HAWLEY & CRUSER, Editors and Proprietors. VOLUME 32: Montrose pc:mural Is PUBLIMID Bran' WZDNIMAT MORNING At ifont rose, Susquehanna County, Pa rrace—Woot Side of PublleAvenoe Cents,. all the Local and General tives,roetty.Stre rim Aneedotee. Idiseellaneone Read ng.Correspond cane and a reliable clase of advertisement., Advertising Rates One equate, of an Inch apace.)3 Week e. or lest. al I month. $1.2 5; Y months, $2. 50 ; 6 monthp, s{.6o; I PAO. A liberal discount on udvertiamenta o; a greater length. 1.111.1ne.s Locals,lo eta. a line tor Oral leeertlon. and 5 eta. a line each eabacqttent ineertion.— Marriagee and deaths. leen ; obituaries, 10 cis, a ha, FIND J 033 P A SPECIALTY ! chark Work. lAnr Pry I. E. B. HAWLEY \VII. C. CRUSER. Business Cards ttlackamitha and Jobbers,Home 'Shoelna a specialty In tb. buttinerat. Wagons and Sleighs ironed and work warranted. re - Debts con tracted moat be cane.lled by the .firm. and neither member personally. Friendaville. Jan. IS. BURNS (t NICHOLS, -y RS In Drugs, Medicines. Chemicals. Dye. .t..itle,Patnts:ol.ls, Varnish. Liquors. Spices Fancy at.cles.Patent Nedlclnes. Perfumer) and TolletAr- Mee. AV — Preseription. carortall3 ompounded.— Brick Block, Montrose. Pa B. Banns, 21. 15.71 E. P. I.II.VES, M.l). t•radu•te of the Onlversity of Michigan. Ann Arbor. ltkis. and also of Jefferson Medical Colleze of Phila delphia, ISU, has retnrr.ed to Prienderillee. where he will auend to all calls in his profession as usual.— Residence in Jessie llosford's house. Office the same as heretofore.. Frlench. vine, Pa., April 29th., 113:4,0 . m. IS=!!!!!:221!12 No. 170 Broadway, New York City. Attends to all kinds or attorney Business, and eon darts causes In all the Courts of both the State and the Felted States. Feb 11.1874 -Iy. DR. . SMITH, 9ENTIMT. ROOM! at rile dwelling, nett door north of Dr. Halsey's, on Old Foundry street. where he would be happy to sec all those in want of Dental V. orb. He trelr confident that be canple sae all. bosh in finality of work and In price. Office bunt . * frorn.9 A. It. to 4 P. X. if ontrose. Feb. 11, 18741—tf BEAT BEND, P. Situated nerarthe'grie Railway Dc. pot b o large and commodious house, has undergone a thorough repair. Newly furmsbed.rooms and sleep ing apurtments,splendid tablecand thihge compels mg, a Ms, eh,. hotel. DENBY ACKERT, !kept. 10th, 1,73.-a. Proprietor. B. T. d: E. B. CASE, BADNESS-MAKERS. Oak Brannan*,light and heavy. at loweat cash prices. Also. Blankets, Breast Bien ants, Whips. and everything - porta - Ming to tho line., cheaper than the cheapest, Repairing done prompt ly and it good Style. Mont..oee, Pa.. Oct. 'N. PM. THE PEOPLE'S MARKET. Punaar Proprietor. Fresh and halted Moats, Raw, POrk., Bologna San ,pae.eLC., of the beet quality. constantly on hand, •E peters GIP .1211. liontr.e, Pa„ Jan. 14. 1873.-1 e • BILLING.S STROUD IftHE AND LIPIS INSIIRANCH AGENT. Ale hustrieseatten de dto promptly, on fail terms. Offlc. lret door east of the bank or Win. 11. Cooper A Co Pub.lcAvenne,biontroar. Pa. [Attg.l.lB69. aly Ifibusos STUMM. CHARLEY MORRIS THE HAITI BARBER, has moved his shop to the building occupied by E. McKenzie h, Co.. where he is prepared to do ail blade of work lb his line.such as ma king switches, puthLetc. All work done on short notice and prima. low. Please hail update me. LITTLES d BLAKESLEE ATTORNEYS AT LAW. have removed tu their New Oifia, oppoaite the Tarbell Row, R. B. LrrrLE, OE°. P. Urns.. E. L. BLAKESIZE. W. It. DEANS DEALER in Books. rtationery, Wall Paper, News fa pers. Pocket Cutlery, Stereoscopic Views, Yankee Notions, etc. Next door to the Post Office, Montrose, Po. B. DEANS. 00pL 30, 1374. EXCW.A..\ - GE HOTEL . .1. I.IARRLNOTON wishes to Inform theVablittbal having rented the Exchange 11,11 tel in Montrose, he it now prepared LOaccummodati r the traveling, publte in Arst.class style Montrose, Aug. 23, 1673. • u. BURIIIT.T. Soutar An Staple and Fancy Dr/ (lauds, Crockery, Hard want. hark, Staves, Drags. OW; and Potato, Boots sad Shoos fiats sod Caps. Furs, Buffalo Robes Gro ceries, Provisions, &c. New-Itititord, 1 a.., Nor, 6, '72—tt. DR. 11. A. LATIIROP, ♦ I miniaterr ELEcTuo Tamara. Biama, a sic Foot of Chestnut street. Call and consul to a.I Chronic Otdcacer. Montrose. Jan. IL It —no B--if. DR. S. W. DAYTON, PHYSIQUE B SURGEON, tender. his services to the citizens at Great Bend and vicinity. °Mee at nit res id ence. opposite Barnum Roue, G't Bend village. Sent. Ist, 180.—a . LEWIS KNOLL, SHAVING AND HAM DBESSING Nbop in the new Postedlce bufldine. where he will be found ready to attend all whd may want anythlnt , in hie line. Moatro.e Pa. Oct. 19 1869. CHARLES .N. 87'0.DDARD, Yealerin Boots and Soots, Bats and Caps. Loather anti Findings, Main Street. lot door below Boyd's Store. Work made to order, and repairing done neatly. kim.trose Jan. 1 IWM. DLL W. L.,RICILARDSON, PEI Y.SICIA.N & IitTRGEON, tenders We profession■ 5 e rvleestothe eftlzene of hlontrope nd viclutty.- 0 ffice hie rheider :e, on the earlthrettetofßnyee tiros. Foundry. ' [Aug. I. 1869. SCOT7 . LL,4 - DEWITT. 2k.ltorneyo at Law and Boßriton In , Bankrnptcy. Offie '4;n. AY j;ourt. Street-OTc, City" .156t1021111 Bank, Bing naraton. S 1• Y • • Wx. 11.Scorus., Jun , ' Ibttt, Jn. jElLOZEDzwyrr. ASA% 'TVA/MIL. - , Dealer to Drug. Xudleillerff Cbeuffeale, Paiute, One, Dye•etulte, Teue Spices.: Paley. Weds, Jewelry, Per fumery, Mc.; Brick Bleck, NouttflPlL. Establlehed •- • IfTan. 1, 18:5. L. F. FITCH, ATTORNEY AND attNRELEOR-AT-LAW. Mont rose, PA. .oface west of Ole Coati House. Iloutroee. JanzeO7Y7. 1615.-4yl" 0. 41'.11IIIEN, A TTO tot El' LAW. Bosixity, lizer:Jr% Pay., Pension and wn Clidaiii'sittiwAsid n. °nice fir., door below EturVo Store ...II 9ptro.e . :PA• Laku• 1.'69 N. A; C.19,95N0.2v, • Attorney at Law, Ordcelit thiS.COUst , Rouse, le the Commissiouer's Oaks. W. A. Cnossmos. Sloutroee. scot. . 1871.—tf. J. G. trlitAT.9lV, Cint.bcolszni.iatiluilit-t3raYsTon, P. Poad4r4iaranklin Yorke, minequebanna Co., Pa W- B.la "14, Z:ABINET AND CHAIR MANIWACTURERB.—Yoo of Main .I.n:et. Moptruse. Yn. latiz 1. 1869. M. C. SUTTON; ,AUCTIONEER, friBIJUANO6 - AOl$2lT, am 69t1 Priaadeatlle. Pa. D. W. SEARLE, ATTOHNEY AT . LAW. office over MC Store at 111 . Dedrivuer.lia the Brick Block ..Kontrolie Xs: La U 2 a J. B. gt A. H. McqOLL UM, ATTOCCETEI AT LAW Office over the Bank; Montrose Pe. htentroae,ltlay IV, IS7I. : tf • • 4111 ELF, AUCTIONEER. Address, - Brooklyn, Pa Jour 1,1167.1. . 1 / 4 : ..,.., .. \\.\\ ... ••• - :._ #4pil e k lr., , :' - ' 4 . , .1t- , •:r‘ r „ i ' 1,,,- ~. .:, .., ~ . i . ~ , . , ' - - . ... -7, 4!". : 71 :, - --,::-.,,,,, i 6 l- - , 1 . ~ ' \ \ .., - ) - 4 1 . • 4 1 1 .-... '' ' - -..,- ' il s'N ( ' • --- )- 1 . . . • - rP..--- ..-- , ''... v.. - ..r\ \ • .. i :. :. '7 ' ? - r . ~ . ._!,-.01.::. ~, f , . _ ..... . . . . . ~ . . . . .. \ . ..- . . . . County Business Directory Two lines in this Directory, oho scar. $1.50; each ad tiltional line, 50 cents. WM. HAUGHWOUT, Slater, Wholesale and haat. dealer in all kinds ol elate reran, elate paint, dte- Roote repaired with elate paint to order. Also, slate paint for este by the gallon or barrel. Montrose. Pa . BILLINGS STROUD. 'Genera Fire and Life t non ance Agents ; also,sell Railrotto and Accident Ticku toNew Yorkand Philadelphia. (Mee one doo ream ofthe Bank. BURNS at. NICRIDLS, the place to get Drugs and Meal cinee, Cigars ,__Tobacco, Pipes. Pocket-Books, Specta ties Yankee Notions. &.c. Brick Block. BOYD & CORWLti, Dealers In Stoves, Fla rdettar. and Manufactureta of Tin and Sheetiron ware. corer. of Main and Turnpike street. A. N. BULLARM Dealer in Groceries, Provisions Books. Statione and Yankee Notions, at bead of Public Avenue.. WII. 11. COOPER & CO.. Bankers, sell Poreigi, Pas sage Tickets audDrafts on England, Ireland and Scot, land • WM. L. COX, Harness maker and dealer In all article aerially kept by the trade. opposite the Bank. • JAMES E. CARMALT, Attorney at Law. °fat, one door below Tarbell Hotter. Pnblic Avenue. • NEW MILFORD. L. L. LEROY, Dealer in all kinds of farming Imply meat,. mowing machlnee, welll curbs. dog power., etc., etc.. Main St., opposite Havi ngs Bank. !firn• SAVINGS BANE, NEW MILFORD.—Fix per cent. in tercet on all Deposits. Doer a general Banking Bus nese. nil-tt S. B. CHASE & Co. H .GARRET St SON. Dealer, in Flour. Feed. II es Salt, Lime, Cement. Groceries and Prov'en us ` Main Street, opposite the Depot. • ?LIMEY & HAYDEN, Dealers In Drug.. andlledici nes and Manufacturers of Cigars, on Main Street, near 'be Depot. N. F. EMBER. Carnage Maker and 'Undertaker Main Street, two dime, below Hawley'. Store. CAYUGA PLASTER—NECTIOLAS SHOEMAKEILdes er fn genuine Cayuga Plaster. Frock ground. McCOLLDNI BROTHERS. Dealers in Groceries and Provisions, on Main Street.* J. DECKERMAN. Jo.. Beater in general merehandir, and Clothing, Brick Store. on Main Street. GIBSON. H. M. TINGLEY—DeaIer In Stevie, Tin, Copper. Brass and &matron Ware, Castings. &c. Also. man ufact n r er of Sheet Metals to order. Eve Trough and Lead Pip, business attended to at fair pricee—Gibeon GREAT BEND. I'. DORAN, Merchant Tailor and dealer i n Read) Made Clothing, DryGoods.Groceriee and Provisi one Main Street, ANO3 Yoram.' SMITH SAYINGS BM, 120 Wyoming Avenue, RECEIVES MONEY ON DEPOSIT FROM COMPANIES AND INDIVID UALS, AND RE rußzcs TILE SAME ON DEMAND WITHOUT PREVI OUS NOTICE, ALLOWING INTER EST AT SIX PER CENT. PER AN NUM, PAYABLE HALF YEARLY, ON THE 'FIRsT DAYS OF JANU ARY AND JULY. A SAFE AND RE LIABLE PLACE OF DEPOSIT FOR LABORING MEN, •:MINERs, ME CHANICS, AND MACHINISTS, AND FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN As WELL. MONEY DEPOSITED ON OR BEFORE THE TENTH WILL DRAW INTEREST FROM THE FIRST DAY OF THE MONTH. THIS IS IN ALL RESPECTS A HOME IN STITUTION, AND ONE WHICH Is NOW RECEIVING THE SAVED EARNINGS OF THOUSANDS UPON THOUSANDS OF SCRANTON MIN ERS AND MECHANICS. DIRECTORS ; JAMES* BLAIR, SANFORD GRANT, GEORGE FISH • ER, JAS. S. SLOCUM, J. H. SUTPHIN. C. P. MATTHEWS, DANIEL HOW. ELL, A. E. HUNT, T. F. HUNT JAMES BLAIR, PRESIDENT ; 0. C. MOORE, CASHIER. OPEN DAILY FROM NINE .A. M. UNTIL FOUR P. M., AND ON WED. NESDAY AND SATURDAY EVE. NINGS UNTIL EIGHT O'CLOCit Feb. 12. 15474. T AYLOR'S FA3tILY MEDICLNES Pain and Lameness relieved in a short time by the are of Taylor'. Celebrated OIL. The great Rheumatic and Neuraligic Remedy. This rnedltlne le not .1 curs ail, but it warranted to cure more of the ails and lieu which flesh is heir than any other med'elne ever dir. covered. Give it a trill; if you do not fluid It so. It costs you nothing. It may be used with the utmost advantage for any kind of Pain. Lameness. Wound. or Sores upon man or beast. Will nut smart the rear..t wound ur Tore. Foil directions for use around each bottle. Ask your Merchant for a free vial. No Cure— No Pay. Taylor'. Cough Syrup or Expectorant, for all Throat and Long diseases. le very pimi.aut to the taste and contains nothing lniurlour. Try it, and stop that wash and take the soreness) from your Throat and Lutists. Ask your Merchant fora free vial, Re Core— so Pay. Taylors Condition Powders for all kinds of stock and poultry. Warranted the best renovator of the spat ern of run down or dummied stock. thatluts ever been Mr. covered. Try them fur all aiseares incident to the brute creation. Directions for use around each pack age Mo Cure—No Pay. All the above medic nes for pin by Abel Terrell and BUrnek Nichols. of Montrose, and all Druggists and Dealers throughout the country. EL DROWNING TAYLOR. octobcr 21, lm—al—lm. THE GREAT CAUSE OF HUMAN J' MISERY. Just Published, in a Scaled • Entelope. Price air cents. A Lecture on the Nature, Treatmunt.and Radical cure of Seminal Weakness, or Spermatorrhems. induced by t-elf-Abuse, Involuntary Emmisatous. impotency. .1i ere. one Debility. and Impediment. to Marriage generally ; Conant:option. Epilepay, aud Fite; Menta. and ishysi. cal Incapacity. 6e.—Ely ROBERT 1 J. Ctil..Vls KW ELL. AI. D., author of the Green Book, The world-renowned author, in this admirable Lect• ore, clearly proses from hie own experlimce that the awful consequences of Self-Abuse may be effectually removed without medicinc,and without dangerous sur gical opemtions,.bouglea, instramcuts, Maga. or cordi ale ; pointing out a mode of cure at once certain and effectual, by which every sufferer. no matt.- what his condimonnuay be, may care himself cheaply, privately and radically. . gar This Lecture will prove a boon to thousante, Sent ander peal. to a plain envelope, to any address post paid, on receipt of six cents, or tw..) post stamps. Address the Publishers, CHAS. 3. C. KLINE & CO„ 221 Bowery. New York; Pont omen 80z,4586. Norte Better: write pollelea tq tho following companies: I Franklin Fire Insurance Co., Phil., As beta,53.300.000 continental, N. Y, ..... ...." 21,76,000 Germania, ." 1,.513.009 Hanover, 1.250,000 Nlegam..." 1,250.000 Farmers, York, 94 - 0,000 queens, London. .. 10,000.000 No "Tlger•Cata —Ail National Hoard Companies. and as a consequence, sound and reliable, having long been triad and always found worthy, as all, who have met with loebte,ut my Ageocy.wlll testify. Those who have patronized me, will accept my thanks. And to dome who bayonet; I can ou:y say, I promise to do by them, if they favor me. with an application, ma do by give them Ineanince yalut fur their money. Very Respectfully. JIMMY C. TYI..ER. Hartford Accident Insurance Company Policies writ ten from one day luone year tip HENRY C. TYLER, Join the Masonic Benefit Association at Scranton. Apply to ILENEY C, TYLER Montrose, December 8, 1871.-tf GEO. A. PRINCE & CO. • ORGIIIS • :AND - ELODEONS. Theloldest. Lamest; and Mnet perfect Manufactory In the United States. .54 000 . • Now in use. NO other litieleal'lnstrement tevei attained the same Popularity. ' V'Sand forPrlce List Address . , • ..-spreemo,,Nslr. MONTROSE Miscellaneous MONTROSE, SUSQ'A COUNTY; Pk, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10,1875. ffielect Nottrg. A NEW POEM BY BRYANT. Mr. Bryant in his old age has given the pub lie, through the February number of the forth tamillig Atlantic Monthly, a new and a striking poem. It may be accepted as the poetical em bodiment of his views and feelings now At the age of eighty, when he is looking toward the sunset of life. In the same magazine there al so appears a new and characteristic Italy-tint ed:poem by Longfellow, who now lies ill at his home in Cambridge, but we prefer to quote Mr. Bryant's : - - •• THE TWO TRAVELERS 'Twas evening, and before my eyes There lay a landscape gray and dim; Fields faintly seen and twilight stars And clouds that hid the horizon's brim I saw—or was it that I dreamed I A waking dream ?—I cannot say ; For every shape as real seemed As those that meet my eye, today Through leafless shrubs the cold wind hissed; The air was thick with tailing snow ; And onward, through the trozen mist, I saw a weary traveler go Driven o'er that landscape bare and bleak, Before. the whirling gusts of air, The snow flakes smote hts withered cheek, And gathered on his silver hair. Yet on he fared through blinding snlws And murmuring to himself he said "The night is near, the darkness grows, And higher rise the drifts I tread. "Deep, deep each autumn flower they hide; Each tun of green they whelm from sight ; And they who Journeyed by my aide Are lost in the surrounding night. "1 loved them oh, no words can tell The love thitt to my friends I bore ; We parted with the sad farewell Of those who part to meet no more And I whose tam this bitter wind And o'er the snowy Ittllocks creep !lust end my journey soon and find A frosty conch, a frozen sleep." As thus he spoke, a thrill of pain Shot to my heal t ; I aimed my eyes And when 1 opened them again 1 started with a glad surprise. 'Twas evening still, and in the west A flush of glowing crimson lay, I saw the morrow there, and bleat That promise of a glorious day The waters in their glassy sleep, Shone with the hues that tinged the sky, And rugged cliff and barren steep Glotmed with a brightness from on high. Ind one who was there whose Journey lay Into the slowly gathering night A ith steady step he held his way O'er shadowy vale and gleaming height I marked his firm though weary tread The lifted eye and brow serene, And saw no shade of doubt or dread Pass o'er that traveler's placid mien And others came, their journey o'er, And bade good night with words of cheer; "To morrow we shall meet once more; 'Tis but the night that parts us here." "And I," be said, "shall sleep ere long— These lading gleams will soon be gone— shall sleep, to rise, refreshed and strorg. In the bright day that yet will dawn." I heard ; I watched him as he went, A lessening form until the light Of evening from the firmanent Had passed, and he was lost to sight. (elected ffitorl SWAPPING OFF I was only a boy, but I can't tnrget it, if I lire nine hundred and ninety-nine years. It was before the days of steamships, thirty years ago, when they were very scarce at any rate. I was before t',e mast in the ship Jennie Hartwell, Cap— tain Harry Quackenbush, running from Boston to New Orleans. We had an assorted cargo and a cabin full of passengers,more than half of them ladies, and some of them so young and pretty that I used to look at, them, as I've looked at pictures many a time, wonder ing how they could be made so pretty. We had a full crew, all Yankees, and as smart as smart could be, and the cap tain as keen as a new harpoon, too. He was a young man,- -that was his first voy age as captain, but both the mates were old men and had grown gray at sea. But Captain Harry was no novice. He knew every rope and timber in the ship, and how they got there, and could handle her in a gal. as easy as one of your fast men can handle a team of horses. The owner was on board with his fam ily—his wife and three daughters—one of them the prettiest in the lot, was the one the ship was named after ; and more than once I saw her and the young cap tain talking with their heads very close together. But I was , ton young then to take ally sense out of that. To shorten in— for I don't like to car ry useless canvas in a yarn like this—we made a short run out as far as the Baha mas, sighting Abaco on the fifth day out. Then hauling up to the south of Cuba we ran along smooth and pleasant, till we were abreast of the Isle of Pines, and then a calm fell on us and we lay Like log on the glassy water, without wind enough to lilt the sails on the main truck. It was hot, too. Hot enough to stew the rosin out of the seams, but we got awnings up and made all as comfortable as we could. There we lay all of one night, the next nay, and another night, and by drift and all I don't believe we made five miles in all that time. But on the morning of the second day, when the sun rose, we saw a schooner in shore of us, not more than' four or fire miles, which had found wind enough to get that close in the night without 'our see ing her before. • I si.w Captain' Berry look "at her long and earnestly' with glass as soon as he came on, dec)c, and thenl heard him say in a low tone:to,thefirst xnate "Toni Barnes go quietly below, and get every Man oii deck, while I see to the arms and amunition. We're gtit a fight 'on our hande; Don't alarm the women, keep nil from them. Don't tell the men "Stand by the Sight though the /leavens &Sr yet what they'll knot; soon enough.— That chap is a pirate. He has crept out with sweeps in the night, only he sees a breeze coming, and thinks he can get alongside without making ns suspect !" Jumping Moses! How my heart beat ! A pirate ? I reckon l was red in the face, for the captain saw my look, and he knew that I heard him. "Garnet, keep your lips buttoned.— Don't lisp a word. We've got forty-one aboard, crew and passengers, well armed, and we'll beat that chap off if we can't uutbail him !" lie spoke so confidentially, that I cheered up at once, and asked him if I should bring up the powder for the one gun, a lone twenty-lour, which we had carried since the ship was built. "Yes sir,you shall be powder monkey." And he looked toward the schooner. His lips twitched and a sigh broke from them. There was a little breeze coming off from. landward, and we could see the sails on the schooner till, though we didn't feel it yet. But we knew it was coming, and the captain sent men and boys, too, aloft, to loosen out everything in the shape of canvas, and we soon had her under all, from royal down to course, with starboard studding sails set. .. ' So when the breeze did reach ,us,Rei felt t t ht once, and got steerage way right off. Long 6, , fore this the crew knew what tine stranger was, for they had been arm ed, and the gun was got ready. Moreover tie schooner had crept up within a coo ! pie of miles before we got a start. She had an immense square sail for ward,boomed out, and aflying topsail aloft and her tnws looked as sharp as a wedge. As the breeze freshened, I began _to think we would get away from her; arid so thought the captain, I think, for, his eyes Inked bright and cheerful, but all at once I saw a ring of smoke over her bows. and the next second a shot came like a shriek over our heads, making a clean hole thro' our three topsails,without Meting anything else. There was no use in mincing matters now. We knew it was fight. $o we dragged our twenty-four pounder aft and double-shorted it, while we cut away a part of the after rail that was in the way of the muzzle. By this time ail the ladies knew the danger. and sonic of them fainted, while others prayed. But I hadn't time to no tice much, only the captain made there a hit of a speech,and told them to stay be— low, while ht- put arms in the hands of the men passengers, and told then the ship might sink, but she should never-be given up to a pirate. One passenger, an old Jew, who bud a lot of stuff on board, wanted him to give up, so that their lives would be spared, but he got one word and a look from the captain, and he shrunk almost into' the deck, both set-re so fierce. Re didn't take ally more, hut went below and hid. A second shot from the schooner tote through our sails before we were rat with the long gun, and toen we let her know what we could do. We sent two twenty-four pound bulls nght through her big foresule, for aSe was within a mile of us now. Then, as of a sudden, she round:d broad side to, showing a deck full of min 'owl the come—oh. it was awful—a shisv er of iron shot from a full broadsideof guns. It cot away stays and braces, tore tiro' our canvas, let the mizzen topsail dovn by the run,cutting the halyard just abcre the slings, and killed the man at U? wheel, and two more. Captain Harry himself, sprang to tle wheel to keep the ship from brooding to. for the breeze was now fresh'; and le shouted to the gunners to double—shit our gun again and let the pirate have t, while he held the ship on her course. Thvy did let her have it, and t saw,a row of men go down as the shot, Outwit ver her deck from our gun ; but behre another minute she gave us nuttier ta— ritile broadside, and I thought Captsin Harry was hurt, for be turned as pale as if death was at his heart. But it wasn't him ; it was what he sow that hurt him. All three of our tgi— roasts went as if they had been cut dovn with axes, and there was canvas and ig ging all hanging and flapping ; while, to make it worse, a tiller rope was cut aid parted, and the ship came up in the tend heirdeaa and all aback. Sow, yelling like so many devils,the pirates came sweeping on in their schktm• er, cad they looked as if they were ter to our on.. -Aft here, every man, to repell rrd r' ehonted Captain Harry. Then I saw him rim below with a 10t ed match in hand. He came up in a moment, and he brought all the women and made4ew. crouch down in a heap under the shelter 01 the high bulworks aft. Then he stood, with his naked cutlass in hie hand, looking as if he fearetnoth mg On earth, while the pilot came bowl ing •on under fall sail, her fart:agile crowded with men. "Haul down your gridiron and surren der, or we'll not leave a man alive r shouted a big mulatto-colored wretch, with a sword in hia hand and a belt full of pistols. "Come and haul it down yourself!" cri •d Captain Harry, his voice dear as a bugle peal. "We Will cried the pirate, and he gave an order to his helmsman to luff and lay alongside. We saw men ready with ropes to make fast ; and then, as she closed, I saw our captain look taward the women and ray, in a low tone: "Remember my orders—more thou, oar lives &fiend on it." Then crash came the vessels together, and over tier bows into ours the pirates poured, in one riling, mingled mass. Just as they reached our deck.the long gun, which hadibeen swund around so it :hire forward, was tired right into them, and then our captain shouted, "Now I Now I' He and the men and passengers fired a terrible volley right into the pirates, and then I saf all our women' icrnmble over Our bulworks on the deck of the •Pira r te'' vessel, their action veiled by the smoke from our great gun and small arms. We men and boys were not half a min ute in doing the , same; and when. the pirates, or what were left of them, rushed iu frenzied fury's& to sweep, onrquarter- deck,they found it empty,and the schoon er, with all fastenings cut, forging ahead and clear of her. But that was not the worst. A dense column of smoke rising from the ship's hatches told them she was on fire, while we, on b9ard the schooner, were now sailing beyond their reach, having slain the dozen men who yet remained in the schooner. It was no longer fearful to us to hear them, but we saw them rushirg to and fro to get the boats. Captain Harry laughed when he saw this, and he laughed londei yet when he saw the Jew who had talked of surrender run up the rigging, chased by a half dozen pirates, for he knew what must come in a few minutes. It came in a blinding flash—a shock which made the very ocean tremble, and then all we could see of our good old ship was a mass of spars, plank,and bod— ies, flying through the air. The fire had reached the magazinc,and that was the end of her and ail on board. . . . On searching the schooner we found plenty of provisions, and money enough odjewelry not only to reimburse Mr. Hartwell for the loss of hie ship, but,to give all hands a handsome lot of prize mousy of which I got my share. %made quick passage into New Orleans, for that was the best port to run to, and Captain Harry was the lion of the day while we staid there. Mr. Hart— well bought a new ship fpr him, and as - Jennie wanted to be first mate for . life, the old gentleman canal rated. We were all at the wedding. 'TWAS TILE WIND Sitting by the fire waiting for the new year to come in, golden—haired Girtrude crouched on the hearth-rug. roasting her self in' the blaze, her head pillowe'l in the lap of her aunt Jane. She is a saucy young lady of 18, this Girtrude. with a short upper lip used to scornful curling ; but she is charming enough when she smiles. Aunt Jane is 35, with the pen— sive, softened face we used to admire in our youth Aunt Polly—a Ps; years older —sits on the further side ; and in the old leather covered arm chair is Uncle Ned, his brown meerschaum pipe in his mouth in a sort of haze of tobacco and meditation. Uncle Ned is not profound ly impressed, possibly, with the solemnity of the ocasion. Be is used to sitting up till midnight, and a good deal later, and does not trouble himself much about the past, except, in the geologic or historic 'aspects. But Aunt Jane is a sensitive gifted creature, profoundly sympathetic, with a dark, mobile face, and deep, luminous eyes. She is in the habit of holdinr , forth on matters connected with lore and' the relationship of the sexes with great fervor. On these occasions Girtrude generallyy makes profound gesTures, as though she were beating the big drum ; but Aunt Jane goes on with glistening eyes, heedless of the irreverence of the junior. Gerty, however, is rather silent and solemn to right. Perhaps it is that the thought that the ruthless flight of time had come to her, or haply she is soberud by the reflex tion that she is still unafti— tweed at the end of her first year in so— ciety. It is a long, irregular, many-colored room, in an old fashion country house.— At one end is a window that looks upon a lawn and a large garden. In the fur— ther angle there is a door, letting in a volume or lold air and the sound of dis— tant church bells, "Bother the girl !" growls uncle Ned, shivering. "Gerty shut that door." Gertrude let go the handle of the door; a gust of 6 ind caught tt and slammed It to with a bard hang. Aunt June jumps and turns a little pale, Polly, too, is startled, and looks significantly at her sister. "Do you remember, Jane ?" she asked. Aunt Jan a sighed sotti i . -An she said. "Mysteries," cried Girtrude, sinking down into ber place again. "What do von remember, Aunt Jane ? Come tell me." "It'e a very old . atory, dear." "All the better: for that; let us hear it. But first tell me what reminded you of it." "It was the wind." . 1 "OL, tell it Jane, it will be a lesson for these young people," cried Polly. "A lesson they don't acquire." said Aunt Jane, "but as you'll tell it Polly, if I don't. and as I couldn't bear to hear you tell it,— Well : • "It was eighteen or twenty years ago, Gerty, and your grandfather was alive then. He was a physician, and we lived in a big house in tne Clapham road.— There was a nice garden about it, and dose adjoining was another large house whose grounds were divided . from ours by a high wall. It was an old fashioned house—your grand rather's—with a wide passage right through it, and a glass door leading out into' the garden directly op- Oahe the hall door. In the other house lived au Indian nabob, a hot tempered, fiery man, but he had a son Benjamin, who was very nice—or at least I thought so then. Pappa attended on this nabob, and by degrees we became quite intimate with the family ; not with him for lie would never go oat, but with the sons, and especially Ben,who was the youngest, and only a year older than I. "Well, we grew up together, girls and boys, and somehow Ben and I were thrown together ; and he seemed to take a fancy to me." "Ah, you were very fond of him; don't tell me,". cried Polly. "Well, perhaps I was," said Aunt Jane, with another sigh. "'t all events, this went on for three years, and Ben had never said anything to me—not anything in particular, you know." "Three years,! cried Gerty, in amaze ment. , "Fancy! and never propose.— Goodness me I I'd have brought him to book in . three months." • "Ah, we were very differently Lrought up in those ..days, Gerty. Why, I was quite a baby in suck matters,a very child, compared with pu 4 and yet I was about 'your age,' if mot. Older. Why, I don't thinkird Said'a word to him in all those three years but just, 'Yes Ben,' and 'No Ben . : , Yee,' rwas - a little fool, I dare say, i Gerty •,. I can see it now. We would go lout fur king.walkti together, too, and Ben i would talk all sorts of nonsense to me— about love, and so on • and' all I conld t say to him. was, Oh,- Ben, you shouldn't ~.. ~~ ff / 7 ) tey,•''~-,. say such things ! Oh, Ben, you shouldn't hider() ! Ben, how can you I Ben, you musn't. Ab, I could shake myself uow to think of if, "But one New Years Eve—yes it was just eighteen years ago—Ben came and spent the day. And we bad a little car, pet dance, and Ben danced with me ever so many times, and we danced the new year in together ; and when the time came for him to go I went to the door with h , m—l generally did—to show bim out: "And Ben turned round upon ineafter I had opened the door, and he had just crossed the thrashold—turned round with his face quite white, Mid his voice husky, Jenny, he said, in a sort of hoarse whis— per —'Jenny, I love you ; will you be my wife ?' Ana he tried to take hold of my hands to draw me to hima And I was frightened, dear, and stepped back; and somebody at that moment opened the glass door at the other end of the passage and ti_gust of wind roared in and slam— med the big 'hall door right in Ben's face. I never saw Ben again, not for years." "Oh, aunt," cried Gerty, "why didn't you run after him ? I would." "Ah, my dear,' interposed Aunt Polly "we were very differently brought up." "But I'd have opened the door and shouted to him." "Well," said Aunt Jane, blushing slightly,"l did open the door after a while but he WAS gone ; and I called out very gently—Ben ! Ben ! But he never heard me. And he went ..int to India soon after. And some year after—nine or ten—l was walking in the garden all alone, and I heard somebody talking in the nabob's grounds. 1 knew the voice in a moment it was Ben's. I ran up stairs, to the very topmost room, where there was a window from which you could see into the na— bob's grounds. And there was Ben, sure enough —a hale yellow, tat man, with a sandy beard and a white hat. He was quarreling with a dark woman,a head tal ler than he—Luny Ben, 01 course; and there was a hideous ayah standing by with—No the baby was not so bad," said Aunt Jane, biting her lip. "Fur all that, iou neNer forgot him, Jenny, said her sister; and things might have - been very different if the door had not slammed." "Ati, y-s, - cried Aunt June, with a fi nut sigh, • 'Twits the wind." t ooling a Car Driver The other night as the 'last car' was turning around, two young men, who had fixed up a straw man in good shape.help ed him aboard and seated him at the end furthest from the driver. The 'dummy' man had his bet pulled low, his arms down. and was braced up against the end of the car that•he' looked us much a pas. senger as any one. Tne car moved off after awhile, and as it turned into Mich— igan avanne an old lady gut aboard. She paid her fare,the two young men followed ed Sint, and the car moved on again, the driver beeping his eye on the 'dummy' and wondering if he was going to try to beat his fare. At First street the driver jingled his bell fur fare, and the two young men and the ofd woman looked over at the straw man. Tne car moved up to third street, and the driver looked through the win• dow and yelled 'Fare' and jingled the bell again. Tnere being no respouce he opened the dome and culled out to the straw man : "Say you! You want to pay your fare?" There was no answer, and after going half a square he shouted out again : "You mat, there—walk up here and pay your fare." One of the men slit opposite the 'dum my: and he squeaked out in reply: "Drive on the old hearse." "What ! What's that. ?" shouted the driver, pushing the door clear open. "Oh ! hire a hall !" was the reply. mist .von've got to na.v your fare or get en'? ' exclinmee the ((ri ver, winding the lines around the break. t, "Grashus me ! If there's going to be a fight let me off!" shouted the old lady.. and she rushed down the car and made a clean jump from the door. "Now, then, are you going to pay your fare ?" said the driver us he entered the car. "Pay, be hanged," was the muttered reply. Yon'd better look out for „him ; he is ugly!' whisperiq the young man to the* driver. I don't care if he's as ugly as John Jacob Astor ; he's got to pay MS rare or off he goes!' The driver slid down to the end of the' car, spit on his hands, and continued: . Come, now—out with your fare or off you go!' There was no reply, no movement: and spitting on his hands again he called out: . . 'Well, here you come!' and grabbed 'dummy' b.' the shoulders. His object was to jerk the 'fellow' out of doors, add expecting a struggle he put forth ail• his energy in a mighty effort. It was very successful. The driver went out of the car heels over head, with tut straw man on top of him. and the yOung men leap. ed off the. front end of the car just ae the victim was trying to get his thumb in the straw man's eye.—Detroit Free Press. JohnneVs Essay on the "Tode." Todes is like frogs, but more dignity, and wen you come to think of it frogs is wetter. The wuts wick todes is noted for• can't be cured, fur they is cronick, but if I couldn't git wel Ide stay in the house. My grandfather knew a todewich some body had tamed til it was folks. Wen its master wistled it would come for flies.= They cetches 'era with there tong, with is soma like a long red werm, but more !Winn' onli :Menlo ham't got no gum onto it. 'the flu will be a standin a r,ub bin its pine legs to gether and a thinkin wet a line,fli it is, and the tede a settin some distance away, likt, it was a sleep,— Wile.yon are seein the fli as plane as you ever see any thing, all at once, it ain't there. Then the todo he looks up at you sollem, out'of hie eyes, like 'he said ma's become of that fli ? but you knot%) et-it: A Milwaukee man hid in a public door.: way and jumped out' find kissed his wife. She didnt whoop and yell,aa be - expested, .but replied : 3 ‘Donl.be so bog mister —7 folks around here know: me In r , - • TERMS :—Two . Dollars Per Year in Advance. Attert feetvg. PATIENCE. SY PHIEBE CAGY. ' • Why are we so impatient of delay, Longing forever for the time to be? For thus we live to-morrow in to.day, Yea, sao tomorrow we mapnever see We are too hasty; are not reconciled To let kind nature do her work alone ; We plant our seed, and like a foolish child We dig It up to see If it has grown. Tho good that is to be we covet now— Wo cannot watt-for the appointed hoar ; Before the fruit Is ripe, we shake, the bough, And seize the bud that folds away the flower. When midnight darkness reigns we do not see That the sad night is mother of the morn ; We 'cannot think our owo sharp agony ' May be the birth•pang of a joy unborn. Into the dust we see our idols cast, And cry that death bas triumphed, life 'is We do tot trust the promise, thatihe last Of all our enemies shall be destroyed! With rest almost in sight the spirit faints, And heart and flesh grow weary at the last ; Our feet would walk the city of the saints, Even before the silent gate is passed. . Teach us to wait until Thou shalt appear— ' To know that all Thy ways and times are jest; Thou seest that we do believe, and fear, Lord, make us'also to believe and trust! UNDER THE DAISIES. It is strange what a deal of trouble we take, What a sacrifice most of us willingly make, How the lips will smile though' the heart may ache, And we bend to the ways of the world for the sake 01 its poor and scanty praises. And time runs on with such pitiless flow That our liveS are wasted before we know What work to finish before we go To our long rest under the daisits. And too often we fail in a useless fight, For wrong is so much in the place of right, And the end is so far beyond our sight, 'Tis as when one starts on a chase by night, An unknown shade pursuing. Even so do we see, when our race is rou, That of all we have striven for little is- won And of all the work our strength has done, How little was worth the doing. So most of us travel with very poor speed, Failing in thought where we conquer in deed Least brave in I he hour of greatest need, And making a riddle thbt few may read, Of our life's Intricate mazes, Such a labyrinth of right and wrong, t 8 it strange that a heart once brave and strong Should Niter ut, last, and most earnestly long Fora calm sleep under the daisies '? But if one poor troubled beim can say, "His kindness softened my life's rough way," And the tears fall over our lifeless clay, We shall stand up in heaven in' brighter ar ray Than if all earth rang with our praises. Far the good we have done shall neyer fade, Though the tkurk be wrought and the wages And the wearied trarne or the laborer laid All peacefully under the daisies.. going pad*. THE SEWING-MACHINE The sewing -machine is an American inven tion of the last forty years. As was 'previously remarked of the reapers, the European m aca w . at musing maiminro hand method served to exhibit the difficulty of the problem, but in no important degree to solve It. The shoe sewing machine of Thomas Saint, patented in England in 1790. had -a sin gle thread, which was driven bye foiled need le through a hole previously punched by an awl, and was then caught by a loaner which held the loop so, that it was entered by the needle and thread in their next deseent;enaking ing a ebrochet stitch: The feed and th'e stich lightning movements'Were automatic. The sewing•machine of Thimonnier, of Paris, wait usedin 18410 for making army clothing,— Eighty of these machines, made of, world, were destroyed by a mob, which regarded them as an invention of 'the enemy. They were after ward made of 'Metal: . Adams r and Hedge, of Monkton, Vermont, in 1818, and m'oiet J. J. Greenough, of Now York, in 1842. add ed Improvements.. Walter Hunt. in 1999, made at.d sold loch-adults sewing-machines,but neglected to pursue the,business, which conse quently attraod it the time His extreme versatility - prevented suc cess ; his inventions absorbed 'his time; and ne seemingly bad none lett •tor securing. theyecin Wary results of hie- genius. He just miised,and by mere inattention, one of the grandest oppor tunity of the century. Elias Ilintte, with Infe rior inventive abilities but with an adapted 'nese to follow mit a' single object: , persistently, and with business ability, reaped the field, The world thanks the man who gives an improve ment into its heads, ; TllO name of EliaB HoWe is indissolubly,assoeiated with the success of the sewing-maeliine: 'This machine is :no_ ex ception to the ordifirirY rule that an invention Is a groWth rather than an Inspiration, and the discussion on the relative merits, or inventors has been both voluminous and, atrimoniouar-, Examiners,,,eorothissioneta, judges, , ,each in their turn have found it a very lroetty • ques tion how to apportion the respectlid credits. It to no smolt to conceive the need and one's mind td the intrleaciesor the prob tern. . Then came the' details.. The • original machine bad a siretple needle,. and made a run ning stitch ; per t ive sees Machine which made. a succession of loops E forming a erochet-stitch; here tlie machine paused ii ' while Al score of years winVpassed Id devising modes`oi !ceding,' continuous or intermittingrby various:arrange tents of parts., _The 'greatest advance' up to that time was the lockstitchjuventedihytHunt and rude by pesaing a' shuttle : containing a fctirer t4iend throisghlthe loop 'of' tin upper thread chirled'idOwn - through' the chills Van 'fiyipOlitted needle. Thia was •the feature of the How 9 machine. -Following ibis were many itaproaernenta, variattonsould pica adinstruents each PA. Wilscattfony motion feed and re, tatis3g)lookraks iatyir at, which . draws deice the ,it'eadtethrettkaad `through tt ENIE NUMBER 6. the spool containing the lower thread. There is no room here even to recite, the prominent' Inaprorements. Finally, the machine Is much indebted to the skill and enterprise of the me chanics and tradesmen in whose hands It hail grown to the wonderful proportions it now ex hibits. Without impugning the genius of the earlier inventors, it may still be said that the present proximate perfection of tbeMachine Is duo to the men who took up the work where Howe left it. The original Howe machine had a curved eye-pointed needle attached to the z.nd of a vi brating lever, and carrying the upper thread.— The shuttle, carrying the lower thread between the needle and the upper thread, was driven in its nos by means of .two strikers carried on the ends of vibrating arms worked by two cams.— The cloth wag attached by pins on the edge of a thin steel rib called a batter plat4-ivhich had holes engaged by the teeth of a small Intermit ' tingly moving pinion. This was the feed, and clumsy enough. - - • About 2,000 patents have been granted in the United States for sewing -machines; one im provement after another, until there seems to be no end to the devices. Some have reference 'to special parts, others 'are' adaptations of the machine'to new uses and ruing:hilt to which It had nut before been accustomed. If required to point out three mechanical contrhances upon which the most extraordina ry versatility otinvention has, been expended, the writer would most unhesitatingly instance the. harvester, the breech loading firearm, and the sewing-machine; each of these has thous aids iaf patents, and each of them is the growth of the last ftirty years.—E. H. KISIONT, in Earner's Magazine/07,February. ORIciLN--OF FAMILY NAMES. Existing names ate of different kinds and or igin. Some &Agnate a trade, as Tailor, Smith Shoemaker (in German, Shuster), Mason, Bak er, Carpenter, Cooper, Gardner, Carter, Cart wright, Carver, Cook, Bleecker, Miller, Fouler, Foster, Horseman, Adler, Hunter, Fisher, Mer chant (in German, Kauffner ; in Dutch, Koop man). Tyler, Washman, Singer,Plumber, Pope, Wheeler, Stewart, Bishop, Brazier, Sinker, Bar ber, Boiler, Oysterman, Sheriff, Butler, etc., and very naturally when, by civilized organizatlon of society, it was found necessary to accept fix ed names for families and their deicendants, very often the name of the - trade pursued by the bead of the family was accepted by the children, and thus went down 4 to" all the de scendants. In other cases, and this was the oldest custom, the sons added to their father's baptismal name the termination of son, so when the father's baptismal name was, for in stance, Jacob (and we know that the patriarchs had only one single name,) the son called him self Jacobson, and if his baptismal name was John, he was called John Jacobson, his son William would be called William Johnson, his son again, say Peter, was called Peter William son, and so on. Ancient records prove that such was'the custom in Europe until laws were established requiring a pent:lancet uniformity in the family names This was especially found necessary for the enforcement of the laws on the inheritance of property; hence the names Dickson. Thompson, Levyson, Harrison, etc.— Other names are evidently derived from the nationality of one of the ancestors ; for in stance, we find the family names of Dist, Ger man, Dutch, French, English, etc., or after the cities from whence they perhaps came, as Paris London, 'Madras, Berliner, York, etc. Other names again are evidently derived from a nick name, especially those meaning an animal, as Bull, Bear, Fox, Wolf, Ox, Lion, Hare, Pigeon, Sparrow, Colt, Bird, Stork, Swim, Fish, Duck, Pike, Salmon, etc. ; or after a color, as Black, White, Blue, Green, Brown, etc.; also after some quality, as Small, Short, Long, Sweet, Low, etc. But the most curious of names are those derived from objects, as Brush, Bell, Gun, A nker, etc ; or a material, as Water, Brandy, Wine,•Coffee, Zinc, Sliver, Gold, Stone, Wood, and even objects of clothing, as Shirt, Cost, Vest, Stocking; or a part of the body, as Leg, Arm,.Trunk, Head, Beard, Whiskers, etc. All these names are found in the directories of our large cities, and some names are even taken East, South, and West; Spring, Slimmer, Fait; and Winter; Moon, Bun, Star, Hain, Snow, Vmd, Blow; and finally we find Angel; Devil gas, Hell, and Damn.—Erehange. A MONSTER SAFE The transportation items the plains of a - sale of such mammoth dtmensions as to reqidre for its shipment in sections a train of forty ears is certainly one among .the many achievements of American enterprise and energy. An illus tration in the Graphie of ThursdaY represents the train about to start from the safe and lock Works of Diebold, Norros & Co.,ait Canton, Ohio—consigned to the Safe Deposit Company of San Francisco, Cal., for whom it was epee. laity manufactured. The vault of this monster safe has a measure ment of 27 feet in width, SS feet in length, and 14 feet in height. Ita walls are burgular proof, of tlicibest . Welded iirougheiron and steel, 8 Inches in thickness and compactly knitted to gether by double rows of Tha sines, noor and top are to be overlaid with nine Inches of fire proof cement, with an .outer cov- ering of iron, the whole adjusted in heavy ma sonry. The vault is provided with - doubledoors at each end, the outer ono being 6 inches thick, and each fortified, as It were, by , two bargains proof locks. The interior of the vault has 4,- 000 compartments, varying in dimensions.— Three thousand of them are , supplied with key locks, separately and dktinctly operative, and the remaining 1,060, have superior combination locks. A celebrated ,autlier says: "If I were to choose the people with whom I would spend my hours of conversation, they should be cer tainty such as labored no farther than to make themselves readily and clearly apprehended, and would have patience and curiosity to un derstand me. To have a good sense and abill tY to express It, am the most essentlal and nec essary qualities In companions. , When thouglita rise in us tit to utter among 'het:genial friends there needs but very little care In clothing them." Let not sleep fltil upon , your eyes till, you have thrice' reviewed the transactions of the past day, 'Where have I turned aside from rec titude? What have 1 been doing? What have I left undone which I ought -to have done? Be gin thus limn the first act, and proceed, and, in conclusion, at the ill which you have done be tronhled, and rejoice for the good. • Benjamin Franklin occasionally stumbled upon the truth. lie said : "The. ayes of other people are, tho eyes that rutn:us:,,lt all but myselt were blind, I should neither want a flue house nor fine hirniturc". _