The Democratic Watchman. 11 L EF 0 I's; E, l' A THE NAMELESS DEAD Why do you wail,o winds 7 Wity do you sigh, 0 4ea ! It to remorse for the ships some down, with this pitiless shore on the lee , Moan moan, 110011 !n the deSolato night awl alone? th, what Is the tole would faun ant 111 i In yot wild wierd, odes to me A gleam of white on the shore! 'Oa not the white of foam, Nor wanderitw Pea-bird's glimmering wing, to at night TM ..ea bird% roam 'Tip one or the drowned—drowned Of the hapless homew.r.l bound, La•t night in the dark, There pedalled a hark On the bar, and 'twit, bound for home A woman's void white corpse—a stranau young and fair tie°, the cruel storm has enter turd ulth weeds the wealtlit n( her weltering hair, AtiliPthe little, the little hand Lies add limp on the sand, 'Thu y had hound her riot To a wreck of a mast, But the wild winds would not spare! Look, how they hound and leap—vast them seinen tits over the shore, Striving to seize on their stranded prey, and carry it on once more . Its in it rarnorve or area.] Or a longing to burr its dead, That milker. the surge On the wean verge So incessantly howl and tear? Where do they Itet for her etep' whirr do they look for her fare' Where are they waiting to Pee her once more in the old familiar pate 7 Dead dead dead' In mein will their tear. lie %lied, e. of 011,1 id', ,a+ 11111 t.t.l oil that ttoeem a marble grace ' n you sigh,why on wail, it Wind' Why do vou murmur, In ttimirnhil tone, like thing,. with 11 blninan mind' Wail, wail, wail. krtienlnte brean and gale I Fur the lovelineen rare, No pallid and fair, on l slemr in your levy blind' Let. UP Lear her away to a Kra re In the church yard's calm green hren•t. Where dm Pound of wind and waves In strife may never her peace Inolent. Though we cannot carve her naml She will dumber all the Name , And wild rose bloom, Shall cover her tomb, And she shall have pertect rent' Shot k the Heart Formerly, when people asked me if I believed to ghostr, I am answered no, emphatically Now when I interro gated on the sutuert,l answer that I do not know what I In believe. You will infer from this, that my unbelief in ap paritions bas been shaken. Your in , ference will not be a wrong one. Let me tell you my story, and you can see what cause I have to doubt the coy rectnees of my first belief on the sub ject. John Baynes and myself were friends together at college. We used to be called the inseparablem, with some Justice, I admit, for we were al wars together and our studies were the "acne. We had taken a ereat liking to each (Aber from the earliest um. merit of our acquaintance. We were nearly of the Carus age and our taste and habits were very similar It is not to he wondered at, then, Orat we were staunch friends. We had no secrete from each other. What I knew, John knew ; and I shared his confidence ill the Came way. ..futlietitties when alone in our room, ire used to get into ,conersation on such strange and mysterious subjects a• mesmerism, clair‘ovanre, and the like; find I knew from Johnlet man tier that these subtle, weird, unex plainable triplet-es had a str.inge fas cination and a charm for him. Ile was not a believer tti them, and vet there was something about tilein that 'taunted lion strangel) All of 114 have experienced this feeling, I presume, when thinking about something whose mystery was past comprehension. It would keep intruding itself upon our thoughts, and net battle us completely if we tried to solve its secrets. It was so with John. One eN ening we were sitting together alone. We lout been talking on these thing-, and 'rout them had got to talk mg or 0,(.1.. I nleelarent tiny unbelief inn strong anti yositin, e terms "There are no ghosts," I said. "No person ever saw one eleept it) imagm• anions" "Do you think so, - said John, lonk rig into the tire thoughtfully "Yes. I honestly think that ghosts are a pparallolo4 0( the I magi rte.t. ion, `ztrong-minded people never see trim,' I answered. 'I ant not sure 01 that,' he replied ''fresh to tell, Ned, I do believe there are ghosts, P wits or whatever you please to call them,' 'What are yottr reason for this be. lief? I asked. 'I have no reasons for my lielicf.' be answered. 'lint that the stririts . or the dead earl visit the earth I believe, as much as I believe in illy existence. I 1118 V he ronc, but I thing, riot' I'll tell you tvhat,' said, laughing at hie eerioue face, 'if 1 (he - before you do, I'll appear to you it ouch a thing in poenihle ; and if you die first. why, you 'o the Paine tome. What do you eay 'I will Agree to your proposition,' be ftnawered sennuAly. 't Will came to you %%hen I die, wherever you may be, linitla I chance to die firat: Oar college life ended at lent, after we had begun to thin k , it was going to last for ever. And then John and I took different paths, and went out into the world. He went to Canada, ha% ing au uncle there; and I came to London to enter myself at the Temple, and study for the bar. The years went by. I heard front him very often. Ile wrote that lie was At first he had been jun ior partner with his uncle who was a merchant, and then for certain reasons, he separated from his relatives and set up for himself. All of a sudden there was a panic, a crash came. and he was ruined. But still he wrote cheerfully. He went to New York, and thence lie wrote that he had secured a large claim ittone of the richest minin•i gions, and was going out with a p of miners to heel: for gold. , Some five Year• passed. I had mar• ried - anirseified down into a'study man. S 01111? "times, when I read Johns let ters., I thought of the college days, and wondered if he still believed in 4110,ti lie evening I sat in the parlor with tin wife. The fire Burned redly in the grate, but there was no other light in the room. We were fond of sitting in the halbiwilight made by the glowing coals, and had not ligkeed the letup. Suddenly I thought of 'John Haynes. We had been talking of some recent event in the political world, end the subject had normore connection with .10116 thaninight resembles day. But all at once I thought of him, and it seeMol as if he was near me. You have often felt that some one wits near you and looked up to meet his glance. Such a feeling Celtic over Inc then. •Ilow strange!' I said to my wife. 'Here we are talking of politics, and like a dash, I thought of John ; I bat e often told you about hum. It seemed that he ,was there. Ido not reOtillect of ever bluing eicperienced just such a sensation before.' Kane looked itt toe wonderingly. 'lt Is strange,' she said. :Such a feeling came over are. It seemed as if there were some one else in the room.' 1 looked around. There was no one to be seen. The tire burned dimmer now and the room was full of shifting, !rein aloes sliadm‘s. I feel the presence of sonic one,' Katie PRAF, nestling closer to me 'We a't seem to be alone, as before She explained my 'eelings exactly. !lad John liar lIPS been sittinz oppo site to a. I should not hare felt the in tluenre of his presence more forcibly than I did then There w ft . B , a rattle of coals in the grate, and the sparks flew aimard, redly, for a minute; then the mcimentar brightness died tmit , , leaving the room darker than before. •Ned !' We heard a voce call toy name din: tinctiv and slowly. I turned to Katie questioningly. I did not speak,' she answered, in reply to my unspoken question. 'lt sounded from the corner, there.' She turned and pointed to a corner br the door. I looked that way but saw nothing. EU Again that voice, hut this time I caught its sound plaint). It was the familiar moice of John Haynes, tine same low mellow tones, I should hate known among a thousand. 'lt is John r I cried, has come back from California' John, 01,1 hot, where are ? You can't pins any of your tricks on me. Conic out and give me a shake of your hand.' There was a rustle of the wind ua that shadowy corner, though I could have sworn that every door and win dow was closed. Then like a shadow growing out of a shadpw, I saw a torm, a vague, vapor form. It grew more distinct, and defined itself more plainly against the hack ground of shadow, and I knew, bet ire 1 lookel at the ghastly face, that I should acr the features of John Haynes. I look ed iip, and saw therm The thing lilted its hand, am! !dared them on its heart, and then we hea7.l say clearly and distinctly, 'I haue come to you from the dead. I hare kept my 00111%,{P Then the shadowy hands were lined and we saw they were dabble I anh blood. And about the region of the heart were flecks of crimson, as it the fe blood had spurted out in sudden Jets Then the form faded aunt, and in a moment it wan gone. Nothing but shadoaa remained. I turned to Katie. Her lace way very white. She clung to me, trein tiling and weak. 'lt was a ghost,' she whispered •It was not ant thing imaginary. Your friend must be dead.' Three months alter that 1 received a letter from a friend of John hi tine+ lie wrote that the miners' camp had been attacked suddenly one evening by a party ot Indians, and my friend had peen shot through the heart and kill ed instantly. This .9 all I have to tell What we say, I !mite for you to judge ISM that the spirit ot John Haynes canto back to tne tram the border Lands of death, I cannot dolt INDIAV4 31 sru e.—Nut long ago, Perin town‘hip, in the county of St Joseph, Indiana, was thought lit the citizens of the eastern part of the toivii to be rather large, and their voting place to a distant. Accimiiiiglj.,a peti tion to divide the towii.hip was suc cessful. An election wan hell in the small village of t) -, and old W. was elected Justice of the peace. there were no trials to attend for some time, the boys got impatient for one t and thinking to have sonic lin with old W., got tip a sham fight. Inn. party of the belligereni , 4 tlic lir rest of the oilier, anJ , the affair cam...• to trial. Justice W. resoled, and ap peared very grave, as became his. of fice. After several witnesses had been examined, the justice announced as It derision that seven tf the defendattl i n should be lined ten dollars each. Then the boys lami,lvd, and informed him that the affair was only a chain tight, and that they were only in fun. "Flirt, eli ? You may have been in fun, but I• 11 Le ittnashed if I am! Et e• ry man of volt must pat , thin fine or go to jail !" The boys didn't appreciate the fun when they had to "pony up.' —A distinguished professor of Mir yard college was one lloikod by a broth er clergyman how long it took him to write a sermon He 41(1d. S. MI al Ines 11, week, sometimes longer " "What! a week to write a sermon ? I write one in a day and make nothing of it." "Yes," replied the doctor, “but I make soln:th'ms: of mine DICK. ViS to iieell4P mll,, 1,1% vniolv tering with bot, k eAt...td r 141.1.. A Strange Story Three 'Thousand Confedetates on the Dry Tortugas. The Abingdon Virginian contains the collawing communication, which is well calculated to excite profound interest : I saw a man to day who gave bin illune an Ednard Parker, and who rep. resented that he was a Lieutenant Cap ptain to 3. W. lielly:scompany K., Co lonel Greer's'reginient, Fortieth North Carolina Calvary, in the Confederate army ; that he was captured at the battle of Chickamaugo on the 12th of J un e, !Still; was sent to Camp 'Chase, and from there to Dry Tortugas, where he has remained until the Ist day of June last. Iles tale is A strange one, but am forced to believe every word of so N%oulA you II you could see this 1111111 —and it may he of sonic interest to some of your readers. lie says there tire still 3,000 men on the island, who have no means to pay their passage, and no way to nick money enough to do so. Among those still there whose names he remembers are the following : ,lames Grady, Thomas. W. Stinson, Wm. Stinson anti George Tai tor, of Washington &unity; Thomas Carter and Jesse Carter, of Russell ; John Black and Win. ]Hack of Scott ; lames ILgginhothnn, Thomas W. MB% Jesse T. May ,and William A. May, of Tazewell county. Parker says that the pri.oner4 wtie all t'elea•ed at the close of the war, but the% had no means of communication with their iriends and they are ,4111 there in a most %%retched condition, their onIyMUIR 01 support being rived Iron% labor at the les yes at fifty cents per month, and by begging. Ile worked Over live years at fifty cents per month, and saved 4, 36 with which helnuil his litre to New ilrleans, from which place he has walked since the 7th and beg ged his way. Ile la in a most pitiable condition, entirely blind in one eye and nearly HO in the other, caused by ex posure, and very lame and crippled up trout long walks. lle is on his way to his home in Lropkuni county, N, C , hating walked up the Mississippi to the mouth M the Ohio, up to the Ohio and through Kentucky, several hun dred lodes out of his way, owing he eats, to his ignorance of the country and the ignorance of those who gave him directions, lie says that the poor tellows on the island are praying for relief from their friends, but he does not know how that relief cart be of as lie seems to be entirely 'gnu rant (il the means of communication with the cdand, and only knows that cowls go there for coffee. ' 1 write this, hoping you will !widish it, and that it may be the means of communicating the whereabouts of ..11115 of those poor wretches to their The Labor Congress fhe .11441e.itle abuse heaped upnn he Labor 'ongreem that was recently in .444-44)tt at I . lllirinnati, by the Itil4ll - pre.4., with littr4ll . !, It fonLtle excel, 111111, (11!111 to Open the elee of the ,(4441,4 , 4:tnefi to the object ot that part(. I Prelfn Mpeak , ll 4,neer 'rig!, 44 , the to, Inhere rol that 1,404i1 has teltirned to their ploughs 111141 \‘ 41 - 1411op-4.ue though It was a -.badge 11l to till the soil or build up it, 44 11'1thout etocring, upon the 4iNcits "hp•ets that ,alic.l the t'ont!re... , together, one thong 14 it it ti , /1 Ic t ric till.; I. tile meeret of the id the Radical pees and lead er. !lad the metnherm wet together re-olic.l that tine corruption.. it n,l Ipi.pre4Hi , oriA 4,r (he Ra hcal purl) tin Wi11. , 1.111 1111 iteltvolual ble,eung.an.l , •iight enntitined for all time to •oir e their present inaligners in mild lane smothered them with hilmorne lour tub they did not do till+. '1 hey lnol. the best mode. , of pre-en ing their iii,l e p en ,l, l , o , , against the 'vomit. , ot (tioriopoly, tun! ag.airi,t the tilt, ate .kit muu , lutinrt of the roan Iry with the pauper horde,.., „t' r r hnrt Tlin , doomed tiler.' IN o , the it ul al lead'rs I,et 1111111 1•111Itil the right to he 11011 , 0111 lolil n, til4 %lOW, of ptibli, or protest against the importation of it heathen pi/A.OlOll, it 110 will reduce him and his tellm. laborers to the lev el of paupers, and In 1111111etliately dll4)llliCed tie a traitorous• Democrat It t, not the interests of the lahoring ela• , -es that the It'idical leadere are alter. It is their 1,1111.1 arid unreamon tug obedience to party belie,t,,, and the dumb acceptance he oppre,liee and anti republican dogmas. Hence, we may alwuty4 expect to Ilea! the work ingmen abused by the Itadieni press, whenever they meet together for any purpof , e, nod adiourti tlrthnnt swearing to 111, , Italic:II party , L e t ihen t iiialke a note on't.--11/t4- I,tirg 1'(41. —The negroes In Lltticaster county, are busy holding rediviii merlin Brother Ihigon intnidte en.th lions and Brother 3Grrm•ui "Hpone. thorn The bitter 1, genoritil) 1.1114.101,1 in be, disorganising movements by It [lllll,l on the shins 1)r. Wlliming, Profennor of Berberisin, does the ben renting 11r Dickey, Congre,,inati white,) arts as 'Treasurer—that in, supplie , the , Inter free Rev Brother Cull' taken rialiairt a., vet, but In wetting to "bee a Ellen" be fore he deterinition hi They meet in the A frienre Church, from whence they adj;ConArli to the beer aft -10,,n9 whore Dicky ham ordered the la ger Two Irishmen were traveling, when they mopped to examine a guide board. "Twelve miles to rortland," said one. "Jost ct x miles siliiece." said the other. A rid ti n y trudged on apparently satis fled at the small distance. A YAW . in e..nirinv vynnrally iudl vat..l. U pti. .01, nomveryetti.w. Appalling Corruption of the Republi can Party. REPUBLICAN WITNESY ON THE STAND General on Piatt has one of 'his strong articles-in the Cincinnati Com mercial, in reply to General Comley, the Postmaster editor of the Columbus Journal. Atter erasing some thing 4 from the letter that are rather perSonal and bitter, we make room for the fol lowing telling extracts, and commend them to tile attention of albhonest Re publicans: WASIIIVGTON, Juno 27 E=:=1:1 Let us see. It was the design of the fathers to frame ti Clovernment dint it., pOWeri.l should be • few, and its duties sinwle.--Itecognizing the great truth, did he object of the (lo%ernment was to keep the peace, they sought to so frame its organic law as to have the powers intervene only when the peace was broken. In a word, their idea ol self gos ernmeht meant the intervention of the constable. They sought to leave all the various avoratll)ll4 and pursuits of bijnianity to free individual efforts, seeing only that the strong should not pie upon the weak. To the States they gave the care ol the Meal alfair,, to th e ilimeral flovernmeni all the du ties requisite to our proteetion as a na• tion. li ..eems a wash: of time to repeat true-m-, and trt o lio re ciwi ii/e ., ot believe; in them? Ind turniirg hail,- on each great truths, nliere are ' 1t the ,t.k IA all that I hate been hitting for it year pa-it, let nic eay ue brief . Under our pre-rut -teat the local government.; hits' loot 11 11 oi g mtl e anee. Throtigliout the South, under to called acts iit recon , truction, the law of hate, the Legislatures have conic to lie Con gre , sional dependencies, where 'gnu rant negroeo, under the control of un principled demagogues, are made to steal and plunder until the law maker and the law breaker, (idler only in name. In the Southern States seats the Senate are put up at auction said knocked down to the highest moneyed bidder, and into this Senate are gradually gathering Oat)* usurpa tion, all the political powers of the tlot eminent. To the Government thus centralized come all the business Interests 01 the people, sat e thus of the farmerand the laborer, each stming to secure laWe that will unable 0 to overreach the other. And to this usurped IlempoiNtv come all the rogues ofplunder, through unjust legislation. It is openly avow ed and generally believed that no law can pas+ to the signature of the Presi dent that has not, to use the slang of the lobby, -money in it." The late Secretary of the Treasury. the !lon. Salinon I'. Chase, unformed the country that In our hour of distress and peril he wa+ forced to purchase the bankers of the United States And to get thre capitalists interested in the io‘ertinient that protected them, he had to make not extraordinary terma --I will not say that they treated the liepidilic like a gang 01 shylocks—but they were CO treated by the eminent financier into, was then at the head of the 'Treason, and they accepted the terms and the character. It is no ex agg'erat ion to saw that for the purpose id enriching and sustaining these mon cv changers we pay more than our Na tumid Government cost us. Any at tempt to amend, or revise, Or repeal these terms -considered a war necesmo iy and temporary --is met by the vitt lent oppo•ition al eighty national bank els on the hour ul the House, and eliomfli in the • 4 enate to gate the leech es a majority. II the e.,roorat tone, firms, and per rOlt, I IlNye , leil in the iron 1111,11114.H4 are openly orgamied into all association, and pay 1.1.0 a einum4 treasury a hind that :rat Lc r.illed a mirruptikot fund, for It IN used 111 influence Wiidation. Its filthy agents, when not members, ri-nile in NVIOI,I ngt(in, and are support 1,1 liatulsonit ly ur their corrupt limn- The Maine !nay be Paid of the mit monopoly Indeed, the Name may he eael of every tntere-it that ban money enough t., lib!! and In Comm lit enough Lu 11H. It. Generally your member ot Congress has his huuiliar , thrteigh whom his vote IP. purchased. Nbinetinies organi /atious exist whereon ten, twenty or thirty. votes are presented by one agent, who sells out by the direction ot the etturus the entire pen lull. We linJe a corrupt Congress, a Jim 111411. , LeClitIVV, and the only arm of the Government that remains pure 104 the Supreme Court, and that a President ham sought to park with creatures ot )114 01511, and the Senate strives to des strut. ! Ray., then, in all soberness, that it we are toneeept the Repil)he as it now stands, tell government IX a (allure. Arid to the philosophical student it would appear RN if theme a ere the net results ot our hustled institutions it may be there is it Having post er yet hell by the people, and that when the worst conies 1.4, the worst, thie will he broul.dit to bear upon the money dine gyre in the temple, and drive them alit. 1101. 1 410 not see it.—While Republi can editors affect. a laugh at warnings hke this, Democratic; editors pretend to find calvation in the restoration adier . party to power. But true reform lies in ignoring par tv lines and returning honest men to (Mice. I feel safe in thug. I dolt whether an honest marl, capable enough to hold office, can lie a pro , teetionrst, and as for the many sehemea of plawder that inalse a moral miasma about the National capit o l, h e natal turn his hack upon them, so long as he has a good emotion in his heart or lacks brass upon his r lartek. It is all very well to nit bark in the old faxliiotaed arm chair Of otlirna, a n d lanigh at Dear Quoxotcrti who go chary ing tip and down the world, mistaking Mind w ok, for fragile.. tTraprestiorin -I.la ilm ro • (.yak gaud ( ', lire nmd %1 , 4 11111!- -I,o' ther aye a.m. as diary dolph said, run by water, bat by wills• ky, women, rings and foul lobbies. And undoubtedly I am a Quixotic ass for charging into them, when by a dif ferent course I might now be swinging back in an official chair, laughing at the stupid people for being no damn• ably imposed upon. But the world hay to have its official philosophers— el6 how could we run the post office and its Quixotic asses—else no reform. A Man at the Wash Tub, and a Wo man at the Man. -- , t A Sioux City (lowaYr repoßer thusi describes a sight he recently saw in that town. As an illustration of' the progress of woman's rights in that sec tioh, it is interesting: In a certain house upon a certain street, a certain man was sweating over an utt6ertain wash tub for it stood on a three legged stool that looked it t pl ,- eil to topple over. Hiss shit'. a vets were rolled up to his armpits, am his hands were very red and his lace was very long. We saw him pull up from the lint steaming suds a certain gar ment that suggested a woman's most sacred article of apparel. As Ise held it a 1110111PlIt in the air, it seemed to us that his lips' inoveir in imprecations, and we are quite sure that when it went back into the tub, it went _back with a little more force than duty to the garment required, though it must he confes-wd it showed very visible ef• trot "filly terrible Treat and the wretch ed dust of dog idly , service A Woman -al at the WIIIIIOW, ni,,i i'roar her general appearance, which was that of one waiting for clothes to he washed, and from the dogged 1111111 net- in which she was observed by the man at the tub, we concluded that she was none other than the wife of the martyr, who, instead of keeping her bed, as would have been roost modest and appropriate, had been constrained to conic forth, on account of rebellion on the part of the little man. Iler face, which was stern and unin citing, was resting on her hands,wbich was supported by her elbows on her knees. Iler position in the window brought her feet about twelve inches from the floor, and well into view. They were by no means delicate, and nere covered by a pair of cloth gaiter , , conQiderably down in the heel and out at the toe, which It IR safe to say were put into service before the first 300, INN) men who responded to the patriot is call of F i scher Abraham. The ped al appendages thus encased, she tapped nervously together as if they were for itching exercise upon the man sweating at-the tub. We did not long retnata in sight of such a scene. Such things have hero Noggested to us, and we have even beard of their existence in neighlioe ing States; but we did not dream the: - .• was such a slavery in lowa much li.-s in the free and rollicking town of 5:.,..Y Cuv. Just an we were withdravt mg, how ever, another act in Oil, life di awn wa performed. By some mishap, %%hi. II We dell not forsee, the roiseraFde gave wat•, and the dependent fob and tbe abominable sinlm, and I lit• constituting the wash, went or er itiili a crash, and splash upon the 119.,1 ' The woman Jumped like a Tigre-4 up on the hapless %Jelin' of a maul, and taking one of the terrible gaiti.l.4 (tom her terrine feet, she proceeded to R it e bun a seientitic walloping. The MAWR cries,as lieduneed ;In Mild on lip toe, exhibiting now and cher: at the window a countenance which, for ezpremnion or agony, we :lc, ur In our life hali , erinnlled, excited our s, non, apprehension., and we .tariet tl iin a run for the police. We were riot successful, in sin ii an officer. When we rcititned halt an hour afterwards, the uml , llollll :t. cn gaged among the rains and 'Jo. man was nowhere to be .1, lt a • prof , ably locked up in some dark rho In go without his iiiGssrAl l it A (.11,iry , Jirl wire went to the I.iit rt viw lir Cmf. of her old and hest 1 bl. lien ' waa 'married to it rich ity no•ri lotto. 111+(ttaR In city ell 41,1 e e, •if coon.. the t putor tiro. te, dant, and wade niiiiieriepi tier friend WlPlied in Immo.. her bill, into thenot merle., 911,1 a-I they incr. going to a largrl:llJ,leftve tit, the lowing iiiiitruotiori., I/ 'l: , tl 4.111% IMP ritual! cake Kiel inte ,, ,‘,..•rn,i Iv.• rllllll, and When vwir !wend:llli pre ,, liei ou to take more, aintwer that ton hate .1 , wore would Lea -lipt (11 , 11 K .• went on mail! lo - tiAked her to partake wt. more reit - it-It weitte, when to the horror ot her l'rnern,l and mint-.,nowt of the company, elle an4wered to It 1.11,i Vont(' '1 have en aporah.,l tile:ernt : wore would go Hutlpuv thippit ' A CitFAD. -The way to evade a rotes lion. "What heheve said a Mall 10 his ileplhi,r . "W h y I Isdiete the slime as the Church loelieti.s. "Prar, what duce the Church he lieve "Why, t heYhurch believe+ the ,4t WI I believe.' then. what do )on r di a th ,.. Loth Indie%e?'• • "Wks, the Cliitich and I both be lieve tiling" --There I" Pn .ne tall, of the ['reel ,lent rtol calo'Aet pat mg a vieit to Irnollingtioi on t h e 1 ,4 or st ,,,, embee. What'g the wind? The citizeng of tlle 1/I<itrnl ofll ll h la Nhoulel get 'hp a ',oldie 7 , 4-et,ttoe, Itn i oiler the Moe-- t riouß vi.tor.4 the trredota of the cit.). (; e ner ,) 1; r allt ~ .011111 10 mhtto Wnshit,g too a. 11111 Ch 114 Napelleoll does pikrfia. Qweer tones, the e , when the public iri teri•stn are ;: , ),ITig to 'hick, whilst the offieer-i of the govertunemt are .freeing at Newli , irt or home•racing itt B r A ,„.1, A \IAN '3N t•r^Nr" an RC.. fillailit,ll“ I-- (he ,140,•i• All Sorts orParagraphs Asr lafts but a collupso. brood"—Thu A Dati..llasT lady—a star NOTES of admiration—love • A FiitE-escape—when it break A maN•rLE •I . IIE case for the crown— a cap. PREHYSTERIC tIMVS-1/001 e I ding A. DEAD reeloining--11,t of tie in battle. SONIE people of prowls() p r nothing elm) UN.' Vk IL4A L profesoltoll Clltityttr. WHAI fI3II is west valued liN wife? Her-rllig. WHY is II ballot girl like Because isliu e a 110 , 0 r. MANY ludic, are bolityile 4 view to the loofa:, A CANE that goo,' over pidly—ii Tint inosL null-gsli people. I THE W..lllltri (111i.tion--"Cfi mu hilVO Z , :20 till, 11101111114 Iw thero HIIV 111411.11 - var n Id it Nit AN Invalid at th , ,..t , -11 , 1 , 1 , get up In, •tr,rlL;tll ht entlll.4 111 TIIE 111/LII -' What do with Oita 1 tr t,ni IR-1 ND' ljt 11.1• A .1,1- th iiIMEM=I cm I i 1. ,r L a 1.1, 4 deli CWi t 11 li. di•ijlllllk.li. :1 1 / 1 0 I 11 IMM %.,,Itilll . l i. lI . her -,lc. I,llv Put on h“ , 111” ' n..l • 1.110 fru.ti I it',lll 0111, 1.11(1 111 de Wily , . HI ft I.\ Or jll-1 lit,' In 111% .+11 , 411 , 111t Imney ' 1 V!. • I 1111,11 r ,ri nl , l :111 , 0k. 41 t ur•fit :1.,,, ,t 11; to 111140 C k 1 , ,, i 1 2L I,‘, • ,ill,; t‘‘ %IA • ht.:114 ili it' L.', ti s„ II ,L, fol / \ 1. , 1( CI. 1,111,1 111 • .1..111pt r 11! 11. f) tli , 1111/t I. t \ 1 , 1 r nVV ;,? • 4, 1 mill• Pf a mita' %‘L, f•mtk 01, 111, 11:111. , %,ill i %%lit I 111--et 111 _;)t 1114 . .111 Lt`t. W10,t111.4 1 , I `,l , • I =MEE I! i Itm• II t•I a n_!, I • • •• liii•f' .911•111 ti i• 1.11 •II lit ..'l I• 111 \ I ‘l.l \V -I .1 kI:11t,.:.!1 11,, • ••II \ •\ I \ F Flit Si 1-n•,. r‘t.,l 111 ti I 111- , 11111'1111,F •I ; r It ' Int: , -h. , I. N% t , 11 tti it C..norsil l'T rs j ,, ' ,. t. d tit en s" tit Li 11% , tr..,u I IL.. dint rig It, ma", '1.11,11 tly Aiat• It."l,•rt Wit:p. pr tit tt,w• n are Ills •tiako., thoir tlowr tnt ld. ' VII tr i• the ,iO. rerice betNvo, • , 1,1:!1 , 11 nu l n roan wuh 4.11 I )!i.. has OW •Joe offi (I higiton, at ..tlivr tllO . -Lin , 111 . Tii r 111311 %% h., 1 , .t. hls soucr un 1,, , r It Ow %11.11 i.• (UM., 15 depirtnt, tig t 1 , ,r111,•r, Imp nude tlik, !utter 1,, ~,,,, hi., 11 1110 I . ", it,,%1.., I t ty , ,rottri %%us wht 1111,-10 I n Its man locki d tip In d w, auu women are MU 1111 n d4.11'1. A who think. th , ro , iif thy Fi4.11,11 „ hot lip, the ' dal k u, thunder and en itf AA% F.EE was d to t h e 1411,.• hi, 1oi:104., he 1111411,1 uni t ly " s n " I ' JO. certain letufin " 1 " 4 ark (The autlwr """ a wifo uml twelv, children F n. "' . ' the number .if nl4 lll Julncli Butler proemen rr V.,.',1•119 tru,scau, Om mu t i t marring° ti uri deo!. A 1101' , F.WIFE; on n prairie fa htitrat4l the condition of farmer when ,he "Its mighty easy men and the horse', but it's de rind oxen " I i etirrms as natural 4 in r ladie el. glint, splendid, beautiful, and eis it duce fir it man wearing scratch liis head, and it sigmlie as muck. A SA itAror.Akervrint girl is t accomplished linenist at that fa blc rc,ort She can clean oil th walk arid make op the hods i dilrerent larigunge•‘. • IT [mod be a very rutin fill '4 to live “on your own huol tho w prot of it ie tiled the Fame on anybody elne's Iwo!: would be objectionable. WHEN an lowa man gate a marry him be dilating on I n a th, 1. 1 1 , ' 0 01 1 111111 1.111 , * P 1 " Ell I tl i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers