- Theh Democratic Watchmail. IT P. ORAT RIME MX w. TURZT, Aamakars rams Tomes, $1 pep Annem, in Advinee. BELLIFONTE, PA Friday 0101 6 0Ing, Septimbir 10, 1109. DZMOCRATIO NOMINATION& ran GK .- alums. AMA PAOILSR, or motor coturri. TOR IRIPRTMIC JUDGE, CTIRVIII L. PRIIIINING, O! wont courry. DIUKKILATIO copier! TICKIT. jx,... 4 LC011 Ora. 0113 ORAN. UN R. RUMOR. toßAzt, VIM& t a 44 E 1 , 1 11 1 0 . ! WI OD P" =1 l ism . ertantllcCLOSlLLT. 0, /br tallier—D. n..412A0RA. ME YOU REGISTERED? This is a question that tommerns ev ery Democrat. Don't put it off till the last moment, but go immediately and ese that year name is on the Registry list. Remember the mousse of the Democracy depends on getting out our whole vote, and way maw must be Registered/ It won't do to neglect this matter; therefore let It be atten ded to at once. Slot Ooburn end the Lewisburg .end ipruee Creek Rail Road. It is not hard to deceive honest men once.. It is noway. difficult to sell out unsuspecting friends or trusting neigh bors a single time, but there is some trouble in getting an opportunity to play the same trick twice. Jim Co ncur reached the highest pinnacle of greatness be ever attained when he was elected one of the director, of the Lew isburg ak Spruce Creek S.R. Co., some six or eight years since. It is about Abe only position the people *Tyr gave him, and be had scarcely got the chair upon which be sat at the councils of the company warmed, until he sold his friends, the frieftds of the road, his neighbors, and every advocate of the Lewisburg and Spruce Creek Rail road Company. What Fines ha got for his vote ou that occasion—his vote to sell the charter of that company to the Pennsylvania raj/ road—no one but Jia Coscsa and the purchaser will ever know. That As got a price, he will not deny; if he does then we ask him why he voted to take that charter out of the hands of the people of Pennsvalley, who wanted and seeded road, and to give it to an over-grown monopoly, that cares not if the road is ever touched? Can pleasant Jaeu answer? as a di rector of that rail road Company, chos en by his neighbors and friends to represent their interest in that propos ed improvement, he would sell those who had trusted in his integrity, where is the assurance that he would not sell the people of the county if chosen as their representative at lJarriaburg ? We assert here plainly that Jut Ca ■vae did sell the people of Penneva . - ley in that rail rued matter s and his friends dare not deny it. Will they again trust him in a position where he could sell them again, not only in rail• road matters, but in every other matter in which they were interested ? Ilad that rail road charter s eet been mold to the Pen nay l va n la company, long ttefore this the cart would have been running up'and down that valley un• der the ma tagement of the Catawissa Or Reading rail road companies, tor it is *notorious fact that both these rail road corporations were anxious to build a road through that section of our county in order to get our trade to car ry over their routes, and were only pre vented front doing so by the Penneyl vania company getting control of the charter. It was by JIM Coatnt's vote that Pennevalley was cheated out of a charter and a ndlioad. ne deceived them once--sold them—pocketed his price, and now we ask, in all candor, how can he expect theta to trust him again? Voters of Pennsvalley, re• -renumber ibese thin* whoa you go to the polls. —When Mr. COBURN sold out the PeanavaHey rail road, he was only Ibiiiking of hie pocket. He forgoi then that he might sometime salt the people to sleet him to office. Bat So it ie. Jaase P. got his pocket full, and now Le wants to go to the Legletiture. As (be people of the region to whom be played traitor have considerable to say sz ; Itr that mum; e almost feel as if we could tarn him over to their Wider taereles., W .. hi nk they will settle his I bomb off Ily. At least they will not put eir interest* again la Ma handeto be betrayed and Outraged u was their darling scheme—the rail road. " Yo 4 Oan!t Come It." Jury, BUTTS, Jisar Burrs, Jammu's' D. Bum, whd butted ant hie brains polit• fealty, a re* years slime for the dirty dish of a provost marshal oftme, is now asking the Democracy of Centre county to elect him Sheriff, over the grillahrfiffir4rlppled, tftmlgltThur Dem. ocrat--Woonativo. Jeaav may think he is sharp, he believes he is he may lumens he is popular, but imagination don't make votes. He may consider Democrats forgetlbl, but he'll wakeup on the morning after the election to find that they have not forgotten - when he and a few other radical rapscal lions, scoured the country to este white men, for whom their masters paid thirty dollars a head. He'll find that they have not forgotten his little wagon, hauled by two horses and load .d with white men—his own neighbOre —chained together like criminals whom he was dragging off to head-quarters at Williamsport. Oh, no! Men may forgive, but they won't forget. JURY may think he le ail right now, but he'll And his record is most too recent to run upon against an holiest, upright, crippled veteran Democrat like Woon• 'two. Jaitar has had his office. He sold his principles Co get it, and a dirty, dis graceful office it was, sc.:), and a dirty, disgraceful way he took to get it, and he should be the last man now—after helping to Orosecu'it the Democrats 01 the county, as lie helped, in order to make money of that office, to have the ettonteiy to ask them, any of them, to support him for the Sheriffehip. He'll find before he gets through with the job, that that office is much harder to capture than brave .14J111 FOULTZ was, and be knows that he couldn't capture trim. —lf Mir. ROTe, the Radical candi date for Recorder, would draw a revol ver on a defeneelece girl, because her father was a democrat, would he not be likely to deal as meanly with demo crats who might be obliged to have in tercourse with him in his official ca pacity? Certainly, they could bays 11Q confidence in him. because hie conduct on th• occasion of his drawing his pie tol on a young lady, at ones stampd him ae devoid of all gentlemanly prin ciple, and showed him to the commu nity in leis true character of a, brutal, coarse, ignorant, besotted. and con temptible scoundrel. He now asks the people of Centre county to make him their Recorder- We don't believe they will do it. Inasmuch as the gentleman who is his opponent is a man of high character, a individual Rho has lived in honest intercourse with his fellow men, and who would acorn to do a mean action, we feel assured that they will not fail to distinguish between the decent man and the brutalized insulter of respectable ladiea. That Mr (less °au will be elected over Role we have no doubt, else the people will say that they prefer the stay-at-Lome outtager of woman toe man who loot his leg fighting bravely in the ranks of his country's SZMIeII. A Vicrie's L ,—We call espec ial atientiou to the very suggestive irticle found elsewhere, from ''• ty xis." It was not our intention, at this stage of the political canvass, to give any extended space to the operation of oil speculators or oil speculations, but the evident fairness, candor and undoubted honesty of the author, for whose name tyrid responei bility we can vouch, demands the space occupied. If such high-handed and deliberate swindling can be proved Tire. ceding election, What may not our tax ground and oppressed people confident. ly anticipate upon the installment-- which may considerate Heaven avert— of such deliberate falsifiers and ewind• lers 7 A Republican of Potter town• ship states timer facts—voucliee for their truthfulness, and we int, ite can• did members of that party to consider well before casting their suffrage for Lewis Hass, the "oil speculator." —When Run CADWALLADER gets to be Treasurer of Gentry county, it will lie when the people forget the services tendered to the country by the gallant Lirut WOLF. What a ridiculous thing for a man like Rasa to want to be treasurer of Centre county. It does really seem as though some men have "lost their reason." It was a rash thing for Lon to attempt to run against WOLF, and he will be fully convinceirof that fact after the elec tion. of the soundest old Demo crats, one of the best working men in the party, one of the most deserving of candidates, le oar good gray-haired friend, Join H. lioastsce, who will be elected to the oak of Register in Oe• tober nestv by not less than five hurt dred majority. Hurrah for Mosalsow. He •is a Democrat of the right stripe, and Democrats can take pride is work ing for him. A Cord That Won't 111 q: Dri--,n to th• wall, and deeperlati Jrirei cue users.. because there is no hope for theta, rad.. ioalism in this county is working stren dously to do something—lt cares little what it is, only so it keeps its edurage .up 'till the last moment. Bins the county convention gave us the ticket that is going to begloriaisly victorious, thee* worshipers of wenches and advo- eats. of negro voting, have tried about forty different plans. 4o distract the party. and to assist them to make in roads upon tip majority of one or two of our candidates. Their last move is to get an independent Democratic can didate out for some office--desperation makes them care bnt little for which one. If they can do no better they'll accept some weak-kneed brother of "copperhead persuasion," for coroner, rather than odes their game, and then roll up their eyes and howl "no party." But It won't win: There is not • Democrat in the county mean enough to rum for them—not one that they have money enough to purchase to do so dirty a trick, and if there was, it would be but one vote for them, for there would not be another Democrat who would bolt the ticket to support a disorganirer, such is an "independent" candidate would ne•esearily be. No, gentlemen; to use a vulgar expression, that "game's played out in these re. gtons." In the first place you can't get a Democrat to:runomd in the second place it would be utterly impossible for you to get any one to vote for him, if you could And one ungrateful or debased enough to do it. Flo you may as well turn your attention to something else. Get up your meetings, send round your speakers, and swear again, as you did last fall, that your party is not in lavor of negro suffrage?, Go it on that hook again ! Try if you can cheat the white men of this section on that question as vo'u did last fall I We tell you plainly that you are fooling away your time trying to get independent candidates,— they'll amount to nothing if you do get them, and you'll only loose the money you have to pay them for being tools for you. A Groat Horror at Plymouth A most terrible accident occurred at Plymouth, about 20 miles from Scran. ton, on Monday last. Th. coal break er of the Avondale mins caught fire and fell into the shaft leading into the mine, closing it up and preventing either ingress or egress. Two hun dred men wera ‘ i ‘ n the mine at the time, and it is the general impression that all have perished. At last accounts, all business had been suspended, and every effort was being wads to dig in to the place when the unfortunate men are supposed to be buried. The lore, pec.unianly, will amount to about $lOO,OOO. The following are the latest dispatches in reference to the great calamity : P. 8. Sine. the above was written, an entrance has been effected and all the miners were found dead. The fol io the latest dispatch : Awoxpeha September A. Y As entrance to the mine was effected about half an hour ago. The cham bers were reached without serif:nil diffi culty. Meant body discovered was that of Mr. Steele. Further on, and In the most remote chamber, an appalling spectacle presented itself. There, In a heap, end In all sorts of positions In which their agonies had placed them, lay the bodies of TWO 1113ND1IIII) AND ra.asz atsr, DILAD—not a vestige of IN being visible in the countenance or ford of any of the unfortunate men who had met so untimely and horrible a death The wildest excitement prevailed at the entrance to the shaft, and the shrieks of the friends of the dead, -as their bodies were brought up, were deafening Noth lag can Approximate to a description of the scene. No pen can portra y it. The peat up grief of those who st illhoped against fate went forth try wails of heart breaking agony; the endearing and tell dermords of the n other o.- wife, as she grieved the Weiss, form of her son or us d, and tried to bring It again to life, refusing-to Where it could be deed, and desfending It against all attempts at. retrieval —Bora, the Radical candidate for Recorder, showed his courage once when he threatened co shcit a young lady at Pleasant Gap, because her father had a democratic banner before his door, lie is now displaying his courage a second time by fighting a one•legged moldier for the, office of Re corder. Tally two times for the woman frightener sad the man who runs against a ono-legged sellior. Brave Rota 1 -..r—Sow comes it that the "organ" of radintline—the National—la its no• Lice of their tiara last week, forgot Born? Does it think that Jeany's record as assistant profrostlnars4l and white man catcher, is too rough to tie too? There's something wrong iotne• where certainly. ; • --4 vote foiito bosom, is vote &pima tits meal of the Wows NO. °lotion giving olgpre di. sight to vote io Pennsylvania. •TM 011 Markel. I 4 from. PO* 2btoseilip. CtVITIII HALt., PA., Elsrr. sth 1869. HOtteal WATCOIAII.—An oily sub• jinn, like a slippery eel, requires a peen liar and delicate handling. I am not a scholar, nor yet the son of a scholar, but a novice in ibis kind of business. A plain tartner, thinking and writing as a wan who toils hard for his sub 'lettuce, I write you this, and if more is required I may state that I am a IRadical Republican• I- don't like you as a politicion, for I have Minuted "copperhead and "traitor" as loudly as the loudest. I cannot say that./ will vote against your county tiWei, nor yet that I can frpro my antecedents give it my undivided support. While (hie has no particular reference to whist calls forth this letter, it in proper that the facts should be stated: lam by no means standing alone in this matter, although I may be the only one wil ling to break "over the traces" and "speak out in meeting." I have been deliberately, and, as I believe, as So others, pesignedly swindled by one of the drincipal nominees upon ..the Re publiean ticket.. I was approached by. this "oleaginous cons," who, with the Meekness and velvety manner of a first class politico-ministerial pulpit strump et, made representations to me of such seemingly plausible character as to in duce me to give him $3OO, to be inves ted in a general Mock, which he said was nearly raised by a select few, in this township, and which won't', fforn the "surface indications"—it being an oil speculation—yield an immense divi• dend. I asked him who the other stock holders were, and he told me some of them were men of means, Mit by far the majority were as unable to give that amount, as myself, in case it was not a "sure thine." Hs assured me that $15,000 was nearly subscribed, but one stockholder giving more than $3OO. I never received one cent, as divi dend, or profit, and I have failed, as yet to "see" anything of the principal. About three weeks preceeding the late Republican county convention, I was approached by ibis man and told that he was going to try and get the nomination,for County Commissioner, and in case he succeeded, and was elected, I should get my money back. 'lie said the other stockholders had consented to help him, with that un derstanding. I saw some of the oilier victims—we held a meeting—the would be Commissioner was present, and there and then he promised that in case we would give him our township delegation, and assist in his nomination and election, that be would pay us back 80 cents on the dollar. We con sented, of course. So far, so good, but I now understand that having secured the nomination, be told one of the stockholders—(a poor day laborer re duced to abject want by hut in vestment in "surface indications that would grease a mares boots") that he couldn't afford to pay back anything and should not try to. That we took our cha,ces and must stand by it. Among othbr stockholders I may men tison Messrs. Geo. ODlNalaic, 1 Amor Gaunt, Maartx BOWER, WY. Brear and Jonv:Krriv Ea—the latter a very poor man experiencing difficulty in gaining a subeistence for himself and dependent family. Now then, I ask if thin is fair, decent, or honest? Is it what we had a right to expect—nay, demand of this swind ler? I. it what we aye* to expect of him and perhaps of the entire ticket if elected? I care not what the other stockholders may think or say here after—l know what they said at our meeting—but I cannot, will not be again bamboozled in open da!light by this oily scoundrel now soliciting our' suffiages. I know that the hope of re ceiving back a portion of their money alone induced the gentlemen mentioned to support this man. I will no longer give money to dishonest townsmen, nor will I give them a suffrage which may place them in a position to do others similar and perhaps greater injury. For/tali i4l—Lewis /Less. A Victim. The Comet *I 111118. It wiU be premised by the following from one of out e.tchanges, that anotb. er comet is now approaching theaartlt, and is to be seen in ..he heavens " For more than ten years pout the moat act entitle astronomers of the world have told ca. through publicatioirs In -the magmata", and otherwise, that during the month of July, Au gust and September, this year, UM) the most wonderful Gomel the world has ever known, would reappear. They hare aloe tutsurcd sae that It would approach nearer the earth then any sometever dick before, sod that either the earth or the comet would,har• to change Its course, or a collision would be Inevitable. AA this comet Is said to be many thousand times larger then the cartkand Si itsolid mums or Sr., glib a tail of Sri that would reach around tip earth more than a huddred timed, It is 09% at all likely that a collision with it would prole se db the lore •• the late saildellt oa the aria Itallroeld did to some of the more tiatortaasai passengers. According to onions, it was this cosset SAM was inantedl leatterod by a tentble sonteatoet to ter rr p d drew agates retwatrieet w , a mot d ftli:that, in a tea w••••• ant the the walk more then ottie•heU the people of the eatantels• visited by It. Borne years sic" ter, this comet appeored.wgi4p, qad_,lrste, ceded by a most tango tent In Sernet i fi followed by a plftuty or moors. th at piled the dead in hisprla Theltereeti of *tat prop °a.' Vito bury Ibur 4V tba e he . c' ai rne= i rr e eleiblo, 4 lok , math Poteellie• time , thrar to log Oa f the 'Orton.. oot trots 60 oh seeessit of weather. I t be seen With the naked eye . err sty clear nig t,to northars parrot the Itermine. at from 11 to 12 obloak, or WI the atortdait star dee& The late hoary Wee have not had the OW* to delay tip appeaname and progress, or to dim Pe brilliancy, though la ertll grow brighter and brighter, al It approarm , se the earth." Out the Rotltleetion of the 15th Amendment be set aside V The Radicals assert that the radii cation of the _]sth Amendment laat winter by a snap judgment of the Rsld ical members of the Legislature, is ir ripealatle—that it is binding for' ap time. This preposterous ,proposition, which would indict negro sum-age upon the State whether the people were wil ling or not, is nnanewerably disr.osed of by the Harrisburg Patriot, in the following able article : TEM (KrIISTIOII Of itinrtrArtow Quite recently the radical newspa pers of the State hare manifienlid . a purpose to take issue with the resolu tion of the democratic State conven tion on the question of the right of , the future representatives of the peo p le to repeal the ratification of the X Vth Amendment by The last legislature. An article in the Morning The/ of Sat urday contained the following para graph : In this State the verdict already rendered Is beyond their power, except the pernicious in fluence. elsewhere which would Iseult from e republican defeat; because there I. no Author ity In law or precedent for settidg aside the ratification of a that. after its action has been officially recorded in the archive. of the ha, lion. , The Reening Bulletin of the same deli comes thus to the diseueeion of this grave question : The ratification le nbeolntey leteroctible, and it must nilecesarily be so if any such leg. leistion is to hate value. If the next legishr tore has power to wall the action, in curb owes, of lie peedocessor, the legislature of Of (*en years hence will hare the mime power; and so, with the changing supremacy of pu ttee, ratification of the &meatless& will Other be hopeless, of it will have to be taken out and put the Conititution just as one party or the other claims to control the majority of the ellf fere& legislnfuree. This would be ridiculous. It cannot, of course be porrnitfed, and th e people will sot perm it IL But we want the people of the flust• to bear In mind the fort that a democratic legislature would assuredly attempt this repeal, and strive to create con flict between the Federal and State authori ties. It Is not difficult to perceive that the immediate inspiration of this language was the following utterance of that un scrupulous radical demagogue Senator Morton of Indiana, in his recent Pitts burg speech Your legislature ins retitled the flfteedith arrientiment. It le done with it. That action cannot M rveoneldered under the Cooatitotion of the United Steles, and 1 tell my democratic friend• in Pennaylvanii—and I. them make their arrangement* accordingly—l tell them the colored men or Penaeylvaata will vote in • Now let us exentine the gross 'he gumptions contained in all this, for there is not the slightest attempt at ar gument. The worst and the wildest is, that the people of a State have no pow er to reconsider the action of the legis lature, but that the ratification is irre vocable. Whence did these cprnmen tatorr on the Constitution learn this? Where are their law and precedent? The only cases cited to sustain this view are those of Ohio and New Jer sey with relation to the Fourteenth Ar ticle. But the action of these States did not afflict that amendment, a suf ficient number of States hang rati fied it without them. Secretary Sew ard, in proclaiming the adoption of the Fourteenth Article, referred to the rat ification end subsequent rejection by these Stems. But the amendment was shown to have been ratified by more than three-fourths, and Ohio and New Jersey formed by their action no pre cedent on one side or the other. If these States had been necessary to the adoption of the amendment the impor tant question we are now considering would have arisen fur the first time in the h'etory of the country. The true republican doctrine is that the States are in theory a legislature, on the question of this amendment. Until ratified by three-fourths a the Suttee, any one of them may reject, ratify and reject again. They are now deliberating. There has been hasty, inconsiderate, nay, fraudulent action qn the part of the legislature of Penn sylvania. There has been no verdict of the people, but a snap judgment by their faithless representatives. How absurd it is to argue that if the next legislature has the power to recall the action of its predecessor, the legisla ture of fi ft een years hence will Piave the same power. Not if the amend ment, iii the meantime, shall become part oAt L he Constitution by the action of three-fourths of the Suttee. Then it will be too,late. To recall the ratili cation will require a new amendment of the Constitution by the concurrent action of the - requisite Humber of States. Up till the hour when three-fourths the Stater have adopted 'the amend ment, it is in the power or any of them to withdraw its ratiflpation. Until thee they art in legisletive iteration on the *object. The-concurrence offthree- fourths closes the deliberations. There is nothing in .the mere !formal certifi cate by the Secretary of State. Long before that may have been issued, as in the cam Of the Fourteenth Amend. went, the adoption mar have taken piece. The adoption of the axneo - is made valid by the cum - entrant action of the required number of States, and dates fl'om the time the last State shall have ratified it. The world must take notice of the solemn seta of a State, and the mere fitet of recor ding them ' l emon; the sic:hives of e na. eon" is [tailing to the purpose. It" is quasar easy to record at Washington he rejection of-an amendment on the part of a State; as ha ratrihattion. That le what the oltaittlit are therefor. The power of the States to rescind the mti- Of a Constitutional emendmini has been denied by any authori ty entitled to the least respect. That poweris icititiolid in the Okay right of self :government; 'To entablish the con. eratstioetrina 1,1011111 be to place the p eo pl e and therlitatoi constantly at the lower or corrupt **di faithless legia low". It le nos deeded by these rad. iota authorities which we have ( p lo w that Slates have in right to *hi/ripe r , their rejections of *inendmente and e t termer& ratify them. it the case of the Fourteenth , rAtneadment, fift een fik a ge e led relented it. A number of the south ern Stool afterwards under compulsory legislation of Cong ress , re , ended the resolution of rejection sod eat,itlad that amendment. If it be not lawfhl to Whin:kap &hasty, fraudulent or inconsiderate ratifkation, where je she pore: to withdraw a resolution' re. j ee a rl en amendment to the Contain'. don ? If the one rule be good so is the other and thus, then, by the originsl rejection on the part of the Southern States, the Fourteenth A.mandment lute no validity. These asserters of the s t ra nge doctrine that a State ites•no right to reconsider its action pending the discussion of en amendment i are treading on dangerous ground. The Fourteenth Amendment owes its, -exist. ence to the constrained ratification by the Southern States acting under the domination of military power after they had rejected it. If they could with. draw their resolutions rejecting the Fourteenth Amendment what is to prevent the State of Penhaylvsnis from taking back .the fraudulent ratification of the Fifteenth Amendment -by th e legislature of ISO? That is the plea Lion for the Ilia and Bulletin to die cues. It a resolution of ratification, lie a low of the Medea and Persians, be • ible, why shall not a resolu•\ don f rejection? The only true and k \,) rational doctrine is that of the demo. cretin party, that each State has the right to recall its action on an ameni• merit at any time previous to its adop lion by three-fourths of the States. On this is the resolution of the State cow vention founded. It is fully in actor. dance with the great principle of re• publican government. The other view is worthy only of partisans and trick. stern. (For tb• WATCIIIIIII. MUSINGS. I=l Mtn& ■osta upon the evening air, And robe my heart armory busy tare ; Memory's ever loving voice le heard to tell Of distant friends, whom 1 have loved so sell Softly come. the tender memorle• leek, From friends 1 lowed oa ebildbood's track , Life seem ges dieteet from It. birth, Yet we are Oadine—like th► beauteous lows% of earth. ' Farb tender throb that conies to-alight, May hold sore sorrow, hidden fromeor sights Some blighted hope of years Sane by, May brit! to happiness, a stilt. Llfe cannot always dwell 'wild bowers, Where beauty tint. the loveliest{ dowers ; For isunehlee often hold. • shade, And llfe's sweet drattns the soonest fade. God filled the earth with natarafa bloom, And 'unship, robe It. breast of gloom. Throw ammo aollotialg,* the watching apt— Ada. I they wash us but to die. Each ooe, aspirins for the boob of }me May Set ksieed, or write his moue. yet whet le this Vs bat to show That hone le bat a tickle glow. Ambition eannot shield us from the tomb Nor glowing names dispel Its gloom , What Rod intends, no one can know, Death is our nature's direst foe. AN EARTHQUAKE COMING! A California Savant Predicts a Hea vy Shaking-up of Things in Sep. together or October. The following article from the Sae Francisco Chronicle we conunend 10 the perusal of scientific men. The prospect of an earthquake is not a pleasant one. Vapecially along the Pa ciflc coast, where it is predicted to oc our with the ruoetcertninty, the inkier itants will not feel at all flattered. Earthquakes are very distinguished visitor., but they are also very terrible ones, and in every respect their room is better than their company. Wean willing to believe , however, that Mr. Stewart, while a very learned and III• quirins gentleman, will, neverthelera, as a prophet, be a disastrous failure. We hope so, at any rate. The bas Fratieisoo Chronicle pule fishes the following prediction, made by a local philosopher, W. Frank Stewart: _— During the past eighteen months the earth and other planets completed the moat remarkable conjunction AO has ever occurred i and on the titglitof the 14th of last November we again witnessed ,tt e grand thirty-four year star-ewitrin. Every intelligent pecton is aware that for %period of nearly two years our glob , has been autijected to violent perturbations, such as have not before occurred for many centuries These perturbatione'llave been genet' ally dierlEeltillabe at the planet.— Storms, typhoons, volcanoes, earth. 'quakes, intense told and scorching winds have alternately spent their fury upon the denireite Of every hemisphere. By careful obserrations, *Misnomer' have Woad that fn rt period of about eleven years the min turns toward es a remarkably spottedditne, and it lien al so any sudden changes of light and shade upon the sup deicing tide spotted 'Period instant ly affect terrestrial -magnets. It Is well known that in the autumn of la -69 'one of these eetmiPot partnrhation s was immediatelz followed by one of the most' %MEW ATOM% B o realis ever Witnessed in them:ethers hemisphere, and still more sueptising magnetic &fort of the aurora' was to great that Mlikefleis were freely' sent 'over telel graphic lines with Out connection wltait the batteries arid by means, of suror current pions. Many additional facto, showing the connection of celestial