Win. 0 Omer. E. B. HAWLEY & CO., E. B. Hawley, THE MONTROSE DEMOCRAT, AND GENERAL JOB PRINTERS, Montrose, Susquehanna County, Pa Omcs—Weet Side of Public Avenue Business Cards. BURNS & NICHOLS, aBB In Drugs, Medicines, Chemical. Dye /de, Paint.,oll., Varnish. Liquors, Spices.Pancp ,r t .cio I, Patent Medicines. Perfumer's:ld Toilet/it em.. AV — Prescription. can:daily eonspounded.— Brick Meek, Montrose, Pa, ituaas. Feb. 21. ten E. P, IfIIYES, Y. D. Graduate of the Ontseretty of ?Caton, Ann tabor. 18613. and also of Jeffersou Medical College of Phila. delohla, ISM has returned to Prlendstrillee, where he 111 arteod to all calls to Ws precast= as asual.— Residence to Jessie liosford's house. Offee the name as heretotoro. Prtendwille, Pa., April Mb., 18741.--din. EDGAR A. runaiu COrMILLOtt ST LAW. No, 119 Broadway, New York cm,. Attend► to all kinds of Attorno Business, and con ducts eases in all the Court. of both the State and the United State►. Feb 11.1871-Iy. DR. R. W. *11111127/, I.IaNTIIT. Rooms at hie dwelling,heitnoornorth of Dr. Mime., on Old Foundry Street, whom he would be happy to see all those In 111112 t of Dental Work. Da reel. eon ddent that be can pleue all. both In quality of work and In price. Ofnco boon from 9 a.m. to 4 r. N. Mootrara. Feb. 11.1874—tf VALLEY HOUSE. alLty BZID, P►. Sal:MCI:I filar the Erie Railway De pot It a large and commodious house, bas undergone a t borough rapalr. Newly tunnelled rooms and sleep. tog ultartment.u,splendid tables.audallththgs compels. loge cost clams Hotel. ILENRY ACREIPE. sent. Wity.l43.-if. Proprietor. B. T. & E. B. CASE, LIARNBSS.RASERS. Oak Harness. light and heavy. at lowest cash prime. Also, Blankets, Rreut Blau hem, Whips. mid everything pertaining to the line, cheaper than the ctieapesL Repairing done prompt. ly and in good style. Mont :o.e, Ya.. Oct. 0, 1871, THE PEOPLES KABEET. Pan.kir Hann, Proprietor. Fresh and Salted Meats, llama, Pork, Bologna Sau sage. etc., of the best qualm, constantly on band, at prices to snit. Montrose, Pa,. Jan. 14. Ifine-Is BILLINGS STROUD. sRE AND LIFE C.l/1 , 34ANC11 AOSNT. Al nosiness attended to promptly, au fair terms. Office brat door east of the bank of Wm. 11. Cooper & Co. Public Avenue, Montrose, Pa. (Aug. 1.1869. sly 17.1871.( Mammas STROUD. CHARLEY MORRIS THE HAITI SAMBRE, has moved bls shop to the bonding occupied by H. McKenzie & Co., where he is prepared to do ail kinds of work in his Une,such an ma king switches, pod.. etc. All work done on abort notice and print. low. Please call =dose me. LI TTLES ct BLAKESLEE ATTORNEYS AT LAW, have removed to their Nem Ofice, opposite the Torben Rouse. R. B. Larne, tdoutro.e.Oct. 15, 18.13. CIMMEI DEALER in Boots. Ftattouery, Wall Paper, Newel • piers, Pocket Cutlery, Stereoscopic Views, Yankee Notions, etc. Next door to the Post OtElce, Montrose, Pa. VI . B. BILANS. dept. 80, 7371 EXCHANGE HOTEL M. J. HARRLNOTON wishes to inform thepubllethat haring rented the Exchange Hotel in Montrose, he Is now prepared to accommodate the travelingpublic in Fret-class style Montrome. Aug. SS, 18:1. EL BURR treater sti Staple and Fancy On Goods, Crockery, Mod- WSJ 0, Iron, Stoves, Drugs. Oils, and Paiute, Boots and Shoes, lists sod Caps, Fars, Buffalo Robes. Gro ceries, Provisions, Sc. Now-Iltllord, I e... Nov, 6, "72—tr. DR D. A. LATBROP, administers Eiserno Tax:anat. Barns, a 5.10 Foot of Chestnut street. Call and consul to a.l Chronic Disease.. Montrose. Jan. IT, na.—noS---d. DRS. IV. DAYTON, & BURGEON, tenders his services to the citizens of Great Bend and vicinity. Office at tie residence. opposite Barnum lions., irt Bend village. Sept. let. 180.-0 LEWIS K NOLL, SHAVING AND HAIR DRESSING. , hop In the new Posstoffiee building, where he will be round ready to attend all who may want anything In Si. line. Montrone Pa. Oct. 13 1869. CHARLES F. STODRAHD, )c slirta Boots and Shoes, Had and Caps, Leather and Findings, Bain Street, let door below Boyd's store. Wort made to order, and repairing done neatly. Montrose Jan.l 11370. DR. IV. L. RICHARDSOY, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, tender. hie sroresalona servlcee to the , citizens of Montrose an vicinity.— Office at alsraalder le, oaths corner cut of Sayro Coro.. Foundry . fAng. 1. 1869. SCOVILL 4* DEWITT. Attorneys at Law and Solicitors in Bankruptcy. Office No. la Court litrect,over City National Bank, Bing hamton, N. Y. Wm. H. SCOTELL. JIIIOO 18th. 11573. ABEL TVILBELL. Dealer in Drags Medicine.. Chemicale, Palate, 011 a, Dye-etraffe, Teas, Spices, Fancy Geode. Jewelry, Per. itimerT. Se., Betek Block , Montrufe, Pa. Enabliehed 1840. [Feb. 1, NTS._ LAW OFFICE. ►ITCII it WATSON, Attorneys at Law, at the old dike of Bentley I Fitch, Montrose, Pa. L. P. PITCO. [Jan. U. 'ILL w. W. winos. A. 0. WARREN, TTORISBY 4. LAW. Bounty, Back Pay. Pension and Exemo _on Claim; attended to. Dace de• ,00r below Boyd's Store Bontrose.Pa. [An. 1.'69 W. A. CROSSMON, Attorney at Law, Office at the Court licause, te the Commteatoner'a Office. W. A. Cilosanos. bleutrose. Beet. .1871.—U. J. G. 1171 EATON, CIVIL ENGIMIS lErt. Loan Przrrrron, P. 0. address, Franklin Forks. Susquehanna Co., Pa JOHN GROVES, rAsaioxesiorrenaa, Montrose, Pa. shop over Chandler's Elora. All orders gilled in Orsteratestylt. 'string done on short notice. and warranted to fit. W. W. SMITH, .7ABINET AND CHAIR IitANIIPACTIMERB.—Yoot of 11.8112.treet, Montrose. Pa. )s g. 1. 1869. .M. C. SUTTON, AUCTIONEER. and Isianancs AOLNT, Nat Gatl Friendavllle. Pa. D. W. SEARLE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, once over the Store of M. Desesner,ln the Beek Block. Montrose Ps. Leta 69 J. B. et A. IL IfeCOLLUM, .1 rrosaav► AT LAW Office over the Bank, Maatroia P►. Mantroaa, May 10. Al f 1 EL Y, Address, !Brooklyn. Pa AUCTIONEER dttue 1, lta4. JOB PRI N TING Zlsocristeca AT THIS OFFICE. CHEW. Pry Wm. - MONTROSE DEMOCRAT. TWO DOLLARS PER YEAR IN ADVANCE. VOLUME 31. Oh to keep them around us, baby darlings,fresh and pure, Mothers smile their pleasures crowning, moth I=l ere kiss their sorrows' cure; Oh to keep the waxen touches, sunny curls, and radiant eyes, Pattering IL , etoind eager prattle—all young tile's lost Paradise ! Ono bright head above the other, tiny hands that clung and clasped, Little forms, that close enfolding all of Love's best gills were grasped ; Sporting in the summer sunshine, glancing round the winter hearth, Bidding all the bright world echo with their fearless, asreless mirth. Oh to keep them; bow they gladdened all the path tram day to day, What gay dreams we fashioned of them, as in rosy sleep they lay ; How each broken word was welcomed, how each struggling thought was hailed As each bark went floating seaward, love be decked, and fancy sailed I Gliding from our jealous watching,gliding from our clinging hold, Lo ! the brave leaves bloom and burgeon, lo I the shy, sweet buds unfold ; Fast to lip, and .cheek, and tresses, steals the maiden's bashful joy ; Fast the frank, bold man's assertion tones the sor , mts of the boy. Neither love nor longing ke)s them ; soon in other shape than ours Those young bands will seize the weapons;build their castles, plant their flowers ; Soon a fresher hope will brighten the dear eyes we trained to see ; Soon a closer love than ours in those wakening hearts will be. Bo it is, and well it is so ; fast the river nears the main, Backward yearnings are but Idle; dawning never glows again ; Slow but sure the distance deepens, slow and sure the links are rent ; Let us pluck our autumn roses, with their sobs, bloom content. —o— It is only a glove, Ted, a lady's glove:— It has lain in the desk where I found it For twenty long sears, but the freshness of love And the glory of youth cling around it. Yes, there comes Ted, whenever I see that glove, A vision of music and dancing ; And again, in my mind, the eyes of a dove Into mine are tenderly glancing. And I clasp once again in this hand of mine That glove and the soft hand within it; And I feel in the waltz, through the glare and the shine, That it throbs like a new caught linnet. I feel her ambrosial breath on my cheek, Like the scent of the linden blossom : And I know that she loves (though she does not speak) B 9 the rise and fall of her bossom. Well, I went to the Indies in '6O. Ted ; And—and—Tnsh ! It's the brandy and wa ter, Why, when I came back she was dead—shc was dead ; And—l married Robinson's daughter. Just hand me a light and a fresh cigar, It is foolish to keep such a token, When the girl who gave it is sleeping afar In a land where the rest is unbroken, CYRUS FORD'S TEMPTATION -0- A THANKSGIVING STORY Jszoas Davrarr 'You'll be expecting company to-day, sir?' Simon Clayton looked over the top, of the newspaper he was reading, to see his housekeeper waiting for au answer. 'Why ro - -day ?' he said.. in a surly tone, as if annoyed at the interruption. 'Why to-day more than any other day. Do I ever have company P 'But it is Thanksgiving day, sir, and most folks have their kin around them,or perhaps you are going out amongst your own relatives, sir ?' 'No, I have no kin ! There is no rela tive of mine with whom I break bread either ern this day or any other.' The .newspaper came between the master of the house and the old house keeper once more, but it could not quite shut from his ears the murmur of the good woman, as she left the room : 'Dear dear 1 What a pity ! And so rich tool' So rich He dropped the paper and looked into the heart of the glowing grate fire, thinking of the bank account, the railway stock. the rows of houses, the western lauds, the mine shares, the vari ous investments that made his great wealth increase year by year, scarcely les sei.ed by the bachelor expense of his handsome house. So rich 1 So poor 1 Not one hand to grasp his lovingly. Not one voice to welcome him to a family gathering. In his youth, before he had filled his puree, a dark- eyed girl, Minnie Wayland, hail loved him and bed won his heart, but pa rents interfered, dismissed the penniless clerk, and Minnie married a reputed millionaire. Rumorsihtul reached him of hie rival's ruin, bat nothiog definite, though he knew the parents who had taken the true lore from him rested as der the daiseys years ago. Then, stung by the refusal his poverty bad brought him, he bad resolved to win gold. Through hard work, bitter self denial, a close, misery counting of every pentlyAie bad made the nucleons-of for. tune, and dollars rolled into his hands, till he could laugh at the miserable sem the Waylikods had told him Minnie's hus band must secure. He married then, and three bright eyed boys weie boin to him, and died.— Then a golden-haired girl lay in its moth POETRY. GROWING UP. -o ONLY A GLOVE STORY TELLER -0- BY S. ANNIE FROST -0- MONTROSE, PA., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1874 er's arms while the wife.i / ooked with dying eyes into the stern Tiite that had ever been kind and loving for her, and from husband and babe floated into the great hereafter. The babe became an idol, growing iuto a fair child, a tender woman, and when every loving thonght of the lather's heart center e d in her, she fled from him to wed poverty and degra• dation. Had it been poverty alone, the tnem ory of his own youth would have stayed Simon Clayton's refusal : but the lover who sought Laura Clayton's hand was an idler. and rumor said a gambler as well. Handsome. courteous, well born, he had won the girl a heart with well feigned adoration, and the loving father who sought to shelter her from certain misery was deserted. Then came the iron into Simon Clay ton's heart, locking every k'nd impulse, hardening every featute, she. 'ng on' all charity all gentleness. He nad sent back unopened every letter Lina wrote, and lived a hermit's lire in the very heart o!' the great city of 'New To it. Dreaming of it all over the fi.e. he was roused from his thou!.,lit by a knock at the door, and i s answe - to his -Com fit," a lad entered carrs,ng a letter. A tall, handsome boy of seventeen. with the country bloom yet upon his ruddy face. and the cot of a country tailor in his rough clothes, yet, withal. a lad with large intelligent eyes, a broad, dill brow, anu a mouth of fall resolution in its firm etas!) and well cut outlines. Doffing his cap, he nresentrd his let ter, and the heart of the old inan throbbed with painltil force as he glib iced at the signature. It was a brier lerter, scaicely more than a note, reading : DEAR SIMON :—I am dying, and I may cull you so now. Will you give a !Aping hand to my son who will bring this to you after I have left this world, five children lay beside my husband in the churehyaid, but me youngest. Cyrus, my only one, sits beside me now while I write, We nave scarcely enough of worldly wealth to save us front a pail per's grave, and I et nd my son tri you, and by our old love. Simon, 1 emplore you to help situ to obtain honest em ployment. I have been a true wife and a good innther, as far as I could, Simon, yet on my deathbed I know that my on ly love was given io you when they part ed us, and w 11 be yours if we meet in another would. MINNIE. There was a deep silence in the room as Simon Clayton read the letter, and he was forced to wait many minutes before his voice would obey him to ask : 'Your mother is dead ?' 'She died in the summer, sir.' •Why have you waited so long to come to me ?' •It wok all we had to pay oar debts and the funeral expenses, and I had to work to earn my traveling money to come from Moots.' 'You want employment now ?' 'I hull be very gruteiul sir, if you will help me to find work.' qu.day is a holiday. Yon will be my guest for the present, and I will see what I can do for von.' As Simon:Clayton woke. he reached out his hand and touched a bell upon the table near him. His housekeeper answer ed !he summons. 'You see I have company, Mrs. Grey,' he said, and the housekeeper wondered at the change in his race and voice, lack ing all severity yet so sat:. •You will have a ruum made comfortable for Mr. Ford.' The woman courteseyed and was gone, and Simon questioned his young guest. His eyes were misty more than once over the straightforward story of privation the buy told, his evident devotion to his mother, who had been widowed when he was a baby. It was not difficult to see that the boy, ground down by poverty, had yet a craving fur education, and had profited by all his mother could teach him, HIS very touch upon the books on the table, his eyes, when they rested on the well-filled hook case, toll the brain hunger better than spoken worih. So be!ore Mrs. Grey called them to dinner, Simon Clayton was planning the lad's future as his adopted son. True Thanksgiving fare the kind hearted bons-keeper had prepared for the unexpected guest, ald Simon Clayton's heart was nearer thankful prayer than it had been for many long years, as he look ed at the bright, grateful face opposite to h.m, and knew Minnie's child looked up to him for kindness and protection. Before a week had passed the lad was entered as a student in one of the city colleges, living`with his new friend. 'You had best call me Uncle Simon,' the latter said to him, 'fur your mother was dearer than a sister to toe, my boy, and if the people who hear you think you are my nephew, leave all explanation to me.' Bat the world troubled itself very lit tle about Simon Clayton's new relative, some of the more kindly hearted hoping he would have comfort in the lad, others pitying poor Laura, whose chance of for giveness seem..d lessoned by the arrival of this handsome buy. Four years glided by uneventfully and happily. The stern old man seemed to renew his youth in his intercourse with the son Minnie had sent him,the tallent ed scholar who was winning college hon ors, and who kept himself singularly pure in the whir of the city's vices. The fatherly love that Simon Clayton huJ thought honed in the graves of his own boys at Greenwood, sprang to new life and vigor, as Cyrus gained a firm stand in his heart. _.He kept the - boy from the temptation of vicious company by giving him free permission to extend hospitilities of his home to his fellow students. and the bov's own refilled in stincts led him to seek only the associa tion of gentlemen. His love for animals being discovered, he became the posses sor of a fine horse. He was encouraged to join a boat club.and Simon himself ac onmpanied him to such places of amass ment as he desired to visit. Yet,sudden ly lifted from poverty to riches, from a bitter self-denial to an indulgence of every wish, from the necessity of bread winning, to the snply of luxuries, Cyrus Ford was not spoiled. Devoted to the Interests of our Town and County With his heart full of gratitude, he looked upon all his opportunities for im provement as preparation for making his own way in the world. Re was studying law, and he studiei with the thought that his daily bread would soon depend upon his legal knowledge. The idea of over innJriting any portion of the wealth that was smoothing his path through college, never presented itself to his mind, and his most constant thought of future prosperity, rested upon his own exertions, was the hope of one day prov ing his gratitude by repaying the money spent so freely for him, though he could never by a lifetime of devotion return the fatherly love ar.d kindness lavished on him. Ile had heard of Laura Clayton from one of those dear friends who try to poi. con all happiness bi auticipatiors of mis ery. `You had better keep on the side of your uncle by never contradicting him,' this friend had told him, 'he was awfully fond of his daughter,but he never forgave his daughter for marrying against his will. thought his children were all dead,' was the reply. 'Not at all. Mrs. Cameron lives in a little rem, in Pearl Street, and runs a sewing machine for a living, She has one daughter, but all the rest of her children are dead. Hind times, ain't it, sewing for a living when her father is rolling in wealth.' 'ln Pearl street !' `Yes. She makes my shirts, so I keep her address. She is at No.—Pearl.' Tue conversation lett a deep impres sion upon Cyrus Ford. Once in the gen erous impulse of youth, he had approach ed the subject with his adopted uncle.bnt he was so sternly silenced that he never dared speak the name of the disobedient daighter. In October, when his twenty• first birthday came, Simon Clayton led the young man one morning to his li brary. 'Cyrus, you are a man to day, and you have a right to know what my inten tions are regarding you. In the coarse of the next year you will be admitted to the bar, and I shall make you the agent of my property. Together we will go over all my investments, and you will be able to relieve me of some burden of care as well as to learn where your own prop erty will one day lie. For to-day I make my will, and you will be my sole heir.— Not a word ! Your mother gave you to ! Be me loving son, Cyrus, it is all I ask of you.' •Your daughter—' 'Not a word of her. She died ta me fourteen years ago.' The tone was so stern,Cvrus could only t,ow his head in silence, and register a vow in his heart that his life service should never waver toward his benefac tor. It seems a sudden adoption when told in the limits of my story. but, in truth, it was no caprice that influenced Simon Clayton in his resolve. During four years of constant intercourse, ha had studied Cyrus Ford with the close scru tiny of a stern nature, soured by many dissappointments, and keenly alive to every detect in human nature. He found in his closet study of the young protege, so unexpectedly placed in his care, no deceit, no time serving, no servility. Aq honorable ambition, a re. spectful gratitude tnat was never fawn ing nor cringing, and upright integrity, and a close attention to his studies that were no child's task for country bred brains, all awakened the respect of the old man. His love was more easily won. Minnie's son, looked into his Lace with Minnie's great, tender eyes, moved his heart to affection before the first hour of Intercourse was over ; and, once given, the affection never wavered, grown' g stronger with every day's intercourse, till . the gnawing pain for his own boys gone was lost in the son sent to comfort his old age. ;, Thanksgiving came again—the fourth since Cyrus Font came to Clayton—and with it came a sorrow. For the first time in his life Simon Clayton felt the pressure of physical pain. He had been a model of manly strength during the en tire sixty years of his life, but -some un wonted exposure had brought on an at tack of fever that. setting his fangs deeo in the strot g frame, brought it vet? near the grave. Cyrus had been watching all night when Thanksgiving day dawned. clear and bright, though fhe first full of snow lay on the streets. The invalid. turned restlessly on his pillow, spoke of some unfinished business his illness had delayed, and seemed to have his intellect clearer than they had been before during his illness. •I wish you would call upon Hoskins this morning,Cyrus,l want him to under stand about the Isaac, of those Graad .street stores,beture the last of the month. You have the papers ready ?' 'All ready, sir. But are you well sitiongli for me to leave you ?' _ . 'Yes. I shall hcl better when this is settled.' It was a relief to be out in the crisp, cold air, after the long confinemet in a close room, and Cyrus felt light-hearted in a certainty that his friend was better. Surely this attention to business was a good symptom, and the fever was certain ly gone. Mrs. Grey was a goo.l nurse, and there was no especial hurry ; so, af ter settling the business with Hoskins, Cyrus came leisurely from the , office of the latter, up Broadway. It was full of holiday seekers, many At the stores being cloaq, and the clerks and saleswomen in their"best attire going to family gather ings. Cyrus was thinking of the day four years ago, when he came friendless and lonely to the great city, when, just before him, a girl hurrying past with a large bundle slipped upon the frozen pavement, and fell heavily to the ground. In a mo ment Cyrus was bending over her, help ing her to rise; but her ancle was sprain ed, and she would have fallen again but for his arm. . . "I am afraid you cannot walk," he said, kindly, noting with deep pity her thin garments, her pinched features, and the leok of pain upon her face. "I must try," she answered, stooping to secure the big bundle. . "Lean on me," he said, taking the bun- dle from her. "You cannot," he said, as the effort to put the injured foot down brought an ashy paleness to her very lips. " I will call a cab." "Nn, no! I have no money !" Again the deathly pallor gathered on cheek and lips, till tyrus lifted her gent ly into the cab that came at his call. "Where shall I take you ?" he asked. "To No. —, Pearl street," Directing the cabman, Cyrus got into the cab, with a face almost a 4 pale as the one beside hint. The number was the same his frieri4 had mentioned as the ad dress of Simon Clayton's daughter, and, looking attentively under the shabby bon• net, Cyrus saw that the face, pale and thin, was yet that of a child of not more than thirt.•en summers. When the cab stopped before the tall, narrow tenement house, the Young man lifted his charge in his strong arms, and, bidding tier hold fast to the big bundle, carried her to the room to which she directed him. - . It was a poor room, shabby to the ea• tame of shatibiloss, with no romantic air of poverty. but the real grinding facts of exteeme penury staring the beholder in the face. A woman, pale and emaciated, was stiching upon a sewing machine, but came forward trembling when Cyrus en tervd with the child. "Dont get frightened,' he said. gently; "it is only a 6 )rained ankle. I will send you a doctor, if you will toil me fur whom he is to inquire." "Mrs. Cameron, "0 Dollier child are you much hurt ?" y foot aches," the child said ; "but the gentleman has ben so kind ! The work is here, mother," "I will send a doctor," Cyrus said, hastily putting the child upon the bed he had better come at once.' As he spoke, he slipped a note for fifty dollars in Dollie Camerons hand, and left the room before she could speak. It wts too bitter. He c.told not realize it at once, but the cruel truth pressed harder as he neared home. This was the child and grandchild of Simon Clayton, starv ing in an attic, while be commanded their ri g htfid inheritance. Mrs, Grey met him at the door with a pale frightened face. There had been a sudden change for the worst since he left and Simon Clayton was sinking fast.— Hurrying to the room, Cyrus found the news only too true. Eagerly the dying man welcomed him. .He had for got ten all business cares, but he craved the love of his adopted son. "It is Thanksgiving Day, he said, when they had talked a little while, .•the day lor the forgiveness of injuries. Cyrus, I would I knew where Laura is to-day. I have destroyed all letters from her, lost all clue to her. She may be poor, Cyrus. She may long for her father's forgiveness. My poor Laura! I had never crossAl her Cyrus, and she uid not think I would be unforgiving. I could die easier :f I could tell her that I forgive her." Cyrus did not speak. Literally be could not, All that those few gasping words implied pressed upon his brain with relentless clearness. Laura at home, Laura forgiven, meant the loss of all the fair inhertance now his own. Do not judge him to harshly, that a tierce temptation cluchec: heart and brain There was no active crime to be commit ted. Only a few hours silence and the vast wealth winch ht had virtually con trolled for a few short weeks would be all his c wn. He could provide handsomely for the widow and her child when be was the heir; and he was surely better fitted to manage a great estate than a weak woman. Simon Clayton did not notice the si lence that fell upon the room while Cyrus wrtisiled with the bitter temptation iii his heart. He was vary weak, and tim • was short for prayer and preparation for ternity, so the silence suited him well.— But when the very round of his breath ing was audible in the stillness, he sighed as if from a breaking Heart, "My ?tor Laura!" Like clouds dispersed by sunlight, the shadows of evil sped from Cyrus Ford's heart. "Uncle Simon," he said, "I can bring Laura to you, if you wi.h." The dying mall expressed no supprise. The end was too near for that. It seemed nothing strange to him that his strong dying wish should be answered. "You can find her! Bring her quick ly, Cyrus, or you will be too late. Bat before you go, give me my desk, and send Mrs. Grey to me." "Shall I open your desk ?" "Yas, I only Want my will. She is my child, Cyrus," he said, pleadingly. "And if this is destroyed she will have her rightful inheritance," said Cyrus.— "Shall I lay it here on the live, -coals?" "Yes, God will give me an hour or two more of life. Burn it. Cyrus, and at once for Mr. Pearson." So, while the flames curled over the paper that would nave made tim master of nearly a million dollars, Cyrus Ford started to bring 'Aura Cameron to her father, and sent his lawyer to the dying man. But few words sufficed to explain his errand. Dollie was carefully curried to the easy carriage in waiting, and after a long drive the stately hoase was reached when twilight was setting over the great city It was thoroughly in keeping with the delicate instincts of Cyrus Fords chard-- ter that he sent Laura alone to her father, while lie carried Dollie into the parlor, and made her comfortable upon a sofa The grave pale child looked earnestly in his face. Do you live here with my grandfather , he asked ?" “I have livt.ll here for four years. I ate my first meal here on Thanksgiving Day tour years ago:' "Thanksgiving day! We meant to make a little holiday, too ; but I was not paid for the work I took' home, and I hurt my foot. I was not in itt very thank. ful frame of mind before r met you, and you were so kind and so generous!" "I hope this will be one of many thank. fall days for you," he answered. "Your mother will not leave home again I trust." There was still a lone talk before they were summoned to the eiok room. here the reconciliation has been perfect, and Doltie was placed in an arm chair where FIFTY CTS. EXTRA IF NOT IN ADVANCE her grandfather could look upon her face, "You will trust everything to Cyrus, Laura," her father said. "He knows how all my property is invested. Cyrus, you will be faithful to my child ?" 'God deal with me as lam faithful to your trust.' was the solemn reply. Before midnight, surrounded by those be loved, Simon Clayton died. Not un til three days later, when the funeral was over, did Cyrus know that Mr. Peat son had made a new will, while he was seek ing Laura Cameron. By this will he be came h'ir to half of Simon Clayton's estate, the other half and all personal property becoming Laura's. My story may not end here. Fiydyears later, on Thank:giving day, there was a wedding in the houre where Simon Clay ton had spent so many lonely years, and the bridegroom was the rising lawyer, Cyrus Ford, who wedded the grandchild of his benefactor, sweet Mollie Cameron. MISCELLANEOUS READING THERE IS NO DEATH. BY LORD BIMWER LYTTON. There Is no death I The stars go down To rise-upon some fairer shore; And bright in heaven's jeweled crown They shine forevermore. There Is no death i The dust we tread Shall change beneath the Summer showers To golden grain or mellow fruit, Or rainbow-tinted flowers. The granite rocks disorganize To teed the hungry moss they bear, The forest trees drink daily life From out the yi. wless There is no death ! The leaves may fall, The flowers may fade and pass away : They only wait through wintry hours The coming of the May. There Is no death I An angel form Walks o'er the earth with silent tread ; He bears our best loved thingv away, And then we call them "dead." He leaves our heart all desolate. He plucks our fairest, sweetest flowers ; Transplanted into bliss, they now Adorn immortal bowers. The bird like voice, with Joyous tones, Made glad with scenes of sin and strife, Sings now an everlasting song Amid the tree of life. Anti where he sees a smile too bright, Or heart too pure for taint and vice, He bears it to that world of light, To dwell In Paradise. Born unto that uneying lite, They leave us but to come again ; With Joy we welcome them—the same, Except in sin and plin. And ever near us, though unseen, The dear, immortal spirits tread; For all the boundless universe Is life—there is no dead, SHOWS OF GRIEF. Not very many years ago it was con sidered an essential part of the etiquette of fashionable funerals to appear to weep. Each mourner was expected to cary in the hand a white pocket handerchief, and to apply it to the eyes more or less fre quently—the interval between the dabs being regulated by the degree of relation ship which bad existed between the oo• consolable and the deceased. This bit of hypocrisy has happily been dispensed with, for some time past, by the mourn ing fashionista. It is no longer deemed indispensable to indicate to the word that what Hamlet calls "the fruitful riv er of the eye" is in a state of freshet. bt hoisti•.g the white ffig of affliction at a burial. This change id the fashion is ju dicious, fur tears are not necessarily the sigh of sorrow. In fact, weeping regret is usually superficial ; so that to counter feit tears is simply to simulate she low grief. Besides, there are hundreds of persons who, like Job Trotter in the "Pickwick Papers." can "lay on the wat er" at will. Actors shed on the stage mechanically. Nothing can be m ire fal• lacious than the outward symbols of sor row. Neither inky suits, nor cionds of crape, nor an overflow of salt water, nor the ilek-cted 'haviour of the visage, are to be trusted as signs of inconsolability, es pecially if our departed brother or sister has been thoughtful enough to leave a handsome legacy to the sable-clad and lachrymose mourner. In such a case, a Niobe might, withont injustice, be sus peeled of dissimulation. It is common to weep without much suffering, and equally common to suffer keenly without shedding tears. There are human crocodiles who could pour forth eye-water enough to swim in, without experiencing a single pang. DISCOURAGED It is so easy to say "Never give up the ship." It is so easy to hold your head up and step firmly, to laugh cheerily, and have a pleasant word for everybody,when safely hedged in from sorrow and pover ty by the love of friends and a bottom less purse. When sickness passes by to knock at some other door when home is the one sweet, safe corner in all the world, when th-re are those who would suffer that you might go free—ah ! then it is easy to feel as if nothing could ever matte you quite discouraged. This is a beautiful world, and there are lots of good things in it. Yes, marl a son and daughter, a few wives and mothers, and about t hel same proportion of husbands and fathers, do live more in the shine than in the shadow of life.— But there are so many. so many more, who have to buckle on their armor, anti spend their beat heart's blood in the dai ly life. • Oh! ye, whose paths are in the pleas ant places! whose flail was never tried by heaven's seeming disregard of your prayers and tears! who never knew the lack of tender home love and protection, exult in your happiness, arid thank Providence. But while, you drink from vJur cup of life such. honey sweet i!ranehtA, give a thought now and then to those whose daily potions 'savor , .so strongly f wo:mwood, and Pmetaber that a kindly word and a helping hand, which cost so little. may make lighter the burdens of some cue now almost dis couraged. . THE MONTROSE DEMOCRAT Contains all the Local and CI enors Ifteits,Poetryilts ries, anecdotes, Hlacellaneon■ lladlng,Correspocd• once, and a tellable class of advertisements. One square.(fi of an Inth roce.)3 wesks.or lose fill month. $1.55 months. $2.80; 6 months. SACO; I yeAl'r ater l.l6.so. A liberal dhicount on advertisements on. it' length. Easiness Locals. i 0 eta. • line for first Ir.sertion, and 5 cta. a line each subsequent 1111CItinn,. Marriages and deaths, tree; obltuatles,lo eta. a line. NUMBER 47. Two of Itothsehild's maxims . were never to buy anything that WatB not In. trinvically worth the money paid for 'it, and to never have important transactions with an unlucky man. If you would win success be punctual, courteous, honest, economical, agreeable in your personal habits, and regardful of your health. Be exceedingly carer(/' in the forma tion of business partnerships. Give close personal supervision to ev ery department of your business: "the master's eyes are von h both his hands." In serecting employees be governed by their fitness. To make good bargains, you must be well posted in regard to the market value ache articles you wish to buy or sell and their qualities and condition. Pay your bills prumptly and collect the bills due you closely. Avoid going security and making email mans. Don't neglect to insure your real and personal property. In making an lnvestment take care thut your principal is perfectly secure. Keep a sharp lookout fur swindling-de rketi. Their name is legion. . • Isl , ihr lend money to strang-rs. Beware of outside spemilat ions. Your beet chance of making money is always connected with the business you best un derstand. Never sign a paper until you have read t and fully understand it Use your credit sparingly. It may serve a useful temporary purpose,. but pay day is sure to nom., and you should endeavor to be always prepared for it. Always live within your income. In selecting a business, be governed to some extent by your natural twiteei and abilities; but do not neglect any oppor tunity that affords fair advantages, nuless it mikes requirements that are postively repulsive. In seeking a situation, remember that the right kind of men are always in de mand, and that industry' and capacity rarely go empty minded. Neither overrate nor underrate yourca pacity, but strive to estimate your powers at their just values Never fail to take a receipt for money paid, and keep copies of your letters. Do your business promptly, and bora not a business men with long visits. Caution is the father of security. He who pays beforehand is served be hindhand. No mu° can be successful who neglects his business. Do not waste time in useless regreta over losses. An nour of triumph comes at last to those who wait and watch. If you past your servants upon your affairs, they will uue day read you '- It has been said in another form of ex presztion that the slightest excess of ex penses overoncome is poverty, and the hg tea exri•se of income over expenses is wealth. The ab !icy of practical farm ers to master this great problem of life Is not s•t moon dependent upon what they know of their butiness as on their facul ty to apply what they know. Success In ousiness is doe to administration. Ca it'acity in administration is due to that faculty, power, oi quality called common senso, which everybody speaks well of and unbolt understands exactly We in fer its presence or its absence from the • results of a. man's life. We venture lap in) a definition of the phrase we are using not so much for the purpose of makiag - ' its meaning clear as for' the greater pur• pose of giving it a loftier place in your thoughts. Common. sense is a degree, a high degree—it. fine. the I ighest depict of human wisdom applied to practical things. L is not learning ; it is not knowledge ; it is rather the faculty . of applying what we may know to what we do. Other things being equal, the pm ticui fume: who knows the most wilt do the best; but other hinge nit being equal. a man why excels in wisdom In administration may surpass a man of greater learning, nr even grester knowl edge of things, But do not allow this suggestion to lead you to place a low esti mate upon learning, whether general or professional; culture of every sort gives us capacity to appreciate wisdom, and op• purtuuity also for its exercise. You have trouble your ferlings are injured, your husband is unkind, your wife frets, your home is not pleasantyour friends do not treat you fairly,and things in general move unpleasantly. Well,what of it? Keep It to yourself. A smoul dernig fire can be 'found and extinguish ed ; but, when this coals are mitered who can pink them up? 'flurry your sor row. The place for sad an disgusting things is under the ground. A eat 'fin ger is not benefited ,by pulling off the plaster, and exposing it under somebody's eyes; tie-lt up ti-d let it alone; it will get well of itself sooner than you can cure it. Charity, covereth a multitude of sins. Things thus covered are often cur ed without a scar; but, once published and confided to meddling friends, there is no end to the trouble they,may cause. Keep it to yourself. Troubles are tran sient, and, when a sorrow is' healed and past, what a comtort it is to say, "No one ever knew it until it was nil over." Laws, like sausages, would fail to in spire respect if all people knew how they were made. 'Tis God-like magnanimity t 6 keep, when most provoked, oar reason 'calm and clear. • Good company and good consecration are the very Sinews of virtue. • So long as pie are iunoevnt fear, noth• ing. No one can harm you. Each word of kindiiess. come when It may, is welcome to the pour. L Przustrze Era?' Ocolizipat Atomism° Adverthingßates: BUSINESS ADVICE. COMMON SENSE. KEEP IT TO YOURSELF.