Wm. 0 Onmer. E. B. HAWLEY & CO., E . B. Hawley, PUBLISHERS OF THE MONTROSE DEMOCRAT, AND GENERAL JOB PRINTERS, Montrose, Susquehanna County, Pa Orrics—Weet Side of Public Avecme Business Cards. J B. 41' A. H. McCOLLUM, atrieve •T Law 01/Ice over the Bank, lloatrom• v. Montrose, May 10, 1671. if D. W. SEARLE, :TORN EY AT LAW, office over the Store el M. ~ther,tn the Brick Block, Montrose ,Pa. Leal e 9 W. W. SMITH. •HT AND CRAIR MARDPACTURERB.—Po. M sin street. Montrose. Pa, jae g. 1. 1869, 11. C SUTTON, A L','T lOS HER, and Inautairl AntarT. ,o 1 1i91.1 Friendsville.. Pa A.. 111 EL F, Address, Brooklyn, Pa UCTION EER .rtiLe ltl4. J. C. 11 . 7184T0N, Esetwarn AND LAND NU , E*4 P addras6, Pra Yorke, saaquehatola Co., Pa ✓UILV GROVES, ,iiIt)NABLE. TAILOR, Mont.rthm, Pa. Shop ova! Cb an dices Store. A.! , orders lllled In Ilretniteitylt.. ,' c i tlng, done on short nOtlee. and warranted to At. A. 0. WARREN, E 1 n. LAW. Bounty, Back ray, Pension Exea. on Claims attended to. Ogles Oro] ae low Boyd'! Store, Montrose. Pa. (Au. t,'69 • W. .4. CROSSMON, .tuorm•p at Law. office at the Court House, to the onarroaotooer'w office. W. A. CIIOBII.NON. Monti - 01w. Soot. .1871.—tf. LAW OFFICE. r ITCH ..t. WATSON, Attorneys at Law, at the old Mlles of Bentley Fitch. Montrose, P., r. rircn. lJan. 11, "ILL I=3 , ),,,kr In Drugs Medicines, Chemicals, Paints, Oils, ,tuffs, Tea. , spices, Fancy Goods, Jewelry Per• nimery. &c., Brick Block, Montrose, Pa. Established [Feb. 1,1873._ SCOFILL R DEWITT. A 1,...rue,, at Laic and SoHelton , in Bankruptcy. Office \ 4•;1201,1rt etrivt, over City National Hank, Bing c.inden. N. V. 11.8coirtm., Junc I , th, It , ll. Jutoxi llsaccri. DR ll'. L. I,IICLIARDsON .1 I'SICIAN & aGEI3EON, tenders his profession. ee to the citizen. of Montrose and vicinity.— office at hier,..ider:e, on the cornereastof Sayre & liroe. Found" . [Aug.], 1669. CHARLES .N STODDAIW k erin Boots and Shoes, Rats and Caps Leather and Y 1 sdings, Main Street, itt door below Boyd's Store. Work made to order, and repairing done neatly. li.,l,trose J.. 1 IS7O. LEWIS KNOLL, SHAVING AND HAIR DRESSING. al.o l , la the new Postoffice batldlan, where he will found ready to attend all who may want anything tila llae. Montrone Pa. Oct. la ISO 9. DR. S. W. D 4 YTON, IY,JrIAN & SURGEON, tenders bis services to tizens of Great Bend and vicinity. Office at nis r.,ldence, opposite Barnum Rouse, G't Bend village. IPt.lBo.—cr DR D. A. LATHROP, k tn. n Inc are filinc . rno TIIIMJIAL BASEL,. • :he Foot of C:isskaut street- Call and consul o a.I Chronic 0.-canes. Montrone, Jan. 17, '12.—n03--i.f. H. BURRJTT., 1)-aler in Staple and Fancy Dl7 Goods, Crockery, Hard ware, Iron, Stoves, Drugs. Oils, and Paints, Boots and Shoes. Huts and Caps, Pure, Buffalo Frobes, Gro ceries. Provisious, Le. New-Milford, t a., Nor, 6, -72—tt. EXCHANG E HO TEL M .1. HARRINGTON wienea to inform thepublietbat haring rented the Exchange Hotel in Montrote. he 1111 W prepared to accommodate the traveling public In nret-clamp style M entreat., Mag. 28, 1873. MIZE= DEALER in Books. Stationery, Wall Paper, Newspa pers Pocket Cutlery. Stereoscopic Views, Yankee Notion', etc. Next door to the Post (Mice, Illontrvse, Pa NI. B. BEANS. atipt. 30, 1874 LITTLES ,t BLAKESLEE ATTURNIN ., : ., !CI' LA W, have removed to their New 4,,1h .. oppee . • the Tarbell !loose. B. B. Lrrrmc, Oro. P. Lirms, E. L. BLAssau.s. BILLINGS STRO UD. i ItE AND LIFE I:III7sIANCE ACENT. Ai a,luere attended to promptly, on fair terms. Olga trst dour east of ton bank to Wm. 11. Cooper d Ca Penns Avenue, Montrose, Pa. (Ang.1,1869. a:3 17.10:2.1 BILISSos binlollD. I!iEMZ!I7I htit , In'IAN .tt SURGEON. tenders his profesammd ee to the citizens of Dlmock, Pa. Ofile at the !tucks Donee. a 111 attend to all calls In his proles- BD. eat. a hick he le favored, A ..„; B. T. d; E 11. CASE, 11A kNEsS.IIAKEItS. Oak liarnees, light and heavy, loAr.t earn prices. Moo, Blanketa, Firmed Man. k, Wino, and everything pertaining to the line, cheaper then the chespeet. Repairing done prompt, end ingood style. oee, Ps_ Oct. O. 1573 CHARLEY MORRIS Tll k II kYTI BAMIEIL, her moved his shop to the be occupied by E. McKenzie 6 Co., where he is rtp.ired to ail kinds of work (tints Ilne t euch at, k ilLitee, pude. et. All Irork done 013 abort . pr..... low. Pleaee call sod cot me. THE PEOPLE'S MARKET. PruLur Baas, Proprietor. Pr“.h mud Salted Bests, Llama Pork, Bologna San tar.. ro . of :be best quality, constantly on hand, at pr.:.. to .mt Motar..e, Pa,. Jam. 14. 1073.-111 VALLEY HOUSE. ia at, Bean. P.. Situated near the Erie Railway De p., 1. • large anti commodious house, b. undergone ...norougn repair. Newly furtosned rooms and stets- tabi es.and all things compris in' a h, et class hotel ELliatißY ACKSRT, sent !Ott, 1 taa.-tf. Proprietor. DR. 11. N. .tilitlTß, Dr,ror Rooms at his dwelling, next door north of Dr. 1101.0)'s. on Old Foundry street, where he would be happ) to are all those In want of Dental Work - . Re feet, confident that he can please all. both In quality of vi ere and in price. Office hours from 9 A.ai. to 4 r.mt. Montrose, Feb. 11, 1674—tf No. 171) Broadway, New York City. ttende to all kinds of Attorney Business. and elan ds. te eAnses in all the Courts of both the /State and Os lee riates. Feb .1, I=lo uraticateof the olverelty of Michigan, Ann Arbor, , and al. of Jel!forzoo Medical Lotto of Philo , Or 187 y has retarr.l to Prierldseitee, where he saleild to nil call, to hla tprofeaelon as usual.— ItealtlclaCe to J ccair Lionford's house. Waco the same ar I,:relOttire. t r.t . ti dal lie , Ps., April 2f.dh., 8U8...VS 4: NICHOLS, —Hu to Drugs, Medic Lure, Chem:dealt Dye . .de,eutrar,i.DD, Varninh, Liquors, dpicrs.Fancy r e , Paten t ediclue ?nrlcuneryand Toilet dr c.e.. ,rereecripcion• carofally gompocuided.— bncx dluck, Montrose Pa, L3211X.. 21. WU FINE, ofOR PRIATEAS Ilasecrutecii All' Tills OFFICE. CHEAP., . o z - 3r V. MONTROSE DEMOCRAT. TWO DOLLARS PER YEAR IN ADVANCE. VOLUME 31. TO THE EVENING WIND WILLIAM CULLEN BILTAIGT. -0- Spirit that breathcst through my lattice, thou That cool'st the twilight of the sultry day, Gratefully flows thy freshness round my brow : Thou bast beenziut upon the deep at play, Riding all day the wild blue waves till now, Roughening their crests, and scattering high their spray, And swelling the white sail. I welcome thee To the scorched land, thou wanderer of the sea. Nor I alone; a thousand bosoms round Inhale thee in the fullness of delight ; And languid tome rise up, and pulses bound Livelier at coming of the wind of night ; And languishing to hear thy grateful sound, Lies the vast inland stretched beyond the sight Go forth into the gathering shade; go forth, God's blessing breathed upon the fainting earth I GA rock the little wood-bird in his nest, Curl the still waters, bright with stars, and • rouse The wide old wood fix= hie majestic nest, Summoning from the innumerable boughs The strange, deep harmonies that haunt his breast, Pleasant shall be thy way where meekly bows The shutting dower, and darkling waters pass, And where the o'ershadowing branches sweep the grass, CS= Stoop o'er the place of graves, and softly sway The sighing herbage by the gleaming stone; That they who near the churchyard willows stray, And listen in the deepening gloom, alone, May think of gentle Bottle that passed away, Liko thy pure breath, into the vast unknown, Sant forth from heaven among the sons of men And gone into the boundless heaven again. The taint old man shall lean his silver bead To leel thee; thou shalt kiss the child asleep, And dry the moistened curls that overspread His temples while his breathing grows more deep, And tbey who stand about the sick man's bed Shall joy to listen to thy distant sweep, And softly part his curtains to allow Tby visit, grateful to his burning brow, Go—but the circle of eternal change, Which is the life of nature, shall restore With sounds and scents from all thy mighty range, Thee, to thy birth place of the deep, once more; Sweet odors in the sea air, sweet and strange Shall tell the homesick mariner of the shore. And, listening to thy murmur, he shall deem He hears the rustling leaf and running stream THE MIDDLETOWN MYSTERY "Shall I kill him "1 won't take the rPepotodbility of ad vising you, under the circumstances.— You say he has proved himself unworthy of her r "Yee, but you know her character is one that holds duty to be stronger than love—and those sort of women are hard to give in. I'll hare to kill him." ''Well do as you please. But reniem• ber 1 wash in hands of the murder." The speaker walked slowly away with these wards. The voice had come from the old arbor at the foot of the lawn, where 1 had gone to briag iu some mus lin which lay there bleechitig. The tones were low and half indistinct, but I heard all the above conversation clearly. "What should 1 do There was no one at home but Tom and the two servants. Father had gone away on business for a few days, and I was head manager until his return. There was no use in the house, either, whom 1 could tell the dreadful thing ! We lived on a pretty little place just outside the city ; and this summer to help pay oft' the mortgage, which hung upon it like a mill stone—father used to ' say—we had advertised for a few city boarders. It was my proposition, and father and Tum had opposed it at first; father feared it would be too hard for me and Tom said it was "degrading." but I, proved to father that I could get along admirably with Lucy and Dan to help and Toni being two years younger than I, and only sixteen, I did nut stop to ar- ' gue with him on the subject. We were seven in the family now, instead of our usual "trio"( Hayden's trio in thae flats," Tom calls us sometimes.) Our addition consisted of Mr. and Mrs. Miles, and two young gentlemen, Mr. Lewis and Mr. Ray. Mr. Miles was a broker on Third street, and a nice gentlemanly old man he was. Mrs. Miles was very beautiful, and quite a young woman. We all thought she was his daughter, when they drove up to the door the night of her arrival. They seemed a very loving couple ; although I did fancy Mrs. Miles looked unhappy at times, but she was very devoted to her husband, and he appeared very fond of her. Mr. Lewis was a clerk in a publish ing house in the city and went to town every day, as did Mr. Miles. Mr. Ray was a friend of Mr. Lewis,and appeared to be in no business. I didn't like his looks the first minute I set my eyes on him. He was a moody, sullen sort of a ni i i, barely answenng civil questions, alt ough he was particularly pleasant, fors him, to Mrs. Miles.— Mr. Lewis way a favorite with everybody; Tom swore by him and forgot the "deg radation." I! often wondered what the bond of sympathy could be between Mr. Lewis and M. Ray. The one so full of life and auirliation ; the other taciturn and gloomy.i Mr. A. seldom went to the city, but Would sit all day in his room oftentimes not coming to his meals, and when I would knock sometimes at his door, he woul growl oat, "Don't disturb w me, I'm busy.' I bad told Tom, aft ; dentially, the I felt sure Mr. Ray was not 'altogeth r "right." "Never mind Sis," be anew red me, saucily. "I guess he ain't a counterfeiter ; so his money's right' enough , and when you get all your wages for waiting on his highness, you'll be 'right,'" I didn't like to hear Tom talk so to me when what I was doing was only toi elp father along,aud not menial service from a selfish purpose.— Amos NtcstoLs POETRY. STORY TELLER BY G. DE B _o__ MONTROSE, PA., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1874. But, what can you expect from boys ? I determined I would not tell Tom any more of my suspicions. I lay awake half the night thinking of the conversation I had heard in the arbor; I knew the voices belonged to Mr. Lewis and Mr. Ray. Oue then, was as bad as the other.— But who was the man that they talked of murdering so coolly ; could it be Mr. Miles ? I made up my mind I would watch closely the next day, to see if I could detect any signs of malice against the old gentleman. They all seemed friendly enough, however, and there were no ill words spoken save a little sparring on some political questions, after the us ual manner of men. After that time I saw nothing of Mr. Ray or Mrs. Miles until tea time. She had toast and tea in her room at noon, on the plea of headache ; and he growled out as usual, to "let me be." when I sent Lu cy to call him to dinner.. At the tea ta ble Mrs. Miles received a dispatch from her husband, saying "business would de tain ns over night in the city." I fancied she turned pale and looked very sad, in deed. After tea, Mr. Ray invited her to walk down to the lake with him ; she re fused at firtit,but he finally persuaded her, and they strolled off slowly like a pair of lovers. I was reading the mystery ? Tom and Mr. Lewis were oat riding, and so I was left quite alone. I sat in the little sitting room by the window. There was a faint curve of moon in the sky, and the dusk was fragrant with the woodbine, and jessamine tint ran over the trellis work by my window. I must have fallen asleep, when I awakened to hear low voices just outside on the piaz za• "Promise me, then you will not do it until I have another talk with you." "it shall be as you say, out the longer I wait, the worse for him," muttered the deep tones of Mr. Ray's heavy bass.— Then she bade him good night and ran up to her room. How my heart beat. It was' getting fearful. Mr. Ray now paced up and down the piazza until the rattle of wheels and laughing voices announced the return of his friend and Tom. Tom went right off to hed, and Mr. Lewis sat down Upon the steps to smoke. I held my breath to hear what was to come. "What makes you so restless. Ray ?" asked Mr. Lewis, after a little. "Are you still meditating the murder ?" Ray stopped short in his walk. "I have had a talk with her." said be, "and she made me promise to wait a day longer before I decide." "Well I should carry out my own plans without reference to any one if I were in your place." "Then—l shall kill him !" "How ?" asked Mr. Lewis. (Oh how could he speak so coolly !) "Shoot him—it's the easiest. "Where ?" "In the woods," (Our woods Oh ! I must scream soon, and I held my hand tight over my mouth.) "Well, suppose we go and practice the situatiou--come . " said Lewis, and they walked off together towards the little iece of woodland that !ay on our land. I passed another sleepless night, and looked so haggard the next morning at breakfast that even Mr. Ray asked me if my head ached, and said he always found "cau de cologne" a speedy relief "An easy conscience is a better," I an swered quickly. He looked up at me curiously, and went on with his break• fast. I hurried up to his room before he fin ished, and took un inventory of his things. I almost fainted when close beside his dressing ease I discovered—a—pistol ! That settled my determination to do what I had resolved upon the night be fore. Father would not be home for a week yet, and in that time what fearful cornea might there un t be enacted in our peaceful little home ! Yes ; I would take it all upon my shoulders to avert the calamity. Therefore,withoot a word to any one. I took the second train to P—, and went straight to a detective and explained the whole situation. "Come with me at once," I cried : "I am sure he means to kill Mr. Miles this very night!" The detective looked surprised and amazed at my story, and yielding to my earnest entreaties, accompanied me home. We got back at dinner time, and Mr. Detective wearing a clerical snit of black dined with us without the faintest sus picion being aroused as to what his cal ling might be. I saw him studying Mr. Ray an Mrs. Miles and wondered if he could read in there faces the tragedy I heared. When the evening train arrived, and Mr. Miles and Mr. Lewis came up to the walk together, what was my sur prise to see Mr. Detective rush up to Mr. Lewis with a "Why, Harry, my dear boy and shake his hand with all the hearti ness of friendship. "What in the world are you doing her, Jerold ?" asked Mr. Lewis, as he came up the steps. "Oh. a little pleasure trip, that's all ; we must have our recreation too, you, know, answered Mr. Detective, and he looked at me as though to say "all right my dear, I won't tell." They both went up to Mr. Lewis' room ; just before it was time to ring the tea-bell they came down together, laughing. I was alone in the dining room, putting on the last few lit tle touches to the tea table, when they botlicatne up to where I stood and Mr. Lewis, taking both my hands in his said : "My dear Miss Hayden, Mr. Jerold has told me your fears and fancies. 'I am very sorry my friend nail been the unconscious innocent .ruse of your anx iety, but Mr. Ray is at present engaged in writing an intense drama, of the new school, and is in a great dilemma as to whether he will kill bis hero or end his days peaecably. Mrs. Miles was formerly an actress, whose opinion he values very highly, and—so you see—all your little imaginings and fears are wholly ground less." I thought I should sink—and I guess they thought en too, for Mr. Jerold cried out, "Now, my titer young lady, don't ; you have acted so nobly and brave all through this affair—don't, now I"—and I didn't. I made them both promise me Devoted to the Interests of our Town and County. faithfully that they would never—never tell anybody my suspicions—not eveu father. They kept tbare promise. and4.to this day when Harry and I—l married Mr. Lewis, he teased me so about the affair that I married loin to tease him back-- when Harry end I sometimes talk about my "murder case," father opens his eyes and wonder what we mean. Mr. Ray's piece "took" beautifully, and when I saw it played the first time I was as nervous .over the shooting—he shot him—as though it was real. We paid the mortgage of the old place ; Tom lives there now with his wife and little ones (I throw it up to him sometimes.) Mr. Miles died shortly after that som mer, and Sirs. Miles married Mr. Ray a few years after When Harry plagues mu. very much I answer. "Well, who knows but they did mean it after all ?'' At any rate that is the end of my Middletown Mystery. Feminine Fashions —•— A writer m the October Galaxy gossips pleasantly about "Fig Leaves and French Dresses." We extract the following par agraph : Methinks I hear a scornful masculine critic cry, "Well, why do women submit to the tyranny of foreign fashions? Why do they not return to sensible and simple dress?". Ah, why do we not? We can• not, and there's an end on't. We do not want to make "guys" of ourselves, and if we did, 0, masculine critic, you would be the first to scoff at our altered state. Do 7on remember the old maiden aunt in Prollope's "He knew he was Right ?" She hated chignons, and yet when she called to see Cammy French, who had just laid hers aside out of deference to the prejudices of her clerical lover, she came away quite indignant, and aware that there was something wrong about .the young lady's appearance,though what she could not make out. "She came down to see me not half dressed--quite in her morning gown, as it were." (1 have not the book with me to quote her exact words, but such was the purport of her speech.) And, mule individual, von men are all in that respect like Trollope's old maid. You want us to stop follow ing the fashions, and the instant we do you become vaguely aware that there is something wrong, and you proceed to growl about it. Once I was acquainted with a staid old gentleman, who, when hoops were first in troduced,declared that they were an abomination, and that his wife should never wear one. Like a sen sible woman, she quietly conformed to the reigning fashion, and said nothing to her spouse about it. One evening, when the mode was in full blown amplitude, and he had been indulging in a tirade against it, she went up stairs, slipped of her Duplex-Elliptic,and then returned to the parlor, taking care to place herself directly before her husband. He looked at her for some moments in mingled per plexity and vexation. Finally the pent up feelings found vent: "Why Maria, what have you been doing to yourself?— You look as though you had been drag ged through a keyhole. You are—ah - ;h—in filet, you do not look decent. Go up stairs and put some more clothes on —do!" Madame Bazalne ——o— The Mareschale Bazaine, who is a pret ty l,ttle creature, a bright., vivacious Mex ican brunette only 26 years old, is pas sionately attached to her husband, who is 62. She was accustomed to say: ''Twen ty years for me will not be so bad, for when they are passed 1 shall be but 45, but the Marshall will be 82, and that will be too old—it will be too late then for us to be happy." Her eldest soc, Achille, who is six years old has testified the most. extraordinary. devotion to hie father.— He absolutely refused to leave him when he was removed to the Island Sainte Marguerite, and has remained with the Marshall ever since, without attendants or play fellows, learning to wait upon and amuse himself, and perfectly happy when his father wal at leisure to talk to him. Queen Isabel!, whose godson he is, lately invited him, while he was at Versailles.to a children's ball which she was about to give to the yonger infants, but the child absolutely refused to go. Vainly did his mother represent to him that the Queen would give him some beautiful toys. '•She can send them to me if she likes, but I shall not leave papa to go after them," made answer the little fellow, Recently, Marshall Bazaine, nnder the pretext of fihding the heat of the fort too great for his ehildrar during the summer, sent them to Paris under the care of their mother, and it is said that the agony of Achille at leaving his father was some thing terrible to witness ; be had to be torn from him by main force. Elizabeth or Austrhi —o— Apropos of royal visitors, it is said that the visit of the lovely Empress or Austria to the Isle of. Wight was caused by other reasons than those of considera tion for her health, and that those rea sons were of the same nature as those that once.impelled the Empress Eugenie when in the plentitude of her prosperity and power, to undertake a hurried visit to Scotland. The name of the Empress Eugenie's"reason" was the Countess Cas tiglione but the identity of the motive of the Empress Elizabeth has not yet trans pired. Gossip also avers that the Empe ror of Austria telegraphed to his fair spouse at the: Isle of Wight that he was coming to join her, whereupon, the lady instantly packed up her things and set off for London, where she remained for some time, sightseeing and shopping in good feminine fashion, and the Emperor contented himself with paying a visit to Munich, and with then returning to Vi enna. It is a well known fact that, not withstanding the charms both ,of mind and person of the Empress ElizatAtl,the imperial menage is anything but inappy one. Some young infidel says that to put your arm around a girl's waist, when she wants you to, is a great deal better than religion. Propelling In the Dark ——o— That case of Yarnall's is exciting a good deal of interest down our way Just How. Last spring Yarnall began tc visit one of the Metcalf girls, and for awile he was so attentive there, that everybody felt certain there would be a match. On towards July things seemed to be coming to a crisis, and in fact they were fur Yaruall had made up his mind to propose to Matilda. It was on a Friday evening that he called for the purpose, and as the weather was warm, he sat in the parlor with her without a light, the front windows being open. Yarnall didn't perceive a good chance to introduce the subject for some time, and his nervous. ness made him warm. Just as he was on the point of proposing. he wanted to wipe his brow, arid he found that he had 'eft his handkerchief in his hat. He ex cused himself for a moment while he went into the hall to get it, and as he did so Matilda went out through the back parlor door to get a glass of water. Her mother came in as she went out, and when Yarnall returned, he found the old lady, who is a widow anu also named Matilda, sitting on the sofe. Supposing it was his own Matilda, he summoned up courage and asked her to be his wife.— The old lady was surprised ; but %Wows are courageous, and she accepted him on the spot. Just as he was recovering from his amentnent at the sound of her voice, a shriek was heard and the young er Matilda fell fainting on the carpet.— Yarnall turned to explain, but Matilda refused lo believe him atm he finally felt the house in disgust. Then the old lady sued him for breech of promise and Matilt a acted as witness. It seems likely Yarnall will loose, and if he does he will remain a bachelor. The Detroit Free Press tells of is man who sat down to one of the eatin g stands in the market aid azdted for seventy-five coats worth of "the best in the house."— It was handed him, and it made the peo ple's eyes hang out to see him eat. He was about half an hour a' it, and when he got up he remarked that he had for gotten his pocket book. The woman grabbed a knife and started for him, but instead of running away he laid his hand upon her shoulder and whispered : "Be calm, and above all, don't excite me.— My fit comes on reguhrly every day at this hour, and then I get wild, kick, bite, Yell, and tip over things. I feel it com ing on now.. If there's a policeman in the market go and get him, and let him take me to the station right away before I kill some one !" She ran to get the of ficer, and the man ran the other way. In a restaurant, r.ot long ago, a gen- tleman, while detouring a plate of hash, came across a pearl sleeve button in it. lie very justly complained to the big, brawney trader, the latter replying, in an astonished manner, •'Well, what d'ye expect to get—a hull shirt ?" An Irishman found a Government blanket recently, and, rolling it up, put it under his arm and walked off saying “Yis, that's moit,e—lT for Patrick, and S for McCarty ; be me sowl, but this learn in' is a foMe thing, as me fiyther would say; for if I hadn't an edicatto I wouldn't have been after (indin' me blanket." This is how it liAppened down south west Missouri : He found a rope and picked it up. And with it walked away. It happened :hat to tether end A horse was hitched, they say. They found a tree and tied the rope Unto a swinging limb. It happened that the other end Was somehow hitched to hi to. At a recent Sunday school service, the elergyman was ilustrating, the necessity of Christian profession in order properly to enjoy the blessing of Providence of this world ; and to make tt apparent to the v , tithful mind, he said, "For instance, I want to introduce water into my house. I turn it on. The pipes and faucets atm every convenience ate in good order, but I get no watfr. Can any of you tell me why I do not get any water ?"lie ex pected the children to see that it was be cause he had not made a connection with the main in the street. The boys looked perplexed.• They could not see why the water should refuse to run into his prunises after such faultless plumhing.— "Can no one tell me what I have neglect. ed ?" reiterated the good man, looking over the flock of wondering faces bowed down by the weight of the problem "I know," squaked a little live-year-old. "Yoa don't pay rip!" A Boston artist,who excels as an animal painter, saw as lie was passing through one of the rural towns of Massachusetts a very animated looking hull. Thinking be would like to take him on canvas he got permition of the owner, an honest old farmer, and in dne time produced an excellent likeness of the bull, which sold for 8200. On seeing the farmer soon af• ter, he told him he had sold the picture of his bull for $2OO. "Good gracious l" said the old man . ; "why, I would have sold the bull for less than that I" A Worcester boy was engaged in noc turnal cherry stealing a short time ago, and was observed by the owner of the fruit, who, unnoticed by the young rob ber placed a large stuffed dog under the tree and retired to watch the result of the strategy, The boy decending observed the dog, snd then the fun commenced ; he whistled, coaxed, and threatened un availingly, the animal never moving, and finally the youth accepting thP inevitable, settled down tt; passing the night in the tree. After some hours had passed wearily enough to the lad, marling dawned, and the proprietor of the the tree coming from the house,asked him hew be came in the tree, to which the be, answered that he took to it to save him self from the dog, who had chased him quite a distance. It isn't healthy for a smaller boy to say 'stuffed dog to that youth now. A Detroit husband is in trouble lot. whipping his wife bemuse the baby did not take a first class prize at the baby show. FIFTY CTS. EXTRA IF NOT IN ADVANCE MISCELLANEOUS READING THE LONG DAYS. --o Yes, they are here again, the long, long days, After the days of Winter, pinched and white ; Soon, with a thousand minstrels, comes the light ; Late the sweet, robin-haunted dusk delays. But the long days that bring us back the flow The sunshine, and the quietdrippl Derain, And all the things we know of Spring, again,- The long days bring not the lung•lost long hours. The hours that now seem to have been, each A summer In Itself, a whole life's bound, Filled full of breathless joy,--where, in his round, Have these forever faded from the San ? The fret, the fever, the unrest endures, But the time flits—Oh try, my little lad, Coming so hot and play-worn, to be glad And patient of the long hours that are yours THE LONDON ZOOLOGICAL GARDENS. No one can visit the animal treasures of the Zoological Gardens without a sen timent of wonder. Their preservation has reached there the perfection of science. No species of the animal world seems to have been omitted in the plan ; and the large space devoted to the Gar dens enables something like a represen tation of the natural haunts of each ani mal to be made. In all, there are nearly two thousand animals ; many of them are descendents of the original animals placed in the Gardens whet they were laid out nearly half a century ago. Noth ing could be more picturesque than the disposition and adornment of the space. Swans and ibis, flamingoes, pelicans, and queer shaped water birds, are seen sunning themselves beside or floating in graceful miniature ponds, while the plants and shrubs which surround them hint of the distant regions whence they have been brought. Deer and antelopes are gliding in little turfy parks; the kan• garoo has a familiar nook in a copse of shrubbery by himself. The elephants, guided by keepers, and their backs sup plied with howdahs, wander at large be neath the high spreading elms and chest nuts in the avenues. The amphibious rhinoceros and hippopotamus have in dependent mansions, supplied at the side of such murky ponds as they love to wal low in. The soft eyed giraffe cranes his neck amiably over a high, slight fence, and sometimes commits playful depreda tions on visitors' hats and bonnets; the lions, tigers, leopards, jaguars, wolves, hyenas—malevolent beasts of the jungle, the prairie, and the steppe —are,of course, securely caged, the cages running in long rows and back to back. Most curious is the reptile house, reminding one of the abodes of the pet snakes of the old kings of Mexico, and provided with forbidding variety of the scaled and slimy creation, from the enormous boas and cobras to the green lizard and the glittering eyed African viper. The bears have their pits frcm the top of which one looks far down to see the antics of Bruin and his clumsy children in the well; from the centre of the pit rises a high, knotted, thick pole, up and down which the burly bears are perpetually climbing; while the beaver mast feel quite at home with his hut, dam, and pond, very much as he had them in his days of youthful liberty. It is said that Darwin, when preparing his "Descent of Man," was wont to re pair to the Zoological Gardens to study the habits of the animals under all their conditions of eating, caprice, irritation, and pleasure; and even the less learned, whose motive is but that of the curiosity which is universal in humanity, may half unconsciously learn much from contem plating this magnificent collection of flesh and fowl. GOOD HEARTED PEOPLE. What a'comfort they are in this often uncomfortable world, those good hearted people who cross your path , at people who like to please and be pleased —who do not indulge to sarcasm—who never believe more than, they can help against people who delight in innocent amusements, and take pleasure in other people's courtships—who don't probe your sore points intentionally, and, finding out your foibles, trouble your peace through them—who never repeat what this person has said against you, but who delight in letting you know of those tittle compli ments that cheer one's life so—that are really so nice and wholesome for us, be cause there is au atom of brotherly love in them. From these folks young Brnsbhard never receives the paper in which some billions critic has called his last new pic ture "a mere daub ;" but he receives the precious paragraph in which some kind soul has said, "If Brnahhard works care fully, he will some day rival Turner ; and even now his skies are glorious." It is ant out. and carefully enclosed to that anxious artist by the good hearted man. As for the good hearted woman, what a dear old soul she lel How she loves to have you to tea, and - whispers, "How nice you look !" and lets you have your ohat with the nicest man in the room, and giver you Rowers " when you go home, and don't tell every one that yon must be ten years older than yon say you are. Find a couple of good hearted folks, awl their home is a paradise. • I'd rather have such friends, even if they were the plainest people under heaven, than make one of a coterie of the brightest wits ar d greatest celebrities under the sun. I'd rather be good hearted, if heaven would only make me so, than to be wise or beautiful or great beyond comparison. For many a wise man is too wise for hap- piness. and many a wit too bitter for love and many a beauty colder than the ici cle ; but a good, warm, loving heart must bring a little ray of heaven's ann• shine down to earth, and give great peace to its possessor. A blacksmith is always striking for wages. THE MONTROSE DEMOCRAT Cogitates all the Leeslend General Zieve,Poetry,Ste. ries, Anecdotes, Miscellaneous Ileadleg,Coneipik d euce, and a reliable cline of aevertiscments. Otis square, di elan Inch syses,)B meets, or lean, I month, $1.25; 3 months, 8 6 - 60 6 6 : 101,66, 4 $ 4 .W $3 year. 110.80. A liberal discount on advertisements or a grmter length. Business Loeb 00 Me. a line for Mat insertion, and 5 eta. a line each subseqnent martian,. MAUTinel and deaths, free; o binaries, 10 eta. a bait. NUMBER 41.. There is a vety important traffic car ried on in diamonds over the various European lines to this country, and' as the duty upon them is ten per cent, ad valorem, the sharpest watch is kept upon those suspected to be engaged iu it. By means of agents abroad the Collector's office has often information by cable of the departure from the various ports of suspected diamond smugglers, Rnd is prepared to intercept them. In nine cas es out of ten the stones are concealed up on the persona of the passengers. When this becomes a certainty, the passenger is arrested and taken to the searcher s bu reau in the Custom Honse. Here, it found necessary, the party' is stripped to the skin and his clothes examined inch - . by inch and seam by seam ; the heels are taken from his boots, his hair and beard are combed, and every means are taken to discover the biding place of the secreted treasnres. Once this mode of search nerd to be tolerably successful, but now it rarely serves any purpose except in the case of raw recruits to the smuggling ranks. An old bird is caught with chaff but once. A New York Jew, who was reputed to be in the business of smuggling diamond used to cross the water on the Cunard line from three to four times a season.— Two years ago, in the early part of the season, ho was seized upon hie arrival and taken to the searcher's room. Near ly a thousand dollars worth of precious stones were found secreted in the lining of his boots. He returned to Liverpool by the same steamer, and four weeks af terward again landed upon the company's wharf on North River. He was again seized and subjected to the same rigorous search but with no success. The Jew took it smilingly and philosophically.— When he tools his leave he said : "Better luck next time, gentlemen. I shall go back by the same steamer on business, and when I return you can try it again." The officers mentally determined that if he did they would try it again. Upon inquiry it was found that he really had engaged a return passage, having held his stateroom for that purpose. Two hours before the sailing of the steamer he was driven down to the pier in his carriage, hie wife and daughter with him to see him off. When they returned they carried with them over ten thousand dol lars worth of diamonds which had lain secreted in his stateroom during the whole time the steamer had. remained in port.— Before his return to New York the Col lector was notified by one of the revenue, agents aboard that "Max Fischer would. - 1 return by the—, which would leave Liverpool, October 25, with several thou eand dollars worth of diamonds." In due time the Jew arrived, and for the third time was escorted before the searcher. He was evidently not prepared for such persistent attention. He reemed nervous and agitated, and finally attempted to compromise. He was politely informed that that was out of the question. He ' was again put through the searching pro cess. His pocketbook, which was inves tigated, revealed a memorandum show. ' ing the purchase of eighteen diamonds _, of various sizes and prices, amounting in all to about 812,000. When this came to light the Jew begged with tears to be allowed to compromise. His coat was re• moved and the lining examined. Noth• ing there. Then the waist-coat. As the i searcher passed his practical fingers along the lining his heart gave a tremenduous thump as he recognized the "feel" of something pebbly, like little rows of but tons. The garment was hastily ripped, a strip of chamois skin within and unroll. ed, and there they lay one, two, three— eighteen l All there. "You can put on Your coat and waist coat again, Mr. Fisch - er," said the search. er, blandly. "Good day." With: Jut a word the Jew departed,took a horse car home, kissed his family, ate a rousing dinner, repaired to the bath morn, and after soaking a rather capa cious plaster across the small of his back for a tew minutes in warm water, peeled it off, and with it "eighteen diamonds, of various costs and prices." What the searcher and collector may have said or thought when they found the seizure to be nothing but clever glass imitations, worth from ten to thirty cents each, no? body knows; for althongb the seizure was loudly heralded, the finale was never made public. A lady in this city, moving in fashion. able circles, wears a valuable diamond which was imported in the cavity of double tooth, said tooth being in the mouth of an Israelitish gentleman of New York. It was placed in its rather unromantic hiding place in London, and safely covered with bone tilling, which was displaced after the arrival in New York. A NEW ORLEYNS ROMANCE. Every day at one of the Recorder's courts in New Orleans, is to be found an elderly lady, neatly, even elegantly dress. ed, apparently watching with intense in. terest at each trial as it is called, and when the court has adjourned, quietly moving away with the crowd. She has a painful and singular history. Childless and alone in the world, she was once the' centre of a happy family circle; but a series of misfortunes, came and left her hopeless ,and aimless. The epidemic of 1855 deprived her of her husband and two children. Of her remaining sons, one was killed in the army, and the other about a year since, was arraigned before the same court for murder. Before this awful shock the mother's reason had reel. ed and left her a harmless maniac. Slice then she each day imagines her son on trial and watches there for his coming.... Day after day she prosecutes in the court room her tireless watch. Disappointment never affects tier, for she think@ abe will see him to-morrow. Those who have charge of her gratify the harmless dein. eon. and thus morning . and evening she is found at her post, influenced by an affection that defies the might and wreak of reason. To make money—Get an appointment in the mast. h PCZIAITLID EITItT 'i9Zi7XXiDaT MOXFUIS Advertising Hate: DIA HO _VD SI! UGGLINg,.----