liollefonte Democratic Watchman. BY P. GRAY MEEK JOE W. FUREY, Atkins Eonvoip, Ink Slings .iFhe' day of jubiles has come Black men are ahead. t --The "Shoo Fly" hate are becom i n g popular among our ladles. —Doe kill tilicep In Somerset. county.—Ty 11,11, Blade. You'd better keep outside of it, then —We have the. joyful news that Congress will adjourn on the 15th o July• —The woman that was, "moved to tears," it has now been ascertained, was pealing Oni r one at the time. —GRANT wants to get away from Washington. Aud the. people of Washington want him to get away. —The vote oil the infallibility of the Pope will take place about the end of July. It will undoubteilly‘he carried. —The rain descends from the clouds this seftPOli as fast and free hs lies flow from the poiht of n Radical editor's pen.. —Altoona is about to have a great blessing descend upon her in the shape of the Its ocratic Editorial State Con tention. —The Feu an midis, for the present, a failure. ii this respect it is unlike lisiNT . 9 administration, for it is a fail tire forever. -Ninety thousand majority in New Voris is crushing to Radical , . They don't understand it. We du. ,It meant —nigger enough. —Scrambled hair is the latest thing oil among the ladle.. We like scram bled eggs first rate, but scrambled hair —wethmk it would wake us sick. —The Presbyterian Sy nod pronoun• Cc+ Secret societies "ensnaring In na ture, I ,ernicions in tendency and peri lulls to the hherticq of the church and State." The Huntingdon Globe nays it in sorry to learn that the Bellefonte Na bona/ bas suspended publication. The .Vaitunars stock holders are not nom, however. —We thought the Empress ens coining over to this country this suni iner, but it now turns out that she Is going to Denmark. What will the - , .it It • T had an attack of me.ri,ll4 Fitesday night of I i-t seek, \Vile', it comes to cholora tuurbus, the I'resident is no better than any body else, it seems. --That =at have been a very prac tical young woman aho, on hearing it remarked that silk dresses Were very much worn, KIWI that she knew it, for here had two or three holes is it. —Fifty persons locked up in the I'itishurg watch Douse, on Tile.day es clung last, were all engaged in sing ing "Shoo Fly." It was evident that nothing "bodilered" them very much. —A common hoe that costs the farmer $2,25 now, under the operation of a radical tariff, could be bought, were there no tariff, for $1,25. That's the way a tariff "protects home industry." —lt is a little queer, isn't it, that uhtle all the darkey women of the vountry are trying to eonA, the out of their hair, all the Radical wh, women are trying to comb the k into theirs? —We don't, understand why girl. should be willing to pay frorli hivh }flees for corsets to squeere them to death, when plenty of oleo out, he tool,sl who would be willing to e4iiteeze them to death for nothing. --Small pox is ravaging Paris, and the Corps Legislatif spent a whole day ill devising means to cheek it. It 'night be well for Rollie of our Ameri can legislatite bodied to imitate the example thus Het by the French Legis lature in time of danger. The Fenian ',alma, Gen. O'NEILL, mi , uluz in I n w tr with our Kili4h, was put in lid View lig", a great many patriots, for not wanting to go to war mull our natural friends, the South, wpre put in jail also. So it's in jail, "dher way. SEELY, of the Jersey Shore /hrald, Bays "We would respectful y4rt.iiiiiid garrulous gossips of the fix fact shat a man in 'New York accu ululated an immense fortune by mind "'l4 his own business." What'S up ""Iv, Colonel? That hint's almost as hard as eilci0)(• - HASTINGS, the editor of the New York Commercial Advertiser, has. threatened to' kick TILTON, the editor of the Independent, the rat time be meets him. ,As a consequence, the In• dependent man now goes round the otter way and wears a oast•irbn basitt In the beat of hie breeebee. V °LAI the Gr;eat Railroad Land-Robbing Sob'eme Passer. At last, the bill cbarteringi and grant, ing a fifteen million franchise to the new hunihug—of-a -ra+froad Deer ice bogs and the fungi gods /las passed Congress. min s ns or the people's blooddiought treasure a being squan dered on all imaginable schemes; but in uone yet before Congress has Its much been absolutely thrown away upon thieves, without even the Outflow of pinasibility, as has been given to this set of precious rascals, who dub themselves the Northern Pacific It. It. Co. Were the aim of the rorporiattA io•cut and pacl ) ice berg+ trurn :h lash to the Texas inutket, there might be those who could be induced to believe it of some value ; but to tell sane men that n railroad can be built and run in that Northern latitude, while the Un ion Pacific, no much futther South, to a failure on account of climate half the year, is to V4HUIIIO that ihe experience of all men is nonsense, and that all men are fools. Hail the proismition to grant eighty eight Millions of acres of land been far the benefit of a coin pony to tutergate the air by the aid of Minnesota grasshoppers, inatenil of a railroad over frozen vales and everlast ing ice tipped mountain crags, there might have been lound those in the lunatic, asylums who would have ap ',lauded the passage of the charter by Congrests But there is neither Rene, nor it decent vatting of the effort at nr decent robbery 01 the people's motley and lands in this vile sTilleine of plun der. The 1111110118 moon lionit scheme, which some forte tens ago, occupied the attention and affected the pockets of fools in Europe, was a practical movement by the s,de of this visionary Northern railroad bumbuggerv. Six years ago, when this scheme of robbery an first conceited, the couliwa ny asked of Congress forty seven mil lion acres of land as a subsidy toward building the rand. When that bill was being considered, its foe! ds assert ed that it would be sufficient to secure the building and equipment of the en tire route, and that it passed the work would be commenced at once. It wits passed, and the title , tif forty seven mil lions of acres of land, owned by the toiling taxed nuotses of thq several States was pits, ,, il by tile Government, to thii propol , ed railroad compass. For six years they hate held that land, utlering It to its late owners,--the peo ple, such prices unsuited the wants and «mvemence of the cum pan). Now they come to Congress and ask for' forty one million acres more, and with a prodigality unparalleled in the annals of profligacy or corruption, Congress votes them 91e forty one mti huu acres more. Making in all, EI , :1111 EIGHT MILLIOVS OF ACRES. Fit r times as much as the six Net)) Siales--une halt larger than the ,ollected area or the great States New York, Pennsylvania, Virgin ia arid North Carolina, and sixty thou sand square wiles nture than the coins bineil territory of Ohio, Indiana Illi nois, Michigan and Wisconsin.. Were it poamible that the income miming from the sale of these lands once the people'a—now ticorporation . .-- wouhl be so invested na at some future time to indirectly • benefit the unitises, from whom they here been stolemtbere might he a ahadow of excuse for thia unmuttiated, wholesale Swindle. But when:it is remembered : first, that there is no need at all of such a road as the proposed Cjorthern pacific; second, that the Union Pacific is snowed up three montha in the year, and at four hundred miles farther North would be snowed up six out of twelve months, and third,even if the road was needed— could be built and mule pay, that the entire profits wonld go i far) the pockets of the stock holden., and the pen p!c from whom the lands hay; been stolen, receive not ncent of income, the shame less villainy can have no profit what ever. For this monstrous swindle, W. 11. A Itstmaixo, representative from this the 18th district, worked and voted. Will hie constituents who have been robbed, remember this? —Lately, Mrs. C‘ny ST INTON lee• tured to an audience of New York la. dies, o'fi the Mel'Arti,y4u RtcnAans bv scandal. Men were scrupulously de nied admission. It was well for them. Distibtlese they were spared a thous. and deep blushes! "STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION." '''BELLEFO,NTE, PA., FRIDAY, 'JUNE 3, 1870. The Bill to Enforoe the Fifteenth 1., Amendment. A 110:tSTROCS ASSIULT ON TIIE ELECTIVE I= The Votes of Negroes who have npl Voteti,may be Counted. This ie the season of Hell's delight ; for *ell may the Cohabitants of `the world of Despair hold ft carnival of de, light And have a year of devilish lee. Congress is in session, and is car rying forward the work of their master Satan. But of all tlio infamou4 and damnable nets which have tri . arkril this era in the history of our limo., lo•it vomit ry, not one can he found in which there is slicha diabolical proposition of heefte and reward to scalnwaggery, ns is em bodied in Section 21 of the MI now before Congress to enforce obedience to the abominable Fifteenth (or Nigger) Amendment. The Fifteenth Amendment WitB an outrage upon our Race and its Liber ties, and the manlier of its adoption (God help us l) a fraud of such glaring magnitude as to admit of no controvcr. sum in a single instance; hut the Bill now fastening it upon the States ("Loyal" North, and Patriotic South) and providing for a bayonet acceptance of it at the polls throughout the land— ANI) THE (OUNTINfI SUCII vi /TES AS ARE NuT POLLEN) AT ALL challenge the foam, islimeut of even the vilest politicinns and tools N fQsovir. Read ! read I read I—rend, ymi -people, of Pennsylvania, the language—the words—and mentenerw—the aims—the end of Black Republican legudation ! It i 9 said Section 21 of this Bill was drawn for a special purpose. We should judge mo ; and that special put , pose Is the enfranchieetnent of negroes without the trouble or annoyance of joing to the polls, ne poor white peo ple are required to do, Their votes may be counted (and now will be I) t. hale they are a: home and /late never voted! Il is enough, if they are but residents of a voting district; their votes are to be counted the same as it their ballots Ilad beers piit in the white num.'s ballot box! If they but occupy a shanty in some quarter of squallor and are even too ignorant to know hat "II if Ole" means, etill they vote a silent, find as sure, if not a surer ote, than the white Mall who may have to walk miles and wait long at the isdls to get his vote in. Verily, this is the tear of the Alri jubilee! It is also the year of scalawag and vagabond jubilee. It is the season of the Devil's delight, i n , indeed. But read, 0! ye sleeping, trusting, robbed and outraged, everywhere : Section 21 of the 11111,11.9 telegraphed by the Congressional reporters to the press orthe whole country, "authorizes "a candidate" la scalawag, of course! "to yn lojiffe a Untied States Court, "and Ore EFFECT to the roles if per "sons" N iggere j "loamy to vote at "any elef•hon, but denied the right" [no mutter from chat cruise so it can he attribute! to! In, reason of e, rotor'," "or previous condsit.n q . se, °shah . . "For Instance, tf in any Southern - Slate a rap' dtdule" !that is. /1, 01(`Filtt• • wag I 'for !! Sher iff receives one thous mot "while voles, or less, and, there we .fif "Ire' hundjed, or tam e, colored voters "7 fad!, to Dote fir Aim, but excludFol by "the Slate election ,?ffleers he' [the seal awagl "may go into court and hare "the fifteen hundred votes COUNTED "FOR HIM" lover his decent:Demo cratic opponent.l !fere, then, in the beginning of the end of madness rim madder! What a beilifiCent provision this for the pro motion of a scalawaggery in all sec tions! what a premium for more vil. mina to come forward upon the staxe of political action. 'What n a lilessed state of affairs, when the tote of the iltlA lazy African ' I` otii is to le counted whether he krio 8 bow to vote or slot I What a jjedigli t il prospect for men of character and standing to become can didates for office in districts Where, after an election, a scalawag may fop into a United States noon and have counted for hint n vast imnizilinry pop elation of liiii4er. , supposed to re.iiiie . anniewhere in ii. di.trict. Thi4 is .'getting votes' niarle easy. This is "cart i xiog the ticket, with iti frightfli I rengflince. Ar,[' The monstrosity of ,Ineobin legisla tion is exemplified in this instance. Surely - revolution only—and a revolu tion which will strike down with its iron band of blood every vestige of Re publican debauchery trfinTistory—Can rid the country and our posterity of an age of evils which are hanging over the future. , It is now alinost time to wipe out this whole thing called voting. Hancock and Grant The papers have been pnblishing of late a correspondence between (kn. If Asil MK and IN, which goes to show the littleness ul men who % , 01111.1 laln have the people b e h e t e there above the common weaknesses of hu• inanity. It seems, there has for some tiine 'been a coldness between rresi dent GRANT Rad Gen. II t tut is, caused by some interference 01 the former with an order of the latter while in command of one of the departments. ['hiring this disagreement, II tNt tic K visited Washington, and instead of calling on litttvT, merely left his card, which seems to be, in army estimation, dieconrieons. A lter this, INT and If %.“ ock . met in the street, when the President said, "Ilow are lot, II V , : of K? " lien. II %scot krs said merely to have bowed and passel) on, Without speaking. Again, at a wedding party, the two Tel, and TI Wets K is accused of having turned his hack upon the President, Now comes the sequel When Gen.Tuou t 9 died, ILAN, ocx's rank entitled 'him to the socre,siop. Not getting it, however, he wrote a respectful letter to lien SIIERIII , IIII , OIIt It. The latter replied in MU, after con sultation with the President, and the following is an extract from his letter: "1 urn requested by the President to in form you that there is nothing in your personal relations to General Grant, or in your qfficial relations to his admanis. tration, that could Austify you) promo lion now, or lend you to expect it here aPei Curt enough, in all conscience But it shows the mental smallness of our fleet Magistrate. It evidences how little magnanimity he possesses. It presents him to the people mit selfish, vindictive one who 'lgnores great service~ in tinier to gratify per sonal spite II tit or k is use 01 the be-t soldiers of the comitr), but, I,v -cause Ile was conservatite in his t lets s and insisted upon his own inanhoi , "ll— he would not "crook the preg unit hinges of the knee that thrift lawning —"the President, through (,en Sums tv, conveys to him a studied and direct insult, telling him that there is nothing to • "Justify his promotion now or lead him to en pect it hereafter." Such is the conduct of the President of the State.‘ toward one of the het and bra%evt officers in the service,,. A really great loan would have for gotten ur laid mode whateNer of per sonal grievance be 'night have had, in ~rtder to show how highly he apprecia• ted the brilliant talents of one of his greatest Lieutenants But Wit so with lilt %NT. Ills low, gro.eling, sordid nature would not permlt him to be tongnanimow , , and hence lon !WOW to ll %MOCK. and the promotion of Senn.. r tat to the peution that of right be long.+ to the former. But "time at lust makes all !hinge even. Should t;it t‘T live out his term of office, he will not again be elected. Three year. mare, Wel his opportunity to insult the be+i men in the country will he o'er. A Democratic adminni% tration in the future will do justice to each men tt-i If intik:a, and reduce to their proper level the malice who 11011 stand in the places of giants. --G nt • administration having been so prompt to interfere in behalf of the British Government against the Fenians, we are now anxious n to see what it,wii do in regard to the tearing down of the American flag from the United States Consul's office, at St_ Job it's, by a patty of drunken Cana dians, Having avenged the JOHNNY BULL Government upon its Fenian ene mies, let us see if it a ill have the cour age to avenge this Viontem phi ble SY Pi id, insult to the stars and striper. No haebine out non, ULYt , SLM. YOU hake acted nicely toward the Hug h-di—have you the manliness to make them net nicely toward you? Death of thl T Noma eat Son of Hoa Thirty-right Years of Hopeless Insanity, and Final Death in, an - Vu Sunday labs. Theodore, eldest son of Henry, Clay. Wed in the Lexington, Lunatic Asylum, after a long confinement. The record of his blasted life is briefly thus: At thirty years of age irliecsiore Clay was it prdfuisin; ,lawyer. 'rte was the image and the hope of the statesman whose fame was on every tongue. It is true that there were whispers of wild living, and or itidilfurent morals, thit selk . what tinged the fair repute and erFrilarkened the filmic prospects of flue action of it noble house. Still it ens hoped flint these were lint the re suit of youth. and mould be cast aside when circumstances called upon the mature man to ai,ert himself and mattu Ills talent felt in the communi It was at this ttirning•poiril in his life that Theodore Clay began to pus , foie, with an unwearied perseverance that caused his friends great uneasi- Wess, a young lady of Lexington whom lie hind long loved hopelesily. The object of this attachment, who ia at the present moment one of the bright est ornamente of Kentucky society, re pulsed, firmly but kindly, every atten tion offered by the infatuated young tuna, after his meaning had become nianife.t. It was of no use, he would not be refused, and fillo%ved his fair late in the streets by da) and wander ed in the neighborhood of her home by night in all armoring manner. until at last it became evident that lie "was all there," to use the soil phrase by which a kindly peasantry express in sanity. Subsequent violent demonstra tions tended to confirm the impression, it being even related that lie went to the house of Mr—and demanded his daughter at the pistol's point, until at last the wretched truth could no longer be ignored and confinement in the totylnin became a stern necessity. This was accordingly done, (in 1833, we believe,) Ins father provided for his support at that time, and leaving $lO, 000 in his will, the income from which was secured to Theodore for life. That life, after thirty-eight. years imprison• went in what ill the earlier days of 1118 confinement lie was wont to call "a good boarding house, but having some of the biggest fools lie ever saw as boarders, has just closed. For near ly thirty years lie was one of the moot noted of the 11111111.teS, but his graceful manners and flow of conversation ren• dered Imo an object of interest to all venters.• Ile labored under the hallo vitiation that he was George NVasliiiiT ton, and rum fond of aseutning the tra ditiotial attitudes of the father of his country. At the occasional balls given to the inmates (averaging sonic five hundred in number) lie was always ex quisitely dressed, in the style of his day, and was (helve excellence. Dm ring all these long years, despite his general gentieneits and cheerfulness of manner, be was restless an - a discontent ed, and required close watching, it rev er, in filet, having been considered pro dent to leave hint go out unto the grounds without attendants. About the year•lBfify his condition began to grow worse, and he soon after became demented, continuing in hopeless idiocy mint% few days- since, when Death, greater healer than Tinie, placed him again upon rtri equality with the peers of his manhood, who had gone before him to the God who hail created him and did with hint according to his in scrutable will. And so ends as it.tti a story as the truth of history every cow Mantled to be written. Two on of Henry Clay yet enrvii . ,e him, T. H. Clay, ex minister to If on dont«, now residing on his place "Mansfield," near Lexington, and John M. Clay, the rapier of "Ken tucky," and one of the greatest turf men luring. • Pile It On Speaking of the 1,111410 w befcire Con gresp,./Arenforce the Fintenth Amend ment, the Columina, //void gets oil' the following sett-ible conclusion We cannot sat that we are opposed to t h e pa s ,, e , 11113 law, nktr,to the passage a -z•tetiter's Bill, which we publish el-e, here. sOur counity has been controlled do ring the hat ten yearn by the “curte tlemt'' met of spotindrels that ever went unlinttg, andlt rettiliree an extra dose to awaken the nl aeeee to a sense 01 their situation. The American peo ple yelped for themigger and they have got him several lengthe ahead of the white peoplep witlitte Land and Na `al lorcea td keep hint there. They are getting tines from :3500, to •55,000, and imprisonment trout one month to ten years for any whits person who at tempts to catch up with Mtn. Spread it on thipk; there is no use in having a law unless we have a bell of a law. Sa?rdvrieb the niggere at our hotel !tildes, our landlords, haye v e lped for it t tomil!yleh t i he aigger fn on r olturel. re. our preach'eli have piay e.I for itl newly.* the nigger opt' p,ell6ols, the parent,' 'or 'Or hare %•oted for it. Clive ne nigger for breakfast, nigger lor , dinner, nigger for P pper, ui ßgdt rolketedVlolllor i led nigger on the half @hell and Grant us nii.ger soldiers to protect the ballot box. Spswl► frri-411•414141Ne —The su obit rViktithioritielp an engine house. Sunbury has at last got • Young Ken's Christian association. —Vnn Ambnrgh's splendid MIMI/refill will exhibit at Tyrone on the 13th Instant. —French, Perot's melt house, In Philadel phia. was burned on the 100. Law, ti 6,000- —Twenty-fire eents Worth or whisky killed George Pipe. of lletleton. It piped. him home. —ln digging the foundation of the new Pitts burg Opera house, a number of skeletons were found. NO. '22 -killorrloburg bon three darksy millierY companion. "And till negro troops (might nobly." —A vicious dog recently bit an fixed lady In Lancaster county so severely that she died nest day . t t chap in Reading filled his natter 4e t lapi dated purse by selling Mg false tickets of ad missiol to the execution et Deal. —Mr H. A fichweppenheiser, ofCentro town ship, Northumberland county, has • turkey 20 months old that weighs 33K pound,. Good for Schweppenheiser. —Jacob Seifert, of Lower Boucot', Lehigh county, left home on Monday last on horse back, and wee found afterwards Noel:dr to sapling by the halter strap. —Recently James Bennett, who had been employed about the Pennsylvania railroad at ('olu mllle for thirtreve yeah wan run over by the ears and crushed to deatn. C Royer, the conductor who was killed by the late accident on the Pactßo railroad, was o citizen of Esoton, thle Nat•, and hi■ body was forwarded to that place for burial. —Two little boys at Harrisburg, aged six and nine years, left home one morning for echool, but went Itshier latatead of going to school. The result was their bodies were fished out of of the canal next day, I 7) In • —The Williamsport Gwen and Behatin ears thnli a M.. irewgr fit, the Final, newt them Hort le hid nfethoutand thpalor• trout., that will weigh two pounds each, all in ono pool. Thir le tree biggest fish story out. —Tho lightning has been pitching Into things generally of l•te. Only • short time ago, the barn of John W. Smith. at Exchange. Montour county, was struck and burned to the ground, and • young man named Van Toon was killed in Scranton Vice President Colfax presided at the fourth anniversary of the Americas Sunday &hoot Union at Philadelphia, the other eight. Speec lies were made by Rev. Dr. McCosh of Prince ton College, Rev. Mr. Broola of Tennessee, and Rev. Mr. Chany, of Chicago, A itio Tao" —Arrangements have been made, for a trot between Butcher Boy and Hoehn on Thpraday, June 9, In the harrisburg Drlrtog l'ark The race will be for flee hundred dol lar., a aide, articles of agreement to that effect baring been signed by the restoweldire owners of the horsey. The contest will no doubt be close, as both animals are fast. They trotted against each other about a year ago, Butcher Boy winning three out of eve heata.—/Cs —Samuel Glee's house In Dry Valley was honored by the particular nothw of a streak of lightning, on the loth ultimo. Mr. and Mrs. Gime were Just closing the shutters at the time, and were knocked out of time In no time. When they came back to consciousness, they found the carpet bad got up • bleat a confla gration, and that the electric fluid had played the deuce with the cook stare. By prompt af twit they succeeded in eatinguiehlag the fire. —The ►ltoona Sue tells bow a husband liv ing near that, place last week arrived home sooner than he expented. if. thought he would ,apprise his wife. lie got into the house and taped at his wife' bedroom door. She would not letblin In till she was dressed lie thought he heard a noise, buret open the door, and saw a pair of pantaloons going out the window. AVMs gentle advice she went to her mothers for permanent board. The house hold goods of the late home ars to be sold at auction —The Sunbury Guard tells the following rather amusing story A certain carpenter who la ratite rof a worldly tu,n of mind was shingling a house a few days ago, when his foot slipped from its stay, and he was slowly but surely descending• hem the roof. Tim wickedness of his put life came np In hi* mind so lividly, that km cried • out ••sow I lay me down to sleep," but in lite midst ofhis peti tion the thought of having his hatchet In his liana oecurred, and rack as wick he sunk the hatchet into the pot, which stopped his down ward course, crying vociferously, "stick there. d--n you," and soon gained the top of the roof. HUDDIN DILATES IC elle gum YMELLI.—There seldom, if seer, be. oveurred• similar ease of no many sudden deaths In the same family as the following' 1:;r. Charles Cummings diet! suddenly to lowa, 110111 s years ago, we are not nortals, but think whilst engaged In reading a newspaper. James Cummings died sudden ly a year or two ago In Philadelphia whilst at the table eating. Mts. Chesney. •sister, weal found dead in her bed at Nerthumberiand, w week ego. lend Dr...,4phArps 8. ComMings rte. instantly killed by a train of cars, as he NIR4 walking morose the. rowt;s few years ago at I.ewistownt This Ise remoirkaNereeord of sudden deaths In the same isnally.—Silis•- grove Ttmea, its. tactsts Fear ST Ltoernme.—Between six and seven o'clock last Saturday evening during the provolonee of fliir thunder storm . which peered Oria title rotors, the dwelling /Intim of E P. Iloloomb, Fog, at Lehigh Tan nery' was struck by lightning. The bolt plumed through the roof into the garret In two dis tinct places sad about tonifeire apart, where to all appearances the electric timid 'oonoentrat ed, and followed thy' chimney down the sec ond story, tearing off almost the entire end of Ihe house, entering e large parlorimd destroy ing the gilt fremee o( two hula French plate mlrorn, melting a portion of the quicksilver and completely destroying the gilt window corniest. together with the curtain ll:taros, ,hut mooring the from,its or several (olly oil paintings. It then passed out to the eave'a trough, following it about half way around the house, and trown'the Mater icondector Into the earth. where* hole to lasts ass barrel ottani' the foroo,end *Mount of fhe olectrio current. Strauss to sad none of, the inmates of the house waft. materially lOnisdi A man named proiroio 'toddies about shro• haadrad yards (rm Mr. Holcomb's house wail quite severe ly sanno4 and has not . yet ,entirely recovered. Quite'• numbir of *aide and one dog were entirely , pFosaratetl. :The Ottawa, was not very severe, hut wan aosompanl9d Mr:att unusual antoont of electricity. —.Sfaudt 9,en,t Times. • 1