The Democratic Watchman. B E E Zs. I;• PA DAWN AND SUNDOWN ==! The rain Is drifting dean again, It sweeps as ross the iese pined luau IE trembles on Ihu animus And round the bills ills ,eil Ir dn.% Oh, cold and long the list alll 1..•, ice light, no aarintll n Lt i,ig ie ow, For you, my level de tr ,lily Walt in the sweet South lit totny How wait you / In 4 .01110 $(140' . , phu•e, i Itenenth an arch oil Ii n. N . I rep. A smile upon ,4 0111 11101,11041 :4101 4 , Your Ninthh elit , tuetl Idly on lulu kneeA Ply !urn! toy the tlav I. dull, The rain 111 dull and ettlti 11101 11111 1 The wind Is up I hear the tout That. neilrater you, 111'111, 11,111111'4 What hapy sun Mluirlegm l 3.ifir el AVhat p oach of Frani, null \bloom , What taro, moqueatered beauty hen Fla in On) 1,,a• 1,1114' 1,119•11 , 11 gltocl' rho smile„ leaven On ,a I no, 1, 1 1), Tim YIOPM lIRII K 100401 y Oil the And, hush I sarong the son 111 ~,,, flint. Thu ring-dove's niurnin, lug. Ina voinpinint. bear love I when in FlO,lll. MI 111 nnndnV Voile rapt, high glance yam riot th ward torn, I catch lie light here, far 11.ny, Fanned with the Kaki; of *meet MP/Orgill , , rollt lave etiniett 111 III)' II Mllll To guide IMO 01(01101 lIIV 4111.10114 tier 1 feel it k iMC nn elieek and hair, And then, Oh, then,the day dawns lair Through Rummer hour• our lore nag horn Tho uut. t Ntilone alomt 'Fbe field.. Pere with And •11111.• 11111j:tied hen ni illlll. 1111. i Ntreet lIIV \ !Ike [h...., When yre tiro lite hind , owl he,. thr011011111• ti , Vrer"ll l .4.lll .:it iv+lce4l the ,orld f',r nothing \Vied if the ti filch beer. vII holm I, the sttnlll %trend, While' Weeping here 1 W 1.1 1 .11 111111 rlllll,l 111 rileiniiryli tender, it, !light Inuit lit% I'l ' I 1,1111 , hi' 1/4111) 1. Anil .11 Ili. Hue ”I the Lie no. betwixt the light and cie Ho, on and on my tineight. are 11 , 1 II % , 141 Inv tear. norain.t 111.. a /111 And, II relllni II g 0111... I 111411'11w tread If unk nos") feet ahalg the hall, lore not ha,k ! Ih, heaven' If he Should ecane !hi. rains' day t.. rue, 1 hen all three rant drop+, %timing rohl =MMEIIBI The Untold Love of Alice Carey Alice Carey lived and died a maiden queen in poesy. It has seemed to many impossible that she should have carried her tender and Ilaa4ll/Ilale heart through the social and literary ilior oughlares wherein she axe called tin tread unpierred Inc any amorous shalt And It Wahl indeed impossible. There is a secret page in the lin,tnot nnt the deceased poetess which has never been written, and seldom, of latetears, been told. To this Phoebe Caret briefly and indefinitely alludes in the liken h pat/11,111eil I/1 the Ladies' Repository ot last month, and a nlely copied. Th e writer says eule.tantially therein that it her sister ever lot en' there is no line in her published works to tell the tale ; over the month rut the sepulchre of her sail experience sire rolled the stone never by herself teinovent. lire doubt fat 'II' hall conceals and hal! diselos es the truth. It seems intended to stop the flying rumors, while retraining Irons an unequivocal aunt impossible denial As the story can only Nene as a toil to the many urines and amiable qualities of its slit9e(l., ViP need no further ex cure for our effort to rescue the ring tnentary record Irmo the oblieinui to which the mistaken and morbid kind ness of friends would iitin consign it When the Carey sisters made their firq pilgrimage to the Easier' Interim Mecca, ItlifirS timot. Griswold was among their earliest acquaintances 'Thee grntlenisn tit. a promiromt Inner atenr when mein tit airy' less or mucus in New York Ilion at pres e nt lie Was V 510.11 Itk l'a.ll , 4at, \'t , n, ISIS, and %NH, Cfltll,llllelil II , 1,11 /41/0111 years the tartnior int the eldest si sire, Having been educated as a pruner he became success' s ely R Baptist preacher, a Journalist, and an author. As all editor he president over Ihr destinies ot the Brother Joan! Imo /lad the New World, mammoth weeklies, the New Yorker, it literary hebdomadal , and Graham's And the Intrrnauonnl M azines To the first monthly mention ed he added considerable character The last resembled Harper's Monthly, and was bought out by the owners of that alagityllir alter H. ktftel existence. In the wider field ill letters he should be spoken tit rather its it composer than as as author. lie published t anon's collection's of the pl - 1•r a nd p oe i r y of England nail Amer lea, Si. I In ContleC LlOll Nall others, set eras works 01 pop ular liinigrainhv No one w•is better acquainted wills the stare of the Inter ary market, or a ith the puhiimliera , th e metropolis, than ilr (11-18V10111 The two rural devotees of literature from the far West here et rangere, and ,heeded a chaperone. Ile gave them apace in his books, flattered them, en eouraged their hopes, and assisted in finding tt market for their wares. To ward Alice lie more especially inclined Their first acquaintance livened Hilo friendship, 11101 , 114111 p 11110 1111111181•1'. and intimacy into love, It was said at last that the parties %sere soleinnlt affianced. This was nearly twenty years ru,o, RIM Alice had then passed 30 airs still older, and would seem to hare Intoner.] the 11011111 k of ju venile lolly, these bounds are ever passed by men. lint lie wits it blase,' Citizen ot the world, find she was quiet. retired. sensitive, domestic, and Liana taming, Trouble came between the two in the shape of a WOMfIll nut society externally more attractive than Alize Carey. This itason produced a sepa ration. The engagement was broken, Ind Alice, concealing tier sorrows, kept herself more closely at home and turn ed her attention more assiduously to her special labors. The story needs not to be lolly' detailed here. It has been told over arid over again, ever lance the world has had a literature. Several years passed, and in 1857 Ru fus Wilmot Griswold lay dying or a lingering disease ter the metropolis, in poverty and alone. His literary ven• tures had brought all inadequate re routieration, and he had lived a life which it was not altogether pleasant to look back upon. lint the sisters had made many Iriends, and been reason. ; ably blesse..l by fortune. The injured woman forgot her wrongs and fergave e past with a readiness characteristic of her sex. Site came again to the bedside of the man who had so grits• cutely deceived her, and watched with Hilt day alter day and week after week as life slowly ebbed away. sick loom was inade cheerful with books, dowels, and all necessary comeforte ; and, to defray necessary expellers, the money earned by Jaye and nights of labor with the pen was freely lavished At last death ended the sufferings of the false lover, find the grave closed over the secret of a woman's sorrow, now for the first time made public.— r num llepubbron. Domestic Life of Jefferson (the of the most interesting books of Lite day IN mauled The Domestic Idle cl Thomas Jefferson,' compiled from Mindy letters and reminiscences by his great grand daughter, Sarah N. Ran 'Among oilier traits of Mr. Jeller con's boyhood, his love lor athletic spurts holds a prominent place. His lather seems to have been ent.tled to the name of the Virginia Hercules. Ile nab early engaged in combat with wild beanie, and lor days at a time Was breed to live on raw flesh. So great was his strength, that when standing between two hogsheads of tobacco ly tug on their sides, he would raise or 'heal them both up at (ince. Young .leOerwon inhented the vigor and the manly tastes of los stalwart sire. He was early instructed in all the sloth.; and exercises 01 his day. While still a school buy, he was a good swimmer, a tearless rider, nut ardent l+portstnan, spending a great portion tit his time in wandering alter game along the sides of the romantic South Weal Mountain.. He was nut more than two years old when his lather moved to Tuckahoe, yet he often declared that his earliest recollection in hie was of then being handed ttlit Servant on horseback, by whom lie was carried on a pillow for a long distance. 'He also remembered that later, when lice yearn old, he one became Impatient (or echool to be out., and, going out, knelt behind the house, and there repeated the Lord's Prayer, hoping thereby to hurry tip the desired hour The general mode of life at that tune had it ,let Itte,l flat or 01 patriarchal /lie of detterson's grand sone. itched 10111 on one occasion, how the turn of his lather's day spent their tone minded, and, in reply, said 'My lather had u devoted friend, to tv hose house he would go, dine, !Tend the night, dine with lion again on the second day, and return to tiliadwol ui the erelong. Ills friend in the course of a day or two returned the visit and spent the same length of tittle at his house 'Fills occurred once every week , and thus, you tee, they were Loge' her four days out of the seven.' Al the age of seventeen, the future President was sent to William and Mary College, 'where he became Will 11011 e 10 several I/I the most distinguish e.l families uI Williain,littrg, fn n a me of which the tint• of gaming was car rued to a perhicious extent. Jeflersm, however, net er knew one card from another, and peter allowed the game 10 be plat ed in hits own house •I'he charms of the society info which he was thrown linter had the litiWer LI/ di strt lilt mind limn his literiot 1,111" stills 'lle sludlttl fifteen hour - t IL d 1.9 Itlif Mg. 11,1 , 1) otl.lll,Vti 11' 1111 S college file tt Nat ills iittt,ll. it, 1111.11 OW II two 11 . C10ek al 01 lit , 1111,t rise at dawn , the day fiery...at in close ft 1,00:H1100 -- the only recreation being a run at twilight no ft cerium stone a hich stood at a IrOullt it nide beyond the limos of the town. Ills habits of Fundy Were kept up during his vacs Lions. which were spent at Shad well, and though lie did nut cut 111111/Wit Olt Irurn the pleasures of social intercourse a itli his friends and family, yet he roil devoted nearly three fourtlin of his time to his books. Ile rose in the morning as hoot) as the hands oh a clock placed on a mantle piece in his chamber,could he disc ngui lied ut the grey light of eat Iv drawn After autiset he crossed the liivanna ina little CllllOO, which he kept exclusively lor Ills own use, and walked Up the siuuinLL Of lilt loved Monticello, w here rut• was hat log 11,1. air, of till• 1111,1unlain letcieil 110W11, pit 1 ,11;110t1 10 Imilffing NI if, ./1 hi' , It 4,114 . gt wool 1,1%1 • bel • 11 Mil a iht itompluthed young men In Virginta, lie was an excellent mathematician, and well grounded 111 Latin, French, Spanish, and Italian, though he could scarcely have been, 118 IN biographer states, u 'finished scholar' Ili either of those languages. John Attains, in his diary, tlitis speaks of : 'Duane says that dellerson .18 the greatest rub her off of dust that lie has suet with ; that lie has learned French, Italian, and Spanish, and WILIIILH to learn (lef tism,' Ilia school and college education was coneidered by 111111 as only the veidi bide to that palace of learning winch in reached by no 'royal road.' Ile once told a grandson that Iron, the time when, as a boy, lie bad tumed oil wearied trout play and first found pleasure in hooka, he haul never flat down in idleness. And when we con. eider the vast fund of learning and wide range of information poesenned by loin, and which in hie advanced years won for hint the appellation oftt"walh• trig encycloptedia,' we can well under- Maud how this must have been the cane. 111 e thirst for knowledge was insult• able, and he seized eagerly all uteane of obtaining it. It was his habit in his intercourse with all classes of men— the mechanic as well an the inen of aci ence —to LIIIII the conversation upon that stibjtet with which the man was beer acquainted, whether it was the construction of a wheel or the anatomy of an extinct species of animals; and alter having drawn front him all the information which he possessed, on returning home or retiring to his pri• vate apartirriStith, it was all net down by hint in wriOng—thus arranging it methodically and fixing it in hie mind. An anecdote which has often been told of him, will give the reader an idert of the varied extent of his knowledge. On one occasion while traveling, he stopped at a country inu. it stranger who did not h now who lie was, entered into conversation with this plainly dteo.el:and ifitivisioning traveler. lie introduced one subject utter another into the conversation, nail found him pettedly acquainted with each. Filled with wonder, he siezed the firstoppor tunny to inquire of the landlord who his guest was, saying that, when he spoke or the law, he thought he was a lawyer; then turning the conversation on medicine, felt sure he was a physi cian ; tint, having touched on theolo. gy, he became convinced that he want% clergyman. replied the landlord, 'why I thought you knew the Squire.' The stranger was then astonished to hear that the traveler whom he had iflllnd no affable and simple in his Wall tiers, was Jefferson. After his marriage in 177'2, his life nt Nlontivello was a continuation of his literary activity at college combined with an ardent devotion to the enticing pursuits of the (sundry, 'Much tone and expense were devoted by him to ornamenting and improving 1., house and grounds. A treat 1,011 fit totture t , lie found his lavoriterecivatimis 111 out of door enjoyments, and it was lil4 habit to the day of his death, no mat ter what his occupation, nor what of lice be livid, to spend the hours between one and three on horseback. Noted for his hold itiol gractiltil horsemanship, lie kept as riding horses only those of the best blood of the old Virginia stock, In the days of his youth be was very uxacting of his groom, in list ing his horses always beautittilly kept , and It is said that it was his habit, when hie ruling horse wits 1;71,111.0a tip for him to nlntmt, lo hniah lox white cambric handkerchief across the animarsslioultlers and send it back to the stable it ails Ibis( Was left on the haodkerchief. Ills garden book shows the interest which lie took in all gar deiliug and farming operations. Thi., hook, in which lie began to snake en tries as early as the Near 1771 i, and which he continued to keep all through line, except when Iron' home, has every thing jotted down in it, Iron) the date tut the tiailie.t peach blossom to the day when lip, wheat was ready lo So Isle. Ills personal, household and tarn' accounts were kept with the lire colon of the most rigid accountant, and lie was a rare instance of a man of enlarged vietts and Wide range of thought being hind of ihitarle The price of Iris horse', the fee paid to ter rvnien, his little gilts to servants., his charities -whether great or small Iroin the penny dropped into the church !nix to the handsome donation given fur the erection of a church all Mond a plate in his account book ' An interesting account of Mr..letler son'm life si Paris, when lie load surt recded 14 Franklin as United ii4fittes 18 given in the following par agraidi Not 1 . 0111.1 have been noire con genial or delightful no hills than the society in which deflermon moved nil Paris At the head iii an elegant es fitlilishment, its an American and the friend of Littlitretie. his bonne Wits the I.lloflll. re.,iti .1 till the Noting French ollicers who 1..,.1 i ntlopiia-timillv taken up arils If/ deft., Of tie great cause of liberty the New World , while, as a philoso filler and lite author of Notes on Vir ginia, - his Society wit, sought for and enjoyed by the most .11,4111114111.11 o! Has 11/1111 ;Intl melt of MCIPIICO, who thronged front all parts of Europe to the great French capital. Nor were the ease and grace of his address, the charms of his eloquent conversation, and the varied extent of his learning, !opt up on the witty trot lotridmonie women who were found at the comt of the amiable young louts the Sixteenth, and of his queen, the lovely Marie Antoinette .11sadly pre eminent for beauty and tnislortune. II is social Ili tercioirse with them, and the pleasant friendships tormed for ninny, we dim cover 1n Fla gracefully written letters to them Mr. and Mrs. John Adaitin were in with Jellereon, and hire Adams I ate a grat•eltal tribute 1.0 hen talents Wel ant 111 In her lettere home, 110+1 one of them speaks of hini as being one of the " choice ones of the earth. — II is intereotir, with hie twocolleagnee, Ift Fttinkliti and !lir Admin., was of the most delightful character, and by both he was sincerely loved and es teemed. The friendship then formed between Mr. Adams and himself with ettasl, in alter years, an the storine and bitterneem of political life at a tone when, perhaps, party feeling and prepnliee ran higher than ever before. \V lien Franklin returned borne, load ed with all the 'lotion' arid love that the admiration of the French people could lavish on lion, Jefferson wan ap 'wooed to take his place am Minister Irani the United Stales at the Court of St Germaine. " You replace l)r. Frank ' kelld COUllt de Vergennes, the French l'rennier, to him. " I sue (Ted ; ru, one could replace hint," was .)etierson'e ready reply. l'erbapri no greater proof of defrerson'm popularity Pan' could be given than the fact that he kW noon became a favorite in that learned arid polished society in which the great Franklin had been the lion of the day. We Hoist make room for the demerit tion 01 Mr. detraroun's domestic hie and muftis after his retirements horn, public life, written by his grandson, Co!. Jetterson Randolph. 1114 manners were of that polished school of the old Colonial tiovernment, so remarkable in its day—under no circumstances violating any of those minor conventional observances which constitute the well bred gentleman, courteous and consideraie to all per sons. On riding out with him when a lad, we met a negro who bowed to ns ; he returned his bow ; I did not. Turn iug to me, be aela•d " Ito you permit a negro to be more of a gentleman than yourself 7" Mr. Jefferson's hair, when young, was of a reddish cast.; sandy as he ad vanced in years; his eyes, hazel. Dy ing in his Stith year, he had not. lost loth, nor had one defective; his skin was thin, peeling Troll) his face on exposure to the tm, and giving it a mitered appearance; the superficial veins so peak, as upon the slightest blow to mine extensive suffusion of blood—in early life, upon standing to write for ally length of time, bursting beneath the skin; it. however, gave him no inconvenience. Ills counten ance was mild and benignant, and at.- Iraelive to Strangers. \\Bile President, returning on horue back Iron' Chariot tsville with company whom he had invited to dinner, and who were: all hut one or two, riding ahead of ban, on reaching a stream over whieh there was no bridge, a man asked loin to take him over. The gentleman in the rear coming np just as Mr. Jefferson had pit hint down and ridden on, asked him how it hap. pened that he had. perm:tied the oth ers to pass without asking them. lie replied : " Vroin their looks, I did not like to ask them ; the old gentleman looked he would lie would do it, aril I asked him " Ile was very much nut , pri,e.l 10 hear that he had ridden be hind the Pretodent of the United Mr Jefferson's stature Wag coat [nand 'eel two nail a half inches in height, well formed, indi eating strength, activtly and robust health; him earrings erect; step firm and elastic, which be preserved to the last , In n temper naturally strong, un der perfect control; his courage cool arid impassive. No one ever knew him to exhibit trepidation Him moral courage was of the highest order his will tirm and inflexible. It WWI re marked of hint that he never Minn duped a plan, a principle or a friend. A bold and tearlene rider, you saw at a glance. from his easy and waft dent seat, nail he was master of his horse, which was usually the fine blood horse, which he subdued to his will by a fearless application ol the whip on the slighti,t manifestation of restiveness. Ile retained to the Jae his fondness for ridinv on horseback ; he rode within three weeks of his Tenth,w lien, from disease, debility and age, lie mounted with ,dilliculty. Ile rode with confidence and never per it servant to accompany him; he was load of solitary rides and mu sing, and said that the pre4tence el servant annoyed him. Ile held in little esteem the edit cation which made men ignorant and helpless Its to the common necessities .if tile , and he exemplified it by an incident which occurred to a young gentleman returned from Europe, where he had heen educated (hi riding out with his companions, the strap of his girth broke at the hole of the buckle ; and they perceiving it an accident ens ilv remedied, rode on and lilt 1)1[11. A 1. 1 / 1 111 1111111 coming up and seeing that 11114 horse had made a circular path in the rood in his impatience to get on, asked it lie could aid him. air," replied the young man, if you could only eeaiel me to get it up to the next hole "SoppoBe you let it out a hole or two lin the other nide, " 101141 the Illael Ilia habits were regular and Hyatt! wane Ile was a mixer of him time, rove always at dawn, wrote and read until breaktio.t, breaktaated early, and •Itned from three to lour • • •, re tired at tone, imd t.o bed at from ten to eleven. • lie nail 17, his last innemm, that the nun had not caught him in bed tor fifty year. . . He always made his own tire. He drank water but once R. day, a sin gle glans, when I.e returned from his ride. He ate heartily, nod mulch veg eta bl e fond, Fireierring French cookery, because it made the meets more ten der. He never drank ardent spirits, or strong wines. Snell was his aver. .41011 to ardent spirits, that when, in his last illness. hie physician desired him to to use brandy as an astringent, lie could not induce him to take it strong enough Tilt BOY in A lIF.KO A.-1110 papers are telling about a boy in New England, now boo teen years of age, who of hopponed to be the riCheht boy in the United States, becau,e be ham a great deal of money. To our wind, the richest boy ni America is the one who is good hearted, honest, ambitious, willing to do what IN right. Ile is one who loves his north er, and always has a kind word for her : who loves his sister or sisters, and tries to help them with true affection. Ile is the boy who does not cull lin lather the "old man," but who loves him, speaks kindly to and of 111111, nail tries to help huii us the signs of age gather fast upon his brow. The richest ix the one who has pluck to tight his destiny and the In ture. lle is the ohe who has the manhood to do right and he hotiebt, and is striving to be somebody; who is above doing a mean action ; who would not tell a ho to screen himself, or betray a friend. Ile whose youag mind is run of noble thoughts for the Moire, who is determined to will a name by good deeds. This is the richest boy in America. Which one of our readers is it? —" I wish you had been Eve," said an urchin to a stingy old aunt, proverbial for her meanness. " Why Nor "Because," said he, " you would have eatew all the apple, instead of di• vtding it." —A trunk factory out West was lately euperceded by a saloon. The old sign, it is reported, was retained by the new proprietor, who economically changed the T to D. The Democratic Party. The rise and progress of the Demo cratic party in this country, salami ex change, its vicissitudes and success, its triumphs over apparently insurmoun table obstacles and its present formid able proportions and flattering pros ects, constitute a part of our political history that is both gratifying and re markable. Parties by the score have utterly vanished out of existence, and are almost forgotten. They were lounded on mere temporary issues. The Democratic party lies lived and will live. It is founded on vital principles —fidelity to die supreme law of the land and the rights of the States. To these, as (moth& has eloquently said, it owes its greatnes4 In tens past, its prospects in the future. Driven from power by a revolution which no human wisdom could have done more than postpone for a brief season, it retained its organization and its influence in the midst of political and social convul sions which threatened to uproot and destroy the Goverment, itself. Hope lessly in the minority, with both purse and sword in the possession of reckless and fanatical enemies, the Democratic party never deserted their' standard— never utterly lost !mart. Neither the clamors of war nor the terrorism of tri• unipharit factions; neither the 'Jerrie (moon or hereditary foes nor the treach ery of former friends were able to shake the allegiance of the masses in those eternal truths which are not for a day, but fur all time. They knew in what they believed, and in amount of flat tery on the one hand, or intimidation on the other, Atvailed to change their creed. Faith less lived, determina tion less firm, would have sealed their doom long ago ; but the Democratic party has drawn from that faith and a determination a vitality which no blunders or defeat can quench, a vigor which neither age nor adversity can overcome. It has survived the war, survived the changes which the war produced, AN stands to day with unbroken front, - banners full high ad vanced mill as ready to fight as in years gone by, when the very name of Democracy was a synonym of victory. our opponents have pronounced our party dead and buried a hundred times, and sung 7'e DeUlllB mer the corpse which they londly hoped was beyond the reach of resurrect moo, but again the canonized bones have burst their core meats, and the uneasy ghost strode forth clad in en la plat. steel as of yore. The Demomatic party Id still a hv ing example of the el a Tinent truth that principles Mond in right and justice, though trodden under foot and forgot ten for a little:while can never die, and that an honest and intelligent people, however misled by prejudice and pas slim, will sourer or later abandon their false gods and worship at the shrine of constitutional freedom --liberty regu lated and controled by righteous, on partial law. Thrilling Incident l'he world of fiction hardly contains a more thrilling chapter than an inci dent which marked the life of the late Rev. Mr. Lee, Presbyterian minister& the village of Waterford, N. V. Mr. Lee was sitting in his study about midnight, preparing a dlnCOUrse to itch ver to his congregation, when lie heard a noise behind bun, and became COUFICIOUR that some one was in the room Mr. Lee exclaimed : Whitt Is the matter? ' and turning around IU luachair, lie beheld thegrun face of a burglar who was pointing a pistol at his breast. The ruffian had entered by a side window, supposing the occupants were locked in slumber 'Give mime your watch and money, ' said lie, 'and make no noise or I will tire' 'You may put up your wearam, for I shall trin4e no resistance, and you are at liberty to take all the money and valuables that I possess,' was Mr. Lee's calm response The burglar withdrew his menacing pistol, end Mr. Lee stud 'I will conduct you to whore my most preemum treasures are placed.' Ire opened the door and pointed to the cot where his two children lay slumbering in the Sweet sleep of moo cence and peace. 'These,' said Mr Lee, 'are my most precious jewels. Will you take them'?' e proceeded to say that ant a min liter of ihe g osp e l he had few earthly pops, iliut his moms were tlevot, 4olle oivei—the edooutoui of hi. eSilldreri I,llr,zi tr . and 1,..11,1, atleeted by too., t,., k Tears fill ing tits eyes, anal ' etpresaed the ut most, sorrow at ~,e act be was about to commit. Alter a low remarks by Mr. Lee, the would-he criminal eutihetiteil to kneel and loin in prayer; and there, in that. amid the silence of mid onoider poured forth hie re niorne and pOrliitetice, while the repro sentati cc of religion, of peace and good will, told him to 'go /111,1 sin 110 more.' Such /1 eit.e fiat kw parallels. ----Forney iii his "anecdotes 01 public men," reminds ois that Balti more w as for many rears the chosen spot for political National Goatee. lions. It wits iii Baltimore that Mar• tin Van Buren was first nominated and renominated. It was i u Balti more that Joseph !1011, of Kentucky, thrilled the nation by an electric speech vindication id Richard M. ,lolinson, in 188 i II iii , in Baltimore that K folk was nominated in 1844, is i 14 . 1111 Pei iitie efindidate. It was In hal, iii 1848, that Lewis C 41414 VI its it"tillistilett. It was to italtiniore that Franklin Pierce was nominated by the Iteniociaht and Winfield Scott by the Whigs in 1852. It was in Bal. tunore that John U. Breckenridge and Stephen A. I)ouglas were nominated by opposing. factions of the Democracy iii 1860. It was in Baltimore that Abraham lam tiln was nominated in 18thi, niih Ainlrcn JOlllO,Oll as Vice l'reeident.—Fort Wayne Democrat. All Sorts of Paragraphs Advico to foot mon. To run t bridled moor." Lriou are tin &lying s don' ottorrpt th hold 1,110 ruins, Beauty is worse than wine—it i erases both the holder and beholdr Cleanliness is next to god lines., is sonp that is next to charity. A paper out West is called The of lien. , IL will be laid out before Wornon do not talk morn than They 'ro listonod to more, that is The man that takes it dollar it but if ho steals It rnillyun ho is a The Chicago Republican call "an oxplodetuicid SCRBOII for ke 111: A men being naked what I, wino ho preferred replied, "000 plea " Al Niagara[ Falls, in tho'hole lusts, lager boor is called "Vin d rairek." A Mil wttukeo debating , oeibty log to work out "Do hackman souls?" tinloons in Cilnforniitliiive boor formed into ntiiiipenstirit , i of wed Some teetotalers would prefe tery grave to preservation of spir In time the mulberry tree bee silk gown, and n silk gown bee. lady. Grant's relati vs multiply ut rah,. Neat ly every body you anti-Grant It is stud Grant cuts a figura at Branch. It is thu stunt, old Numbur Ono. In writmg II hymn don't he to, tiler about the mutter you tlBO - Air Glll/.111.15 86, grid still vtgo hard workor, and in confident e tion of reaching 100 If men are honest they will te that their sUCClibti in life mar wonder tow them than it is to yot When a Kansas City saloon ot fresh barrel of whisky, he calls' Ong n new elevator. When an A ustrolian risks a fr tnke a glass of wino with him ho .Let us kiss the baby " Why should ft Ppidur be a goo bull player? liernuse naturally excellent fly-catcher. A learned Germun theologin lurid out thnt there are it few Ito forty-four millions of dovils. A settler in Minnesota war 0 attacked by two 1 ndietni, but guy a "settler with his halo rtil, Miss Frances Power Cobh,' I, published an essay on ..The We trust she understands her sul The N. Y Standard'a "faahior apeaks of a recent funeral on fifth as "the finest private affair ever ed." Ono who wialit2e world to what he knows about farming, a the best way to raise straw berries n spoon. A rolling-pin with which a wife had knocked her hughaie seven dines, canto in na evidence Indiana trial. . Patents issued To the Lou,l Flail VMS I, Or “cortiornieldornan the Chicago Post for "sphteiferril assmsaruty " In Toronto, recently, a man h wife's coffin curried through tt window, for fear of acratching th off his front door Fragments of human boings, into the air by a steamboat est are spoken of in Arkansas matin ic phenomena " The boy who wished be was a tam so that lie might play all Lb didn't reflect that a four/Lain play unless it works wall In Chicago the police aro coin of no untidy, with uncombed In washed faces and hands, dirty and very faulty uniforms Sad A child up town liar none (ut off by an accident, a Oiling neighbor thought it re s of being nipped in the Mid A Oil wd l'onfeetiuner to Hang Ll4llOll 111. put ott to any 'pretty 0. to .•tprt litwho enters tiw hi• faio,ll,, invn•a•l A '4 / 1 11 M runlwt 11111 ti•r u ivoti V:110/I toineit eat " 1111 11114 1111 , 1 . 4 . 1 we d 248 feline., with the Si cuuult , Y yot to hero front Tito liotol in Etighttici with tho numii 1M Abu "titi,puniniaplosak , gog" Housa lit naisiplon Bench ono kilter 111118 011111 tllll A young man in vamp meoting the prayers of the ri , s4.mbly hut "could not sit down to a royal w mitinz threo times ue !Mich a, hoot A lirookl%.o mother old vl,olhor ter to .01 1); . .r hurt find when that (-undid (lonise' replied no, 111'1, it spoils tho geritlernon's They hnvu ilowbpstper (lOW thu Ponjuulo Bird ol Good A iwvitpurcr could never fentli nest 111 111 is country with 141101 n n that In %VI luitagion, Dula wtire, Wit la /.1, L ty• 0114, years, mil, fire built dm hulk of ono hundred nn iron fitvalnors stentn.liipe, awl Or 11114 (IWO, a.•el ns Wvi tom-I , d 111 Ow hill 4) it, tit 11111ilai luau—pure us a 8111"Wilitkl. Oita I thy Cold peaks of the Buctian beautiful as the hour' that bathos in the crystal fountains of par graceful as Pearl afloat on her skiff over the dark blue sea ; vain than vain,—the warning to gun heart when intellect flashes Ire bright eye, and the lighrof the • breathed like music upon her fact
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers