The Democratic Watchman. --INLLICRONTE, PA LOST Thal iiiibta °omits out and alimmor%, The stars like diamond% gleam, Laigint Al'ofhn bought; aro waving a pleasant mountain ..tremn. And nty thoughts they travel backward Int* the long dead yearn, All& 70%114110e some* up bcfcre me, Sera through a mint of team W. tiset--we loved—we parted; The !glory over new, TWAnect—W hoped—we waited, N the Non years grew. A,MLaiMyll between ua, A gtlf that time haa made, Now habits grow upon us. Old beauties Ulu& and fade. Take old) hot look behind yon. !Meth* video! year., Dose my face come yet befor you l liften.througti • mid of tear•? Sata•Wanuee eve Clete" will be continued seat week, the malls liariurfaileti to bring us M sweat weekly instalment. After this week wekope to be Able to continuo It regularly. Nothing To Mak• us Happy Many a mati and many a woman is dissatisfied with life and continually wishing themselves dead. They look with envy upoh the success of others— have no desire to succeed themselves, and throw shadows upon time lives of others by wirlong themaelve. out 01 this world and into the next. Now we have been thinking—thinking that such persifne will not be happy in a world where He who is Supreme lees it all His own way, when tile} are twig- Mille In a world where we mine it all ours To be happy ie tO lire to a purpose. With happiness life is a iiccesn. With out it a failure. Yet people sneer at those who try to be happy. Those who love each other and rest like the glories of a netting nun over field and forest—whoare good, and kind, and loving, and demonstrative in their al fictions are called (bole, even by those who profess religion and purified in , tentione. And )et they profess to • follow the teach Ing4 of Min w ho sass "Mean iv brat eternal hapuinees,where loved and loving rest forever, with the near, the dear, the constant, the wor shipped. Some envy others happiness, and by remarks, cruel talk, wicked thrtintn, and baneful speech, wound and weak. ea those who are dirtying for it heart shelter we all need —the love even Christ Jeans Mond in the eociety of Mary and Martha. Why not allow others to he happy even it we cannot? We are happy, and contented move and more as the yearn come to break our tall when into the lathomleets - ,;#byes drape our pool to the heamitul t rest which has no working We are happy to being contented with the re sult of our strit trig. We are happy in our work and in our love. We are happy in our health, in our din t s-mil ion and ability to work, and, above n il, ni the golden place we have in the hearts of SO ninny of the poor, the sarnent, the heart-sullen tag ones who write 1p us. zed who do not, but call ire friend In front °four pleann nt, cheery, well lit result, in a heautitill l'ark. All around are (rem It in the property of the city--but we enjoy it as it it were all ours--as come would to ~w a it all, and with the heaulvea thereat film in by a high wall, no none could nee In the night, as now, a thotiennd a nd more bright lights are to he peen all oboist, an 'float around ua were bear en anh,the•e were Hip Mar. We en joy all' this. The water Noes and pltuilten into the basin, nod large rener voir, cool and refreshing to the flesh, the ear. We are happy in this beano. fed feast. And in the day time we look out to sae the bnds and leaves on the trees— to nee the chatty nparrown on thegreen sward and in this hrancliee, mnknig love and melody. We nee tire co l t)) enclosure—she graveled walks the rustic seats or benches whereon people sit to rest—the crowds of men, woolen, and children wsndenng therein--to see the elegant teame and beautiful ladies —the handsome equipagen and At) loth gentlemen go by—to nee the houses, arid the stores, and the cteeet, and the telegraph wires, and the homes, arid the spirals, and all the works of man here before us, and are an happy to looking at them as if we ow nettl)khent all. Somebody owns them. It can look at theta. Arid that is all we could do if we owned them. Anil nth era reliete us of the care and at iention which now is not ours. When there is so much ut lite to make us happy—when such good friend•, such earnest menu and womeit lom us—when therein so much to en joy—when there are so many who are wok and friendless we are happy and oniztented, as we are sorry for them, WI would aid them. What ifthat man lives in a better house than we own? He cannot take it with him. What matter. the size of Ow earth when we can filially aced only for a time, then, no little of it is which to sleep? What if his or her minftion has more rooms than outw— its can be in bast one room at a time, and we are as happy here as he or else there? His windows may outnumber Rl* but we can see out of ours—he Om do no more. That chair is &seamy Mos as his is to him. The smile of the sine who love, us fills our heart with a life-tint PO golden--can he say Wm? Our room may not be so large oil his, but it is as neat, and clean, as Illgairiy 7 SS homelike! Zia darling may wear more silk than army but silk is not love. His darling away be more queenly than ours, but Lir lies ie no sweeter, her hand no satiny, her fate no more smiling, her Moo ao more true, earnest, soul wrap., plug, and both sustaining. Win der.. Nog may ritiaja Isar carriage ; f . ka ry an ts is livery may wait on .)ter; she may diamonds by the score, but he" ha MO more tenderly loved, more lovingly ~... . .. cared for by his darling than we are by The Old Bsttoheltse's Note-Book. ours; Si' bosontissofter resting ruifra __.l.._ place, tier arms rdt ri; t turflove no I met Lucy Gray on the street to more Otatitio—her ' an caress no d ' for th rat time since my a'cci• sweeter thaii all tllese - wel intao our d . She' as very kind in her in. loved one. i " 's .: elf tilßil her hand amo arms--liee, hp . i II rt In t er 8 good bye, she raised her.beabtiMl arn' a is g ey wi ti It4h that made her A ft like pilay , errtins e o e it li la a rose. She is a ours ip Atti - j e I 1 o .:111odeet, beautiful dearer tha n - to im An t 3 so, to,. n du Cul; twit I 'risked mysell i . as I we are happy. - .- .tooil lingering there, why all this lies- We have lived - tile life Ora man. A • alio", this delay 7 Lucy would will-- brave, earnest workingman. All that ingly be mine—l know the language is ours we have won by honest toil of of those dear blue eyes so well I And brain rind mottles. Others have- nos siw would be. a devoted 'wife, a gentle done so well; if they have done bettek nurse. Why then do I hesitate 7 Alas I still WO-Attl egeft.ll.l,.. Our maphond I cannot en d ure the thought, that, if I has been preserved the while, and on choose - het', two Other women must he our face or person is not so much as driven to despair ! . And I, who am one mark of dissipation—on the heart naturally so tender hearted where the of Ilr we love is no deep tear-fountain fair sex ill concerned bow could I an of sadness from our cold, selfiel, cruel ewer to my conscience for the ruin I misuse of strength and authority. And intuit work 7 Pear ,Imey I It is hard all these blessings add to our happiness to give her tip. and to our strength, as do the kind Young Harding; came out of his words of/rends lead us as a little child store as 1 left her, and she blushed a steps to reach an outstretched hand, rosier red than ever as she bade me that we may do more, and still more good-bye. Even that puppy must good while working to win the reward have noticed it. Dare say, though, lie which will he given those who reach lookail entirely to himself. Those the Eternal Shores willt heir pearls in young fellows are so intolerably con hand and not lost in l ir e's great sea. ceiled 1 It tine not HO In my day. And some are so intent on reaching * * * if * * the distant shore they lose on the way all that would gain for them admit tance, and reel beytond the line which separates the flowery plains from the hot, sandy shore where those toilet walk who have credentials entitling them to the Lealtaii vest. And as we are happy we would have others so, Would totlion who is Our Father that we could call to our room to night all the weary wives—those who are married, lint 0 I God, so wretchedly single; and all the men who promised to love them and give to them the happiness they once hoped for. That we could call to our moat to-night all the niter, "our brother-, ' who are killing themaelvea,Ortishing out their manhood, lading their ti le-boats with that which will drag them dew n 4ho-are ruuning wild and reckless; who are cold, cruel, brutal, harsh, eel fish, tyrannical, neglect nil of home and home ones ' and ask them to be men for the sake Of manhood, and the glo rious reward it bringa. That we could call to Its to night all the little halt starved cliifilren,who are II iiNlved--1%110 hate none to love and care for them-- who are neglected by cruel, careless mothers and drunken, forgetful fathers, and give to each of theta a bisuiet like the one belliresos in the form of a cross, which came from some one the other day, a kiss of lots, a bit of sunshine, and a hope for that beautiful lilt we all might enjoy it we IA 0111. i. Thinking—mid thinking. Wonder mg why men will not be men 111 , 14;10 t of wrecks, why women a ill not lite Mr something besides eat y, foolery, ti f ell ion; whit , buss will not think more of,. Ifonorsbie old age, lisle, liestititill, glorious in the sunset of lire, than 01 decrepit manhood—wh) they will not by the high( - orttre and the reward !tire brings to earnest glen, or, swear to live nn , : be 1.01110,04 S to be 1.111.1, good, loving, useful honorable men, rather tliiiii be of thu wandering, list less, thou4biless driltiillllll %11111•11 11111 . 1-. the slimes, noms the seii,llll,l ili,a, het. On the Raft& II niCd In the golden sun set ‘Fell—the midnight is here, The work it the week is dune Ilase we been of ii-e the pliht neck? [litre ire aside erril Mie perms happy '' Ye. , l'erhapn inure. 'A it has tried, at al: es ents. \Ve know where unir chapters hAse brought light and Ille to one home Whirl/ NO( ma n v weeks anee• 1111111 an abide 01 COl , l Ile , , , leet and urine rs, Thank tilod for thus reward, and take courage. If we base not benefit ed oursetses, we has?, perhaps, done good to others, and if we base, 1111,1 do, our hie will he happy, our filial rest sweet, our bruit ones with nun(her Volliler frOlll whence Colliet , the reaert , /rug of a ll• lOW golden shadow which step step, is leading us on the glori out Sabbath morning, whfcli Crud gn es all who ' hare good records wheisconies to us who are still "brothers und pus tent - the resting hour of Satur day Night. -"Rawls" roli [Rot "Wits\ Din you `note ?' —ln one of the town, of .1 rlt:i 1,i14, a pi a , h a il been ilrinkmg 1111th a late hour of night When he Idarre , l for home, honest folks were In lied, and the houses were all abut and dark The liquor he had Laken wit- too Inln II for him and Ile lid Ina is Oa a here io go. Ile at last a 7js r 14.111 rIII empty wagon shed, li and tell upon the ground For a long tone he lit I 111 111 C 1/11C011( . 1011A1(4 4 8 01 tt drunken eleep,ltad would have retell (tor the imow ou the ground showed the night to he very cold) had not others l eas I nsenatble than himself been around loin. Thlii shed was a favorite readeatuns of the hogs, they rushed out when tile new collier arriv ed, but NO% a returned to their bed. In the litost kindness, and with truest hospitality, then gave their taped com panion the middle of the bed, sonic ly ing on either side of hint, and others answering the name of it, quilt. Their warmth pretested him from being in jured by the ex popore. Towards morn ing he awoke. l'inding himself coin foe-tattle - and in blissful ignorance of his whereabouts, he supposed himself enjoying thelteconimodation of a fay. ern. lie reached out biallst.idbictti,o4o. ing hold of the bristles co(,, a hog, 'ex claiming:—"Why, Mister, when did you shavt, last V Tut American yacht Sappho, on Wednesday last, won for the third time in the race with the English yacht Cambria, at Cowes. The Cambria was the crack yacht of Great Britain, and was beaten in her own waters. PITT/SWIG reporters are excited about a mysterious Individual wbo rides on the Hirolngbam Wait gars 'from early dawn till dewy eye. He never speaks to anybody, never stops unless the care do, and pays his fare promptly. I called on iny glorious It :dote tlits afternoon. I found that everlasting Strong, the law} Cr, there, and Khe ed her dark gray eyes with such a loot, rt,ler, 'I ' 111 Idtnt 4, 411),4 grtly I,' 111 .1111 0 , 0, er ` 4 trong, sat sulking in the window all the while. At la,,t In 4 jealousy got the better ot him, anil w ki t n hasty farewell 'MI the house. The dear crest lure grew «erioito nt once when we were alune. She Braved a sigh mid looked at tje fr2ni under her lung liodic , knew fully too well what site wad , ex petting to hear, and the words were al most trembling on my lips, but the thought of L r uey and wy ititere-ling I larrnicolrovil them hack again, nil I tooh nill lent cOrerl d l i teeping Inn in -ins peeve. I feet and know that I ought to end t Int• struggle, in jiott ice to myself and them lint the melting gray eye , iot the charming in loh,w 111111111 HQ , MI El lt h their hopiriniz lien lienur,Lmg guile and echo the line‘ Ilow ? « i * AL eight in the 0% ening I called up on my third nor erirla%er, the lietre,4 %vlint.e golden chain, atone for the plainne.B (If her face and the .earit en dmvmenta of her mind I found her alone, Hitting at a NI I filow, and looking out ‘%itli a Had ecpre,,:on upon Ow sounding lilt My heart %%tt , full, and longed to comfort her IV offering her tny heart and hand t7,r ‘‘liielt so many bate puled and yearned in valit. - Will - not do, after all, he iny bent choice and x‘He-t Illnrse ? lovely (ate u. Lucy nurt clialigc and lade ui the year. go slow l 4 and the , dark gray of the la, m hung uldow %%ill loose something of their enticing light be fore ,he has been long my own. BM Ilan let, toll her hundred thnii,and charm, that Cali Ile% em change ur pail - Ilanlet, with her tutu Louie, her e4)lllltr% lit, -CI, ;1 , 11.... her age., :111, NV., 1 Ilere 111 1 1.4 I kneel 4/1114 I 0 rice a Vletor • there must I NOW. for 1110111e111, nor fear 10 Ire de ',ea! But 4111 , e% ening 1 could nut veal. the !nag.' AOl - 1/ , that If 0 , /1 , 1 Leto bound her ,hPart to mine. That great hull], mg brute of a dragoon, taol most Imola eome ramp- In 111.1111 or,, and take Ler I.Jr ,a all, 11)1)11 ale shore It , %/I.IS , 11,1 cllgugl•nll•ui "" sLe raid, 111./1;11 11g 0111 her hand a, , he ardoipied for lent mg ale :Ole looked at me litth a smile and a. rigli, an I Lenl t.t in her hand. he .Iragnotong tio,ipder pulled 111:4 yellow midacht.- and glared at me, and I glared at limn 111 refitrn To morrow he shall get his tolrtit., and I will for get, as best 1 .van, ul a ‘oyage to Ea rope 'hall tin Harriet, the broken hearts I leas e ladund. A1)1 4 , 111 \ crootnal loitering! 'My tvretche,l'sell indulgent, indolent de lny ' I Lnt e :eel) a night lhns morning tl.at a ill haunt toe to the grave !, .11 the altar of the pano-lt church stood three pale/111d lowly Irides, and each easta heart readm,4 glance orauguish and itonorse at no, its they pronounced the fatal ‘tpr,l , that separattd us or e‘vr 1.111 t weak I ming Harding, the bcwitrlOttg W et. 1 , ,N Mkt, the lanVer, and nit golden Harriet thrown hersell wont on the blustering dragoon' I, who !night have pret sato/ at ielist one ol the-e stterttiees- who ought Irntc wad, ut lea-t one heart happy-- is hen shall I ever cease to !eel remorse for the incurable attsery I bate thus telly wrought A Legend of Killarney One ul die legends of this beautiful lake, situated iii the heart of Ireland. Is, that once every seven veiirs, WI it fine morning, before the first rats of the sun lutie begun to disperse the mists tram the liviinn p 1 the lake, the O'llonsgline comes riding over it on a beautiful snow-whole horse, intent up on household affairs, fairies' hovering before him, and strewing his path with flowers. As he approaches his ancient residence, everything turns to its form er state of magnificence-11M castle, his library, his prison, his pigeon -house, are reproduced as in the olden time. Those who have rout-age to follow him over the lake, may cross the deepest part dry Milted, and ride with him into the opposite mountains, where his treasures lie concealed , and the daring visitor will receive a liberal gift in re turn for his company ; but before the BIM has arisen, the 0' Donaghue recross es the water, and vanishes amidst the ruins of his Another relates how a young and beautiful girl, named Hakim, •hen wandering along the banks of the beau tiful lake, after the fast rays of the set• ling sun had gilded the horizon, 08w by the pale light of the silvery moon which had just risen, a plumed head rise out of the lake. Gazing onill phantom, she distinctly saw the full form of a cl.ieftain on a white charger, gilding slowly- towards her. lie had a chivalrous look, and in his" hand 'a wand, snrmounted by a golden sham rock. They had an interview, She loved. lie promised a happy life un der de green tayst, She agfeed too his own on the nett Mav morn., morn arrived, andafelche was; re in her bridal drses._ § he stood sc high rock ' oir the boMrs of the la ee just RR the eisa began to gild the sur rounding mountains. Soon she heard rapturous music, the air was perfumed with delicious odors, and she beheld a train of beautiful damsels arise frornifr . the water all clothed in white, scatter ing spring flowers around; then a group of young children with fragrant flowers, and behind, n'Donaghue, on his white horse, which was led by Naiads, As ' the train moved on, bojs and damscht came up and followed till the whole were opposite Melchh, He .wore a glittering helmet, bright armor, and the crimson scarf Melehre had given himl when' do, parted. She knew not what ' to 0, I . o' h ow to join her lover, but rectly she stepped back a few paces, and rlllllllog, made a big jump off the rock ; Donaghue rushed forward and caught her in his arms before she reached the water. The entire train gathered arOund the chief and his bride, aml all slink beneath the waves—nor has the lovely Melcha been seen (km that day to this. A True and Touching Incident A limo :111.1 11IA %%Ire Were pre paring to!mend a Chri,talaa party at the hout.e of n friend. "llencv, my dear hindiand, don't drink to much at the party today," 'aid she putung her hand upon his brow, mid raising her eyes to his lace ttnh a pleading smile." "No, Millie, I will not, you may trust ine ; " and she wrapped her infant in it blanket and they descended. The horses, were soon prancing over the 0,7 f, and plenstnt cOrn ermalion be gilded the wit*. "Now don',),..tou lirr got tour protn tee," wit tapered the t wing wile as they passed up the steps. Poor thing! she was the wife ni a man who listed to look upon the wine when red. The parte prt..sed pleasantly ; the ‘‘lte decended trout ihs appear Cluiniber to join her bw.hand. A pang shot thiongli her heating heart as she met lOW, tor be was intoKteated ; he had broken his promise. Silent ly .they drove homeward, sat e when the drunken Man broke into snatches o: Songs or unmeaning laugh• ler. But the wile rode on, her babe pressed elo-clt to her grieving heart. "Give me the baby, Millie! I runt trust inn with him," he said, as they approached a dark and swollen stream Alter solute hesitation she resigned her horn—her darling hake, so rlosclt tern lied in a great blanket—to his nrins. t ever the dark waters the noble eitel,l.4 bore them, and when they rya, bed the bank the mother naked for her child. With much care and tend erllelM he placed the bundle m her arms, but tt hen she clasped it to her hrea.st no bahr was there It bad slip 1,1 Irmo the lohitiket, and tLe drunketi lather hnew it not. A wild whriek ti o'n the mother aroused hun, and he turned around Just in time to see a rose lace rise one moment above the dark water., and sink forever—and that ht 111 , o en 1/llVilliferallVP. Tike nugutsh „lib,. mot her and remorse of the lather are better imagined ttnitti dVseribed. A 1 1.ivri F. REFORMER —The following conversation, which, if it di i not occur oar presence, occurred somewhere, and an It %%111 n ltply to all localities, nc give it to our readers for the moral it tetalies. It is n great wonder to ii, that t here are not more tneti m exist once leading purer lives, then such litrili, g , little sunbeams, in the form of liatiglileret —God bless 1111111 !---1,01111 Out to tit the simplie'ty of their pure, ‘aaorett hearts, those niece and eat rav notices indulged nt by lathers, wlwh, to the child, must appear eo mobatroue and iiiiiierestiarv. Nellie—Father, do on remeridier that mother asked ton ror two dollars rnorntoa7 Father—Yes, my child ; what or it Neihe—Do you remember that mot er dilu't get the two dollars Father-- Yen. And I remember whet little airlm don't think about. Nellie --What is that, lather? father--I remettilier that we are not rich. liut you seem in a brown studs What i t , my daughter thinking. about WILB thinking 114011 t 110%% much one cigar coats. Father—Why, it coma ten cents— not two dollars by a long shot. Nellie--But ten cents three times a day is thirty cents. Father—That's as true as the 1»1/11/ plieaticm table. there are seven days in a week. Father—That's so by the almanac. Nellie -And seven times thirty cents are two hundred and ten cents. Father—Hold on. I'll surrender. Here, lake the two dollars to your mother, and tell her I'll do without Cl pre ;or a week. Nellie—Thank you, father i but it you would only say a year, it would save more than a hundred dollars, We Would all have shoes and dresses, and mother a nice bonnet and lots of pretty things. Father—Well, to make my little girl happy, I will say a year. Nellie—O, that will be ISO nice ; but wouldn't it be about as easy to say al ways, then we would have the money every year, and your lips wou'd be PO much sweeter when you kiss ue. Moen is said in these days of wo, man's sphere le it not true that her principal fear is that she will not get married ? " OCR dry goods men are happy=the nun is making parasols and light goods desirable. The "Sleeping Beauty" of T n essee, isp,,,,Qne whoinsfefilt ry? So much has al , ... . in regard to the I. ' • l ea e h oily le I c i i . ' , T; f tj ' ill% 1 ne , tu lt, il ritd : i teSti ~ ' it6 that al ven, nd,'. de Au a plain e n of flictiti, ad I 'now; them from ber mothisr, i b Iliter,frieinis, who now have •her in 'Bay* ip the same house in which I am stopping, and from which I am now writing to you. Miss Susan Caroline Godeay was born in Obion county, Tebn.,and will. in ten miles of this city, of poor, but, very respectable parents. Her father has been deiCd for Ober - twelVT fedre: Her mether still lives and watches over her loved child,. and the Sunken eyes and furrowed brow show very plainly the trials and sorrows she has experienced in her duty for twenty one years. She is very poor, and, to some extent, dependent on the contributions of visitors, to take care of and prow! , proper supplies for her charge, 4 Mies Godany was taken sock when about four years of age, with what was supposed to be chills and fever, but which bathed the 'kill of nurses and physicians for more than two years, at which time she fell into a nervous sleep, from which she has not woke since for a longer time than twelve minutes. She usually sleeps soundly from 11 o'clock st night until about 6 in the morning, and through the day awakes once an hour. ger waking spells are never of less than four nor more than twelve, but usually about six minutes duration. In lier waking moments she spoke kith pleasantly and intelligently, answers promptly any question naked her, and appears quite happy and contented. One of the strangest points of this strange case is the seemingly total ab sence of anything like respiration. A piece of the finest polished glass held to her lips fails to disclose the slight est trace of breath. Her puke is per fectly still, and but for a nervous and tremulous motion of die body, which never ceases, rat might nt any time call her dead. She has grown during her affliction from a little cl»lii to about the aierage height of her sex, and weighs ninety six 'PUMAS i and al though Tier body and hands show her very poor in flesh, her face is Mil and smooth, and her Icahn res tvelkdevolop ed. Indeed, such a rare style do her features portray that vlie is n(1.1441417 propriately called tlit Sleepi,4, Ileanty of Ten nessee. -- I'll ifin ray, ,Tenn , l'orrespciplence of Me: I, iiii smile Com- . merrial. iiiii A Ft-tat - 1E 'roar % - r (tile of the most threat- that ever VIM made as flint or the Dominion. lips,. t o =tale the l• [moll-awes by clog tug the Welland canal againi-i. Amen- Call vespela, 11 it were done, a would compel the of an American canal, mid the IVellarid would soon have its rotten ilork-1 decorated with ragged 1111 , fi lur ("1- butt the placid (4.)ter, I,l ' the canal, in , tend of a revenue float the tolls of Amer; can pa , ,sirig through it In tact, there are not enough I.ll.4i+lng Iron) 1,1,11• port to another», the 1 , 0711111 Noll In pay toll to hell the I ;04 erriur I;erierar t•liild in unilerchithe. N ine 1011111 H of the rev enue of Welland canal 14 deri‘eit fro nt the pw-hag.• I lirini;ll it ol ,Itnerieno bottomed Craft., Cliff, lag froTli in the Ullll,l Stales 10 4•110 , r4, and the other tenth torinnli Canada with ueces FltleM t Whir)) S% 01 . 111/ increnne in price it they stopped Up the canal. .1 people that rai l ae.ive n tietaiiik or railroad.. ov-r n whole continent, 00,11 , 1 not be long in liadding a short canal• and alien they oil it done, would he rea dy to Nat, your bigge,nt vessels • there's room enough fur them to pa..., through our ditch." This IS not mere "hlar-ited Yankee hotnlat.t it is a sober tact, and it is foolish lor any Canadian paper to tinggeig the .I,,ppilig the Inter lake. C.111111(4'0: in retaliation for the course of (air - eminent in not allowing l roOpti to pfIPH through oar eatialld the Sault. SONG OF CONGRESS Cold iron, Ili the oominim folks' nhoieln and IJam tillenglll to .4111 , 1011 to the hearient Mule the high pr ive of shit from n piehle inity o.ave And Et duly Vei Jetter.+4.l2 news . you a bonne.. hr nw ledl I tho people ran never refuee The people Ott I ergo ore bet told Hole,. 1 , 1 , 01 ni"11 liirosee proprietor.. In re Ulrn 1.., i•ii%i,p ) Mlly let .1,111.ei1l fly taxing all cohere. a hundred per cerium I'M on the nen, A. hard as von ehoone, From the anti in {AU band t., the 11111111 In our .hoe.. The monarohr of belt piker, the lordn of the forna , e, And roanters of fired eruteha to Congrene return Ito, So ee M.,111.1 re in good earnest the laboring elaasee, For n. by should we ears for Ole larrof the rnamse+ ' Put on the ,creop is 11,11 on you ebooae , I 111 the groans of the victims our Matters mouse —Oki (Nord, The American System The industrial class of the United States have been the subject of a long and interesting report by Mr. Francis Clare Ford, Secretary of the English Legation, at Washington. This report was made in pursuance of a circular addressed by Lord Clarendon, in April, 1669, to the *natio .anil consular agent of Or at: 3ritan, initructing them to report tit ii the condition of the in dustrial cle in the countries to which they were accredited. Ma. Ford says that the American system of common school education has clewed the con dition of the native-born working man, 'v i nd has disposed him to prefer occupa• none in which the exercise of the brain is in greater demand than those of the elbow, and assert that the steady influx of immigrants for the last twenty years has created s t aleinclination on the part of the American to engage in the rough toil of purely muscular labor, which the r.ewly.arrived foreigner ie ready to exert for hie support. , Ali Sr SLP!ragra p he. 04, VII 'tied Grew" ie Sioux aid: StitAssault° , is the name of a new oil city, and an artesian well is to be sold in Charleston. EIND.ala °aunty, lowa, boa a copper mine, and Indlamipolis, Ind., recordod a $10,000,000 mArtgage. Visotrrl♦ oysters 4ro sent to England packed in mud, that they may reach there alive. TuE great lire in Quebec last Tues. day was only stopped by a sudden and haavy.fall of rain. MR London Pima says that in Lon don "thieves at present aro too clever for the preeentL ADMIRAL Farragut is to deliver the Prizes to the Annapolis•Nnval Academy graduating class next month. Tux Protestant Episcopal Qonventien at )3altimoro elected Re , . Win Pit_ ney, of Washington, Assistant Bishop of Maryland. IN Clneinnati, B. F. Redman, Jr., obtainedverdict in the Supreme court for $B,OOO uninat H, pd 01116er/Iton for the seduction of his wife. A BILL passed the Semite last night providing for the government of the District cf Columbia, with n Governor, Secretary and Legislative Assembly W'st. E. !Dm. and John Philips (col ored) were senteneo‘Lat Bostim for the murder of Wm. Jacobs, the former t o be ham , ecl and the In tter to the ` , :ge )(lbw' bo II Su 1111 v a t hee ("Punt), Wiiieotedn, refused. vote of (de% en to five, to grant aid to tl.o ItlilwaUkee and Northern Itailr 'l'ii a last straggler from General Lee's army has arrived at I.nutsvalle en route fteltimore After "I"llter,iblirg" 110 retreated to Mexico, and it now on his way home Tut: Revolution settles thadiiili-Wabli ing question by quoting from 2il K xi' 13 "I will wipe derliaalt•in iii a man wipeth a dish ; wiping it,and turn ing it upside down." ItociiEvour It now in prison Ito romps daily with hi, children, and they made ..11,11 11 noise the other day, that he warned theni, "We will all be turned out, If we create auuli a row." 'NE gallant Fenian O'Neil comp/ions that he is n terribly ilbived man 'While be was gallnntly 114hting the Carnelimis in the front, the United States Nar•hal took n hack at bins in the rear. Tit Itntllitsl Con V 6110441 pf the Indiathi t 0.0 Editors and Publishers Asisisin doll met in Indianapolis A resolution wa. jodi l ded requestinic Congress to re. lure the duty on printing paper to ttn we. ern) .1 rEWJnv, Fine° a NEN. St reflcer, mK rir Mutt Crrick, near W urn wa to-a, committed suicide/ 'lt,. nitro, I~ witi , l to he virrow (hut •hr hal iliiiighter (It imirry corirr iry to thechilir, wishes. A ,NART boy , vf nellefontain, , after entifie; green apple, eN,l n i, i )id dear I I've chewed an l iJ I 1 ., I kn- . l An" . odd Fellow!" Iti mother. '`l‘e,t; be'n giving n the ariy." Ttf r: champion old man who i. ui th e hahit ,pf mowint fifteen tom of hoe per diem, has turned up thus call) In the ••ell.. )(I In Indiana. They arc getting him orgiiniAed for the hummor AN English farmer litely plarlrded the fullowtne; announcentetit : "Ir:sten s:ye sale of bre stock , eon rag not 1 ,4, ' , lnn 140,000 1)(,3, and a lluoNd right of pasturage " It turned nut that be had several hives of boa to di.rwso of. Tnir letborers ti the Kariba , Piv Itatiroad demand that they :hall b. armed For the protection of their 1; , ,25 and threaten that if their demand tr. not complied with they wilt ev n va— senger train and come in, thus e[ ,, t , ne; the passengers and foaving them to the ti , Pithir mercies of Ulu savages. G E. ER AL Jordan, it is said, lot, writ ts,la to the Cuban Junta in Ne% Yorh, that he has met with little amour:v.4e ment thus fur in Washington, but doe, not despair of accomplishing motieth:rig before the close of the session of C. , n greys. lie attributes his want of .47( to false reports having reached the mem hers of :iptinish victories DYI NG words Sr., sometimes strange A colored man who died in jell at New Castle, Delaware, the other day, said to his nurse, "You won't have to cash any more shirts for Me ;" and nn Id Ilol7t whose feet Wore OW ofena the PI/ I Ind el ph 111 and New York Railroad, Wedne, day night, said it "would colt him 1 , -s for boots " Turns are encouraging asmranm , ,' that the death penalty is to be abolidi ed in Holland and l'russia. A similar measure has just been rejected n, Bava ria by It /iftlBll majority The mritation of this question in this country has tem porarily given place 1.0 more friteresting matters, but it is not to die out until sun is finally gained. Ase man and his wife, residing , n Keokuk co., lowa, where returning one day last week from the funeral (duo last. of their three children, who had died of scarlet fever, a thunder stem: came up and just as they were metering the gate of their desolated house the lightning struck their carriage, man was instantly killed, and the wife is now a raving maniac. Juya.xibit I'eabtdys aro in bloom at Albany, New York, and will SUMO day make amities, in the world. The 'Argus tells of a little boy, his taco besmeared with molasses, and his rags fluttering in the breeze, running 'up frdin the river, flourishing a dirty shingle, and scream ing at the top of his voice to a comrade . "0, Bill !get na many boys and shingles as you can, for there's a big hogsit of 'lasses busted on the pavement—busted all to smash I" A exonntarr traveler at Baltimore, who demanded his trunk at the depot before all others, and was told by the Irish baggage master that he must have patience and wait his turn, turned upon the baggage maker with "You're an impudent dog." To which hn of the trunks rejoined : "An' hitt), ye are monkey, and Its a great pity that, whop we two were made bastes, ye wasn't made an Illiphant, so that ye could have yer .blasted trunk under yer nose all the time."
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers