THE DEMOCRAT P.lThiLtearbp Erma WEDIEgDAY MORNIXO AT Morrows, EtasquERANNA Co., PA., DS L B. HAWLEY & CO. Al rye? annum in adrabco. at IWO at tbo eat of Tear RATES Or ADVERTINNO (Threo fourth. Inch of .pace, or less, Make a [(para.) One square, 8 weeke or less, $1.00; I month $1.35; 8 months $1.50; 0 months $4.50 ; 1 year, $13.00. Quarterly, half-yearly and yearly adver tisements inserted at a liberal reduction on too above rates. When sent without any length of time spialfled for publication they will be eon filmed until ordered out and charged according li• Auditor's Notices. $2.50; Dvecutor's and Ad ministrators' Notices, $3.00. All communica tions of limited or individual interest, 10 cents per line. Obituary Notices, 10 clans pet line.— Marriage and Death Notices free. TOD PRINTING executed neatly and promptly and at fair prices Deoda, brortgages, Notes,;;Justices', Consta Was' School and other blanks for sato. iotelinntouo. Book Agent Business. ——o— -erva IN • PCIILISIIER'S OFFICE'_O "Did yon want to see me ?" asked Mr. Button, a prominent publisher, of a deso late, long, rusty man. "Yes," replied he in a dejected tone. Wal ?" barked Button, inquiringly and d'ilkiprovingly in a single loud harsh syl• lable,—"llere I be." "lib-uh-uh-um," began the long man, with a long cough, apparently only a cough of habitual preferace; and he 'ad• ded, with a spiritless manner. "I was stopping in aro city for a few days, and nut having an occupation just at present —Lam a member of the ministerial pro fession, sir—but not being engaged just now, I thought I would confer with yon on the subject of undertaking to engage in the sale of some of your publications." Button moved impatiently in his chair. "No, use , use. You can't sell my books." The long man, as if unaccustomed to such direct and uncompromising speech, started perceptibly, and looked aghast for moment, as if some one had "spatted" him in the face with a cold wet hand. "Uh-uh-uh-uh-nm," ho began ; "I trust, sir, that the fact of my teing a minister of the gospel!"— Not the least in the world," interrupted Button—"Nothin' of the kind. You hain't got the root o' the matter in ye— that's the Ion" and the short on't. You can't sell books. You can't sell nothin'. I haint no use for ye. A hundred sech fellers as on.ycouldn't sell a baby a tract. Its firm I want. Piety` ain't no count in the subscription book business. Nor ministers neither; only men. I'd like to e , ,mmOate ye, my friend, but tain' no kin.? rise. Good mornin.' rut very busy. John!" he shouted again to h's el, rit, 'who instau tbr appcased—'l3llv this gentleman out." And without paying the to ist attention to the confounded long man, who coughed again in full, and would have begun another circumlocution, 3.1 r. Button made a sudden halt face, and addressed n:iother applicant for empkyment: "Now, Mr. Jacox, your turn. Bo you want to get some territory to sell my hist'ry o, the Bible r "Yes," said Jacor, and he wore a look that testi/find to an uncomfortable sensation in view of the dismissal of the poor broken-down clergyman, who had as it were gradually been extracted from the room in a state of astonished hut feeble in d ignation. "Hump!" snuffed the publisher, vigor ously. "That chap would have sot there'n talked all day long 'f Pd a let him. No wonder be haiu't got no engagement. What's he good for, l'd like to know." lie may be wrath sornethin p preachin, for what I know, where they only want a kind o' nose to get them asleep, but I don't believe he can save no soles. Forty seen preachers couldn't convert a rat, let alone a sinner in britches! All the used up ministers in the world, I believe, think they can make their everlastin fortins ;ellln books. They're the wust and meanest failures on urn' aIL I've lost money enough and tune enough with dm, I tell 'e, before this. I shuck urn off quink now," , "Now, Mr. Jacox, do yoti know how to sell a customer a book??' "Why," said Ja2OS, greatly impressed 1.,y the intense manner and weighty mat , er of Mr. Burton's address, "Why, I've 'wen in the habit of thinking so ; and I% e t)1,1 a good many books; but 11l say this Mr. Button—that I'm ready to take your directions?' "Now ye talk like a man o'sense," said Button. "Here,"— and taking up a copy of the History of the Bible, he held it out to Mr. Jacox. Jacox looked puzzled. "I mean it- I mean exactly that.- 11 me that book. I don't want it.— - J—n a book agent anyhow Cussed nartical villains!" Jacob, without a word, took the vol and rose from his chair. But on .eized a pen, turned to the table, and be ..;au to write assiduously. "Mr. Button,l believe ?" said Jaeox, in a prompt and sharp but good nulured voice. Button just glanced up and then down egain, saying, gruffly, "Yea. What do 3 - ,u want ?" Tacos laid the book on the table, open to the title page. "There, Mr. Button. You're a man of a family. That book will do more to keep your children honest and safe in their morals and their practice than all tie Sunday schools in York state. You're gc,t to own it." "Getout with your book!" exclaimed Button, slapping down the cover of the 1!Qok and gime it a elide so angry and vicious tlukt it new quite over the edge of the table. Jacox caught it neatly in the air, laid it right back where it was before, open just the same, anti wentwent strught on xvi txnetly the same tone, barely rplcipg semicolon state interruption. "—As was saying; now for instance" tour daughter hears somebody my the Bible's a humbug; shea a young innot. npoent girl and don't know good end s;Til. Or 7enr Ign o and be thiulut It's smart to be an independent thinker.— But when they come home and ask you .or their mother about it, you just look up the points in this book and you set'em all right, and save a fine young fellow that you've set your heart on, from go ing head first into infidelity; and all the wickedness that generally goes along with it." "You see," broke off Jacox all of a staldeti, "this is no fair shakes. I haven't studied, up the book. I don't know any thing about it at all. I can't sell a book that I don't understand. Neither could you • nor anybody . I can't preach at raiom." "You've done very well, Mr. Jacox," said Button with a smile, "that's jest what I was a watin' to hear ye say. I was a lookin' to see bow long you could ran your mill without any grist You're the man I want, I guet , s. Yon ain't afraid, and you don't git upsot, and you don't lose your temper. And if you'd had the fax about that book well in your mind, how long would you have hung on to me?" A full look of ball dog tenacity set tled in the queer light blue eyes of the little man as he answered with hia teeth set together: , "Till I had your' name down for one or more copies, unless I diedfirst." "WM," said Mr. Button ; "that's ex tremely satisfactory ; now I must go ; eau you come in here to-morrow morning at nine exactly ?" Jacox eaid he could. "Then I'll make an arrangement with ye that'll suit ye, I want to give ye some particklers about sellin too, that'll be of service to ye. And see here ;—I wish you'd master this here"—he took a print ed thing like a sert of hand-bill or broad sheet off the table and gave it to him— "and see how full an account on't you can give me in the mornin.' Good day. Mr. Jacox." And that is the way hook agents are hired. Summer Diet for Infants. _o__ In response to a resolution recently adopted by the New York Public _Health Association, Dr. A. Jacoby submitted the following schedule of directions concern ing infantile diet in Summer. The phy sicians present agree unanimously that if printed copies of the schedule were dis tributed much good would result fiom it. Over-feeding does more harm than anything else; nurse a baby of a month old or two every two or three hours; nurse a baby of six'montha and over, five times in twenty-four and no niore. When a baby gets thirsty in the mean time, give it a drink of water or barley water. In very hot weather, mix a tea spoonful of whisky with a tumbler 'of water. (no sugar.) Boil a teaspoonful of powdered barley (grind it on-the coffee-grinder) and a gill of water with salt for fifteen minutes.— Strain it and mix it with half as much boiled milk and a piece of loaf-sugar.— Give it, lukewarm, through a nursing bottle. Keep the bottle and mouthpiece in wn-- ter when not in use. Give babies of five or six months half barley water and half boiled milk, with salt and loaf-sugar. Give older babies more milk in propore tion. When babies are very costive, take oat meal instead of barley,but be sure to cook and Rtrain IL When your breast milk is half enough for the infant. alternate with bread and food. In hot Summer weather, dip a small piece of litmus paper into the food before feeding. If the bine paper turns red, add a pinch of baking sod to the food. Babies of six months may have beef tea or beef soup once a day by itself or mixed with other food. Babies of ten or twelve months may have a crust of bread and a piece of rare beefstake to suck. No child under.two years ought to eat from your table. The Summer complaint comes from over-feeding and hot and tool air. Keep doors and windows open. Wash your children with cold water at least twice a day. Ten times is not too many in the hot season. When babies throw off and purge give them nothing to eat for four to six hours, but all the cold air you can. *After that, you may give h few drops of whisky in a teaspoonful of ice water every five or ten minutes, but no more until the doctor comes. When there is vomiting and purging give no milk. Give no laudanum, no paregoric, no soothing syrup, no teas. Una!red Rooms ——o— A writer in the Country Gentlemen says: "I pass some houses id every town whose windows might as well be sealed in with the walls for any purpose they have but to let in the light. They are never opened, summer or winter. In winter it is cold ; in the summer the flies stray in, or, if they are , netted, the dust sifts through the nets. Now, I can tell a person who inhabits such chambers when I pass him in the street—there is such a smell about his clothing. I always wish for a sniff of cologne or hartshom, or burnt feathers, or something of the sort, to "take the taste out." A house that is never aired has every nook and corner filled with stale oders of Cooked meals, boiled vegetables, especially cab bage and onions, which, as the weeks go by, literalfy reek in their. hiding places. Who has not wished sometimes to hang a new servant's clothing out of doors some •frosty night until it should be throughly aired? But I have seen the fine ladies come sweeping into church with their velvets and silks, when said velvets and silks gave unmistakable evidence of baring been housed in just such shut-up chambers. Oh, what a tale that odor of pork and cabbage tells about the lady's style of housekeeping I The very garments of the children tell the tome story of un cleanliness, It is bad to have unwashed clothes, but there may be an excuse for it. But what excuse can there be for unwired ones, when air is so cheap and free ?There is death in atieh unairedchambent. 'Better a swarm of flies or a cloud of dust ; better frost and snow in a room than. these in tolerable smells. Dear girls, the Oretthing in thomorning, when you are ready to go down stairs, throw- open your Windows, take apart theclothingof your bees, and let the air blots through it As -bArd As it will. Thew : iaetdth and wealth in such spoiler. It helps to keep away, the dec• tors with long bills, It .lacips to -make your eyes sparkle and to make your cheeks glow, and to make °theta love your presence.. Okla who live in those close, shut up rooms can onjy be to/nreted at the best In any dick;" • farm and tirtoidc. Bantling out of Timothy. From an address delivered before the New York State Agricultural Society, by Hon. J. Stanton Gould, we make the fol lowing extract on the subject of running out of timothy as a hay crop: "One of the causes of its running out is not generally understood by farmers, and should be clearly stated here. Tim othy is found with two kinds of roots; sometimes they are fibrous; in other eas es they are bulbous. Many authors have considered that these two kinds are two different species, but as there seems to be no other perceptible difference the dis tinction of species has not generally been noticed by botanists. In the bulbous va riety the plant renews itself by an annual formation of bulbs, or perhaps, it would be more correct to say of tubers, in which the vitality of the plant is collected dur ing the winter. From these bulbs proceed the stalk, leaves and roots. Hence, when the former perish, the latter cannot be looked for. These like all other tubers, receive their growth and nourishment not directly from the roots,,bnt some matters which have been elaborated in the leaves, are returned to and stored up in its reces ses. The completion of their nutriment is indicated by the drying up of the calm in the neighborhood the first and second joints. If the stem is cat before this yel low spot appears the tuber is immature, and the plant will make an effort to repair the injury by sending out lateral tubers, but unless the plant is unusually vigor ous, these shoots will be feeble, and the stems springing from theni sicken. Eith er the cold of winter or the heat of sum mer next ensuing will be almost sure to kill them. When the tubers are allowed to come to maturity, and one of the low er joints is allowed to remain in contact with it, they will remain fresh and vital during its winter months, but if the green portion is served near the bulb atany sea son of the year, root will perish. Thou sands of dollars are lost annually by neg lecting, this simple principle. Either the grass is shaved by the scythe down to the bulb, or cattle are allowed to run in the meadows until late in the autumn, and thus destroy the timothy. The timothy plants, having fibrous roots, will bear mere severe cropping and close cutting, but are more likely to be frozen out dur ing the winter. Nothing can sho! more clearly the evils arising from our ignor auce of the habits of the grasses than this persistent sacrifice of our most valuable species of grass." Corn In 111111 r and Drilla --o At the Michigan Agrienitural College, in 1868, two plots of Land were set apart, substantially equal in character of soil. each measuring forty-eight rods in width.' The ground was ploughed flay 5, and manure was spread evenly and worked In by cultivator and harrow. Yellow Den corn was planted May 31, in rows fit r feet apart ; one of the plots being plan', d in hills, the other in (bills. The plots were cultivated and hoed June 15, and again July 7; the plants being thinned so as to leave the same 'limber of stan= on each plot, inclnding the eq• at dtstri bution of plants throughoutthesubdiiis ion of the plots. As near as p. ssible each of the two plots received the same labor and cultivation. The stalks were cut September 17, and stacked rn grod order: three weeks afterward the corn ens husk ed and weighed. The stalks were then again carefully stacked, and hauled and weighed, in good condition. October 12. The corn on the portion panted in hills was better in quality than on that planted in drills. But the drilled portion produc ed seventy-four and one-sixth bushels of shelled corn, and three tons of stalks to the acre, against sixty-five and one-half bushels of shelled corn, and two and two thirds tons of stalks per acre produced by the portion in hills.—Rural World. Limn Benne _o_ For the past ten years we have raisrd them in great abuudauee—in fact, have cooked none other for d.-y. The first veer or so we font.d difficulty in ripenininhem as we picked for the table as test as they were ready. There are two points, if oh. served, which will ensure success, The first is to pinch off the top of each vine when they have reached the top of the stake, say 6 ieet,and the second is careful ly to save the earliest pod for seed. Many writers say that they must be planted eye down, etc. We never practice it; we put the ground in nice order, when it is warm enough, and plant as any other beans,fonr to a bill, and they generally all come. By saving the earliest for seed, we have them nice for the table three weeks earlier than as usual. Svrarmlng Bees _o__ A bee-keeper gives the following plan to prevent a swarm of bees from getting far away from the hive, with the state ment that after ten years experience he has never known it to fail once : As soon as they show the first 'symtoms of swarm ing, stop up most of the outlets of the hive so us to force them to be a considera bie time coming out. The swarm being made up in part of young bees, many of whom cannot fly well, and as nothing can be done by the swarm until all are out, they fly aboutin the air; by prolonging then:exit the feeble ones become tired, and finding their plans frustrated, they alight to re-arranged their journey. If they can leave the old hive all at once, they care very little about alighting. 40....-- 7 --.- Iteath to the Cortfrub. The Germantown Telegraph calls atten'- tion to whet it says is an effectual remedy for the corn grub or out worm. Mix one part of common salt with three parts of gypsum or plaster, and apply a table spoonful around each hill when the plants first appear. Be careful not to place it in contact with the Plants, is it may destroy them. This method of protecting young plants flom the cut-worm was praotioed by the late Isaac Newton, of Delaware County, with perfect success, MANuniso eon Cons.—A corn plan ter makes a very true remark when be says that "Nature is a great chemist, us ing up materials, but not a creator, mak ing something oat of nothing. Whatew ever dressing is applied• merely in the bill or upon the hill, for effect, depends upon the general condition of the soil outside of the hills. Good ground, in any season, or plenty of dressing upon it, is necessary to a large crop."—American Farmer. WOOD mold and leaves, composted in a beaPt-r*CB ap exctilePt fertilizer, Hardware. THIS WAY, GENTLEMEN! MlCairpcocori HORSE HAY FORKS ! A, .1. NELLISI PATENT IMPEOVED Twcnty•Two &sea Fair Preramma Awarded Thu Fork in Flßoan Idoutba—'367 and MU. NEWS'S GRAPPLE PULLY, An Implement that Frery Fanner, Carpenter, Mason and Painter Should Have. Rocolviag HORSE RAKES hand lintcn, Scythe.. Snath•, Grain Credlcs leen, kA cher Etrat.d Axice, M .• Spring, Carriage llotu. Ct ^ o Bart, (Steel and Iron.) "Atrcaraitcor CI fCi F 3`. .EI 33 I. 431 , T 8 That o.o.raor Over an A ARM ViIITSTLE 1 when the Coffee la Ready (or the Ty or. Tin , ((N6 and you toil flud tho Cog o A Itropo Right! Airs, (hind :tones, B limps otts Picks, Lock, !inn,. Filen, linohn, Drab lielsea, SO, th Stones, 1-1, - hes, Paints, 011... Varnlnh, Stove,, Tin-'. ere, Lampe, Sc 3lontrone, July 8, IST At. BOLD 6 CORWIN IlyisiT BROTHERS, VICRANTON, YA Wholepnle & Retail Dealers In HARDWARE, IRON, STEEL, NAILS, SPIKES, SHOVELS, TJILDER'S HARDWARE, MINE RAIL, COUNTERSUNK A , T RAIL SPIKE.. RAILROAD & sUPPLIIts. CARRIAGE SPRINGS, AXLES, SKEINS AN! BOXES. BOLTS, NUTS and WASHERS!. PLATED BANDS. MALLEABLE IRONS, RUBS, SPOKES, FELLOES. SEAT SPINDLES. BOWS, ANVILS, VICES, STOCKS and DIES. BELLOWS HAMMERS, SLEDGES. FILES, dc. CIRCULAR AND MILL SAWS, 11FLTING. PACKING TACKLE BLOCKS, PLASTER PARIS CEMENT. II Al it d GRINDSTONES. FRENCH WINDOW GLA SS. L EA TB ERS FINDINGS FADUI.tNK'S SCALES. tkray.tno, March SI. 11(5. Groceries D OWN TOWN N.EWS MINER AND -COATS, Main Street. 5 doore below Co) d', Corner. Montrose FLOUR, GROCERIES, AND PROVISIONS We are constantly ree tylnri pet 110 v have nnbfil afresh stock of Goods In ourlh c :which we Is - 1119cl CHEAP! CHFAI ! CHEAP for cash .or excha •go orprodare GOOD TEAS', OOFFRE, SUGAR, MOLASSES, SPICES, PORE", FIST!, LARD, HAMS, DRIED FRUITS, CLOr ER & TIMOTHY SEED, - tre. We to orefltted and mad., addition, toot,' t'toeh Pang al d are now ready to forward Butter to the her commis* onhotmer In New York.l rec. of charge, ant met, I emlad rencement I , 01 , 011.1011,...ntr Call and ~, arnloronr •Itork hefor, poreharlngelo whcro,andeonvlncryournelver o Rho aCOD QUALITY R LOW PRICES SIMEE2 NEW GOODS. The anderglened having refitted. refernlshed and 11 n•ntnclyd the shoe. formerly occupied by R. Rrn von. Jr.. at Lawsrille reran.. are new prepared to Imo WI the people with an desirable satiety of DRY GOODS! GROCERIES 1 1 BOOTS & SHOES ! HARDWARE!! CROCKERY! cfr , cfr A. tan be found elaca - bore, and at as Peakable Prieto O.l#Z. Crane. Lawaritte Center. Pa.. March 24. ISTa. Furniture and Undertaking. m' - cr za. INT I rit" 1:7 la. 3S I AT WILLIAM SMITH'S Extensive Furniture Wareronm you will find the largest stack of FIRST CLASS AND COMMON FURNITURE' To be found in this section of the country, of btu own mennfacture, and at prices that cannot fail to give satin• faction. lie makes the very best EXTENSION TABLES In the Country, and WARRANTS them. UPHOLSTERY WORK or all kinds done to the neosat =noes. 81'ILING $3 MI 13 /9 OF VARIOUS KINDS. PURE NO.I MA'rRASSES, COMMON MATRASSES. UNDERTAKING The subscriber will hereafter make tw. ",adermaina a 117417.,PLehims abont'ci MET!! ihr 111 4 111 needing his services mu to attended to promptlytmw satisfactory charges. WE. W. RUTH & 60E, Montrose. Pa— Jan. 11 1 .1871—n05---M. RECHMOW & DROTEIRE. General Undertaken, APO DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF COF. FINS, CASKETS, ETC,, cs.mexi.dmr 33rifN3:). W I OZNIcL:" ALL OlingttS 19/03IPTIX ATTENDBD V, nur.uociac lirto April .41,1873,—tr, SCRANTON SRNS BM, 120 Wyoming Avenue, RECEIVES MONEY ON DEPOSIT FROM COMPANIES AND INDIVID UALS, ANI) RETURNS TIE SAME ON. DEM AND WITHOUT PREVI OUS NOTICE, ALLOWING INTER EST AT SIX PER CENT. PER AN NUM, PAYABLE HALF YEARLY, ON THE FIRST' DAYS OF JANU ARY AND JULY. A SAFE AND RE LIABLE PLACE OF DEPOSIT FOR LABORING MEN, MINERS, ME CHANICS, AND MACHINISTS, AND FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN AS WELL. MONEY DEPOSITED ON OR BEFORE THE TENTH WILL DRAW INTEREST. FROM THE FIRST DAY OF TILE MONTH. THIS IS IN ALL RESPECTS A HOME IN STITUTION, ANI) ONE WHICH IS NOW RECEIVING THE SAVED EARNINGS OF THOUSANDS UPON THOUSANDS OF SCRANTON MIN ERS AND MECHANICS. DIRECTOES : JAMES BLAIR, SANFORD GRANT, GEORGE FISH ER, JAS. S. SLOCUM, J. IL SUTI'HIN, C. P. mArruEws, DANIEL HOW ELL, A. E. HUNT, T. F. HUNT; JAMES BLAIR. PRESIDENT ; 0. C. MOORE, CASHIER. OPEN DAILY FROM NINE A. M. UNTIL FOUR I'. M., AND ON WED NESDAY AND SATURDAY EVE NINGS UNTIL-EIGHT O'CLOCK. Feb. 12, 1813.—1 y LEHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD. 1-1 On and niter June 10. IV:Ara:Ds on Ibe Lobig Valley Railroad will run as follows: SOUTH. NORTII. Yo, :3. !I. 7. . . . . 243 1141 910 F.lmlra. ... 12 43 613 943 810 1:81 041 Waverly..... 12 00• 3'15 9(11 335 137 10 00 01.11044. .... 11414 021 030 420 905 10 10 ...Touarda. 1103 457 810 2.1 11 311 Wynln.fog ...101 715 545 303 11 30 . 94: 403 691 614 11 IS._ illayhoppen .. 9 :5/ 8 :XI 6 25 12 ...1C Atchooparly,.... 9 13 6 1.3 603 350 11 11...Tunkhnuneck... 449 390 058 811( 441 150 I . l;ist3n 505 9111 4:41 62S 15 011 2IS 700 213 480 , T 311 435 . Mauch Chunk.. ... 11 45 115 N2B 550 .....k.llymorrn a. 10 45 I_lo 840 605 .... 10:71 12 it) 915 6 35.......E.a5t0u ...... 1005 11 35 10 f`A) 8 00....PbIlatlelph14 P3O 45 r..a. 010 New York , o 000 s. No. 3.2 lent VO TOwanclg at 7 10 a. F tn.; Athena. 7 50 p. ;t; Vi r o ' 37nl m t;t: r p i . " L " . fl .1 9 0 1 t U ' 41 0 5 m.: , Athems, at 6 p. m, arriving at Tjuranda at 716 p.m. Pramog Room Care attached to train. mooing through from Elmira to Philadelphia. It.. A. PACKER. Oupetiotend 'I 4 .A. FILIEtZIMM Ma 3EC COO' ES 1E - 01.1 . 0qTTE TIIE COINIT 11,1L,L, ...-3,.. .-.7.77,!"-.--:::-:'41:7-17-%,.1,---"---- :-.'-'-7.- , -: S - ,.-' , ,--'" .-...-. 1% 7- ::': ~', r!r, 7 7 .';. , =': . kr - 1 . 1 .1 . 4-:.: :::_;;;;:: 4 ;tf . ..P ,IA , - .--,--",...,............____.• • .-, : ~ - ...V P- 4. - ~- ' &VI : t 1-3...,,- ~ ' ~ ' ,Q4 , ~..475„---- -- n., ti!l,;- -, t ,. X 1 -Til i t - 7j : .. 7 ' afil„ thafdiliill3W.h.tao:ibx, . ~,5, -- , 4 . 6 .- - . ,_.l r L 4 -1,1,„ 4 40.41-Nt e e , 0 3kti - W i t. '..W. 'l - 5 , 4" , ': . ,e - ~,. 7,: t .., . zztia. - - - - , ..„r_ t r-,,,e,-:-- .-- . 4 , : , ' Jr MONTItuSE. PENN A. JOAN S. T.l Ft lIEL L, Proprietor Elzht Sts,• leave till, Hew, duly.terlleg nfrt the D. L..t W.. the Erie, and :he Le131,...-11 Valley 'RAI! Liele 1.-i1 Geo. P. Rowell EL Co. 12.0()()1 - 000 ACRES. - M'ra.z-zazuu. The cheapest Laud in Market for sale he the UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD CO. In the Great Plate Valley. 3,000,000 Acres la Central Nebraska Now for rack In tram: hirty noes and nowsrds nn five and ten years credit at 6 per cent. No advance In. trivet required Mild and healthful climate, fertile sell, an abundance of good water. TUE BEST MARE ET IN THE WEST! The creel minieg mr s ionn of Wyoming. Coliondo, Utah, and Si rads being rapplicd bl the farmers in the Platte Valley SOLDIERS ENTITLED TO A HOMF:STEAD OF ONE 111:NDIIEU AND SIXTY ACRES. TEIE BEST LOCATIONS FOR COLONIES. FREE BONES FOR ALL! Mtrt.ioaa en Aran" of choice Government Limits open for entry ne , :e the Homestead Law. near ilia Great italltond. woo good mnrkets and all robs enieixe• of an old sertlod country Free Parses to purchasers of Itsitr,md Land. Sectional Map•. shoo inn the Land, alre ucw 1,3.110. of Descriptive Pamphlet with new Maps Sla;lctl Free Everywhere. Addn,s, O. F. DAVIZ. Land Commissioner U. P. It. IL, Omaha, Neh, WE WANT AN AGENT In this township to ca nea rs fee the nen . salmi ble. and fast selling hoot., by Or. JOHN tOWAN, c ,§ricurr of a 41rtv Recommerded and endor-ed by prominent minl•ters. physicians. religions and secular papers No other book bk. It published: #49 per week guaranteed. Aidress, COWAN & CO., lbS Eighth SC, , 1 / 2 , 4 :110M EST/C 9 404 - + „,, , ,' ISTERWS.;,, IUEE2I3I! AGEN TM %V A PerLSO +1.11,1 for C:010°4110. DOMEr3TIC SEWING MACHINE: N. T lOU ASK ! ILL TELL !" (The New DEPARTURE in Books.) Agent. WaStod. Erelnalve territory Oven. The hook will sell lt.elt. Father, llmher, St,ter, Brother, Militate?, Merchant. Manutarturer. Farmer, Miner, Mariner and Yarnell all want It. Twerm in Mover r IT. Seed for Circular. CRESTERMAN & WEB STER. 50 North 6th St., Philadelphia, Pa. TELEGRAPHY. A DOCeSSATT part of every _pereon'e education In Ibis advanced age to the art of Telegraphing. Apply to the under: do for Eralth'a Manual of Telegraphy. the beet work pub/lA:he:Yon thle subject. Price 33 eta. Al e° for every deertYption of Teleyrtephte Inetrnments and Battery : Moto Chrom:c B. tery for Alcetroplatin:. L. 0. TILLOTSON It CO.. S Dey St_ New York. MONEY NAnalt I S o t, part lculan Free. S. A. drimcmaa 17 Hanover alost 'prOW ens DONE, or the keret Out.- 1.1 NlnAtarhe and NV bletera In 42 dnyn. Thla GREAT PECRET and lOU olnern. Gamhlern' Tricks, Cardiology, Ventrlloqulpm. all In tlio ORIGINAj, D "B . etecli . l E ro i Lidm ih ":4ll: l l l lr . d . far . 25 cents. Address PATENTS OBTAINED. No fee. oaks* vnecerafal. No fore In advance. No charge for prod:ninon , nearch. Setd for circulars.— CONNOLLY' 111111 S„ ICS S. Fourth St.. Philadelphia, Pa., and Gad Ninth St., Wavhlngton,l}. C. 5 tO $2O PKIIDAY AUeuts 'flute"- All cheers of reorklog pooPlo. e$ either coo. young or old. make more money at Work for no In their spare moments or all the time than et anything else. Particulars free. Addreea G. WEIN. SON, & CO., Portland Maine. CIf3TTYSfB'QRti• HATALTSINE WATER h the nearest approach to a rpeclUc ever discovered for Dyrpepsie. Neuralgia, ilheuroatisur, Gout, Gravel,. Dia. bete...Kidney, and Urinary Diereses nencrely. It te. noree cuorcular you cr to the pettilytie, It cuter Liver Complalot, Chronic Diurrtura, Viler,Conotipation, Asthma, Werth end Drenched*, Disease's of the Skin, General Debility amg.Nenrous Prunus:lon fronslllenmt and Physical Damages.. It Lathe Dregs et Antidote ever ollanovazd for emeshe Mainz or Drlnkjug. It cor rects the stomach, promotes Digeetion, end relieve* the Deed abnostlnstantly. ' - No household should be With ;RIM • For sale by alhiraggisp. ['yore history of the ripriogs, Al medical reperte DM Dower or the water ova dhalser, tar =frame Fums,. awl for leetimonials from dirtinguirtied men, mud Foe pemplt 13110THSHS, lieneriG Agents. eel Soh Pront Philailelpia, Pa, potrbprg Pp g Miscellaneous. N,. No SI. 2. P 6• THE "MONTROSE DEMOCRAT" THE ONLY DEMOCRATIC PAPER IN SUSQUEHANNA COUNTY JOB PRINTING. We have made tinge addition to our office in type and material of all kinds, which enable us to do all kinds of Joh Printing at the .L.nreat Prices. 13or Heads, Letter Heads, Statements, Printed Envelopes, Business Curtis, Visiting Curds Wedding Curds, Posters, Horse Bills, • Side Rills, Sli Bills, I'rrgrammes, Circulars, • Labels, Receipts; Notes, Tap. Paper Books, • Pampphl.ts, Catalogues, Certificates, Bonds, Deeds, We bnve on ban& NOTES, JUSTICES' AND CONSTABLES' BLANES Printed and for Will. Give na a call and try us, and you will bo con vinced that we do our work well, cheap, and with despatch. All orders, by mail or other ise, promptly attended to. The Demoorat is publiabed weekly In the borough of IIONTUOSE, SUSQL7HIIANNA C01713Y, PA., On a large folio sheet, and contains TWENTY.E/GIIT COLMLIS as READING KATIZR Its circulation is increasing every day. AS ALADVERTISING MEDIUM It offers rare facilities to AMR Jl4- CPA CTURERS, ~SALERS IN FARM EI(PLE.3 MY TS. JLCCIIIYER V', FERTILIZERS, di-, to reach a desirable class of customers. Advertisers will annuli their Interests by making its columns the medium through whirl to address the public, as We paper reaches sli classes of people— Farmers, 'fee/tanks, No-chants, Proles- :tonal Alen, etc., elc, Terms-02.00 Per Year in Advanee. UI commanicolonsabould be addrestett to 4st 13, - 11. HAWLEY &CO„ rususlins, isonsear.. 1,1 =III Dings and Medicines. _ iIEVV D!SCOVERY In almalead and Medical Science. Dr. GARVIEWS TARREMEDIES Cure Incipient Consumption. Dr. GAILVEPS TAR REMEDIES Curo Catarrh. Dr. GARVIN'S TAR REMEDIES Cure Asthma. Dr. GARVIN'S TAR REMEDIES • Curt Ileart Disease. Dr. GARVIN'S TAU REMEDIES Cure Diseases. Dr. CIA:IV2O'S TAU REITEDIES Retzutate the Liver. Dr. GARVIN'S TAR REMEDIES do thoStomachandßowels Dr. GARVIN'S TAR REMEDIES Care nil reniale Weaknesses. Dr. CAE:SEC'S REMEDIES ruri!y the Blood. Dr. G.1.117:7PS TAR REMEDIES ere Di ,ea:cs of the Throat. Dr. GAMIN'S TAR REMEDIES Cu:e Eroneraith. Dr. GA:IVIN'S TAU REMEDIES Cure "Rose Cold,noe'llayEeverg Dr. GARVIN'S TAR REMEDIES Cure Lung Diseases. Dr. GARVIN'S TAU REMEDIES Cure Conviipation. Dr. GARVIN'S TAR REMEDIES, Cure SW:it:beam. Dr. GAIIVEPSTAII REMEDIES Cure Ridney Diseases. Dr. GARVI VS TAR REMEDIES Prevent Cholera &Vellow Fever Dr. GARVIN'S TAR REMEDIES Prevent, Mai:trio:as Fevers. Dr. GARVIN'S TAU REMEDIES Remove Pain in the Breast. Dr. GARVIN'S TAR REMEDIES Remove Pain in the Side or Back. Dr. GARVIN'S TAT/ REMEDIES Are e Supe rior Tonic. Dr. GAr:VIN'S TAR REMEDIES Restore the Appetite. Dr. GARirax's Tut REMEDIES Came the Good t Is Digest. Dr. GARVIN'S TAR REMEDIES Rederethe Weak and Debilitated Dr. GARVIN'S TAR REMEDIES Giro Tone to Four System. L. EYDE & SOLE PaOPEIL4OBS. to 'Seventh Ay.... New ForL. :,____e"..l) YEARS AGO MEXICAN/ 11USTIO lAINANT Was lint knertra in Anisette. It• mashie are well ha •son throughout the habitable world. It hae the oldest and host sward of asp Liniment in the. world• the millions upon mill lons of bounce sold no complaint has ever reached as, and as a healing and PAIN SUBDUING LINIMENT; IT .11A8 'SO EQUAL n la rceerranended with nnbocmdal akataknoalla all cases or Cute. Brame. lawns. fkpra lilbannts. Eno. 11011 Se,llk,: a. Dam ild.llaa. Stillness of Ihs .lrents. 1 rourn Fret, kers. Lc.. ko.. among all =Zs. and for epralns. launder. Illngbono, Poll- ITdeters. ado. }Maeda, Erwin. Bprln g. balk Saddle. Collar and llunnsa Clads; also Illimaxes Of MO 40 and Lam in Horses, Mules 01 Cattle. ISTLE e. INEEfT ILL • L//0 Ciao ICenrattia. th ettm ail sat, Gout. Lento Net . . Balt Mom. Poisonot • 13 Ito. I...lternel Bono en itneele eduction*. Boro Niyplca ac., and mg Do justly termed the paean lox all XTEICNAL WOUNDS Itemember. this Liniment did not , spring up In n day cora pear, firodnetog von arOST •210111 4111 D ricycsonch taan RAIN= Br Aranßox. ASI3 iittilatoo3t LIN131:611. Eat webs.. the cap orients of over thirty years of trial. with the most subetental remise, swyby • gitattado of eitoestaa . 2 It Ma Liniment Is act ea reccaunendcd. Oa Money will be Refunded. • Do not be imposed open by ming my other Lini ment claiming the unto propertleit en remits. They are•diet and a triond. Lie rare and got no th ing Mat Man Ming L' nn, girlkmD Et ALL DIMOMIIII AIM COtlrAlt DM= A 9 21:19., eft. wad 61.00 par Mottlo. o r 012% Mrs or Earns, Erns. C. • „LYON' ZIZEV. CO. BROIL 'S- A YEW 4Xing4TrosB =SE , , . .. . Pure blo om Complexion. .tnoPusr7. ad Ito Oparstiall is sow and tut atom . IL away With the Ilaahai AV , ' rocs maid by t. Matto, sadl.cikasi,:mt. eshl Ele n l: 6 7 Mad= ait.3 Piarptotatbrpolllng dub istblpitbr spots. Ihivep am Tao, reiscblek taitu rg sad by its mtle but robabt ti Ogled e‘A lc% ' ErgOr I 1. BLOOXIIM ARMY.. - spa gab i zi= sa ." l4 " 7 - 8 ", I:42°S:
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers