The Demotratic Watchman. ZELLZFoNTE, PA LOST 14eiria comes out rend glimmera The *tare lik• tlianion , l4 gleam, • ANA long ;green bough' aro a n ring O'er's pleasant mountain 4 t ream. And ny thoughts they Imre! backward low the long dead years, Am.:flour foie* itomeo; up before ma, Moo through a Ode& of leer, We net—we loved—We puled ; The rfoory ever Dew, We'live4—we hoped—We welted And me the long pars grew. • Tootofsel.ollol:mitween guirthet time has made, New hablts grow upon us., Old beauties feint and fad& Take one it look behtpd yen, tuts the VIM or years, Don my fees come yet befor you, 411•44.throuth s mir,t or oetr• /trir , Wivaiwe tut Cuter will be ermtinued MPS( week, the matte baring felted to bring um am usual weekly inetalment. After this week set bops to be able to cootlou• It rogelorty. Nothing To Mak• us Happy Miny a man and MaII y a woman it tlisaaf,itified with life and continually wishing themselves dead. They look with envy upon the success of others— have no desire to succeed the,mselvet, and throw shadows upon the liven of Others by wiehing thetn4elve+ out of this world and tutu the next. Now e have been think ing—thlnk mg that mob persons will not he happy in a world where He who 19 Suprema has it all His own way, when they are mis erable in a world where we hn‘e it all ours I To be happy is to live to a purpose. With happiness life is a sneeess. With wit it a htdure. Yet people sneer at those who try to he happy. Those who loVe each other and rest like the glories of a setting sun over tlelil and forest—who are good, and kind, and loving, and detuonktrittive in their af fections are called fools, even by those who pmfese religion and reun i fied in tentions. And )et they tirdess to • follow the teachino of iLim who sap; Heaven is but eternal hatipiness,where loved and loving rest tbrever, with the near ? the dear, the constant, the won- shipped. Some envy others happiness, snit by remarkr, cruel talk, wicked I hrumii, sod bitnefitl tipeerli, wound and weak-. en thaw who are Partying for n heart shelter we till need—the love even Christ Jenne found in the eornety of Mary and Martha. Why not allow °then , to he happy even it ne cannot? We are happy, and contented more and more an the yearn come to break our tall when into the fathomless abyss drops our soul to the beautiful rest which has no working. We are happy in being contented with the re sult of our suit ing. We are happy in our work and in our love. We are happy in otir health, in our disposition and ability to work, and, above all, in the golden place we have in the hearts of no rurally of the poor, the earnest, the heart-sulleritig ones who write to us. and Who do not, but call tin triend In front ()four pleasant , rheery, well lit room, is a beautiful Park. All around are trees. It IS the iiinperty of the city -but we enjoy it as it it were all ours--as some would to i.wn it all, and with the beaiiiien thereof shut in by a high wall, no none eolith' see In the night, as now, a thousand n od more bright lights nre to be seen all about, as if just around us were hefty en and thee, were His stars We en joy all this. The water rises and Oodles into the basin, and large reser voir, cool and reireahidg to the flesh, the ear. We ars happy in this beams fad feast. And in they time we look out to see the bode 514 leaves on the trees— to see the chatty sparrow son thegreen sward and in the branches, making love and melody. We see the co l d) enclosure—the graveled walks the rustic seats or benches whereon people sit to rest--the crowds of incur, tyonteti, and children wandering therein--to see the elegant tennis and beautiful ladies --the handsome equipages and stylish gentlemen go by—to see the houses, and the attires, and the steeetNand the telegraph wires, and the homes, and the spires, and all the works of man here before us, and are an happy in looking at them as if we owned them all. Soinebod) owns them. • We can look at theta. And that is all we could do if we owned them And oil, *lll relieve us of the care and attention which now is not ours. When there is so much iii lile to make us happy—when such good friends, such earnest men and women lanni us—when there ie so much to en joy—when there are so many who are sick and friendless we are liappy and emstented, as we are sorry for them, sod would aid them. What i(that man fives in a better loose than we own? He cannot take it with him. What matters the size of Itius earth when we can filially claim, staid only for a time, then, so little Of it in which to sleep? What if his or Kee Mansion has more rooms than ours— Ire can be in but one room at a time, mod we are as happy here an he or she there? His windows may outnumber wire, but we Clin see out of ours—he son do no more. That chair is as este) , tons as his is to him. The smile of tin tine who loves us MIS our heart with a lift tint so golden—can lie say sore Our room may not be so large so his, but it is as neat and clean, as orderly, so homelike! His darling may wear more silk than eau, but silk is not love. His darling may be more queenly than ours, but bar kiss I. no sweeter, her band no osier, her face no more smiling, her heasomore true r earnest, soul wrap plug, and heart eustalnlng. Ills Jar- Reg may ride_in itar carriap ; servants its livery.may wait on her i she may eras diamonds ley the score, but he is 11111 more tenderly loved, more lovingly cared for by his darling than we are by ours; Ist* boson tie softer resting pface, bier arms attf oi t i ek—h.e'love no more tp.stinw-her and - caress no sweeter than all these welcomes of our l a o r v m ed n_ o i n l e ee. .. he, obi • It her beakitiM ri n a is g like piiiaritias o 0 e It 011100 1 dearer than h ieto im Art sd, to, we are liappy. - We have lived - fhe life of a.man. A brave, earnest working man. All that in ours we have won by hclltest toil of brain mid muscles. Others ha,s not done so well; if they have dons better st.ill wet..ltr.4. copttnia.. Qur manljood has been preserved the while, and-tin our face or person is not so much as one mark of dissipation—on the heart of hpr we love is no deep tear-fountain of sadness front our cold, selfish, cruel misuse of strength and authority. And all these blessings add to our happiness and to our strength, as do the kind words of friends lead us as a little child steps to reach an outstretched hand, that we may do more, and still more good while working to win the reward which will he given those who reach the Eternal Shores with their pearls in hand and not lost in life's great sea. And some are' so intent on reaching the distant shore they lose on the way all that would, gain for - them admit tance, and rest beyond the line which separates the flowery plains from the hot, sandy chore where those 111081 walk who have credentials entitling them to-the Lealian Rest. And an'wm are happy we would have other t a Pb. Would to Ilan who is Our Father that we could call to our room to iitglit all the weary wives—those who are married, but 0 I Gol, co wretchedly single., and all the men who promised to love them and give to them the happiness they once hoped for. Thaf we could call to our room to-night all the men, "onr brother-, ' who are killing themselvee,crusiiiiig mtl their manhood, lading their lile-boats w ith that which wifrdragthem doss n who arc running wild and reckleva , who are cold, cruel, brutal, harsh, fish, tyrannical, neglectful of home and home once, and ILA them to be men for the sake of manhood, and the glo. rious reward it brings. That we could call to us to night all the little hall starved children who are ludo% ed-- who have none to love and care for hem-- who are neglected by cruel, careless mothers and drunken, forgetful fathers, and give to each of them a lusplet like the one lief; ire tie in the form of a croqs, which rime Irons some one the tither day, a kiss of lose, a bit ofsit❑4lll it and a hope for that beautiful life sue all might enjoy it rte Thinking--and thinking. Wonder tug Nabs, men will net he men itt.ter,,,l of wrecks, why women will not live tor something besides ens v, foolery, lash ion i why boys will not think more of Honorable old age, halo, beautiful, glorious in the sunset of life, than of liecrept manhood—ally thee will not hr the light - OMM and the reward lose brings to earnest etideasor, suear io live mid he soniebods to he Lind, good, loving, meltil honor:dile men, rather than be 01 the \%;tl.4leritig, 11,4 less, 11101141111 e, lines the f 4111,1 1 .%, t 141.1 14 10e , e/1,111111 blrnrhen on the tintei li) the golden sun set Well—the noilnight is here. The work tit the week is iliote Ilase we 111. e" "i "'e the Past "eel` 111 " e " made twen cell It‘orfti 'MHO' Y 4. 4 l'erhapm more. \I e Moe tried. at all ex ems, We know where our I limiters hose brought licht and htt• to tine home which not Mall V weeks since wits an abode tit colt! neTrivet 11101 tnise Thank Clod or thin reward, and tithe courage. If we lia,e not benefit ed ne hate, perhaps, done good to others, and if we hate, 5 t1,1 do, o ur lif e will he Intpp oar final re.t sweet, our loved ones with us (her Yonder from whence come, the reach ing ,it a it • low golden ••411a,10w which step by step, is leading its on the glori oils Sabbath morning, n loch (iod gix all wholiave, good TCe4prth4 whcu SrColll.'ff to us who are still "brothers and sm.. tent" the renting toms ill tiatur day Night -"Rao A . ' I'OMEIII/Y "Wits.. flit, rut' tit(tt '--In one of the fowl,. of .Irital,lo4, a ma', html been ilronkneg until a lntl• hour of night When he for home,honest folks were In bed, and the houses er'e all Shill sod dark The In q inor lie had taken 100 Mal In for Iwo and be 11111 not I, tti here no go. Ile at last sta t fgerrd Callay Vial4oll and 1..11 Irt,im Ilse ground For a long time be 1,1% in the 1111C010 . 1010.11t01 01 It 'hunker, sleep:llnd world hate frozen (tor the 1.11‘,W on the ground showed the toght to Inc .fiery cold) hail 1011. others less inseesible titan h 'note I f been around hint. This shed was a favorite rehtleiVollll of the hogs, they rushed out when the new corner arm ed, but anon returned to their bed. In the most kindness, and with truest hospitality, thee gate their piped com pan)on the middle of the bed, Some It trig on either side of him, fool others answering the name of it quilt. Their wardith pretested 111111 from being in jured by the exposure. Tow unlit morn ing he awoke. Finding hinted( coin fortithle and in blissful ignorance of lie whereabouts, Ile supposed himself enjoying the accommodation of a tav ern. Ile reached out him hand' catch ing hold of the bristle. of a hog, 01 claiming:—"Why, Mister, when did, you shave lulu?" Tait American yacht Sappho, on Wednesday last, won for the third 'line in the• race with the English yacht Catnbtia, at Cowes. The Caanbria wan the (*irk yacht of Great Britain, and was beaten in her own waters. I'll.'ll9U so reporters are excited about a myeterious - Individual who rides on the Birmngharn street aays from early dawn till dewy eve. Re never speaks to anybody, never stops unless the cars do, and pays his fare promptly. . The Old Batch°lar's Note-Bonk. --« I met Lucy Gray on the street to d ' for th rat time since . my acci d . She as ve r kind in her in , ' ad I ber hand a inn ' t en s ooilbye, she raised f ey wi ii I II that made her etli ?sift rose. She is a 1 t 1 o . .-. iodest, beautiful n da nil, an I'tisked myself, se I .tool lingering there, why all Um hes• „lotion, ?hie delay 7 Lucy would will ingly be mine—l know the language of those dear blno eyes so well I And siva would Loa. devoted wile, a gentle nurse. Why then do I hesitate? Alas! I cannot endure the thought, that, it l 'choose bet', (WO - Other women must be driven to despair! And I, who ant naturally so tender hearted where the fair sex is concerned how could I au ewer to my conscience for the ruin I must work? Dear Lucy I It is hard to give her tip, Vslung Harding came out Or his store mil left her, and she blushed a rosier red than ever as she bade me good-bye. Even that puppy must have noticed tt. Dare say, thorigh, he took it entirely to bun self. Those young fellows are so intolerably con ceited I It was not so in my day. * * * * * - it I called on my glorious w idow 11111 afternoon. I tound that everlasting Strong, the law ter, there, and she hit ed her dark gray eves with such a look of 11.'1f1, , .. rl ll'', 'I I 't• 1, II 'N I ,l ii , I, !Mil 141111 g 11 , HIV ,11.1.0, nail 131 V ter ••trong .at sulking in the window all the Nshilv. At last his jealousy got the better of him, and with a limuv farewell lett the house. The dear erre tore grew serious at once when we were alone. She heaved a sigh and loolA at Inc from under her long laslie. I knew only ion well w hot she was e x perting to hear, and the words were al most trembling' on my lips, but the thought of Lucy and my inlete-ong Harriet drove them back again, and I tiiol. my lea. e, ••01l heepoi , her 111 , 111.1 tense I feel and know that I ought to end this struggle, in justice to in) sell and them But the melting gra) eyes.d , the 01:1111111Ig Ni lill/le haunt my own ' , with their !mitering be,‘ itching 01s7 and echo the yue , ,tion, II ow ? * .. * * • I. 1 At eight in the et I ealleAlip on my third lair mut - aver, the he rem. 4 I whobe golden chains atone for thee pl a in ne . e ot her filet` and the Scarily ell donmentm ,If her mind. I found her alone, rotting at a window, and looking oat with a end eciore.toon upon tie ,otonling M) heart wati full, an d I longed to comfort her hv ofrering her iny heart and hand for a filch CO mane hate johr.l and earned in vain. \VIII not the, alter all, he lily Leaf el.wer an .I w i-r-t i ionic ? tact. , it I art mint change and fade an the year+ go rluwlt Lc, and the lark gray et ezi 01 the lie \SO. Ii Ilig a ItIOW tt iii 100,e 81111Iellillig of titetr efittctrig light he lore she bite beet Irrerg my own, lint Ilan let, It dr hl.r hundred thousand charms that ran net er cliange,or jail thin iii, withher town liOuac, tier ...win ...eat, her , er‘ailts. her equip age,, al., ie•, there must I kneel 111111 to rOO• a victor : there 11111,1 1 Mlle, Ica' iilie lira.' liniment, nor tear U, he a l, hied' 1111 tlll, e,vtliog I could not .1•;11, thr magic word, that would line hound her liPart to mine. Thai , great hulking !mite of a dragoon, . need. collie tramp upon Ile, 111141 lalst: lien lur it walk upon the .bore It a "an ..1.1 engagement, hoe nald, Iwhling out her hand ri, apologized for It'rl%lll V . me the looked at me Orith a smile aria it nigh, 11, I bent over her hand. 1 lie dragooning m'inde'r pulled his yellow 1011 , 1M:11e , and glared at toe, and I glared at lion in return TO 111iirroW he Khali get hit quirtii., and I will lor get, an beat I can, m a toyage to 1:11 rope with nit' I farriet, the broker. hearts I lento 1,1:1111111, AI crinpnal Itatering Ily wretched indulgent, indolent Ile 'ay ' I Lase ,een Asight this morning that a 111 llama the is die grave' .1I the altar of the patt•ls church Hood three pale and los el y hrodes, and each cast a heart rs Ifsng, glance ofangtndi and lenair,e at ins, nnt hey proannneed the latnl ss,•rd- , that separattd sit tor eser ' I.ns s weds swing Harding, the I...witching widow silt the lass ver, nod ins g“1.11-11 llama throyss henell ass as on the blustering dragoon' .1101 I, who alight Lass- preV , elited at least one (ol t•aterifive.4- who might has a mad, at lea,-1 one heart ham," - - when sisMl I el.er cease to (eel retnorne for the incurable turnery I base LIMA sully %% ruisglst • -I..dger. •• A Legend of Killarney One (il the legends of this beatitifill lake, situated I. the heart of !retain!. is, that once every seven vearq, oil a fine morning, betbre the first rays of the sun hat e begun to disperse the mists (rout the bosom of the lake, the D'Donagline (mines riding over it on a beatitiltil snow •kV hite horse, intent lip on household itlibirs, fairies hovering before hi 11), s lid id re w ing Ills pat h alit flowers. As he approaches hurtuicient residence, everything turns to its awn) er state of magnificence-1)41 castle, his library, his prison, his pigeon-house, are reproduced as in the olden time. Those who have courage to follow hilt over the lake, may cross the deepest part dry looted, and ride with him into the opposite' mountains, a here his treasures lie concealed ; and the daring visitor will receive a liberal gift in re. Iturn fur his company ; but before the nn has arisen, the 0' Donoghue recroes es the water, and vanishes Amidst the ruins of his Another relatee i how a young and beautiful girl, named lielcha, when Wandering along the banks of the beau tiful lake, after the last rays of the set ting sun td gilded the horizon, saw by the pale light of the silvery moon which had just risen, a plumed head rime out of the lake.. Gazing on the phantom, she distinctly saw the full corm of a chieftain on a white charger, gliding slowly towards her. He had a chivalrous look, and in his hand a wand, enrmounted by a golden sham. rock, _They had an interview. She 'loved. lie promised arhappy life un der the green war* She agreed' his own on the nail. Itlay morn: morn arrived, ....%ndl.llelclis wasf,r in her bridal dress. She stood high rock on thehonlers of the I et, just as the sun began to gild the sur rounding mountains. Soon she heard rapturous music, the air was perfumed with delicious odors, a . .rti she beheld a train of beautiful damsels arise from the "water all clothed in white, scatter ing spring flowers around; then * group of young children with fragrant flowers, and behind, O'Donaghtie, on his white horse, which was led by Naiads. As the train moved on, hors and damsels earns tip and followed till the whole were opposite Watt. lie woe a glittering - helmet, bright armor, and the erinison scarf Melcha had gi6n him wheti they parted. She knew not what to do, or how to join her lover, but di. reedy she stepped back a few paces, and mining, made a big jump off the rock • 0 Itonaghus rushed forward and 'aught her in his arms before she rent-lied The water. The entire train gathered around the chief and his bride, and all stink beneath the waves—nor harrthe lovely Melelia been seen from that day to this. A Trun and Touching Incident all.l stn t%!le were pre part ig to attend a Clirt.tniam party at the house of a friend. " eitry, my dear hindiand, don't drink to touch at the parts• taday," she putting her hand upon lira Loretta, and ritu•mg Logy eyes to his (ace soh a pleading snide."' "No, sfilhe, I will not, you may trinit me," and she wrapped her imam in a blanket and they descended. The lior.es, were soon prancing over the tort', and pleas tnt eon, ersat ion tie g lid e d the wmr. “Now don't 1011 for. gel sour promise," whispered tile )(mug is Ile as 111ry 1/111141..11 up the slope. Poor thing ! iLe was the wife 01 a 111111 i 11111/ doted (0 100 k 11 ) )011 tire wow alien red. The party pawed pleasantly ; the Both ifeeendeli Iron the tipper chamber to Join her liu-band. A pang 5110 i Olitmgli her heating heart an she met him, or be. was Itilociealeti; he had al-0 broken him promise. Silently they drove homewa rd, save when the drunken man broke into snatches ut sooro, or ruuoeanu.} • laogh ter. But the wife ride on, her babe pre.p.ed her erteving heart. ''(;tve toe the baby, Nitthe! I can't tru , t ion with lion," be NMI, as they api t roacite.i a dark and etrullea Htreato. .1 tier notne hesitation she resigned her lii.t born— bertlarltng babe, no rbwely writ)a4l in a great blanket —to lit,' amp... ("e ve the dark waters the noble Isire them, and when they rya, lied the hank the mother asked for With touch care and tend erness lie placed the bundle in her 111 - 1114, btu( when she clasped it to her breast no Labe was there! It had slip l ied Irmo the blanket, ill die Drunken lathier knew it not. A wild segliek Ii ii the mother amused hint, and lie turned arou...: j ust 111 time to see a rose lace rise one moment above the dark water., and siiik forever—and that iv wan intemperance. The anguish of Ilse mother and remorse of the taller nm Letter Imagined than described. A LITTI F. REFORMER —The following conversation, which, if it ,11.1 not occur in our pre,ence, occurred bOlitett here, !Mil RS It will apply to all localities, ‘‘e gise it to our readers for the moral it teaches. It i 9 a great wonder to it that there are not more men to ext.tt enre leading purer Ines, when such darling little sunbeams, 11l the form ut daughters —God liless them ! out to the simplic ty of tfier pure, innocent hearts, those vices and ex' ray agances indulged in by lathers, whiA, to the child, must appear so 111011BIFOUR and illitiel.CPßUFV. Nellle—Father, do ion remember dun mother anted ton for two dollure (him mormnai Father—Yee, my child; what of at ? .Nellie—Do you rementher that moth Vr didn't get the two dollarn? Father Yen And I remember Wittlt little gulp; don't think about. Nellie —What is that, lather? Fat her —1 reateather that we are not rich, Bat. )uu eeetu In a ltrowit NVliat is rue daughter thinking u tt 9 was donkitig about hots in Ile!, o n e cigar coats. Father—Why, it come ten cents— not two dollars by a long shot. Nellie—But ten cents three times a day is thirty cents, Fattier—'That's as true as the multi plica 1(111 Nellie—And there are eleven clap) in a week. Father—Thnt's so by the almanac. Nellie -And seven times thirty cents are two hundred and ten emits. Father—Hold on. I'll surrender. Here, take the two dollars to your mother, and tell her lo without ci gars tor a week. Nellie—Thank you, father; but if you would only say a year, it would save more than a hundred dollars. We would all Ow'e 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-0, that will be ao nice ; but wouldn't it-be about as easy to say al ways, then we would have the money every year, and your lips would be co much sweeter when you kiss us. Moen is said in these days of wo man's sphere. Is it not true that her principal fear is that she will not get married 4t Oct dry gOods men are happy—the sun is making parasols and light goods desirable. The "Sleeping Beauty" of Tstmessee, - lay-Sne who_olllll6B So much has ' al n in regard to the 1 an ,Y 4 e r v t is f' ; h • a a t olLilng ne it il teak IW - that al yen, nd alto u a plain a of facts' as if nditi - them from her Mother, tiVothafaddr.friends, who now have her in 15hargis irt the same house in which I am stopping, and from which I am now writing to you. Miss Susan Caroline Godsay was born iu Obion county, Tehn:,and with. in ten miles of this city, of poor, hut, very respectable parents.. Her father has been deed tvrelir Airs: Her mother still lives and watches over her loved child, and the sunken eyes and furrowed brow chew 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 procure proper supplies for her charge, Miss Goiisity was taken sick when about fouryears of age, with what was supposed to be chills and fever, but which baffled 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 at night until about . 6 in the morning, and through ,thecdat awakes once an hour. Mir vvakiii . k spells are never of less than four nor more than twelve. but usually about six minutes duration. In her waking mo ments sh e spoke both pleasantly and intelligently, answers promptly any question asked her, and appears suite 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 hiss tails to disclose the slight est trace of breath. Ifer pulse ix per fectly still, and Inn for a nervous and tremulous motion of the hotly, which never ceases, you might, at' nny time call her dead. She has grown during her affliction from a little child to about the aterage height of her sex, and weighs ninety mix pounds i and al• though her body and bands show her very poor in flesh, her ; -thee is full and smooth, and her lf . M.l.lreq welkilevelym ed. Indeed, iftmli a rare et) le do Tier features portray that she IM not inap propriately called the Sleeping !Seamy of Tennessee. —I 'n ion Co ty, Tenn , Cmteapundelire ‘:,l* the I, ausrtlle riapi• meri ial. A Fr.trtri t. Titorwr -I Pile of the most fooli.li threat , that ever was made is that of the lhanuoun. It pro poses to , pite the l'ruted Outten by clon ing the Welland canat tigitim.t Ameri can vesselq. If it were Jana, it wrth] compel the building of an American canal, and the Welland would a n o n have Its rotten Ilurk deCOrAttell with ragged boy, fishin,.; for boll head• the placid a mei. 01' the en , ) of a revenue fi out the lolls of .Nineri eat , ri p. si lig through it. In tart, there are not enough Se,,ek panning from one port to ;mother in Ole 1 ton to vat tall keep tile Governor General s yolinge.q child in toidercloilie , Nund tenths of the rev. emit. of Welland canal is dented front the p0i....ng.• through it of American I,mo:wil erlll-, f•iirr trig fr , ati in the United `..l:ites w oib,. / lt, an d the other tenth t 'amnia , %1111 tteceA totirs, whtelt worth InereAne Ili price if they ntoppr I lift the canal. .1 people that ran aenven netautk of railroads over a whole Pont went, a mill not lie long in, bildditrig a short canal• and when they had it done, would he rea dy to sat, "Send aiptig your biggest esSeld there's r 04,01 enough for them to pass 1111'01101 nor ditch " .1 . 11114 I not mere "hlarsted Yankee botrihnni it is a sUher tact, and it to fi,olish for any Canadian paper to stiggetig, the stopping the inter lake commerce in retalottora for the course of oar Co,- ernment in not allowing troops to pants through our ritual at the Sault, SONG OF CONGRESS Cold 4.41, in 11. OOMIEIIIII (olive nhoveln find • 1144 Str l, ll4llll4 . .llldllit to the tleitelext tatelt; White th e hlgh sr tee of attlt from a pickle may 1.1011. 11., And 4 duty 4/111 "floe %el .leffere,l flay la • ' Plll 01111,0 ',crew., to hard as you t temre, xro?„, thr people an never refuse The pe.,1,10 rt I,,gr are but rehrls and riders fermi 1 4 • Vol Men are turitle•e pr..itrtelorti In reolrn Ln I , iir nit) , let it POI - 11CM . e•1/1 taiitig all where a hundred per rectum I'm en tile e•eri•Vl An hard as you r mono, Frn,rn the axe In our 111411(1 to the TlNtill In our , shoes. The 'maim, he of salt-pans, the (onto ul the furnaee, And roasters of bread erumbe to Congress return So all s , lue• se in good earne.l the laboring For why choulli ae ears for the WOOO of the mass's , Put on the serve! .5 • hard in YOll MiooPlo 1 11l the gr ans of the victims our masters amuse —old Ouord. The American System. The intitivtrial 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 itt pursuance of a circular addressed by Lord Clarendon, in April, 1889, to the dtplotnatic and consular agent of Great britan, instructing them to report upon the condition of the in dustrial class in the countries to which they were accredited. Mr. Ford says that the American system of common school education has elevated the con. dition of the native-born working man, led has disposed him to prefer occupa none in which the exercise of the brain is in greater demand than those of the elbow, lititcl assert that the steady influx of immigrado for the last twenty years has created Olisinclination on the part of the Atnerican to engage in the rough toil of pprelp f inuecular labor, which the r. the foreigner is ready to exert for hie supiort. ' l 7o,B9Ata p Paragraphs. ried Grease" is a Sioux Ch Spaniel:ma is the name of Rosa , oil city', and an artesian woll is to ho sold in Charleston : eatitias. county, lowa, has a copper mina and Indianapolis, Ind., rocord e d a $10,000,000 nitirtgago. vizoiNlA °plan gro sant, to England packed in mud, that, they may reach there alive. TEIE groat Ilre in Quebec lest 'nips. day was only stopped by a sudden And heavy. fall of rain. THE London 'Pima says that in Lon don "thieves at present aro too clover for the present. ADMIRAL Farregut is to deliver the prizes to the Annapolis Naval A endrt»y, graduating class next month. Toe Protestant Episcopal Convention at Baltimore elected Rev. flVrn. I'ic•k. pay, of Washington, Assistant Bishop or Maryland. IN Cincinnati, B. F. Redman, Jr.,. obtained n verdiel in the Supremo Court for $B,OOO against H. C. Oulhorston for the sednetion of his wife, A Btu, passed the Senato !ail night providing for the government of tho District a.r Colunthia, with a (loverrior, Secretary and4Jegislative Assembly Wm E. 1 / 1 1.t. and John Philips (ct . a.. urea) were sentenced at Boston for tho murder of IVm. Jacobs, tho former to and tho totter to tie , pribt,7l t,/, Irto Tuc Board of Stiiii2r% Ili; I ke,: h , uniti, Wi-com•in, lo a vote of plc% ell to five, to grant e l to tie Milwaukee and Northern Railroad. Tut: last straggler from General Leo army low !Uri Vt. , " at L(1111SVIIIo eft rialto to fialtimorp. After "Peterhlairtt" hu retreated to Merle?, atid ib now on his way hotrm. it.volution seltles question by quoting fr4,iii 241 kin u ,, xxi 13 "I will wipe Jertisa a witx , tli a dish ; wiping it,und turn ing it upside down." Urn nEronT i% now in prisifil Ile rompv daily with hi• children, and 01 made %lid) n noise the ether day, that he warned them, " We will all be turd out, it we create such n row." 'lnv: gallant Fenian O'Neil comphoni dint he k terribly man ha wits gallantly fighting the (107111,11. mi in the front, the United Staten 'Marshal took a hack nt hi in in the rear. Tit v. annual convention o f th e liidi:iiu Suite Editors and lutiitehern Ai.ao la. Lion lout in I nditinapolet A. resolutctn toloptett requentinkt Congreat t . . re: dune the duty in printing paper I tcr, par cent t t:w ,111Q.s •Ince ft Mr.. Strciker, ing or 111111 Crock, near Witt/ wabi-a, ‘Viscon , in, committed suicide 'ltr Vllll , ll i. .aid to be grirrow that 4lio In4l itidueed a daughter to marry tontr iry to theehtlir.i wishes. A 'TART boy u(•13ollef, , after eating a green apple, ex, h, Auu d , tear I I've chewed an off low I" A n Odd Vettow t" vnd Lli mother. "Yes; bu's giving u 1• the grip." 1 . 1(E ehnlnpiOn old nnul who I. in the hatot of tnowing fifteen time of lay per Alvin, hue turned up Lhus °fitly in the ~u-on in Indiana. '1 hey arc gutting 11r4tini a•d fur the burniner As Erticlish farmer llitety ph t eArdel th• following annottneentent “Etten stve sale of lit 0 stock. rootpnvng not loth 140,000 head, and right of pasturage " ft turned not that he hint several hived of bens to dnposo of.. Tits laborers on the Kansas ,tic Itnilr,nrt demand that they shall be arowd for the protection of their 1 ,, and threaten that if their densind not complied with they will save semzer train arid come in, thus ejiii (1(14 the passengers and !oaring them to the tender mercies of the savages. (h. \ ERA L Jordan, it is said , ha: writ t" ti,, Cuban Junta in New YorL, Burt 40 has rust with little einseir;o4ii merit thus far in Washington, but doer not despair of imcomplishing before the (dew of tho sea,ion grrl4. lie attributes his went to false reports having reached thotherm hers of Spanish victories 1)il Nl'. word< are sometimes ,trutrugo A colored roan who died in jail at Sew Delaware, the other day, <nut to his nurse, "You, won't bare IA) Wash any more shirts ffir me ;" and an old nrul whose' feet were rut off no the Philadel• Tibia and New York Railroad, \Visite ., day night, said it "would cost him I , ss for boots " THERE are encouraging a.iiiirsin that the penalty is topi. in Midland and Prinifitil. - FA surlily measure has just been rejected in Bo a rim by a small majority The nviatian of this question /n this country has tern porartly given place to more interrstitn; matters, but it in not to die out until ai aim ii finally gained. As a man and his wife, r'en,iding in Keokuk co., lowa, where returning oue day last week from the funeral of the last of their three' children, who bad died of scarlet fever, a thunder item Canoe up and just as they were entering the gate of their desolated Mimic the lightning struck their carriage. Tho matt wits instantly killed, mid the wife In now a raving maniac. JuvarviLis Peabbdys aro in bloom at Albany, New York, and will sumo day make a noise in the world. The Argun tells of a little boy, his face besmeared with molasses, and his rags fluttering in the breeze, running up frdin the river, flourishing a dirty shingle, and bcrennv ing at this t top of his voice to a eornrade "0, Bil4t get as many boys,and shingles as you tart e for the's a big liogsit of 'lasses busted on thWirmverneut—busted all to smash I" . A sxonnisir traveler at itattimere, 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 ambler with "You're an impudent dog." To which he of the trunks rejoined: "An' faith, ye are A monkey, and its a great pity that, when. , we two were made bastes, ye was.'t made an illipbant, so that ye could have yer blasted trunk under yer nose all the
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