II A W LEY az CRUSER, Editors and Proprietors. VOLUME 32. )11Dntrirst nuntrat PURLIS.IIED ETEET WEIMPLFIL&T MORNING, .111a/r1)..q . . Sasquchaffna County, l'a ; V ra r e—Well Side of Public AVell a; gnu ell the Locniand General New 1., Poetn.Sio eta.,tv., 31h-cellaneolle Readinw.Correvono sue a relishieciasa Of aavortirements. Advertising Rates: quire( Man Inch space.)3 wetko.or can Z.Z.I •h. ¢1.25; a months, $2.50; f, months. $4.50 A liberal diaconut nn adeertiAemento at a Locale.lo etc. a line for fleet a.•O. it line each aubaequent lurertion.— and death, fro,.; obituarica, 10 ct a. a line. Mares =Mi,.••--i.5..j..MU.L5,1 A SPECIALTY Q~rtck LFork•. Wll. C. CRC:SER. It. II A WLEY, 1 Business Cards /11:11;A" et -V.9CKE Y W N. Green and N. C. Mackey, hare thie day ev es into a Medical co-Partnership, for the practice Medicine and Mirzery, and are prepared to attend ,taptl . % to all cane in the lity,'of their prof,neion at non, of the day ::nd night. !notona, Pa.. April lf, 1517...-41-21.. 11. D. 11.4 I DIFIS, IL D.: 411IG:V;THIC ha. located Illm.telf at Nl,ddrt,,, , . as herr lie sr it attead promptly to all pro talvtrte-y taunt-AA-et w Iris Cat, ~aru,ira huikhne...emad floor, front. Ronnie at at ~ E. Baldwin's. Pa.. Starch l tt, It+7s, El= 4. WATSON, A Unroll .ot-I.co Mont r,'-e, Pone c Collect lone Promptly Atteotit..4 peoni Attention ;r 1 i, ell to rphuro.' curt Pent e , - I nrrell, Pnl , :o A vont!, .;, ; , ma. 31. .ite the 1 1.75. DR. h . TI". I, 800(1, al hi , dwdliind. r.:741 door on Old FOIlllar) hen. hr ‘i ,cid hr nil tirwr In want of Dvntal N ,1/1. 11. rootident that .nn pic moo nil. bo.h goalie o: 11,1 lb pru, OM, Lour, fromt. a, Y. tot r ....v. Feb. 11, 014-1( VA LLEY ROUE. liren.„ea. Sit tidied ticur tie Eric liallica) Dr i• con:H[10,111m, hou•e. tht, Al nth rgosle ,• rep., Scicl3 ietr,cni,nplcodid compriec •T c hotel. HENRY Ae - E • -it. Yruyrictor. fill. PEOPLE'S MA IiKET Propriator. and `..!,411.1.1 'Mean", Marne. Porli..lloltrla San ,,t •'La heat yaallty, huustautly un hand. at MiIMMIII .BILLING:i.STRu AND LINE INSURANCE AGENT Air. att ended to p romp! i .on fat r t cruo. °Mr. ,or cast of tt, book ol WIII, II Cooper S ( . 0 venue,liontro,,, Pa. [ A tor .1.156 n. -71.1 IlinntNon oNotto. CII-41tLET MORRIS II \ BARBER. Ims moved his shop to the • ocCuitted by E. 411cKeurte A:Co.. where be in to attat II kinen of work in lit, Ilne,nocb Se ma , A hes. puff. etc. All work done on nnort ,„. . Plettte Mill and see me. Lea'. r No. 170 Broadway, Now or Cit) I.ITTLES d. IILAKESLEE 7. UN EVS &T LAW bare rctuoved to their ~„I,O9lle.LLe Tar , ellßout.c. IL 13. LITTLE. GEo I'. LITTLE. L, BLAKE.,LEE. 111=111Mil IVnl] I:l4per, Ntwe ya =9 • • --. rorkot Cutlery. raercutql4 , oc VicAro, li.sukte etc. Not door to tla Pot . ' (Alive. Moran..., . B, b.EANS. ES 611_4_ , VG E HOTEL. URINGTON wirhee to Inform the poblictlno z the Exchange Hotel in 3fontroee. he , • .• pared to aLcuminodat n; the travnl]ng pqhl:c ,tySe. Aug : 2.h. IL 13LTR1T.7.. .1 ,laple and Fancy Bn (loads, Crottmry, , Hard. • Stover. Drug, Olin, and Palate. Bootr • Hats uud Cape. Purt 4 , Buffalo Robes, Gro ,• • - erovision.. ~,rd. I a., Nov 6, '7 , 1-4. 1 . le ,10EI1' G.R q WES, N'AitLE TAILOR. Montrone, Pa. Slop over '.;tore. Alt ordtr• filledin first-dal. Ftsl..= dune to order on rbort notice, nod warrun - :LI June al, '75. DR. 1). .4. LATI11:01', ELSCTI(.O BATHS, 6 Ole Fool of I.; e.trnet. Call and conaul to a.l Chronic MEI= AINoLL, lIiXING AND DAM DRESSING lie arts Posted:rice ‘there he wt , ready to attend all who may want anything Montrose ra. Oct. 13 Ib6l. ll_II:LES STODDARD, • ~ awl Shoe', flats and Cape. Lcatherand r Lae ns, Maw streat, let door below itoyd's Store. k•tra ••1 Lai r a order, tad repairing done neatly. Jae 1 Vqn. DR. IV. L. RICILARDSO.N, TAN 3rItGEON, tender, hi. professional ' , tv-lothv citizen: Of ontrose and vicinity.— of,a. 0,-,Aiderce, °lathe cornerrastorSarra: !:,.• Found', !And 1, laB9. SculILL & DEWIT'T. I.lr and Solleitorf iD Bankruptcy. °Bice ~,t rt Strvet,aver City National Bank, Bing- N y ' 14'31.11 ,c4covit.t, JratoziOntrerr. EAGLE DRUG STORE. t list!, the piaco to got Drugs and Mcnicincr. Speen/lei Nut/011, Brick Block Kt.. May SW, IS SEMBEiI dealer its Drithm Medicines Paiute, Dye-stunt, spites Perfumery, a te.. ploy 19, 1113. hi:. C. X. V.A.X.N.E1.4.3, Gl:] , t).N i.li tout located at Auburn L F FITCH, AND. CQUI:SELLOR-AT-LAIV, Mont- u3lc.• weer of thy: Court now'', J..nuar) ins.-4yl A 0. WARREN, • L.A tc. Bounty. Dna Pay , ronotou Claims- attended to. °Mee fin, liunnsStore, 2lontroee.Pa. (An. /..69 IV. A. C'IICISBIfO3. -; Office at the COllll, j7OnBC. IV the Lio.t IS. ,S.. Or.Otrixori. .1. G. VS'IIEATON, - • L rx AILNI, LlgiD SIIIWESOL I' u. addret.e. Frankllu Yorke. Suagnehonna Co., Po W. W 8.3.1.1T11, In ASD 13ANCIFACTUILER6.,—Yout AtuaLrusc, PL. )66g. 3. 1869. if. C. S ITTIVA EBB. and Ix sCUASCE Frlendscllte, Pa: D sEAILLE, 7"" El 'f LAW. °Mee. vet' the Stare.oi AS Lc Brick titock.Moutrose Po-, WO 64 , 7;=.l.tt L. °Slice ovsr .a. Dewitni . ',Jatte9 ./U. R .1. /1. Mc(fOLL Mitt' Law ognt-. owl...theßank, .11clutroiC mu) , 10, 1641. tt. A M • tIri.N EER - 14, lea, Addiete...ltro,ulklyrr,Ell 4,444\ No\ 4 4 \ t- t C!*/ ei it ; t 5) • • -. 1 „ %v. ( \riv + P. 6 7 PC . e:6 4. (71 „ fc; \ 4-* County Business Direcotry TWO lines In this Directory, one year, sl.bt; each ad MMM=M MONTROSE rot. tiAtiolrwouT, Slater. Wholesale and hetai dealer in all kind. tt‘ 11.tte roofing, slate paint, etc. Roofs repaired with-Late paint to order. Also. slats paint for mac b) the gallon or barrel. Montroac., BILLINGS STROUD. littler:l. Fire and Life non' finer Agents ; also„sell Itallroan and AcciduatTiekt to New York cud Philadelphia Waco our doorcast of the Slunk. Hoyt) & CORWIN, :Wiler• I a Stoves, [farthest, and Manufacturers. of Tin and Sheetiron ware.cornet of Main and To mut kt- street A. N. DULLARD Dealer an oroceries, Provision- Book•. Statione and Yankee Notions, at hoedof Public A venne.• WE 11 coOPER CO.. Bankers, sell Foretga Pas. sage Tack, to and Drafts on Engin Mt beta rit' and Scot land. • WM. L: COX, Barnes's nicker and dealer In all artielt nsaalli kont by fit.: trade, opposite tbe Bank.. • JAMES E. CARM ALT, Attorney AI Law. 00f ce door below. Tarbell House, Pebble Avenue. • NEW MILFORD. SAVINGS BANE, NEW M ILFORP.—F ix per rent. in forest on all Deposits. Does a general Banking RI, nests. -all-tf 8. B, CHASES Cl, ~ l ARRET R SON. Deale4 in Flour. Feed. Me.t 'nit. Uwe, Cement, Grorer , es and Pros's!, nr Main Street, opposite the. Depot. F. LUMBER, Carriage :Maker and Undertaker on Main Street, two doors below lla wley's Store. GREAT BEND. nottAx, Northant Tailor and Sealer in Re.t Made Clothira,s ,Dry Ooods.Oroceriesand Prov, . o. Main Strcet.• Banking, &c BANKING HOUSE CORN, & CO., m4or.rrztosm, P_SN_ GENERAL. BANKING BUSINESS DONE. COLLECTIoNS MADE UN ALL l'.+lNTs AND N;()MPTLY ACCoL7N TED FU I; lIERETOFDRE. DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOR Ei AL IA . UNITED sTATES s (an I.: BnNII, MAEMAI=I COUPONS D (Try AN D COUNT) BANK CHECKS CASHED AS USUAL. OCEAN STEAMER PANS.kGE TICK ETS TO A. FROM EI:IIUPE. INTEREST ALLOWED UN sI'EcIAL TIME AS PER AGREEMENT 1111 EN THE DEPOSIT IS MADE. In the future, as in the past, we shall endeac or to transact all money business to the satin faction of our patrons and correspondents WM. 11. COOPEtt & CO., 'Montrose, March 1(1 '73.--tf. Banker* Authorized Capital, Present Capital, FIRST NATIONAL BANK, MONTROSE, PA. WILLIAM J. TURRELL. D. D. SEARLE. N. L. LENIIEIM, - - 'C us hi e , pirert4r,. WM. J. TURRELL D. D. S4.:ARLE. G. B. ELDRED. DESSACER ABEL TeintELL. G. V. BENTLEY A. J. GERRITSON. Montrose, Pa E. A. CLARK, BihaCanit4w. E.!. A . PRATT, . New Milf.rd. Pa M. 13. WRIGHT, Susquehanna Dept, S. LENIIEIM, Gnat. Bold, Pa DRAF',6 SOLD ON EUROPE COLLECTIONS MADE ON ALL PoINTS SPECIAL DEPOSITS SOLICITED Montrose, March 3, IS7s.—ti SCRANTON SOINGS BANK, 120 Wyoming Avenue, RECEIVES MONEY ON DEPOSIT FROM COMPANIES AND INDIVID UALS, AND RETURNS THE SAME ON DEMAND WI !HOW PREVI OUS NOTICE, ALLO W I 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 FOE LABORING MEN, MINERS, ME CHANICS, AND MACIIINISTh, AND FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN AS: WILL. MONEY DEPOSITED ON OR BEFORE THE TENTH WILL DRAW INTEREST FROM THE FIRST DAY OF THE MONTH. THIS IS IN ALL RESPECTS: 10 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. 11: SUTPHIN, C. P. MATTHEWS, DANIEL lIOW. 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'CLOCK. • Feb, 12. 1874. V REOEHOU P. !MOTHER, General Undertakers .I)EALpats IN ALL EINDs OF COY FINS, CASKETS, ETC., - • c 3 REA 13231%.73:21. ALL pitDERSPROMPTLYATTE2iDEDTO ItEctiittra , thtu Binghamtory..Marhle Works April Z 1,1674- 411 kindo- of Monuracnt.P. " lieu& tones, and T .Marble Altualef, tua4c to urdcr.- AlEo. Scotch Om:kites ,4,12 band. " 4. P/C:HI:RING ds rter.r.llls(l.: Cour! Area U. P, BIZUWX. INC. 23, 4/n. eirct Nortrg. •'SEE'ST THOU TILE LILLIESt" See's( thou the Mlles, Ituw they blossom, how they bloom Can'st thou tell me whence their beauty Or their delicate perfume ; Or know'st thou the reason Why the spring-time showers fall ? How the summer bath its season, And the winter after all? Can'st thou read the stare, my Prophet ? Or the lesson they would tell Have they langtetee you interpret I3y some mystic kind of spell ? Cau ' st thou curb the clouds, and bino them To thy bidding when you list ? Can'et thou see what is behind theist As you penetrate a mist Can'st thou 'chain the vivid lightning As a slave unto your skill ; Or mutpel the raging tempest To obedience at your will ? Can'st thou mount the winds and ride As swift coursers of your own You're a little thing beside them— Like a silud.grain to a stone. fans thou-sound the deep sea fastness With a s.imple spool of thread; Or with fingers ta :telt the vastness 01 the great vault overhead Yet I rend is human meekness Teaehful stories out of all. t. d is strom.,eagainst our weakness, Ile is gia.4tt}chore we are small. Ile has clothed ,the tender lily With a robe surpassing kings', And He shakos the rain of Heaven On the earth from off His wings. He has lit the stars with fire ; He bath formed the miglity sea. All thinvs move at his desire, Will lie not take care of nu. ? And must I go e'en second minded Tu my Maker hi my need? Can, n creature fir a creature With its Master intercede By , A o lue wondromt intercession That toy poor heart may not know ? Be hash ears for my conleision, For His word bath told me so. Knock, and it shall he opened Seel:. and you shall surely find nen: one door to Heaven And it., Ruler is behind. II , • is neither deaf nor blinded, lac stands within the gates ; it:ur a man to he reminded That a erattiumn knocks and waits Trust the Master. By the compass, By the level and the square, .Mark your actions set your ashler In the living temple there. S e i%ber ,hod tor bar( Ihot enter In the Grand Lodge built on high To the altar in the center, Under the All-Seeiug Eye. $500,000 00 100,000 00 -Then sun nowt have me for a 11)1 , 1-, Mr.ry Tl,eee words were addressed to a frag ile girl, who had to a l appearence but Just entered upon the golden e ra of a maiden's hfe, by a young man who would :lave hi en p,unouneed handsome. were it not for the fact that his entire person bore the unmistakable evidences of a life spent to debauchery and dissipation.— The damsel stood. holding it-res.:NJ-1y in her hand the latch of a small latticed garden gate, attached to the residence of a wealthy gentleman farmer on the east— ern side of Lung Island, and her attitude w a s that of of one in deep perplexity.— Her companion was the son 01 a well to-do farmer. whose idle disposition and profligate habits, having totally obscured ' uo him whatever favoiable qualities he might once haNe pussesksed, had complete ly estranged him from the good, graces of I the villagers, and now he stood, at that age when most young men are preparing to make their entry upon the broad thea 're of Ide, deformed in image and mind and condemned to Le disappoint( d in one of the tenderest points of human nature. His downcast air and the embarrassed I but firm deportment of the maiden told th e a hole story. He was in love and had beenseiected. , ‘Then vuu wont have me for a lover, Mary Lii3if ?" . _ -ft Cn.•ce+ trin much, Hugh, ro be corn pHlled to speak so plainly upon a topic u p on winch I thought—that us I hoped we already understood one another. But con cannot be totally blind to the obsta cles stand in the way of our un. ion." "No, Mary. I am not blind to them.— In the first place there is my own evil destiny, that thwarts me in all the dear e..t, sides of my heart. Do what I may. fate scowls upon all my undertakings.— You smile, Mary, bat it is as true as Holy Writ ; I was horn under an evil star. and am doomed to continual. defeat and dis sappointment." "But this cannot be predestination, Hugh ; for you know you left the side of one who loved you with all the tender- Nees of which woman is capable, to lavish your affections upon one whom you knew was enable tdilreturn them." "Yee, I know, Mary—that young offi cer engrosses all your thoughts, but he doesn't care the half for you, Mary, that I do—he is frit trifling with your gentle heart. arid when , he has auflicicatly sinus ed himself, he will turn and throw it from him, as a child throws away a toy of which it is tired, loving you, Mary, to wither like a rose on its stem. Heed the warning, Mary Leilie, or- bitter for you will be the awakening." "LA u net part in ung: - .!r, said Mary, whose light blue eyes were dimmed with tears which: another word would have drawn from in torrents. "My heart I cannot give you—that is another's but my friendship may-.s , :rve as an induce ment to quit yotir suit ways, .and in that light my baud is yours." • "My rude grasp is not sufficiently hon estfor the hat,dof tsqt.t ire Leslie's naugh ter,7' Hugh made answer. "Farewell, proud girl; at least, my addresses will Dot trouble you again," and .With - this he turned abruptly away,itind:Was soon lost 13111gbanitoP; NY =ZEN MONTROSE. S El= ffiatetcti AN EVIL DESTINY. BY B. F. G "Stand by the Right thnuehle Heavens Ih111" to view amid the wanderings of the leafy lane in which had taken place the above interview, Hugh Morrison was, as has already been medtionsd, the son of a thrifty far mer, who, thinking to do something for the family honor, had educated hint for a profession. Hugh chose the law, and af— :er the appointed time for study mid ex— pired he settled down in a small country village, on the seaward side a,f Long Is land, Where he opened an office, and for a short time fortune, smiled upon his labors, and he gave promise to a glowing career. lint even here, after awhile,Mor :ison's idle disposition made itself lest, and besides this drawback to success he had conceived the idea that lie w,;,s burn under an evil star, whose was apparent in the failure of his most munitions prospects. After several months of steady application to his duties, it we, whispered about that Hugh 'Morrison was getting into dissipated habits. and oftentimes his office was closed fur days, and the affai•s of his clients neglected. while the time which should 'h.ite herii devoted to them was spent among low corn pan ions at a sea-side tavet•n. With all these things in view, it was hardly to be wondered that his suit pros pered not with Mary Leslie. This was the position of things, win n on an afternoon in Autumn, a small. strangely built vessel was discovered a. the anchor of the village, and twe a ld evening a number of rough-looking attired as sailors, were observed 10ut14,11 , about the only tavern in the place. There'd be another chance for the revenue officers," said old 'Squire Leslie, who had been standlng upon the piazza of his dwelling which overlooked the ocean, narrowly scrutinizMg the stranger thrungli his telescope. "Your lover will soon be among us again, Mull, or 1 ant m ist ak en ." I)o you think there is anything wrong rho .tt the vessel, father ?'• said Mary, evi d,ntly much interested. "Um 1 she's either a smuggler, o sofa -thing w0r.; , ," muttered the u!d (113 . 1. s! , I! scrutinizing her. -she has the sirang-st look about her cf any [ en r saw. But Harry will be here . shortly— ucA not blush, you witch—and lit silt ..;01 1 clear up the mystery for ns."— It au 38 the 'Si] ul re had said. A party levei.ue officers came to the 'tillage ',xi day and among them Harry Wilson —the person alluded to as Alary's But ihe stranger was either an honest cruiser, or else her plans had been so al t fully laid as to defy the ‘igilence - of th,,se commissioned to watch her. Nothing now remained, therefore, but to keep up a strict eum•ilance upon the motums of tier crew. For several days the vessel lay at quiet anchorage, and Ilugh Morrison. aho I4)r some time past had been g , tting shal.hv and negligent m his attire, wa , r,hservcd 01 a sudden to dress uell, to nAve pl,4ht{ of money, and to pass the greater part of nig time in the company of the smug, visit,rrs. It was one very rough night in An 2 gti: , t that a small boat, containing four or five p,rsons, pulled along,ide the Wizard “Boat ahoy !" cried the watch— goes I here "Why, don't you know me, Mynheev Dawson ?" responded a thick voice, with a strong Dntch ace‘lat, from the rear of the boat. "It's your very good hen' Va cobHummel, that byes spirits of you. '•I know YOU en,pmfh, Ifornmel, hot who arc those with Poi ?" eai&l ihe watch. "Dev have the password, I tell you," replied Rummel. "You,d have spared both of us corm trouble by cagin g so in the first place, Bummel," growl ed Dawson. But comt on*board, we have quite a tea party here to-night." 1u H. few moments the entire party— consisting of the aforesaid Bummel,Hngh Mcrri-on, and several persona whose char acters for probity might have suffered detraction in the village, had the object of their present . visit been known-were safely bestowed upon the deck of the Wizard. Tau stir made by their arrival brought up their mate, who conducted them below, where they were ushered in to a cabin of rather cramped dimenisons. filled with a party of noisy revelers, com posed partly of the crew, and the remain der of certain persons of standing from the village. Ilynhee: Bummed was evidently no stranger in this silent circle, to judge from the familiarity with which he saint ed the skipper and crew. Hugh Morri— son wiis:eyidently on terms of intimacy with all, for he called everybody by his lisurname, and drank very deeply of the smuggled liquors. As the night wore on, the revelers' waxing more and more nproarous,indulg ed w songs and low-lived jests, Until the cabin rang again, when. in the midst of the , n fusion a pistol shot was heard without—the cries of the watch, and the seedling of many feet along the vessel's side and fleck. An instant after, the watch came run— ning into the cabin, crying, "We ate be— traved !" The exclamation had barely escaped his lips, when the door was thrown open slid a party of revenue officers headed by Harry Wilson, entered the cabin. "Out with the lights, lads, and push for it !" said Morrison, ashing a goblet of wine on the nearest lamp, and spring ing to his feet ; "he must have sharp eyes who sees Its: now." "The doors and hatchways are fast; you_svill find resistance rain," said the voice of Wilson, in the dankness. "You will fare better if you do';nofoppose the officers of-the law in the execution of this duty." ' . Some of the boldest•of the Party now made a rush-for the cabin door, but were repulsed by the officers, and a desperate skirmish ensued,. during which the groans of Hummel, were diStinctiy audible amid oatiib soil curses of the smugglers---- But it wait useless for a few to, contend again - such a superior number, and in, the end the smugglers were eonipelled to give in anti the whole party obligetlita accoin patty the officers to ti'e village. , A trial Was held a few days afterwarb, and Thigh • Morrison), among lathers,:tints con tined to some. months'impkisonmen t. in the county jail. He was .resigned, however, because he attributed this new reverse to his evil destiny. Mean wh ile,l time wore away, and Mary Liebe and liarry Wilson wore to Ue.-atar, NTY, PA.. WEDNESDAY. JULY 28, 1875. ried. fly II strange coincidence, the d a y settled upon for their nuptials. was thet succeeding the one on which Hugh Mor— rison', term of. imprisonment was to ex— pire. On the evening pre'r.eding the appoint da y , Harry parted from Mary with a "limn upon his brow, and a strange Fore. his heart. lie know that one who, he knew, bore him nn friendly feel— Ingi had sworn to be revenged upon him for the part he sustained in the affair with the smugglers, and, bearilla In mind that 'the incarceration of Hugh Morrison was mid that day, he dreailed same inter niptin on the morrow. He strove to drive awav these feelings, however, and 11-.,,nglit on his homeward walk diverse • . 'taut t•; Ilt•ct 14ms would assail Mtn,, t tt t, .t.• tune tie had r.achekl ft . 's room, t 1 almtst entirely dispelled them, unit dtov the receollection iroin his brain. On the f , illowing morning, Harry's lamilady went to his apartment to sum mon him to breakfast, this that he had overslept himself. The knock was unanswered, and the door being forced, the boric of the poor lad was found, lyirg 4 , 1) the floor at his I), ,14ide, with a deep wound in his chest, and a ghastly inaie• in his throat. The carpet around cord filth blood, a small dirk lay n t 11 , 0 r, find one of the windows ~ i )-; op it. th , . dues and ttailings being much ,Tm.hed and broken beneath it, •howin:l the direction taken by the Assas- That wit.; a terrill. day for poor Mary Upon an investigation of all the eir— ennista tees,the author of the murder was easily traced, Hugh Morrhion and his tt,,ociates had been lileiated on the night wisich this fearful oecuranee took place, ii»d 1i:1.1.11(.01a had hen seen loiterit.g ati,ut the village. The knife teund beside the body bore the. initials 11. 31.. will!, i lie ippearance of gur— rison at the ' , awe time the smugglers took their departure B , 'rved also to oorrohorate the gent ral t-uspicion that be Wiu the inerdt rer. l'los was, probably. an utiirr phase in ids destiny. A viiitr utter the above ucuurance the S, L t1:111. 11 ding that. ita despite of the doctors, Maiy was Gradually but surly h o lin g all a y beneath the irresistible de stroyer, consumption, resolved to pass a year in trayel—hoping by this means IA restore her twd!th—altogiither e se— cret prompting told him that Pycn this re ,o or i ce would be a Vail) one. Toe vess,l on b which 'Squire Les lie and Mary had embarked with was an:old sailor, brit having built expressly for nier cantiie purposes, her means of defense were exceedingly alight. tier captain, however. was an experienced navagator. and knew well chat ports to enter and what Itartuullar localities avoid. Luck f fir hrt,ZOS 210 MIN , feat her attend ed the first days of her passage out, and Mary's tiealtii app. art d to have received already u. renewal vigor, when one of h )se natal occurances fr, m which mari• i•tr, even in tkete peaceful times are not at ways exonpt, threw a cloud over the pr,speet. A treinendnona -storm baying aris. , ll at a., early 5!/ , g6 f the voyage. the —Good If ,, e•'—the name of the merchant on which the Le,.lws had embarked—was so dismantled and disabled by the gale as tm become unmanageable, aid being (Irk en upon a shoal of rocks, was wr , ck• ed almost be Oro the life boat could be made avallabe. lilt in ,this, as in other eases, what should have been their safe— guard proved theie bane: So great was he•rush made f‘tr the boat, that it upset immediately upon touching the water, a nd a h uniber of miserable beings were t. us, t r. , ugh their own rashness, Ili. ed l b to a watery sepulcher. Mary Leslie :vas the only one spared, through the ex ertions of a party of wreckers, who had .manoed u boat immediately upon the oc eurance of the accident, and by them she was recovered from the waves and con veyed to the shore. As she has borne, in it state of partial insensibility toward a small collection of hovels, which stood high up along the shore, a crowd of wild and uncouth beings were visible, darting about up to their waists in the surf, bear ing P.relics in their hands, and seizing upon such stray articles as occasionally found their way toward the beach,•while oti. e rs were dragging, bales, boxes, etc., into dry places. fur by this time the vessel had gone to piece:. A stnouldering .mass of ashes which burned beyond ,the huts, upon a piece of tieing ground, told too well the story of the vessel's loss. These wild looking be ings were wreckers of the most unprinci pled kind, and this tire had been kindled by them for the purpose of decoying and wrecking the duttressed merchantman, that they might plund.. , r her of her vain- able Conte,' 15. • Miry Li slie. when she regained the full possession of her senses, found herself lying upon a bed of emirs() material, in a darken(' apartment, and as she endeavor ed to-.recall all that had passed, she was conscious of a rocking senatien- -a strange dizzh.ese at the head. Upon looking around, she found to her astonishment that she was reclinit;g ,upott a canal' in the cabin of a vessel if considerable di mensions, and all at once the idea flashed upon her that she might have been dreaming. A very brim I time suffice :a to undeceive her ; at a restless motioncof her arm, a woman of youthful appearabee, who hail beer, sewing at the other end of the cabin, advanced to w ar d h er . "What hideous dream Is this? I thought our vessel had been lost, and all on board had perished.: Alt I who are you ? . your face seems strange; and yet, have. seen yon somewbre,•now I think again. Your name . • "What my name is now I am forbidOn to disclose. - I was once called Margaret' Schuyler," the wOunta " Whal Margaret Selittylor; the daugh ter of my father'a nearest friend, my old ,companion and- 'schoolmate, the-pride of our village olvon were once called, - pu remember • 111iidge' ' and they- called wcr 4s:tomer:L. Don't you remember ?" s'Yes—yes- remember ; all t heee . things -well never.:-never forget them either!" , • " Mary' looked round..in:amazernent; her friend ,wiis • 6.15""hy;. *Age.- what.. raitiveA' yon thus ? to hurt your feelingi • ."No, nothing ;. but your: Vrorda .y'o opened a new wodr.d."' -- • "What do you mean ?" ‘,!.1, who was once, as you say, the pride of the village, am riow—its shame." "Impossible ! what Margaret, you—" "Yes, I Mary—l, who had been deemed pure and good, was blind enough to lis ten to the proposals of a man of evil character, and behold the result." "Strange ! I thought you married, Margaret." 'ln word only—not in truth." 'And your protector is—" The commander of this ship." 'flow r "In ether words Mary,—my tongue fal ter= when I mention to a Lund Pr rate 1" "Merciful God ! Is tt so ?" "It "0, do not mock me, Margaret ; re- member, I am your old friend—pity me spare me !" "It is true, Mary—would for my_own sato that I might contradict it. My pre sumed husuaul was the leader of thr wreckers who drew you from the raging waters, after your vessel had struck. His hand lighted the bacon fire that lured you to destruction—he bore you to this vefs.el, and his name is—" The door of the cabin flew open at this instant, and a tall, muscular figure sup. plied thevacancy. - Hugh Iforriaon !" pie:•ceing Scream--a fali— a etAn fusion of tongues—a hurrying of footsteps. Morrison raised the inanimate form of his victim-from the floor, and as he gazed npon her palid leatures, lovely even thus, an exclamation of disappointment escaped Poor innocent ! she was dead And comes the most eventful por tion of this stop,. Horrified .at the numerous crimes of which he had been the cause, Morrison determined to sell his vessel, make over me half his' money to some benevolent institution, und,retiring with the remaht, der to some distant spot, to pass the rest of his days in penitence and peace. In pursuance with this resolve he took route for Europe, but was cast away—rescued from death by some humane whalemen, recognized in a neighboring sea-port by a former associate of Hurry Wilson. carried to prison and finally tried. The circum— stance the knife,which bore his initials, the fact of his being liberated from pris on on the night. of the murder, and the testimony of Margaret Schuyler, who had accompanied the guilty wretch in its tiight—all tended to convict him, and be was hang—protessing in his dying speech upon the 4catfuld his firm convic tion that he had been through life the victim of an evil destine. A Just Retribution, The other day a well dressed stringer carrying a hand-valise, called into a life-- insurance office and inquired if the agent was in. The agent came forward, rub bing bis hands, and the strarger asked : "Do you take life-insurance risks here ?" "Yes, sir ; glad to see you, sir; sit down, replied the agent. "What do you think of life insurance anyway ?" inquired the stranger, as he eat down and took off his hat. "It's a national blessing, sir—an insti tution which is looked upon with sover eign favor by every enlightened man and woman in America." "That's what I have always thought," answert-d.th,• man. "Does your company pay he losses promptly F' "des. sir—yes, :sir. "If you were in ,ured with me, and you should die to night, Fde hand your wife a check within a week... "Couldn't aitk for anything better than that." "No, sir—no, sir. The motto of our company is, 'Prompt pay and honorable deal i ••llow much will a $5,000 policy cost?" iiagoar d the stranger, after a long pause. "You are—let's see —say thirty ave. A Policy on you would cost $llO the first year." -That's reasonable enough. "Yes, that's what we call low ; but ours is a strong company, does a safe bus mess, and invests only to first•class secu rities. if you are thinking of taking out a policy, lust let me tell you that ours is the b st and safest, and that eyen the age nts of rival companies will admit the truth of what I sa y: • 'And when I die my wife will get her money without any tronble." gultrantkv that, my dear sir." • "And DI get a tlitridend every year, hen ?” "Yea ; this is a mutual company, and part of the profits come back to polic..Y . hollers." "And it went cost me but $llO for policy of 0,00 ?" Chaff s the figure, and it is as low as vim can get life insurance anywhere.— Let me write you a policy—you'll never regret it." “Tiletn'e the blanks, I spose ?" said the stranger pointing to the blanks.' • "Yes," said the agent, as he hauled one up to non and took up a pen. "What* you sac—shall I fill. yon out the' apOlica— ia "No, Iy., guess I wont take one (o-da" said the stranger,as he 'iinlooked his ; "but if you want something to take that wart MT your nose inside a vieek,rve . got it right here. Its good for corns, bunions, the toothache, earache, sprains, 11 The patent medicine man left; •• think I can suit you to a hair," said a boarding house landlady f•to a bachelor applicant who had been ~atatii!g.ihis re quirements. .'Snit me to a , hair ; na'am ! 1 hope'noti that's what my, lag ladyship tried to do, and *gare me three.64mpies in the butter." • ."Oh! my, friende.exclairoOd aims orator, "that X had a - wiadow, in my heart, that:you taight'all fook.tit „and ,see Of what Y tell you "Wouldn't a - pain 'ill your stomach do just.: as• asked - ti 'Smell , boy.' • ' AiDee Illoines,Wiiman wive her husband morphelle to cure.hini of chewing. tebse co. It cured him ; -bnl t ittids nu isebange saggeetively,, his- wife now,:ilOitig'hyr own !raying. - - A'yniiog laity,, residing - received over. fifty ;Julies. , Bli - with them --on her eyelids. TERMS .—Two -Dollars Per Yaar in Advance \ gome fading. THE LAST LOOK. [The following beautiful and touching poem Is from the pen of Edwin W. Fuller, of Louis- burg, N. C., the author of "The Angel in the Cloud," "Sea Gift," etc. It was written upon the death of his little daughter,and is dedicated to his wife.] Do not fasten the lid of the coffin yet, Let me have a long look at the face of my • pet, Please all quit the chamber, and pull to She And leave me alone with my darling once more. Is this little Ethel, so cold and so still ? Beat, beat, breaking heart, against Hod's mys tic will ; Remember, Oh I Christ, Thou did'st dread thine own cup, And while I drink mine let Thine arm bear me op. But the moments are fleeting, I must stamp on my brain Each dear little feature,lor never again Can I touch her ; and only God measures bow much Affliction a mother conveys by her touch Oh ! dear little head'; Oh dear little hair; So silken, so golden, so soft and so fair ; Will I never more smooth it Y Oh ! help me my God, To bear this worst stroke of the chastening rod. The bright little eyes that used to feign sleep, Or sparkle so merrily, playing at peep, Closed forever ; and yet seem closed with a sigh, As if for our sake, she regretted to die. And that dear little mouth, so warm and so soft, Always willing to kiss you, no mutter how , oft, Cold .I,nd rigid, without the least tremor of breath ; low could you claim Ethel, oh ! pitiless death ? Her hands, no—'twill kill me to think bow they wove Through my daily existence a tissue of love ; Each finger a print upon memory's page, That will brighten, thank God, and not fade with my age. Sick ca well, they were ready at every request To amuse us. Sweet bands, they deserye a sweet rtst ; Their last little trick was to wipe "Bo peep's" eye, Their last little gesture to wave us good-bye. Little feet, little feel, how dark the heart's gloom, tVI .n ynor h t.lll-41 in *het desolate room For oil 'twas a right sweet beyond all com- pare To see little "Frisky" rock back in the, chair. Oh, Father have mercy and give Inc Til l y grace, Te see through this frowning the smile on Thy face ; To feel that this sorrow is sent fur the best, And to learn from my drirling a lesson of rest DIVERS DANCES The warmer climates seem to be naturally productive of the best singers and dancers.— There alond can be found that glow and vivaci ty, that' imp&uousness and enthusiasm which can hardly ever be equaled in northern cli- mates. In Russia, for instance, dancing /is quite as common a pastime as in Spain or Italy. But bow vast the difference ; The' Russian peas ant's dance is heavy, listless, and oftentimes de void of gracefulness. lie merely sways to and fro to the monotonous music of the balateica— a long guitar, whose notes are frequently drowned by the shouts and songs of the standers. The dance of Cossacks is nothing but a noisy tramp, or condensed stamping of feet, dignified with the euphonious names of "koppak," `lro pak," and "kastethik." But the Court dance is the polonaise, or Polish origin, as indicated by the name. It is merely a measured promenade or march, affording the very best, opportunity for conversation, Is at once graceful and uncon strained, while the strictest etiquette may be maintained. The redowa, mazurka, and verso- Vienna are all Polish Jane& Great Britain, Frauce, and Germany have each been the birthplace of a number of special or fancy dances ; but at the present day there is really no national dancing,and the same bty lc prevails in all countries, at least in good socie ty. The jig and country dance are purely Eng lish, while the reel is unmistakably_ of Scotch origin.' The minuet—so called because of the short stop (menua oar) taken in . the different fignres--originated In the old French Province of Potion, and was afterwards introduced by the Marquis de Flauinarens into England,where it lopg remained in great favor, and deservedly, for it was a dignified and graceful dance.., The gavotte, witieb recently . come into fashion a s a f an cy d a nce, w..s tripped centuries ago by the peasant gi4o .in..the Gavot's country:--a small momitainons region in the neighborhood .at asp, in the south ofFrance. 'The'ever delightful waltz, contrary to gener al belief, isnot of German 'origin. It was ex treraely popular in France towards the tbir teenth and fourteenth centuries, and became knoWn in Germany only after that period. Its popularity was semi established in all countries despite'the prejudices and objections, raised. againstit. The polka was brought from the forests of Itungary In 1940; and crested quite a sensation., Everything was done to'-pulse fastileM' There were polka hiltisand polka dresses, polka Jew,: airy, add polka trimmings. The schottische and mazurka. no:it : came In vogue, and from that tithe finicy dances inidttplied ramdly,many of them goihg out of fashion' before the end of a Month.' Not a lew of the modern dances were first brought out' , fai the stage. The cotillion is a very old.dance, which, ha's 'beenbut . slightly modified, for, most of its lig-, urea were' well known ,more than one hundred years ago in seveial 'Of the ancient provinces of F France. bequet; mirror, said butterfly 11g. urea, for instance, were •Ceryr populac,Una mftia- Iy,Penaisted, as now, of round dances. - - . • By hanky arid integrity yon will gttin-erett h ever burb, and your word will be thought more valuable tri any bM.lness you may bp con cerned In; than the hiwiers' hoods in the , has wits barn , pride leads the van, poverty loino up the NUMBER, 30. FLOWERS. Can any one on reading this title exclaim "flow hackneyed and tiresome ?"-Bnrelp not. Flowers come under the bead of the fevi thhiga of which one never becomes weary ; that Is, If they loved once they arc likely to love them at and wish ever to have them in sight and drink in draughts—the larger the better—thefr balmy breath, the sweetest of all fragrance. A love of flowers shows a refinement ofna ture, no matter how rough and uncouth the, ex terior'of the being who possesses this fondness for Heaven's gilt ! What a strong influence they exert ovens in tent modesty-! flow often will thesight of one of the:l6llWe blossoms of the field carry us hack leagues of life long since swept over by the wing of time, and how plainly do we see again the, loved (me who gave us one of these when parting, and whom we never saw again ! The signiscance that }leaven has given to each of the blossoms it has generously scatter ed around us is truly beautiful and wonderful. There is an Easteni fable to the effect that each. flower is consecrated to a particular'angel,while the peculiarly delicate and lovely tea-rose, the fairy of roses, is consecrated to an archattgel - of the highest order. A lover of flowers could not welVselect as his .own any singl3 one, for while we gaze on and decide it the most beautiful, another of equal. beauty anti tweeter fragrance will appear. Alas, 4 like the human race, the most beautiful are not always the purest and sweetest. The mignonette, which holds Within its tiny heart a fragrance that should be known in every collection, is much more popular than many flowers of superior beauty ; this little plant has drifted to us from far Egypt, where, as some writer graceffilly remarks, "it may have wafted sweet odors from the banks of the Nile to the infant Moses, as he floated by In his ark of bul rushes." We are sure we should only cherish this dear little plant more sacredly, it we knew truly it had performed this dike of love to the sweet babe in his loneliness. We shrink from the, tamarisk. though so quiet and graceful, with a feeling of dread, probably because we have as sociated in our minds the use it was put to in olden times of crowning Roman, criminals, . which bus left a taint the wind of centuries cannot dispel. , Still, an etfection for flowers is the foretaste we bay&on earth of elysium. flow 'fascinating is the simple descriptions which We find in Dickens and other inthora of the loye of the toiling millions for those bright gems of nature! They are the compensations lett Its by the tall which leads us up to a glimpse of that flit' state of blissful innocence in which our first parenta dwelt in the Garden of Gardens. and symbolize the hope, wafted on balmy breezeis,ol the sweet • life reserved in the eternal for the lovers of the beautiful. • Bow sweet to think the wildliags of nature are tree to all ! Oa the hillside and in the mearlow Mau flowers nictilt vs: Irnc - bitkilti# - cull and crush, the happy child gather and twine them in garlands for illayllay's merry queen, "without money and without price ;" and the careworn may bend; and bolding them dose to the bleeding heart, take comfort that we, too, like the flowers, may perish and pass out of sight for a little while, when the glorious spring time of life everlasting shall cause us to' blossom anew In the "sweet fields of Eden," where we shall never perish or fade away, but "grow brighter and brighter throughout all eternity." HEALTH AND DISEASE. There is no one thing which causes so much pain, poverty, and distress, as had living and had doctoring. Laurie% philanthropists tyre nw consenting that health reform Is the basis of all other reforms. AVe must insist that physicians should begin to preserve health, rather than drug to restore it. It is strange that so many haie nn Idea that they can do the latter, but not the former. They can make one well, bOt cannot keep ono • so ; reversing the common-sense maxim that "an ounce of prevention ls _worth it pound of cure." Strange that the skill which puts a body in order, might not prevent the disorder.' Is it not easier to keep the road • than tolfuld it aftnr.„,_ losing it ? Is it wise . to lot ottr 'children con tract vices, that we may use our skill to return them to their lost virtues? Is it not easier to keep ten men sober than to rein= one drunk ard ? So must it be ifs to health. Far easier and far safer for tiocto? r s to 'study, to Practice, to teach hygiene—to have all their patrons live in accordance with the laws of health—than to dose them into health when siek. Why not do as one of jhe kings of China— give the physician a certain sum of money for every day the family were kept in health, but nothing for the days this inestimable blimsing was lost? 'Under such an eugagement the phy• sician shouldlave the control of the diet, and other sanitary regulations, which would be far easier, happier, and less expensive than his too' often vain effort to kill dfsease with .pelsonous drugs. • . _• • 'Besides, let it be well understood and never forgotten that disease is the remedial effort of nature to right a wrong ; the ntible defence against a vire attack ;• the coumgeons, loyal ral ly to dislodge a dangerous foe. Vor instance put snuff in the nose, which will be the ree,and the sneeze which follows to expel' It is the di sease ; put the same weed in the month; and the saliva flows 'to wash it out, and if held In for the first time nausea - rind vorelting •as rein forcements to expel the enemy. Swallow indigeatiblelbodMoon a - weak stom ach, and tho disease of tbroWing it back comes as a relief. These instances, be assured, sound- ly illustrate the friendly action of ear systems against old injuries: The cause of the disease is a foe to be removed—the 'disealie Itself a friend never to be y fought, hut alviais feyored flappily, howeyer,with ordlnary caution a man' becomes his own physician.. ; • . • •"I.le has bat to keep a careful watch over his desires, and restrain the promptings of passion always struggling to be free from the fetters imposed by, common sense ; tci keep : the system in a health •condltion, and conform, - to the Ly-, glenie laws, -which mark ' thu boundaries of health and disease, and Le has a certain immot pity from pain and suffering. , ' - L'• At a prayer-nieeting au old min got up'and prayed for a son now in a felon's cell for tin crime of murder. Anottee,old, Man trembling Pined his,PraSurs; adding that. he, toe, bud a son,init be had been murdered. Their names were made known, and the When of bldward S. Stokes and James rlsk; Jr., steed fur' tho first time face to facb.-04ithyo TraZufte: Every year of our liyes we grow , more con-_ vineed thatit is the what , und bestlo turn.: orir attention on tlie beautikl end thetufd i auk dwell as little tie - possible on the "an - ana . .