THE BEDFORD GAZETTE IS PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORMNO BY B. T. MEYERS, At the following terms, to wit: 2 00 per annum, if paid strictly in advance. $2.. 50 if paid within 6 months; $3.00 if not paid within 6 months. U7"No subscription taken for less than six months paper discontinued until all arrearages are j,i Jnless at the option of the publisher. It has bn decided by the United States Courts that tbe stc ppgge of a newspaper without the payment of arrearages, is prima facie evidence of fraud and is a criminal offence. courts have decided that persons are ac* countable for the subscription price of newspapers, i; they take them from the post office, whether they nhscribe for them, or not. THE MONMOUTH REBELLION IN 1635. The student of English history will vividly remember Ahe bloody brutality with which the : suppression of this rebellion was followed up | by the relentless monarch who had attained a j success of which he showed himself so unwor- j jby. The celebrated Jeffreys. then Chief Jus- j tire of the Court of King's Bench, was sent to hold what has ever since been known as "the bloody assizes" in the counties which had been the principal seat of rebellion. The transac tions which occurred and the moral features of the chief monster and actor therein have been photographed Gr our benefit by the glowing pen of Macauley. They furnish a lesson and a warning to all those who would imitate his atrocities. Among the victims of his ferocious cruelty, was a poor widow, named Alice Lisle, whoso fate will serve to illustrate the temper and wor kings of unbridled power at the time. It will not lie without its interest now. She was a woman of respectable connections and of a most kind and benevolent disposition. She had given shelter and sustenance to two persons who had taken some part in the rebell ion, though she solemnly denied having any knowledge of their criminality at the time. "It was no easy matter," says the historian, "in such a case to obtain a verdict for the crown. The witnesses prevaricated. The jury, consist ing of the principal gentlemen of Hampshire, shrank from the thought of sending a fellow ereaturc to the stake for conduct which seemed deserving rather of praise than of blame. Jef freys was beside himself with fury. This was the first case of treason on the circuit, and there seemed a strong probability that his prey would escape him." To prevent this he gave loose reio to his di abolical nature. He called into requisition, all the influences of his position, and all the terror of his unlimited power. The proprieties of the occasion were wholly disregarded. The rules of law and the duties of his high office were alike openly violated. Witnesses were brow- 1 beaten into unintended statements; jurors were \ terrified into acquiescence in what they utterly j disapproved. The defects of the testimony i were supplied by the fury of the judge. The woman was known to be a Presbyterian. ' "I tell you," said the judge on the trial, "there J is not one of these lying, snivelling, canting j Presbyterians but in one way or another had j a hand in the rebellion. Presbytery has all manner of villany in it. * * Show me a Presbyterian and I will show you a lying knave." The historian proceeds to state : "He summed up in the same style, declaimed j during an hour against whigs and dissenters, j and reminded the jury that the prisoner's hus band had borne a part in the death of Charles j the First —a fact which was not proven by any j testimony and which, if it had been proven, would have been utterly irrelevant to the is sue. The jury retired, and remained long in consultation. The judge grew impatient. He could not conceive, he said, how, in so plain a case, they could ever have left the box. lie sent a messenger to tell them that if they did not instantly return he would adjourn the court and lock them up all night. Thus put to tor ture, they came, but came to say that they doubted whether the charge had been made out. Jeffreys expostulated with them vehemently, and, after another consultation, they gave a re luctant verdict of Guilty. "On the following morning sentence was pronounced. Jeffreys gave directions that Alice Lisle should be burned alive that very after noon. The excess of barbarity moved the pity and indignation even of that class whi eh was most devoted to the crown. The clergy of Winchester Cathedral remonstrated with the Chief Justice, who. brutal as he was, was not mad enough to risk a quarrel on such a subject with ab army. The proceedings, findings and sent- nee are approved, the prisoner will be sent under proper guard to Fort Mifflin, near Philadelphia, Pa. The commanding officer at Fort Mifflin is charged with the execution of this sentence. I>y command of Maj. Gen. Cadwallader, OFFICIAL, (Signed) Albert Harper, A. A. General. On the 17th of June writing to his Father under date at "'tort Mifiiin;'' he says: If they wont release me, I can bear it to the end, for if 1 am to suffer because I don't believe in shedding blood I will bear it. I would rather take this penalty than to do in opposition to my feelings on the subject ot war. Every one should act for himself and let others do the same. I judge it© man, but God is the one to Judge. I did not report when asked, but I think to be really guilty of desertion in the sense of the word I am not, for I never ran off, or hid from an arrest, nor resisted in any way. lam more and more convinced that war is wicked, since I am about military scenes. O, that peopio would learn war no more, but learn to love one another. A week later ar.d he writes as follows: FOUT MIFFLIN, 1 June 25th, 1805. ) Dear Father, I take the opportunity to let you know that lam very poorly. I caoit hard ly speak, I am in the hospital and want to know if you have done anything for me to try to get mo out, and 1 would like to have some of you to come down to see me, for lam very low. I can't stand it much longer, if 1 don't get better soop; but, I hope that these few lines will find you all well. I want you to do something for me as soon as you cau for I can't stand it much longer in this place. P. A. KLINE. And then comes the mournful intelligence of his decease. FORT MIFFLIN, ) July-Ith, 1865, J Mr. Samuel Kline, Dear Sir:—l write you a few lines to let you know that your son Philip A. Kline is dead. He died this evening about half past seven o'clock with the Diarrhea. I think he is in a better world than this. He prayed till the last for himself and family. ABU AH HESS. It was after the war was over—the rebellion ended, peace returning, this man was tried,' convicted, sentenced and punished to the death. ; He died in peace.—But his blood cries from the ground. His orphaned children, his wid owed wife, the bereaved family, they mourn and weep; but they rely upon an Almighty Helper and Deliverer, for "Vengeance is mine and I will repay, s&ith the Lord." _ THE NEGROES SOUTH. —The radical Gov. Coney, of Maine, in a letter, has the following to say about the Southern blacks: "Among them the marital and parental re lations, as a legal condition, have been utterly ignored, and the race condemned to the level of brutes, presenting a spectacle of abhorrent in decency which, had it been the only reproach of the institution of slavery, was enough to call down upon it the execration of mankind." Granting that this may be a good argument against slavery, is it not an equally potent one against entrusting the ballotbox to the keeping of such degraded beings* Rates of SUroertising. One square, one insertion, $1 00 One square, three insertions, 1 •*") One square, each additional insertion 50 3 months. 6 months. 1 year. 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How THE SHODDY BROTH ia MIXED. —The New York Tribune discourses as follows about, the incongruous admixture of radicalism, shod dy, and all the other odds and ends of the "ley al" party in Pennsylvania: "The contest is very animated over the Phil adelphia appointments. There are three slates before the President—the congressional slate, and the Cameron-Forney slate. The Congress men of the city profess the right to control the Federal appointments, and urge Morton Mc- Michael for Collector, Win. A. Kern for Post master, A. B. Slonaker for Surveyor, James Pollock, for director of tlio Mint, and Charles Gibbon for District Attorney. The Kadical slate is headed by Thos. Webster as Collector, John Gilbert Brown of the Press, for Post master, E. M. Davis, for Surveyor, George I. Ritchie for District Attorney, and J. Barclay Harding for Director of the Mint. The Cam eron-Forney slate would gladly retain Thomas for Collector, and Walborn ps Postmaster. Cameron wants B. Brewster as District Attor ney, while Forney wants Dan'l Dougherty, the eloquent young Irish orator, for that office, and Brown for Postmaster. Col. Fitzgerald was urged by leading merchants for the Collec torship, but has withdrawn positively in favor of Thomas, and is mentioned as the Union nominee for Governor. M'Clure and Curtin have scattered their preferences over the slates, and are more anxious about the comiug elec tion for Senator in place of Cowan, and the Governor also. The friends of Forney hold him in reseve for the Senate. Judge Kelly is in high favor with the Radicals as candidate for Senator, while Forney will be supported by the War Democrats and Douglas men. Cur tin, it is reported, will go abroad, and M'Clure run as his candidate for Governor. Pennsyl vania is hard to understand in a political way, and never more mixed up than now." Aye, that's it —"hard to understand," and "never more mixed up than now." There is where the shoddy ' 'party of grand moral ideas" is now, as seen by its national organ. Mixed —mixed—mixed; and, the Tribune might have added, lost—lost —lost; for that is the finality to which the mixture is fast drifting.— Patriot (j- Union. SriCKiNG TO ONE'S RIGHTS. —OId stories very often have a forcible application, to present times. The following anecdote we met with lately in an exchange : "How is it John, that you bring the wagon home in such a condition ?" T broke it driving over a stump.* * W here V 'Back in the woods, half a mile or there abouts.' 'But why did you run against the stump ?' Couldn't you see how to drive straight?' 'I did drive straight, and that is the very reason that I drove over it. The stump was directly in the middle of the road.' 'Why, then, did you not go round it.' 'Because, sir, the stump had no right in the middle of the road, and 1 had a right in it.' 'True, John, the stump ought not to be in the road, but I wonder that you were so foolish as not to consider that it was there, and that it was stronger than your wagon.' 'Why, father, do you think that I am al ways going to yield my rights v ? No t. I—l am determined to stick up to them come what will.' 'But what is the use, John, of standing up to rights, when you get greater wrong by so doing 7 'I shall stand up for them at all hazards. 'Well, John, all 1 have to say is this—- hereafter you must furnish your own wagon.' PICTURE OF THE RED SEA. —Hogarth WAS once applied to by a certain nobleman, to paint on his staircase, a representation cf the des truction of Pharoah's host in the Red Sea. In attempting to tlx upon the price, Hogarth be came acquainted with the miserly conduct of his patron,| who was unwilling to give more than half the real value of the picture. At last, out of patience, he agreed to his terms. In two or three days the picture was ready. The nobleman, surprised at such expedition, immediately called to examine it, and found the space painted all over red. 'Zounds!' said the purchaser, 'what have you here? I ordered a scene of the Red Sea.' 'The Red Sea you have,' said the painter. 'But where are the Israelites ? 'They have all gone over.' 'And where are the Egyptians? 'They are all drowned.' The miser's confusion could only be equaled by the haste with which he paid the bill. The biter was bitten. PAT AND HIS PIG. —A rollicking Hibernian of the light division in the Peninsula, was trudging along the road with a pig tied to a string behind him, when, as bad luck would have it, he was overtaken by Gen Canford.— The salutation, as may be supposed, was not the most cordial. "Where did you steal that pig, you plunder ing rascal ?" "What pig, Gineral ?" exclaimed Paddy turn i ing around with the most innocent surprise. "Why, that pig you have behind you, you villain." "Well, thin, I protest, Gineral,'' rejoined Paddy, nothing abashed, and turning round to bis four-footed companion, as if he had never seen him before, "it is a scandalous shame to thiuk how riddy folks are to take a honist boy's character. Some bla'guard wantin' to get me into trouble, has tied that baste to me cartouch box." The general smiled and rode on. ©?-"\Vhat a fine head your boy has,"' said an admiring friend. "Yes," said the fondfath er; "he's a chip of the old block; ain't you I sonny?" "I guess so, daddy, 'cause teacher said I yesterday I was a young blockhead