( man. VOL. 6) BELLEFONTE, THURSDAY MORNING, DEC. 19, 1861. NO. 49. ° The Bemoratic Watchman, ALEXANDER FUREY, Publishers. Per annum, in advance,) $1 50 “a Foot sly within 6 months. 2 00 « «if not mid until year is out, 2 50 Mo paper di ed until all back subscrip- tions are , and ¢f lure to notify a discontin- mance at the end of "0 time subscribed fi» will Be sonsidered a ne ent. TERMS §t ADVERTISING. } jutsrtion. 2 do. 8do. Bour lines or less, $ 2 3748 50 square—12 fines 50 75 100 To aro 2t lina 100 150 2860 Three squares—36lisy 160 200 250 C 8 mos. 6 mos 12 mos. Six lines or less, 150 $3008500 One square 2 50 400 700 Two squares, r 4p 1 600 1000 Three squares, dp 3 8 00 12 00 Four squares, ® Bye! 10 0u 14 00 Half acoluma, 10 00 14 00 20 00 One column, 4j16. 00 22 00 40 00 Over three weeks anhpless than three menths, 25 cents for each inser on Advertisements not yarked with the number of fnsertions desired, Willhe continued till forbid- den and cha" 8300TCng to these terms. Fire, pol’ | and Ilaneous notices charg- ed accordin, . he abog rates. Business not: 18, fiveben's per line for every snsertion No reports, resolutiolglor proceedings of any corporation, society or & giition, and no com- munication designed t0 §S attention to any mat- ter of limited or individitinterest, can be insert- ed unless paid for as an tertisement Obituary notices excel six lines. fifty cents a square. ra Communications recom€iding persons for of- fice, inserted at ten cenb | line; and the pay must accompany the comyjjeation. isgelmeous. THE THRE GHOSTS. A SKWLTCH FOR SUPHITIOUS PEOPLE. ? BY L. AUGE(S JONES. a “W hen shall we meet again— In thunder, lightng' or in rain ?”’ ! MACBETH. 1 wonder of any of'fe readers of the New York Weekly are sugititions ¢ I hope not. In fact, | don’t{live they are ! To speak the truth, I woll’t have the auda- cious impudence to i it or imagine such a thing. But notwit nding, there is a ®ertain class of people bse heads are filled with very fanciful . ideas, and whose power of imagittin is wonderful to sensible folks. | We have all of us, 8 gene period in our Jives, met with them 35¢have been editied by hearing some WODGey tale from their lips, about the “awfulip» Susan seen in the back kitchen, th gro night before grandfather died ; thegpinge noises” Pe- ter heard in the BAIT gop little Sis” had the measles ; 8040) old Giles, the village sexton, 8aW & ‘yj gure all dressed up in white,” dancing sg the graveyard gate. ; These superstitious \gj duals, who be- long to the Macbethia Gilpin, Tam O'Shanter school, are giging away fast. Thank Heaven for it, Di supertsition make progress as rapid, oon conse and knowledge, the Wor g 14 pave been in a horrible state by is time, and ihe days of Salem witcheral is pave been nothing to the presente pujwer pag truthfully said, “Know | power.” and knowledge will grow ang. i strength century by century as the world stands, while ignorance gio ciivion will vanish before 1ts triump|, i con as the darkness of night flip. the golden sun at morn «« A yery good beginn. 5» t reader may exclaim; “but thatis® op oo oo 0 ‘We are waiting patient] | riabodt the ghosts.” Very well, yepathonr about them. Four years ago [ took yj 45 gee a rich old uncle of mine, \| (wo nica farm on the outskirts of a ple, ge. Iar rived in the morning, sf; scant day. ate a hearty supper, a0¢nioy ahcomiort able chat with cousin Ki 3° evening. When the family clock Yok b my a unt and Kate rose to retire. «You had better go ‘bed rly,” my sunt remarked to me, “,p *t you to drive over to L—ville ,, tning with your cousin, and see ne So ie old schoolmates.’’ 1 «« He can’t go !”’ said Yancemphati- cally, “the boy don’t cq Tat once a year ; and the Giaion he takes must be with me. 20%81: on the Lake . to-morrow, and ol vo lobe here in a few minutes wi If Kate takes him off par ah have a chance to get a, slr 5 week, for he’ll be lugged canto anios 1 8 and the old boy only kn( i ins among a lot of women. & on 1, v8 argument was |, ladies retired rather ores) Joo Ze cle Ben and myself lon der «Ha! ha! ha!” L of ¥ainiols “never give in to women § ? Old Warren soon came... sols and after shaking hands \ begh oer haul our lines and hooks ; + «+ Tell us a good 8UOTY 1, wrenid ny uncle. «t Wal, I don’t care of y W’ rot the rising of ’bout a ghost T seed fourteen years ago in ‘That’s a ghost,’ sez I. ‘an I'm a goin’ in walked straight ahead until I cum within about paces from where it was ; an’ thar [ stood and looked at it. It was orful dark, but T want a bit skeered, although it kept a waltzin’ back and forth again the wall. — ‘I'm bound to hev a tussle wi’ ye enyhow,’ sez I. TI buttoned up my coat and took a step closter. Suill it waltzed away. T got mad, fur it did'nt ’pear tew mind me a bit. Finally I made a jump fur it, an’ as I jump- ed I got a blow right on my nose that sent me a staggerin’ ba %’ards, with the blood streamin’ down my face. I looked up. an’ the darned thing was hitchin’ about jest the same still. I got skeered an’ in tew the sexton’s house. I woke him +y/an’ he got a lantern an’ went back with me. ' We found the devilish thing dancin’ away still. The sexton went up tew it an’ began to laugh.” ** What was it ?” I inquired. * Why the sexton had been workin’ that arternoon about the ehurch. an’ he driv a nal in the wall an’ hung his old coat on 1t ; when be went home he forgot it. When the wind blowed 1t moved, an’ I took it for a ghost !” ¢ But what struck you on the nose ?" asked Uncle Ben. ** That's the funniest part of the story,” said Warren. © When 1 jumned to grab the darned humbug, wy right foot came slap on the teeth of a rake that lay on the ground. and the bandle flew up and hit me an orful slap right atween my eyes. I treated the sexton to say nothin’ about it ; but it leaked out somehow, an’ now I don’t care who knows it.”’ We laughed heartily aud emptied our glasses. “Tell us another, Mr. Warren,” said I politely. “Wal, Iwill, an’ then I muse be gettin’ along toward hum.” The humorous old gentleman helped him- self to the cider and begun : ‘I remember a thing that frightened me wuss than the other. Wheu I was a boy ’bout nine year old, I was settin’ in the Kitchen of my father’s farm house, waitin’ fur the old man to come home, so I coul) pat up his hoss in the stable an’ go to bed. He always went down to Rube Timon’s tav ern overy night after supper, to spend his evenings drinkin’. I had to set up to put Bess in the stable ; fur he was giner’ly drunk when he got back. Wal, this night I'm speakin’ about it rained an’ blowed tre- mendously. Twas past ten when I heerd the hoss a comin’ up the lane ; so I rubbed my eyes, an’ got ready fur my work. My father came staggerin’ in, an’ arter hittin’ me a cut with his ridin whip, he scz : “Go an’ put Bess in the stable, an’ mind the devil don’t ketch ye, fur 1 seen him in the yard.’ «I didn’t say a word fur fear I'd git an other cut. but I went out an’ led the hoss into the stable. Arter 1 finished rubbin’ Bess down I give her a good bed, took up my lantern, went out, and locked the door. The wind put out my light je t as I turned round ; an’ somethin’ black an’ cur’ous lookin’ come runnin’ rite up tew me an’ stop- ped all of a sudden. ¢ Thats the devil,’ thinks [5 an’ [ begun to shake an’ tremble with fear ‘I’m gone now,” sez [; and . tried tew thiok of my prayers. I hadn’t got mo-’'n three wo ds out afore the devil made a jump, an’ away he went tearin’ round the yard in circles like a skeered cat in a small kitchen. I started toward the house, but afore I got tew the door he was after me fast. Wal, ef I didn’t run [ must ha’ done some tall walkin’. I was faintin’ with fear fur T heerd him arter me. I throw’d down the lantern an’ sailed fur the door, an’ rush- in’ agm it, it flew open an’ fell head over heels into the kitchen, an’ fainted. When I come tew I found mother and one of the gals settin’ by my bedside. I asked ’em ef the devil had gone ; and they both bust out a laffin, ‘ ¢ Why, you foolish cretur, says my mother ; ‘ther’ ain’t no sech things as devils or ghosts on the airth- -the ghost ye get skeered at is in the kitchen now, dryin’ itself by the fire ; come an’ see it.’ ¢* Thinks I, ef the women ain't afeerd, I ain’t ; so I got up av’ follercd ’em. «