The Democratic Watchman, It E1.1,E F 0 1% TE, PA THE STORY OF THE, WIND lIT AMANDA T JON'S .1 - The wind eRITIO over the hill° one day Singing a charming tune. An light MA low no the wlerpv lay Of n immming.hird in June Qhonld not have heeded his Idle song, But his Meath ens on tne fare, And Ids arms around neck wore tinny In a fairy-like emltraee Then "W hither away, Aweet '" maid I "And why in thy wont no gay And why do thy WnVing phoottmlly :in homily all the day 'hike a child Releep." the zephyr Mill, "I have lain the whole long night, Ivith th e moonbeam. reread twelve my tied Foi n dovering pure and while. 'But Putt mm the sun from nit of the ern Hod lifted him princely head, 1 he 'mum, like A, mother, lifted itie From out of my mnowy bra ,'Then up, it the golden light. I flew O'er meadow and grassy I sprinkled the clover heads with dew I niftled the meadow rills. "hrwept the bought; of the beeell To look at the nertllng bird, The broken Hewer by the rolling limit I eheereit with my loving "I iltiltered afar with the dancing liners irer forest and creeping vine. I gteefiill* ki.sed the tainting flowers, "hll their lip. were rod mg wine • eh, mwiftly 1 fly o'er fhe r(olling gray., And the wheat on tootling farnot, Till the old Taira.. Night I,llle, down at taut And eraellett me in her arm., ' Then Whither away ." raid the wind to Inc "Ana where hart thoit 'went. day , And shy is thy IMO .11 s,td to pee, When everything else is gay' Alas , .weet wtnti . ." Plglll.ol 1 , 1 say, While the tears ht Illy eyelids gres I have not borne it, it ',ill to tiny, LW/1.'1.411'1114de drlitight 111111, ' 1 have not aearehed for the broken flowers That wither along the Way Nor gladdened the night of the prleelesa hours, Nor bent my knee to pray ',4l° • 11, sweet are thy songs o'er lake anti At 'nom and eventide But the lemon of love thou hart taught to tile Is sweeter than aught beside " Injurious Habits of the Young Girl of Fashion. The indolent, inactive, volutuntis mode of living indulged in by the thoughtless votary of fashion, in addi tion to the absurd and destructive man ner of drrauting, contributes largely to the enervation of tire individual and impairment of her general health. Late hours; and lounging much of the day in a N arm feather bed, in illy ven OMNI apartments, with heated air, irregular meals—hot, stimulating food and iirinka, excessive dissipation dur ing the night, over dancing, exposure to the cold and damp night air when thinly clad—entertaining company at unseasonable hours, mental condition xarying from excessive excitement to extreme depression, which such a life invariably produces, all tend to render such manner of existence anything but desirable, vet it is miscalled a life of pleasure, and longed for by those who cannot attntn it. The everlitating coin plamings, the racking headaches, neu ralgic pains in every part of the body, the poisoning jealousies, and the ten thousand other nameless perplexities incident to such a life, render it one of extreme misery —not to be envied even by the rare-worn daughter of toil, who earns her daily bread by paid la bor. rSI"Z letter such a life of folly, irivolity and 11081 Ninon during her early years, plumb' she survive their immediate re sults. arid remain unmarried, in her declining, age she will reap a 11111 liar ei-t from the seeds sown in her tnutli till •lwl PI and nights. Peevish, irrita ble, complaining, health sacrificed, and to happiness a stranger, none to love, Because her state of mind and physical condition, will not be such as to excite that tender nintion in any one, none to inpathise with her in her wretched condition, because all will recogiii7e it as the inevitable fruits of early profli gacy, pride and selfislinc.., std finally at variance with herself and the world, she will sink into the grave, "unwept, nnhoriored and unsung," and the world will feel that it has lost lint lit tile by her demise. Should some men be so unfortunate as to become riazrled by her machinations, as to unite his Ilex tiTlV with hers, if possessed of the in telligence and sen.ihtlitirm of a rnah he would soon perceive that he -had got for a wife an empty sham, a toy, a gew Caw, and worse, a thing neither ornamental nor uusful, an :mum beanee, a v. liming, 1:011111 1 / 1 1111117,' Self - made invalid, a miserable malcoefterit, a perpetual annoyance; without intel ligence or moral capacity to compen sate for destroyed health, and mental irritability ; with all the sweetness of temper. gentleness, kindness, srniabiJi ty and loveliness, characteristic of the cultivated and refined of her sex, sac rificed upon the altars of pride, selfish ness acrd fashion. Can such la being expect or even hope to retain the af fection, or even the respect, of a man of sense and culture, however deep an impression she might hate made upon his heart, by her blandishments and show, before time hail divulged the grand deception of which lie had been made the victim ? He soon becomes dissatisfied with his home, because lie finds nothing there to make it aurae tire. She in whom he expected to find centred all the endearments that make life happy within the sacred pre. civets of home, has become an object of disgust, instead of adoration, awl all the marriage obligations, and legal restraints that the ingenuity of 1111'11 has ever devised, are riot strong enough to hold him in companionship with her, by whom he has been basely de. ceived, and whose perversitersm and cold selfisbness, have rendered her an ob. ject of abhorrence and contempt.— From the Medieal Indep-nelent. M —Footr,, , peaking ot n miser ly nog uaintanee, said he believed he would be willing to take the beam out o his own eye if he knew be could sell MEI Remarkable Scene at a Wedding A French paper relates a thrilling scene which lately occurred in a Par isian mairie. A couple presented them selves to be married, the bride about• eighteen years of age, and 'possessed of considerable personal attractions; the bridegroom an extremely small man, aged forty-five. When the ceremony was concluded lire door of the hall was burst open, and a woman of gigantic stature, accompanied Ly a thin damsel of fifteen, horst into the room and el bowed her way through the semicircle of guests. "Wretch, scoumhehthief she cried, addressing the husband.who turned as white as a street; "this is how you leave me in the lurch who have sighed during fifteen years for the (lay when I might call inNiself your wife I" Saying this she seized the un happy man by the collar and jerked him up under her left arm as though lie were a crushed lint, taking no no tice of his struggles. She addressed the Mayor in a voice of thunder, "Do I arrive too late?" "The marriage has taken place," replied the Mayor, "and I request you to release. M. Au-' groom, and to retire." "Not," said thogiantess, "without giving his de serts to the vil!ian who leaves me with this girl here." "No, no, that girl is not mine," howled the little man. lie had better have remained silent. • The giantess fractmally raised him in the air, and whirled him rotund her head. "Repeat what you hare said!" she shrieked, "this child who is Idle you as one pea is to another —is she yours or not?" M Augustin did not open his month. ,Ills executioner then seized his nose with her left hand and wrung ft violently. About this time two or the guests, moved by the entreaties of the bride, attempted to interfere, but the enraged woman, treeing the bride groom as a weapon, and brandishing lion at arms length, charged hek,oppo nents with such fury dint she put (hem speedily to flight, "Call the police," crietaithe Mayor. "You need not give yourself the trouble," hoarsely Often lated the giantess: "I will let go the rascal of my Own accord. Here, my beauty," addressing the bride, "is your little bit of a man. I have not broken him. We have no: further business here. Follow lure, Bflpilf0111e, " arid so saying she, flung down her vretrin at the feet of two agents of police, who at that moment appeared fit the door. "I go," she added, "but let him ever appear before rue on his wde'sarm,and I will take him between my thumb and forefinger and make but one mouth ful of hon." This little incident cast quite a gloom over the assembled guests, and no one dared even to pick the fainting bridegroom from the flour until the last echo of the heavy loot- , steps of the injured fair one had died away in the distance, when they raised him to his feet, and in i-olenin silence took their departure The Ku-Klux in Alabama The organization bearing this name, bore of Radicalism and nurtured by falsehood, has been the means of much party servjce,`and by circulating free ly stories of rte outrages the "Northern , heart ham been fired and their prept• d cep kept alive against the South. That (mirages have been mrinufactur ed is pa eta. That violations of law of an ordinary character, such as happen everywhere, have been seize" upon and, by the Radice: press, been "worked up - into terrible persecution of "loyal ',len,'" so called, is equally known. But we have seentrio !indica! testime, 'iv more thoroughly refuting those charges than the following, which we lay before our readers to evidence the treachery with which. they have been treated by the Radical ['rem; and its Malltrulatore, in their frantic and wicked efforts to hold on to power. It is all extract from a letter written on the fith of July, by the Radical flov ernor of Alabama, In refutation of the false charges against his State, all ex tract from which we glue as follows "I BM well apposed flint it has been recently proclaimed, in a very high , i place, that, except in certain localities in Alabama where the people are toy al, no man can speak his sentimNs t if he be a Republican and friendly to President IlranVa administration, with• out danger of aiwasionation. Thelma thor of thin base and foult deelakfation has defied a successful contradiction of what he now aysertn. "Now, I submit the following state ment of tarts, to' whiell I invite the dispassnaiste consideration of every honest man. lam a republican, and the sincere and disinterested friend of General Grant's administration. Dur ing the last presidential canvass I mole seseral speeches in favor of General Grant's election. Not one of the speeches was made in a locality in wlimh the people are or were 'loyal,' in the sense assisted upon by 'the de'. lamer jiiitt indicated; hut where, ac cording to his standard, they were and are fiery 'disloyal,' I was not nscas iivate+l, ❑or was I insulted. or even treated with the slightest disrespect. Nowhere did I wittiest' anything Crlr yond the ordinary manifestations of the people for or against the respective candidates for their suffrages. Later incidents may he mentioned. At the last congressional election in this Slate, ( August, 1}4119,) the Hon. R. S. Heflin wan the Republican candi- date for the district in which I ant a voter. A few days before the electiok I vi ent with Judge ffelliti to the town of Dadeville, in 'Pallapoosa county, whirh is one of the most decidedly I)em. arra( ir cou nties in the State. Both of us made speeches—vowed ciuMelvea Repulilleans, and especially frier l , lv to President (I rant's administration.' We were tint assassinated. Neither of us was inspilteil. So far from it, we were treated, personally, with entire respect. The court house wits thrown open lor oar ae commoilint Inn : and the brinks hand. compo , isl f flung trill or the 149 , (.. (NNW • , 0/. r:/ if thr,lno. I l•r Ire (t7britiookett. and 1111,1 .1 11.111 been soldiers in the Rebel army, went into the court house and enlivened the occasion with appropriate strains of music. Predictions Verified In 1864,1'6 political banners of die Democracy were in'eribed with such admonitions as ," hilecy Lincola yori will secure Ill) EQUALITY," and "Elect McClellan atilt you will de• feat N EQU Al, ITV ." Again, in 1863, the fol'owing inscription was prominently displayed on every Dem— ocratic banner: vole for I;entil iv It Note for NI. (MO Sl' FFRAII All these warnings were met by the most positive denials, on the part of the Radicals, who pointed to their Chicago platform, which declared that the right 10 regulate the question of suffrage belonged to the people of the loyal States; nail every Radical who was eleeted either to Congress or the Stale Legislature was so elected, de claring that no attempt'would be tirade by Congress to enfbree negro suffrage, and that any such attempt would be riot only violattie of the Constitution, but revolutionary. These and similar declarations were repeated time and again by every Rad ical paper in the Commonwealth, and no man uttered them with greater em phasis than Senator Scott, of Hunting don, and no other man rerrateil them more frequently than Daniel •1. 111m'• , rell. And how did they keep then• faith? Mr. Morrell m1 1 ,1;0,1(.1 exel v measure of his parts calculated to se cure negro suffrage and negro (virility —Hie very things that the Democracy charged thetufwith intending to do,and which they rid emphatically denied- - from its first inception. Are such men fit to represent R free people in the 113 tional councils? The right of suffrage is the most precious right freemen can possess, and that people who do nut possess the right to regulate the suf frage of its citizens cannot Inc free. The people of these Stales formerly fkissess- NI this right. But through the treach ery of Darnel .1. Morrell, and his Rad ical colleagues in Congress, this tight was taken from then) arid giver) to the national legislature. No mare flagrant act of usurpation was ever perpetrated in any country; and aid •t he blood of the revolutionary heroes course the veins of their descendents of the present day these guilty betrayers of a cont4d ing people woula share the fate that usurpers of i constituted authorities lied the people_heeded these warn ings of the democracy, these high crimes againkt liberty would not have been committed. The right to regn latekthe question of millrace would have remained with the states and the people thereof, where our fathers plac ed it. But these warnings were not heeded, and we behold the conse pieriCe. Will they lick the hand that siniten them? Will they honor dim betray ers? Will they bow their necks to the yoke of despotism by givizig the usurp ere a new lease of power's Acam the Democracy warn the pen plc to hewnre Power, always steal ng from the many or the few, has other conquests in prospect. There usurpation and encroachment upon popular rights is only psi, begun Elect another such It Congress as the present, and the vollirlin of American republic is ready to lie writ ten,—A lioona Sun. Gems of Thought In diving to the bottom of pleas urem we bring up more gravel than peark Re Gentle —Harsh worilm are like hail-moues in eionnier, which, it melt ed, would fertilize the tender iiluntri thee hatter down. Mental pleasures never cloy. En like those ofthe body, they are incream ed by repetition, approved of Lv reflec tion, and strengthened by eniovment. Temperances—lt is I lllloo, , Slide to lay down any determinate rule fur temper ance, because what in luxury in one may he temperance in another A Pithy and Pregnant Epitaph.—A friend mends 118 Iroin a tureign eemetery an epitaph in Greek, which may he thus Anglicised Everything re mains; annihilation iv WI IMSI4II,Ie • even decay is but a course of trans' lion to a new form of being.•• A pithy and pregnant sentence. A Good Action.- a roan has a right„to he proud of tknything it is of a good action done as it ought to be with out any base interest lurking at the bottom of it. A Friends.—Let no one count the num ber of his Iriendm till they have been bolted in the sieve of hie own adversi ty, for there is much bran in prosper one friendship. Reverie IN not thought, though ma ny people mistake it for thought. Thought in systematic; reverie is die. jointed and lragineniary. Thought is laborious, Ten erie is the reverse. Frankness is not rashness, nor is it vehemence. It is not petnlent or the (atonal. It is as modest as it is molts guise& It is riot obstreperous. Yet it dares to lit( the veil and show un pleasant truth. Trite.—One watch set right will do to try many by; but, on the other hand, one that goes wrong may be the means of misleading a whole neighbor• hood. And the same may be said of the example we individually set to those around its. —Here is the extravaganza of a Memphis lover • "If the ocean with ink were tilled, and every leaf of parchment made, and every atick on earth a coin, and every man a scribe by trade, to write the love I have for von would dram the ocean dr% not would the scroll con lain flit. v6l ,dc. stretched Iroffi sky to . What the Negroes Want In the Radical Convention of South Carolina which recently nominated a negro foi Lieutenant Governor, a colored man named Cain thus deliver ed himself: "There is a question that lies neat my heart and neaf The heart of every man of my race. It is the question of equal representation in the halls of Congress and in State affairs. It has been charged upon me and a distin finished friend that we have sought to raise a negro party. Let rue just touch that question with my magic wand and answer it, and I have done. All I ask is that the colored voters shall have equal representation. I know that two years ago I thought it was not judicious to thrust ourselves tor• ward in office. I took the ground that we had better send white men to Com gress, and that Colored Republicans could wait until niter the election of Seymour anti "We have colored men side by side with wl.ite men, but since the passoye if the .11 fteenth amendment tee believe ter shmild take a step'higher. / de. mood that me should have• a division the spoils. Let, us have three col— ored by three white representati ves in lon gress. Let us have an equal divi sion ofthe flies ivid the spoils and we shall be satisfied." What I Don't Know About Firming In selling by live weight, it Itt a good plan to teed each one about three patty of %%mei, and what other miull can he got dm% a 'On jaht before dm lag on the seale4 If the hover ham ever invented touch 1111111eN on ' change, he will know trim( "watered stock" 111(4111H. In holding Ow plow, I ulways prefer to hold it 111 the house, -i.ented in to rocking chair, with in)ly cluster eil mound me. In planting hay, I always plant the longest I can tint, as short hay hen& it person's hack too much when cutting In the ,matter at wheat, I always raise it tv the barrel, at a mill not fir awal, an II saves buying seed, plowing sowing, era(' i rig and threshing. I gen erally raise it on a rime. In traveling through the country, I have often noticed that farmers do not sufficiently regard the health of their alionak, M . ) barn is arranged on a plan or my own. It is open on all sides, so that no creatures may have to stand out in a storm becaure I am asleep or away. This also saves lum her. All around the barn are benches on which any animal can sit down when tired of standing, or when wait ing for something or other to turn up. The 'Meritt says my cattle always sell when my neighbor's don't, and he thodoi it is all owing, to my economn% , and I don't doubt it. In subsoding a piece of ground, I al ways 'plant' a mortgage on it in the winterlirevions. It raises the biggest kind of a crop, especially when you let the interest go behind. I hardly ever knew such a sowiikg that didn't turn out full KM well as the holder expected. In raising hogs I think that many farmers are altogether too slack for their own interest. Now, suppose that I want to raise a 1104 I go at it in a careful, scientific catty. A good many farmers raise their hogs with the first club that comes handy, but this has a tendency tto make the animal discouraged and discontented. I hale my own ideas about training horses, It e ver 1 get hyld of a hone inclined to run away, I always borrow a buggy of some of my neighbors, put him to It, turn him into a lot, and let loin run Ile generally gels sick of the fun by the tune the buggy is gone, but it he don't, bitch him many it the wheels that may be left, and keep lion traveling. The owner of the buggy al ways expresses astonishment at my syrn u Pill, bn lie evidence of Its mticce. , s Ishere before him, and be cannot his pute the pieces. If I ever get hold of a kicking cow, I always let Mrs. Quad sit down lint to milk, nod I take toy station near by to see what toot the animal. kicks with, and how hard she hits, My wile ham a remarkably clear memory, and alter coming to she can generally give me any particulars which I failed to note owing to distance. I then get the row into the stable, draw her up with a windlass until she is just evenly hal uncial. Then I get a bag and till it with bricks, hang It within easy kick ing distance, and I stand fur develop ,merits. Every timeslre goes up, I hale another thing to apply to her front, and after she ham gone throligh wit l this oscillation two or three tunes, she never kicks any more, at fend not un til she looks around for bricks —M. Quail, Deb nit Free trans. .11,11.Eitsio's Tr.. 4 N(' (r pot off till to morrow What you cat, do to day. 2 Never trouble another for what you can do vont-melt. 3. Never Nocua your motley betore vou lotve u. • 4. Never buy whatyou do not want i The phoceeuh awe `:71,,01, Of who'll the because µ. ia ellen p. donne: attorney took '420. the clerk 5. Pride costs us more than hunger, nail the marshnl t 5. The re thirst and cold. maunder, ,;4/11,16, wits solemnly ordered 6. We seldom repent of having eat- to he paid unto the 17. S. Treasury to en too little. aid uo paving ill the public:debt. Who 7. Nothing is troublesome that we will now breathe unit against the efli do willingly. ciencv of the internal revenue depart S. How much pain the evils have meat, or the honesty and economy of cost us that never happened. the present administration. -- Carlisle 9. Take things always by the smooth Volunteer. handle. 10. When angry, count ten before •aliazei 01111110.1 J A 1011) you hIIICII.IC ; livery angry, Count a h u m -qiim (tato pill :lid illp 01 'no Il 111.1 Bred. Ina du plaid 'dloui all 01 ft) 11.111101 114111 014 'lllO.l 0111 111 5J01.111111, IV the people of Paris are "clamorous 51i of notiq 11 pai pun ina for leaders," why don't the 'Tribune 0111 Cq lI paylow win pint 'put 511 Ito send thimp some double headedones 111 1 ',Cup .i.upo Sill 1 . 5101 11 . 1 ' , 1 4 ”:4 uu u! They have the effect of quieting 010 15 51 , 00 11 kip a paJoilua plug tioiliAt the inasstii, %fp! ti pa>faullV 'Bop 2iiiA.lo6(lo LIV A MAN who went ti ling In it private pond in a Anborhan town, complaint. 0,„, I„. " h i s . !l ot too• lotp, and that WAS , ,•,, O WrIS the unforfunate A Sample of the lleisailucles of 14,f? in Mexico. The cites& of General Negrete, now lying in Vera Crux under sentence of death, for having conspired against the present government of Mexico, bas been most eventful. His military his itory is quite familiar to all American renders. At one time he was Division General anti Minister of War under President Juarez, who now tins it in his power to sign his former comrade's death-warrant or commute the capital penalty to another form of punishment. Juarez and his Prime Minister hate Negrete with bitter intensity, and if the sentence be commuted it will be under a strong outward pressure. Nearly every man of note in the comm try has petitioned for commutation. Negrete was 10U1111 secreted in a house in Vera Cruz, where, for five months lie had maintained a concealed exist ence of the most wretched character. To gain a livelihood he often assisted in making cakes and presenes, which were sold in the streets of the city by a faithful Indian woman, and at times he worked as aid in a tin shop, lie having obtained a knowledge of the trade in his boyhood, betiire lie coin• menced his eventful military career. Notwithstanding his most coin menda ble industry he earned so little that more 4littn one day had to be passed by him anti his few companions with. out having anything to eat. II is tam then and now in Puebla, has also suffered great privations, and l itPly his will' had to beg for clothmc with %,bich to decently clothe herself mid eloidren. Yet this man has been the center fig ure in three consequential re‘olutll/8 and thousands of men have obeyed his orders. lie also in part planned, and in truth fought, the battle of Puebla, of May 5, ISM, when the French were so badly repulsed. Ills poverty, after holding so many exalted positions, and tilling numerous important places, is cited as proof of his exceeding great honesty. It is averted that should lie be executed, another rei 0411.1011 will be added to the ninny revoluthMs for which Mexico has become so notorious the world over. A Centenarian t Itt NVedneadav mormio , , ogti.t Mrs. Mary M. McDade die4l al Green castle, aged one 'hundred and l a• , • yrurv, six ',torahs, and fourteen days. In Thursday the lutieral ceremony took place and tin appropriate address was delivered by Rev. Thomas 'l'. lit Brett, Pastor of the Lutheran (lime!' of that place. Ile Waled the following laCts in regard to her life and charactea: 'She WILK 11:4,' Collllnoli and IrlelnVed as a ltristian, and in all her relations am a vronitin. a w Ile, a mother, a neighbor and a friend, none named her buil. it. praise. :•lie Warn boric January 171 . 0, 111141 %%il , 102 yearpt, months and font tenni day, old, when slit , paiilled away limn earth. Iler father ion! grandlather were in moderate eircunistanei,, but industri MIN, frugal, and patriotic, and engaged in the War fir nto.rnain Indcitendenta., Irian its ta•tnnlng, to Ow run-e 11..1 lather was pn bsr lurntly 1(1114 , 1 In an 11•11gagyinent n Jlll 114411,1114 in the west ern part of Ili,. :' , 1711,' Mi . Dade hunlly retnot toil to Ctri•ctiv:olle when Ilse deceased was in her aixhentli% ear, lint resided for a short tone on "The Marsh" east of the village. It was re lated that when tieneral Wiudiington passed through the town, los au( mum was attracted by her pleasing deport ment, and that he entered into cmiVer- Pal ion with her. She NSII4 very tainiliar with the stirring tunes in which she had lived, and had frequently enter tained her young trietels with intere-t - ing recitals of what alit , had 1.1 . 1 - 1, awl heard. She way early married to Mr Mcliade, an intelligent and industri -0118 man, lie dad in l'lol l'he fruit of this ninon o,n-+ lite children, all of whom had preceded her 1,, 1111 . grate, except her mon, Sir John Mcliade, now iii him setentietli venr. Mrs Me• hiatle's 'health was aiwit‘e goad uX relt fora Anal , 1.11114 , , aln,lll 1141r1 . ‘ Nt..trs a.zo, whenktit. tmln•red cnnsnler ably 11 , TTI 111 . 1% , 1,11. , 1•11.11 Q,.. During, the pa.t twenty tears her idly-acid eire,gih was gradually reduced, and e ‘ceptiii x an occasional atteielaneir 1/11011 111. Inolllllo selllllrod awa, Irmo 11 , ,nie. 1)111 - 111.,! t 1.,L+1 lit, teary .14. 41141 1101 I, !INV 111•1 )14111.e at all. 11.. r tie 11111.,1 eulttrly in Mat last, awl het was min+ impaired iihoot the Haul' Ii me. retained her mental faculties mitil the last of June. , (In die morning of NVedliesdav, ugusi ceased to bientlw, awl was gathered to re- . ... " ('lntintr, s Inns ! , I (Wry Spirit I'Al ”1-1 , I JII lIYIU -Here I at] in.•nkt,t %%loch caNtii a little light on theixtntonlinary Itwit well a pliNitir of the iinlional &ht. At Cliarleviritt, ti I!„ PAX piwkageH of 101111,M0 wore reeenily, retired and ,add by order or the I. dnitnei Court. A I . 4ll . l'tXR eesayist xays : Perhap , + the treat, triumph of all moral writing.. 111(.111.1i ter ~• rn:ons, Is that they ; , t,elie, .eme Fwrrt and inno'•,•i,t -leer " All Sorts of Paragra A. 1, ui Ilr flguro—a woman per witii UNIVERSAL topics—The tin rhino lovors rpotrrol do I tha k1.15(4 , ? Nor n witty-scißm—thitt ides ❑ church, Til K root, that President ( -( ‘r , a A 1+1,(1171:1 , 111 , 41 , 1 lIII4IIIeSS till .L 41.1.10,1 Ni AN hiet pr itch croquet n. n wicket game ScA 071 the bottle-11..1.1 ways 40 splendid as settees. . II ENS nit, not the only lit that leather their nests. .Do you !nuke 'game" of it you umk•e him "quail's' A PRIV \ ant a pinch—Uric Lia , self-hov nail you. A o\l 11 , 1116 iy 116(` nluirei n h 14) play lipoll A rtrt Itylthattle— When try to blitel,rit end' other 11 \ i. Ilk , u 1 1,1 tIlt00, WIII2II into 110 t. WII \ u 1/1/n tWeIV(.I 01011 yotilur,;. duitin g th....n-w , i groin' fr TII K.' 1101 . 1 UI get tt good' v, L ,).1 git I, to tlit) par, I 111 stit•k4 to It imp >llll might tt, I. TII 1 1 , 1 , 1% 101 ,, IV , 1111•1,11 I 111 114 to try 1,••II direful Inc I 7 It 1111- . .lrs, to) ,upposi• , l11.1..1(1.41 ni IL •I:y by it. b 1\ PI • tirituatrhal Jadtei whiit nlll tla•ri. Lr kit Ilis•-r \Vrtlt man 1111111 , -1111 110 ‘Vhat a wfmian WilE• t:1r1 fulls in I.•te 111-I,inan 11nr In•art 1,1 10111- PAL Tilt. Scotch pr,,rumeiat,,,,, not far out of the way On %plum' \ 1,1 \•,'\ 11 , 14.111' ‘14,11t/lIIIL Unit 111 . 11riy 1111 th rlitner %VII) r n I croon of nr ev 10. (7rpek y.) low .qlt. II 1 , 1111110 111/1111 I vgv,,, !hitt nuty bi. enllnd "an Ilili it nut' A rin,..l eighl dor , ,kr, to kr— country. Lot at tho .titurnor •pnmJ , Pll 111.2 . 0. o.r. \‘ tii I, 11 hag.. clir , pet I,; r , . ) ,•1110ri ' it t,,.•1, RI tit \ tll pill It (1,.,.0 I Cs %1.% -11M.H.. , ill.. With tror4,, 1111.1 bit!' halls Cll,l Till. N. v.. thirds “ri thing, I% 1% 110 11 , 1! 111 Irry :ono' the tn. , nntninl in 11. ' 1,1- I,n, W)I% 1, I rvirw \ 1 • 1 a 111 in who wou'd itui oils. IA ,tit. him] it tilt tliiiih. IL 11 , 11.11111 I.l"%tetil II A ..rF %It) think , 01% nin% to' :1).11t lho do 11.4 • '41..1, it I I li. hurl- THIN •1.- , 1- 1.11111'11d) IV. r.!IIIIIrkliblo I W 111111( v , r 111 ..),thers—linv.• very 11111 114. l• ~ t'otcpot \l. all orraotino PV, nor ol a a Huang-nott•two it twat V • lui‘v,r of nun cattle :,r.. g.ing w144.r.• lino tako n 1110. id, hc -nap at \ou, you can •iini raced old gi that nil flint i• twei.g , ary 111 t 111 .fit Natisagen in I v 1,1 , ,01,4 are, as tho poets the j.vetis things Ifi list are I hey always 11111r11111r111.4 th„r of our moSt9kiliflll 1111 11. , •11• hit, so tau( It confldrure I but •ay, 611 cun drill uI de I , truth nnolo of mewl., not, n h ar.• ,undry war corr. elm! .1 with habitually strc trio], ' vim ilivro be Ruch in tl tti uc.,t c“rilei,' Its tuft tth a tile! ;ulh IS kfloWII thing iit ft tune— r ttll f .f ff ‘ffif hrtvi Wulff tiwn yfftl, • I 1 1. 1 \ \ of 101111110 h, niz,, -.it 11 , ,%%11 II 11111110: , Line -, If It (Itan't tukt. Int .1 \VA griindoo to comit wiritl . % with 1114 .ind «nulti tr 4ecu re bolird ru howl I 1{ . 1(11f 111 journal chart.; \%itil hit% ink the night-mars• ~r that chi ttracter noents to ail ME "A Li mi•Elt parting''—T Nihon st , . amboitt uulplt uquin,t tho pier befor 1,1)0w1 • ". A pa. \ IA I, paper conch °boom) %%1111 the following 3 ileation • 'Several deaths ar ably deterred " A potato , . of the comet better half 01 it—will be gla that the cotton crop of Lille a thnated at four million bales A Fltf.Nl lIMAN, wishing t Intett. IL girl its s "little Ismi a "•rtilll I mutton." lie d r IlPr.Stllll.l the technicalities of tl language "Wit Al , Avould you bq , des Walter to hi , . weethear , "If preqs the seal of love upon t wax lips "I would be et: YouNo Indy physician. aro in, rapidly throughout, th and 'con 0.9 non tly theoung .h.c:,lodly m mom cickly tr th M
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