fDpmitg Democrat. HARVEY SICKLER, Publisher. VOL. VTI. Ppming prinornil. A Democratic weekly _ paper devoted to Poll .. J ties News, the Arts and Sciences Ac. Pub- "" . lished every We dues day, at Tunkhannock H|l /Tr*>. f f -v Wyoming County.Pa t |mN LJ J BY HARVEY SICKIER Terms —1 copy 1 year, (in advance) 82, BO; if Mt paid within six.months, 2.50 will be charged NO paper will be DISCONTINUED, until all ar yavr-igcsre paid; unless at the option of publisher. RATES OF "ADVERTISING. TEN LINES CONSTITUTE A SQUARE. One square one or three insertions $1,50 Every subsequent iosenion less than 9 50 REALESTATO. PERSONAL PROPERTY, and GENERAL ADVERTISING, as may be agreed upon. PATENT MEDICINES and other advertisements oy the column : One column, 1 year, 860 Half column, I year--- 35 Third column, 1 year, 25 Fourth column, 1 year, 20 Rusliicss Cards of one square or less, per year With paper, -SB. rr EDITORIAL or LOCAL ITEM ad verfising—with out Advertisement —15 cts. per line. Liberal terms made with permanent advertisers. EXECUTORS, ADMINISTRATORS and AUDI TOR'S NOTICES, of the usual length, $2,50 OBITUARIE-*,- exceeding ten tin- s, each ; RELI GIOUS and LITERARY NOTICES, not of general nterest, one half tne regular rates. vertisemrn's must be handed in by TUES DAV NOON, to insure insertion the same week. JOB WORK of all kinds neatly executed and at prices to suit the times. All TRANSIENT ADVERTISEMENTS and JOB WORK must be paid for, when ordered- B mines Mot ices. K" R.A W ELITTI.E ATTORNEYS AT LAW Office cn Tioga Street TukkMMck t'u Hg. COOPEK, PHYSICIAN A SURGEON • Newton Centre, I.uxerno County Pa. 01,, I'AKIHSII, ATTORNEY AT LAW • Offi-e at the Court House, in Tunkhannock Wyoming Co. Pa UJ M. M. PIATT. ATTORNEY AT LAW of fice in Stark's Brick Block Tioga St., Tunk nannock, Pa. T4. a CflP i E, ATTORNEY AND COUNSEL LOK AT LAW, Nicholson, Wyoming Co*, I'.ie Es r ecial attention given to settlement ol dec. J dent's estates Nicholson, Pa. Dec 5, l c (j~ —v7n!9yl >V. iloAWi PHYSH IIN - • N • will atteml prumj'tly to nil MIIS in hiaj ro feision. May be found at Li- Ofll.-e at tlie Drug Srore, or at his residence on Putui in Srect, formerly occupied by A. K. Peckham Esq. DENTISTRY. ■ *y g- v ; DR. L. T. BURNS has permanently located in Tunkhannock Bon.ugh, and respectfully tenders his professional services to its citizens. | Office on second floor, formerly occupied by Dr. . uilmao. vbnSOtf. PORTRAIT, 'LANDSCAPE, JLHEWTSII X 1 ATLVTXDVG 7Jy V. Hl r Gh'R, Artist. Rooms over the Wyoming National bank,in .Stark's Brick Block, TUNKHANNOCK, I'A. Life-size Portraits painted from Amb'otypee or Phot ogrnphs Photographs Painted in Oil C< lors All orders for paintings executed according to or- ! der, or no charge made, ItT Instructions given in Drawing. Sketching. | Portrait and Landscape Painting, in Oil or water ■ Colors, and in all branches of tho art, Tunk , July 31, '67 -vgnso-tf. BOLTON HOUSE. HAHiIISHU HO f PEN'NA. The undersigned having lately purchased the BUEHLER HOUSE " property, has already com menced such alteration* and improvements as will render this old and popular House equal, if not supe rior, to any Hotel in the City of Harrisburg. A continuance of the public patronage is refpect fully solicited. GEO. J. BOLTON* WALL'S HOTEL, LATE AMERICAN HOUSE/ TU MKHAMNOCK, WYOMING CO., PA. THIS establishment has recently been refitted an furnished in the latest style Every attention will be given to the comfort and convenience of those who patronize the Houe. T. B WALL, Owner and Proprietor - : Tunkhannock, September 11. 1861. NORTH BRANCH HOTEL, MESHOPPEN, WYOMING COUNTY", PA Win. H. CORTRIGHT, Prop'r HAVING resumed the proprietorship of the above Hotel, the undersigned will pare no efforts fender the house an agreeable place of sojourn to all who may favor it with their custom. Wm.H CORTRIGHT. June, 3rd, 1963 MEANS' HOTEL. TOWANDA, 3P-A.. T* B. BART LET, (Late oft.. BRAIXARI> Hons*, ELMIRA, NY PROPRIETOR. The MEANS HOTEL, i* one of the LARGEST and BEST ARRANGED Houses in the country —It is fitted up in the most modern and improved style and no pains are spared to make it a pleasautand, agreeablestoppngi p;ace for all, 211yv3-u. ME GOD EON FOR MA I.E. TIIE subscriber offers for sale VERY CHEAP, an j almost new Piauo Frame SIX OCTAVE MELODEON. Also, a lot of Household Furuiture at very low prices For particulars inquire at the honse now occuj ied i by the subrenber, formerly occupied by Henry Stark. A G. STARK. Tunkhannock, Jan. 20th, 1863024w4 JX V THE peculiar tiint or A infection which we FIV call SCROFULA lurks y? in tlie constitutions of 'ah multitudes of men. It J either produces or is produced by an cn , feebled, vitiated statu* „ if t ' l ° blood, wherein ! jA-r' that fluid becomes in jjpcL i to sustain ® ' vital forces in their vigorous action, and j —A%&^ the system to fall into disorder and decay. The scrofulous contamination is va riously caused by men urial disease, low livinjr. disordered digestion from unhealthy ! food, impure air, filth and filthy habits, j the depressing vices, and, above all, l v I the venereal infection. Whatever be its origin, it is hereditary in the constitution, 1 descending '•from parents to children unto the third and fourth generationindeed, it seems to be the rod of Him who says, " I will visit the iniquities of the fathers upon their children." The diseases it originates take various names, according to the organs it attacks. In the lungs. Scrofula produces tubercles, and finally Consumption y in the glands, swellings which suppurate and be come ulcerous sores; in the stomach and bowels, derangements which produce indi gestion, dyspepsia, ami liver complaints; on i the skin, eruptive and cutaneous affections. These, all having the same origin, require the same remedy, viz., purification and invigora tion of the blood, l'urify the Mood, anil these dangerous distempers leave you. Willi feeble, foul, or corrupted Mood, you cannot have health; with that "life of the flesh" he<liy, you cannot have scrofulous disease. Ayor's Sarsaparilla is compounded from the most effectual anti dotes that medical science has discovered for this atflii ting distemper, and fur the < irrc of I the disorders it cntaiis. That it is far supe rior to any other remedy yet devised, is known bv all who have given it a trial. That it docs combine virtues truly extraordinary in their effect upon this class of complaints, is indisputably proven by the great multitude of publicly known and remarkable cures it has made of the following diseases: Eing'fl Evil, cr Glandular Swellings, Tu:ao;s, Eruptions, Pimples, Blotches aul Sores, Erysipehs, Rose cr St Anthony's Tire, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Coughs from tuberculous deposits in the langs, White Swellings, Debility, Dropsy. Neuralgia, Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Syphilis and Syphilitic Infections, Mercurial Diseases Female Weaknesses ami- 1 d, the who'e series of complaints thatr.ri.-o lioui impurity of the blood. Minute rop< :?* of individr. 1 cases ma} - be found in AU.H'S A\;.K;C\V AL.MANVC, which is furnished to the ih I:: *1 ts for gratuitous distribution, wherein n : y le learned the directions for its use, and some of the remarkable cures which if 1..- na.de when all other remedies had ! ih dto ::i rd relief. Those cases are jurpo.-ely t. hen front all sections of the countiy. in culcr that every reader may l ave access to s< : :c one v. ho can speak to l:im .f its benefits fnaa perst mil expericra c. Scrofula f . ingredients, some of which exceed the bc.-t of Sanuparit/a in alterative power. Ily its aid you may protect your.- e-lf fro - : the inffe r ing and danger of the se disorders, l'urge out the foul corruptions that r t and fester in the Mood, purge* out the tause s of disease, and vigorous health w ill follow. liy its pecu liar virtue s this remedy stimulates the vital functions, and tints c.\p< Is the di-tempcrs which lutk will in the system or I urst out on nry part of it. We know the pt:! lie 1 ",vc 1 a n iU -reived ly many compounds <-t" ty-r. ayari.'la, that jaomi-ed mucli and del notl.in •; last they will neither be deceived nor di ..pjnintcd in this. Its virtues have been provt n by abun dant trial, ami there* remains no question < f its surpassing excellence for the cure of tl afflicting diseases it is intended to reach. Although under the same name, it is a very different medicine from any other which h. - la*cn before tlie pco; le, and is far more ef fectual than any other which has ever been available to the an. CHERRY PECTORAL. Tho World's Great Remedy for Coughs, Cold. c , Incipient Con sumption, and i'or the relief of Consumptive patients in advanced stages of tho disease. This has been so long used and so uni versally known, that we* need do no more than assure the public that its quality is k> pi up to the lx*st it ever has been, and that it may la* relied on to do nil it lias ever done. Prepared by I)R. J. C. AVF.U & Co., Practical and Analytical Chcmist\ Lowell. Mass. Sold by all druggists every w here. For sale byßunaell i, Bannutyne, and Lyman A Whlls, Tunkhanno< k. Sterling A Son, Meshoppcn, Stevens A Aekley, Laceyville, Frear, I'san A Co, Factoryvilie, and all Druggists and Decisis in med cines, everywhere. THE HEALING POOL, AND HOUSE OF MERCY. Howard Association Reports, for YOUNG MEN on the CRIME OF SOLITUDE, and tho ER RORS, ABUSES and DISEASES which destroy the manlv powers, and create impediments to .MAR RIAGE, with sure means of relief. Sent in sealed letter, envelopes, free of charge. Address Dr J. SKILI.EN HOUGHTON, Howard Association, Philadelphia. I'a. 6n44 - lyear* THE UNXON STRAW CUTTER, MANUFACTURED BY William Flickner, At IIWA'JIAA'A'OCA', Tenn'a. Who has the exclusive right for Wyoming county, is one of the very few Machines that will cut Hay. Straw. Stalks, <*c., better than the old fashioned Cutting boxes, used by our grandfathers. Those who value tuue and labor: and would avoid a needles- loss of both, in feeding their stock, should get one of these improved Cutters. No man ever found anything better ; or ever went hack to the old machine alter a trial of it. A Supply Constantly on Hand and for sale. WM FLICKNER. lunkhaiuiGCk, Dec. 2, 1377v7nldtf. TUNKHANNOCK, WYOMING CO., PA. -WEDNESDAY, FEB. 12, 1868. Hflfttg. [From the Scrauton City Journal] THE SOUL S REPLY. BT* STELLA, OF LACKAWANNA. I have questioned I have queried, Soul of mine, till I am wearied ; Pondered many a day, and wondered, with an un disguised desire. As the stately suns sank slowly to their western couch of fire, — And the lardy twilights lingered till the midnight moons climbed higher, If the gods—with gifts o'erflowiug In their rich and rare bestowing, Should but offer, should but proffer one among the magic.three, Love, or Fame, or Gold, unstinted, which of all tby choice should be 1 Which could rouse thee into waking From tlie dumb and dreary aching— From the sorrow of to-morrow, or the grieving of to day, From the stupor and the torpor, wearing tby sweet life away ; Love, or Fame, or Gold, oh answer, which the court ed guerdon, say 1 Gold ! a wondrous wizard, surely, Shining in the dark so purely,— Luring willing souls to loudness, with its glamour, ttith its gl ire Cla-ping gemmed and jeweled baubles 'round each skeleton of care, 1 Till their ghasttiness break lightly into beauty ev erywhere : Gold the tempter ! oh the treasurers It should buy thee, and the pleasurers ; Delicate and dainty offerings from a bundled spicy Isles, — Adulation from tho many, and bewilderment of smiles : Dreams too beautiful should woo thee— 9b->uld puisne, perchance undo thee ; Every star should glow a promise, every bud on Bower, and tree, Flush with hope's unspoken splendor, fleeting,cheat ing, though it be • Deign re.-qxinse, oh sou! of silenco. which the tempt ing gift for thee ! Or if gold yet lack the power To beguile life's little hour — j If its glitter fail to charm thee, or thy being would'st not crave What,the Wi rl'i's great thousands toil tor, moil for, • to the last a slave. Till the wild unrest sink breathless to an uncom pl.lining grave. Yonder, like a fire-fly dancing, Now retrenting,jnow advancing, , fn and out the hazy shadows with a grace 'twere sweet to name, Raaiant gaiiand* deftly wreathing waits the gifted goddess—Fame ; Many a soul hath drained the chalice Fuaiuing iu her glittering palace— Many another knelt iu rapture but to press her gar ment's hem, • Or to grasp the pearl dissevereJ from her peerless diadem : Love, or Fame, or Gold, unmeasured, soul of sad ness, which of them ! Yet no flutter, yet no waking From the dumb aud dreary aching— From the sorrow of to-morrow, or the grieving of to day, From tho stupor and the torpor, wearing thy sweet life away, What shall rouse thee, what shall *ave thee from this wastiug slumber, pray 7 * Love it must be—thought hntb guessed it, For a sigh of thine expressed it, And a stirful throbbing crecpcth through each limp and languid veiD, Till the ruddy life-tide ieapeth swiftly on its course again ,* Though thy pride so silent made thee, Love's .weet meutiou hath betrayed thee ; ] Gold may dash thy sky with rainbows where its meteors flash aud fall F'ame may hold thee and enfold thee in her fascinat ing thrall, But'lis love's magnetic mystery that enslaves thee mure than all. MY. BIRD. BR FARSV FORRESTER. Ere last year's moon had left the sky, A birdling sought my Indian nest, And folded, oh so lovingly ! Her tiny wings upon my breast. From morn till evening's purple tinge, In w'Rsotne helplessness sue lies, Two rose leaves, with a silken fringe, Shut softly ou her starry eyes. There's not in Ind. a lovlier bird ; Broad earth owns not a happier Dest; Ob, God, tbeu hast a fountain stirred, YYbose waters never more shall rest ; This beautiful, mysterious thing, This seeming visitant from heaven, This bir-l with the immortal wing, To me -to me, Thy hand has given. The pulse first caught its tiny stroke, The blood its crimson hue, from mine, This life, which I have dared invoke, Henceforth is parallel with thin.*. A Bilent awe is in my room — I tremble with delicious fear ; The future, with its light and gloom, Time and Eternity are here. Doubts—hopes, in eager tumult rise ; Hear, Oh my God ! one earnest prayer : ' Room fo. - my bird in Paradise, And give her augel plumage there ! INFANTILE INNOCENCE— "Papa, didn't you J whip tne once for biting little Tummy V "Yes, my dear ; you hurt him very much. "Well, then, Papa, you ought to whip sis ter's music master, too ; he bit sister yester day afternoon right on the inouth. and I know it hurt hur, because she put her aims AROUND bis NPDT AOTI tried to QHUKU him. ' " To Speak his Thoughts is Every Freeman's Right. " EARNING A WIFE. "And so you want to marry my daugh ter, young man,"' said farmer Blivens, re moving the pipe from his month, and look ll.g at the young fellow sharply from head to toe. Despite his tather indolent, effeminate air. which was mainly the result of his ed ucation, Luke Jordan was a fine-looking f llow, and easily moved from his self pos SI ssion ; but he colored and grew confused beneath that sharp, scrutini'.-ng look. " Yes, sir. I spoke to Miss Mary last evening, and she — referred me to you." The old man's face softened. "Molly is a good girl, a very good girl," | he said, stroking his chin, with a thonght- J ful air, " and she deserves a good husband. What can you do ?" The young man looked rather blank at I this abrupt inquiry. " If you refer to my ability to support a I wife, 1 can assure you " " I know that you are a rich man, Luke 1 Jordan ; but I take it for granted you ask ! my girl to marry you, not your property. — What guarantee can you give me, in case ! it should he swept away — as it is in thou sands of instances — that you could provide for her a comfortable home? You have hands and brains — do you know how to use them ? Again I ask, what can you dor This was a style of catechism for whicli 1 Luke was quite unprepared, and he stared blankly at the questioner without speak ing* " I believe you managed to get through college — have you any profession }" " No, sir; I thought " " Have you any trade?" " No, sir; my father thought that, with the wealth I sliouid inherit, I should not need any." " Your father thought like a fool, then. He'd much better have given you some honest occupation and cut you off with a shilling ; it might have been the making of you. As it is, what are you fit for? — Here you arc. a strong, able-bodied young man, twenty-four years ol I, and never earned a dollar in your life! You ought to be ashamed of yourself." " And you want to marry my daughter," resumed the old man. after a few vigorous puffs at his pipe. " Now, I've given Mol ly AS good advantages for learning as any girl in town, and she hasn't thrown 'em away ; but if she didn't know how to work j she'd be no daughter of mine. If I choose I could keep more than one servant, but I don't no more than I choose that mv daughter not long ago, au awful silence ensued, ; which was broken by an impatient youth . | exclaiming : ' Don't be so unspeakably hap ■ py " So much whisky is drunk in Chicago that thousands of mosquitos have died of deleriuin tremens after biting Chicago citizens. A thief was lalaly caught breaking into a song. He had already got through the first bars, when a policeman came up and hit him with a stave. The following notice might have been seen some time ago, stuck up in a corset maker's showwindow in Glasgow : "All aorts of la dies stays here." Rhyming lovers generally woo their sweet hearts in such wretched verse that it is no wonder so many of them are jilted. Grey hairs, like honest friends, are pluck out and cast aside for telling unpleasant truths. Laziness begins in cobwebs and ends in iron chains. It creeps over a mad so slowly and imperceptibly, that he is bound tight be fore he knows it. * Throw a piece of meat among bears, and a purse of gold among men, and which will bes have the most outrageously—the men or the beasts 7 A quaker makes pleasure of his business and then for relaxation makes a business of his pleasure. An Arkansas traveler says he knew a young fellow down South, who was so fond of a young woman that he rubbed off his • nose kissing her shadow on the wall. I Some sensible bhafl says, truly, that a per ! son Who undertakes to raise himself by scan dalizing others, might as well sit down on a wheel barrow, and undertake to wheel him self. A wag, on being asked what ho bad for dinner, replied, "A lean wife, and the ruin of a man for sauce." llis dinner consisted of a j spare-rid of pork and apple sauce. Why is the clock the most modest piece of furniture 1 Because it covers its face with its hands and runs down its own works. "Mother," said a little square-built .boy, about five years old, ''why don't the teacher make me monitor sometimes 7 I can lick ev ery boy in my class but one." "Captain, what's the faro to St. Louis 7"— "What part of the boat do yon wifb logo in, cabin or deck V' "Ilang your cabin,'' said the gentleman from Indiana, "I live in a cab* in at home ; give u\e the best you've got." Another relic of the classic age has been found in St. Louts, being a dog's collar, sup posed to have belong to /ulius Caesar, from the fact of having his name engraved on it ! A SEXSIDI.E WlFE. —'Pray, tell tne, .roy dear, what is the cause of those tears 7" "Oh, such disgrace ! I have opened one of your letters spupnsing it to be addressed to mysely. Certainly it looks more tike Mrs. than Mr. "Is that all ? What harm ran there be in a wife's opening a husband's letter ?" "But the contents !—Such disgrace ?" "What ! has any one dared to write me a letter unfit for my wife to read ?" "Oh, no—it is couched in the most chaste language. But the disgrace 1" "Disgrace 1" Here the husbauJ caught up the letter, and commenced reading the epistle that had giveu so much uneasiness to hia wife. Readers, you could not guess the cause in a coon's age. Tt was no otherjthan a bill from a printer for nine years' subscription. The "disgrace" was wiped out almost im mediately. Artemus Ward was out late one night.— Here is his account of his return home. "It was late when I returned home. The children and my wife were all abed. But a candle—a candle made from taller of my own rasin'—gleamed In Betsy's room. It gleam ed for I ! All was still. Tbe sweet silver moon was shinin' brite, and the beautiful stars was up to their usual doifts ! I felt ft sentimental mood still so gently o' rme stealing', and I pawsed before Betsy's win der, and sung in a kind of operatic vois as toi lers, impromtoo tu wit: Wake, Betsy, wake, My sweet galoot 7 Rise up fair lady, While I toot my lute ! The Winder—l regret to say that the win der went np wtth a violent crash, and a form in spotless white exclaimed, "Cum into the house you old fool. To-morrer you'll begoin' round complainin' about your liver." No wonder that Weston is a good walker. It turns out that he used tu be collector for ft newspaper. NO. 27.