Bellornto Democratic Watchman. BY P. ( ;RAY NIEFk. II I; \V. .ItIIRE , A s,o, Eorron. Ink Slings.. nre nearing the senron of the ,ere nwl ;%ellow Ns iw your CCUIK a pOultut in Lytlell.- 1;m They charge high for cold CUE <0 t nl , lO \ diat ehc Erightiot with OLIN }: LoGA:v. \\*lint It pity I —ln Ilit4(itiy, I( . iinsan, (here in a 10„,11, . attaciiIIIIIIILB for arc trolueiitly‘ery annoy- exchange 1 4 1114 more men are i r . , t a.n Ir, unal tluril than women. Of runic ho ever heard of a WOlllllll nian ! \V II i rEttoitx ham dechned a re— for Convre.4 and a nigger h keen nutted ill lii,, place, "Vutli heA. I IR'!" . 1 t‘ , .) niggers art• perted to go to I , MI / 0111 , 1111 a. \VII holm OWN ;I' Ici( (mem, 1“r there's hi;e ones II.,• Lonotville /t,t,/t/ Sun recortlA 'lt ILnt n elinp -tot„! ulr Ithe a !Irk.. an d , :ot ttoirti,d. nt trite of the thmt o, the otlwr day. fail- a Indic, now wear thesamo .1, le id lint that wfoi worn tt hundred 'tut lip tars iIVII II istory is notthe ii.l\ thin? that repeats it4ell. We have it kink in our library tle.l It 1. NT 111111 his campaigns," \ mote approtirinte 1111111 P would be, champagnes." -- km le r•my woman has had CII in the last fire years. w be able to give a good account M t li to till. 01'11.1114 marshal. I:a lira' paper hinter' that I, 0. ‘‘ receivPill 114 n royal guest by li n%711' 11i i m. (.o'lnm—don't he 1,,1n.:27 t'. l a %vr's royal honaehold hen ' --It riiipioreil that HORACE GREt I t t it•ii•he NfiniFiterto Eng -1;11/1 n C.rt, of F111 , 11•011 1 1:1'SEN, dc- L, I 11 , 4% , F. ‘‘ oida make a high II , ,4 1 hog in Wayne county, , 'hot weigh. 1000 poundsgroFw. I n• 4 lug hogs here, how— . , don•t go on four st- .n 1 ..‘,.n the lever and ague -tbthe niggers of the ‘ol,ll. Mince the war the black - e become inlernal lazy I ~,t•\ eat i) shake t- , 1 , ‘ , . It. Avitios.‘ to to receive !,.r twenty leetttre ui Cablor- nut • ,NS loonres are dear at any like to get one of them m a matrimonial way. \ ' , how out \Vest somewhere - that a loan can't drink 1114 Witch ,!,,- , l‘y now a-lays as formerly, , lauver of "jumjams "We he has tried it on. - \ oiing Lonisvilte gentleman be to marry a young lady m the Miinoniit It Cave, an envious coteinpo• rain le:narks that this looks I.ke run- I, ni ma. r imony Into the ground SI(;E:I., having recovered iron' lo— recent 'Nuclei+, ought wow to go ooti l too itrolottia, where he !night once ti: I hear the cry -toVo,tre gold to ti¢hl Mit Ind do bully lager 1••••• r —l'he average s alary 01 a :\ t•w Ilamp hire clergyman, according tu :111 s3siLa year. Admitting tl.a• of thew are con4cientoms taut„ thi. pi more thaa it great many ot theta earn PAT I 1 IS Singing 111 1110 Well, le , Ile! I I Ali, Ir , %%1. going to have Nil here, and t the going to get, ~ •4 0 1 a ihty '• We she le,ruither,-oweeiihnt Than* tnai• the water! • —We are told that the 'l'rone /blab/ editor went to Lewistown along ccith the Democratic conferees trotu floe place, and wan "np n !dump,' as mind We guess the Herald Man is a Intl • \ed einee ii ltadical primary th cuun uc Tyrollt!. -The planters or the South are go ito make an mrott to colonize En g. Ii ~barrows in the cotton growing m(clions or the country. In such case the scriptural passage may be reversed and many (English) sparrow will he Id more value than one man. --.1:poor man in \Voonsockqt, bond a pocket hook containing three thoiNand dollttrg, sod restored it to the ()a tier, who told blft , gratefully, that (;od would rew . .tid Lip honesty! The poor wan has t Aout t of it, but thinks lie nooll have giliae.l foil the trouble heduid know! 0w1.,c , t 111 111111011 P cuqs the cricket lot Belo of to VOL. 15 The Reign of Terror in South Caro- Just now a party, calling itself a Union-reform party, is making a hard struggle to redeem the State of South Carolina from negro rule, and to place the control of things once more in the hands of the white people. Meetings are being held all over the State, which are addressed by rtble speakers, notwithstanding the danger of insult and even of bodily injury to which they are exposed at the hands of the negroes and their infamous white allies. The condition of things in South Carolina is horrible. tie groes have everything their mvn 1%!1v and there is ronselpiently a reign of lawlessness and terror. Barked tip hy SrorT and a host of white rene gades. both native awl foreign, the black element esteems itself at liberty to do what it pleases, and it genetally pleases to do the cost devili s h anti wicked things. All this, too, under the eye of a white blovernor, who might. if he would, restore order and entitle himself to the grateful thanks of the people. Nit an election is approaching, and Seorr is a candidate. To secure this negro vote, and thereby ensure his own election, he finds it to his in terest just imirto shut his eyes to the doings of his black supporters, and to leave unpunished crimes that should be atoned (or by the blood of their per petrators.. Such is radicalism, and of such stuff are its repretiontatiVCE. made. Poor, miserable scoundrel he de serves and we trust will hereafter re , cc!! we the curses and scorn of his Own OE \Vt. wonder how long this state of things is to continue, !row long 'ire the people of the South to stiffer in this way? It makes our blood boil to think of President (la ithatidoniti o g hinikell to the pleasures or Long Branch, while iii one of the States etti posing the country over which he was elected to preside, and which he is bound by his oath to protect, there is now a reign of aiiiiichv 811 , 1 bloodshed, caused by the etlorts of one tarn t o I'ollllllW' himself in power. \\limn will the President awake to his duly' But can we expect anything or (iltl\ T 9 \V e doubt it. Ills whole course, ever s in ce h e assumed the reins of Govern ment, has been rather against the lieo plc than for them In North earoliaa lie aided 1111114. \ anal Kll2ll, by serilin!, them Ills troops of the 1;ot ernment when they were attempting - to do eC netly the 11(1111 thing flint, (iOV SCOTT is floitlg, lost li. all probability, if seorr needed his assislanee, lie conkd gel, it an easily dill Iloi.uts and Ilefflll , 4t INT seemS lo have forgolten hum manhood, 168 honor, the holies of I. great office every - diing —ni order that lie ni a y please the Radical Party, which now ottns hini, body, Soul and breech es. well - plillellee 14 agreat vir tue, but is will not last forever. The time will come when these infamous scoundtel will seek their holes,and call on the inojintaiiis to tall on them and hide them nom the wrath of an tilt raged people. The Empress Eugenie Amid all the siorni4 of war mid tutu now sweepim: over Prince, the noble Empre,4 lit i.l xi: stands bravely at her poi-t. Instead of ily ing from Franee with her /lA' sortie martial. Ist. , v °Mil hate to. belie% e, the still re mains in Pane, nrtiug the pail of a noble chriethim vOOlOll. With her own fair hands ehe minister, untiring ly, to the week of the sick and wound.' (id soldier., 1.111 french nud Pritiftn, Wllllllllg %Oil' , " Rota friend and toe 0111,1., aII4I 11141114;11Iff, other lit dies of high lank to fallow her holy example. Siirebi,, Ileateu will bias this grand, noble 1,1 °man, who thus, 111 the midst of her own great trials, and with it erii,hing anxiety for the fate of her !midland ;Ind NUll and France in her heal 1, can co far forget or put away ecerything Have the tender eco»ptomion and pill 4)1 her plIfV, wouutuly rant, for the %%retched vie timo of this most ler1'11)10 anti Unhappy It is not alone in the courts of fashion that the Empress of the French is so prone, as this war has proved. The heave men of both armies who, wound eil io death, Liss her hands in.grati- ni i w , ft,p_ "STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION." BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY, SEPT. 1, 1870 tiole for tier tender kindness to thel tell its a different tale. They tell us how she has given up her pithier that they may be made comfortable, and ordered that everything be secondary to their benefit. They tell us how she goes animg thew, with tender pity in her beautiful eyes, and eases the pain in their burning foreheads With (ho magic touch of her cool, soft hands. They tell how she is an angel oil earth, --a loving, pitying, gentle, noble heart ed woman. )11, that our country 0 - Tools, who are alums so allslollo l / 4 ) 1111Itat.` the 1 ranch rtypre4FCß styl e 0 1 'lre—, fluky always hetirafter be jic4 as /1/) , ,i ,, !, to/ /11/Ihti , 1/ , •" 111.:11f.71!V lilt• u, times of attgatAti Atui .lay tiod bless El \ft , th e prayer of every America', The Difference The great secret of the prosperity of the eonntry In former \ oars that In lair a as plod in pro; ortion to the price of hying. Every laboring man had nom. e%, anti often had it to spare. The tweeasaries of life were cheap, and the consequence was the ino4t unexampled proapefity the country over. 1 . 111.1 Wilki under I)enioeralic rule. flow is it now—how has it been 4ince the accession of (he Itatitcal par ty to power? The price of living lia liven enormously 11101,11nd our labor log men have been paid in a deprecia tett currency that has Gen worth hard. Iv more than half its face, so that when a roan goes to market IWO 18 obliged to take along a ba.ket full of money to buy a pocket MI) of provisions. And matters are getting no better fast. , The importation of the Chinese , • coolies ban put labor, in some sections Of the country, down to 30 cents a day, and white men are crowded out of etn ploytnent altogether. And still this wretched work goei on. The COI/11('S are corning In by the thousand, and for every one that arrives on our shores, a white roan may commler himself nit of a job. The capitidc-fs are selfish capitalists always are, -rind they till! not employ men to work at :,-2,(H) or '' , •2,31 . 1 a tiny, when they can get the finale work done for 30 cents a day. Laboring men may Inc well understand this first as [ant, and then tinny 14 ill lie able to make up tin it minds 1114 to What is the hest cower , for them to p u re u e The Radical party generally (vivo. cafes this coolie labor. Their journ als say that it will benefit the country and that the pig tails will make good citizens. And yet the) have the liudence to appeal to the white labor ing clan for his vote Can it he possi ble that any man, who earns his bread in the sweat of tun lace, will fur an slant listen to the voices that are thug urging lion on to his ruin' The l'eniocratic Party, if it can at lain to a majority in Congress, prop)• eve to put a* immediate stop to the system of Cliinese iminigration to this country, under contract, by law. It will thus secure to the laboring mho his rights, and prevent the degrada tion, to want and woe, of the bone and sinew of the country All it asks is that the labormg ineu—the men %vim are no deeply interested in this matter —will join it in the herculean effort to overthrow the iliclibas that, IC now ((rushing the tile out of the white work ing men of the laud. --B. P. M.% ERI, one of the editors of the Ilarn , hurg Pa, tot, and one of the boldest and best Democratic e;11 tors in the State, has been nominated for Congress in the district composed of the Counties of Bedford, Fulton and Somerset. Mr. Mvrots will have for his routpehtorin tlo- race that corrupt and insignificant little scoundrel, dons %, the present incumbent of the °Bite, and there can scarcely be a doubt as to the result of the contest. CE , ,ANA will be laid out as cold as an icicle, and Mr. MYERS elected to the sent which his opponent now disgraces. Between the two men there can be no coin parts in, and we think the people of that district have been watching for some time the rascalities and twistings of the little villian who has so long been trying to lead hi emaround by the no.e. The day adult NNYS SUCCCSN IH on the wane, and the night of political darkness will soon bury hun in obliv ion. So be it. i ~„,, ,-, ~ aditam Expense of Living. ' The llepubliean party, which has ruled this country for the last ten years, and whose member's are again asking the people to extend their Con gressional power fur two years longer, assert that under their policy the la boring men me better renumerated for their labor than they ever were previ oils to the advent to power of the Re pith! ican party. Let us examine this assertion and see if it is correct. In Ififitl the following was the list of hying for n family eomidose of four members, whose head worked .ty the er ibly for their support: Ment,2llb per week fo,, He {l,a ,nn rent, per neck 1401101 , Oh " 0 , 104 , .{II kit .tot T 1 ,, 11 , 11, •' (“, t... Li Pi.l Ito*, I, lillgilel " ('' 111 1 . . 1 111 k 7 4110r0. I' 11 Nur., 4 1 4 , ' ca. ne . 7 4 I oil,' I lb 14 Ce 11. ., 1$ ~ 11, Light, •' * 10 TAal expenoe per week In 1559, a commoli taborer received :- , 1:25 per day, making per week $7.40, which lett him $2.61 per week to edu cate and clothe his family with, which in one year would amount to the snug little sum of one hundred and twenty li dollars and seventy-two cents. Now, then, let us see what.it costs a family composed of the same number to Ise, in 1870. Howie rent, per week.- . . 00 1',,,1, '• I 00 `I , • I. 2IIT, " On 20.•_, 4 20 111iller, 111 , " O. 30e . . MI 111, ad, 7 10avelf " (.0 100, 711 1 , ,,00 04 .., I.,,hugliel " (, Mae - 40 (t. I(h• , 711 . rd. 1, 7 lILftY Smotr, -I Th. th =9 1111111 Total ezpenee pet week A common laboring man receives .. . 4 1.5n per day, making per week 19.00 which leaves him in debt $2.21 with nothing to clothe or educate his tame• In one year his indebted would amount to one hundred ;gal fourteen dollars and ninety two The difference under Democratic rule in 1859 and Republican rule in 0170, in favor of the former and the working man, is just $250,64 per an num in the laboring mane pocket. lii these statistics we have put dots ri the average price per year of the hare necessities of livi - ng,without a sin. gle luxury, taken from the receipted store Mlle of the years 1859 and 1870, and consequently are correct. They are startling facts, but more than one laboring man is obliged to look them in the trier.. 'rim question iv,ehnll this Republican party, under whose policy the rich are rapidly growing richer and the poor, in the same ratio, are growing poorer, receive any longer our confidence and votes 1 Laboring men, refill von answer correctly at the polls? The telegrams from Europe by the Atlantic cable are more confused than were the tongues of the people at the tower of Beide. Nothing we read is to be relied on. Oneday's despatch - es are sure to be contradicted by the following day's news, and even the name day's denpatehee are put together in contradictory and disjointed para graphs. There is it huge fraud some where, not the least of which has been the intelligence we have been receiv ing from day to day of the rapid march of the Prussians upon the French cap ital, Paris has not fallen yet, nor is it likely to fall—at least,for some time. For the truth of how matters stand be ta France and Prussia, the best way is to wait until the war is over, whim we4at)34lill be likely to get at the real farts of case. —The Mauch Chunk Ditnes,which utilised on (or a couple of weeks after tin enlargement, lute again made its ap pearance. it to now a large 32 col— umn ;alto', and has a bright and healthful look, as though it was on the highway to completo nuccens. The Tim's in doing able nervice for the De mocracy of Carbon county and the country generally, and we are glad to nee thin evidence of its appreciation by the people. ---The Ifolliilayslitirg Register re peals that "no luau in this State leas more warm friends in lair county, than (01. L. W. HALL." This is the opinion of one Radical editor at 1011. daysblirg against the opinion of anoth er Radical editor at Tyrone, who has expressed an exactly contrary opinion. \Vell, well--when doctors disagree, who then shall decide? A Model of Brevity The membere of the liar of fmzerne county and the political and tiereonal fiiende of lion. Grottott %V, Woone addreeeed him the following letter. WILICLA.BARRR, Aug, 211, 1870 /lan C 1 en W IS'oodu Inkß SIR 'rule undersigned, 11101111,111 a inure Bat of I,itzerilo otankty, and your political and p e rsonal friends, Cr•pert fillly hex leave to ask you whether, if the Petrioeratic Conven tion, Noon to itsventhle, In its wikdom tender you the nomination for Prenolent.indge of this Judicial District, you would deem it compail bll3 With your 111V1111/1110114 and engagements for the future Inn accept the Qom°, and if elec ted to discharge the dude s of the Alec, \'ery truly yours. (Signed by a long list of members of the Bar and others.) To the above letter Judge Woom wroth made the lolloa nig reply • 81 rs TT ( _,,, Wiicts-11itr, A og, 21), Is7o. (Y r oar" I lot, r reve lnote of to day Inquiring whether if norm. lied for Pre•i den) Judge of thin Jodieilkl Ingirict by the forthcoming I)einoc rime C 0411.111011 ( ‘,ll neeept the nomination, and if I Meted by the people will ondertak nt to dollen 01 the Mlle.*, and Iwo N Ordh Xllllll ex prONN my 0111111.1% I I RM. with great roaper•l, lour .errant W WootiiAAßD CIE Itrieln,nd to the point, but it looks very much as if the Judge has made up his mind not to accept another con gressional nomination. We want to sec him in Congress again, and to want`` end one 'of du k e counties in his district has already put him in nomination. Possibly, hovvvet, the Judge is sodis gusted with his associates in the last Congress that he cannot be prevailed upon to go again. In such case, we will have to do without him, and the Luze . rne Judicial District will gam a most eminent Judge (FOr tho WATCHMAN SUNSET. 11:1110 ITEDEDIME3 Dreamily stand I watching The glow In the vreatern skins, The' the breeze', softly woo me, Yet the tears are In my °yea, Perhaps 'tie the mist that blinyin me For the linnet "teem., not IC fair, The aeetie not half so lovely, Nor no bolt and sweet the air,— An when. In the far away past I bavn stood In UM glow, And watched the crimson glory Break over the field, of snow, Ah yea, 'hi, the mist of teem That make, the picture lee. fair, I miss is bright form from my side, And a glory of golden heir. And far In the west I we, A fair fare all shrouded In woe, Alt I the sunset wan never thus shadowed, In the beautiful Long Ado. Then mya eyes shrink away from the sun light, And I close them, to shut In the tears , But they enema shut out the walling•, 'flint eon.r up the mode of dead year,. The ',whiner wind■ bring loved ♦oleee On their wing. —. broken prayer— A sobbing—l open my eyelid.— A glimmer of golden hair And ever (hue in the auneet, When I stand In the failing gluts. It brings me weary pictures Of that bright Isle, Long Ago, How the brightness waned soil faded That eluelered around me of yarn Ah me, 'tie "deal h in Il fn'tathink or the days that are no more_ —The little, bejeweled, kid-gloved Lord ARMSTRONG, who has mis.repre.- sented this district in Congress, and who wants to continue to do the same thing for two years longer, gave the people of this place a disertation on a Protectiv; Tariff on iron, (the same question he dodged in Congress) one evening last week. Some of his state ments were about as lucid as butter milk and as correct as GuiddvEit's travels. For instance, he assorted that the average price of iron, when in mar ket, was $3O per ton ; that the raw material in the earth composing this ton of iron was worth just :2,0X1; that it took 14 days labor at 112,00 per day to manufacture a ton of iron, which would make the Cost of labor $28,00 per ton, to which add the two dollars for the raw material, and the total cost per ton would be thirty dollars, which it sold for in market. Now, if this statement be correct, our iron mann. factureni are the most benevolent hu manitartan philosophers that we ever heartl4l !They expend their money in building furnaces, superintend their works and pay the freight on their iron to get it to market, without ask. ing one cent pay for thBlx time, trouble or interest on this money invested, all "free gratis," that laboring men can have employmeN. Such disinterested kindness on their part should not go unrevearded. That ARMSTRONG WB5 wilfully stating an untruth, and deling the demagogue, the fact that all of our iron manufacturers are rapidly accu mulating eat-filly riches, fully attests. Try again, Spewls from the Keystone —Mec*thliln contemplates the . erection of a 3.r0,000 11111111,ot 1101180. —A Carbondale policeman allot and killed a but glal the other day. =Foyer and ague la prevailing in the noigh boyhood of Mechanicsburg. —Beaver enmity Wash, ()fa pumpkin vino 54 feet long, and kill a lengthening —Pitt%burg highwaymen wear masks over their (erne and early six-barrelled revolvers. —.lud g ptinmhle, preeldent of tho Lyeomlng ih•tru•t, has lately returned from t ttip to inuegiita NO. 3 4 —rapt. N.MeCtellontl hal. been nominated for ':ongrittot by the Democracy of tho tr4th tlittlrtet —Coe Geary'a proclamation in regard to the en fnreement of the 1M h amendment, la the =I —Chas A. fternelt, of New Bloomfield, has been nominated for Congres9 by the Radicals of Perry eounty —Then, in an Erangical LitthPrn in ini.ter at Blooming (;rove, Lycoraing county, Who is W 2 yearn 0141, and atill prenehop —The ne. /0011111 fire engine fir int City stirk4 lip gravel le+ well as water, and on this ne,,iint (Ines not giro waist-action. ens nominated for Congress in Uth Vonango and Crawford diettlette Radical rOnfer..nen, on MO 27:1,1 l allot..— —Henry Rime, In the employ of tlin :lending n11111)11,1 cialtintny, Walt killed at I'hent•tvill nuU 1011, 'art week, in this usual enreloin an) M r and Mr., Jamb A rmagoat are the old ra comple in Clarion county. Thor aro line, two t Var. old, and hi full rOgS1:8P1011 Of ill I=l —The editor of the Eorent Prem., vrithla what crinu• Ile hive I/VVII guilty of that he ~110111.1 hr nottuneted fe: Congrewl, by the —l.llliP Maxon, a young Southern girl, and a vii•unn to tit° arts of tho netlueer, died in ❑ar rPbnrg the littler dug front the etleets of an Rltt . llll it'd nbortion —Willoint:flionini, it boy of 17 'toffs of age, won hips❑ hy n eoppnrlotatl nutlike, neer Shnrp•hurg In•t week, from the Militia of which he flied in great agony —ln Ihle H, aI, there I, a pauper and crimi nal population of about ?5,0110, ninety per cent, of which ham been brought to degradation and a ant by intemperance —Henry Lewis, of Chestercounty, attempted to cut his throat the other day. and succeeded In making a large gmili lie floe admitted Into the Pennsylvania hospital —Pallles ahout, Chamhershorg are handy engaged t 0 nearehina for treanure, nald to have heen'hurled m t b/d, oletaily by robe) noldiers, alter the McCausland raid —An Iron-gray mare. belonging to Miller tirabern. of Sandy oreeit township, Venango comity, woe etolen the other night. Fifty dol lare aro offered for her recovery. —The ('omm.'•lonern of Carbon county of fir n reward of three hundred dollar+ for the arrent nod eonvietion of William Dada, the murderer of tho men Dolan, at Ruck rnoun- eollimion oeenrred on the Mabanoy dt , IYII.II Ilt ho Lehigh Val!ey railroad, the other liv whielt a coal and- gravel train was wrecked and a hremen named Henry Hess 4111,1 Shortbill, a laborer, Y. yearn of ove onnitnittetl ail/hlO In Sharp/ll:irt( ' on the roth Illfo°, by hanging himself In a arable, The eau.° tonigned wa• dirtreas of mind from poverty —Soon• mnhu+la•ue 4:ertnan" !mated a nin It.. on Mn Old Hag atat'l, on the LOP of 011 e nt thin nnnnn near Mauch ChoinL, last Neel. lln the neat Noma lover L. Bette F rangy t , OW It .1000 h. IM. m•tant, Mr 4 Carrie Mel,lath •iy, of Taylor town•lnp, Lorrenew county,was Mtn , I.r•tl Iry Imo and norlon...ly ininre 1 She MOlll.l h.we Iron torn to piece.. hal not a fann er Vlthifi to 11.`r rrin•f —ln Sharpaburg, on Saturday lust, a boy nomad John Soler, wag kOl.l by e blow on Alio head from a base ball club to tho hands of another 1,.)y mulled Thomas Paris. They quarreled at play, with the above sad result —lnn 'foods near n field 'thorn half A mile from I,, A i.oek,l.yeogrung county, there were fount, ni few der. Ago, i he *Ai cher, tl meg, sack, nhiri, apron, ntoekingA, he., of some female d e eplyoath blowl. Foul play has 1.5.1 going on somewhere I he Iltll4 enfranelli.ed ettizen•of Harris burg obteot to Iwo tag 010 word - eolorne pine.' after their narnen on the regiatry lists. l'lty Congres. , didn t pans an net to punish the eadaci.., n w.o.r, roe e.en Intimating that Iha 111,1 y en triotelli , e.l are .'niggers," —Frank Keene, a gay and fengve coati, out. about Tinianlle, wan compelled to leave that neighhorhand by a VIIOIIIO.I. 00111UAILIMO Tor deceiving A young girl onto marrying him, let litter lA,II , t011....n. of the feet that he already had a wife in New York Frank got out very nuddenly Nusty trunk —Alex Johnnon. of IVaatmoreland county, father of 4. r•t.ever !Mr Wm. F Johogon, to now ninety eighth year. This venerable 1111111 is the ohll.st. Film Mason in the United Ststea, haring entered the order tnilreland 17r, Ile it yet quite hale, and moves when) hrlakly, and is yet an example of suavity and manner. —Jacob Fink, of Juniata ttounty, night a gteh man on the Pestit'a !railroad in the Narrow., was found on Santitty morning a week with both legs broken and mangled, haring lee run Over by One or the night tonna lIIr hat, lantern and hammer were found a short dla tenet, above when, he aas IC Med— Lewistown Gruel te S4AII. himplent enrol for !make bites we know (pr hate heard of 1.1 b, bury the part bitten in mast earth for an boor or so—. Judge frforrigon Inform.. um thiii his father was bitten by a copperhead many rar ago anti cured hhnsolt on the Riot by following this and the Judge In a ♦ub. e ymsnt 141110, ennui n young man, bitten by a Pllllllllr mink.. by 010 Patna operation 'nth, In worth re. metnboring - 1,14111,01111 (Thistle. A Craters funnies —The Supreme Court:Of Pennsylvania has derided that where by neg. livere spark from aha emotive set fire to. warehonse near a railroad track, the railroad company Is liable for the damage rinse by the fire, butt strange to say, the same tribunal also deelden that if another tempo caught from the dams. of the burning building not on fire by the locomotive, the owner of the safihprmnisea has no remedy The railroad rornpany, lasses held, wax only responsible to the first person who by the negligence of the rtodroad comp*.. ny's servanta had his property set on fire and destroyed; hut although the second sufferer Poe injured by ptecisely thweamo reason, be. rouse the tire kindled by the looomotivq spread to him, he had eta remedy.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers