- I: The Democratic Watchman. B ELL EF ON T E, P 4 N SEA VENTURES 1 steed and watehed my ~h ip• ❑n ~,f Bosh one by one, unmmu mu free, What time the quiet herb„, Nlhut With dood.tide from the The first that palled, her name wa• Joy. 0►• spread a ammoh aline amply .Itll lad eastward clrMra aith beittltikg •par+ Before the Dinging gate. A•Mber •oiled, her mune tt •+ llope le cargo In her hold %he bore, Thinking to find lo we , tern Of nmorehandlpo It store. Ma salt that sailed her t) She abegrad a v...(1 flag at u o in.t.t, A ling aa rad an blood eh.. gillOVI And she aped south light 13st The lost that sailed, her tame a it•t Faith slowly ohs took lair patt•tate loath, Tacked and lay 10, ut Iwo •1,.• A straight rout no for the 11, 111 lity gallant ship. the 7 o iy Over the Phimmertnkg •rm 1 stood end erewhed rrmny : I day eat of4a oeme back to in. Enr Joy was refight ter Pirate Pion Rope ran 11110111 , 1 hidden roof And Love took hr, tG un Icrotl Lnt In whelmina seam of grlof Paid, tame at Itt ,, t, and tutu 86e reeompen.ed nu• . 1 1 Ins 104., Pot OM • MITIZO mat , •he I, oußht A e, own rtnlati fu 4 er.., THE OLD STORY Wheel H., ft. elle II •I"lc, 01 her sweet fore far I say what lot,- ,114 h..f.iro me Whit loser. f..reyer +lts , That flowery bloom ..aerll r Pa liet boing That hlrole piny ' , t ink That vast I. trreett., Thal all Ihln R. take Lovers hare pat.! , holg. ((lit, Lovers will ray them evermore (, 'Weal yuting kyle. lg. Bean , own one «,f.rn J form' With lAFting yotilh roiir 1. woo Glow ever. ever fr,o, “.”1 A Alio U (fear old eters , et er V•pu , la Pod. have !minted Bare naught in life in 1,111( "Lit inai, .1 , 11 111 , ~nplet•• revere have , nail t 6. -4 , LOT•ri will pay thrill Vletliiiirt Awful Scemtin A Menagerie. -A Mu sical Band Fall into a Den of Lions —Three Men Killed—A Number In jured. I'he Midttlet.mn i Diu ) Banner 11114, the lollowing The usually Toe! I,itte village of Middletown, SI •-,ottri, on, Wel) thrown into a pailitni lever of excite ment tfy an awful entnetrorhe which (ventured to the hand hitelv attached to .John Robison Ci. circus and ani teal 8110 W, and lcd hr Prof. U Sex ton. rpon etartinl i,ut Ironi Cincinnati for the senSo4l, niann;:..ment deter mined to prodoce 4ottletlting novel in the %, ay of a hand rtn i ri,,t, and con ceived the idea 01 w. uuiiny the band upon the e 0104.31 den oi Nom idtan lion., ttiel tom one of the principal nod intr , i inipomitir feat neer; of I lie .-1,05% Although repeatedln warned by Pro )essor Sexton that he tleenic,l the Lage ',insecure and tlangermi- ui the extreme, the managers still persisted tit COMp{ . ll ing the bitiiti to role op.!. rt thi the Mtn' morning of the 12th the band took their places, and the procession commenced to mote, rumd the shouts of the him& of rustics 0I i hnd as ltembled to witness the grand pageant, and hear the eni,‘ ening strains mil nm sic. Not a thought of danger was en tertainetl by ant one, but the awful catastrophe was itl it to occur As the timer endeavore I to make A turn in the stream the leader , became entangled and threw the entire team into contusion, and he 10,1 t control of th e m, a n d, berotti.ng frightened, they broke into It spolt•lit run Upon the OppOflite 11141 C of the rev( th e t ore w l n . e l of the cage enure in r WORM with a large rock wtth such force n.• to cause the braces and stai-limns which snpportrd the roof to gine away, thereby precip, taming the entire lama into the awful put Wow. For an tuatara the I ast crowd was paralyzed with:fear, but for a moment Only, and then arose such lt I= as was never heard la fore The awful groans of terror and agony which arose front the poor victims who air !wing torn, lacerated by the frightful rues Alters below, were heart rending and sickening to a terribly deOrini morn en t somispne of the band would extricate themsPlves Iron the del , ris and leap over khe of the cage to the ground, with a will spring, and faint away upon striking the earth, so great was their terror but nay ture could not stand and see men liter ally devoured before their %ere eye-, for there were killing hearts and strong arms ready to render every assistance necessary to rescue the unfortunate victims of this sharking en story A hardware store which Lappened to stand opposite was Invaded by the re quest of the noble hearted proprietor, and pitch•flirk s,croa barn and long bars of iron, and, in Met, every available weapon was brought into requisitton. Thi" side doors of the cars were quickly torn from their fastenings and then =I was presented in tew aniong the brilliant uniforms or the r,oor nu fortunaten lay lege, arms, torn 110111 their Poc ke ts arid halidevoured, while the savage brutes glared ferociously . with their sickly, green colored eyes upon the petrified crowd. Protemor Charles White arrived at thin moment, and gave orders in regard to extracat ing the dead and wounded, he well knowing it would be a dlticult and dangerous undertaking to remove them from the tnluriated monsters. Stationing men with forks and barn at every available point, he sprang fearlessly into the den amid the savage monsters, and commenced raining the wounded and passing them upon the outside to their friends, lie had sun ceeded in rennoving l the wounded, and was proceeding to 'gather up the re- mains of thel l ikdees when the mam— moth lion, known to showmen as old Nero, . VPRANO WITa A Fitiowrrct., arms upon his Weeperijaateniei;g his teeth and claws In him, ip hie neck and shoul ders, lacerating; ith in,a horrible man ner. ProfeseoriWi4te made three her culean effort* tioltake the monster oft, but wittoutitvall, and ° gave orders to fire upon trim. The contents of four or Coles navies %%ere smmediately poured into the car- NIQ9 of the ferocious animal and he fell dead ; and the brave little man, not withstanding the fearful manner in which lie was wounded, never left the cage until every vestige of the dead was carefully gathered toiether and placed upon a sheet, preparatory for burial. It was found that three of the ten who mounted the cage a short time before were killed outright and four others terribly lacerated. The names of the killed are August Selmer, Conrad Freeiz, and Charles Greiner. Coffins were procured, and an ifllltiediate bu rial ileterm tied unon,as the bodies were so frightfully torn arid lacerated as to be unrecognizable to their most Inti mate friends. It was a melancholy dav for Middletown, and a sadder day fir the friends rind companions of the deceased. Making A Fortune.—The Modern Way to Wealth Operating in "Bank Stock"— PerseVeranoe and Nitro- Glycerine Rewarded. Samuel McFadden was a watchtnan 111 a bank lle was poor, but honest, and 1,1. life was without reproach The trouble atilt lion was that he felt that he was not appreciated. Ihn salary w' as only ?4 a week, and when he ask el to have it raised, the President, the 12ushter, and Board of Directors glared st him through their spectacles, and ti'owned on him, and (old hint to gh nut and stop his Insolence, when he knew business was (11111 and the hank cmild not meet its expense now, let alone recklessly lavish one dollar a week more upon such a miserable worm as Samuel McFadden. And then Sam uel NreFadden felt depressed and sail, and the haught) scorn of the President and Cashier cut him to the ttiatil. Ile %%wild often go into the side tars and how his venerable twenty four inch head, and weep gallons and gallons of tears over his insignificance, and pray that 1.6 ought be made worthy of the ( I .l.ltter's and President's polite atten tion. ,Idne night a happy thought struck him, a gleam of light burst upon his soul, and gazing down the dim vista of the years wall his eyes all blinded with the oust of joyous tears, he MAW himself rich, honored and respected. ti. ;snatch McFadden tooled around and got a jimmy, a monkey wreath, it cios. cal chisel, a drill,and about a half a ton of gunpowder and nitro glrerine, and all those thini:s. Then iq the dead of night, he went to the fire proof hale, and, atter I%iirking at it for a while, burst the dour aliot brick work into immortal smash with such perfect s u ccess that there was 110 t enough 01 that safe I It to make a car pet tack Mr McFadden then pro• i•reded to hind up with eo ipors, green barks, currency and vent., ;old tonal! all the odd change thilt us as Ipiitz around anywhere, HO that he praur '.l Ind of the hank with over one rntlhnn dollars on hill] Ile then retired to an 1/1111.0.11111111g rest lerlem ooh 01 town, and ...Lent word to the detectives where he A detective called on him next day wttli a soothing note from the Cashier McFadden treated lint with lolly score. Detecti,es called on luta eiery day with humid(' notes from the President. tiftshier and Itoarrd of Directors At laQt the bank officers got up a magnifi cent prate supper, to wineh.Mr. Fadden was In, ord. Ile Caine, and, as the bank officers bowed dawn in the dust before him, lie pondered over the bitter past, and his soul was tilled with 1,,11.1 exultation. Ite(..re he drove away in hie carriage that night it was all fixed that Mr Mc Fadden was to keep half a million of that money, and to he lintnolesteil if he returned the other halt. lie fulfilled his contract like an honest man, but reflised, with haughty disdain, the offer of the ra:ltier to marry his I McFad den's, daughter Mac is now honored and respected lie nut, es in the best society, he prow ses around ur purple aniline linen and other good clothes, anti enjoys himself first rate And often now he takes hie infant son on his knee and tells hun of hisearlt life, and instils holy precepts into the child's mind, and shows him how, by industry and perseverance, and frugality, and nitro glycerine, and monkey wrenches, and enterprise. and cross out saws, and familiarity with the detective system, e'en the Floor may nse to influence and regpectabillty r k ruins. Tue. cit) election' ,4.1 d iu Water bur%, Connecticut, elf Monday last, re sulted, in the words of the Waterbury American, (Wien)), "in a clean strop for the Demorrats in everything ezrept the Second Ward." The ,I aril iron claitn4 that this is not surprising, ex - ce l ittn-: IV regards the Third Ward. ward" it says, "IA known to be strongly Republican, but it .yen(-Dear °crane." The Democratic candidate for Mayor, Isaac . E. Newton, was elec ted by 193 ninjorit v, Waterbury, last ear elected a Radical Mayor 'by 316 majority, but her citizens seem to pre ler a return to Democratic manage ment. CERTAIN Philadelphia mothers are' inclined to complain became° nurses have a habit of plavrog ball with ha— bieN, twirling them from one window to another, when they are caught and thrown back. There appear' , to be no harm,in the amusement as long ae the babies do not drop to the pavement. But some women are en partimilar nurse can't seem to cult them, Amalgamation Nipped in the Bud In the forenoon of yesterday a thin, tall,awk Ward, colored 11111411 0111111 o! - graceful ly into the Probate Court room, and presented himself' before the clerk who presides ON or the marriage license desk. The clerk looked up and paw before him aid War): face, wrin kled from age, overworking or ill health, and surmounted by . /1, course, uncombed. stragglinif, mat ul black hair, marked live and there lig gray. The man was unmistals,ili!n an uteri can citizen of pure Attie: in descent, f i flly forty y e ars old he a ant ed a marriage license, and atter giving his 1111111 C as T110111:18 Sim name oflus intended bride 114 Sarah Baker, be added with a' Itvtnkb oi pride, "Be lady is pure white blood, sure." The clerk ihoppeil his pen, looked tip in astonishment at the black lace before him, and snit get a license, sir.' Thomas Sharp looked bewildet sl. Ile evidently 41111 11./I purer lie that the Fineenth .intendment e,,n1,•1 .1 on In race only the right N ohoo.ong men to rule over them, and not a inexorable clerk referred hint to the Judge, and the J him tobring hirebride into the coml. Thomas • went on his errand, and soon returned witloliree WIMICII t )114' was R dark 1111111141 i), aunt her a light mulatto, and the third, Saia Baker, WilM indeed, its Thourt • had de••!rilte I her, of "pore white blood •' She had long, light, ..1 . 1 hair, bhp. et es, !air completion, regular teatitte4, with no trace of tiegzo blood or parentage about her. 'She Rit..lllllll, neat, symmetrical rooire, Hoetler called the two herone him, amt 4 explatited that the law for hid the intermarrtagt• ot pore white 1•10,•I ‘t ..1 tii can 11100 d, ir hat lag a t aloha lure of African hh..nh we! Illip,e4l penalty of fine and imprisonment up on the Probate who should is sue license for marl tag,. as uell as upon the pei•sai holorizing the marriage. He then asked the expvet ant bride about her parentage She did not become stitni.ed ttith btu-lies, but told her story tt ltutß(.4,lt ~ 1 11',(1.,!114 forward, 1111H111...0.i air, ui +(l'11:1,:o. (..,11- Iraet to the halting, dul•lotn, ••npress -101114 of her intended husband She said she never knew her , he died when she was 9.111.• tour. Her moth er was a light intilait,, the Into of a Mr. linker, of Nash% illy, 'refine's , . She hail been told that .he was the ebild of her voting 111:11.1,T The 'Judge asked her it she had ant testimony to offer in ,iitiport of her statement. She referred to the dark mulatto woman, nip,. hem! toititied that she and Sarah were idai mates together at N 3411% :Ho, Terme.... Mee. Theif mothers lie:tMgCil to Mr. Baker, who lived on t'herrt street, near College Sat.th tar reputed to he the Chllll (1f her wing master. Sarall'o , mother 1- at ten I.right, mulatto. The sin Itlld Sa— rah bad been here alone lour r ears, and were each about twi nit two tears of nee. This way all the te.qinionv , he had to otter, and the to! I them to return'at two o'clock io hear 111.1 Is eNion. At that lima !Amnia, came alone, et nientiv tearing Ilse dece , ion would be at lverue to hi , Bore,. .1,..i,,• at urine told him he was 141018- tied that Sarah Bake! .AlO4 01 pure white blood, and that a Ili rn-r eon) l not be issued. ' I 11111 very sorr)r, It,er, Thoula.+, "I've only been here lour 11101ihiol :rOlll the VOllOll fie'l , I filet thua gal at a ball, an' I've keen litkinl her I...church, an' It'll oat ally 111 love, all ' We 1%111)1e.1 to gel mar ried Very horn' Mir And he 1%1111(01 away, mid hearted and HloW, —( ililati A Specimen Indian Maiden . il"erlay a highly poetical lillumma to ' , Arab V. 111111.111he en, the tatererting r nt Jlr. Winnemucca, chief of the l'iuteo, wimmeitliag 31111.1 Chi! 1111 . !Wight,' 011! sit 1 ' 1 ,11,.! he re inetiihered liv the people of \ and Southern Hallo atilt leeliag4 of Jukt. pride and u.llunal,on \ datt;Flitcr, ':oohs nu 11.1411 -1- to 1 . 1/11/C 111 fill n.11./11 1/1 the 111111 ta, 141/11-1, have born hisl.l/e/I el/ on. Nparttgl) In days g nu ik‘ upon her it Iwitrioti . , Iht !,•,1 \Vii nettitteeit ~tin /11111,0 . 11 Wee/. y, "iturt a ritten (", cry nag t•mit.4 !Ott, to l4dittt, I %mum-4 , 14,1,er Parke). m wlurh , h/ 11,1, VI/ ei111•1111% I,4,rlrw.ed the wrol,gm I,t her race." \chat iii h jial noodle. some of those Ea,t,rn people are wo are not t ery much mistaken, xir had the pleasure of 1•1111:, ear- n.,fo, Minn Sarah nt Camp 11. 1 11 , lii, NV, /1 , 1:1 Sill and a ILw other interentotg relies or the "noble red nigh were h. fatted at the Fort diow that sailor lor the spring ,•alopnign nwon-t IWA 110 can gratit• The emigration hullng stop ped for the ....ism., "there were no other kkoild, tot weitier, -o',:tralt and „her It the were'nbont to fare buJIV, as the supirly of dried ecallis, gram , hol, pers and lice had been exhausted. Their condition excited the et Rituality yi 111 StOn'ii boys at the hurt, so thet Mere taken in tie) eared for un til npting, %%hes the% ienomed their favorer 1404tont• 01 mtenling gold noir lit-cling. Bill It In our r , collections ol 4f Inn Sarah that we propose to resits. Sarah waY tit that tune about sweet sixteen or twenty--it would be difficult to judge of her exact age from her ap pearance. owing to a careless habit she au gamed of never washing her beantifilly chiselled features. But cm we hind been taught to judge the ago of a cow by the wrinkles on her horns, or the age of a tree by the belts of growth on its. trunk, so we made a slather at Milo Sarah's age b) number of scales of greasy dirt which naturally accuninlated on the ridge of her comely countenance during the lapse of years. She was about four or five feet high—how is that for "Lo —and not quite as brjad as she was narrow. Her raven tresses, which lind been permitted to coy with the sport ive breeze; unbound, unwashed, and uneombed,from her earliest childhood, stood out in elegant and awry confui , skim from her classically shaped eabese which contributed to her contour an air of romantic splendor. Her style of dress ' though primitive, closely as sinulated that worn by her more lush !tillable sisters in Paris :old other big towns. It wan the fashion of the day, slightly exaggerated, consisting of an elegant scarf, about a foot wide, cut Irony nn ancient horse blanket, which wits gracefully girded round her deli cate waist, the eireuniference of which, ort mg to the scarcity of clover and l're-h cricket. at that season, had tel diminished, over which hung a' beautiful set of skeleton hoops These rompleteil the toggery of ling r.aeet nut simple daughter of nature. Iler feet were incased in moccasins, awl allowed evident indications of hard vice and long walks over the rocks' hills and sage brush plains, the mud of her native heath, crisp and dry, cling mg tenaciously to her toes. Anil we arc glad to lie able to announce that thi. divinity was treated luring her brief soicatrn among the white sa‘nges with all the repect due her exalted tank and birth right—as the only if:11011er and hill ress of that noble old chief, Miiimmuccii. An Item For Every Man We have probably all of us met with in•hances ni which a word heedlessly Token against the reputation of a fe male has been magnified by malicious mmils mud the cloud has become dad{ enough to overshadow her w Inds exis teme T,, those who are accustomed— ma necessarily Iron bail motives, but from thoughtlessness—to speak lightly of telltales, we recommend the follow 111104 RH worthy of their consideration. Never use a lady's name in an im proper place, or at an improper tinte, or in nil ell company. Never make assertions about her that you think are untrue, or allusions that you feel she herself would blush to hear. When you meet with men who do not scruple to make use of a 11 1 01117111 ' 11 name in a reckless and unprincipled manner,shun them, fir thel Me the very worst mein hors of the cominumty—men - lost to every M l ll l lll of lionctr, every feeling of humanity. Many a good and worthy woman's character has been forever ruined 104-14eart !woken by a lie, man utactureil by n %Wain, 81111 repeated where it should not have been, and in the pre.amee itlhose whose hltlejudge meat could not deter them from circa hating the 10111 and bragging report. A ~litlider 1, , 110011 propagated, and the .. ins tl es t, thing derogatory loft 81081/111'14 character will Is on the wings of the iml and magnify as it cumulates, un• tit its monstrous weight crushes the poor 1111C08C1181 , 1 tletnu. Respect the woman, for sour mother and sisters are women, and as you would have their fair name untarnished, and their hie unembittered I' the slanderer's biting 1. 11;: s le , heed the ill that your own wmds may ling upon the'molter, the en-ter, sir the wife of Nome fellow crea tote. David Young's Almanao This publication was of the 01.1 ‘,1.001, which predicted the weather, and these predictions, says the .V. (Ilaterrer, "were, of course, as On ell W 1,11 g as true " Ibt‘ul Yoong's alumnae, year after %ear, had a great popularity in New dei , ev, where the weather prophet had lived and died It is reported of him that one warm, bright summer day he na.. riding ( 4 11 horseback through a country road, with which he was not familiar, and, being in doubt, he stop ped and asked a man it this was the road to Morristown. "Yes,"-said the farmer at work near fly teriee iii the field, "but you must make haste, or you will get a wet jacket." David san no signs of rain, and be ing. NV ke an to weather, jogged on with out fear. Soon a summer elmid dark cool the sky, and down came a show er of rain, which made the almanac man scud for shelter. Here was sonic. tiling for him to learn. The shower over, he remounted and retraced his steps toorhe prophetic farmer. Find ing hirn, thwi spake David . "My friend, I have come back to ask you for tounsign of rain. lam in the weather line mymelt, R i gid will give von dollar, if ton will explain to me the secret, for 1 ton ell re you must know more about it than I do." ''Give me the dollar,' said the farm. er,And, taking it, he proceeded : "NVell, you see, all about here we take David young's almanac. and when lie says 'look out for rain," we known it's going to be fair; and when lie mays "fair," we know it will rain, sure. Now, this morning, I was look ing in the almanac, and it said for to day, 'Fair weather," so I knew for sartin it noulit rain afore night.'' Ihtvid Young hit his horse with the switch and rode away, a sadder but not a wiser Let Us Help One Another This little sentence should be writ ten on every heart, sttirnped on every memory. It should be the golden rule practiced not only in every household, but throughout the world. By helping one another we not only remove thorns front the pathway, and anxiety from the mind, but we feel a sense of pleas ure in our heart,, knowing we are do ing a duty to a fellow-creature. A help. ing oran encouraging wohl is no lose to us, yet it is a benefit to others. Who has not needed the enroitraysmcnt and nid of a kind blend? Bum soothing. when perplexed with some task that is myaterious and burdenrome. to feel a gentle hand out the shoulder. end bear kind voice whispering: , luDo not reel discouraged—l Fee you r - e t xott luled —let are help you." What Strength ie in spired—what hope ereated-:.W . hat dweet gratitude is felt, and the great difficul ty is dissolved like •dew beneath the sunshine. Yes, let us help one anotlier by -endeavoring to strengthen and en courage the weak, and liftinetlve bur den of care from the weary and op pressed, that life may glide stnoothly on and the fount of bitterness yield sweet waters; nnil he, vv Rose willing hand N ever willing to aid us, will re want our lintillite endeavors, ane?'every gootlileekl Mill be nit."brend ea , ,t tpon the waters, to return after runny dart," it not to us, to those we love. - - PITILESS FATE CT ALICE CkRT I slit in lily dream, a nontlet lai Mtrolllll, And of et the vire.tin nntt a In Idge Mt ilen And over tho n hitt• it tot a nearlet light, And otter the scarlet n golden splendor And het owl the Imago trap a goodly ridge Where bee, I,rµ(l honey and corn was growing. And down (hat way through the gold anti gray A gay young 111/111 in 11111)/41 trap rowing I 4 , til Inns the• shore that a nose Murk ut hi', billion hula, sore WS the , ra rest, , A fairest ki, Iht 111111, era wl 1t11,.1 toes It omen 1 11,11111.1 and } 110)- 11101 Ln 1111111 g 11114 • 111 11, I(4r ...11, 1,1(11 ns obit It I r ~) billy 111(1)111(11111111)144". n• fu r "It ill I .1110'11 I" tht• ,%4 p A -h. , h, 11n,1 111t1i het MM. vi hob toil h• i; iv soling limo in tilt. bout Ft light lit her the 1,1 toa he t tier, Aiiii mhe ericti with h, i 111 in. 4 ,, SI HO ' 111 haste I , IIt Illy l Ili vitaMr gris. to cold imam 01., the Kuhl, And de• •i¢hed .Oh roily the I..slndv to lootr het-- lan, m•• mild he rutwe•l .1.11 it I‘lll hi +a , . I .di u. , t ill , ‘l,Ol Ihr I /11.11111.4. ti'l th. thelh hill-hod et et Ihe Corn ovl r the 'Web w dull •a 11! 110 • 1111111111111 g, Vllth the 411• W then. )1141 thl , ello hid thl. , llgh, She V”ttehell 11114 Ma:. .1 )Itt hit... 1, eV. But th e r,l ht I ty win r 1 tin my M w L.. p hot polling heart inn light sr leather It VV. 0111) u 11 - 1,111,1 tho 1,11.1g4. Intl nirearri he I thy and lot er„tud all logoth. r A S.to Coo . -A 11l 'if tin AN" YOH Tar: STE‘NER, ( i^l of Ito , roN.- The pa-rticularit of a cam, touching, eten thrilliug, In UP sadness, were related to us testerda). In the Bill of I , :fdi there ed nn fill. , rift a young man ihrect from (let ninnt, who had come to the west to seek his fortune !eating hi, new ina,leitt. be , hind, wuh the mule:standing that el e should join huh in his new borne a. soon as he could send for her Ile came Mae with a willing, patient. heart and acute hands, and by dint of the utmost energy and,attention to hu~n ncss sin. seeded $41,.11111 ci.ltigli to send for his '.tit,. anti in due course of tune was informed bt his it-lends in the old count:, that she had niken passage ut th, i tit of Boston. Elated with hope the husband went to New York it all the expectation of meeting her, and there he is waiting yet, pacing the duck and !yoking out on tire Hutto , ' lor the vessel, which started ILK at Itil lIIS heart's lettrest treasure, hut w luc li, ha , peter signaled, for the C 011.• suction has furred itself upon the minds ut all the City of Boston has gone down. Like tile President, she sailed away from port with flying colors, and was "never heard of more." Already the underwriters have commenced to settle the claims entatled by her loss, I tisanters :it sea are .terrible, conking in any shape, and death is awful, but there are iii most instances some crumbs of comfort for the consolation of mourners. There are the final min istrations given to the dying one, there the last look to be l',entowed upon the trio 11111 i once hut bted Mid lot ea, there Is knowledge of the whereabouts of its last resting place, where one go with re, erent hands to strew:wi t a• lies and leek the sod with giants typical ol our memories. The wail elf there thin;!s makes the grief' of the poor has band we finite described, the harder to be Loans. i mg in ills arms he might lotto -,.flte 0.11,50111t1011 It Is the Mi cer tiwoy of her fate that makes lion inicon,olable, and for. es bun still to remain. It is it hail beast which would refuse its eynipittliy to Imo or and one who can city, "I fair beloved one who is dead, but we know not where the body lies buried."—/)ubit yue ( Iowa) Herald. 811 A 1,1,011 VD A If.oLer..-John !rapine, while on a bender, recently, wade a tnietake very !Laural to one in his con lie imagined that he watt indulg ing ru copious Mott:milt Of benzine, thet, 14e was drinking genu ine lineeed oil Shortly after John felt a queer taste coming into his mouth. The first idea that ()crime,' to him was that he was pui.oried. A physician (taa, t ient fur, and he up plied a stomach pump. "Is there arsenic in it, doctor ?" laintly inquired the patient. "Nu," replied the lEsculapius, smells like a newly painted house." "What l" screamed John. "It smells like a newly•painted house," repeated the physician. "Doctor," criedithe now excited pa tient, "you don't mean to tell me that I've swallowed a house ?'' Os Monday the Ilernlerata of New London, Connecticut, elected their en. tire city ticket, with IGO majority— Lamt April the Rat{teal majority was 110. Another evidence of the popu— larity or tirant, the Fifteenth A inend• !bent and Chineee labor. All S - 41 : p of t'aragraphs ;,. How to milk° n fire hot—Keep it coal WEi.comn lines to the Inilies—,lln en lines ' 'W . II ERE cowartlice eusable—O n Cape Fear Cur \ from filo mint of nature-1'cl) ny royal Morro for ati Arab Tribe—Up and Iledouin TILE bow of a lup L. not evidence ot \ 4CCIC —Citpitill invested In bowling alley+ 11;tult•i 1,w , , have commenced thCii evening seromidei Ala , onary---- A bricklayer vo story building. Win* is a key like a liospitaf Bo C/11.13 . 0 it' , full ~1 wards. ric 1•1.1. Puiletontlun—Putting stop to 1.1 g0 . 1 , 111'" E. ill VOl Ito waterng placer of print_ tors in Eti ropn iv Erns. coo, ni Well :is overt• nom, should go on its own hook. Shur Li ) obt acquaintances be (m g/0 , Ni,p if thry liavp . IC11 , )11/1. th..lr milli n• h:n,r n right to put on aireq 'Ills: 1.,u1.1 . , , p Fun •ay, that ticro 1,110 utooy day Coot. ad ire (but itapo, , thh , to prin. lice) for the 0 a.on— keep cool \ twwl y -- 4TI NV:IV tin. 11111 d 1101. \Cnn l I,InJ ••1 I rtrntl -114,01 , 1 R tel " Ont. in ‘,,iiter-color. WI! \ I gam , .10 gum bolli n . 4 plm it -1 , it pitch 111111 tea , .' Slii) 1 1111- 10 1 11 1 , 1.111111 111.`V ' .\mn F. Lti i• Winit not arnlnnL ru Lheir pmt Flow) ,•:111, Crinrlo4 II Snt Ow trn ut Amer:elm I'ap4 r : 4, lfirler I,ll , i‘i a I.lll'l'lll/111 ` , l that 110 !Whinny - "look up ' ro -ttid% nw . , he qt ro , d!n , 4 viii ho found in tli -IV/1111pP TII l)% • 11.•,11e. i;041,'• tin birth, ?,n,1,-..the lit 101.1 'Spi int; k A% 4wailov, , ,' 11 ,, Tvw1r.1 a . as the Lail(lalor 1414,, the )1111 llHide )1 v;onentlh, , th. rfoth , 10).•n !hon. :n 11"t11. Irigintll II Inv:Waal nu get to be 111, 6111 "I r naelwt , •ir trOting power, IF 111 II It LI I r tr, rn( , NVII I W ,, 1,11 , 11 l(4110 LU ,It 111 the 1,•••• If!% :manta rimy get In b.. : h•r. ) t i II tUaI A la , . wh.. affikrtook to •tdo n I) a, nolo}, ~w pructiAltig on h toddle MEE \V111.% 11.1 i, 010 rI 111 tl,`,1111.• I:1 nulvv 11. a Inds " 11 . 11 , n It t. pat tor n her hitels hii~tt lint 1.1111 L: tt. .11 at t I, it Ilw I , n , pi•r wity I • ~It tiro n_tirt( 'A t I ?wit' I I s --lhr• lot lure It t louvo It alone v.itt OW l 111111ry In pot.ito, ..Ot reser:lde ll , ttt 4i.4111.• , 1 por-,p. J it pz. frelriOritlV lIVO . r . It , .'VP, V. !If n “Cottgro.entior.t'' t to a , Iry linpt. , t, II TO a litipt.llo. Ir n wo. 4'ongre4albrotli.t TIII w , rl,l nii huer its prejudi. 4. I p r fer. , tr,•mztli in it , ' , overage , . roll than In It , r y„, N. ‘v.m..n are never in ireir. danger iil Laurg !wide slaves than whim the are at their rcet I 1 , a paradox in India that a 1.14 raoct eommon thing arnor , .: the vo.ilthy clash Tar 4,nly men that think well of in:- ser3 aro the expectant heirs, who don t care how SU irig the fellow iP Loy t, in France, is a corn d 2, , Englund, a tragedy ; In Italy, RN semi , and in Germany, a nick-dram. , If you want an ignoramus LA , you, 11 r 1 'DM to death, and wear n 1.1.( nealc about the '§ize of a brickbat \VIII is a fellow getting drunk aml ..wearmg up stairs lik, 3 ft gri,ka man It cau , e above doing a bad act \Vom,t ••s right. are respectefl fu tI lowa pt nit,tithkry The female cun tut du the• 'Will) work as the men Wir r part doll every right-pn rpo,- ed citizen occupy in the chariot of state Ile' is a spoke in the common weal. ANo 6 1.11' --An actress of rather an4u- Tar proportion; lately received a love let kr commencing, "My dearer/ angel ' if n WOIIIKTI had as many Inch upon her heart KS ehohas upon her head, is cunning rogue would find his way into .101411 111 1.1.1 Nom says he would never patronize a lottery so long as he can hire any 'wily else to rob him at reason able wages. A BEN VA OLEN I gentleman has discov ered that in forty years a snuff taker de votes twenty-four months to blowing his nose. WK are told that if a sailor have a caul, he can't ha drowned. When an actor gate a ran, we Luow ho ie pretty ecrtain to go Juan. A W Eel LILN pupor LLuJ.n that %union would not make good statosnien "Tho question of the ago" would always trou ble thorn. • Tits New York papers any the spring suits for ludirs are ornamented' with •'"- ry thing "from Jacob's ladder to a pen - wipv in silk " A Vitatiox who undertaken to raise himself by scandalising others, mightas well sit down on a wheelbarrow and try to wheel himself. Be urtmoßrrhiirrh members are quar reling about which church has the tall est spire They are all btlilt as far up as they have the right of way Ter, New York Tribune calls the an vil chore% and artillery accompaniment at the Bethoven Fotival there, "the quinteownce of Siam-hang."