I= Bellefonte Democyatic Watchman BY ;P: GRAY MEEK JOE W. FURRY, A99OCIATE EDITOR Ink Slings —Trensurer SPINNER i elill pinning The thread of his life has not yet been wound up, —LINDSAY, 01 the Huntingdon Globe, has got married. Out of the frying. pan into the fire. Hantingdoll Globe's devil c hallenges any red man to bent him yellin' srpleatin'., —There are seven times as many women ng nien in Milford, Pa. Old .alchelors will please lake notice. —A gay Lothario, in Canaan, aged orr, has, just run- away with another nan's wife. Thg youthful villain l —The editor of the Tyrone Herald, Itatliral organ in Blair county, pitlolie.- v declares that the Hadival Senatorial whet is tile wenhest that could have teen nominated. --ft ni supposed by many that 1,! - (IFER , at one period or Ins existence, mast Inue.been a Radical. -for accord mg to MILTON, lie once attempted to recmoitruct the government of Heart. _ Ils NT made rap his mind the other toquit tirmlowy, whisky long enough to r eeogiore the French Republic Ile i mmediately relapsed. liovitver, and babbled forth, ''Tie Empire is Peace —let us have Peace." —The mongrelizing of its population of ranensians, NegroeQ, and Indians equally, in its civil polity, is what ruin cl Mexico. The same thing will ruin the States, unless nigger Allftrage stopped very soon. WILLIAM announces his de termination to have !milling to do with the Republican Cimerionetit or France. What have our 4ailiettl organs to say now Will they still aNiere to the old King against the Ite'pliTilie? he wile of Cob A. K. Alcri,t RE has been placed in an insane asy lum. We are .nrrli Bat how could any %%il man retain her sob( r alter hav ing hued in the same house, for sears, %Hill such it innatie McCi r[ik. —Wp so me , her,. read the followioft t ottre import, it In her h II -t I' male I Ih. wtr”ngeolt I mmt, th.” In thtiktt atm nrk I , • t‘ttryttin'tt Imhztto the lionge•l I- pity -pity 'tiFt 'tl4 kiln Ilk of I have nom ~,ted 1 nigger liar Supreme ('hurt ldie, and steveral otht.r nigger. for ,ither liiionv the remolittiono re..ed w Ilfle ni favor of Prussia and another ni favor of the Chinese. NVltite working men, what do you think of —We are told that n young man in mhnna went out hunting Ake Other hem d a rn.tling In the bushes-- red --and brought his mother 11o,t hat he commlere din+ the shit he ever made. Good Our hum, .erhapH, but very haul for the mother ri --The celebrated Wot:1, in bis dy rig advice to CORMN El 1., counselled the latter to be careful, when retiring from office, to "carry nothing, with lion bill his r4;be and his integrity " We opine that lbw world be considered "sliort commons" by nine tetit,l‘n of our modern ltadicals RUC! PT FOR MAIN DICA I, PA - Tit COTS —We have beenllavored, by a disgusted saint, with thV following re ceipt lor compounding Ikadical pittriot-• 141 11 -2k parts 11 ypocrisy , Iti 'Mirth Neer,, 3 parts : Iti parts Po litic:ll Professions; 15 liiitrts iCew lug land Christianity ; "2 parts M ix• -- BIIIINY.RD, of the Herald, having prayed for s°nu• congenial wind to blow the top °li the bridge in front of his Whet., Tit%cult, Of the Shrad"rdi re• torts that it certainly must be wind proof, else the flatulent dilutions o f Ifxll\Fxil would have blown it "high er than :t hitt!" long ago. Ha I hail lot"! 14C P ITS 1.1 e t r I I.l.mour has issued eall tot another Soot hem Commervial ' one I'll unn The Fr Pretodent has 44 'n hidden away 40 long, and Irma tp a ocet.ttottally and at such long m ental., that he it, aptly styled "the , rear Itueriratt gopher." Rut he VPlllh determined to go for tanother ' llnx colon. —II rinliFt As, in 10t4 inimitable way, fiteetiotisly spcaks of a political arty of hie time : There nee c no wight-clike Talattouie.,— Ile Awn, for pelf, foi two groats, Corruption's wnvs eon NI( Weil In try M ben Mill ilnitgonti first grew , high And inert toll Oat, they ',new not why— Kxcept it wan thatport Y rink" Were filled with polltlcian• And while the net ion's pockets bled, Ink night tbe brawls and coteries led There vaunt have been Itadieala in ltofu. 43'H, or the ;above would not w__i, 7 . . 4[F,l tilliffli,t; DM The Coolie Immigration An ie very natural the question of Coolie immigration to this country is fast assuming important dimensions. It is pregnant with issues of vital eon insolence to the laboring population of the Union. Not essentially a ques tion oI politics, it has, in view of the Issues . vol ved, become the touchstone of party strife—and tbe Democracy, as an earnest of the rectitude of their principles, have adopted the negative of thht quest,ion, and array themselves on the side of the working poor of the land. That the wholesale importation of the.r Chinese emigrants cannot but re suit in 'turnery and degradation to the present laboring population of the enuntsisckirn lt palpable truth. plain, Indeed , that some of the more moderate (tithe lirtd.eal leaders have suggested a "partial modification — of' the awe to ',met the emergency of all overflow of chinese immigration. Butt with the Democracy alone tests the merit of placing this question before the people in ite true light. Viewed from whatever standpoint, the Coolie Immigration appears only as the moat gigantic, of the ninny at tempts which Radicalism has mule op on tlin rights and liberties of the mils- CPA Its inception, sprung from a deep-laid attempt to entail and finally abolish the few remaining privileges of the laboring poor. It would be wrong to characterize it as tot) thing else. Radicalism has contintioiody proved itself the wor , t enemy of popular litter' ty--and Its last is its most iniquitous essay in that direction. It is thus that Coolie Itritingrution has become a po litical question —and the tone is not far distant when it Will be looked a r on al one of the gravest issues of the day.' Under the Democratic rule,this land, be it remembered, VI" RR (lie land of the toiling poor. Labor was held to lie honorable in a country where prim! Inc simplicity had not, as vet, viven place to misrule and exclusive luxury among. certain classes of the people. Gold was not then the criterion of north, public or private. The country was Democratic; its (lovernment was Democratic; its roles were Drimermic, and it n terpreted the Constitution up on Democratic principles. But what II change luau "come o'er the spirit of the dream We have in place of all this a which haw given to the country' all the e‘ils of nag ad aunts tration---all the Tres and guilt of plethoric, and unsound (because only seeming) pro.nperity , all the dould• lug concomitants of mushroom Muir) and social and political corruption. To Ihts has the Radicalism of the flay brought n land once prosperous and hopelid of a vet brighter future The teridem y 01 all this IH 10 ilt•grnde the laboring classes , to make them de— pendent 111,011 wealth ; to make the rich, richer, to 111111(1` 11Ie 1.1)1' st,4l , poorer - and ultimately to over turn th e Repub lican tlo%eriittient of the country, To ,This end -the fundamental change of Ithe tlo‘ernment the uui,t etlecti , e menus which Colllsl be employ is the degradation of the nut sees .And Radicalism to .dowly, hot surely. ef fecting this end by 1111'1111H of the Coolie Immigration late! , inaugurated. qty the continuous influx of the element, Itailiettlisin designs to make slitter of the toilers'at , home thimigh the importation or toilerA front abroad. Here we have the pith 14.,the whole question, from a Radical point of view —its length, its breadth, and its depth, and also its glaring iniquity. With an OVVI Ilow 01 Coolie labor, the standard of .social and inditidual ptospetatv !limo '•, t h e poorAtof this land must speedily decline Div" of Is:ew England, and the nionopole.us of the Smith and East, will be joyful at the sight of degraded white labor. They can then fill their coffers with the lucre gotten by the bluoilottal tears, and toil of the white population—Mr will not Divev then hare the cheap las bar of China to use an :t t>iilistitate? What will Dives ;are 1;11 \ our groans, ye !if the toilitl4 Iran, W hat is IL 10 him that ye labor lor n iminical Lance'? 'Mat ye are sunk in misery, and hopeleamly degraded from all op portunity or' pro4pect of ailsancement ? Enough liar Dives that ye do him Her vier ne ti machine, and that he eit.im "STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAI. UNION." BELLEFONTE; PA., FRIDAY, SEPT. 10, 1870 fit for toil. An for those grand princi ides of Democracy that man is the brother of man—a 4 for the great bless ings which should flow from these principles—what does Users of Massa., clumetts, or of the South. .or of the West, care for them. Ile vomits the ill-gotten gains which your toil has brought. Here your ronnection will) him has its end. And such will he tlie end of the present movement in regard to Chinese immigration. lint, though with,the consnommtion of this iniqui tous purposcsof Radicalism the nation may be Able to preserve an outward shoe of pro.perily by ren.on of the luxury Till the riehev of the few —yet will tlo attentive ohherser be ("reed to exclaim oi the won4Aot 1;o1.1.00tb "111 int 1 • + the land I. lartrtetithg tlla n racy 1‘ bets• 141talth it.. itittitlittett ntlU titett th•rnV II t• 3 111 loViiold a country t$ hos e i;overoment has ceased In Le Repoli 'lean in everything but the name lie µ•ill look upon a lard, once the hope and the haven of honest tot), changed scores the light and the Letter influ ences of freedom. lie will see a country filled, indeed, with 'Wealth, but that wealth in the hands or the privileged few. lie will listen In the words and gaze upon the externals of a Itepoldi- Ntil people—Litt alas! ilinse empty shows, like the, apples of the Dead will Le all the more repulsne Irmo the political and social hes hidden liy their lair exterior. Well shall it be for the people of this 'mai if they take bred to the signs of the times. 'These signs are palpable, unmistakeable. So plain, that he who runs may read. They foreshadow the downfall of popular government 111 thin I • nrnn. ItadiCah-1111 will continue its professions of regard for a government 1 "oldie people and by the people" lint, the while, it will be stealing with in -611.11.114 11111141, first the political, and lasils the social rights of the masses, and cow erting Ow , "got ernmesst of the people into an all but monarchical system --a system in which a tale olig garchy will be the lords and masters of every avenue to political preferment , in which the "commoner" will lw made to feel the lIIVPI4IOII of the Item.- ..ratao or government in which a mom.% ed arettocrac - the worst po litical evil which has ever afflicted a nation—will be maintained to its legit 'unite fruition of fetid decadence. 'no, shall we see the ruins of that I ketnocrac, who In the Fathers of the I?evolution had hoped to secure to sue- ! ((wiling generations., We shall nee that, by reason of a supniene , n on the part of the people, they lost (11(.11 hiss erties. Those liberties which were be queathed to them by hour gathers as the greatest of earthly advantages. 'l•he end is not yet. Itut unless the people awake from their lethargy, and by a timely Instration purge and cleanse themselves limn the guilt ot o political suicide, that end will assured ly come. We hate its incipient ntAgtim already among us. And the most. dan 'croon among all these attempts to nub ,urt ilie lihertiell of the people, none is uurre 11,11.111,t1i , or laud in its *takings than tins attempt of Radicalism to sub simile Coolie labor far t iit of the white population of the country The New YOIk Tantr.v, a lite haw, Atipporter 01 the ltatheal party, antler all iiti change of tottneti and atti tude., at last them in the fare of the tiaks,T atlinata.tration, as 1,,1101,,s: "111urt ly tilitttit to littpllell when 31r Forney's two imp,n begin to talk of renewed Niuthern outrages:loll , f 114 lir, sign je tinder stood et erywhere h{re 14 it plirttitsit which luny be Interpreted Without prophetic 11111 Stllll4. neh elicit for promilltlg personal ambi tion of Ice tome• greed to he ittestentell to Con grcnt. of tile President Soule plan es ettnten; plated forcurvwgnu el, lion ttgatiist the wi 11 "1 the people, lit 6, pet pet lint lag tin million' flint et tti not witiottsiol the free eXt rein/. or the httlint '(lnc the K 114111: reappear,aiill murders soil outrages multiply at a rate which only vivid 111111K1f111110Mitanin explain Of thin dtart• lung intelligenee the Nl'inahingtnn ehronirie and and the Philadelphia Inca haven ineinopoly ; they are without, a rival in that lino of the newspaper bioninenin. And they inre preparing now for frond, alitritfemtntiono of their peculiar elicit They would linvo let believe that tho olinient. lin North Carolina might hair been prit• vented hod there helm more ittiYonet 4 it the bnllnt-has, nod they Pilo tit•vel ti‘entet In whet Stole.. Ins to suggest ilitt necessity for military eppenitinern niche , sure of Iteptibli van stet", len ''hey ask us to rely more npnu 1110 bullet, and loss 111.011 the ballot." That is just exam ly what Ills Demo(' racy have been telling the people all along. It is good Democratic thunder, and the Democratic presa rlionld roll it liiical nk The Fitness of Things The ctertial fitness of things is fine. ly illustrated in tin: policy of (IKANT's administration with respect to the Pretieli Republic. Radicalism, in this instanne, is trite to Its instincts, with It vengenriee. Professedly fighting for the cause of true Republicanism,the heal ['arty, through its high priest, LI, S. GRANT, ignores the existence of the infant Republic of France! The observance of this policy on the part off; RANT and his administration, lien . the principal European powers have acknowledged the de "(trio Frefich (lovernment, IC, to say the least, in very bail last*. But there are other and more- Hignelfrant reasons why the Gmertlitient of thin country should he among the this( to great the new lairs Republic it Franor. From the day of Lexington, when Vatxki IN saw a ith it piiiplietic eye, the first dawn of that freedom which was the birth of a nation,--troin that liour, the sympathies rt,f France were with the Colonies in their struggle for national existence. From that the Colonists hail the moral support of the French people; and with the con flirt of Saratoga came the material aid of the French (loyernment. That aid was given with 110 stinted 111111(1, until by reason or the Wilted etTorts ~r France mid America, the cause of American Fieciloin and Independence triumolied at Yorktown tni many a battle field 01 the lievelittion, stihse• quelit to the surrender of 111'111,1,1 the blood of French soldiers and Amer. iron prOriots flowed together and their hones whitened there together. While the voice of History shall be beard, it will tell how the triumph of France, during the Revolutionary war, was the triumph of Amerman Iffileim den cc And what returi, shonld the A men- Cllll people, through their government, fIOW make to their descendants of those who are at this motnent strugglin , in the same cause, and for the same poli tical principles, as tho , c contended for by the patriots of 177(1? Most assured lv the people of thin country should has( en to greet the sister Republic. A ini thin, we take It, the majority ut the nation would do, were It not dint their desti nies are at present controlled by a Rail iral dope whose Hide care and solici tinted are the emoluments of offices, to the niter exclusion of the country's honor and welfare. And what is the moral which we gather front this potty!, on the part of the Washington Caliinet ? We are taught that the loud profesnions of Radicalism with regard to a love for Republican-Democratic principles is but an "mounding brass and tinkling cvnilials"—tditt.t. beneath all thin show and gasconade about "a government of the people and by the people," the vo times of Radierthsin conceal n thorough dis L regaril and contlmipt rdf popular gov (Tanen,. This truth has been illuss trate.] in 11111110 canes before to the to•lum pi I; it %•.t.T . 4 ailtriimstra tion in respect. to the Drench Repilblin caps the climax cif Radical We are, perforce, brought to pee and to realize the hyporricy and double dealing which obtains among our pres eat riders, and that, too, in a peculiar Iv striking illallner. We behold a fat , lion laving claim to the confidence of the (-wintry by reason of an affected rev erenee fir ifepabllrnn ideas --and,whed a crowning opportunity arises for the ilemmistration of its sincerity, we see thin stone faction temporiie with all that is inimical to popular government and the rights of the people. All Otis must have due effect iipon the coming elections ; and we trind that the people m this instance, will esti male Radical pretensions at their prop er value P. S.— writing above we learn that the Cabinet a Washington moved by n strongly expreseed feeling on the part of the country, has recog nixed the French Republic. —We are told that the Prussian advance has been stopped in C0118e• tptenee of three .lespateli es sent by the United States Government in favor of peace. II GRANTS despatches are so powerful, what would he the enlist .. . gurney iJ Cane he should wave his night band Good Lord ' pre , In Irmo earthqualces, olcatmest rail •, 4 ~ 4 if taw, net at this time, the !Indira]li twill Olio is being exhibited for the benefit 01 the saints. This exhibition is a wonderful display of craft and po litical ingenuity in the shape of chang ing and receding colors. This wonder ful ilisplay of talent and Macchinevn lino policy is "on sight' in every tow and county throughout the State. It includes three sets of with many side issues, and its teach ings are believed, by the hothful, to be infallible. The first set of rinciplcs has the negro for K t ing, and the Coolie as hi, Grand The second set inclinleil the "great moral idea" of Radical title and the other greet "idea" of the purity of It Ves administratiol. The third set consists of the past record tit Radical Party ; the "idea" 0 1 \\' man m !tights, and the other "idea' iof oho country's Increasing Prosperity. The side issues exhibited—or, at least the spectacles exhibited as side immiles—HAP the Decrease of the National Debt conifer tin INT, the prospects of A rite.ti can commerce, the benefits nrrsing from MOllO pollen, Rings, !itter] Corpo rat ions,Railrond Burglartes in shape of subsides, New England "Progress" and lihosyncracy. , This great exhibition is now in (hi. hand rif each and every Radical !Dicks terer, tVhipper-in, Lobbyist. nnil Fifth Monarch Man of the Party of great moral ideas. Different portions are exhibited in different localities—that i., to suit the exigencies of the came. What is "shown" in Massachusetts is kept behind the scenes in South Caro lina what is displaced in the West, is juilicummly omitted in the middle States of the Union. This exhibition has hitherto deluded the rabid votaries of Rnilicalism —and it will probitfily do so now -while the high priests of the l'arty exclaim (afor the 11 of Octo ber) —The next Lettl•lnture of this Stele wil have the apporitontnent of the Congressional and Legislative dist-ieta the first for the next ten years, the seen.el for seven Both these are now fixed by the PRIMe begi•lattire for the first time slnee lanl The same thing will yol, i• Could he dope.. anti vietimv—anti—TE nnt n " nr a g ain until 1041. . . her. vn wise Sulnt ' Behold your light— Southern Scalaweggery t went v years flgo map' ew liar,, Book, the National Denioe race, after a severe struggle, elected ,lames I. Orr, of South Carolina, Speaker of the United States House of Representatives. If some one had then suggested that a time would cornawhen ties James I, llrr would public ly write a letter giving in his adhesion to the .164,1ation Party, he, no doubt, would, and all others, no doubt, would regard such a thing as quite beyond the range of moral possibilities. But it has not only happend in fact, but Under circumstances a thous and tones over more revolting than if lie had honestly adopted their creed, anti believing amalgamation of white and negro a vast benefit to all concern ed, had thusjoined all organization to practically carry out the Abolition "nleas," however mad and ITICOMMIIS it may have seemed to his friends, the sincerity of the act to sonic extent might have redeemed it. But tin await until, through a monstrous fraud, the Abolitionists got possession of .11114 State, and with a standing army to back them, should go to work, ltn.l completely reversing the social order, actually distort the inferior negro abme his own kind, and then Join these moral monsters and aid them to the utmost in the total ruin of society, ry beyond anything v i e r k no w n in l A, crones, and treasons, and vl Mantel.' of the past. In the days of the great French revolution, men often passed from extreme Republicanism to Roy alism ; but what was this paltry change mere class distinctions to change from Democracy to Mmigrelism, this awful crime against nature, when men Idle Orr, I Butler, rhekinson, &c., go ricer to the Abolitionists, and without even believing in the beastly idea, striving their utmost to degrade flour kind, their own posterity, into MI accursed amalgamation with niggers In view of the Radical exi;edjiim, to Salt River, on the I Rh of O.:totter next, we lin ve at a great outlay, sect r d reliable charts of the ehores and head. waters of that stream. For the here fit of our Radical mints in this wan- I y we would state that t hese Chart 111 y be hail on applient ion at Otis office—free NO. :i6 The Political 0110 Spaw:e from the Keyelaim. —The Pennsylvania railroad hand'. bar* Just been paid nil. —Fever soil nano is prevailing In some pot- Emma vi the litt4o4- —(ion. 4lnrtranft Ito% gone to Niagara Fall* to intend the reunion of the eth army corps. —Poring tlie poet ten yearn Penneylegit& has produced _oooo,Wbarrels of petrolirm. —A new paper to to be started In llarrieboq in place of the Daily 7bpie, wbloh ti died the , death —Radicalpelstlem In Beaver countyjuit now nre "up a ?dump." The party to fighting like vale and dng —Bost of the tonna of the State have poets of the Grand Army of the Republic. Belle fonte has none. --J It Bretton, Esq , of the Oarltale l'etur her, bite eltleirewn Oren the Coegreasional eentegt in the( dietriet. —TPO Peltrlnt mnye that the park in which rep a the rernalati alb,. founder of Harris g, In ,wily neglected. —The eat works of W. L Sancta .4 Ca at Peit4town, Pa, worn burned on Saturday , morning Loma $20,000. —co) I Z r Judson, (Ned liuntltno) le t lecture in Sharon, neat month under the :um pire.; of the P O.S. of A —The Philadelphia chief of Pollen la at outs with the newspaper• He had better come down from his high horse coady farmer• t think that the re rent ray, will Inereage the earn ernp of that comity at lent nne third —Thorn inn nigger exhibiting In Tyrone who hope , . to gratify nll orilnlonn by calling iion.elf all "A friean.Franro-Prumainn " • - tt 14 whoiky row, in colutubm, on Satufl dnv night lint, two negro.r were allot and killed by a rnloon koeprt named Young - • lhr f.en ./ournn/ any.. I nir hut, ter mnrket ran he ;Iva•ruhart In thin way In quantity. arnn•e In quality, Wong In 1 .,, rm, Initml In l“-Ice, —A negro boy nained Herdsman wan amt. enientally ahot In the tripe end eve, with bird 3 11 , o r t , ,A 1 )V o rtAi f t4offia t i4bAracti on liattirday last. # —ldither and Sheaphord Lig° of Wllmiika4 ton Ip, Mereereonnty, killed a Week Finlike. nn 84Otrility laid that measured saran feet eightaniba-half Inches in length —A hid named Gristles Pfonta living in Nor $ vriell township, Lanedster roomy, was threw,' from a horse the other tiny and killed He H11 , 17TrEeiC•011111 child buried by the same pa rents —The MI term of Allegheny College, Mead ville will eommenee on Wednendny fled Sept 14 at which time ladle. nre to be admit ted to all the prirtlegon and tult Anhwei of the inatittition —A trial] seas killed at Pnrt Jervie, a few day. attn who had been in the employ of a railroad for nine year.., and this wan the first pentium accident that ewer occurred to his :- unit instances are rare —The Altoona ,Sun lost the point of an Item by witting the earl before the bore*. than And 'eft all the natural horn fools—vide the lirrahl—still all re sod kick int. "rho killed slavery and I).mm-retie bralna,—Rrniniras —AU the Radieal paper, of Penneyiranht nwear that the Demnerate are free trader, and opposed to proteetlon Vet, tiarlield, in open rig the eampaign on thin Republlran aide at Manrficht, tihio, the other night, tieetared ti in i the' Democrat" of Penneyliania laror a high tariti " Who lie. '—Krrhange Friltn the Perry enmity paper! we learn dint a little girl ten yearn of age, daughter of !Moine' Miller, of Centre township, wan antic ...I into the 14 notl4 by an unknown 1111 Jan and horribly out-raged. Every effort in being rniad• In ferret not lb., perpetrator, and the elttrens threaten to mete ...it npeedy pintiee In tilm when found tr Kttagn —A min named Diamond was ii,iantly {tilled at flallitrin Wit gaiiirday night by (wing run over by a train of care Two truing were paff.lag a uni t the name time Ha curs the one, and attempted to ern...the Intel:, not noticing the other It is &leo maid that he 'was deficient in /searing Ilia buoy Wan horri bly nuitl l / 1 1011 lle belonged to Ihnt neighbor lima'. and wax unmarried —A /Mona Sun In A rtnotrong enunly, n,young man nam ed ititerlng died, and while his father and throe Mot hero, with a Mr Hlllen, were out In the cemetery telecting a burial site, s I hue. der AtOrlll reels up PO fierce and Anions, that a stroke of lightning killed two of the brothers And Hines, and ..everely shocked the father end the remaining MOD. tine of the (touring. wan unmarried, but the other ball a wife and three children, en fife' also Mr Woe, large meeting of workingmen wn• helm Philadelphia last Friday night, and resole• lions ntrooglY 41 , 1mIneing the t ill roil Il lion pf chine." ripoi-4-4ne Inlim adopted General • fhomas, the opponent o f Judge Kelly. for Congrose, among others, addrenned the meet ing Kelly to a strong advocate of it proton• live Ina itt, and profeseeit great friendship for the interente of labor, but hie views on Chi. nese immigration in not seem to cattily the work nig claret. of li ta2wpcity.—/trchange th.e Mao --Mr W W Woodruff, who has been, reoentiv, on a visit to Mound/grille, in Went Virginia. gives au aceuunt through the eolutnns int the West Chester Republican, of an Interview Ile had, whilst there, with a very old man, which may he of some Interest to our readers. It is us follows: 'At M. ontismle Mr W ealied to see an old gentleman by the name of Mk had Ed wards, are seas horn in York, Pa., on the Itth of August, 1767, and. who was. consevinently lal ) vl4lllOlll On the Idtl, nrllle 110,001 /1101101. W "ailed, the old gentlemen was um, 311,1 hi. grand daughter went and milled him Its elllllo 111, shoot hood., and talked before taking his sent. lie veld lie wan born in York. Pa three doors abort, the ohl Omit 1100. e, that Ile WAR (light yenta o ld in hen has hither wrlll into the revolutionary army; that his fittllPr was 11l (Inc battle of 'I . I Polon , that lie (the son) was a gunsmith; aeon rnlleJ out by President Washlogion to put down the Whevky Reta,llinn, that he remov ed to Washington Cm, Pa., about and ~,,, ()at). years after with him eon, ICI M.1111•11.1ille lie retainaliis sight and hear. Inn, and vetivers.. with P.P. 111.1 rue ry scented I.ot very /nightly impalied. He nee. lilted very clearly a 11111111/0r of ineidents that he witnessed in York Miring tile revolotiona ry wear. Uuc WAN the shooting of an,. Amerll - soldleis, midi her wan tl)tlit 'runs Pell two enviilry 1111.11 In the streets 1,1 . York. PM. mon had a personal quartet atilt met ,In the"etreet on hone barb, sew d In hued, to settle the matte: in thl. fearful way. Roth rasing expert r..neery, they fought sometime without Injury to mullet But id hint one knoek ad aaide the sword of the 04111er and struck him iveross the neck, and Inc fell from his horse dead, and the quer' el aas ended-retitle' f Mr. W. said the old man followed him out on the porch It hen he Imft, and thanked him fur calling to 1100 /illll.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers