1,A.L.V1•r5:1;194 The' Democratic Watchman. hf '" r iikttYPOlPli: PA ' , THE 84111V8ADRAWER. , . Tinifftrll y liriwetlumysttornhug, Ilderest rare, "liffirni tenet; ittnlyllftg. • • ' • ''''''ThatitrY•daling shall never house weika t, • And there while the hours are wa rill the Is all at rest, • 'ot firriact limey a baby• • ~glorse to my aohtumbramt, "'Aftpreity, 4We gatminis t wrought, sitting apart, Wileb" rgt.o o , l i o it r r u trotohing vrmet my beating fltia "• Andeflierinrrkeppy d ng iiineakst in a 111114 e song, Like the murmur of birds ai hromling, When the dAY are Warm and, long. „Lletrod kkeslidoty wardrobe, fh_ trot was almost fUll WI tobdis bf the'llnest muslin. AuOnsebsa tithe whitest wool. • 1 Ismaieerth:.;,' kllloirethet, . • . With rows for' every pair, III?. And "Valk " 9top fragrant, , or my prAdoe tp wear Ah 1 the radiant summer *toning, of • ntather'ajoy Thank 0011, he la Mt and perfect, leyboastifol, mow born boy." La it hhlit !tear be.preio white garment s wrought while sitting apart Lay him, so sweet and so helpless, Aare, oltme to my throbbing heart. Shifty and many in evening Mk • ESCIO-a , " baby mune, What do tha angels Cl.ll him r For he died without a mune, Bit while the hours ire waning, And the 11041110 1111 all at rest, And fanny a baby nailing Close to my aching brow SPEECM OF SENATOR WILLIAM A WALLACE, AT BELLEFONTE. The likswie of Use Campaign BIELLZTONTE, PA., Aug. 24, '69 Sonatbr Wallace,. of Clearfield, spoke this evening hero in the Court HOUIO tQ ft fere and enthushuitie meeting of the Democracy. He said : At the threshold of a Gubernatorial campaign in a great State like ours, in which the results are to be potential as well without as within our borders, it might seem appropriate to discuss the grave questions in national politics which present thetnselvee on every hand. The short-comings of a national 'admhvtatration that assumed the reini of power with flattering premises of reform and goo 4 gnvernnment; the fatuity of Its officill head in surrounding himself with advisers without experience and tounselore without knowledge ; ;their ntter failure to create and sustain a poli cy in our national affairs either foreign or internal ; the broken pledges for re trenchment and economy , the unsatis factory condition of financial affairs ; the .increased rates of interest; the prostrated condition of all kinds of buei -1/014 ; anti the onerous and never-ending weight of taxation, are themes upon each of which the people think and fuel deeply and to these, we might with prof it dew, to our attention In the pending canvass. But matters of serious M.- ment•claim our attention nearer home, and remembering that our institution x are founded upon the principles of local self-government, and that the protection of our personal rights and of those lesser but important forms and privileges which aid in making up our .fornt of government, is vital to Its success as a whole, it becomes our ,duty to closely scan the condition of afairs In our State government, and to learn by calm scru tiny there, whether the agents we have employed in its istiministretion buys boen faithful to their trust, and are worthy of is renewal of our confidence That a wide spread sentiment of dissat isfaction exists, nay more, that the pr» wailing tone of the people and the prose of the Commonwealth, is tigeinet the . official fealty and perromil purity of the mass of those who have made and exe cuted our laws in the past three vdars, will scarcely be disputed Such a sen timent could not exist unsupported by facts, and it is our bueines4 in this can .vass to toot its truth We br o adly charge, that In every ele ment of good government, in every es Gentlel feature neetywary to the protec tion of the rights of the people, the ad ministration of John W. Geary has been e failure. He Is the Executive head end the policy dictated and the ends obtained are equally Chargeable to his account, and hi, Isi justly responsible for the misrieeds of his subordinates and of those whose policy MU. moulded at his dictation. , He is responsible, that the expenses of the Slime government are larger now than daring the war, and areiaereasln g ; that the treftenry of the Stem is teen aged in the Interest of a ourrupt ring, and the money of the people seed to fat, ' ten now burdens upon them ; that e n_ blusbinK corruption la boldly charged upon the incumbents of place ; that pri vate legislation, to the detriment of the public good. rapidly Increases ; that monopolies are melded and given power to oppress the citizen in his business ; ' that the jedidary are attacked and the "sanctity of the organic law overridden for a price; that legislative borers and Cort/mg officials swartn9eround the seats • of power, and fatten on the body politic and the • what revetitais that firm into the coffers of the Commonwealth are . diem* from their legitimate and con ,- Iticutioaal p' 'pupa ilitzir OW ene of tilt! •,..ElOO.l 44, Mad 4FO 10 Plmin tenapoe.qt a horde o unnecessary hire , lingo,about t lha legleiattve mid, executive &pertinent" of the Mite government. . This is no fancy . picturq, hUt 14 the ; ports*y*l of mo r tar butatartling t*itiee, and l ts, truth will ,be demonstrated by au 4wvetotigtetto of the 10104 , • , The ex of the thatesoyernment . during t three years of the war ear",i4 o . l airtqati of iliivernoc 4. OM. 'Nitro 0 40 owe,: "PDX YearSi oe .peoimber 14;408, ..441, 4 gen; ~ ; , tor, pm/ ,qid ing toor/ r4 p,'Keros6oo t ilVl ; ..., ,;w.ft_ leiosw,riAs/ 400 6 1 , Y !refs ititt . t/ • / .t. , 1 J , • r• ,1•kr.**14 1, 4 1 - 41 P91 Ole 1ref141414„ jbw ad Wagon of ,fto!.. Gepry, thew 1 iii i4 iffitl, iIr•AVW POW "44•41 Po, -4.04% 'l 1 ,. . 1 ,.•11Vi1l VI, 0 , • I , ' Ii• 4, ,L) I, I 10116,••••0••••• 1 4.•*•••.•.1.•••••••••rirry 11167 ,11711 1808 8411.1011 The expenses of 1888, It Is thus seen, are $246,618 greater than wore these of menu truth be renaereci for this frightful in crease of.oxponditure. "Phe-tremetwr-rkwift-rm-eartbramb&-ir. atcltteitstYo'pearnadtionnsl3o ' road o ag in Men whose 0911800011 W elected them as honest men i only those Who have seen Its manipulations of hien and Its altneist universal success in its movemen.s, can justly appreciate the vicious influence it exerts. The treasury of the State it re lords as its inheritance and the money of the 'People at its legacy. To 911 the. Treasury and ndt pay the debt, to hank die the deposits and realize cent. per cent. Mutt their skillful `manipulation, to redeem the lean beating five per cent. and replace it with one bearing six, by an "adroit arrangement 'with those in power, have beets some of Its exploits tri the past three years. Previous to 1867 the mass of our debt paid an interest of but deeper cent., but under the shallow pretext that it was over due, the ring enacted the law of February 2d, 1867, by which the Treasurer was authorized to redeem the overdue five per cent. loans and replace them with a loan bearing six per cent, In this arrange- meat the hand of Governor Geary is plainly seen, for without his consent it could not have been the law. A loan of more than- twenty three millions of dollars bearing interest at the rate of five per cent. 'was iralllllllll. ted, by thin operation, into a six per cent. loan, and the amount of interest payable by the people, in 1866, wits $1.892,105,wam increased in 1867 to $2,- 237,033,0 r over 3b0,000 of an increase in the first year. in 1868, we paid 1,979- fi9o in interest, or $87,000 more than 11 , 9 had to pay in 1866. The expenee of placing the new loan paid by the State wail nearly $90,000, making an aggregate 01 over a half a million of dollars paid since 1867 to enrich the Treasury ring. Alf of this twenty. three millions of six percent. loan is vet to mature and upon it this year arid each succeeding year until payment, $230,000 snore of your money than he. fore - writtheeerimary, must be paid in in. tercet. 'flw figures are from the official documents, and the same docus mente show that the State Treasurer had in his hands, in 1867, an average monthly balance of over three and a half million,' of dollars, arid in la6B, his average monthly balance wan over two millions three hundred thousand dollars. With these princely revenues at their command what could not the treasury ring effect t Large fortune,' flowed gently into the laps theme shrewd financiers and they controlled every spisiisluirtit to pOwer and place. No law credit be passed against their will and their asnisutnee in legislation was a guarani.) of success.. Nu bill eat" ever paused In a hich these num were interested that a-as refused the signature of the Govereor, and lie never inittated n Momentl movement against their will. *That wrriipting and debasing in. fluencea surround and pervade the at. mosphere of the State capital, scarce needs proof. The closing bourn of the last session of the legislature were full of proofs of the wealth, the power and the corrupt purviews of the Treasury rung, and so vile and base have we be come; and so plainly was the power of money in legialation proved, that the tnoml sense of the people who hear me would be shocked at its recital and the outrageous character of the transaction almost etamlb ibex a falsehood Such Gouge could not be, had we a firm and pure executive. The knowledge that the calm and intelligent scrutiny of a capable and honest Governor was to be fastened upon their deeds, and that the veto power would he exercised in bold. ing them arid their purchasel privileges up to the scorn and execration of an outraged p4ople, would go far to deter these men from corrupting the weak rind purchasing the corrupt. The evil is a terrible reality. It confronts us in high places and it saps the vitals of the State. The remedy rests with the peo. ple alone. The vast increase in private legisla tion and the many corporate monopo lies granted, to the injury - of the people, can beat be Allow') by a comparison of different periods. . . Under the administration of Governor . Packer, during 1858, 18:0 and 1860, there were paaseti a total of 2,019 Lille which became laws, or an annual aver age of 073. During 1R74, 1865 and 1866, under Governor Curtin, there were passed 3,131 bill* which became laws. .or an animal average of 1,(144. Whilst during the sessions 1867, 1868 and 1809, Governor Geary's three years, 3,689 Mlle became laws, showiug an annual average of 1,223, or nearly double the average during Governor Packer's term. The necesnity for spem iel legislation during the war was tar greater than since, and the amendment, to the coustitmtion depriving the ,k,gis 'Attire of power co enact laws in canes in which the courts have jurbididtion in the hands of a firm execut‘ve odicer. would have vastly decreand the anion nt of them vicious enantmen te. tiotares of lasrmare fonntl.apon, the alattite books of ),867, 1868 and 1869, in which the 'doutte wire *Mad With the' &mire, of the subject, 'yet favoritism,, or some other Inagua, mettred the Approval of the Execticirp. Thin is the,fleld too, in which special privileges are ,Mcured and in Which peculiar vocation of tegislativw borens is -made profltible, awl when it is seenithat in the term of Goverjor Qeszypy,cr eight hundred laws have been tinaotei (venting chart tfareAolirrfretiteeeeporattotil or enier4.. fag tbe, pow igt(441 1 4044. ; liMpteci • Fib pll4„be estimated, suit tha c le 'basin unA•ittood.' 'Two' .111 'Clftitit'lo/gllltatioll' is' In netesleart' and detrimental to the people, and their safety demanded a clearly defined policy on this subject and a rigid ad.. herence 'thereto by the Executive.' power to apt additiort telt _..... —ditly in ...... A sion. 'SifeW I AI ra - 4:4411 +llJttititlytitit °er ,ItTi 44 nvy? t 3 9 an 4 1 41 t Oft ay. rweio, general laws as far as possible. The remedy R* Ntib snlailiieltremil in the hands of the Execidivn. lie has failed to airily it and hits aid&l and abetted the wro'ng. The delibetate overthrow , N isjudi• opal district, the. attempt to nullif; the of the people of that district in the choice of tiadr judge, and the palpable violation 'Of 'the ronatientioil 'rimmed' in modeling, ah are ohaegenbiejlirectly to John W. (hwy. for the hill was signed on the very morning after the night of its passage, under clicumstan• ces which coriclusivelY prove his knowledge of itst purpose and character. If ha knew these, is it uujust to_chargs that he knew how it was passed end what, base means secured the limes nary majority for its gpectly enactment? If 06 judiciary are to be attacked and the eapreast will of the people defied by the use Of money in a corrupt combina tion, of what value are our institutions, and whose life or property is secure? John W. Cleary possessed the know!. edge of the wrong and the power to prevent it, and tailed to use them, and lie is justly responsible I'm the infamy. [ruder Clip provisions of the law en acted in days 'when national debts were not considered national blessings, and still unrepealed, (=loin revenues belong ing tA the State were to be applied to the payment Of the State debt through the operations of a Sinking Fund. Since 1860, the last year of Gov. Packer's ad ministration, $45,346,000 have g o n e into the treasury. By *far the larger portion of this proceedr from the reve nues specifically applied by law to the payment of the debt, and yet the debt now is only about four millions less than it was in 1860, and this calculation ex cludes the loans fur military purposes, and to redeem the overdue loan Where have those millions gone, end why Is the State debt still so large 7 The mis management of the finances of the:gate, never so groat as within the last three years, the paytnent of larmdy increased salaries, the emplovment of pastors and folders and other useless (Amalfi. the increase in the iinuount of interest, end the necessities of the Treasury ring, have combined to increase our expenses to so great nlri - extent as to divert Mee. large revenues from theirproper desti nation and therefore the de bt- still exists Strenuous etThrts were, made at the close of the last 'Session of the legislature to have the surplus in the Treasury ap plied toward the payment' of the debt maturing, and a section was placed in the appropriation bill by the united vote of all the Democrats and it parlor the Republicans, ordering the moth ipation of the payment of about $BOO,OOO there of out of the surplus then in the Treas ury. This would have saved the State $50,000 The bill was then sent to the vommitve of con term - 1,v., and t)My struck this section out at the command of the Treasury ring. When the bill came up in the Senate, on final passage, he this form, it was voted down by a rote of 22 to 10, mainly because of the omission Or this amendment and of the payment of the piasters and folders in the Seven ltepublicans voted with the Dem ocriits and defeated the bill and aliened the wisdom of the amendment Yet, within three days four of those Republi cans Changed from and voted with their brethren to reconsider the bill and they passed it by a vote of T 7 to 111, two Re. publicans voting with the Democrats against the 1011, and IMO Democrat vot ing with the Republicans for the bill. By this vote the State lost at least $50,- 000, and the ring gained the use of over $BOO,OOO for more than a year. Why, in this exigency and undir the facts disclosed on thin passage of the bill, did not the Executive do his duty sad send it heck without his signature 1 lie was too weak ur lie was the tool of the 'Treas ury ring; in either case, ho is unfit for the place hu The administration ofJohn W. Geary Is a failure, the name of legislator under his rule has become a hissing and a re proach, the (sir fame of our noble Com monwealth is tarnished, her revenues are wasted, and her debt unpaid ; her magnificent resources lie undeveloped or private enterprise must do the work ; the power to guide the State in her no ble career of progress, and to give to her that place amor.g her sisters for which nature has fitted her, must be sought elsewhere than in the feeble ca pacity of him who now Is her Chief Ex ecutive ; and we point with confidence to the man of oar choice, to Idui who has grappled with the rugged realities of our mountains and our valleys, and by his indomitable energy has made them the sources and the avenues of iiiitulti riches, to hint who with strong mind and iron will has concentrated all his powers in her development, to iris who has by these acts proved his now, lky to suceessfully manage and control but own business, to him who has by Ills business intellect, his upright deport ment, his spotleils 'diameter and his deeds of charity, won the, hrgherit trade among Ills fellow men—to Asa/Packer, the successful business men, as the man whom Pernisyfvanlatiow needs to ban ish corruption, to pay her debt, restore her enedit.anvi vionslop.her resources. (linrnenee Applause,l „ With uvitebnlly' "hasbn 1 131overnror Geoy tvansinittod to the , legisisture the revolutions of ;Congress proposing the fotilsouth Amendment, and in doinu so le.Uctx44 , l, it.idtsiq • siiiii•ove ettinvi of the IfutitelerMftrese and un- Wilt...tingly • , recornnienit ithe , prompt! paglhuitiovi of ithe wipe )ry the "Rapie r turn." Ere thus Inithitlisibe grass wrong that hail labels perpetrated nein-the piterikl of 'the . fllf9rn iN I uP.PS4. PPP* tutlin whiph emphatically daelares that• die right dr stitiage "Asir Neat •In 'oda class of citizens totite. , estelasiot •zot all others, he recommends the destruction of that into and the substitution of an other without the authority of the peo- t 46111.1.44.46.14•4•41111,..4.115•••••••••••••, • WE dtt• , d i vot their right to pose . : of ioe 4 t t ' o Jon! : th-. e i .io f e ' tit t.. do T to 11; % mi. to . Itss e l irinvtv in tioAnio:.=ende:voroolwwhm , s s el wrong has boon perpetrated ups n cl e it4n,siitueoto py r qp Legislature n "FTPTi lli ri e-b- P - Ri (eik "iilthemtganie 61)4°4 etitithp • by din • s • .againss the rati cation, and their right to be Heard before thiterwerdiet was re ;mut*, wits as clear as was their right to fiats 'upon the question origirinlly. It hit nbt entered into the canvass in the election of a single member .or senator and nearly all of those who voted for its adoption in 180, voted agalrnit nn amendment of the same character in 1868, koown as the Itioknian resolution. t)is determined were they in their refusal to permit this Yoke of 'the people to be heard, that in the Senate, on the I lth of March, the Radicals, by a strict party vote, refused to postpone the question for two weeks in order that' an oppor utility might he'hnd for the people to be heard b petition and remonstranee ou the subject. Never ,before was the right of petition denied in a Pennsyl vania Senate. In the same body reso letions providing for the preparation of a bill to submit the question of ratifica tion of the amendment to the people et the polls in October, and to postpone sic- Ron until the rtimult was isseertaineil, was also voted down by : the Ridicals, every nom of them voluig against sub mitting the question to the people In the Home the mime proposition was sub milted and there, too, the Radicals re fused, by a strict party v(ite, to submit the question to a vote of the people The resolution ratifying the amendment was then adopted, in both brunched, by the votes of the Radical members and Senators, and we noosed from them to you The question for you us determine Is, Was it right for V 0.14 to pass upon so vital a charge as this, or will you be bound without your ronsent npportu. nay to express your dissent f The sen timont of the people of the State is un mistakable against the ratilicsstion of the amendment Yet Radical orators argue that the question i• settled and cannot be re-opened, and that, therefore, you should not ;apish thew for their violf Lion of duty The princ.ple of loyal government is violated by the servants of the people, who declare 01,4100.11/es their musters The inherent powers of the people to, deteFinine fur themselves their rule of suffrage and to adopt or reject their organic laws, id dens , d and trampled upon ; and they are deliberate ly told they are without remedy and that their faithless agents should again he employed Can Impudonte further go? The right of repeal exist*, and in heres in equity avid Justice The forms of our eon4titittiosi rind the sovereignty of the people, la well as the lowerful voice ot our groat Suite, when deliber ately announced through the ballot, will deinocistrate In the petty tyrants who would thus deprive us of our dearest rights, that fraud and chicanery upon four millions of p,•„ plc will not w•ii, and that the •voice of Pen u t yl the Keystone of the Federal arch, is not for but is ag mist the ratification of the Fifteenth Amendment (Greta ii plat/84. RIPE WHEAT We loot to-day o er a outlined fortn, And or tears fell softly loin , We looked our hut nu the aged tare, With IN look of peso., Its patient graos hair like a silver crow n Wr tonrhrd our awn to the rlavrol.l hand. From life'. long slate ut rem , And nmnng the hionrontr, white and 1 , 111.0. We noted w letneft of golden wheat. Slapped doer to the lolent breast Tilt blossom]. wiii•pered of fadelelol bloom, on, land where fall no tram, The ripe wheat to'd of toll and clinic, The patient walling the I rontlng prayer, The garnered good of the year. We know not what work his hands have found. What rugged plamo. hi. feet , What emus aim his what hilu.kness 111 night ICA We saw but (lie .. the EllOlOlOlll.l white, And the build& ripened wheel As code goes up m the fields of earth, Bearing the tmuuree of 11(n, God lotiae fur some gathered limn of good, From the harvest that shining stood, But welting the reaper's knife. Than labor well, that in death you go Not only bent with bloeanma atritet— Not bent with doubt and hardened with feds , And dead. dry hunks of the "'atoned y ars— lint laden Vlllll golden wheal A Remarkable Dream Last winter, in one of the London pa pens, an article appeared suggesting the Lypothesis which might account fur some of the unexplained phenomena of dreams. The writer recognized at, an undoulitell tact the freipieat cation 4100/40 , 1641 AIM 1 / 4 /13411.. it persons far separated from each other; so that simultaneous impression's wire msdc on those minds, not only in aloe', bo also in waking hours. lie guppomed, than, that there [MOIL be a power in nature whereby a brain, intensely excit ed, might send forth Imphisev—traces, perhaps—inch as should, in at, letiktil tit, reach another brain, aril Convey thoughts arid images from t i arm( to the second. Ile,engsested that, I.y process to which the movements of elec tricity and magnetism- 'would afford at least distant analogies, mind. ie sym pathy with each other might Otte share a coMmon experience, He would in this Way explaon the many well attest. ed Instances' relittiver , hays been impressed - with the fact of the death of some object of love,, dying, it may he; thousands of miles away ; ao' at the. very moment of 'disease, 'hey have felkiunbutitlthaLtleAtlibad taken *CP- Read,ini this artie e, was reminded tifriitrv'e that I' had'heatid'hilet an' iiithrtate Itiend,• era &tint 'which be , , had, had , ; direct !mai -pristtioasly, and vTlikeh Ifft, otti riiepds also Opt n ed ayy Ike same, lapur, tberepre ask ed hioilo eve eiliint, itiuthe of Whitt' Qd . frad'tbltt fitt., and , ainsuri shat fleas tan. real it without feeliew l tbealit virmi ind•O q , reiwkiable dream. I need only add that my friend is a gentleman and a scholar, of high cal• larit ell tll Mer Is the fall of 1865-1 think it was In . th L zaujaLQLX.p . awktr z .-whikl. was ' spoiting law in th city Llll 4 elired to my room a milkkikli Trt-w-Ttltek twriviniug. member, distinctly. hearing the clock strike Avelve atiTllTYTh"bed, watching the smouldering lire, anti) &oviform' crept over me and I slept. I hardly lost conficiounnses when I seemed 16 heir hind and confused noises, and felt'. a choking sensation at my throat as if.' it were grasped by,,a strong hand. 1 awoke (as it seemed) and found wyaclf lying on my hack on the cobble stones of a nano* ntreet, writhingi.in•the grip as low brows], thick eat MAO, with "uniceinpt" hair and grizzled heel who, with Quo head at my throat an holding my Wrist %;ritli the other, three' his weight upon me and held me down. From the first I knew that his deeire was to kill me; and /117 stragglea wete for life. I recall, distinctly, the sense of horror at first, and then that of furl. ous determination which took posses. nion of me. I did not make a sound, but with a sudden effort threw him half off urine, clutched him frantically by the hair and in my agony bit furi ously at his throat. Over and over we rolled upon the matinee. My strength began to gtte way helbre the fury of my atruggles. I saw that my antago ,, mist felt it and smiled a ghastly smile of triumph. Presently I saw him reach forth his hand and grasp a bright hatchet. Even in thin extremity I noticed that the hatchet was new and apparently unused, with glittering head and white polished handle. I made one more tremendous tight for life. For a second I held my enemy powerless and saw, with such a thrill of delight its I CII,IIIIOL forget, the horror stricken faces of friends within a rod of us, rushing to iny rescue. As the foremost of theta sprang upon the back os my antagonist lie wrenched his wrist away from me, I saw the hatchet flash shore iny head and felt instantly a doll blow on iny/orellead. I fell back the ground, kntimb ness spread from my herd over my body, a warm liquid flowed down ujion my face and into ,ny mouth, and I re member the taste was of hood, and my "limbs were loosed." Then I thought I was suspended in the air a few feet above inc laxly, I could see ffipf , elf, as if to a glass, I) mg on the back, the hatchet sticking in the bend, and the ghastliness of death gradually'spread• mg over the tace. 1 noticed especially that the noun,' made I.y the hatchet was in the centre of the forehead at right %wiles to, and di% ided atually by the line of the hour. I bean] Pie weep ing of friends, at first loud, then grow• ing fainter and fading away intomilenne. A delighttul sensation of tweets repose without a feeling 111 like that which I experienced years ago at rape May when beginning to drown—crept over nie. I heard exquis ite music; the air was full of rare per tunics; I sank upon it bed of downy me a lien, are' a start, T awoke. The tire still smouldered in the grate, my watch told me I had trot been more Lthan half an hour leap. Early the next morning I Joined an intimate friend, aoh whom I spent touch of my time, to acemoretn.y as was my hail, muffin, to the law school. We Loafed for a moment of various topics, when suddenly heinter ranted me wolf the remark that be I had dreamed strangely of me the night before. "Tell me," f asked; "what was it V '•I fell asleep,•' he said, " about tweke, and immediately- dreamed that I was pass;ng through a narrow street when I heard noise and cries of IbUr der. Hurrying, in the direction of the noise, t saw you lying on S - iur back fighting with a rough laboring man who held you down. I rushed forward, but as I reached yos he struck yer on the head with a hatchet and killed you instantly. Many of our friends were there rind we cried bitterl In a nit): ment I awoke, and An vivid had been the dream that my cheeks were wet wit b tears. "What sort of a man was her" 1 asked. "A thick eat ;Min, iri a flannel shirt and rough tronaerft; hie hair was un combed anti itle beard' itrizzled and of a few days growth," , Within a wattle I was in Burlington, N. Jr, I called at a frienil'a "My Illuthand," mid m friemEr is ile to nit', "had r.tteli a horrid dream about you the other night: He dreamed that a.man killed. you in a Aireet fight. Ile ran to hel yea, hut before he reach ed the auatt-icaus uty had killed you wit,h a great ! club. "0 no,veried the burtmod — aeroall the rdom; "he killed you with ft ' I may add that - these crietidd.pf mine wane pensonallymeik sown, eaaiotlier; The,tirct.one, in, ricw Y0,r14, dr,e.auied ,tiat lie %ram the foremost who reached the scene; the other . thitf'he was' one 'of the number who followed ; Leoilr of ' which 'point/ coincided with oiy , qwn • droani. I a ea4A are Ots Plicunistancek, I, • re theta. ljeineraberi f il the remark of old Artaphernes, that dreams are of fen'the resaft of a train of thcaight' started bv•eonveroation ,or roaltiag l , or Ike lueidents of ,wiskiag time, but I riouldrecall, nothing, nor Fot4lo,lller , of my frieityts Gant any eirpums ne "that'eref thib had sad. WSW vei 'lteettot by, tut 'OPistorh;l : is ar6tclr they iecatlith taloa lase otigis f this, re, A r49431 F. , ,,,Y 4 4 , 15.e1e 4 R , —When Dan Rico'. ars' wicy Jan away with an affinity, tho bereaveff htio band said, "It is a comfort to know that Ole went off with a pinthstnnn. clYeTtor isbellllima horse? Ike auseS *lair rah it ell m b s tiee: —Within ton years past the einigrA. Lion to tlill3p2ityy from gurope bosh. mated st'r,ouomoo txl6bno. ' AVitrielltil t sdreielecuirett the par, milt of her bill by' carryinvolf the wooden leg,of a ntybactory costumer. —A contemporary thinks that if rain 4t'oes' not soon oonie to lay the dust, "New Jetste*reill All blow easy." ....Remark of au lowa man during the total ecl)pne: "Gentlemen, I have be en to n hundred circuses, but thie'bdats 'em all!" —A. little Utica girl's delleitint wealth h t . uto,;kiave all. the mope), you want to eperid, and to Wear button gat. totti." .Tbalar'ftlebt alarnond fn the 'United Stases Is said to Live been recently sold at Saratoga for t 1,500, It weighs 10! karats. . . —An ilitterato correspondent, who e Riven teeporkingl, want; to know "ho t the " Anglo-Saxe° rape," eg. , ranch tslk. ed Of, IN to come otf. —A New York (It-lunatic (Title ~atr of a burlesque writer, that he II "nuvr persevering than littnquu'k ghert, and quite a humorous." —A dbuntry paper sap there n n nnal in that vicinity ow nonn that he rtt.r tho door-step of tho church to ;ere the wear of hie pew cushions. —An urchin on being rvhekr.l for wearing out his stockingm at the plied 'dint it tiOulan't be heipe4—"toe wiggled and !ada didn t." —A prominent German in St .ktoph, !do , while admiring the eclipse thsoth er day, remarked : "Ile look ,heat pig cabbage cut mit a knife." —The rate at which the new lot trains between New York and Chws K u must travel to be on time is thirty.4olt, miles an hour, including atoppegss —A wag speaking. of the eadistlia. Lion of troops, said. "Notwithentchr H ; many of them leaving blooming; wll., behind, they go away in triensportf A country newspaper stales thei e young lady et an amateur concert atm e well deserved furore by the lkilAwiti , taste with which she sang "An Ang-I. Whisker.'' —Tbe partiii . g between Dan Hu. and his friinnh is structi4 For b., )on , or so he hits been nieking hi. birs,'l tnitni, end is tearing' bin ar.lf awes MO'n this summer. —h is stated that the prositleht ha sent It opeetwl mitsgengor and II ,Alit stottint.r after Princt. Arthur, with kr, Invitation to tqw.ml a month at the White Huta°. -151/wrine 1130 y, the, Tiarkirih 3hw• ter, hus recived the hunentry title cilah,";he higheeet in the Turki•s rivll Derviee, RI 111 Ill Ark tit the Sultan • eKteern (or him —There is n 11%Ing In sin who was twice married before was twenty.one years ot age. ■ mother before slut was sevunteen, and It grand. 1111. t before she wst6 —" Employment No cornitill) produ rn elim.rfulnebs," sap Bit.hor Hnll "that I have known a man to cow. home in high *writs from a itnienti b•- causo he had the nianagement of it —A wonitnii resently died in Trn• ton, Michigan, in giving birth 1 ,, lire thirty.linot child Among the thim one were three pair of twins, and the olden. of them all 11 only 29 years uld —An enthusiaatte Western xntvr says that Annis Dickinson is not preu, but tbst alin is bandliortm ; stylish, hut refined , she is lo•sh, hut not loveable; not stunning, but %drum hie. • • ---A wornin in St. Loons, ton lit "d delirium tremens, threw her child ” ,, t of n second - story window, toil then jumped out •Iter it An Old Isd, caught the child in hor apron, but mother was "instantly killed " —l'reaident triune% MACY prayed, if e iireAtll•rn paPer is to be IN•1 lei' Oh Lon], , we no abominate oureelice that we could spit in our Laces am- kick our ,01 ‘'eA iuto hell !" Pieta) of coin? , ranecnis prayere are quite M. Piny —Twenty, years nut) l'etinsyhini 3 wax thy 'arm!, wheat producing t.ittit,m the t'rrion, Now it it about th"' tw dith on the lint. The people hnve term , ' their attention to the developement glut which tb , hidden in the earth—cii coal And iron. 000t0 SPELL CAMP, yell Aaron." 9rrat A, little tt i r-o-n— Aaron Aaron " Very well, reliant - HI, see if yoll pelt tinted Whales " Yea, air. Great country, I lute N oe try I'l-i-tic" " go up to the head." —Art'offeniied woman, net ineitstititi to the funeral of s near neighbor, stew the following Ist' to the mourners; "I think I bare hen elltrhted ire Fitting entitled from your of invitations, We shall probably a !utter/id at, our house one of th ee" d W . Mid we won't it i vlte' ; —A witiskyV ridkihg• Irishman vs' brentgrie befbiall nnskrietrate mantel 'rte . :ter, charged with being .drank s ad de "OttrlX, T, ll 9igegletaati committed tie delinquent to Prison for M 'onth 'ffifirt he'woOld gfvei Mtn here enough t o teurse.whisisy.,oilbres,l faith," wee the prisoner's reply, " and Porter, too.' , Western traveler , having secured IMO a bat, hi cadet to prevent encroach" amen* liesoble& a. pairof spun on hi' .11044, WWI( ratintupp, ,unfortio ty eleeping part i ner, alter several thrust/ the ilitarVrehillidetr, 'rdared out: " YtiMdkkdl,iFf"yam• lite tr 'gentleman , you 'ought lea**Ohl Yeah wain si ;' —'-tin f"ttsPtell ,1131tOr ,004 4"Y 1121 `" ~,sl/Kgrillth„ Op t 1)l,i affootwm ppp h T o t, aid deibribing fdeet# n14411' 1 6 •tiuni 'II' tpanspuetai anSliovo, you b,5,', 411 1 dn my arul,;', c o ) p argrar k. sr. the lady, . I yod out a Vert re d specie/hie couple, one is trasporl e end the other hang