The Democratic Watchman. B E I. E N 'l' E I' - INCILLE'S MISTAKE, rbo vi.ot raer, bidding het adieu. I took my hat. and, lowa. g low, a 'that va Phan raarimg homeward sOOO to 1.... ed my come, R0ir5,...,1 tiny and !wig Ow 1..11 111Z11111 I lwarli dinoi 11,n 1111,1.1.1,, ktvl with n board I.nn•dlr• me Around my net It her lovely nl ni4 .4 lit, KIN4Ori me, yo prdrl pint kt44etl me thettugh •nd through `hook •1111 I 1/n1 ,1111111 g The Idue ing 1(1,4,4 tlutt did horn tried b. spellkkm.l git.p% ,1 L 01.1 . 1111 6 , 1 got, I left Illy ('alit ,' She .ttirl4l it ~ hat And ..,1...1 with yam!), t 1 , 1 In 1111 l ther, • Oh dear , I thought law+ I , aa, toy brother What shall I 110 1 .1(11/ /1 1 4/ 1 11 1111 1 lier and o'er. I la. Iced Ihr eourtutt , ',b... ,, ',tore'' Sll, 111111k11114 01,1 1 1111.111 Weizetl upnn toy 1 1,111 1 k , 1:141 fort 1.4 WI 11111111, /1111 110111 1 11, Clolll4l l ' quick. Whet. oto niy coneh to tale, I 1 1 11110141 Pleop, I tossed, and pondered "%Vital a wealth nil 1,,v0 Tim( girl gills In4l 11 x 1,1,1111er 4111' 4111111111 1,0111 Mlldogr. 11,1 1'111• Idea gILrn•VI 111141 VIIIII 144 e 1441 11.44 We, I lh,r often. owl 1., cn.•II11ru11 ('liar.,•rr evt, ttttt nth UN run VlOll ll{4t . 14nd VIII 1.11111 wVn• IMO Ind onf... 1 Wit' hvr • 111/Al 111%' The night Rho 1.1%..d 111. in ',meek° for Pun ' • F.,. Henri your ill pfd hettd. nor In oUn r I.ltimftmmuf. , and .ffijg ui h , •d '1.011.11.1111 know 11" 1 1 / 1 • ..1 , .. 1 11.1 . I 111.1 111S1 111 my 1,5 , 1501 1 , Ill•1,11114 oti ,• • • • • ihr...01 nll these Velir•, I 111 , 1 not Mire regrst ‘I, 11,i‘Ing hill., nl ths tngl sln• sut Happy JIM I and h,lly hen, I 1.. nnldr her, 11111.4E1i 111 Him • I .“114111nvl, hrl , rnel Ind tht•ii she slt '1 he 11, d , ar. of 1111 4 IM, I'h.l r dli,n't off , n Illll{o . 111 A LESSON FROM THE BIRDS Address Delivered Sept 9, 1871, to a Sunday School Picnic, at Beaver Creek, Md 111 %II 11111 NV heti flit. Vici‘t. 1/4 riiutintt, with the Note- 4 , 1 I he %%•• twig here 14141.1%, 31'1 . kI•RN. Its 1.11,4% Nettil 141,11t1 me•rils its our Mein' t.,l h r h r 1 , 11 ,1, 9 or are tte ou:t tti: grrifid rltsl ILt• lentli, le•I 1111Ie-, /ill 1111iLf, have• tilled the leutt ranupy and vladne , n. 9 II 1111 4 is "lir purpose.. We have• f uller...l live) It llopelve.1.11•4111 11.-1. 1.4 Ihr 1)1 1111111 Hilt 111111 . 11 .. , 111•1k eu 111 e lords, 8,1 hull 11u.egihrit11111 • I nz• like a 1.'1,1 Air t ali: , , we tnii.t no koloovileol;:e ilont ••••• 11 lilt (1.,.1 hn 111Jt,ie 1.. 1... 1 11" 14 , 1111 nll.l In ria.l.lej the tarill aiii -4iiig liner the it4l,l,tage ill 114 Ili 111,. 11/1f11.011%, I. jar 11.1 ;Ili UeCr Herr them it we i t tl.wre the end 1,1 /1 ,1 tritlt rt+ the, tit,..tver tht 1,,t 1 , 1 1111,1 It I net 11. /1,1 vt,. B.:, 11 we tune our ht.kl God ind brawn and eternal I,arlP are Inn 01 Illonnls , q4l% and 19rar,• li , him 5' 10 MO N1111111•111,11y ns li,r 1.10 hoy, pe.ar $ll 1,1,,v,• IL,• 11,..n. r- d.wwwin we lia'r MEE 1 , a% e Immo 11,1 Irom 1111 tiott I it, 1114,1 Yltilf•11 I men repeat will , pry lii. 1101 Witt to the e tillotr4 her.. 1,111 Nil ~mind tlt lily , t 411• 4. I t , t 1111 .4 11111,11 eeilh the genial Kenn,- ttt t•trlN an] I he u~l their raaig and tOIVI theta Ilitiii,/.11”1% in and 1 11/1 it 1111111.: 1/11 . .1 . Iree, app. rrritl , lQ ',alio and tree 'l . lllli I Art nnt 14,4111444 4 i oil ft loth las rtl.,r, rk.lt t.111 . 111M 1 ti..• 1 111.1.'1 .1 1101 1.0 ;I if 4 1 lot lot r-• se, r.,:k bor. i 'tool .1. , Ti. ear,, "ill 111 the ss. sst Ilss• a "we for hi- rr•rosise, lisp hit Ilse SsAss•• ss the n.Ln, whieli made the !Is,. is ntr , 111' sistsl-sls,•11 , lull of glad a... 1 cheer AM the, were, bean each morning a tin% id hard work, for the t0ie1.,4 find 111100,1* and grt-tt% li 111111!..• were heavy load. 1.1,11, 111111 wllll no 111111 , sod were they fixed into their ;dare. Anti so an the telthered tribe whirl) 101 lowed the retreating winter into theae wood- MHP in the work which God litt.l vise', them to do Ansi When the tie-ta were tinitdied and received the preeioun egre for whlrh Ihet 111411 been made, and tbeme gave plare y 01111 g bird. , and I heard their hungry eliirimiga tor food, anti (Honk. rare. Wen Illipootil upon the parent. I heard no I•l , lllplaining rules, lnu 100.1 was sought for and obtained, and the rung went on, ittni - all *van glad anti j,,%0it., as though there WWI nothing tor birth., to do but sing and be glad, and let the world go on without a stroke of toil or a rare. Parents and children, thee , . bird. have as heavy a tack unposed 'lieu. them in their sphere of lice as any we the have in ours. l'he struggl e .or i preservation of their liven is 811 hard its that in which we are engaged for the preservation of ours. The sticks they carried for their neat, were as heavy timbers to them as those we handle in rearing our homes. The insect, they slew and carried in triumph to their ihe grain they hunted in the blaze of the hot summer 611 n, the flights they had to escape the ra pacious hawk, bring home to us thoughts of many a point of likeness between their lives andourn. Yet they have all the time set us en example of patience, perseverance and content. went, and they have greeted our ears with sweetest song while they labored on in ceaseless toil. The same God who made them for their place in the creation, made us for ours; and while God's Son tells us that not a sparrow falls to the ground unnoticed by the Father, he adds that we are of more value than insiny spar rows. Why is it, then, that we, in our higher sphere, may not take up the toils of eaoh day with hearts as light sod songs as glad as theirs? Have we difficulties and dangers to harass and try as? So have they; fur I have heard the darkness resound with the dismal hoot of the Owl which sough their 'lves, end I have Keen the branch which held their precious faintly qui vei in the storm, -itcay they pursue (hell search for food with joyful anticips ions of the chirping,' which will give Mace to tones of gladness when the hungry month is And mar not we, while we toil at the plow or at din worli.beneb, or in the store or study, to win the means of lilt for those dear to um, fill out • we remember how gladly the fruits of our labor will be reeerr•ed Ibo•+e litr whom they were wont Or. if we must travel abroad, and title, leave the le lights of home belmid tie, have we tilt cat our reward when our wandering. lead 114 bark to the spot Ilelirest ill IV+ on earth, and we feel trout the depihe ot our hearts that •• - IN 4weet to hear the tt Midi dog's hone , t hark tiny deep ineoth'd seleontenN we draw near loone. Tim maeet to know there le an eye sill mark our e..th)g, sea look brighter s hen We 00010 All our earthly troubles have their ci , rresponiling Joi . is, and all our earthly lahors have their earthly reward. fu these respects, I see not that we have either itil‘iintage or ilisadvantage of the humbler creatures which God has made. He has given tis wants its mere 11111 mats, w conittion With all other crea tures, and so he has placed within our reach the means id satisfying them then. are We not joYOIIB and happy and lull ut song Why are we otien gloolor and sail, and brooding Over Our work, and complaing 01 our tiustisi, and tetiling that our 101101 114 Ilea , V to tsar'' There is one went law which we bate ‘iolated which our or. I .44mile:tellers -the lords —have kept, and their keeping of it has tilled them with happiness mid t toutentlitent, While tour twltuntu of It 1 1.0. s tilled our spirits with groaning and pain They have hilly carried out the end lor which Gail made them They are s pist what he intended them to be, and 14, be this is to lie alums happy They are not so made that they can understand, to the least degree, the great and glorious plans of the Creator, and eonseglielitk heY lire made that they naturally and iii-titictiselv carry out the will id I They Wiwi, like machines, till ing the place tor which the% were ;mole, and /ill the laws which govern their lite, work iiimbstrlicleill) and , 'or these laws were tr4lneil in all All wise Nlisid We have lor our exitheil pro Org.. aii understanding of the plat. tit lied eu tar net Is arses-art to enable a to work with him nl car ing t hem tail \Ve Cannot see tar rll.l 4.1 them, but we can re , ei , e iutel ligitile directions (ruin hint who can, and il er lollow these directions the end lor which we are Made will be reached Lt us, and in reachilig it ar air made happn, In the fullest (-tot( it% of our limiter. Anil s,, the lite 4,1 man will/ Vlllo,e 110.1 desires lout to ilk I. t 1 1 / 1 1/i I soot whra< tar It ar tit 1111 C win Hors hear ill lilt w6u cannot be plunged into gloomy atelanClioly I , V any event ill lite. Though the song of lease whet, the seeker tor lorry has his wing Itst,e,ll them and the ,111, alai though their hearts throb teat when. ito hoot iit the (IWI lis ”1121.11,. gmir. pnd the 'homing 11051 it 1141 4 044014 g I, hesari trgatio., and the bright ;dimmer. Ilits the !lila were nuk,inwl, No alit, 4 11. 4 11 401 104441 11Te r14414• . 1 44444'4 4 1 roe i Le alert % it ti Man t .1..1 1.1141. with V101110.1.,111441 4 1414,0 414444 d,,rl. ash it. art. , Mat eihk Wei their 1114 4 1 , 4044 may . 1 .11. e r Li" Senn LnndM.re 14144414 1110 4 411 1 ' 0414 444 OW , rr , delrtlln ol the ditr..eott. with 1,. it het rind tt Ilil pu iihisiettt it tate belor e them, at light re t el.. them 'it 1114•11 111ut lot.tretlie% remember the bleree.l Niat.ier Who - ehtlere 1 lor and it in a i.milege to cutler for ht. cake, and they eare ma what men twi t 110 to/ Brett, for the Nillilt 100101 wills 1411fititerrlig 1111111 10 the glo rious home "over there," and the midnight oilence t. broken, and litrunn of glitrilleen fill the doutial pr...., for the mutat-ling wounds and the gloomy ..trromoling. are reirCen, here,' fill more, for the exceeding joy with which taith lu a glorified it. deenter, and obedience II) hint, have tilled the heart» oh hi. follower.. We have more to do ir we heroin plod' the ohteet for which we are made than anrnotln hrn r, but we have snore hi lin, It Milli, and lire cirri re !nen', hly more g i411,11, when e.I. /1+(,11,41 whole God ...peak. to u. ti. lug Word, and no learned what he will hate ud to lin, we lofty MA defiance to tone, and change, and death, and hold to our heart. it linppiness which will ew aide Its ttiwa)o to rejoice, and fill our ...)118 with strung desire to ',raise God tong. Then have our 'tong.* music and a rich rier.s which trO harmony or earth ran rival; and while With the organa of tweedh we make the earth resound, our heart» reach oat toward the eternal ble..edrien. and delightful rest of our 'home in heaven, a 1001,fing 0100,1, a house not made with hand., eternal in the heaven.. One more lesaon from the birds, and we are done. Of late I have observed them gathering lino flocks, and the conga they need to sing have chan ge d notes of a diflerent character, and it is evident to any observer that they have something of importance in con iemplation. We know front our oh aervations in the pact what it is they have iii view. The CEold winds which come mweeping down upon us touch the instincts of these little creatures with the impulse to flee away before the breath of the coining winter is upon them, to the sunny land where bloc moms are ever blooming, and where the air is ever perfumed with the odor of flowers. In a little while we will have them with us no more. These trees, so beautiful and verdant now. will stretch their naked arms into a bleak, cold sky, and songs of g ladness will not be heard here. But the a Imo birds which have lent us their presence hrongh the summer will be repeating 'hely labors and singing their songs ill summer clime, and ha"ppiness is in siore for them there am here, because they will follow out the laws of their nature then as they do now. There i n winter of life coming for us all. The het its that beat high to-day will soon he silent in death. The voices we heal in song will be stilled forever. The places our presence now tills will kill. , lIS 110 more. Are we preparing for that event so certain to °Ale ? 1)o we gather ourselves togetlier, and cheer each other on, and sneak of the home where no winter nor night Igor storm can ever roue, mid where "aumi the flowers that deepened to their eternal Leona shire the trees of Eden first bowed themselves to the bree/el of earth," we may meet with all the gaud who have gone before, and dwell together in pet feet happiness forevermore? In midsummer thole was a pair of birds which built It nest and reared their toting within hand-reach of my door. The little ones grew rapidly, and when they were well leathered the nest could scarcely 0100011 them, and the parents began operation , - to per suede them to Ilv. fearful they were, and how careful, but how pers... venlig. They meant that e‘ery little fledgling should learn the use or us wings. And I saw 1111.111 for a little while about the trees, and then they all departed together, und it I ever saw them afterwards I 1 , 1.1 I 11111 dis anguish the voting from the old lards Thettilevelopmeot linti vomit, and they were what they had been untie for Now, if there 101111 g birds hilt] been 1141. 1100, %%1111 11110 r wings tin Used, /11111 no experience tarnished them of how they might to behave them selves 10 be perfect birds, the% might Lute had Moil carried to them and lived in dive through the:outliner lint it hen the frosts were Sir 11100111;g the earth anti smiting the leaves from the trees, and the cold winds were sough nog the death song I/1 the .lend summer, and other warblers were winging their flight to the sunny South, tbet m 11.4 bone been sellto perishw our cheer less clime, Chnotutn pioreul. let 111 e 4ns In 4011 tlllll your ttnrk fir %our children In but poorl) done when vim till the , .' moutlot with 1 . 00.1 nt‘it tiler iltettt With line ( 1 1011110 g. It ILIA 14 41111,1' for !hew, 411.1 no inore, sou would do it lets erliel I twllhlud4l 1111 nourn.lonent from leetile 1111 , , 111 the 11)0/1110:: 20 110111 e In that rhme here the 'III) N net er net, 11101 where 1111 trifler 01 hie %111 e‘er When ilelith eiiiiies, 1111 111111 Sill) lifter 1 - 14111 e rtir he!, its 10 1)444 resent Ille tvitl 1)1114' /Mike 1111 1 111 Irel Ihr nutlr inteneely the 1.1111., , , trhlrh will eiii2llll their lilt loreser 1. , 1 111111.1 11'11111 Ilil . lll In Ilt. 11011 litts gut ell Ilion I'lll4l , llles 1114' 1111111 1.11 11/1.11 illt• .3...0 , , 11l 111, 411e11 1 / 1 0. iirttter In the Father, And eivuotl, tiott ilieN might know ' lllll the 1)4,11' trite ( 111141 .11.4110 VI 110111 Thou hunt Atilt! " knowledge 1111141 be and it is Obtained 111 the 1111 ills nlr truth, In the ble•oed toluene which ;011 linm gut en 114 In our 11wu language, Illy Holt s•ter,i,turet, Car, a rhrlSlll4ll hr mllrrll C11,11(1 , 1, 111111tV /11),1 Hain , here, Imo+ in gi‘ t , Olen, knowledge of Clir,t, inn% the% TIM% nee.lre " i, it L. , 00.1 part n 1,1 . 1, cannot lie take', 'I NN I I in. wnrld I.ln. never .een nn i,_iinii,ia, well mdeipted ere lie h 11 , 11'111 Itrt eel the 'hide In Ctia.k . ll .1 11. lit "onll.lt etrhnul, atul it 11/01 ffilehtwhat ht ti4)l ' n help It will he w h en we all Otte nttt~elsen til the witch nhOtliti I ei its undo• dilv to rejoicing tutu 4n , ).1 e heir tul eittn. II in the history of n o r `iiindav t•elitnil, and of the COllllllll 'lilt' In which ,ve Illhor, and work 111 ihr enniing vemr aM ae have never iione helort to tench children the truth and trod Flu hers told uuithere, let UPI learn Irmo the Fordo, which have lin i heir 1 , 11/1111ter work xhoutlle,and are now re tidy It, depart with their FIDDIEI I= Who, rho 11,tet•re over hlf•tew,in, the heath* ever ' rend herr the eapaca lea whiell have horn developed here may exert then, melveft In new , ecettem of ,Itappatema and 01111.1111er pv. The mono) }WWI that nestles in your now ennnot rest there 'lse hand with whic'h t ou pnah astott• lie thorns which tweet VOW Child' s pathway will grow feeble, and aner while death will clap it, and your chiliiren'a learn will tall upon the cold clay which has given up the tenant who once loved them an only a parent ever loves. II you give %our children all that earth can idler, you give them nothing which can nerve them or S ou whet, I hey maind about your dying form at the last, and ere I he last of a parent's love an the light of earth fades Iron) your glazing e)e forever. Then your imtiles for them will he done, and their own •vill but begin. But give them what God (Mere, what heaven fur. niithen, what demita Chrint has brought right in among an, and youtdie a fain. ily circle together with a bond which death cannot sever, and which tvrll grow stronger and stronger throughout all eternity, while you formal' our children with an irrettiet4ble weapon , for the battle of life. May God help us all in every wink wliich r he has given us to do, is illy Prayer. THE BURNED CITY Incidents of the Great Fire at Chl cap. By the mercy of heaven, not by the might of men, the mein] lire in which Chicago has disappeared, wee stayed at last on Monday night, Octoller 9th. Heavy rains coining up checked the progress of t he Heinen and stifled the emouldering embere of the vast deaola• Lion. The fire had thne lasted, with but a slight intermission, two days and three nigh's. Ti welly hail called her self proudly the kale olliatilens Iles in savkeloili and ashes, and imind Omni her rained' preenu•ls a hundred and homeless people he In 1111111111e11 1 danger, sin perhaps, indeed. hui 1,1 di.•ea.e, despair, and 14111 la. We tile 1444. w tilde lo glee 11le piddle 11. nnoenlel iirec , 4llll ul ilie U•nluuanuu 4,11111 e lie 11141-1 disasirous lire %ewe!' has I'l ef bests I%llllll'll 011 11116 euuu tsl•nl. The recoird 111,41 mist Ilestructuve lire bloke iOIII 111.0111 111 O'CIOCk Sun. the western division ol the em,, at the vorner of Peß.oen nerd detlerson streets, a 11 1 / 1 14. 1111111 W hiel in o worse evil have been found, hir the houses sir blocks around were wooden Irocuteuts, as dry and crisp and read) to he burned an if they lind been prepared for that purpose. And they had been prepared. For works at almost unexampled &oath had Id:toted the west, Inure particularly to the neighborhood of the city. The prairie- were bare and brown, the WIIII•11,11rHI'M &led rirvli• ed itinio-t its it a HllllOOl/ httd swell The mom.• Ire thin quarter was tern ble 1,111 only' the beginning 11l horror,. %%ere nuns to rOilie The wnnl 10.1 just net In from the oionilliNest Willy In the 4 , tening, and Just abolit the rinne illicit die (midi/ignition began 11. , liened, and soon Ilierea,eil 111 will leilet• all it breame it furious gale. The env fire englinte4 came to the eeene with all 1...HM1,. deepateh ; the lire- Olen H ell. 1111110 Si %%Orli OM Willi their e in aulahning the lire ol the p.m ~.104 evening, and et en had lint be. n Ire.h Ihey could have been ol In tle stall, for the flame. had gut tinder headway and were out 10 be stopped. The poor people who oeenpied the tenet/mut. sprang, in .frtivut from their bed., and with tries 01 terror ran down Into the .Ireet. Bed. and liirmlure mf rill de.eriptiotim were 16ruwn front the window., tool lay in Iteterogetteon.l.(lll IliNlllll On the side walk., olo.tructing the patnotge In and fro of the tire eone pante., and 111.1,4 preventing what little Cleaner 110 bad keen of impeding the onwaid rush of the lire, and noon the whole dootiet, as tar down its N'ait linren strict, tine one .Inert of flame., roaring and hissing and licking about Idle. Id lumber and tow, ol who li era. 1,.• I and fell trashing to the gr.uod. The lighleil ii Inr mules around% and the ricer look ed like it stream of 1,14,./.1 llnnln had the hunllle. which 4a...opted the dietrun time tow., al/. will. their a nd In to eatn.g their Immo. 11.11.1 hirniture, which to of them itp. , their all, it was rt thing not to he thought of Wollien, bail ,7111‘1, ran Kereitilillig through ihe i•treet., a 1,.411t (.11 one lino, while little children Ching to then, n. renroleg with terror tin swill! night. NI, n emen the roar on the dames and the .rush 4,1 lalling timber., (mold be heard the ..I the hOrsee ringing out on Ihe 111;111 air Ther wunl~l not be driven livka,. lenl, N 11114.1101 with tear, tell down in their elahlen 11,1 wen ririeteil Pills , /slid the .r. he entg menet. 4,1 burnme was molded to the to whirl. “Iwa‘. arroniiinnie. hnriiiiig Lenldmgs whin ,vnier lin. been showered Upon them In three lontra the lire h a d Wilde ft ch./in .vrai lie from 11, , Rove. i-treei In Van Ilitren,anel tr.on the river to d e th.r...ll ...trona, it tulle 11e length and near', a toile in hr•Holth l'he whole mit awoke in terror amt the p•tri vie, only to liiid then, 111111 ta,ll, (Wining 111 Niel fro, will. 000le4 -Win ?. on curl,'. 1414 , 1 1.1.11,41 rL I 1%1 • Mid holi long tiler [lieu who lay in their arms atileep i I rill 1111COTIPI . 1011.1 of the ilresit d . r which hall he fallen them, or rip wit h win , ilering eves la thmt mother's trines - W tint was it ',till n 1 1 ,141? NVltat made the eky int red? \Vit . % nit re the streets so toll of people At some he tire did not go Ina direct Itnr , lilt Mit eimin houses -- as fires will do ittom..t to/harmed the whist ~r the thine, As it lip proached the rivet tt became evident that it would cross It. and puma that tear was realized ; hot- the %vim] carried brands itivrOn , i the ir,,froW stream to the northwest side, 111111 there, falling on the wooden adpri nine the gas works, set it in lire, and then ,the flames, having secured a foothold, rushed on to their work of further de struction 'I he gilt+ 1101187 Wan de-laq eli, and the I It 3 was IIVII(Pd nnli I.v the tires which were consuming itself Then name a panic, such as a city 1145 rarely seen. Vague rumors of pillage filled the air, and deeds of vio letter aml horror were more than dread ed The people rushedpellmell from their houses rather than Oemain within them in dark !Wail—the must hated and detested thing ill times of disaster an't catastrophe. ''hey ran in crowds about the streets, meeting crowds rush ing from opposite direct lons, and, 111 their fright trying to push their way through the dense masses which en countered them. were trampled down and many of them crumbed to death in the desperation of the moment. Au awful spectacle was presented when the fire, having swept down from the river, reached Lake Street. An eye witness of the scene says that the body of the flame preaente4 a front of half a semicircle, and belairid it was a raging, roaring hell of lire, hall a mile deep. Nothing material could ',withstand the surge of this tretnen lotre sea of flame. On its advance northward it had driven the inhaln tants into Lake anti Water streets and on the bridges, much as a prairie tire stampedes frighted animals. The streets were tilled with &distracted pro. pie, panic•stricken and huddled in a mob almost as terrible to behold as the roaring 'c onflagration . Until now some ins' seemed to bare pointed out this section as beyond the reach of the fire. But when It was seen that the ocean of flame was irresistibly whelming everything, all depet?dence ite Mount' means otsuccur 'wait lost. Looking down on this awful Assem blage, In as it wait by the limning ..ri,,,,qm light, and hearing the horn I. e litinattit tumult *Wee the crack line of the on-coming fire, it seemed the *Nailing realization of one of those old visions of the day of jade ,neat. An overwhelming sense of a eatastrol,ll? 11011111 i the power of Man to arrest, robbed this sarging mob of people of the usual petty considerations 01 lite. Tlitene who were strongest at.d iiiiett cowardly, knocked the others down 111 their delirium ; Well, women, and children were trampled noon by human herds, that fled without reason hither and thither, tittering the most ',mini groans HMI cries of distress. IVi.eii the fire seized upon Lake street, overlapping the magnifivent stores and warehouses which extend from Lake to the river, and igniting them anti all their costly contents as if they were so much tinder, it horne sight was presented, for now lye, t usandm were O hemmed in betweed P re and the 4 river. The stauniletie wits sickening beyond the power' of words to tell Men and horses were jammed on the bridges; women and children clinging alike to eiteli other and the most pre 1.10118 Of then household elfects; some tit them with the clothe. nedr, iorit from their beslies i in blindly idiort serraming and moaning. All distinc tion of class anti nationality was lost This narrator crossed the Wells street bridge and reached the track of the Galena road lie does not remember how he crossed it. It seemed to lion atierwarils that he was lilted upon the human waves and thrown blinded and confused into the opposite Street Here the smoke wits 'ammo, 111 IltllllO. HI. lows over the stalls, and through Wells, Lasalle, Clark anti Dearborn streets. As he ttirtied to look inlets a fiery cincture stretelied all round 10 the 14011(11 and nest, and through the smoky cross•streets burned the red glare of the on rushing flee.] with Its Wilde.] jIIIWN tool liiriii lost. The streets looked like last nweii doors. A i in t the ttiortrile dawned—and upon what n Keene! The eon rose In rid R/1 Keen through the smoke whu•h hung abuse the city like a curet.. That which at night had been *win] In ite genndeur, looked demolitte and w a n ift the early Italic The burnt dimrietm looked like hell with the lire , ' burnt out. Men, drisen by that blind instinct which wake. them, though hopeles , , returned to the scene of that disaster which had ruined them, sought the spas where once their 6onles had stood, and sitting down on some pieces 01 'ellen timber, actually wept arid wrong (bear hands tri anguish (hie of Illewr wretched beings sought his liollll . , SlOl, 111 Steloplo,l4 on a hall charred beam, caused It to spring up, and from beneath it came, a sick Iv odor Ile 1010 1 . ) I , lrilf . I %lid 14'11.1 11455 the 'lonia,. and MI% I.eaeittli it the dead body nit hit 14011, IL young wan of about '2O >ears of age, who, proha• lily, returning to the horse to gave .. , ,alething he prized, had 'Allen in the 11%01e+ 110 , 1 bel•rl buried 10 death -- roe-ted to death. nat,:bun t the day the tire eOllllll 44491 N 1110.14 4449'111193 114 1110.1gli 111 1 . 11.11itq11 4 had mortiose. The wind blew a hurricane, At 0101101 1.,r the express purpose 111 aiding the fiend ut lire, who would en or it street with a roar as 1110102)i tleition yet more alit lignatit Than Itini-elf who was drivin g low 111 tretay Then the lire rushed un at slue houses, seizeil thew, and they were Whirred tlWity 111 rtlll4/1e and flame, or sent with entelsing walls and bursting beams toppling to t he growei Vet atn•il the rage their fall mull seareels be heard In streets border ing on the riser, It., ill"-, In the rear tit Kinzie and I•butili H e aler, walls fell with a sullen roar into 11, Willer, which seethed and foamed for It nut merit, and then closed above them tin ruffled. In Wabash 11,1.1 Miii, ly an ntenitee, rind In ell the places where the richer elms. of (lunette lite, when the tir e came the .listres. NW, awiiil Women whit Innd nftVer known what rt mare WPM, 101.1 Contnnineftllr were, ll` , 11111. would SU ',pone, utterly iticapahle• 111 bearing w ith equanimity such it f,t 11111111 y as the destruction of their homes, yet here there were titan) in stances of heroism and love, worthy to be ening in story. Mrs. L-4. of Wabash ',reline, had been detterted her .ervfl. o . ar $OO/1 lIPI It i•e,• 1111'1:z111, •,' t ever the% IA I. • ' 1111111114 011 She, her elan : rt... r, and her reivalid husband were n.• .re in the house, and the flames rapt ily approaching. There was no help to be expected, fur everybody wan bent in saving what lie could of his own property. There wits „,,, II nl ~,,, nl to spare, and the two ibelly carried Mr L away in their arms at it irto in safety beyond th each of the fire. Such instances w huneseroun, alike among rich and poor. Children were carried, screaming with terror, women were ehrieking, men shouting, and running. Some old and sick and helpless were carried oil stretchers—some apparently tie mented or stupefied were dragged along. Close to their heels, in hot pursuit, came the belching, roaring, and crackling names. I n route places they actually advanced as fast as a mate ran. The most awful of all wee the thunder - nun roar that scented to rtill upward and outward front ihe con ire .4 I lie imge holocaust ; now there son .1 Ile a report like the boom of tlis• tent grmr.-, riurtiri came a snapping like the retitle of nineketrv, The rush from the . Tegniont House, when the word was RivFn , was akin to a panic. The stairway. were choked and as the smoke from the approach ing fire came in puffs through the win• the situation seemed frightful. In three rapes ',emus jumped from t h e , i...10w4, aid two children were I ed up tit h e.lm end throwiri from the !mirth story window, and landed on the pavement uninjured vie had a broken leg f from the eecond•etory others were bruised fr cause. M Throughout the day lion raged, and all hope ing it seemed to Ire lost, yet continued to blow lorce; and when night new horror was adder drunken and intimated the streets, chanting nl bent on pillage. It ince yet all experience shows that in tunes Of great di not chastened, brit the their natures is rowed tt become moral maniac and hall-grown boys hrt al stores and houses, search rat her of w isk v der. In some Ift.UItICVN toxicatmg liquors were streets, the beads kno then took place scenes description to their title ing bestiality. Men fell down In their tra others took their places and he helplessly on th others who wallowed like hop e s. In some Ins! relit were overturned ran down the gutters a which leaped along I, burned with a gloonl Several persons were Int in this way, but many away by their less drun although there waft litt tellowship in them, seem to have formed a Inure Collllllllier., Minil much Of horror, plllnp shed. But the tire -wit ? The wind altered IN then almost died alit. drenching rain, ar.d nt meemed lu linve hunted too, lind conic m nhund Ines the moral terrific! cm continent had ever km Already stun• or the t tiering rettulis ul the have been felt Niel' wl ago were millionaires tit Kehler, 11.111141.1 perllllleAr I.llleli It took years to a been overthrown in n an 111111./111/11e been destro has taken ‘ettret to actin 1 , 4 reported, many 111 made crazy by Ihis 1/1410 er time nor care not) re von, F/11111111.44 hive het and all ertlnuury has net iithahitartin of the IN tun itrouiis of all ,lies•,•. ntreets, some lifire'ool. /11141 .1111Ver, there were of the wt Elie) were shelterless, I itmerllt nirickttu, 1114.1 'l'l , l. figol,l or mu.' in when• retain PH were we lettnlv for !matting one children, children lor band,. lor wit eM, and w 1,111.14,—W/1r pitiable to trim ka and good., were the streets, but they hill While there are titan gellerolls devutlllll on I li and Iq per rip , he p , 11.12 till,•, 11•• I= Noll WWI Irving ICI rl•ll.nv pe•rx Iron, nil ;ace, and men to help 1;;;;;, hnl 11; 1e.48 he pond them '.. 4 .7111 were ehcl.lrueed, DrIV llaSe iitkejj 4 ;51)0 fur all 11011r . 01.' clew, on getting titmtregne, 1 ttttt I It, iger Fit three lb. vs 101141 MI 11411 Ii M•ll frt . ; etrel IhultrM I oth 'none WI times midi:, hilt oftener RI Itne 1141%, Iwlle of Aug h,rtnerll ul (Ito, phice,) lire rent e tor M 1111111. 1111111 her tint, In order io owl II ilrilik. The outliving on Ile, lienri rendering 10 141 11,008 Ind men, woolen died Ii ether like emo note., need in other pin illeeem.ememt lierllotll.l 111 k 1 hor bOiplemn child bread. hens trok Imre not w v to nine me :tied 100 11121.: i l•• 410 1110, 1. 1r1100:•••• • r •tmille. 11 11••1-1 proreedir eli•I .1••• 10, 1,1 11.“ . ,.! 1 , 1 ,1,11Tt0% in the pnna 1.1 and patirnto Who have Iron. h eiM Of 1 4 1041114 , t1 Wlrn•li lit the beat were all Monday night, and thee tit Tnetillay. There were people t% I terttess their 1.111164.1541 !molly to (;o•I'm jIII , IIZII/1, I.utl " rills IS it Pre( GOIIII.ITRI{, %WI 11,, vorsc All the paekttle llottee and 11111r1 V Or t he elovnto mimed, Hull these two Chesgos best prosperity rrupted Two cornimnies ()I !Jo faotny Hrri.ed once put our patrol dal Isle and property. The railroad coin pat, ie fret. thome 'Alto Lad rriet,4 IA city, even pie her elle! uud Philntieli.l.ift pond vi V) 11/1110111 Tlll. 101 l ,1 :11,•/1 ,01 11,, I,lll_ and ihree nul nearly three-fortha of 111' A young lady with runt, but rather large an a San Frandsen shoe rto tired. The admiring elo Gallic extraction, eomnlii gnw•r we m• t ' Oet, b .11ellee tee iltiMediately."