Bellefonte Democrtc Watchman, lIMIEEMI IIY P. CrItAY TdEEIc .fOI4 W. FUREY, APIOCIITA EDITOR. Ink-Slings —"GRANT (101I't %VIM a seeotal term." 111 a r li g :l4 eye. not ardent Radical out West. IN YAMS, of Yes aqua ardent. ---VINN tr. RE %It U itomr buoting I'nther TlT,Ait.iNTity. We'd like to be bnoytd by het' -ourself. —A :? , 55,00) ervie4trino Plaine of GrtisT ii lAMod Moi t. r,el, it he an talk, fat lie:AVen'ti -: - ..-111;4-ItUrliglt WWI robbed the other \V hieh wht ws that there is not always honor !Wiring thieveq. ' —.M.lntleeotit people oolulge ut 1101 so ll ll water. W.., gtw , t4 titat'S WI) Ili nothes some of thew ('1 gassy, —BEN W uu, has ielired to private lilt. Nobody will regret it when BEN retires from lire altogetlifot . _W e have it front itndirul sotirees . that oitgli to Ii , impeached. tholl( lie ought to lot. --l'ittBlitirg lilts a ‘V(11111111 Nl, Itil thrve liitAlmudg. We'd rather be the «•omen than either or the —A correspondent took tea at Salt Luke city, where six WOW poured out the cotreit and twenty seven children asked for "eravy." oh, Lonly ! —(4 rant, a in Haidoi Bpen,ling 'deep over 11114 rneFonge grew—trying to plod). who to get to write it for him, "Brick" days —This is the season of the sere and yellow leaf—nand of no leaven itt Hays our devil, "but the l ea v e of my girl's mot her to see her daughter ; hope." —The New York RA/rear/s lift "liquor in.peetors" are 'imen of tatitte . : What 11 rnna~meut that is to our frtends (il the Nutionni. -0 1 , 17' bits been lowering the sal. nries of Fume of the Government elert,. lint lie likes b .- J . ll4oer Ills own, and lie lota dune it, too, niter-the pre.entntion mode. —\[r. A. R I'e' in, editor of the Urbana Cabin, was married to MINH Alt lISTRONO, nt GOIIOII, Ohlo, a short time ago Miss A R WITRONG had no Objection to being candied. —"An Internntional Dog 'dime . to be held in 'New York." We propotiu to enter our editorial cotetoporariea of the National and Republican, on ate count of their growl: —The wife of a clerk in the Louis ville Courier Journal office has fallen heir to a fortune '5:1(11),000. 'Plu s is Letter than if an heir hail fallen to her. At leant there is more money in it. In the South they call ,pour the fifteenth amendment. because it IS hard to get down. In Pennsylvania the Radicals call it nectar, because they lore both the taste and smell of --A traveling conjuror by the name of Rentsti has been diddling printers and hotel keepers out of their hills. If he ever tomes to Bellefonte he'll find a couple or customers that he enn't diddle. ----Mr. J. R. Doszttno, Into of the F'tillon Democrat, ham part:flamed the Indiana Democrat, and will hereafter conduct that paper, vice l'ifr J. SANSOM, retired We dun ktio' who'd make a better editor. —A man named (ltitiriett died at Ainhest, Va , from glanders which lie took from a horse." Well, what did lie take thorn for ? A man that'll take glandere or anything else {feat dub belong to himsought to be punished for it. —Bishop Donsrs soya that no clergy 1111111'8 salary ought to be lees than $1 0(X) a year. Then 110 congregation ought to Eaten to a preacher, incapable of giving them an annual thoneand dol lars worth of his litre, but no mord. —Old Mist s wilt! Doe, the Npokesumn of the Southern commer cial convention, in an address to GRANT, nominated him for President in 1872. Modest GRANT said he didn't want it again (I) If anybody has an old wall or bridge to build, better send for 111 RAC --That whisky is a peaceful hev(r , age ie proved by the fact that n hen •tbe internal revenue asseaaor,in KAMM , city, .ran out of stamps the other day, and not a barrel could- be opened with out one, he had to Bend all the way to Leavenworth for kappa, in order to prevent a riot. — BGLANAPr,tIIO HOW Secretary of War, in said to have a "commanding figure." Whether thin relates to his personal appearance or to the 'amount he lints' in hank, we don't know; but, from GanNr's antecedents, we judge he exanted,a - "eottittuttiding figure . ' before he made flip n 11111 TO T" . ....... , ....... , ........ , ......z_......................._...z.;.....".............,...,_44.____,"...,._. .____ „..„ ....__ ...__..................,. nil. .... k 44„ ,--- .."1 - ...- } Partnayi • , --Alle g heny eity leen la •-•<' ' 1 / ,1111,1ron. —'l Ile appleerttp in CL ter 4 7 ,----- - ; °11) -------. P tatfra i tf ._., 11l air • , /__/, /// ilk, ~,, /0„ 4 , ~• ._ ~" ) ,• -,-( 1 1 :1._ . :1 :11: , , , , ,pe1i t t ion et li Lin .—.....-41,...9 , tied nt I r emilify prlYlo t.l t tenehers All IMP 'ige ooloit• or .--A !lendin g %routine *tu g ) n 011 n etin g itly g irl, and itie gg i 1,,1e le Ire ' - .. VOL. 14 The Byron Scandal "'LIM!! HIIIIIL (War 1:1}P(` Nv itnetis agi t it i vt thy tioighh , )iir," k one it the prevelit.4 by the Therrone tvhlr6 it denounced and for rude WIN lIeW to be or a tee tore un litinioti..4 119 to cull for fteparate and Hpecial tionileionation on. the tahleks tit NoHot Sllllll. RIO, 0111111 Wr roemiatre the eadth :m.1.1(411 or that perfidy and /lo• (nue,vudatv'x the 0h1ii4.1.110n., of lono :tot to furor 'Cid... , against the dead ? 011 HO, lineloid in th...levti ueBH of death, are to oiler the %,orili4 of denial twatiou the 1,1.4 intern tihirh Slander '.echo to throw around (heti names ? For a toueli leNwcr enure than Lbw Stipplora ohl paid l'or furl iiiitadity with her life. But the Ghoul or New England Puritanism Ihei to illii.trate the damning elreetm of re1i.1,1011.4 hypo ern..y blended with the cupidity of Ml/111111011. pooiesiled OL the leapt Pe ngp 01 honour nod troth, would 11'11:1 line Ile copy ihe position which II ‘attiET lIEI raElt SToWn ink in the estinutfioli of the world, in retleretlee to her slivifer on the Ilk'es of boom Ili \ null Lin sister. What will be_...thi: verdict of mankind on that Poraani-ito which, like the jackal! of tic f0re..,0, tear 4 open the graves of a hmtsehold in its seareh for the carrion of litils,bood and slander? That Lord live° was, in many re. spectl, a had Men, no one at nll con tenant with the records of hi, lite and character, will Mr a moment deLy. Reared amid adierse ctreumstance-t, his mind took its bias from the domes tic di.-senstous and troubles of his Mindy. Under the influence of other surroUndings, there is every reft , on Jo suppose that lie character would hate been different to what it lamed. Let those lesser souls, who delight to Ida zon thus faults of the great, have a care to record, at the same time, the temp tations encountered— p hil balance the sins commit/et( against the temptations resisted. Inheriting the ardent, romantic and impetuous temperament of his mother, Itvitos was left to the care of 1116 guar. dian, Lord liodi,Asit. While under the care of this nobleman, keen and Ills sensitive mind realized the friendless nests and peculiarity of his position. About this time commenced his nt tachment for Mt ar CHAWORTH —find it is conceded that the tale or this at Anelllllellt was decisive of his future etistence Had she married him, his life would have been one of happiness —but the world %mild have lost a great poet. MARY CH AWORTH rejected the "lame hoe," and llvnnv became vicious and a misanthrope. Those two words front her he loved (they were uncalled for, his lameness being so sli ht, as to render it almost hillier ceptildm— those two nerds were never gotcn At length !Into , : all/lined his Triajo rev lie published bin " !lours of Idleness." The critics unsealed lion. lie demolished them IR los English Itartis and Scotch Re, VW CI e 1 . ," and then ended lor the continent. Two years spent in Spain and amid the classic scenes of tireece and Italy, and lie returned to 11: iwinti.l, lag to the world the y akt tifnt canton of '• Chihli: HIM lame as it poet was SOW CV 1 !woke," said he, " anti litund myself fatuous. It was now that he married the dough. ter of Sir ilium' Mt LIMA use. She had pi evionsly reje:ted hint. not lie won now famous—and, let. it' lie ever remembered that it wan aim who made the fir t o‘ertitrys in this latter instance. That was a butter day for BYRON. The fllltrriage was 111.11(IVItlthl and ill "'tarred. The ardent. impetuous temperametit of the poet, was littled adapted to the cold, concentrated disposition of his wife. Fora while they liven in liar mony. A report was spretaisdleging Britton's Insanity. Phveicians, ttit known to him, were set to watch hie movement?. Extrtymg.ince ntlif mis management had involved hilt) ot debt. His wife, nt the advice of her -family, forsook him. lie sold Ntewstead Ale bey. fie received fifty thoi sand pounds with wife. lie gave Iy.rsone hun• tired thousand, 1.1• s own couptry de nying hint a 110111 C 110 re'iolved wier II "STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION." 1114,1,1,1 ,1 ,14'0NTK PA., FRIDAY NOVEMBER 12, 1869. In Itnly. ['emu], sew-itixv, uututnuud —CO114(00101 on he 01 1111 mete 1.04ret4 than the heal trho 111 ithal and forsalscii--he (111 littly he lurtned Jhe actin:1110411(p of Hi t; Culitite:N GL14.1.102 1 —0111)1 I ' lllll that 11111 1 111 . 1 ylao a dOWII Wll,lll l'oll rally 11111 iiifellectivilly. The rvvolti thiii in Greccegiroit4m.l loaf 110111 Ilia • lethttrgy, and Ile .ought to lie lime, 111 the eAttze, 111 (;teetan Irl that, Imite whielt he hall • earned lII' the field (It Itteratitte But hi 9 lit Ita run. 1 / I * .e , irtatiort ;Ind Inent:ll tie! lio,l ,Imie he: r II(.t.1, --and ht We,teril 11 1 vecc, al the ago. "1 thilt% cello 44.11r0 "111 e Lrrente.t Englndittinn .It the nineteenth cetitnz clo-ell his lllilil HO 101 1 1111-Cl.ll/It . \ 151c10.21 . . Whale hale heel? the Cults 111 t 1.14, there 14 1101 111111 ft -1 grollll.l for Mla. 17'014 1:a h ' llllllar ( . 011 i'l l l - 11illg 1111 1•011 Ili(1011 Itltll Ilia • Tile 114‘q•11.1011 le;llo ttvon fare the rI times Or 114' 01111 ;lad such a Name as 'tweed been coni :anitted by Lord Antos and his sister, wouid have transpirol before to day ; or were such a thing possil le its that the secret cook] lie kept tor more than hirty years, la-. the giI.I.IIINK.VI, A) 110 hated the lit mist wo/Vla err tautly have Hammett it forth to the world) were helell a thing possible, w y would not Lady Bruner hare call tided the secret to Moortz, the friend an d only confidant or her husband ? TitollA`i Monet. would have known of this thing, of all others, relatives or friends—the only person 'whom Brims could trust as the custodian of his Posthumous memoirs, MOORS, Weald efrtainly have been cognizant of this blot on the poet's life. Why, too, should Lady Briton have confided to Mrs. Maws, that 'which she would hot disclose to her nearest and dearest rela• tutu's? Why did she not confide this story at' her husband's guilt to the surviving members of his and her father's family who stood around her death bed? More than all tlllB, since Lady livativ's pity for her husband prompted her, during a long life, to hide trom the world this story of his damning grolt--why should she, at her last hour, seek to blacken his inenit.ry by breathing the recitta of his Wthiey of the ear of lIARRIET PagIiCLIER STOli r. ' The real cause of Lady Bract's estrangement from her husband was, first, that pecuniary embarrassment w h ic h ultimately led to the sale of Newstead Abbey ; and second, the evil courses into which the poet subse quently fell; and thirdly, his alleged insanity. " After it became appareth that his strange conduct toward me was not the result of unsound mind, but of willfulness, I felt justified in leaving him." in this strife, the ver diet of the world, as in till such cases, was given, right or wrong, iufavour of the woman. Popular applause, ever as uncertain as the winds of heaven, turned to detestation and disgust. Men hated him, without knowing why lie was accused of crimes of which he could not possibly have . een guilty. Ills actions-were misrepresented, his motives belied. 'The baser herd, who caned his literary fame, gladly joined in the general howl—and he thus" vane eitgoimint of the depth, and mean liegS or huutrai malice. But that proud s old r ose superior to it all. In that hour when the popular clamour wits at its height—when she who, what ever Might have been his fading .4 4 shuatid have been the last to forsake hunt, had lett hum for her father's house -then it was that, like the boa at bay against a herd of jackals, he hurled defiance and co:awn pt at tie mycophants around him. Pity that, he bad not opposed the sante unbroken front to the temptations of sensuality and dissipation 1 „...put the reaction came. Mankind bet ati to asTi themselves what it wan that he had done to merit their hate and obloquy. The tide of popular fa. your with now etronger for him than it had ever been against him ; and on re ceipt of the tidings of his death, "there was mourning in every hamlet throngh- Europe.” It wait in alluilton tp theee trials and triumphs of hie life that he wrote those:immortal words : Wyn I am mhos, it for bnilr "hall whelk Tn" Pr"ri?etio (11111104 s of this ver.,,, A n .i potou TlllllllOl 110ii.1.4 tint mowuLnin of my 11:11 , •11 -4' , illllll i I .014110111 ,,, 11.." I/I'.l 111 0 01.111 110110111 it llm i• I rt , pi 11,1 L. wri,tl.• ssrh 1,l , rll limo I ,po a .10144,1 tlttlig•+ t • bu tut 411t•11 , 11111 , I 11,1 111 V 1 )111111 1111 111 . 1111 1111,11 rong4 Inpvity I In". I 1,. pt , ull4t Immon 11111 K. r•irn di, ? Plain !lirg 1.1411" M , 0111141111):,11111111y, ' r” pnlltyjotr 4: * not livid in rain. Nti, , mind /11.1 v Noo.l ili+ the. A int nu' ft :fln.' peri , ll oi en In minion:ring pun Hilt iltnt 'thin me 111 lit° uan•, midhv n°Lrol exiiiin 4o , lll.tlilun imoarthle iii• 1•111 11 ,, t or thl! I , llll.llltWrlql lone of It 111111.• Pyre, 4 11/111.111 NNW+ -iulc tlllll 1114,0 in hrnrtu nti 1 1 1) nuq , th ,, lutn revii,,r". ni 1.1 t• IS 11 nnwl n 1 the friolll , llly (118 t. 111,04, Inv 1111111... 111 t 11t Ilene 1%11011 lIP \All. iir mi.!, there here none whir nerriserl him ot the crime of incest. This wa-r re t d-i veil tut the Puritan Wiwi!, übo, wanting: gold, iii named not to it be riolaiing the 'rare; and atteMpiing to Irlat•kim (Ire memory awn. unhappy being, anti blit-t the fair Mine of ano titer whose life ries ever blameless. Chi' turpiuulr, 1)1111114 1111.1(1V , IlleltiLle as it in, but he regarded an an inagpowili of ihat , roeuil and political rediool in which MN. STOWE hair been educated. That heterogeneous nil), true of hypocrisy, and hollow political and religirrior rrlfr aim, which is can kering and rotting the morals and the principles of the New England error mnnities spreading its blight over the whole country —that admiAture in the fruitful soarer , , the legiti-orate g4lll, of those instinctn and esplrettorrs discovered by Svowe m the .IL tempt to -acquire profit owl a 'air l-y darkening the charact rii 1. a-4 Br aux arid stabbing that of his mister. 'Phut morality which, while it ;twirlers at the literal infringement of the Deca Logue, yet smiles complacently at the riolation of its spirit—this inerahty in the fruitful source of that decadence in individual probity and integrity now so common to New England ; of that deceit, subterfuge arid commeegial clicianry which,wlrile it erects churches and seminaries, fills its money•bags the sweat and toil of the poor ; of that Puritanital cant and mural whine, larded with Scripture; which led the profound MOOTESVVIEU to exclaim, " The Tree of Knowledge in not the Tree of Life"—which found the Puri tan of Salem, in Massachusetts, Hanging of hi• cat upon a Monday,. For killing of a rat upon a Sunday, ' —and which now finds HAMM' Bee mica Smirk endeavouring, for the lake of gain, to tarnish the already too ' dark character of that being, whose imper ishable renowo will, nevertherthelese, be dear to learning and Co fame, long after the STOWS has mingled with other • unremembered dust. New York and Victory. The late defeat of theL4adicale in New York, was we hope, the death blow to Radicalism in that State. HORACE Orteineft, one of the founders and greatest leaders of the Radical par ty, was a candidate, and his over whelming defeat shows that neither he nor his principles are popular with the is.opie of the great empire State. The Democratic victory tells us, in thunder tones, that the doctrines of the Tribune are not the doctrines 4 the people, nor is the prophet of the Tribune the prophet of the people. We look upon this emphatic i con demnation of the Radical partS• ui general and the administration of Gen. GRANT, in particular by the people of the State of New York, as the mighty stroke that has cut off the last head o the Radical hydra in • that State. iieocelortb it will rear its horrid front im more, and the people can now breath freer and easier. Thu election of jOIIN T. IlorrmAN as Governor was the fitst blow at the monster, sad one which weakened its power and onset settled its dominion. The final blow woe gii en in the late contest, and to. day Radicalism in New York is crawl ing on its belly in the duet, with the heel of the victurious Democracy plan ted upon its 'jack., The Right is tri— umphant—the people lire free. Oh, that we might but say the name for Pennsyl , :raniu. But here, we aro yet in darkness. The hour of triumph is delayed. It will come in time, but we most yet uulfer a little more—bear a little more, before our people will be ready to declare against the Coln mon enemy and assert. their Gotbgiven right to rule,accordinobo the eternal princi ples of truth and ,juslice and the re q femen of eon.' 1111601 ml law. • Death oe Mr. Peabody (j PE uruur, E.I/.. the great Alnern anti Engh,h hanker. lie i in London, al hi , r. • ‘l,`, had jn.t rearli(l En;; land Irotu !him 'renntry, where, 1( I:1 be retnetniatred, he tine t ai a wino only a 1 . 1.111 monrbi I : Zg. . Ma death line cannel great regret both in England antbjri thin country, for he wile 'a Cif I 7.01 i.l both and in both wan equally lielovol and eqteetned. Mr Pi:twiny pO-80, , ed an immenQ,. li n true, nhich ho nAeol Int the benefit of )11:1 ruler, and hi , nohlr charily In LcLnlf of Southern 0 , 111C:1(1401 111 11114 coutttry wtll tauter ITIIIIIIII ae a la.,l:ng ineint , iial liis virini• and go(xliifsg. • Mr. PEpIIODY ‘t a+ a wane (.1 14:11(1,1110re. Tire Io'• lo‘sing, to ii!'h,on to him ileevase, till] sli,m the leeling nt England; 1 1- 1" I'l, death of Mr l'erthody 11 1 1 1 01111111 11 .1 1111/1 1111 T 1111,141 91 ,Vo l Ditlg Nat punt 1 101 , ( 1 1111'1 1 11111(), 111/11 1110 6trt ronl.l not hi. 1.4 idely plibldo t ,t until to-day Ilia I.l,Ath tal tittl,..l•lilly ',grotto,' Fi11 . ,.( 1 4 1110 flying /1t luAf M 114( nod Itoiloilogn Irititeti m mourning In ta rinnn part+ ot thr vity, nild 11111111 1, V1 1 14 1 111 1 0.111 public grlorattort lii on venni' .arrow The ..ltirs of thin 11101 1111;, In MI 41/itlllllY 11r(11 . 1.`..11 , , Peo - 01,1V vin not n ruin u! 111111111.114. I.lllolllllod loleooo, but nufwr of J 11411110114, aide Ittme,oleio I'. HI,. el arity Wan n.it 1,0 , 01111,mm. Ile gave from Mr mnl ntilv.tatieo lit not rill render wltal, death roll from lion /fir .ervieer , boll) in 111, lint ire and adopted country, bane bt.er. fiItIIIKIV and generoualy atteugnizetl in royal letter, laid the thank . of ( longretin The itive.ing hi+ tuti need to learn tr. in the eon...tomato man of haw In gam money His tweer may them hog It 1111.10 ho ninety spent In G a tst's calonet are three men from the Stakes of New York, New Jersey and Mar . land, namely Fisn, lioncsoN and no ssts kit.. Al these gentlemen were at home canvassing their respective States, Isefore the late elections, in the interest of the admin• istration, and yet -all of those three States gave overwhelming Pemocrattc majorities. In New York the people have shown their appreciation of Ult.tsiT's muse by electing a large Democratic majority to the Legislature, besides the whole State ticket. In New .lersey the Democratic majority is in creased, and in Maryland not a sznyle county gave a Radical nrijority, and there isn't a Itailtral member to either branch of the Lea istaturc how is this 7 Are Ftsai, Rousso:iv and (Items watt. entirely destitute of influence-, or are the people of their States disgusted with GRA+.7 and hug eontempoille ul mitanitrat ? the latter Is, of C0111&9e, true, and accounts. for the stinging condemnation which these Men Lame received. —" Fighting nut now a. days, timi c t amount to quite so large a figure as it did during the days of the nigger war. The people have some thing to say about vibe matter now, and they have decided that. : while Slum. might do well enough to , lead a lot of plunderers in a war or cotton and nig gem, he won't do load in the front when the struggle is for the advance ment of the civliazatton and glory of the 'country. The following is the opiniati. of a disgusted old Dutchman in' thir matter: I Astro voted mit dor Sigel Wit dor Grist , ly I 4fid vlght— I Top frightened like der I ityfol Der tom ting voinott right, Der Sigel he vim beaten, Intl Greeley, no van he DP , nest dime ven Igoer, to right I learn dem fellers be. It ishe't tic (tile .illdeg, Dem Dernok rat.. ish bricks •ighls uo room mit Sigel—. I quits dem bolitien. —The State constitutional convert. lion of Illinois stands at* follows : Repnblicans, Democrats, Conservatives, Independents, This is a tolerable fair division of A* political elements, sad, if the ohj . pct to to revise and amend the constitution of that State, ought to give a pretty ac• curate expression oLthe sentiment of the people. If tits Democrats and con servatives will poll together, they can cheek the will schemes of the Rath calls very effectually. Stornwrz, recently Con nected with th'e. Altoona Vifidirator, has AsAtimed the editorial 'direct:lair- of the Beaver Local. 'Mr. SW Awri is a good writer and has gate „ literary rep utation. —The Elk Detnocr*has be ta• ken inn chatge .1)310 tuairci J. M I.LER, ' a Harrisburg 6%N. We,trtiei Mr. MILLER will make it an efficiept Dpincrratie weapon: Pdl: m Irnrest perfn:7l' Iu tin) l'seinlity nights, --I.lll.lniban the elm sliqh. fro flan L - en cn ' luou, mutually 0111110 184+11 NO. 4:; hio the largest d En, in ihe United 1-tnt9ti. erneil hp llttrlfenix --Sleupielutune county LO.troth Y when) but. e =MEE 11..tlioclivtChu • c Jul John%town, CAI - The roonty tronimrot of Elio, oho 4101 pseerrie.l a foi,N weeks ago, Is tOu slimly recovering. -- •I'hev have a 100 Y sty ad. a,eot.llng. to 000 0 palled 1110 '..00togo110111.”1 —lt 3 oung man mimed John Jenningit dram run ot in. and kipeci by a' train of card, near oit•hiirg, on loot Monday !Agfa a work. new ritt•Merg ilding Bill cr..l in,orie, v. Meh enrhnv6ntle l'itt+herg helleves establlallee ita claim as • great city. —Erio mot Pittsburg tram a ship ritual be tween the two towns Ilt• last named great oily might to be oblo to orotot 11411 the work alone. - The Mayor of Oil Iflty lately gave the of . t het piece twenty-tour hours' notfie to quit. They left Ins body for Pitts burg. --The Philadolphie &Weir Marmot, Is In 1n• yor or nominating Furman Sheppard, for Judge, In place of Poxen appointed by (herr u..uecerd Itrowater. —Near Pottsville, latety, three hoytifanglit another boy, built n lire, and 110111 hitt] over it until ha was almost masted, to punish him for telhilit that they iiad robbed a spring house. —GoSenior (teary has net another of Ilia friend. at 'thirty Ile hot week pardont.d young Parr, a fellow who wan nentanced to two Veers unprironineut for cntering the residence of I oinosodore Self; idge, and stealing cloth ing -"not.—Mr John Arms, of Pughtown, wan nho in the head and hricast,..on the 2uth ult. by thn careless handling of a gun by another, who supposed it to be without a charge For. Innately Mr Arm, wan notdangerottaly 4131.111- ded. —The Delaware and Lackawanna Railroad, at ha tune of the Avondale disaster. sub. scribed $40,000 for the relief of the bereaved (mollies of 0i :rimers. Mr. Gaylord, treasurer of the fund, says not one rent of the subsertp. lion has been paid. --It le authoritatively announced that two third. of the Preebyteritxut have mined the r.-union of the Prembytarrien Churches by the reintred meority Ttm General Aseerrnhltee met xi Pitt.hurgh of - November tho toth, to count tho •otoa and announce the re• —The Downingtown Joerrocit mays that an. other unstiverp.fil I effort IMO 111.10 on Monday nigid of laid week, to rob the reiddenee of Joidina Dente., Fe] Mre. retinae heard the inn-glare pry off a bolt from the window shat ters, and tuck irry, it noise they wore frightened off teachers of one of the pubitc eirltools in Franklin were propeented the other dory for nweiatilt Lill battery for Hogging a puplizreril twelve year. 'chr a/Awn wag" brought bane Josue., Dally, and the Jury rendered a ter diet of sot guilty, and pe•iieenitor to pay 1,10 —Twobrothera,NamletandJoha Van Verve, the one aged eleven and the other fearteen yearn, 111. Wihiainew.rt, were handling their father's awvy rovoliver on leaf Saturday morn. Ing,w hers the won poet was ace Mental lyd Ise berg. ed, the tall plaiting - ee ti rely Stunstrigh the body of the younger hay, causing his immediate Oeath —A singular wedding rearnedy took place at Philadelphia. A man over oew hundred years old married a woman aged severely-eight. The gamins " In the neighborhood celebrated the occaoton by hombres, beldam old tin pans, and by Owing the eentractiag parties pacier. ally • cattail u owls& serenade: —Pedestrians are 4.'01,144 to hate *onto rights oa the streets, a as hdured owe has Just recovered Olean hoadred &dare la Ph Ilavretahla, for three , ribs 'woken by •waron ea lie was attemptiaw to craws a thoronwhfara. When the driver. isdoretaad I hat every rib la worth five hundred dollar*, they will be apt to have more rare —graittain !touch was killed the otber day while feeding a thinsahlog machine inalippery Rock township, Lownimets cecuty. A picob rock which had *lapped off the handle was throws into the rnanbine with the sheaf at wheat In which 11 was sticking, when it wail Instantly broke to piece*, • fragtntrat striking Mr. O. Is the lkorsilLeorl and penetrating lb. tiaras.—The ColunsblaSpy.says, - tt few days age Mr. Jacob Saylor, of Washington, in tears lug up an old floor found nearly Zoo in silver, whioh had fal les through the openings In the floor during the long "lapse of ages." Nye and tan cent places, quarters and halves wen among them ?dr. J. L. Shuman Is the happy possessor of same of these pieces, some of which are old, and so much worn as' to be quite smooth. 1 —Philadelphia city le oansiderably exercised over the developments in the came of Emerson, the autograph forger. The fact that the pleb for many yearn exhibite4f in Independent* Hall an a genuine produthrlon of Georg* Vas& Muted titres out to be the wart of this aver graphical genius will no doubt 01111236 a feeling of disappointment and, disgust In the hearted all, from the President down, who have gamed with tearful oyes upon the supposed sectw• relic. • —A Philadelphian, arrested on. spaniels.* it drunk vanes. and:fined therefor, related Ida. expenience to thet magistrate : "There was dub greatest to do I ever saw, I was sure there ma an earthquake; for the houses and steeply were ail staggering about, and the streets was* Just rot:kinglike a cradle. It was a most , lime Aipookonle; so I fetched up uplink • . pump end held on. while I look a good irked the tnagnlneenit Deena, No panontma:swelthli , rome np hrit., toutiis, trees, fences. all ~- I g and plunging like a ild horses. The war. worth a dollar and a h&lf. li 1 LI 9 Mil ~' 11 f~lol II a. shot' {a noun 1* EWA Ispor ' tl4 k‘ 11 inet ern ht her him. vIrT L I { , he of miy citii ; ii' l Of coureq 1614 " ;i: r nsover ' ien thol n iar 1 gla. hrinan.d ati 1:il *on rogrnnv milted to Oki eh Wll/1 recently ikla ljrlo county. It OW • of tablo up nt Al too the local reportOrs,'