated their loss at COO, it is thought diamonds are cheaper in detroit then in other cities, Tun season for keeping diaries begins with the first of the year and lasts op to 'about the first week in February, Linn Posen!. —o— REAL LITE. ——o— The St. Louis Republican publishes the following. A pour gir!, now about nine teen years of age, was born in Rome, and received the above name. Her father was probably an organist of the wandering jew close, and her mother may have been a fish woman. There is no doubt her parents were poor, and they may have been honest. Line very early conceived a distaste for life in Rome, and started out to make her fortune. She was pret ty,—ltaly's sun burned in ber veins, and Italy's skies shone in her eyes. She got away from home at fourteen, and threw herself upon the wide world with that dangerous companion, a beautiful face.— She drifted to New York and soon be came noted as a "pretty flower girl." She did not stand on the corner with her blooming basket, but carried it around in fashionable avenues, and to the brown stone mansions seated thereon. Her fresh stock of flowers every morning, and her bright eyes and the roses on her cheek, and the perfect picture of beauty she made, harmonized with the aristocratic locality she loved to frequent. She al ways sold out and then glided away into the solitude of fhe great city, no one knew whither. Iler swift foot defied fol lowers. She became a curiosity—and then a sensation. David Simmons, an old, rich, retired merchant, saw her and became one of her daily patrons. He was often seen talking to her on his marble steps, and afterwards with a posy in MS button hole. Then Mr. Simmons tried to and out where the beautiful vision vanished when the basket was empty, and because he could not became greatly distressed.— Mr. Simmons was a widower, but he had a daughter who was married, and she and her husband lived with the old man in the house. The daughter saw the beau tiful Italian girl, and did not like her.— She objected to her father making an old dunce of himself, and the quantity of flowers which old Mr. Simmons bought every day was something astonishing. The more his daughter scolded, the more he tilled'his room with flowers, and the more he displayed. the choicest and rarest of them in his various buttonholes. lie was a walking conservatory and hot house, though he could not be called a green house. His white hairs, too nearly resembled dead leaves. his daughter and her husband made an effort to get his property taken out of his hands, but fail ed to establish a case of insanity. This angered him, and when it was over, lie ordered his covetous children to leave his house entirely,and they went sorrowing away. The old man then turned all the property he paosseesed into money and disappeared from New York. The beau tifnl girl ilmumparegi at. theme time. She had made her fortune. lit he old man and his Italian charmer went by sea to Savannah, Georgia, where they were duly and properly married. David Simmons on the same day exe cuted an instrument whereby all his mon ey and bonds were left to his wife. in a few days he met. with an accident which injured his spinal cord, and he laid down and died. Nothing was heard in New York of the fate of Simmons for six months, and, in the meantime the girl had left the country, and was wifely back is her own sunny land. The only thing left to tell of David Simmons was an emp ty trunk. which was found in a New Or leans hotel. bins Posselli had been heard from. She had been seen in Home, by one who, like old Simmons, had been infatuated with the bare legged flower girl of New York. It was at the carnival last spring. During the last days of this fantastic saturnalia, he saw a gorgeously apparelled woman in an elegant open carriage, who attracted universal attention, and commanded the plaudits of the throng that beset her car riage. It was Lina Posen Her form was nearly lost amid the banks of roses and exquisite flowers that surrounded her Her lace was wreathed in smiles as she pelted with sugar plums the occupants of the carriage next in front or next behind her iu the procession. Her eyes danced and laughed and sparkled like light in water. Her whole being was in a condition of bewitching madness and tumultous mer riment—the very intoxication of ecstatic enjoyment. She had made her fortune. The fairy dream of her childhood was realized. She is nineteen, and rich and beautiful, and a native of Italy. A for tune for a prince—perhaps a future queen of the opera. What connection has Lima Poselli hencefo:th with the pretty flower girl of New York, or the old empty trunk in New Orleans ? A New Idea. —o— A NE, ordeal of the ball room is pre scribed by society in Montalluyah, where the choice of partners is made to depend on the superior beauty of the fobt, as de cided by an arbiter, chosen by the com pany, and, of course, famous for his taste and knowledge of the beautiful. While the arbiter pursues his duties ,the ladies are concealed behind a screen, which is, however, open sufficiehtly at the bottom to disclose the foot. She to whom the palm is awarded has the first choice of a partner and the others follow in succession in the order in whioh thq have been ranked. This diversion, though exciting great interest, is not so happy as the choice by hand. The ladies whose feet are placed in the lower rank often think themselves aggrleveitand are slight ly jealous of their rivals; for in spite of the efficacy of the laws, it is altogether impossible not to feel compassion for the ladies who see the plan given to others by ono recognized as an honest and able judge, a man who. taste is known to be irreproachable. When the hand and foot of a yonne lay are inclined to coarseness while at the same time her talents and goodness entitle her to a superior posi tion, the fingers or toes, and afterwards the hand WI foot themselves, are bound np fora ceiain number of boars each day. A Bar FaAsoisco ittry , coined the phrase "delneional insanity: . Terms{ .rurvairr. IMAM. CAL The Now Bonnet. —o— A foolish IlUle maiden bought a Toolish littlo bonnet, With a ribbon, and a feather, and a bit of Lace upon it, And that the other maideas of the village might all know it, Eihe thought she'd go to meeting the nest Sun. day just to show But though the little bonnet was scarce larger than a dime. The getting of it settled proved to boa work of time; 8o when 'urea fairly tied, all the bashed atopp their ringing. And when she came to meeting, sons enough the folks were singing. So this foolish little maiden stood and waited et the door, And she • shook her ruffles out behind, and smoothed them down betore. "Uallelniab r tang the choir above her head— " Hardly knew you I hardly know you r were the words she thought they satoi. This made Out little maiden feel so fey, very cross, That she gave her little mouth a twist, her little head a toss, For she thought the very hymn they rang was all about her bonnet. With the ribbon, and the feather, and the bit of lace titan IL And she would not unit to listen to the Lerman or the prayer, But pattered dOwn the silent street, and hurried up the stair, Till she reached her little bureau, and In a bandbox on it Ilad hidden safe from critic's eTe her foolish lit tle bonnet Which proves my little maidens, that each of you will [lnd, IA every tiablutth service but en echo of your mind : And that the little head that's Oiled with silly little airs, Will never get a blessing from sermons or from prayers. - . 41110 A New Way toVanoke. —a—. Colonel Ira Tripp is n large land and coal owner at Scranton, Pa. At present he is stopping at the Merchants' hotel in this city. Ten years ago he was, next to Grant, the mu- t inveterate emokist in the known world. His daily average wag bat little less than fifty cigars Any constitu tion save that of the United States must have succumbed to such persistent and oft repeated att telt! upon it; and nt the same time Colonel Tripp s began to maul. fest a slight flavor of decay. His physi clans called halt, as the coal trade was threatened with the loss of an upright member. Colonel Tripp did' halt. With the memory of his first half Spanish? the glory of later cheroots, and the intoxicat ing bliss of his last royal Havana cluster ing around him, he consented to go into a sort of involuntary exile from what was a little dearer than either horse or dog. He did this more than reluctantly. - In deed, he tried all kinds of methods to hold on to n the pleasure and avoid the pain, but. bIS yslelann vit./uld admit of no compromise. To chew was as bad as to smoke, to snuff worse than either. Bnt the Colonel was not to be beaten. He. has one of the most beautiful and ca pacious Roman noses to be seen to-day upon Broadway or Chatham street. Tbes nose looks dowinipon the lung, full, gray, flowing, flocks beard as the peak of Tenerile looks down upon tl..ts sea. He haunted the places where the best cigars were smoked, and sniffed their perfumes as angels do the roses of Paradise—at first at a distance, and then drawing nearer as the delicate sense required more. He would place himself in front of sortie one aoout his size, and beg the smoker to exhale his smoke full iu the colonels face. His Roman nose did its full duty, but too often the smoke was cold and robbed of half its strength before it reached him. His friends saw his trouble and sym pathized with him. By a secret conven tion they all rgreed that whoever had most leisure at any time would direct his superfluous smoke straight to the Roman nose ; and this is the only way in which the Colonel has smoked since 1863. He was riding on the froqplat form of a Broadway car yesterday af ternoon in company with a friend known as Double Decker. Mr. Decker wastlow iug the smoke of his ciger lost where, it. would do the most good. the ladies in the car became indignant at what appear ed so indecorous a proceeding, and one motherly old body came forward and pulling the younger man dy the coat told him he should be ashamed of himself for thus insulting an old gentleman. Decker laughed and thee* his cigar away. He and the Colenel entered the ear and agreed in explaining tlurperformance to alloccu , %apts.—A: r. Sun. SINGULAR SOIINADULINTIC FEAT.--The Troy Times reports a curious caso of som nambulism which occurred in that city a few nights since. A young lady, _from a neighboring State., who is visiting friends in that city attended a private social gathering on the evening in ques tion, and being an excellent vocalist she was frequently called upon to sing for the company. So incessant were the de mands of her auditors, that in the effort to gratify them, she became quite ex hausted. The company broke up about 1 o'clock, and at 2 o'clock the young lady retired. In about an hour the most delicious strains of music were heard proceeding from her room. They con tinued so long that one of the members of the family arose and upon entering the apartment of the young lady, found her asleep and singing with all her power. She tried to awake her, but the effort was nuvailitig. She continued to sing, going from one song to another, for upwarild of an hour, when nature seemed to be . ex hausted, and the fair and musical somna mbulist sank into a real sleep. Upon awaking the next morning she know I nothing of the occurrences, and could scarcely believe that. she had been the unwitting source of so much enjoyment and surprleo to those who heard her. A NUMBER of San Francisco specula. tors have bought the islands of Sam, Upolo, Ravi!, and Tutulia in the Pacific. Ocean. These islands arc very productive in sugar, coffee, tobacco, indigo arrow. root and othei tropical riches, incinding a good quality of cotton. A petition has been gotten rip &thing for the annexation of the islande to the trnited Stater. NITMBER )7,, Vartellvi ——o— ILurroxsreleots compulsory education; GBAlrefl incessant 'cigar smoking will enable him to "atnmp" the wbolacountry. WHEx re a ship like o book r Merl ft is outward bound, of course. • • ;:r Viikcw did Ruth treat Boaz roughly ? When slut pulled his earl and trlicr upoii his corn. ' • "Do you like codfish balls, Mr.' Wig ging r Mfr. Wiggit!g, hesitatingly,“lepd ly don't know, nom; I dott't recollect, having attended one." REPENTANONAII Old age le frlng to God the orange of life after the devil has squeezed it and taken its deliciolnljuique. CALLENI . rwrsierctr. stopped at tha shop of a country aposhecary arid Inquired for a pharmacopoeia. "Sir," slid the spothe. airy, "I know of no such farmer Heinz about these parts EprrePn on a deceased IcicomotIO: Coltish:ins fosr orDre aba All prattling lola oats Loog dna she rattail, at last ea Iturtak Arld rsonstord the egg:rusks* train. . A TIN wedding was lately obserted'af. ter a rather unusual manner. The wily eloped with a young fellow, taking with her all the "tin" she had saved to ten years. The discovery of her absence &or% ed the festivities. Two New England women are making money as inventors, with delightful' ta• pidity. One invented a machine for making paper bags with a satchel boll tom has refused $50,000 for iberpatentr— The other has n pater.t for a, 'aelf-triOen ing button, which needs no tntton bola "Taaries our grandmotherf rap sea temponry, "a striking instance Whf,vor men should vote. 'She's paid (saes on I dog for the last ten years, and %rum de. clarea she won't stud it any. longer—+ she'll either rote or ki.l the doggy'.,: A Guava-6pm: in o. cemeterp near Springfield, bears the renewing esti& :1 They aunt into the wmid t) lee • A sample of our mimeo They turned their little beide adds' Disgusted at the eight sad died. A CELEBRATED actress, whose fresh smile and silvery voice favored. the ditce___ tion, always called herself "sweet sixteoW." She stated her age at sixteen in court si a witness. Her son was directly after: ward called up, and asked howold:be "IA "Six months older than mother,".wasthi hone.st reply. A onze;i county lad came rushing into the house of a neighbor and aid "Mammy sent me to berry a head of cab-. bage, and a little piece of triettk•to boil with it; wants t 6 hoiroW a rag to patch the seat of Bill's breeches; we - are pith' to have a mighty cuttin' and slashin' too vat butusu to-day; gout' to snake 4 1ill new coat onen dad'e old un, and ad s new an mien the old blanket" MassscuusErra Millerites haviag.ap• pointed the end of the world for Ant Saturday, Gilmore is provoked that he: was not informed of it in time to get np' one more jubilee and engage the Angel Gabriel to perferm his horn solo before • Boston Audianee, WATEIt core for rate is recommended' by a Vermont farmer who reeentlicanght. forty-two of them in of e night by exchanr, tug a barrel of oats which they were Ile., costomed to visit, for a barrel partly fill- . ed with water covered with chaff: • The victims unconsciously plunged in,. and were so utterly overcome by astonishment as to be rendered incapable of makirigart effort to rave themselves from 'a water= grave. A vorav lady teacher in a Sunday School caught a boy smiling last Sunday. Said she: "What aro you atoning at,' Johnny ?" "Nothing, mom," was the an sWer. "1 know better," said the teacher severely. "Now tell me what .it was P — l, Johnny looked frightened as he stuteriup i ly said, "I • I s-see your n-newspaper s-sticking out, mum." The tend:let pal down suddenly and arranged things. THE last matrimonial freak was at Springfield, Mass. A leader in the ton , of that tonuish city took a fancy to be married in the same building in which her mother's bridal occurred—the old, Unita:ian Church. Bnt the church heti been concerted into a furniture-mentifac-' tory, and so it became necessary to ar, range the sofas and chairs, and the wed,, ding was held iu the urniture ware room. TLIEBE was an oceurenee recently iat the Russian town of Alerandroff that has decidedly an American tinyor„, One Iranboff had fallen paasionately in lore with a young lady named Zonhoff, but his paqou was not reciprocated. One evening he attended. a ball, where she was also pres t .iit, and as her partner was leading her, past hint to take their plate in a quadrille, he fired his revolver at her and instantly shot himself. The Owns lady was nut so seriously wounded: but. that she ran into another.rooto, when he, arising Irvin the floor with great difficulty * followed her and shot tier through' this heart. Tun Russian journals give glowing , accounts of the fa-ewall benefit of Miss Niluon at St. Petersbnrg on the Evlth-15: di, Russian time--of Febeery. She - appeared as lifargherita in ''Fatist"s list of the splendid - gifts presented to MINI Nilsson may be of interest. These gifts were a paw of earrings, emeralds surround: ed with diamonds, valued at 12,000francal a crown of laurel leaves, in pure golds valued at 16,090 franos;a nutriber of bouquets, among them one with a gold ribbon on which were engraved tho words "Return soon," and another one with s silver ribbon on which the words "Rem: ember" was enamelled la bins; and I lastly, during the last inter-act a garland of dowers was dlivered to her on the stage, attached to which was an aadiesit signed-by more than a thousand persons of the highest classes. of society. Thin adroit was in a frame of gold with: dia,: mond% Ahree of which hang the shape 'of eardrops front the .. words "Adieu" Written* phiret W:l3