Win. 0 eraser E. B. Hawley, E. B. HAWLEY & CO., THE MONTROSE DEMOCRAT,! AND GENERAL JOB PRINTERS, ihaa' rose, Susquehanna County, Pa. OFFICE—West Side of Public Avenue. Business Cards BURNS & SICHOLB, I : in Drugs, Medicines, Chemicals. Dye raints,olls, Varnish, Liquors, Spicts.rancy . Patent Medicines. Perfumer} and TolletAt . ..Ir - PreAeription. carefully compounded.- I;r:di Block, Montrose, Pa , 1. Bun., ,L.:l. 1i.9 t.raihate of the eniversity of lU leMon, AAA Arbor, mat, and also of Jefferson Medical College of Phil. deninis. I$ t. has retnrneti to Priendsvillee, where he tcUI mimid to all calls to hts profession es Usual.— in Jessie ilosforif n house. Office the same brretoiore. Fnen ille, Pa., April th., 1874.—fiui. COUNAZI.LOtt AT LAW No. lal Broadway, New York elty tn. nds to oil kluds of Attorney Business, and coo ,l, t. valises in oil the Courts of both the Stste and the t elate, Fun .1, 1874 -'7. DR. lb . TV. SMITH uc arts Rooms at his dwelling, next door north of Dr Ohl Foundry street., where bn7tbnld be totop'y to roe all those In want of Dental al era. Ile ft, I. confident that he can plates all, bottle qnality of ork and in price. Office hoar. from 9 a. 2. to 4 e. a. Mont boo. Feb. It. Isis—Lt ~.r Bonn. Pa. Situated near the Erie Rilllway De p. Is a large and commodious house, bar abdergoee luorough repair. Newly furniseed rooms and sleep ..p.oqineute,eplendld tablen,and allthlegs compels , tog . stet class hotel. k.N BY ACE.E.R.T, ioto. Froprietor. B. 71 d E. E. CASE, i lI N it-11-AL:BUS. Oak Harness, light and Leary at ion est cash prices. Also, Blankets, Breast Blan lists. Whips and everythiug pertalsaleg to the line cheaper than the cheapest. Helisirliag done prompt and lh good style. Hon . ose, Pa.. Oct. 2h. 1611 LIE PEOPLE'S NALLEET. 1 . 1111.11 P RAMA, PrOprielUt. , 411 and batted llama. Pork, Bologna Son , etr ,of the beat quality. conatancly on hand. at ‘• uft to 1 . 0„ Jan. 14. 144,11.-1 v SI , IA N S RUEO N. I. wit,. the pi ofetmorial s w Ilia citizens t Dintock. Pa 00le at the I 1,1,3110e.0.V. 111 attend to all calla In hts prole*. union be is tutored. .Itd; .71.—ff. BILLI_VGS STRO CD. AL AS D LIFE INS;:rIANCti AC ENT. A . l •e Attended to prompt I), ou fair terme. Older dwor east or the bank o' Wu, 11. Cooper 16 Co. Arepue,Mout.roet, Pa. [Aug.1,1869. a!y BILLINas 5T1101713. CHARLET MORRIS I'llE EAST! EA BEER, has moved ht• shop to the nt.ll.llngoer.aplerl by E. Itclienme & Co., where he le prepared to do all Etude of work mills Ilne,such se ma. I; lug twitcher, puffs. etc. All work done on short and pee... low. Nesse call and see me. LITTLES Lt. BLAKESLEE T TURN EY S AT LAW, have remure:d to their Sew upin.,.pposttv the Tarbell R. B. LrrrLE, (IEo. P. LITTLE, E. 1... Bl...oCraL[t. ir. B. DEANS, DEAL - Ell In Book. C tntionety. Wall Pper. lievreps pert.. rocket Cutlery, Sterenecoinc Yletwo, Yankee unotts, etc. Next door to the Poet Orhee, . 11. BEANS. EEC= EXCLIASG E 110 TEL J. 11A IIItINGT ON u. lee. to inform the public that hexing rented the Exchange lintel In Ittootroee, he in now prepxred to accommodate the traveltugpubEe .o Aret-ela” otyle )dontroAc, Aug. to, Isla. IL B URRITT. lecater ,n Staple and Fancy Drs Goods, Crockery, Hard wale, Iron, Sloven, Druv. One, and Palau, Route and Shone, Gatv and Cape, Fare, Buffalo Robes, Gro- Cartel', Fromlona. a N ale-51111°rd, 1 a., Nov, 6, '72—tr. DR. D. A. LATHROP, ..nintsters Etzerno TllillataL BATHS. a .110 Foot of Cn e.tnut street.. Call and consul to 2,1 Chronic o ',eases. ►Montrose. Jan. 17. DR N. W. DA 3'T0.3 tIYICIAN & SURGEON. servings to at S citisens of Great Bend and da d dy.tiy Office at bin :as titmice. opposite Barnum Goose, G`t Bend village. , ept. Ist. LEWIS ESOLL,, SHAVING AND HAIR DRESSING. ea.}, in the new Poeto9lce bnildind. where he will ne found ready to attend all who may want anything in hts line. Idontrore Pa. Oct. 1.3 lea.. CHARLES ST'CADDARD, leni e r In BOW! and Shoes, lista and Caps. Leather and F.udings, Main Street, let door below Boyd'e Store. Were made to order, and repairing done neatly. at ontrore Jan. 1 18:0. DR. ll'. L. RICHARDSON, 1 . .: VSICIAN S firtIIGEON, tenders hie profeeeiona •rrrICC , to the citizen. of Montrose and Vicinity. — . nac, at hien:Sider m. on the corner east of Sept, It 'trot Foohdry (Am:A. 10th. q'u FiLL DEIII2-7' A:: onnq• At Law and Subciturn in Bankruptcy. OHIc• 4:. 49 Court :street. over City National Bunk, Bing 44.4.09, N Y. WE. 11.Scoviu., J uu4: 1.19 1019. JELLOIa. DLWITT. ABEL TUBLIELL Dealer lu Dru,re Menicitles, Chemicals, Paints, Oils, Dye stuffs. 'tcso, :plc... Palley Goods, Jewelry, Per' lualer). a.e., Brick Block, Idontr,,se, Pa. Established 1,45. tlreb. 1, Itria. LAW OFFICE. ITCH & WATSON, Attorneys at Lew, at the old aide. 01 Bentley 6 Yltch. dlontroae, Pa. r rrrea. I.bui.ll. '71.1 o'. 0 . WAT,ON• A. 0. WARREN, r 1 A LAW. Elonnty. Bacl l'ay. Peu•tug. .t.d Earn, on Claim* attended to. (ItOce dr , l •tJ r below Boyd's Store, Moutture.Ya. w. A CROSSMON, Attorney at Lair. °thee at the Court Howse, ie th CotoinalFeioller . a Othct,. W. A. Cnoepxoh. outruakt: Sent. . J. C. WHEATON CIVIL ENOVALEIt AVD LARD an:moron. P. V. addrear, Franklin Fork P. Bo Co., Pa JOIIS GRO rEs, „ nu , A ,"•.F. UR, Monona, P. tqlop o•e , , re. Al , order• fined to drat-rate L andler St uotice, and aruranted to fit, LOOM 011 tr . MITH, ASIN ET AMD CHAIR hi.._4l•WF°4,lnats.---11869. ' OO of Main street., Montrose, Pa. 3sag. 1. M. C. St7Tralc, A CPT lONEE.II., and GISCI.I.ANCT. AVEXT, &MI .191,/ BT. Pa. - D. w SEARLE, • rroitNEY AT LAW, Once over the Store of 31. Jewigiact tbe Brick Block 310 arrow: ,Pe. taut 69 J B. & A. 11. ifel.:ol.L. UM, Tr.,. ca. AT Law 001ce over the Dank. MOUtrOt . l'a Mau trcree. May 10, ital. AMI EL Y, ..641,1ines, Brooklyn, Vs ~ , L- C TIONEER Ju.c 1, lel.l, M - mm deo rfirivrigivc Micooutecti AT THIS OFFICE. CHEAP. •rry tro. VA ONTROSE- DEMOCRAT. TWO DOLLARS PER YEAR IN ADVANCE. VOLUME 31. TOO OLD FOIL KISSES BY IL 11. STODDARD My uncle Philip, hale old man A Yo■ Niazots Has children by the dozen: Tom, Ned and Jack, and Kate and Ann— How many call me "cousin?" Good boys and girls, the best was Bass ; I bore her on my shoulder, A little bud of loveliness That never should grow older Her eyes bad such a pleading way, They seem to say, "Don't strike me Then, growing bold, another day, "1 mean to make you like me." 1 liked my cousin, early, lute, Who liked not little misses ; She used to meet me at the gate Just old enough for kisses This was, I think, three years ago— Before I went to college I learned one thing there—how to row, e v" A healthy sort of knowledge, When I was plucked (we won the race,) And all was at an end there. I thought of Uncle Philip's place, And even country frienli there. My cousin met me at the gate ; She looked five, ten years older— A tall young woman, still, sedate, With manners coyer, colder, She gave her hand with stately pride, "Why, what a greeting this is; You used to kiss me." She replied, "I am too old tor kisses." I loved, I love my cousin Bess ; `he's always in my mind nose; A full-blown bud of loveliness— The rose of womankind now ! She must have suitors; old and young Must bow their beads before her; Vows must be made and songs be sung By many a mad adorer ! But I must win her; she must give To me her youth and beauty , And I—to love her while I live Will be my happy duty: For she will love me soon or late, And be my bliss of blisses, Will come to meet me at the gate, Nor be too old for kisses ! How IT CAME ABOUT She sat in the shade of the portico Busy with some sweet task ; The Spanish eyes and the forehead low, ma by the airy mask Of the dusky hair that had rippled down As he sprung over the flower bed— In Booth, she had purposed to frame a frown But ebe framed a smile instead ! lie took her hand in that certain way, More eloquent than words; No sound fell into the silent day, Save the chirp of the orchard birds; tier work lay close by her side unecanned, The hook on her knee unread— In tooth the had purpo-ei to loose Vie hand But he caught the other instead ! And when with the wealth of the rosy June The bees to their hives had got, He leaned through the lull of the sleepy noon And whid,pered a—you know what! She swayed from his earnest eyes, and low She burled her blushing head— In sooth, she had purposed to say, "No! no r But she murmured - Yes instead ! RR. WADDLE'S STORY It was at the Boston and Albany rail road depot in this cite that I first saw Mr. Wand'e. I was going to \Porches ter that after noon. The "express' starts about two demo*, I believe, and us I had fifteen minutes to spars, I went into the gentleman's waiting room and sat down. The gentleman in the next seat to mine started no the moment I vat down, and made a rush for the door, casting a fear ful glancd over his shoulder at me. Then the door closed behind him. He was a very singular looking gentle man, at the first glance you would have te ken him for a man of sixty. His hair was white as snow, while his whiskers. which he wore Yung and straggling, were black as Day S Martin's blacking. His nose wus a Boman : his eyes small, dark and nstless ; face pale-as the palest moon beam that ever beamed, and his trem bling lips blue. He was a small man,and so thin that you could haye bored a hole through him anywhere with a two inch gimlet. But what was be afraid of me for ? Am I each a terrible looking fellow ? rather think not. At least, my friends don't seem to think eo. -'No," said I, 4 that man has been doing something—and its something awful. And yet he don 4 look as if he was capa ble of committing any great crime.— Perhaps now, the poor geLtleman is only runnine away from his creditors." . . . Brit I had nd more time to waste in conjectures, fon the train was ready ; and so, taking my valise, I went out, and was just passing through the gate, when 1 saw the thin gentleman dodge behind a very corpulent uld lady who stood a few paces to the right of me. But I saw his restless dark eye gleaming at me over the old lady's Fh4der. "Well, if yo go on this train, my dear x li sir,lll see mo eof you before I get to Worchester." And passing through the gate I got into the cars. Every seat as occupied in the first car that I went in o. As I entered the next car by one door, the thin gentleman en tered the othee, but he didn't see me.— He advanced long the aisle. glancing cautiously to he right and left, sailed into a seat, an the next moment I sat down beside r . The thin ntleman started up and made an attetript to spring out of the window, but II caught him by the collar t i and forced hi back into the deaf: "Then you o want me ?" he said,trem bling as if withague. "Yes, I Walt you to sit down, and not attempt to d It your brains out by throw ing yourself ut of the car window. If you don't wa t to go—" POETRY. STORY TELLER MONTROSE, PA., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1874. "Oh, but I do'. Ido !" Then he put his lips to my ear. "You won't take me hick, my deur fellow, will you ?" "Take you hack ! Why should I take you back ?" And then the thought flashed through my brain that I was sit hug by the side of an escaped luna.ic, and I began to feel quite as uncomfort able as my companiul . "Who do you think I am ?" I asked. "You are a detective, and my wife has put you on my track:" answered the this geoileamn, in a hoarse whisper, glancing anxiously around among the passengers, as if fearful that some one would over• hear Mtn. I laughed. "No, my dear etr, von were never more mistaken in your life. I'm plain Rubin son Dobson, watchmaker, Wash ington He grasped my hand. "Egad ! I knew I had seen you Wore; and I thought—but, by the way, don't you know my wife ?" "How should I ? Why, I don't know you, and I don't think I eier saw you be fore." "Then you don't know her—don't yon know Mrs. Duncan Wallah. !"' Then he threw himself back in his seat with a sigh of relief. Then he mop ped his lace with his pocket handkerchief and in the act, his black whiskers fell to the fluor, leaving his face almost as smooth° as a glass bottle. "Ha l" I exclaimed. "I am Duncan Rand e, cried he, clap ping his whi-Ai--re into the crown oh itiE hat, and clapping his hat on his head. "And Mrs. Duncan Wandle is your wife ?." "DonWy =o ; and I am running away from her, by thunder! Tes, Mr. Doh. son. I'm roonmg, away from the aforesaid female. I'm going to Sam Franeisco,and if she follmrs me there I'm going to the Sandwich Islands, and so on, clear round the world." "And suppose. she follows you all the way round ?" `Then gn round again." "And if she still follows ?" "I'll limp going round till I tire her out." "A stern chase to a lung one, they say." "And Mrs. Wandie will find it so, Mr. Rubinson Dobson." And he jammed his hut over his eves and looked very deter mined indeed. For the next fifteen minutes Mr. Wan. dle never opened his mouth. Ile closed his small black eyes, and I thought he had gone to sleep, but he startled me suddeniy by grasping my arm and ask ing me if I liked stories. "Yes. Mr. Wardle. nave you got one to tell?" "Hare I got a story to tell ? Well,vou bet I have, and I'm going to tell it to yon whether you listen or not. Fact is, I've got to tell my story or bust, Mr. Robinson Dobson, that's just what's the matter with me." "I'm all attention, my dear sir," I re plied, "and really I must confe - tn that I am very anxious to hear your story." "Well, you shall hear it. HI take my hat off to k.ep my brain cool, for the fact is. Mr. Robinson Dobson, when I get to thinking, and when I remember what I was. and then consider what I am. why air. I feel as if I should go mad. Some titura I think lam mad. What do you think about it ?" "Why," said I. railing at the odd clues. thin of my friend, ' when I saw you try ing to throw yourself out f the window, I tnil think your mind was rather un siiund." "Of course pm did. What else could you think ? Why, I don't believe lam perfectly sane, do you ?" • • I (All tell better when I hear your story. perhaps." ••Well. perhaps co. I'll tell it, and then 'f you think I hire been through with ea m m h to make a man inane, whv,when we get In Worcester. von just chuck mei into the ai4yhim. I'll be out of the way of me wife then. anyway." "To begin, then, ten years ago I was a happy man. I was a bachelor of thirty. and had just come into possession of con sideralde property by the death of my father. As he was my only father. and was los only child. of o , llrs, it fell to me, and it Was a very pretty plum I assure you.' "At that time I reside I in Boston, boarding with Mrs. Josephine Hickory diekery. She was a widow and about my own age. She was a large woman, a very large woman, Mr. Dobson, and 1 am a very small man, and quite thin, too.— Yon notice my thinness? Yee. Every• body does." "But to return to Mrs.Hickorydickery. Bides being very extensive in her pro portions, she had rid hair. Your wife may hare red hair,and your children,and all your relation, and you may think it is the most beautiful color in thr world for hair, but dye my eyebrows, it I do!" "Aside from her hair, Mrs. Hickory dickory was a fine looking woman, and I told her so. She didn't thank me for telling her, of course. Her sex is never thankful, no matter what you do for 'em. You may not think so, Mr. Dobson, but I can't help that I have seen something of women, and I know them just like a book." "Now, I'm not naturally a marrying man. The simple fact that I remained‘a bachelor unto I was thirty years of age, without even making love to a woman, proves that. I think. And I might have remained a bachelor until this day, if it hadn't been tor that property that my father left me. Pm not handsome. You smile. as if you doubted my word, but I'll leave it to any woman with a well balareed head, if I am not about the poorest specimen of humanity she ever saw. lam not tallented. I have not a single talent for anything. As Professor Bumphier said when he examined my head : "-Mr. Wandle. said he, you ask me to tee you a chart but you don't need one. Yours is a very serious case, he con lien. tied, and I feel almost inclined to doubt The facts ; but phrenology aever the truth of the matter is this : you're a perfect damphool And the phrenolo gical gentleman was right, Mr. Dob on. Devoted to the Interests of our Town and Oounty I told him so, and gave him a dollar for his h mut sty." "Now,_with these facts before you, sir, you naturally ask, why should any wo man want to matry me ? Why for my money, of course. They never thought of throwing sweet glances at me until I became a roan of w, ulth. Then, sir,wheu it became known that [ counted my tuba ey by thousands, every unmarried female at Mrs. Hickorydickery's went for me.— M Iss Lute—she was a fluxes haired crea ture, with blue eyes and a milk•and-wat ery complexion—used to play for me every night in the parlor ; and she hang. ed that poor piano Imp( there was no an re music left in it than there is in a dry stick. Miss Retie. she was also a blioide, and sang for me. Yes, she sung to me until she was so hoarse that .he couldn't speak above a whisper. Miss Nutt read poetry to rue. Read it until she had exhausted every native poet, and ti enoustead f commencing no th e E ll . bards, she hired a newspaper fellow to write sonnets to my eyes, my nose, and my beauty generally ; and she published those sonnets under her own name, and then, read them to me." "Miss Dott danced with me. Yes we waltzed and waltzed, until one evening. the sweet creature slipped out of my arms, fell, and broke her leg. Then she was satisfied." "But the playing and singing,t he read ing and the waltzing was nothing to one thing more I had to anderg i. Mrs. Hick orydickery used to fald me in her arms and kiss me I Yea, sir, I was obliged to be kissed and by a woman with red hair, fur how could I help myself ? I was weak and she was along. But if she only had only kissed me, I might have Leen happy yet. But she wasn't satisfied with that, she always managed to have some one else in the room, and she alwa%a made them think that I was the affectionate one, that I was doing all the kissing.— Of course she could handle me just like a puppet : and she'd say : Now, Mr. Wandle, you shan't kiss me nule.rs you're the strongest, end I know von are! That was the why she did it, and it wasn't long before all my friends were bothering me about the lovely Widow Hiekorydiekery, for they all thought I was really in :nee with her. At lust, one night the widow told me that she had waited long enough. ===lll Yes, banean. Why can't we be mar ried this fail just as well as to wait uutil next winter:' «•ell, ma'am, enid L's ont you wait un• hi I have asked you to marry me ? Ask me ! Do von m -an to soy that you havn't asked me ? Do you :neau to say that— /ledll to say jll9/ tli s, Said 1, starting np and looking az: large and tierce as could. I mean to say that I never asked von, and I never intended to a s k you to become Mrs. Randle "The widow smiled and folded me to her bosom." Don't gi.t mad, Duncan, dear, said she you know you are going to marry me. "Never I cried. - Then I shall sue von for breech of promise Rut I haven't promised' "I\e shall see, my dear :^ "Very well, we trill see." "Good night. love." "The next morning, I ctilled upon my lawyer and stated my ca,e. "Better marry her," said Mr. Grogg,—. "She's got everything her own way,and it von go to law about it, you'll loose the case, sure. But perhaps yon can settle with her fur ten thousand dollars. II you can, settle, and in future, as the elder Weller said to his sou Sammy, •'Beware of the widders!" "But the widow wouldn't settle for ten thousand ; and so—and so—l—l mar ried her." Mr. Wandle paused here. and covered his face with his hat to hide his emotions. At last he recoitered sufficiently to con tinue his stDrv. "After we were married she g ave up her boarding-house, and we lived in the grandest style imaginable. Nothing W3I too rich or too rare (or my wife. She in vested a fortune in t iamonds alone, and in less than a year, my dear sir. Duncan Wandle wasn't worth a cent. Mrs. Wan d!, had either spent it, or got it into her own hands, and I was left with nothing. "1 proposed to Mrs. Wandle that we should separate, and she agreed to the proposal. A week atter, I started for the Rest; and finding friends in Chicago, soon obtained a situation. but learning that my wife might, at some future day, conic after her little hubby, !is she used to call me. I applied for, and 'obtained a bill of divorce. "Then, my dear sir, I was happy. As happy almost as I had been in my bache lor days. But I was born to ill luck and it follows me. "One day my Uncle Benjamin came home from Australia; of course he didn't come home in one day. but lie arrived in Chicago one day. came to see me, was ta ken sick that night, and the next morn ing he was dead. As I had seen my uncle half a dozen times during his life. my grief at his very sudden departure was not extraordinary heartrending; but when I found, after the funeral, that he had left me half a million of Mon ey I tell you Mr. Robinson Dobson, I fairly howled, for I knew that my late wife would be after ins, and how was I to protect myself. "As 130011 as I could, conveniently, I packed my trunks and left for St. Louis: and I was not a moment too anon, for my former partner appeared in Chicago the very day I left. She followed ma to St. Louis, and I hurried away to Cincin nati. Then I went to Baltimore. to Phil adelphia, and at last to New York, with that woman closer at my heels. However, she lost the scent at last. She went up the Hudson to Albany, and I went to Newport. "It was right in the height of the sea son. and I determined that I would mar ry the first handsome and agreeable lady that I could find, who would have me. In less than a week I made the isequain tanee of just the woman I wanted. She was beautiful, very. I think I was almost in love with her beauty. She had black hair. and 1 al ways did dote on raven tresses; and then such sweat and dovelike eyes! Yes, I al most loved ber,but my reason fur wishing to marry her was that I might have a wile to protect me against lira. Hickory• dick erv. I suppose I should have taken my law. yer's advice and kept away from the wid- UNA, for my intended was cue. But she is - as su beautiful that I had made up my mind to marry her if possible, even before learning her name. It was said hy those that knew, that Mrs. Jarvis Freeman was wealthy, and consequently sh'. had scores of lovers, old and young. But what surprised them all writ S that such a magnificent woman (ate was a perfect Juno in form) should deign to cast her eyes upon me. Perhaps they forgot that I was worth half u Fin sure that. I was fool enough to think that she loved me fur myself alone. Our 0)1111811'p was short, for before the end of the reason Mrs. Freeman had prom sed to be mine. She returned to her home in New York about the first of September, and I billowed her goon after. I stood, in such fear of my former wife that I couldn't ieel site outside of Mrs. Freeman's pro tecting presence. We were married in October. Air bow well I remember that day What a sense of relief stole over my senses when the minister pronounced us otie! "We were going to Europe on our wed ding tour; hut we ,didn't go. No—we didn't go." Here Mr. Wanttle stopped to groan, and .train he covered his face with his list. But after a momentary pause be went on agaio : "Immediately after returning 'from church ni) wife retired to her room. Her maid came to me soon after, and said that her mistress would like to see me. - When I entered the room she was seated in an easy chair, looking, if pos sible, more beautiful than ever. Duncan,' she began. smiling sweet ly. have sent for you for a very partieu purpose. "'Well, darling.' "'Well Daneam the gentleman of 'Yhotn I hlrei this house and this furni ture is very anxious about the rent,and—' " •What'! hired ? Don't yrda dwu the house?' •Is it possible that you don't recog nize me? Don't you know your own Josephine ? AllO woh a laugh she threw off her oeautiful black glossy hair. 'A wig!' "Yes, a wig, "titti.by dear. Vim see had my real hair cut close lied covered it up, because I knew von didn't like the vent are—. "•I am - Mrs. Wandle, formerly Mrs Hickorydiekory.' Asd she laughed sweet Iv. "'But your complevou ?' I gasped ."1 , :th00,11,d, my love.' 'Great heavens! and you've got me again?! I groaned. throwing myself into a chair. "'Yes, my darling, you are doubly mine, now, lor we've been twice mar ried.' " -I gave it up then," he said. "I thought at useless to tight against fate, particularly when the fate was a woman, and euch a woman as my wife. But yesterday we came friim Boston, and I can't tell - you why, but once there, my courage revived, and I determined to cut loose foom my wife at once and forever. I've got toy money where she can't get it, and I'll spend every cent rather than let her etch me again. But if she once gets her eye Oh inc, 1 . 11 have to However, she 0 at the Revere House, and I am here." Mr. Wandle paused to wipe the per emration from his brow. Then he look ed into his hat, and then he turned his small black eves on my countenance. .•Bul I've got my eye On you." said a voice. Mr. Randle iitiercd a piercing shrek. jammed his hat over his eyes and sank into one corner of the teat. I turned and confronted an elegai,tly dressed lady of magnificent proportions, sitting in the scut directly' hack of us. I had noticed her before, more particularly from the fact, that until now she had been closely veiled. She smiled sweetly as her eyes met mine. T.) 1.; Is Mrs. Wandle, I presume," said "Yes, sir. 31y husband, I believe, has been tclli.ig von about my little peculi• arities," laughing. "Would you object to changing seats with ule?" •`O, ; tud in the least." I arose. Mr. Wandie equir,nrd, and turned an imploring look on my face, but I could not kelp km. Mrs. Wandle took my place, and I wont into the smoking cur. So ended Mr. \Vaudle's story. I have seen horn twice since, but always in com pany with the lady whom he has twice married. A young blood, much given to quizing ieople, went into an eating saloon, and with quite a deal of flourish took a seat at one (if the tables. A colored waiter approached him with a look of inquiry on his shining mug. "Well, salt ?" "What have you got to eat ?"asked the customer. "0, got almost anything, boss." "You have, eh ?" "Yes, 9ah, shuer." "Almost anything. Well, well, give me a plate of that," said he, looking tit the darkev. • Th• waiter returned his gaze for a mo ment, and catching the fellow's id•:a of quizing him he celled to the cook ut the further end of the room: "One plate of hash!" "What's that ? I ordered a plate of that—didn't you understand? Almost anything—which you spoke of." "Well. sal., dar's most anything in hash." Yob ! vah ! and the durkey laugh ed as though he really enjoyed the joke that he had turned upon the quizer. "Unmanned by the loss other husbil4tr is the new style of indicating a widow's grief. FIFTY CTS. EXTRA IF NOT IN ADVANCE MISCELLANEOUS READING CARPENTER'S LOVE SONG. Oh! Polly, dear, when first we met It seemed designed by Fate, For gimlet-like your eyes, my sweet, This heart dir penetrate. My katures arc not chisled out With aught like classic grace, Though chisel cuts upon my nose, That time will ne'er efface. You had a handsomer lover once, A painter and a grainer, An honest carpenter, 'tis true, Though not a great deal pla(i)ner. My fortune-teller gives no hype, Yet this grim sybil maugre, I won't give up my suit, but will Consult another auger. I have a heart of oak, my dear— One that is leal and true— But, Oh this heart ot. oak, my own, Doth turn to pine, for you! Wilt' be my plummet and my line— Become my wedded wile— Be spliced in holy bonds to me— Veneered to me for life! And time no change in me shall work, Nor fortunes little slips, Blest, it from th' ancient stock there spring A dozen little chips ! Oh ! on our wedding day, my Poll, Well have much mirth and revel I For I will rise that day above My common • eoirit•level 1 N ENOLISII DINNER We decide upon a dinner and then in vite the most eligible ' noodle of a noble man we can find to occupy the chair, en deavoring to fix upon one whose political opinions are not so strorg as to make him obnoxious to either party. Flattered by the invitation, the noble noodle consents. Then we go to moneyed men, saying, 'Lord Toni Nobody or Prince Good•for- Nothing is to preside at our dinner. Will you be Steward?' Glad to keep fine corn. pony, though only for a few hours, these gentlemen consent, knowing, as does the hiuiman, that a subscription is the pen alty paid for the notoriety or honor thus conferred. Chairman and Steward se cured, smaller lights are only to glad to buy tickets. The dinner is given; we coach the Chinaman about the charity in which he is supposed to be profoundly in• terested, about which he speaks in a sin• gularly parrot-like manner, heads the subscription with £25 or £2O, the stew arks follow with less or greater sums, more private individuals swell the amount, the list of subscribers is read at the din ner, published In the next day's newspa pers, and out of the vanity of humanity our noble charity is set upon its legs. Desirous of testing these dinners, I as sisted at several, humiliated as I felt at the first by being allowed tea and sand wiches in one room, while the tyrant man sat down to joints and removes in another. I went on this occasion to hear royalty in the shape of the Duke of Edinburg speak. I f royalty had anything to teach" I wished to learn it in one easy lesson.— After the feeding came the national an them, of course. For the I-don't-know how-many-eth time God was commanded to save the Queeh, and, right or wrong, con founded her enemies. Then His Roy al Highness rose amid a tremendous chit ter of knives, forks, glasses, and plates that did duty as claque. Everybody lis tened as though pearls were about to drop front his lips. In a voiu hesitating, and with an absence of command of lan, guitge that w3uld have astonished an A mer,can ashy, His Royal Highness con trived to propse his Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, the Princess of Wales, and the rest of the royal family, adding, "I presume I need not say - anything to recommend the toast to you." "More sensible words were never spoken," ex claimed the next day's leader. •'We are not surprised that loud cheering greeted the announcement." There was no doubt about the cheering. His Royal Highness attempted to say a good word for the theatrical profession. and grievously mur dered the Queen's English. His inane tautology was received as we would re ceive the utterances of a Webster or a Philips, while the humor of the comme dam, Buckstone, and the graterul speech of the elegant Alfred Wigan, an actor of whom England has a right to be proud— both of whom spoke after all the noble• men present had aired their stnpiaity— ' were accepted es clever, but were not al. lowed to produce such demonstration as only belongs to the people. I was dis- . gaited, not with the Duke of Edinburg, (who blames the sacred cat once worship ed by the Egyptians !) but with his flunk ies. HOUSEHOLD MEASURES. As all families art not provided with scales and weights, referring to ingredi ents in general use by every housewife, the following information may be useful: Wheat flour, one quart is one pound. Indian meal. one quart is one pound and two ounces. Butter, when soft, one quart is one pound one ounce. , Loaf sugar, broken, one quart is one pound. White sugar, powdered, one quart is one pound one ounce. Beet brown sugar, ono quart is one pound two ounces. Eggs, average size, ten eggs are one pound. Sixteen large tablespoonsfuls are a hnlf a pin t,eight are a gill, four are a half gill, etc. Never be sorry for a generous thing that you ever did, even if it was betrayed. Never be sorry that you were magnani riums, if the man was mean afterwards.— Never be sorry that you gave. It was right for you to give even if you were imposed upon. Yon cannot afford to keep on the sate side by being mean. The Japanese census shows only three thousand criminals in a population of over thirtythree million souls. THE Morraosli DEMOCRAT Contain. all the Local and General New s, Pootry.fito• rtes. Anecdotes. Miscellaneous Meading,CorreepO.d. erica, and a reliable els.. of savertheakents. One square. (X, of an inch Sp; ce,)3 yr belts, or lee*, $ t month. sl..ri; 5 months, 62.60; 6 months,. 6410 I year. 60.5 0 . A liberal discount on advertisements of • creater length. Business Locale 10 cts. a line for first Insertion, sod 5 cis. a line each subsequent Itifilrtlnu. ILsrriage• and deaths, free ; obituaries, 10 eta. a NUMBER 42. Why does boiling fast render meat hard ? Because the excessive action of heat causes the albumen of the meat to set solid, crisps up the flesh fibers, and prevents heat having a gradual access to the interior. Why, when a good soup or broth is re quired, should the meat be put in cold water? Because, as the heart is devel oped very gradually, there Occurs an in termixture between the juices of the flesh and the external matter. The unable and savory parts of the meat escape and en rich the soup. Why are stews generally healthful and digestible? Because being compounds of various substances, they contain all the elements of nutrition, and as the of fice of the stomachs to liquify solid food before digesting it, the previous stewing assists the stomach in this respect. Why in frying fish should the fat or oil be made very hot before putting in the fish ? Because if the temperature is low when the fish are put in the frying pan, it becomes sodden in the steam forined—bßits water, but if the oil be very much head the water will be at once driven off, and the fish nicely browned by the scorching oil. Why should fish or meat that is being fried be frequently turned? Because the turning assists the evaporation of the water. When the fish or meat is allowed to lie too long, steam is generated under it, and the moment the steam is driven off, the surface catches to the hot pan,and becomes burnt and broken. Why is broiled .meat so juicy and sa vory? Because the action of the fire, hardening ifs surface, seals up the pores through which the juice might escape.— It acts in the same way that the sudden dip into boiling water does upon the joints of meat, but more effectually. Why is cabbage rendered more nutri tious and wholesome by being boiled in two waters ? Because (according to Dr. Paris) cabbage contains au essential oil. which is apt to produce bad effects; and he recommends that they should be boiled in two successive waters, till they are soft and digestible. Dr. Wm. H. Hammond, in discussing the sanitary influence of light, observes that the effects of deficient light upon the inmates of hospital wards and sick chambers have frequently come under his special notice; that most physicians know how carefully the attendants upon the sick endeavor to exclude every ray of light from the apartment, and even some members of the profession are singularly assiduous in this respect; but that the practice, except in some cases of actual disorder of the bruin and other parts of• the nervous system, is pernicious, admits of no question. During the late civil war Dr. H. visited a camp and hospital in West Virginia, in consequenee of infor mation received that the sickness and mortality there prevailing were unac countably great, and he made a minute examination into all the circumstances connected with the situation of the camp, the food of the men, dtc. Among other peculiarities, he found the sick crowded into a small room, from which the light was excluded by blinds of india-rubber cloth. The patients were us effectually bleached as is celery by the earth being heaped up around it; pato, bloodless, ghost-like looking forms, they seemed to he scat cely mortal, Convalesence was, under such circumstances, according to Dr. Hammond, almost impossible, and his belief was that many of the men had died, who, had they been subjected to the operation of the simplest laws of na ture, would have recovered. • TO MAKE APPLE DUMPLINGS. The following very good receipt is from the Cincionatti Gazette: First procure good, sour, juicy apples, pare and core, leaving them in halves.— Get all your ingredients ready before be ginning to mix your dough ; sugar, soda, sour milk, lard, salt, flour and apples.— Now make,s,dough as for soda buiscuit only adding a little more lard to make it shorter. Take a bit of dough out on the kneading-board and after kneading roll this as for pie -crust. Then cut in pieces long enough to cover an apple, al lowing for lapping the edges. Put in two of your apple halves, sweeten accor ding to taste, and cover apple and sugar with dough. Lay the dumplings in your bread-pan the amoothe side up, first hav ing your pad well buttered. Proceed in this manner until you get your pan well filled, (he sure it is a large sized pan, for they will go off like hot cakes;) then place a small bit of butter on the top of each dumpling, sprinkle a handful of su gar over all ; then place in a moderate oven and allow them to bake one honi.--- Serve (not too hot) with pudding sauce, or with sugar and cream. When a man has been out in the world a long time, earning his meat mid drink in any other business than that 01 school keeping, it is astonishing how ignorant he soon becomes, and with what awe ho listens to little girls bounding the prin. cipal countries of Europe, and stating the latitude and longitude of principal cities—perhaps spelling-with ease and ao• curacy, many of those puzzling words which always send us to our - Webster Unabridged. It is astonishing how we shed our learning as we get older. Wben intoxicated, a Frenchman wants to dance, a German to sing, an English. man to eat, a Spaniard to gamble, an Italian to boast, a Russian to be afeetion. ate, an Irishman to light, an American to make a speech. When we are abroad, we can bear well enough with foul ways, nasty streets, nol sortniditches. but a spot upon a dish, at. home, or an unwept hearth, absolutely distracts us. IS PDsiItUZD ETZIKWZDXZ/DAT M 0112,1310 Advertising Bates: THE REASON WHY. SUNLIGHT FOR THE SICK. When the heart is still disturbed by the relics of . 11 passion, it is. Droner to take ups new one than when wholly cured.