- Wm, 0 Cruiser B. B. Hawley, E. B. HAWLEY & CO., PUBLISUERS Or TIM ENTRE DEMUR, AND GENERAL JOB PRINTERS, Montrose, Susquehanna County, Pa Omen—West 81de of Public Avenue Business Cards. J: ct A. 11. McCOLLUM, Arms"», at Law OM» over the Bank, Montrose Pe. Montrose, May 10, 1871. It D. W. SEARLE, TTOIITIET AT LAW, °Mee over the Store of 11. Dessaaer. I a the Brick Illoelt,Mottrole.fht. Nal 69 W. W. SMITH, BINET AND CRAM YANDPACTURKRB.—Poo of Meta street. Montroate. Pa. lang. 1. 18G9. H. C. SUTTON, A COTIONKEIt, and Isstramma Aar r, so astf Frlendrirllle, Pa. AMI ELT, UNITED STATES AUCTIONEER, ♦se. 1, 1169. Address, Brooklyn, Pa J. C. WHEATON', Cam, Fareseriaa Aso LAND SIDIYIIOII, P. 0, address, Franklin Forks, Susquehanna Co., Pa JOHN ORO VES, A s EtIONABLE TAILOR, Montrose, A. Shop over Cbandier's Store. AP orders filled in drateate cutting done on abort notice. and warranted to fit. A. 0. TVARREN, TTORNWIt AA' LAW. Bounty, Back PAY, Pension -and game: on Claims attended to. Office ..sr below Boyd's Store, Montroee-Pa. (Au. 1,'69 W. A. CROSSMON, ttorney at Lew, Office et the Cot Rolm% In the commissioner's OMlee. W. ♦. Cnossion. Montrose, Sent. SUL 1871.—tt. MeKENZIE, tf , CO. Dea:ert In Dry Goods, Clothing, Ladles and Misses fur tihnee. Also, agent. for the great American Tes and Coffee Company. [Montrose, July r, `:3,) LIB" OFFICE. f ITr9 b WATRON, Attorneys at Law, at tho old office et Bentley Se Pitch. Montroee, Pa. I. F. Frye.. Van.ll. '7LI V. R. WATSON. ABEL TURRELL, e der le Drags 31mile - ince, Chenackla Paints, 011 e, Dye studs, Teas, nplees, Fancy Goods, Jewelry P. lamery, Cc., Brick Block, Montrose, Pa. Established 1 4VI [Feb. 1, Dna. tirOVILL & DEII7TT. ABornoy. at tom and ~ tollcltor. In Bankruptcy. OITIrc tin. 49 Court Strout, uvvr City Nutlo.l Bank. 14. g. bAtuton, N. Y. WK. 11.8cortt.t., = E i MI DR W. L. RICHARD,9O,II,, CrITSICIAN a,SURGEON, tender, his proferelons scrrlce.to Oic citizens oniouttuse and vicinity.— ihne st bisr.eider ;a, ou Ota CUrUcr MIMI of Sayrt Ito, Pound, [Ana. 1. 1569. CHA RISS STODD A RD lan'er to Boots nod Shot,. Hato and Caps, Leather tine r,tatogn, Maio Street, let door below Boyd's Store. Work made to order. and repairing done neatly. Itur.trose Jan. 1 Ina. LEWIS KNOLL, SHAVING AND HAIR DRESSING. D Cop :o the new Poetottlce ttildinc. where be will at rouud toady to attend all who may want ailythiny 1, 416 WI, Montrone Fa. Oct. tB. DR S. W. DAYTON, i'IIYSICIAN At SURGEON, tenders hls services to Inv taisens of Great Bend and vicinity. Gravest ~.11111CTICt. opposite Butium Rouse, O't Bend village. seri. Ist, I9ll.—tr DR D. A. LATHROP, A ni sisters Euscron Totax.t. Bat os. a ;se Foot of sellout street. Call and cosset to a.. 1 almalc otseases. Montrose. Jan. iß:E=l!'4! H. BURRITT. eater at Staple •ad Fancy On hooda, Crockery, turd ale. Iron, Stoves, Drag, Oils. and Paints, Boot, vd Shoe., Oats and Cap., Furs, BaCalo Rohe.. Gro ceries. Provisions. de. Nes.-)1tIlord, 1 a., Nor, 6, "72—tf. EXCHANGE HOTEL 31 I HAR17.13717T077 wfithes to inform thephlaTtethat banns rented the Exchange Hotel to Moutrore. he now prepared No accost ..date the traveling p bl Iv nracla.e rtyle , ntrore. Aug. 33. 1873. LITTLE:S & BLAIrEstEr ATTORNEYS &T LAW. have removed to their Nero OP., opposite the 'Yalta Rouse . . BILLINGS STRO UD. FIRE AND LIFE INSUAANCE AGENT. A ousluessattended to promptly, on bar terms. Otter trot door east of the hank or Wee. 11. Cooper A Co. .nhlle Avenue, Montrose, PA. [Aug. I. ISO . J my IT. PIM.] 1:W.3.M0. STROUD. B. 7'. d E. H. CA3E, 111RNE ,, 3-1 , 4A KERS. 0* Marne', light and heavy •I lueh•t cash pricer•. Also, Blankets, Breast Olen. lorts. Wipe and everything pertaining. to tha line cheaper than the cheapest. itepalrtng done prompt ly and In good style. Mont. - ose, Pa.. Oct. V. 183. CHARLEY MORRIS TRR HAYTI BARBER. has moved his shop to the buirdin: occupied by E. McKenzie d Co.. wb.•re be Is prepared to du si I kinds of work in his line,soeh &amo k lug switches. pods. etc. All work done on short canoe and prices low. Please call and see me. THE PEOPLE'S MARKET. PHILLIP illansr. Proprietor. Flesh and Salted bleats, Dame, Pork. Bologna San- Far, of the best quality, constantly on hand, at •aIL Mont,se, Ps,. Jan. 14. 1873.-Is VALLEY 110 USE, Ungar Bern, Pa. 81teated near the Erie Railway De pot Is a large nee commodious house. has undergoes • thoroctqh repair. Newly garnished rooms and sleep to g apartmentw,aplerlld tablas.a od all things compris lag a fist gloss hotel. MENET ACKERT. Peet. 10th, 16r3.-tf. Proprietor. F. crtußcHaL, ;Renee of the Peace: office over L. S. Lehhetm'• store Great Bead borough, Susquehanna County. Penn's. Has the settlement of the dockets of the late Lease Ittekhow. deCessed. Office hours from 9to 12 o'clock s. m.. sod from I to 4 Co'cloCk p. Onset Seed, Oct. Sd, 18:2. DR. W. W. EMITS, eirrtsr. Roams at his dwelling. next door north of Dr. Halsey's, on Old Foundry street, when, be would be happy to see all those in want of Dental K Gra. Re feel. confident that he can pie Ise all. boat In qaallty of ours and in price. Office bourn from 9 a.m. to 4 r. i. Montrose. Feb. 11. 1811-0 EDGILE 4. TV22IIELL, MT M=:2 No. 173 B . roadvray , New York City. Attends to all kinds or Attointy Bush:leas, Lad COO &mt. ennses la all the Courts of both the State and the Colted Statue. Feb it, Ira -ty. BUR-V 8 d NICIIOI,S. in Drugs, Medicines. Chemicals. Dye .L.,ns. Cairo...olls, Varnish. Liquors, Splces,Fitney art .cir2.l`stentitledicines, Perfumery and Toiletar e,s, LVT•Preseriptions carofully compounded.— Brlck Block, Mokt2Cie, PI. Bolus. .eb. 21. 1212 1011 parwrveGv Tap OFFICE, CUES,P, %%stow we. • MONTROSE DEMOCRAT. TWO DOLLARS PER YEAR IN ADVANCE. VOLUME 31. -0- LY ILAZGA REY 1. PRESTON —o— When any task my hands essay, Wherewith to fill the eager day, There rises to my thoughts alway, The hindering question ; "Whence the need Of this thy lightly-weighted deed? Forgo it,—and who taketh heed? Perform it,—who will praise or blame, Though it be wrought with purest aim —Done cr undone, 'tis all the same. It cannot surely much behoove, In tby life's so narrow grove, Thou inovest, or thou dost not move. Amid the thousand myriad lives That overcrowd earth'a humming hives, What matter if no work survives Of thy small doings?—Who counts, alas! One cricket chirping In the grass The less, when time cloth pass! So,—keep thy song unwritten ; spare To spill thy music in the air ; Let be the stainless canvas bare! The world is over-leaved with speech, And who so out of wisdom reach, Aa yet to lack what thou eans't teach?" —0 poor, proud reasoning ! Shall the spray Of , tern bt%tcle the boulder grey, Threaded with morning—opals, say,— "Whole winged flocks their nests have made In your great oak : Why should my blade Afford an humble-bee its shade?" Or the light breeze sigh ;—"Lotal and deep The mountain winds thro' forests sweep; Must I just rock one rote asleep!" Or glow-worm murmur :—"So divine, tin Hooding, sunlight's, moonlight's sliMe,— What needs this moth with gleam of mine? Beciuse our music is not keyed Beethoven-wlse,—thercrore, indeed, We scorn to blow our oaten reed! Because we may not counterpart The dance and trance of Shakespeare's art We'll stoop to soothe nu aching heart ! Nock-meekness nil! There (loth not live Any se poor. but ti e may give,— Any so rich, but may receive. M=MICIM Withhold the very meag'rest dole fiends can bestow, in part or whole And we may stint a starving soul, What then ? It some poor song of mine, Should yet prevail to bring the shine Back o'er one spirit's dull decline,— And for nruoinent seem to fling A flash about its sun-selling. —I think (God grunting,) may sing ! MISCELLANEOUS READING A SENSATIONAL DRAMA Mr. Earnest Lyttleton, of the Temple London, was ii- author. by choice rather than necessity. He pleased himself to think that he was drawn or driven to ht erature by the sheer force of inspiration of genius. fie had some at.nual income independent of any literary earnings, wt ich was perhaps fortunateon one sense seeing that his literary earnings were not great. In another sense, however, it may have been unfortnnate ; for if lie had ic live by authorship he might have made a better success. He was thirty years old, good looking, and active. He could do many things very well. He was great at athletic exercises, played several instru ments, and wrs;an excellent amateur actor. 3tr, Ernest Lyt tletnti's literary efforts were varied. He had published a volume of essays which recetvel high commenda tion from the best critics,auld lay a ni"tion less load on the shelves of the publisher. He wrote three novels, each in a different style, and each in itself was admirable, but just wanting that little something which ensures success. tiro. P LITTLE. E. L. FILKEEn.r.z They received high and just encomi ums from the critics, and then success• fully tell dead. He wrote a very clever ' little comedy, which was played with great success in private,but.being brought on the stage, proved a failure. Then he thought be would redeem the sinking drama of his country, and he wrote a really fine and poetic play, full of thought and pathos, and even passion. But he had forgotten that a drama. now must be written to snit the peculiarities of the leading actors. The leading lady said she couldn't see herself in the part of Lyt tleton's heroine. The piece was played six nights, and then withdrawn. Our hero began to think it was time to reconsider his position. He made six dis tinctive efforts at success, and decisively failed in each. He began to grow ashamed of himself, cynical and moody. Ho had thought of marrying, but though he lik ed ever to many women, he did not love any particular, one better than the rest. He thought of trying to go into Parlia ment, only he reflected that he would be certain either to loose the election, or, if elected to prove a dead failure in the House. Lyttleton had friends, social po sition, health, talent and money, and yet life began to look very dreary to hnn. Men like him are more often in the mood which leads to suicide than the world, or I even perhaps the men themselves are aware of. Wandering one day in an op pressed and weary condition, out from his chambers in the Temple, Earnest Lye. Beton lost himself in a maze of narrow streets where only poor people lice. They were the oddest streets such as only the old parts of London can show. Here you see the remains of what had evident. ly once been a stately palace. Perhaps some Sorry, or Leicester, or Percy once occupied it when the way in front was clear to the river. Now a separate family swarmed on every floor, and clothes-lines hung out of its corneesed windows. Next to it was a regular little rural cottage, with red tiles On the roof, and a porch, and a window on either side of the porch tiles, porch and windows, now all smoke grimmed and dectiyin t Tap town had grown around this ontfaile, built it in, blocked it up §n4 otiolood it helpless' there, like the pptty bride of the ballad in the old nal/ otioek 4 lbw of the houses had Bills Poort yard§ ill front. Others rooked forward, bolgioft Into the narrow street, like, shabby imittithins of'',. the leaning tower of NA, Of course there was the usual portion of gin-shops, The Smallest London - streets seem to re. quire at least three glg,shops tutllpplyite Peals,: tit even the gin.ibop ticrQ pa Altos Azasola POETRY. THE GOOD OF IT, M M! MONTROSE, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY Gi 1874. took of the quaint character of the place. They were not flashy and pretentious in stitutions, sparkling with cyrstal chande hers, and served by young ladies in black silk and chignons. They were small, dark, ancient structnies,with a step down at the entrance, by virtue of which the incautious visitor sometimes presented himself head foremost. The entire thor oughfare seemed to end in one darkling public house—to close, finish, and die there. But when you come quite near, you found that a narrow archway, open ing through the public house. adm•tted the passenger to the outer world again. Mr. Lyttleton was drawn, despite of himself and his own grievances, to ob serve the place around him. "People really live hero !" he thought. ''They struggle here, and have their ambitions and failures, and make love and are lov ed. and win their success or are utterly t:iscomfitted, just as everywhere else. 1 should like to know something of a life in a place such as this." Glancing up ward he caught a glimpse of a window in one of the largest and oldest houses, where there was some attempt at at orna mental blind, and certainly a box of flow; era ; and he thought what a pieture,what a story Dickens would have mule even out of a glimpse like that. He thought Df another great artist—perhaps a greater artist —iu the same field of art; he re membered George Sands's poor Genevieve with her flowers. "There may be a ro mance or a drama in that house," he thought for anybody who has the wit to find rt.' chen suddenly it flashed upon him that perhaps his own lack of liter ary and dramatic success had been owing to the fact that he never mingled with read life outside of hie own little circle ; that sitting in the library or smoking room of his club, he had spun plots and people, romances and snfferinga. ont of his own brain and the circling cloud of his own cigar. ••Whv can't I go and lire there for a while r thought onr hero, looking up again at the large, grim old house which had the box of .flowers it, the tipper win dow. "Why can't I go there and live there as the petple do, and steep myself in the atmoophere and life of the place, and find some genuine materials there ? I'll try it ! I'll plunge into some hew condition of life, here or elsewhere in the search of the romantic. as Dr. Syntax went in sean•h of the picturesque." Ile emerged into» broader street, hail ed a passing cab, and went home. An interval of some weeks may be sup posed to have occurred when the cur ain again rises on the life of Swordblude al ley—for such is the name of the quaint and narrow street which has just been described. The place, though miserably poor, was not uproarious, or drunken, or squalid. There was an air of hard and painful work about it, but also uu ap pearance of decency. The house with tile ornamental blind or attempt nt one, and the box of &were had many lodgers. On the ground fluor lived a gold beater and his family. One flour above were lodg-d a p‘istman and his household ; at the rear a bill sticker and his wife and children. Higher up again, a little colon, of artisans. Still higher were the two little rooms, in the Inuit one of which was the box of flow ers ; and over this again under the sky line, lodged, in seperate rooms, two young. men. lite room with the flowers were ocen. pied by two sisters, one a little girl of twelve and the other some three-and. twen•y. Three-and-twenty worked for both, the work being the nicking of arti ficial flowers. Three-and-twenty had a fine, tall figure, a handsome face and fair hair She was dressed in very poor black clothes, was marvellously neat for such a place. and had white hands, which even her work did not spoil. She was called Annie Prince, her sister, Nellie Prince. They were orphans, and alone in the world. It was summer, and the heat is stifling. The window is open, and the door is partly open. The little room in which the sisters are sitting has only two or three chairs, a table, and a shabby old sofa in it ; but it is clean and well kept. Their only apartment is a little bed-room Annie Prince sits at the window working away. There is little to distract her at tention, for the only view is across into the bed-room window of some lodgers over the way, where washing is taken in, and the room is perfectly festooned inside with drying noder-garmetfts, of Into the room below. It is near noon, and most of the population are away at their work and the lane is lonely. Suddenly Annie having looked out, draws in ber head. albeit dashed with a certain tone of alarm. "0, Nellie dear, please shut the door e Annie's lap is incumbered with her work and site cannot well get up and shut the door for herself. Nellie is busy on the floor with some scraps of green and crimson, and is in no baste to move. "Nellie dear, George Ransom is coining up, and I don't want to see bim." But a step is heard on the stairs now so near that to shut the door might be like an act of rudeness. People can't keep to themselves always in such places as this, and so Annie checked her sister, who scrambled up to shut out the visitor. A tall young man stands in the doorway. He is yellow bearded and rather hand some, but there is a vague suggestion of dissipation about his whole appearance, and his pale gray eyes seem ill to bear the sunshine. "Good morning. Miss Prince," he says with a dash of sarcasm and an air of mock deference. "Good morning, George. How soon yon have come back l" "Yes ; I've a holiday to-day, and, by JOye, I mean to use it, too I Look here Annie ; I want to take you and Nellie to Greenwich. Nellie's face beamed with delight for a moment;bralthen ti wasqnicklycast down as she noted her sister's expression. An nie shook her head. • PI am sorry, Qeorge, but I have no end of work to do, and I can't vOan't go ! Oh, stuff ! you know you could go. It's only working double twice tomorrow and the day after:* 0 1 can't go, (huge. Devoted to the Interests of our Town and County. "You won't go,vou mean ; that's about the sizi of it I Now look here, Annie, this won't do ; no, by Jove, it won't ! You are treating me badly, and I don't mean to stand it You know I needn't he in this beastly old place at all if it wasn't for you ! Hang it I the fellows I know don't live in this sort of place !" "I know you need not live here, and I wish you wouldn't. The place is poor and miserable, and I wished you not to follow tue." "But I will follow yon until yon marry me Yon said you would." "Oh, no, indeed !" "Well, as good as said it, when your lather was alive, and when ho asked you. Yea, you did. Well, you didn't say you wouldn't. What have you got against me ? Look here, lam making two pounds, aye, three pounds sometimes, a week, and I can afferd to marry, and keep you and Nellie too. What have you to say against me ?" He came into the room and caught her wrist. "George,'—her tears were rising fast,— 'I never promised you, never, indeed ! Bat you know that I don't like your ways of late. You spend your time badly, you are out late. and vout—you—" "I drink too much, I suppose, do I ? Well, I do drink a little now and then but:who's fault is that ? It's your own you drove me to it l" She shook her head. "No, no, George; the only time when I thought I might have been willing to marry you was the very time when I first noticed all this and that world have pnt me against mar rying you, if nothing else did.' "But suppose I promise—suppose L take my oath that ) ! wont drink too much "?' She shook her head again. "Oh do,for the sake of our old times, let me alone Don't torment yourself and me. I can never marry you !" "Nellie, look here, you run into the other room. See, here's a penny; go and buy an orange." Nellie ran away delighted before her sister could interfere. But Annie Prince was not afraid of her lover. "Now, Annie I omit know all about this ! Who's the man that has come in side me with you ? I mutt know ! I had a good chance with you one time. but you have changed to me lately. and sonic other f. has caused it. If 1 ev er know him ! Tell me his name !" ILis nmaner grew menacing and fierce, but (he girl wits perfectly calm. She was about to answer, when a clear tenor voice wus heard singing on the stairs and the tread of a than rapidly ascending ; and then all at ones Annie Prince did start, and the real blood rushed into her face A young mar. with a moustache, and wearing a rap. paused the threshold,look ed in, seemed about to enter, then drew hack, nodded pleasantly to George, took off his cop to Annie, and bounded up the stairs t i the highest floor. George Ransom li - inked fixedly at An nie's still crimson cheek and doworast eyes, and was silent for a moment. Then lie said : "Let's 13Sy no more about it, Annie just now. Will yon come to Greenwich with m , —yes or no r "Ni', George. I can't go. lle Glen-bed his teeth fast, muttered something to himself, and sullenly Jett the room. Ile Irmt down stairs, went out, crossed the street to the Gray Mare. a public house over the way, having called f"r some drink, took a place be. hind the worn and discolored old curtain once red, that screened the parlor win dow. Down to Annie's room presently came the young man of the tenor voice. He tapped at her d00r,., which now s he had closed. Annie did not call 'come" in but went to the door and opened it. "Oh Claude e "Dear Annie, I have come to take you for a promenade.' the young man said in accents epperently foreign, although his English is quite good. 'But I would not intrude while you had company. We will go—you and Nellie and I—to the Crystal Palace. and you shall enjoy the fresh air, and Nellie shall go in a swing. and eat cake and drink ginger beer, and ride on a velocipede if she likes ; and you and I will sit on the grass—' 'Oh' but, Claude, I can't go ! George Ransom was here just now, and—and he wanted ns lo go to Greenwich with him. 'Diable! Confound his impudence!' I am too busy—indeed, I am. But when I re fused poor George, I couldn't go with any body else—now could I 1 And, o', please. Claude don't stay, and don't be seen ; for I am afraid r 'Afraid 1 Of what ? Of that fellow ? ,No not that, I am afraid of your be ing seen here,' 'Come with me, child', the young man said, gaily nutting abort her fear,and put ting one arm around her waist while she tried, not very vehemently to get away 'Come to the Crystal Palace,and hear the birds sing Yon are looking palo and thin, and Nellie too. Come I have a hol iday, and money m'amie, and I can't en joy it without You ! Tiens ! Ltoo,am pale and worn. ,Yea indeed, you are, Claude. Why are you so pale !' 'Want of air, child, and enjoyment and J can't have either without you. Come I put your hat on. and come.' Femme qui park—woman who deliber ates ! Annie looked into Clande's face, thought he looked pale. thought she ought to make him happy for one day—him and her sister Nellie, of course—and she dropped her eyes, pat on her bonnet, and went with her lover to the Crystal Palace. The moment they came down the dark ling stairs of the old house to go en their way. and emerged into such light as shone on Swordblade Alley, George Ransom started in his seat and sprang to his feet. They passed out of the alley, and he lowed them at some distance. Through all crowds, through all turnings, he track ed them ;and when they reached the Lon don Bridge railway station. and entered the railway carriage to go to Crystal Pal. ace, be got into another carriage and fol lowed them still. Oh, what a happy day for dear, good Annie Price I since the death of her fa- ther had left her quite an orphan, and sent her to make her hard living in Swordblade Alley, she bad bad no such day as this, Her life hid lo'g been very weary and sad. A beam of warm sunshine stole in upon her when theyoung Frenc h workman, Claude Copin,came to lodge in the same house with her, and they be came acquainted and friendly, and she grew to like him very much. He was so handsome, so graceful, so like a gentle man ; and Annie had still the memories of days when she knew people of better inteligence and moaners than the people of Swordblade Alley. And he was so frank, bright and winsome. She never • felt more than a sort of kindly toleration for George Ransom, and of late how coarse and selfish he appeared ! She was not given to questioning her own heart, but she knew that she loved Claude Copin, and she hoped, she thought ah, she firmly believed—that he loved her. lie has not said so yet ; and ho certainly nev er talked of marrying. But she had no faint murmur even of distrust within her; she looked into his eyes. and, save for some vagr.e lingering fear of George Ran som, she was nappy. Tho bright air, the soft, sweet English landscape, the crowds, the music, the statues, the place, and the frequent op. portumies for a seclusion which was al most as good as a tele a tele made the girl as gladsome as a bird. Claude Cop in too was very happy, wondering, per haps, sometimes within himself why be was so happy, but distinctly conscious of the new indiscribable scene of joy. Little Nellie, we may be sure, was not the least delighted of the group. She got so many cakes and fruit to cut that she could not help Raying : 'Mr. Cofan where ever do yon get all such lots of money ?' 'Olt. Nellie, for sh.rre ?' her sister in terposed. •lint this is holiday, Madamoieetle Nel lie ,' Cupin gaily answered. 'When one makes a holiday ono. does not think of keiiiping his money.' In the course of their rambles Claude remembered that he had protnised to buy something for Nellie at one of the stalls, and as it was some distance away he of f•ted to run back for it, leaving the sis ters together. As he run gaily across the sward to the'piace of glass, Annie gazed tenderly after him. She suddenly started, for she fancied she saw George Ransom conic out Irom a clump of trees and fol low her lover. But she quickly settled in her own mind that it must be her imag ination- —that her interview with Ransom that morning had left a distuedng im pression on her. She was right, however, in her first thocght ; for as Claude was entering the palace, and was quits out of sight, a heavy hand grasped his shoulder' and when he turned round he saw the face of George Ransom. „Now. then,' said Ransom' furiously: 'l've followed von about all day for this, I didn't want to make a row before her. Are yougoing to fight like a min ?' 'Fight ? De Grace ! for what, my friend ?' 'Talk English. Yon talk it well enough to her. Yon understand it,anyhow; But I don't understand you.' "Don't yon ? Then I'll make myself very plain. See here, you've coma be tween me and that girl, I've loved her for years. I love the very ground sbe walks on, and the rags she throws away when she makes her flowers ! She would have come to love me and to marry me, only von come between us; and you mustgive her up, for I must have revenge." “litnsom," he said, speaking very gravely, and drawing his excited rival in to a secluded corner of the court in which they stood, "I have done you no harm, I don't want to hurt your feelings, but I must tell you that if I were never in the world she would not marry yon. It is no fault of mine, I saw that before I ever thought of marrying her—l mean' before I ever was friendly with her. It's only your ill luck, man. Stand up like a man and bear it." "Note bit of it I I'll not bear it ! You've deceived and bedeviled the girl with your French mar nere and false tongue ! Why,yon only have known ber,a few weeks, and I've known her for yeara! Will you fight me ?" "Here—in the Crystal Palace ! On a shining day ! And the police all around!' Copin could not help looking amazed at the idea, and h's expression of counte nance only still further infuriated his op ponent. "I'll show yon a quiet place down yon der behind the cricket ground, where we can have it out without any one seeing us." "But, my good fellow, what confound ed nonsense" "Yon French coward, you can't fight —you don't know how ; von're afraid ! But I'll make you fight : I'll knock you down and kick you here on this spot I" "Ransom my worthy friend," said Cop in, with a face now quite ,calm and set tled, "if you will make a fool of yourself, I can't help yon. We had better both make fools cf ourselves in seclusion than just here. Come along, if you will have it, I'll try to show you that I can fight, even if I am a Frenchman." Ransom's eyes beamed with a savage delight. The two men then walked to- gether in silence, avoiding the crowd,and especially avoiding the place where the sisters were seated. They found at last a lonely place within a belt of trees. Ransom said, "One thing now, mind By 11---d, I'll not spare you 1" "We had better loose no time in talk," Copin coolly replied "or some do will come." • - - They flung off their coats ; Ransom I rushed at his adversary like a mad bull. Foe a Frenchman, Copan 'Understood the science, of boxing remarkably well. Ho merely put off Ransom's blows for a while. "Fin/ en finer," at last he said, and sent one straight, sharp blow right between Ransom's eyes. Ransom went down like an ox under the pole-as, and lay sense- . less, Copin approached him with an air of some anxiety, felt his pulse, lifted ono of his eyelids and appeared relieved. 'All right,' he said. 'He'll . dal . he'll come to an a few moments, and be will hardly want any more, I can't do better tttati SUM bun wheto hp is, awl get FIFTY CTS,,EXTUA IF NOT IN ADVANCE that dear child away. This is becoming sensational: ne:preseutly joined the sisters; Annie was growing terribly alarmed at his ab sence. and saw that there was blood up- on Ids bend. Annie eat in her little room thut same night alone. Her sister was in bed and asleep. It was a warm summer uit,and there was no light burning . She bad been an idler all day, and was an idler still. She was thinking.' Sweet words which Claude had whis pered,in her ear as ha left her that even ing on the threshhold, after their return from the old palace, attll lingered with her. They were only a few words, but were alive with love and promise. Life seemed to be really brightening for the poor orphan girl. The horizon of her existence appeared to expand and glow, and to inclose a prospect more genial than that of Swordblade Alley. She could now work fur very hope and hap pines& But there were pangs of fear, too. She had extracted from Claude a sort of half confession of his quarrel with George Ransom, and although Claude insisted that the affair ended with a fair fight, she could not think so. She dreaded Ran som. She thought there was something terribly ominous in hie having followed them so stealthily and patiently to the Crystal Palace. She dal not like the idea of these two man sleeping in rooms next to each other that night, and she much wished Claude would lodge somewhere else for a few days to come. It grew dark, and she lighted a lantern and tried to do some work. She always kept a' little dark lantern,to be used when. she felt compelled to work very late at night. It threw its heam of li"ht, direct- ly on the work, and if any late steps passed her door she could shade the light in a moment; for she did not care to have it known to all her fellow-lodgers that she sat up alone half the night through. This night, however, she did not seem able to work, somehow. She partly un dressed, put out her light, oud stole into her bed in the other little room. • She could DOS sleep, and after a rest less hour she thought she heard a voice in the alley—a voice well known to her. It was the voice of Claude Copts trolling in low, sweet tones one of his favorite songs. Annie went into theinnit room and peVped into the alley, and she saw lilatide come sauntering down. de en tered the house. Just as he did so she thought she saw a dark figure stirring in an old doorway on the other side of the alley. The night was rather chlar,tho ugh moonless, and there was a gas lamp a ht tle way 'down Swordblade Alley. The girl was sure she saw a a figure partly emerged from the doorway opposite, and she shuddered. She lit her lantern, but carefully shaded It. She beard Olaude's steps on the stairs, heard him Range for a moment outside her dotir. Oh, bow the girl's heart throb bed at that little bit of evidence that her lover thought of her! And then she beard him climb the rickety stairs that led to his own room. Still she saw the figure lurking in the doorway opposite. Now it emerged bold ly into the alley, and she could plainly see that it was the figure of George Ran som. He waited and waited. What was he waiting for? At last he crossed the alley toward her, and she could not see him. He was evi dently entering the house. He had not knocked. Late as it was, the outer-door of this house, filled with loungers of vari ous occupations and hours, was not yet locked. She heard no sound. Could he have remained below? No, for she How heard a faint tracking noise of somebody creeping cautiously up the stairs. With all her senses on the stretch, she watched and listened. Ransom bad evidently ta ken of his boots.and was creeping gently up the stairs. He paused, at the door, and the girl's blood seemed to chill. Could his secret visit be meant for her ? Had he come to kill her ? She held her very breath. He passed on—crept upward. Now Ransom's usual way was to come home in a noisy, careless, swaggering sort of fashion. There was something ominous in it when he stole upstairs with noiseless tread. He was going to murder Claude! The girl's courage came book in a mo ment. She seized' her shaded lantern. opened the door, and glided out. All was dark below and above. No lodger was awake, at least no lights were burning.— She crept up a stair or two behind Ran som. lie must have fancied he heard a sound, for he stopped, and she stopped too. lie went on again, and she crept safely after—glidin g like a ghost. If the wretched old stair-case had been less rickety, he must have beard her; but ev. cry tread of his however cautious, made some noisb which seamed loud in the lonely darkness, and swallowed up the sound of her light footfall. It was a long, slow, and fearful ascent, the climbing of that flight of stairs. At last they were on the upper floor, the man and his unexpected watcher. lie doped at a door, pushed it gently open. and listened. The frill deep breathing of Claude couldba distinctly heard. Annie thought it impossible that the beating of her heart.should not attract Ransom's ate tendon.; but there was a throbbing in the brain, a ringing in the ears -of the man who had come to do murder, which almost; deafened him. In the dim gray, beam of half light which came from Claude's window when the door was pushed in, Annie could plainly see. Ran soul draw from his pocket a clasp-knife, whiah he opened. Now if she were to scream, would it save Claude, or would it fail to wara him in time and render his enemy more . desperate.? Had Ransoin looked, at that moment he must have scent her. But he crept into the room without looking around, and she glided swiftly after him. Ile bent over the hod, as if to make sure of where his victim lay, tind raised tho knife in his right hand. An. nie Prince seized his arm, clung round it with saber weight and strangtht Atid at the same 'natant, with wie sudden, half npconcions, Convulsive movement , back the shade of her lantern and. sent OS bright-beam of light dazzling across the assaviej 604 Thea 41104tw9 wl4 THE 3foiqtrtosu IlE3ibbilkt Contains ell lbe LocalindOchirakiilite,Pber*Atir. ries, Anecdote*, liiscelianebne Iteadleg,COnciPtlleli um:, and • reliable clue of saverthements. On* square. of ()tan Inch apnea.) 6 Weeks, er l month, sl.s• 3 row:atm 1930; IS months Se I year, $6.30. A liberal 01rcnbut on adrertlearilerat ... ier Ce'sglreiliworl efii i ! .2 / 1 1::= 1 S e in CI CI L ctl a t 1 1411) " biarriaires tad lathe, tree; oblbearisi, 10 etc a dile:. NUMBER 18. for help, and George iiantoin drokieJ ali the floor in an epileptic flt, and Olandei ' started np, awake, to see Annie staidly beside bim,aud to learn that her prese 'and her hand bad saved him from death - • George Ransomi vrus oat of his Genii for eom. time after. Drabness the 6m j sion of his mind, the vehensanco of hid passion, and the load of his awful pursed had wrought him into such a conditiort that it only needed the sudden ehook of Annie's grasp and her Wan of light td shatter for the time his reason altOgetberl When he tecovered his senses he seemed to have recovered also something of bid better nature. He emigrated to Nevi England, and will probably never ard Swordblevle Alley again. L...ng before hansom's recovery Anntd Prince was married to claude Copin. Shd had to learn something before her mar' riage which at tire t almost bewildered hob The intelligent reader, however, will not be so much surprised to learn thaton thd• marriage day the bridegroom signed hid name rot as Claude Copra, bat as Earns est Lyttietm. In fact, Mr. Lyttleton had gotta i 4 search of a sensational drama, and found it ;_ and with it a dear and devoted wife; and a happy existence. Annie and Netz lie and he went oa the continent for d year or two, and when they returned tot settle in Lendoti,Mrs. Lyttleton's culture! and maiiners were such that no ones would have guessed • that Ernest had found his wile in Swonibliele Alley, Enli our pair made nu.svcret front their Mende of her birth and her poverty. Neither he nor she were ashamed of anything her life bad known. How I wish that you had known Katy., 13fi8 and her mother were living with gratidmothe Dawson, at the old farm house,while Ur. Iliad was away in the army. It was in the early spring when the days were just chilly enonglt• for a cheerful little fire on the kitchen hearth/ litcid yet it grew so warm at noon that Kitty buid go trudging along out of doors, bare• headed at times. Once she went out to the barn to watch' grandmother Dawson make a warm bed for sf motherless little lamb, and give It some brags , fast Oh what a wild coil day It was, with, wind fairly thundering around the old hard-=‘ The harness In the closet next the granary kepi tapping, tapping in a mysterious way that made Katy feel almost afraid, but it was only becaului the wind blew against it through the crackt.= Ole cherry, in her shed, just out-aide the bate', bawled out so dolelulth and it sonndedso fear; fatly near that Katy - couldn't help lookirootti her shoulder every now and then, expecting to see two crooked horns close to her cheek-- , When evening came, and the curtains were drawn, she held the yarn fur her mamma to' wind, and didn't cry nor jerk herself, except SY very little at first: because MAW= was gov leg to knit it into sucks fbr the soldiers, and she said that Katy mast be papa's brave little , girl, and do all alto could to help. Bo EMI stood very stIlL Grandma Dawson tell asleep as she sal by the Hie, and mamma told a glorious little story as she wound and wound, stopping !hr Katy'. fat arms to rest, a story about a great battle', and about papa Burns, and she said softly AV the end of her story. "Oh, Katy we're gladi we let papa go ar'nt we Y And I think wluird the trees grow green again the war will all tsf over, and papa and all the soldiers will coma home, and we'd not have the heartache iusye more." In the morning Katy went to the window t look at mu woods. They looked very gray ands cold a say across the fluids, and even the Blau: was not bu Wing yet, by the kitchen Every day there came a little whitild moment in the midst of her dull muting and mischief; when she remembered about herrnotheros Imp*, and then the would gaze eagerly out of the' window at the apple trees and the far away' woods, and it (lid seem as though they grew more naked and gray than ever, What it this year the trees wculdn't be VMS' at all, But at last the Rm budded, and then/ Katy took heart and made the dolly dance aai torn somersets By and by the woods took le. tinge of light green, and thee 1144 Oda MOO shadows in their billowing tops. nut Kateil mamma read the papers day atter day,amtgreW• sad Instead of glad, and one evening whim:flaw found Katy looking at the woods as they glowed in the yellow aunset-light, she Bald l& no use watching the woods, Katy, tar papas cannot come." And It was very true that her could not for Katy's papa was dead. 14qugams Burns had the letter In her haqd--,ther had ever written. I don't think that /Katy ever retheuthered much that was read her estop% that papa Burns had said that ho would like Itogat¢ his arm around his little, girl, came more—anthl she knew just what It meant. Its a long time since Sates papa died butt She toils so clacerthily and plane SO fiOTS 4 4 II B . . that I still call her rIT KATY' The following. errs for neuralgia glyso bp the Newark Gegette. IS Well Worth ' 11 7 1 4. — `, The article reads: "A friend of ours, who Ana fared horribly front plus from neandgist, hear—' - lug of s noted physicisa In Germany, who In— - variably cored the disease, crossed tho Wen and visited Germany for treatment Re sales permanently cured atter a sojourn, and tho duo tor freely gave hint the simple tweedy qtedi, which was nothing but poultice igatgloionatb from common field thistle. The leaves amnia, carted and used OD the parts affected POI pot& tire, while a small quantity of tim lisma qw, boiled down to apint, undo small wine glass ot• the devotion drank before each meal. Out% friend says ho bathe known It to fail nitgie. lug relief, while triobkost every cote It han 9/4. feeted a cute,, Chrikcht Union replies gs query se tes velambet it Is wicked to. &ace t • "It is wiekedi when it b evicted, and no; wicked arbertit not ticked. In twat it bas no mum Amla% character than walking, wrestling, GT sowbw., But company, untimely hones, vil dances, nut's rage the exercise evil; good comPawit what , somo boars, and home int:lumen. niAIR It M Icy mat bends." Have &care of your Wow s for spasalont* hey rides q pony that runs sway with Passion has done more mischief in Sins Wtstial %mall go RONTAtv gazikt (Ass elm It is Prictesta tray Within:um Sltriornro Advertising Rates: EPLLOG GE (community ed.] MT KATY.