The'lDemofflgk- WateMian. 974 4 r IttEK. Trani, $2 pnr Annirm, In Advance BELLEFONTE, PA; Friday Miarnina, Jule it, 1869 .Light from the Wort. There is now orktos an element which will one dity , produce • result most devotedly to be 14ishol, 0-wit : the emancipation of 4he West fort the ohains in whiohNew Esilklaltirun ningly bound her, and a dit Mft` of those portions otrut• country which' have been sundered upon abstractions, aa a kept divided by the devices of those *hose interests were served by the division. The Wont and the South are Natural allies, and in nothing has the diabolical cunning/A' New Englana been more &arty - displared, than in the work of armiat agosprie4ilh other these two reaction', betWbeit.which the naturalitiea of unioniaretaitiong: The moetrupertleind, obtrver can see at a glance that the South and West being both producing countries, and both having the finest agricultural resources in the world, are naturally hound to gether by the strongest ties which can exist in the political world. And in the same views, no one.can fail to see tillitt the interests of both these. meat ROC. tiOng are antagonistic to New England. The country of wooden nutmegs and "great moral ideas" is capable of pro. (toeing little from her barren soil; while she has the most splendid facilities for mauufacturing that are any where in the world. She wants high tariffs up on her manufactured articlee, while she desires to purchase the productions of the rest of the country at the very low eta figure. It is nnnecesnary to elaber ate this idea, for it is only necessary to call attention to the existing facts to have them fully understood by all thinking persons. With these facts before us, bow strange a „condition of affairs is presen ted when we look over the history of the country for the past nine years,and then glance at the situation in which things now stand. Did New England deliberately plunge this great country into war, and produce all the blood shed and suffering we have experiencr td, for the sole purpose "of acquiring the dominion she hag exercised ever since the war began 1 One thing is sure, if, was New England ideas, prop agated by New England men and pa pees, in violation of the spirit and let ter of the constitution of the country, which planted hate in the hearts of brothers and led to war. And there is no record of any sectional difficulty ev er arising between men of the different sections where the origin of it cannot he directly traced "to New England Whether all the agitation and deli,her, ate syntignatic teaching of thirty years was meant to produce the war and give the controlitig power into the //arida which now yield it or not, no better mewls could have been employed, and when we see the rest of the country sufferingsintensely while New England thrives and fattens on 'their losses, it is strong prenumpliye evidence that she deliberately, and in ..the spirit of the used the very rturami employed to produce the very result which has. been attained. Hut it does not matter for our present purpose whether the end now before us wts, reached by the employment of meauc carefully pre pared, or whether it is nierely an Rein dental result of the Workings of human affairs. In either case, the necessities of the country would demand a change, and the duty of the people would be to produce it. After the change is made, it will be well to consider the degree of guilt for which the authors of all our miseries must be called to an account. But the hour rapidly coming on when the great Wail which Is crushing the mighty West to the earth will be cast off. The murmur which began a year ego is increasing to a universal roar of anguish and hate, and the time is not far distant when the South and West will stand shoulder to shout. der against the usurpations of. New England, and strike for once a down- right blow for that liberty which they lovf, but which the West hut so poorly n dental:4 As surely WI nature „still works in her great realm, let politicians and tricksters do what tihdy may, so surely will relief come, if from no where else, from the stricken and enslaved people of the Weet. The foothold obtained in the early- settlement of the great Slows, beyond the Ohio by the ever.busy Puri. tans was a" Arm one, and only the meet bitter experience, like that they are now/ suffering, could induce tge people of those States to rise up in the. great Strength of their native manhood and shake off forever the claim with they are bound. But the wcik mme k done, and it will be done for all time. The dominion of Yankeedom ionce fairly ir i tOnv_n2r,i f.iii e rflet, and tthe natand goodilense and varit power of the Wee l eP,peopbeliP l i g P xl r 9lB4l l for the good and improvement of thei own splendid domain, and their fertile soil will no longer produce Ostriches to be transferred to the bleak and bairen New England hills; , When this tithe amen, and it can not be far in the Altura, the Democrat id party vsCll i ssiintire . an accession of strength wiMi tvOl enable it to accom plish the great work of preservin4 the government or our fathers from an archy and from despotism. Whenever the West has suffered enough to get the eyes of its deluded people fully opened, they wiUmesla into the Demo cratic party as to the-only powerwhich is able to help them against the corn. mon foe. Let those who have strug gled manfully for nine doleful "years, take heart to struggle on. Success will come, and the dark night through which we hltielever ceased to toil s will only make the day of Democratic victory more glorious, and more bril liant with hope for the future. 'Rah for the Nig. The Execiitive Committee of Afri cans waited upon the President the other day, and presented an address, in which they pray him, to appoint negroes to high offices in the North as well as the South. Bully for that I Let's have the thing in all its beauty at once. In the meantime, we would sug gest to our new postmaster, and all the Jollier late appointees hers about, to get their houses in order for the new kale of things. If niggers are brave sol diers and good 101 l Black Republicans, why shouldn't they fill all the Repub lican offices 7 Are they not as honest as the rest of the party, and who will deny that they have more sense than the white fools whcl have hurrahed for them for eight years. In preference to politicians and One armed and one legged soldiers, a Republican nigger seems to be the favorite, with big odds. Hurrah for old King Africanus I No ble land of Dahomers I Bestiful dev il bushes of Equatorial Africa I --In the monthly report of the U. S. Commissioner of Agriculture ap pears the followingtinteresting record: "At Prince George, Md., pleuropneu monia attacked one herd of cattle, and four or five died. The rest were sent to Washington for Beef and the disease did not spread." This must be pleasant to housekeepers and Con gressional hash-house bositgs at the Capitol. What a pity it didn't spread among- the two-legged cattle in the House and Senate, who seem to grow fat daily on worse than pleuro-pneu moniac beef soup! —Let it ever be borne in mind that, when Virginia and her twelve sister sovereignties formed this Union and set up the promising pauper—the Fed eral Government—in business as agent of the States, she was the sole mistress of a vast territory now cut yp into the States:of Ohio, Indiana, Wisconsin, H imont, etc. This territory Virginia red- . ed to the young pauper Federal tiov eminent 611 11 , dower, with which to commence business. - Now the once pauper Federal Government is muster and not sert ant of the States, and it has put its impious Cron heetof power upfn the neck of Virginia, its mother. An illustration, this, of the success of usur pation, and the drifting ft* an unex plored and trackless sea of 4- the ship of State. It is an illustration of liberties lox•. never to be recovered except by a counter and irresistlese revolution of the people. A D1L.1144t ! a Radical car pet-hag Sate Senator Of Georgia, was assassinated a few days no t , while rid ing along the highway. The. assassin was a one-legged ex-con federate sOldter- Terrible Ku Klux outrage. But when it is taken into consideration that A 1). X. 1148 had made 'persistent and deter mined attempts first to seduce, arid then to ravish the soldiers sister, and died, dirty villain that he was, a pr&per and merited death, the Ku Klux pelt of this story, loses much of its force Senator ADKINS was no doubt a rela tive to "Sister ADKINS" concernin: whom i4is;riung,that "she lost her grasp on Canaan's happy shore." Whether or not she did, iris plain that /Lela& CONIIIITENT.—Tosee the police of tile regular meetings of a midnight con clave of petty politicians, radical rasp cabs, wench wonsh i pens and Constitution deflres,Such as the meMbens of the "G. A. A." 'are known to be, placed week ly, at the head of a Democratic news. paper. "Huntingdon Monitor please copy." —More than half of GrRANT'II ap pointments in the South are AfriceMs. This it; no doubt a relief to the white people there, as a nigger la far prefers, bit to a scalawag from the North of a paler hue. d I, (f ib pAnipA% REvtiv4., • "All i the Deoenoy In Conclave—The • God and Moralfttpe" Deliberate. over Matters and7lllAo—The 104 dom of Brownelow In Convention f—' An Eye Opener for Decent Men. Some ofthe rodent of the WATCW. AN Will be surprised,otlterbwilldoubt, and some will disbelieve that such a scene as is described in the following article ever occurred. Last week we had an editorial article on the same subject, but refrainedrfrorn attempting ti;'stitte the particulars; because we had learned them only from brief dispatch• es, and thought prehape they might be colored by partisan bias or personal hatreds. Since writing that article we have received a copy of the Cincinnatti Commercial as titrenitous a radical • pa. pet as is published west of the Ohio, from which we get the participate as given below. If these scene // are not enough to cause a blush of shame to crimson the cheek of e meanest radical in this State on account of his political associates and friends in Ten nessee,then indeed may we as well look for a spark of Christianity in thelower most portions of hell, as for a tinge of der.vncy in the compositions of Penn sylvania radicals. here we have a good specimen of the "all decency—the God.and morality party" of this dis graced, debauched and demoralized country. These are the men who are making, enfoicing and executing the laws of this country,—men who are not only a disgrace to themselves, their country and their race, but will dis grace hell arid disgust the devil, in the great hereafter. After describing the meeting of the delegates. arid the at tempt to make a temporary organita timi the Commercial Pays: Here the confusion and noise became indescribable I never heard anything that approached to it before, in point of strength and volume, and old politicians who have grown gray In the service, say that it was beyond anything in their ex perience. Cate tried to appeal to their reason, and asked if they didn't want to behave like decent white folks. This was the signal for a fresh outburst. Cries of "Do you mean to insult the col ored delegates arose from all parts of the house "\We're as white as you are," screamed the negrocs, until their faces were neither white or black, bat red. Poor Senator Cate only used the term "white men" as a sort of comparison, but he had got his foot ,pto It, and 'the Convention would t not listen while he got it out. Here confusion became woillie confounded. Not ene less than a dozen men, some white and • others black, were mounted upon tables and desks, all fiercely speaking and gestic hating at once. It was a melancholy waste of words and wind, for no one heard what was said. Men were de nounced as liars and fools, but were su premely indifferent thereto, an they did not hear the compliment. An old man whose gray hairs should have commanded respect, and did com mand silence for a few seconds, pointed to the portrait of Lincoln, which hangs in the hall, and said "that it was a won der that it did not frown upon' this dis graceful scene " Here the yells for "Butler," "Femme," and "Order," get in agape, and one man leading off by saying that old Abe might frown and be d—d, ha wilai nob going to'be run over by a set, et d—d, political hacks, and was ready to fight it out on that line, regai:dlers of the time ttinight take A Airy 'sensible negro, being sagas 610 US enough to see that nothing could be done with three chairmen, all deter. mined to act Irr that capacity at (MCC, moved "Dat we do now adjourn," and .was rewarded for hiitwworthy ef fort In behalf of peace' being pulled overthe desk - backwAs he struck o , r , his head, howeverwas not hurt. .4rre the irrepressible Femme made tenother effort to remind the Convention of his existence Drawing himself up to his full height, he screamed, "Gentle men, I will he heard, ' and putting as much breath behind the word "will" as would be necessary to preach an ordi nary sermon The Stokes men were equall deternuned that he should riot he heard, and they carried the day. All this tune Cite kept rapping his mivel with commendable perseverance. II •nry Dutch, of Chattanooga, moue. teic it desk at tee back end of the hall, andspoke for full ten minutes, appar ently boiling over with rage, but no body paid any attention to him, except an old white Ic•aded negro, who pointed to the eloquent bus excitud Dutch, and requested the Convention to "Listen be that d—d fool " But they would not And thus matters went on for ratlsec didn't go off) for two hours and a half. It was ono cbqtinuod scene of confusion The three (+Memel) all tried to 'act at once. and all spoke at once. Nothing whatever was aceomplishedk The gal leries were crowded to,auffocation by men who watched the coAnbined circus and ihenagerie below with the liveliest interest. Upw long this might have continued, I know not, had it not been for Butler and David Nelson getting in to a•fight. Nelson approached Butler, who was trying to act-as chairman, and words ensued, the import of which no body knows, when they clinched, an 4 would have rolled over on the floor had not the crowd been so 'great that they could not. And here ensued a scene, such as la not witnessed often. Every body rushed pell-mell over the desks,pis tots and knives were drawn, and, if ten or fifteen poligi had not been in the room, there would lfave been blood shed...lt was a hard' matter to tell who was fight ing and who was trying to part those who were fighting: Some rushed out, believing that there would be a general fight, and others rushed in, believing the same thing;and wasting to take part in It. If ore 'pollee made their appearance, and, after a good deal of pulling and hauling, sweating and swearing, It R. Butler, member of Congress, and I:lSvid Nelson, of Knoxville, wore marched off urder 'guard, each nobbtripainod by a renumber of "friends." And now ensuqd a scene of undescri able confusion. Twenty or thirty w ro , on the floor at once (or rather upon the desks,) and the display of passion was - rifle. An old negro who had apparently been well u eed, propos ed ad that "De 'veatlon do now eyed with prayer.' - A delagate—"Yes, old man, a prayer wouirbfa P a d—d good thing. Grind on, brother earne." voice—"G—dd—ti old Pearne, he cant pray." Another--"No, but ho cad' act the d—d • fool." A delegato—"Gentlemen, this 'ere is disgraceful. Les loom or else do something. Stoke and Benter aro both good men. lam willing for either—" Here he was interrupted by a colored gentleman, with his kinky heir parted in the middle, who raised to a "pint" of order. "D-1 you Rod your order; you black rascal, sot down or I'll knock you down " 1 "Gentleman, for God's A delegate— Bake—" "Say for old Pearno'a sake he's• rut ning this machine." • Brownlow—"4 will be heard—" "No you won't—the Brownlow fami ly's played out." Cato—" Please listen to me one mo ment, [lnterrupted by cries of, 'Pearne, PeaPne i l I have only to say— [ D—n you and your say.] I believe—" [here he wte completely drowned out and forces to give up. Yearns ad vanoed toward the Speaker's stand and endeavored to say some thing, but ho only got out, "Whither, ah, whither ere we drifting ?" when a negro answered, "to h—ll," - which was followed by a roar of laughter, and cries of '.Butler, Butler." Butler essayed to speak, but the Seeder men told him to shut up his d—d robed mouth, and cheer ed lustily for l'earne. Here II man fell otr a desk, and the cPy of "a fight," " a fight," was raised, which brought the police iind everybody else pell-mell on to the unfortunate man. A young fellow mounted a desk and commenced denouncing Stokes, when the Stokes men yelled, "take him down I Take him to his mother," &v.., amid the jeers of the negroes who cried out, "Stokes ain't like Senter, ho didn't have to have his difficulties removed." A delegate—" Disabilities, you G-t 1 d—d fool." A voice—"who removed Butler's disabilities Ile used to be a rebel!" Another voice—"lt's R d--4.1 in fernal lie.'' Here everything went into confusion worse confounded—at least fifty men all talking at °dim, and some getting ready to try Akio knock-down argument of the fist. Oate—"l have a paper—" Several voiees—'•oo to 11-11 with the paper " Cato—AlM it's important, and—" Voices--'Then let a white man read it We don't want to hear you " [Cheers, groans and laughter ] Cate—"lt's a dispatch from Governor Sprague to the working men " V cices—" G—d d—d Sprague and you, too " Another voito—'.Give It to a man who can read." [Laughter.] A noro—" What's Sprague got to do with this 'vention A delegate, about two-thirds drunk— " Three cheers for Henter, and .d—n the Duncan letter " [Cheers.] Butler—" Silence, till the dispatch is read." [Cr als for Britler, !Lad cheers Pearrie.] A voice—" Cate can't read—give it to A nigger " Another—" Let's buy Stoke, and Cutca IL spelling book " Another—" Let 'ern alone and they'll steal one." Cate--"I will now rgnd the dispatch, and—" Delate from Chattanooga, [very hoarse -"No, you won't ; your'e played out ; we don't want to hear you " Negro—" Let the grm'an * read." White delegate—" Yes, let him read about the Stokes-Cate conspiracy. That is what we want to hear." A voice—Where's the school fund?" Gate here began reading the dispatch from Sprague in aloud voice. The sub. staneeof it was that the man who•killed Abbott would address the citizens of Nashville on Monde) ❑tglit Delegate—" Less nominate Sprague for Governor." Another—"No, lea.; nominate Roos Hopkins " [Great laughter and cheer, ] An old man —"Gentlemen, I —" Here he was interrupted by Phut' t. of "Put him down " "Take him out " A voice—" Let the d—d old fool go on " Mr Whams, [ln the spettker'sstand] "I would hke to, to—" Voice, -.Dry up, your old "bald head ed devil " "Up It.ek to Ohio, and F top making your hying by swindling poor folks " A negre—" I move that we'uns du now adjourn '' Another—•' W here to '?" White man "To hell." Voices nWer'e already thero.' Another voice "Then I hope old Pearne will burn up." ' Delegate "Peerne, why the hell don't you tight I" Negro " He' wouldn't tight a bob tailed cat " Here a large, tine lookiug mulatto got upon a desk, and, with tears in his eyes, asked if the Convention would hear him. Cries of "Yee," "no," "take him out," &e.; but the mulatto maintained his ground, and, as the confusion subsi dell a little, ho said that he hoped ho would never see such a day again, and that his ears might never again hear what they la,ad this day been compelled to listen to. "White men," said ,he, "colored men Jock to you for an exam ple, but I warn my race to follow you no longer if this is the way' you are go ing to act. It seems-as though the voice of that martyred man," pointing to the portrait of Lihcoln, "would cry from the grare.et.such Such a scene .aswtills. ltiy white friends, .I. ant ashamed of you., and so is every colored man in this house. I say to my people, bowar9, , oh, beware, of following after the itihitu mei." • This little speech produced n sensa— tion. Silence reigned for the space of a minute, and it seemed as though the truths ho had spoken had sunk deep in to the hwts'of his hearete, But seal tho tumult began again, and raged worse than ever, Ails t Poor Georgio. The Empite Stalenof the South seems to be re-inflicted with the special antic tiveeensideration of the unscrupulous Powers that be 1 We obeerv'e that a cabinet meeting has resolved to push troops into Georgia, if the carpet-bag Governor will consent to make a requi sition of the government for troops to suppress internal insurrection. It will be no stretch dcdnacience on the part of BULLOCK to assert that troops are necessary to preserve order, and that the civil authority ig inadequate to maintain itself. Any scalawag is coin. petent to the task—lltrr.tocx certainly is, and we shall soon see a large portion of the Federal, army moving into and overriding the civil authority of the , great Empire State of the! South, o'n a false and lying as. sumption of a false and lying•cacpet bag Governor, with the direction of the venal and Corrupt Government at Washington. If there is any considerable trouble in Georgia, the Administration and the world know the cause of it and the' prime movers of`'it. Let the infernal fiends who have been sent into that section be left to their own resources— let the garrisons to removed—let the people of Georgia have the control of their own destiny—let the black people shift for - themselves and, like the white people there, be compelled to work an earn a living—let the agitators and fanatics rest for support upon their own merit—and we shall have no more of this "insurrection" as it is called. Life is as safe in Georgia and the South to-day as it is anywhere under the folds of the flag ; for life is secure nowhere. In the North a continuous reign of murders, assaseinntions add crimes un• paralleled In its ceaseless record. It is no worse in Georgia ; but it ought to be. The Georgians to the soil indigo !) 01111 have a natural, moral and divine right, to say nothing of a right consti tutional, to govern themselves, and it is only wonderfUl that they have not long since hanged the rascals sent among them to insult, outrftike l and rob them, and to tyrannize where freemen live and where liberty is cradk.:l:-.%' • "Let us have peace," maid the seven• year's man when besought the pegple's suffrages. But Lad he said "let un have eternal war," he could not have indicated his policy more perfectly. .4 is a rule of perfidy and oppression—of unjustified interference—of inexcusable interineddling—that the Jacobin party meek to establish If bloodshed is rife iii the lard, the Radicals are happy ; for imeoinniotion, uprisings, and inter• nal turmoils only can the festering and damnable evil exist. If the (ieorgiann want peace, let them first hang their carpet-baggers. These dogs will never 'per . mit peace to come to the_people. They are as low and characterless set of rascals as ever lied the north to escape Scot free the cnmes for which they should now be the in mates of our penitentiaries. Tihere is not nne of.thetn who has any charac ter whatever. They improved morals in this section by going away from it, but God help those who ars afracted with them. Hang then I War leads to peace—Hemp is cheap—liberty is dear—hang them by the score, and "let us all have peace I" —Ac the WATCHMAN editors are notorious for "10k-filings" which they conceive to be witty, without any respect whatever to the truthful !leas or nlitr.ll.lllllllllVok I r what they •aliert, we are quo," Ntilling no accept the above NA Kerne thing --Leungtoten bcosoct Or. The ,Hilt tone we irtnetnlier or ma king an io•Nert "flit bout renpeet" to the ''truthildnese." of it, was about three years ago, when we said that the Lewistown Democrat was " a live pa• per and ably edited." Can brother FRI SINCAR point. out any other in- Planet!? More Radical Victories Radicalisiii is progressing. It is making a vigorous tight for a firm foot Lord mi this continent, and in mammy itibtaneem is cooling out triumphant. The Potts‘dle Standard gives the fol lowing account of a victory of &heal doctrines in that county, Which for the benefit of the supporters of that party in other sections of the State, and es pecially hereabouts, we transfer to the columns of the WATCHMAN : A Negro Marries a Radical's Daugh ter and Seduoes her Slater. Mr. Daniel Hoy is a' Radical who lives at Lorberry, ibout four miles above Pinegrove, in this county. He is a thorough believer in the doctrines,teach_ ings, and principles of Radicalism, and regularly votes the Radical ticket. He was an advocate, too, of the Fifteenth Amendment, and treats a negro as "a man and brother." Mr. Roy has a daughter, Eliza by name, who is very fair to look upon. ,John Bowk is one of the "coming men," BA black as the ace of vadat, but what else theire brentleing abolit•him we as unable to say. Be tween John and Eliza some time since ,there sprung up a warm intimacy and affection, which ranked about in weeks slnco'in the twain being united in the holy bonds of`netrimony by a Rs& lea! clergyman. of Pinegrove. they are man and wife. But . "the course of trite love never did run smooth," and Mrs. Bowe's father had raised a storm of indignation over the result of his own parental teaching and belief. Bis daughter believed that her sable lover was "a man and broth. cr " and as good as she was herself, What difference to her if his skin is A , Many shades deeper sind blacker 1 Ila n she loved, and to him she plighted h er vows lib wan her all in t all, her pr ed . int and future, the sunlight of her exis tence I Were ever the character,' a Othello and Desdemona bettor assumed? What the sequel will be, remains to b, seen, as the father of Mrs. Bowe is still on the war path after the clergyman who disgraced his manhood and calling, by tying the nuptial knot between two such lovers I But this is not all I Mrs. Bowe by 4 sister, as fair to Ibok upon as she. Be. tween the sister and Mr. Bowe an intl. limey has also existed, the fruits of whi c h will be reaped shortly. "She loved not wisely, but too well," and goon another Japhet will appear in search of a father.' She has heard of, read of, and seen many a black sheep in a flock and from her conduct seems to prefer the Nock! To her sorrow and shame, she has found out what a gay declever this.bleelb Lothario has proven himself to be. We presum e Mr. Bowe is • )lappy "man and broth er," being the husband of ctne sitter, e n d soon to assume parental !relations to little "kinky," The motker of whom we have already dearribed.7 tlo much for Mr. Bowe, Mrs. Bowe, and her fair ~s. ter. Another gel lo riotia victory for that party over which the Sanctified Saints of radicalism can shout until tki-T throats are sore, has just occurred away down in Georgia, where reconstructi on and radical vtogress has been malting such rapid trides since the closing el the late "onpleasantness." The Athens (Ga.) Watchman records the partieu lars as follows: On Tuesday of last woek • 'very epoctablo young lady, named Gray, M. teen years old, while at the spring msr her mother's, in Oglethorpe county, •e brutally outraged by • negro man cam. od Geo. llopkins. A fter lie had accom plished his hellish purpose he shot her through the head with asis-shootcr, ml it is supposed she died instantly. Her body was found some two hours after wards by her mother. The negro ht. been arrested. —Loafers and other green thaw can be seen in profusion about 014 place at the present time. Item• for the Ladles CLM WOMAN Weal I—Some women. shak s; off the 'newborn of sorrow, or holding It in oteo ante, face the world and become mistressevC the aftuat ibrt. We have such among our worth lent customers ; and gladly would we see their number multiplied. A most noble Instance le the honored woman, Mrs Batley, who died on the 21st 8f February last, In the slat year or her age M rs Bailey's husband—Robert-1m a printer, who died In lan, in embarrassed , c cumatonces. Undismayed by her Inc., it. took her husband'w place, and for fifty-three years she conducted the business successful- In Teel she retired from business Until co Introduction of Mu am-power and machlnere her office was one of the largest In Phllwie phis. She instructed forty•two boy. in the mysteries of typography and some; of an prisitent prosperous master print -eta serve' their apprenUceallip under her. For • conod erable period she was elected City ter ol Philadelphia by the Cpuncile , and her imprun sae well known SUe had great energy ant decision of character She was upright and high religious principle For seven years be , tore her death she bore ollerriposedly the Ore cal wen - km...e inefflent to protracted year, but her energy of mind remained in ornwr At this period a large rent was offered for et" of i her houses by a person who desired to eeve vent It Into n drinking-saloon. "What" vie exelairned with emphasis , "rent my property opposite my own church for a tavern' not you give me six thousand dollars a yea' Retrievers •Yunday Telegraph. A Plenty Woxie —A pretty woman I. ..ni the initilutions of the country—tot Inge , ,7 muslin and glory. She makes sunshine, hit. Omen, and blue sky wherever she goes It path isulape of delicloun roses, perfume mA hegutirYltfr is a sweet poem written in ran , colors and ehotee vlll. , anti prlnelplrs stand tip hereto her no so rmtny minfirstss points tier words flout around the ear mime, birds of panel ise or the pv.rfasso 4JI Sabbath hells Without. her,emlrly would Ile trove( attractions, the eburrh reliance, the young men their v e ry party lier influent's and getkeronity restto the t (moue, strengthen the feint hexitei Wheno‘er you find thu virtuous is mints, also find fireside boquepa, clean cloths, , inPi• good living, gentle hearts!, musk, and MO." institutions generally She Is the tors'! humanity, and her inspiration tiro lasti , f heaven--4Exchanpe —Bir Charlet, East r ia Aro says of Crogulou "When we reflect on the baneful inflow , which this wretched invention must hare• hWI (or the last tau years on the tastes of the roar generation, we begin to fee I by how touch lees than ourselves little misses. who ere , c ll in their teens, will be capable of appreciating the Venue of Milo, or the drapery of any ether antique statue" —"We all know," says Alfred de lifus ,o 4 "how much a pretty woman who.. how a p , r‘ , " figurer gales from hawing her form relle. , fra under the aspect,. of. numerous mirrors 51.4 denies, she envelopes, so to speak, the whom she desires to please."' —The objection to women practising inetliclio It Is stated, dates back Ikt 1421, whim IL Peta l " wu presented to King Henry tho fifth, thAL 'no woman use the preattice of flsylc, Linda payne of long Imprisonment." —The Massachusetts Legislature has no-u." l s law to authorise any married woman to I"' an executrix, administratri a, guardian or tro.: tee. ThLe completes the equality of tho our woman with her single 'Tater. —Mitut Phoebe Comeau, of St. Louis, Mina Peckham, of Milwaukee, aro both study ing law, and intend priscUa ing their proterli on. The Chicago Leila! News is oonducted by lwly Brodwell„ "with ability, discriminati on, and courtesy."
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers