Bellefonte Democratic Watchman BY P. (MAY MEEK. Ink-Slings ' Tyrininl rir 1C nightn oh, 1).011-0 1 1 nucL KilightB I 1111 tO to F,nglanil. Alas, poor AimloN ! 'hen nitou n Ix intentpd with burglarn As" black Itcpublicans. Which is the ? T un Atandard man can lake opt hat, I if we ever meet that l'mvell we'll fill him full. (4 It '.T hag appointed BOUT{T in.!, to a cabinet position. 'Bout n' well have apponted somebody etas. lief. LoxrurritßET haying turned tadiral, rottie One suggests that it is a mg. street dint lois no turning. (kr. of our exeltangett tufys that a fielogan editor has inherited a grave. ard. Perhaps he may soon occupy M !'SETTS dein:lll(h n II I 1,• on foe Dr. I fou r. 11u'.' ,eh(' can a“ . no muoli imptideive, we can't Tit' wa}• to get an office wafer tie%s i♦to !Unlit , leint n prest:nt It has 1,•( n trod, wlth unparalleled sue will h. the tun; nine nt lA , dr, 10 y t at e.,.....zhn in ilunlingd ,, n —(1/ob. lil Is , all f I% or k, %%ant 1;1:11 Per if /dila:104)111g lltfihr 11/ the llty,,tor Algile, ItC111: 4 . II We %%anted wttlil tltl take ;oniething %%urth BM Tnt fkatingilon Cb.L. Ktntct that rali,ri are coming iii, but it ba Icnli room for more." We haze r. .'7101.11 t 4.:4 V.,is,;clia rat -r (immune,- tlikki 1.11.0 I,[l\ nicht 111 in . "Dog l'ou. .11 ertrel , -, then, ‘t onld n ropte• 'fur. Ivconiing judicial district ha 4 I cell wii.ofl wit 01 cu tent• 1,% the Leg ()Ol (burr and Pr.Ti• lint Tlicy (7,11,11,1“! It :11%11. ` 4 .)titt n‘tr.Y that •'llee(y r It)iidn laing U) r NV all st:ect e%cr . t 311 , 1 alwre the parin7 . stetne•i: : l an ar. when the wind iiitt‘l.t. f'nliimhin, on the 2511 i ultimo, Mr Timm vi Cimuirlim. married 11.1-4, 1: , 111/ I! i'oll.l II:D. We rimpo , o Mr. ri i. will now work in hi. (0% n oaiNiird 'Fur new Pre , ident k appointing all Li relattveq to office. Gratefully they lil\ ' ' he no diAeoitrwged d'or (7r , tra will provide," ,te Tut ITolliday.burg Regiitter cotnee to um thii week ao smeared orer with that we can't read it. Don't do that again. DAVID. or we might smack rr the anoot. M. C TOOL? has been elected a delegate to the Democratic State con iention from Mercer sount v. Among the ennilidate, wr Pllppn.c, there will Lr ron.iileralile flidiing for that trout. arc Frowner:, it iv said, k serious. ileliatinr, 'whether it iv better to po to Dakotan or 11Varrisloirg Better 7 0 to Dakotan—there iv serions objections to tour our lot in Ifarritoirg, General. Inas D. DErar.v., the pet of Col tr hat been removed from the position oi l Gprernment Printer, and A. M CLAPP, of the Buffalo Expco7, *pointed in hig place. Thin is clapping it on to COLFAX pretty heavy. WE had an article prepared for thin paper on the etirinmi customs of the ancient Israelites, but a. "nice 1411" employed in our office, being in 6'e with a little Jew girl, objects to "ir saing anything about. the "He brew children." LoNoirnr.r.r is rewarded for turning coat. Ito hag been appointed Stir vevor of tO Port of New Orleans, at a Pill ry of $lO,OOO n year. If .I.oux- SON had done this, the Radicals would have raised the What do they think of it now? A sorritraN editor days: "If the erred commissioner delays its removal mnrll Topper the dead dog at the corner of Capital street will dry lip and blow ^waY." A decided hit at the street rom mimsioner. Wonder if it wouldn't apply in Belle.fonte? Tne VC l lolll.otlllreptilo who getbi Itemefor "'Bellefonte 'Vote/train elendere one of the Anent little towns in the following outrageous Manner: "The i'filiesDentorrat honets that Mdchanice• 'ultra has a 'velocipede.' The man who has It hare to go out In the eminttv If he want, seen—there to nobody In that dried up 'piece to look at him." The corporate authOrilles of Mechanicsburg ^tight to sends committee of one ova c to Mlle. , f "ie, With directions to "chm out" that Ilm—Ealtev Spirit. Village, indeed ! Step up this way, Ana. well show you three volocipeties, besides glass works, the largest and Lest ho!els in the State, the prettiest girt?, thebravest men, the finest stream ^I water, the innAt beautiful spring, the battiest hest looking burgess, , nmartestkiwyero, the most printing , • , ' 't ' 4:'' )4 , • . , . .f j're/ r t _7 0 1 ) 4 c i I - 1 -1 4 / /A 1 1l atc4 ' ) - 11 tutor [i 'ur ........1„, , . - J p 111 VOL. 14. offices, the best schools, the "urnari est" boys, the blackest Diggers, the best dancers, Om portliest landlords, the sl<illfallest doctors, the best editors, the richest men, the finest court house, the biggest buildings, the ablest preachers, the best lager beer, dad---nod about "cleaning out," do yon— 1:= =ME=l!l= 1:0 SIDF.RINII the I,llllTdee (; R iNT made in his appointment of STLWART, and 1118 talk about the Itoeky !noun tairk, the liteidnes of him idea. k about on a par \%itli those of the mother whose daughter %%anted to go bath. toother, Inn) , I go not to 'II on • .)011 may. my dangling Bang pair it,, In v 4111 it lii. kor) jtut dnht Kau, ar Broken and -Mended ( ; F t \NT . q cabinet t‘ent all to Itiece: , , and ha, been recitic , lnicted E. It W A4lllll It'll", (2011`6011q - Or 1114 Illifit fur the 1.1.1t1011 or Secretary or State, reargued that portflio, and hay been appuitite.l Mitii4ter to France, nn office he to equally incapable of filing!. liti ttprie E. It. 11/Astral' RYF, it one linr.t. Congret , stnan, at a ganto of diplomacy with the EmperorNAPULEUN, the, 111.11.. t ~t ate.fitatt, probably, in En rope. nil the tery euuw NVlitit hind ot figure ittlithe poor tict ir rot, an p . m think W, trenthle itch apprelien , irm. wit( o rte allow our.eltc , .. to reflect lapin the proltalle an I 1.111 , 11 for the r relit ()I nor root rut let." DIX. nt that Court, i.N 1.11 4 1 eintiiigh, but he 1, infinttrlt pref , rail to W tan ut it•t , . Rurelt Glt .0:T. n bile -cuing out of the frying pan 1111. i . 1111141(A tato the tire. UN lie VI ill find after a 14l month. experience o ith E. B. nit the coJa of the French En. peter W tsnaunNE:a'tttead, tvi Secretary of M ute, the PrC9lol,3lt wed ex Go‘era.,r I.if 11 , 1 1 7 1 , 11. of Nco York, n‘rmerly an nil \Vlur, and not% a Republican of the ron.er% e . c h o ral. (inc. Fl , ll 19 0 ell nigh on to ~e‘enty crag of age, atel hatl longs:nee retired trom the political arena. lie Cr, a va.: improsentent on WA , onunNe. awl 1- dee:lolls the sa test man in the caitinet. 11w selection gives it an air of re.pectabdity, and he all titukulttedl, make it a c=er and cooler minister than his predecessor ,1s ae told our reader- , last week, Mr A. T. Situ uIT, the great New Yorß importer, as t compelled to resign the I,llire of Secretary of the Tr t.1 , 111y, 4.11 account of the Interposition or of l lass that mad , 111111 iceligihie. Oraftt.E S. B01:7 C% NU., of Alla4411,e1111• MOAN, as we at that limo intimated, 11/1.4 teen llpiraalle,l in Ili , pla , C, seems to argue that the President eon- OWII int . :ill:Ede judgment is sot:teal:at .Itakeit, this being den (led coney -eat tp rtri., politicians. Box TW LL all 111(1 4 n• e Rad 1111C0111pro mi.ing radical—as much of a negro lover as the, fierecnt hater of white sin prentacy' in that party could desire— but he 14 tieverthele94 it ream of Pone nLilitr nail reputation. I'robably, he is an good a selection us OkANT could have Ina& °la of the Material forced upon him. 111.1 appointment gives the es erlasting, greedy State of Ma.ssacliti setts two members of the cabinet, as Judge Ilona, the Attorney General, al so of that State, has not resigned. lit the pernork of Gen. 111%1.0.0, GRANT ' S Chief of Stall, we have the new siort4ery of War. Gen. SC,IT% FIELD, JQII% SO ‘.` ' S appOilltee t ha. bevy' removed to make room fbr him, and we Puppo9e it will make but very little difference, militarily considered, which of the two holds the 4 ollice, Both are so accustomed to obeying (la 412.11 . 9 or ders, that it wouldbe an unwarrantable stretch of the imagication to suppose that either of them has an Opillloll &.l• Iris own. RAwl.ivos will atiminkter the office according to Cia.+,7sT's diree tlollB, just tie lie has always dope, and so, we suppose, would gotorfelm. Con sequently, the change is neither fur better nor work°. At the beginning of the war GRANT wan a Galena tanner and B VLINaS an Illinoin collier. No iliegraee, certain ly; and we mention it ouly aa suggestive thitt:preeentrideof position should not make theta forget their former low es tate. . . The C•tbinet, no now constituted, inns 611 lOWS : Strnbrry St,4lC--.11Ab1i1.T49 "STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION." BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 1869 Secretary qf the n easury- -U cu. S BOUT W 01 AillfitillehllSCUH. • See/Wary of War—JOHN A. UAWI, INOS, Or i i Secretary of (he Interinr—.Jm on U. Cox, of Ohio.. Sceettary of the Nary-- A noten E. Boat* rtd Pennsylvania. Attorney General-- b. 11. HOAR, Or Massaellnset Postmaster General —Jon): A. J. raEss w 1., of Mary land. IClix the Cal/ilia as recom-tructed. 110 iv long it will be before some of its present members are removed, is 'bard to tell. Thus Ihr the %%heels of Govern ment, in t; KANT'S 111111i1H, have revolved ‘‘ith'grent difficulty, and it may not he long befi/re new ,pol.'es will he needed in the :lisky Iwh Hon. A. G. Curtin Tin , . gentleman, who is our fellow townsinati, and well Icnown over the ectintry an being titre Governor of tin-+ t nonweallit, lla. ',c o n appoin ted Premi.hoit T as Minister to Tkiti, we suppoc, is ti ;wai ted coniiilintent to Mr. CI ans. lor par ty services, for certainly the e\ Gus er nor did all he could for tlic clectioit of I GILAST. TO a Gu‘ornalcilt, with which we hate had at little trouLly as that of Ittn , -in, we siipise,e the nomination of Mr. CI ril l . a- Mini-t.. %%di do a- well thst of anyliod all tic hilt oar, to do n i l ioc to keep on the • pii• of A I rx a ta , h, or j rathot, a 1411.111'e, thr,t will be uttsil!, perlorniel, so long as the two Autuera odes are in the 11.1i111, Ilatteting each other, a , thee have h«. 11 rifler• the as unihuon 01 p01%1.r 11)4(111' italllMl par le in this country. A residence for at nplr of tears in lit. l'etcr,litirg, near th... Conti. of the Cr. tn. tilll certainly be u. ...ecord with the idea , of ronqoltda red power, whirl'. we, are informed, h,tt,• I.e.m iuitiihc , l I.:. our e .Governor sun , pr-rernient to political Mlle, It all be hardly ,tile, however, fir him to Sot. urciii Of the practical work mg- (if th -10,tt , (11 in that coutitr,), than he Iran I+l,ll in oar OW.II for the last eight yeMr.i. l'ortneeted,achc j ut e h e el, here, with it put., to shunt the rights of tile people are Pmt as the du-t, twath their legit, it i-+ not to he espeeted dim he w ill be able to draw it eompar nn j„,,,,,11, to Itepublie,tn invUtn toil' , or that hi t•ocratle blood 1%111 dell the klridllng tire , 01 indignatton at the prospi 01 or .1. li.,%llilrOddell anti op prtsse.l F,iil lr .111, no' Ili gither uah nr,il etes Irate too long tone it to thi. sight at honor to I. cl the rising tear of 11111:Idly for the sutler tug peasaiim of that tar-a(1• land. C'ortar,: : , our Foca! 14.01 i Id he sonien hat that, rol 1.1.1 i t.J•lertion I the Re M intstei Irmo among 10/. jlt rollll\ 41. g fee 1 and, of coon,, dnli (l:: nkrtil to the for the compliment. licllelond at St. Yr t(r-hurt' se,ll he -,northing new tin I. r t,ll. -.on, and we 0n1 . % trit t the Ciar of all the lit.-• 1::• 1111. t I.ollCtlll`, through %he Wand cool te-y of Mr.' ( . I'n-rt.:, a lavorahle impression of our 1001111U/111 10‘5 11. The c\-Governor In 111 honor bound to do this nitwit for us, and we have no dottht that he still feel it his duty to exist himself to that cad. We are to have nigger suffrage next fill. Won't it be nice? Won't it be splendid to walk up to the )tolls and deposit our %owe alongside of a big buck nigger'? We won't be a bit be hind the other wales in the adoption this grand moral idea. Oh, won't it be nice? Now, there's Maryland, and Delaware, and Kentucky, and Georgia, and Ohid and some other states that won't know the blessednetie of this thing till long utter we do. Won't they feel bad about tt. Ain't they fools for not passing the Amendment and having it right away? Nigger suffrage/ 0, blessed concep• tion 01 a master mind I What dreams . of bliss hover a bout it—what grand, lofty, noble ideas the bare thought of 'it biings with it I It is a thet. Theirrepressible nigger will be among us, Cheek by jowl, next October. }low does it please you, hon w people, Are you. satisfied ? Recon cile yourseh•em, for the cliC is cast, —non. £uns GuT9:IE, United ntate4 St near!' 'ffdrd — rentueky and secretary of the Treasury under Pre-i -dent Petarer, died at Loniaville, on Monday MRt, aged C years. 1 90TURIE was a very able and intluen• tial man, and hia hem is a national calamity. (For the W rTCIIMAN HOPELESS. Sittlng'hero alone togethor, With the nrolight on tho wall, Let us talk, my friond and brother, And the pact awhile recall ; I have seen the retitle?. feeling That conies over o'er you stealing, As the evening shadows fall, For you cannot help hut show I t,— Ah, you Mart to think I know tt , Yes, I know your neeret all It ix sad that you count buffer On and on from ditr to day, With a hopolors pain and pasvlon That iv wearing S'l.lll 00.1 y, Bad to ho ao weak and to Ai to intro to Los a u WOlll3ll Who Von not your love repay— Knou log you must line o ithout her, Yet to have your thought's about her All the night and all the day Bee how dark end rich %nib beauty ' Is the night, And o'er the snow Gentle winds from boas in ii•mth ring, - Bort cc summer breezes go , And the starlight aefily streaming, - And the moonlight brightly gleunling On the glittering crusted snow, ihke a radiance and a Iw/est/ler I 'Nod in like the silt cry whitenezt Of a Ere you used to know Fold tho blinds and drop tho dittAing, Do not look upon the night , It will only set vo to mind You Of hor eye 4 .0 .oft and brlght or h, r eyo4 .0 bright tool tor. lor That reflactod all ti, splendor Of the luminous moonlight. When you walked the fields together In.lhe deer December weathd, 'Mid the snow hanky 141 c onung t. bite Wlta 1, II 1 r r nomlr I.enut:, Starry, radiant, tutu and la fight, Al/ the glary of the day 111110. All dot t•plonder ofthoptghtl It waleriat- tsar istaw-tintt ~,,, y u.'l ha4gh beauty grow upon you Evory day anti etery night, Nor her t OHM no like a fountain (Jr a Mt - Lain ttli:M Ilia motintain, 1 oikliug to the olcor otatl%l.t. \Vint it a n.. f wilt not tell ynn, alarm men in pain Will Ilekno.lovigo they hark• ft It it, Aril %knob! like to feeft again And hat on,' 11111111 , ran claim her, And no , tin ly cannot blame hor rir the root that rnivit remain , Yon are nnly one of cloven That guild elfin?) as high heaven ,For n vnllr theyillifin't obtain Ali, it truslsts you wince to hear st, And your bond is on the chair Anil I pity you .uneeruly hieing out your douk hour thorn, Po )ou mutt Ole pain and achulg And the night. of relines. seal:Lust WI on you oriod in your despalr— A.1.10g of the shy above you Why it e rm •he oonld not lute you, WI y not lour your burning, prayer? I ran )1043 the mute appealing In your strangely luatrouti eyes' , I can read the hopeletis feeling In y our bosoldi by your algitl • Light your pipe and go.to talking, Pitco the floor, anti try by walking To forget her and tio a tee, To keep dean this memorial ttArting And [bethought+ of tiopeloas parting That forever ni.lartit All in vain—you can not do it, And you would taut If you could , You Mould think to-night about lierw If it tool.. your heart'v best blood. Go, eputarlf, then, to the feeling, Tour away the bumf 4 of hcultug An it leckless lover would,— Roy cl in your glorious vorrviw, Caring nothing for the morrow— Drink the gall and call It good. If to-night her face Is gleaming Bright amid the moonlit !MOM. And another lover, dreaming, Otto, on its heavenly glow, If her viyes. In flashing brightness, Sweep arrow the glittering whiteness Of the silvery crusted ,suow, Anil that lover, bonding o'er her, Vows forever to adore her, Can you blime him? you did so. I think she pinlles upon him, Did she ever smile on you Turning now thews eyes upon him As on you, she used to do. And he stands ns iti a vision Thinking it must ho elysian Opening out upon his view Oh this night will never leave him, Though perhaps she will deceive lam, A. alio is so apt to do. As for you, poor moth,. returning To that thee you so adore,— To that light whose brilliant burning Oft has wounded you before, When, within your dreams, you meet her, , Fresher, brighter, clearer, sweeter, Chum her to you and adore ; That is all the blisethat's given To hopeless lovers this ado boayou, Hold It fast forevermore. Mosemtcm, Horeb 13, MIS. Tut Radical Convention at Chicago which nominated Ght v.er Jeolared in itn platform that the people of the `Hop• al" Ptatea alone had the power to de• termitic for theu+sel'•ce the gueatiori of ttegro autfrage--thab it could pot be formed *pm+ them, and that it was not tl miLticr for Cong,tc:Aionitt Legislation, On thin platlvrril I:1N P (VLIH How has tho 4,olitration of that platform been adhered to ? It has not been adhered to at all. No sooner had the ,eleetion• been decided than the Radical Congress began to tinker up something in the shape of an Amend. ment to the Constitution, to take the power of regulating the question of ne gro suffrage out of the hands of the people of the states and to vest it in the State Legislatures. This piece of miser able chicanery they called' the 15th Amendment, and it given the negroes all over the Union the right to vote as soon as it is ratified by the Legislatures of twenty-eight states. This is hove the Radicals have fulfilled the pledge made to the people at their Chicago Convention. They declared then that the people alone had the right, to decide the the matter , they declare now that the people have sta rtylits in the premises, but that negro suffrage shall be forced on them, whether they arc willing or otherwise. Senator W A Ltitcz tested Radical sincerity in this matter the other day, when he offered in his place in the State Senate, the following preamble and resolutions : "%Vanua the Congress of the United Statee has proposed an amendment to to the Constitu tion thereof, to he kdown as Article XV, which changes the role of suffrage now e listing an this Common,. ealth, and substitutes therefor another and aditterent rule, which said amend• meta In now ioditoltted to the legislatures of the different Staten for ratification. and W, "All power ainherent in the pen ple,- nod it is right that they should have on opportunity to veto for or against the rat ifli tfon of the said amendment Anil to determine whether they will nit change the rule of sof (rage now existing. therefore Besot Pert That the Jusileiarx Committeeof the Senate lie and they are hereby , instructed to prepare and forthwith report to the Senate a toil for the luting iesion of the question of the rat I firnhon of the Ana nmeniforient to the pup!, nt the election In Orfober 1560 ItaohaL That the Senate will not net open the questson of the ratlficadon of the *tatd amendment to the Coted dation of the United State.% at Its present emotion, hut will *watt the net ion of Silo people at the polls thereon" These resolutions, no eminently just rind proper, Were immediately noted dorm by the Radical majority, All theDemorrntavoted for themand all the Radicals agaiii‘t them.. But they hare put the Radical members of the Senate on the record, and a most infamous MIME! The Democracy desire to leate thin question to It tote of the people, and bad Mr. Wtr.i.lcc's rt-tolutions been adopted, this would fume lace the is sue next fall, and our State spared the disgrace of forcing upon the people a inewire to ts htelt 'whelp they are alnioQt unanimously opposed. But they failed, and since then the majori ty iu the Senate hive added to their in• filmy by passing the amendment, there by, in effect, saying to the white citt• zenx of the State, •'W are your mu,- tors—not your servant..." How any conscientious Radical—if, in the nature of thing, there can be such an anotnaly —can hereafter sup port a party that so openly and un blushingly violates its pledges and tramples upon its avowed principles, 15 to us an incompielteust,ble mystery. Surely he should coma out and disavow his allegiance to a power that is en. deavoring to cell his lurth-right fur a mess of negro 'pottage. • Ml•itii•sota I.o7,l4lnture, which in Rifibe a l, h i , A set the Radicals of our Skive art exam ple they would do well to Rillow. In stead of passing the negro sliffrage amendment at the behest of the Ruth Congress and the ORAIsT adminikra• lion, they adjourned Avithollt.titkiin any action on the subject, in order to give the people of that State a chance to express their views upon it. Thin is honorable, and shows a higher code of principle than we thought existed any. where in the Radical party. But there is not the least probabiltty that our Pennsylvania Radicals u ill follow the Minnesota lead. They have no prin ciple and 'less honor, and will adopt negro suffrage without a qualm. —A rtsdical piper states President JOHNSON used the word "Con. stitution" thirty-one times in his fare well address. This mayor may not be' trio, but it is certain thnt the wbrd "Constitution" seldom or never appears in anything emanating teem tho T eal party. It is a word they do not lose; as 'the very- sound- of it lashes their guilty consciences into an agoity of fear and trembling. They woN . .dd rather never see it eijhear It, abidevpn3: joyfullx blot it ottt/f they dared. .) 1 41 only wish that we to der, had a .Pre'sid dent in the cesentivo - chnietvho`thoi,bf as mOttlt of ,thq constitution ,ON eaaw Joettoscor did. ' " Judge ;Skater. iit e last week I:irtuled, hi Our. vocal to 1, err e t last to the death of Hon. ;411 shaler, who died al 44kwark, I s • ~ t;T ersey, in the ii I st year of his age. „ sq Stealer was a member of the * Pittsburg gar, and highly distinguish: itillp, 'the Masonic Brotherhood. Ire liei Ili ' taburg Poet of last Itidesday, we , itel 4 proceedipge of the Bar.,in rela li d[ the dead; of the Judge, from Whig we extract the remarks of Gen. ki l n. Id Roberts, pending is motion tii 'i it a set of resolutions in tribute -;. I to ;i ' ,; igh character and eminent ser tvi..• ) ~..; I , ' oberta said : I ti on askrell by the corntraittne, Mr Preel , to oak it Word or two in imppOrt of the r.` .1 Hone that have Just been read.,The task *0 awry one. To describe Judge Shal ler to 1 . .ito who aid not know him la impossi ble')l, 0 y a word of eulogy beano the bar of 'Allot '''• county as to his past life and rani. nen ” j..tlese persoUal and professionel char 'acter, kf a indeed erVerogatory ; and In' this .prepet this Crowd et assemblage of his late 'asses: '; ,so honors e alike to our ihui ,to ill shall Dente myself With le forego'. , pie w • .1. Char e filmier w in Middleton, Con , neetiepin the hoar o.la which his father had been ho in before hl 113 ~ and In which 11111 aged , sister,'• realties. Springing from the hardy stock, o ; Brew Efigla n td, the activity of Me after htt, otte i k a l romt4lll e with the fine physical and Tit I orldnutatien which he thus deli, ed. mtpceir el riberal „education, groan sting to 14310 'C liege,in Schenectady, Vet. Yoe udder under tho p eeeptorrhip of the ceieritra tett Dr, Noth WI II WIN • subject of great pleastire to hurts of Pile; years to point to.,A Pn; , ies'isen repreteeting seven of the gradiia clog class of tile year, Who Assembled atfiolkin mainly and viii* ,t ikrespects to Dr. Nott Pa I t Ull , fiftieth slitrilre ry of their graduation Judge Shafer ken leered when a fliers boy. and tent by flif.jki son to carry the deo:dame ken of war are y of General Hull, which was then enc.* u the hankerer. the Mau moo. Carried:l u an early period to the charming an t Iv a 50,055 00 western life. the/Sterile i t a d ak hills of New England , 411 possessed tiger any eltarma,and hi, determined nb ag n ton West ilo linishedt his legal Mild! ii; ch had been etohhienced in the Stato of tziow Ork, in Ohio , and about 1812 or 1813 he t.obit him permaneneresktence in tine city pall Ut led into the funny °Lille late Major Kirk It. TherarstMes. Bluder dying lit early everat years afterwards Judge Chalet iffelr the daughter oh the late Judge Hitidte,'ilhar 'oOr survives him, the last- Bur, tying menthe . 1 WWI e, of that remarks. hie and talented.ily Judge Shsier eons— nwneed lila earner, i Our bar, amid Ole most inspiring east* t • I save the ability of those a ith whom at th 0 'lie had to cope Profs'r atonally, sir, tire t , ntal giants then ; the Mir of our county' I et exceeded In profes sional ability by 1 . the State, and. SOUP& tilialer had to dg 1, ay forward to success amid Anvil mitt ker Campbell, Entitle Semple • James • • • — d Henry Baldwin, end in a latter day wi, ' shining talents of a II ilkuis and the c .., . dent genius of a For ward He %resat me Recorder of the dity and upon the pr.,,,' of Judge Wilkins to • th•• Prestdent ,/u. ` cif the Court of Com mon Pleas of AIM • \ Bounty to the District Judgehip ?if thoji , States tor the Western Disiriet of Pehnsy , Judge Shiner sue eeede.l him arid d rge d for many years the duties of Prost t Judge of the district thetrentnpneed of ()Unties of Allegheny, Heaver, Butler 4 Merton, with marked 1 ~ acceptability to is ,• re district. The posi tion he • aubeequent , A igned and again came to the bar,end o El g(ention of the oak:e -n( Aesietant Judge ILe District Court Al. legheny county, b 1, 7 agate le of vated to the bench 4nd becamp tiloc late ofJudge Grier This position he resigned and again eAm, to the bar, a stn resumed with Pis wonted vigor the t fillitiee of an actlire pMettrloner. Tim • 4 I. litteint elation whieh he suiliseemently a ell was that of Attorney of the United Flied * pie Western Distant, of Pennsylvania', w . fie hold during the id ministration uf Dr. ' at Pierre NO. 12. - , For n rer oil f e " otty yew s Judge Thaler we. thus Int 'mewl oolatrd u ith the people of Allegheny and t • blnining counties, and more especially w our own har. Ito tram emphatically what hay be termed n true Outs —energetic In Retie' , , legtlle In expedient, elo quent in diction-1i sweet ' as. in ndronate were transcendent ~ unequalled. Day atter dot•, in the tereral Ftt , from the 'mutest to Sin highest he d every professional duty with a fearleas 'fidelity and en Wiley rarely. if elcr, equaled. ❑e Identtlied himself with his eligut and tried his eftll.lo with the• enthusiasm , of youth, and Se told down his profereinnel weapons at the close of a calls* sail a grace nod calmness and professional hioulness worthy of all Imitation Alm relators tot opinion upon the Hales of Attcernsys adeptcd by the Supreme C Mit of Pennsylva nia furnishes us with a hosutlfnl description of his stews of the tarred rhararter of oar du tie* to one rhents, comparing them, an he does to the rulationtion that auhewta betwolen. bin - bond and oat , parent and child, guardian and want " Jude• Shnler a. .TollttHan • developed she woo, elow.teteriatics &A 111 every other plume wns loyal to hit parts' Ire writ he I h c In her defon•e nmi_lf ho .hared her offi cial honors he did it without political deginula /ion. ' Too fond of the net fo pursue the grin dirnt." • 111. path to office eat nailer interns with broken promises or violated pledges. /this. Shalet ea. a plena man—an earnest EPlscurs lien and trite to his( littrelr Whether we eon template hie eharnerer ass Christian gentle man, an amine politician, an upright Jacs° 01 tho eminent rerementatue of professional' Tion or, We cannot fail to admire it lie was emi nently n gentleman In the hroout and peeper am opt-What of that muellasbused term; a lien tleman in appearance and In him hearing. and Above and beyond and better than all, a gentleman in every Imptilmo. In every instinct It were pet heist Omits to Mottle the social eirdie, tint there Judge Shale; •linne pre.emi nt—.i kcal father, a devoted be timed, a warm and genet..ts ft and There Id, eel iorponi ;men, gust:slot& %lilt OA their spirl.tme unit, force and beauty ' I+lllll.v as gay at the lire-dy'seight, hayed round Yiury aohject, antiahoria as it playthi, Fli~tytt on the combat a. Ronda, w, bright, Ne'er carried a heart liftmen awry- ow in. blade." As Is knows to you all a terrible aillietion compelled biro to retire from the Dar—au of gletion which he herewith heroism as remark able so his &tweeter. While the fleet of 11C11% on was shot out, his Intellect beamed with Ida xonton brilliancy, and through the kind ness of those around Mira to keep, himself thoroughly' adyised of tlsecurrene espies of the day, upon which he oortiessed with fluency and case. For a few yeas past ho hem resided at Bellefonte, and some weeks shore Po went to Nowarlc., N. J , to mates whale ow Ma too th-law. While ther e 11 e ho was stricken ?Yawn and expired on Fri d ay the Gth last serfoiln ad by his family an Mend* lie has gone. Chapin Bhakrr ao more Thopure roan, the upright Jade^ the lofty end accomplished adv ocate, the sersteat politi cian, the sincere ehristhm, low ifedi 'Way. May his ellimpte bee !mon its Ter. —What is greedy bog Massachu setts is I NM satisfied whit Hose and I;totrrwti.i. In the cabieet, .sbc „has forced the rippOilltPTlOßt of J. Ls•rsabr Moitsv, as Minister to England, and is now risking the Grecian Mission for llosta. Will she ever ho done? Has alto not ,route other. position for some othisr inulletlhend in , Opp ? Vie, land pf, dgrand n4ral ideaaP and illegitimate picaninniest is core/dilly getting more than her share. —lt is now said that uktries ap roiotment• to Rumia Irri ttlek of 4.4)163t0res tog* rid oflikt. This be. ltg:tho 4 , 14 PP, it we woe colony we Wottt!ln't j go. Wed Stay at Itonit sad tusel4 Wiggle trig4t. Or two worth knoiv.i,ng, •
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers