Bellefonte Democratic Watchman 33Y P. GRAY MEEK JOE W. FUREY, ASSOCIATZ Enzrox Ink Slings "Gobularti" suffered yesterday —Latesl thing oul—Tow JARVIS'S patent pump —Some high old mitein eonrt,again, next week. 'Twas ever thus. —Base hall partly revived thin mummer. we -tut-ho t ed icivirrfttir forever —Little Jowl CRSRBk iR going to contest the Rent of lion. ii. F. MYeRS in Congress —The geography of world has changed, for the Holy Land is now as near as the Oil Regions. —Wo learn that those two pigs, T11111(117 and Baststran, were slopping around Altoona the other day. —The Harrißhurg policemen rehnie to light and extinguish the gaR lampa, as required by the new city ordinariee. —1iin1( 4 011.1.1 , 404 SRVS : A coquette i n I,ne iz nN tome nn R bottle of pop that lin?. Stood Plllll time with the conic pulled out. -11)r. If. T. II r.i.ntoi.r) expends $)011 MO a year in advertising. It is printer's ink that wakes him hold his helm bold. —The editor of the Hollidayelmrg Standard k Po hard tip that lie otrerg to sell hitt marriage certificate. For eliarne, —A Chicago editor has been present• ed with a suit--for libel, with every thing gotten lip in the Intent style. We w,o, him joy of it The year 1871 will begin and end on Stinday. We'd like to know what right the year has to begin on Sunday more than any other man! —We are frequently asked what has beeoine of "Wearing the Cross." The fart is, we guess the thing has been worn so long it is worn out, ---glen. A rev, who married tier. Ira v danghter, ham been tearing the point lace off Illanehe'm mlyttwl. Sp there im a roolnemm in the family. —A young man asked tOmarrted Ia• dv ui New York to e!OpC with Lim. She lola him to aqk her husband, and hr {dot Iris nose broke for hut polite- ti,t,:t• nr Fond (hi Lae, WIPCMI: rni ki. ko•.I 1 ear off The man 111 .1 Ihe arrnr i of the mule's root was the roost disagreeable thing he ever etr'd. —Tyrone hag a new aide walk, but the editor there can't tell which lode. In Itct, it .I,m't make much difference, for they generally stagger on both —The editor of the Republican ha•• 1112 nd vert ised to the extent or twenty fi dollars for a silk het, is now ready to put in a whole page for a snit of clot lies. —('sptain M( C1A1.1.1 ND, the newly elected Democratic Congrenmman from the 24th Pennsylvania dint rirt, has "struck ile" in a well he put down at Franklin. —That Bellefonte lawyer, whom BRAIN/RD says called for Home extra copies of the Iferadd,has since told us pr vately that they were so very con venient when lie wanted to mh—ave.y —The Spuyten Duyvil ("reek post master in New York, has been arreet• •l for robbing the mails. Thi,, conduct don't look RP though this post mi ster master cared much about swirl' the —The Republican thin week con taina several pretty pictures, among which are a couple of hirde, a cannon, a coon, and a man with a pitch fork. That paper calla this rejoicing over the late election. —The If tuitinpion Monitor has something in its editorial columns this week about discontinuing its exchange with us, hut it was so badly printed that we couldn't make it all nut. Please send us another copy. —Our contemporary or the llepuidi ran is catching it on lie hog question Sit ve the ol lan yektira Standard: Brown of tbo Bellefonte Repriblornn In Inter , ioa ma the crack how , of that bornotrh .unit, lig Irmo eportn, hr. PePTIM alottpinotly competent to the tank, both by nature nral ed ucation. GRANGER, late Rndirnl RR -01.0311t Adjutant General of Lottisinns, "n e arrested in New York on Tuesday for committing extensive forgeries of Sille hoods. Tie now contemplates a friendly visit to the Pnnitentini y. —Some of our exchanges Deem to think ft n little surprising that Consta ble MILLER, of Mercer, a Radical blow hard, shouhl bay* thicanipell with fif teen hundred dollars of other people's money in his pocket: Isn't it perfect ly natural ? What eb.e. MA a Radical, could the Onstable hare done? ...111/etalk VOL. 15 --- Titir - 42T - t on g r ell . We never take much mock in epee ntion. Never btilld high on probe Whiles, and very seldom count much on the "flattering tale" hope is said to tell. But speculations, probabilities, or hopes aside, there Is something very promising in the result - Utile late elee- Enough to make it appear at least possible, that the Democracy may control the 42d Congress. This may seem strangelll, the reader who hilf,l farted to coil e chances, but strange or riot, it is nevertheless true. In the pr e s en t 4lst--Cougress the Radical majority is 114. In the next it will lie 1.1 as will be seen by the following i•xlnbit • 42n Comings. 41st Unnna ens Dem End. /rut //ern Rod. On, 4 2 2 4 I I 2 2 I I 3 A liihattm A Hi xlimoin I ..1 2 I Oelf.sxre Florida 1 inorgia I Ilitioin .6 I niliatha lIMP 1 , ♦ In -•I 7 - 8 I - 2 3 - - 6 - Kunnas Kentucky Lonlelana Maine Nlloo,lte h u•etie M k• h igan Maryland . M innerwa . i,odaalppl M um.wwiri Nebraaka Nevada New 11 re• w .1e rgey . 1 Ne•w I..rk 17 !Cm tit Caro Imo. 5 ()hit) 5 - IS - - 10 - I 5 - 1 6 a I I I 4 5 2 7 .1 3 9 I 14 12 19 2 2 6 14 5 14 lIMMII Pent )Ivanla II Rhoi n Inland - Smith Carolina 'rant...owe 12 1 6 1b 2 2 1 3 I 5 5 4 1 3 5 i 5 V.•rtnunt trginum • 6 Virgin!". 2 W 114C4111"111 'rol/11 107 123 Ha 100k1 moirity 13 •I:nunuted From these figures it will be seen at a change of never) votes from the Radical to the Democratic Ride, will a lye iis the control of that body. is there no probability that such A change may occur? The 42i1 Congress will not meet until the Ist of December, 1871, over a year frAin thin writing.and who can tell what revolution nay take place in public as well as private opin ions in that time. The result of the late elections shows very conclusively that the political tide has turned and is now running in favor of the Democ racy. There are ll MIR/III& II ram tli ally ands of voters and scores of officials al ways, who want to float with the tide, and is it beyond a possibility that sev en of the Radical representatives elect ed to the 42.il Congress, may not be come dissatisfied with the actions of their own party,.dimgtisted at not hav ing the oilinence they may imagine they should have with the administra tion) and wilting to be with the side that promises the starriest mutest; in the future. give their votes and intlu• duce in opposition to the party which elected there We are not without hopes that much may lie the result. Our Radical brethren cannot deny the fact, that there is a strong element in what in left of their party, bitterly opposed to the policy of the present ad ministration. There in nothing that party can do now that will prevent that opposition front growing greater, bitterer find more determined, and from thin anti-administration party the De mocracy may secure the requisite amount of votes, The open rupture between the Premident nail Senatorn tint RZ, Rost, !Iowan!) and others, will tend greatly to this result. Takivig the disrupted condition of the Radical tarty ii to view,ite (femoral itation, defeats, and certain downfall, know ing the general ifeeire of aspiring politiriane to lie on the winning tilde, and taking into consideration 'he fact tint 11111 of t h e w ent I -nix itlicliCa I rep- I est - goniit p+ from the Southern States, twenty-one of them lire from districts that are naturally Democratic, and that their only hope lor the future is to act an Democratic representatives, we can scarcely doubt that seven of them, at least, will do IRWIN, the present Stale Treasurer, Pi.,./111+ 10 !111 ve become exreedingly un pypnho,%, ill p•chr .elv I.e nide to oteke en n idiom, for re-election. Hitt own platy orgene d , tionnee him hitter 1, ns emropt, incompetent end of no neet•ittit, save to fill his own pockets. So his chance tor continued preferment is ex ceeihtigh slender, and he will to let, he old 'get] to :weep( one fir the l o e .set , ie the Radieut BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY, NOV. 25, 1810 "long Live the King I" At last the Spanish problrm has been solved—at least, for the present. All hopes of a Spanish Republic are dead, however, for the kingly purple ham again been placed upon the shoul ders of a royal scion, and Duke AOMT.t, second son of King Viciptt Emsisum., of Italy, in now King of Spain. Thin event wan determined by the Spanish Cortez borne two weeks ago, and, of course, settles the cptetstion of the Spanish succession, unless the peo pie of that country should he thspo4ed to raise amass about ii. We did have some bunt hope that, with the over throw and liamishinent of Qu itEN Is t . 1111,1 set her foot upon the neck of Monarch v, and would rear up a Republic upon the ruins of tile fallen kingdom. The elegant speeches of t'tv TEI.I.IR and other Spanish republican patriots, led um to think that perhaps there wan a wide extended feeling for the Republic, but the hate events arid the tame way in which the people have submitted to them, have about con vinced that Spain nn not vet ready to inaugurate that (lay in which her rulers shall he her servants, not her masters. Anil we doubt if the Spanish ending will not be the fate of all European Remit,hem. We have not much faith that the Frenc i li experiment will stand the storm didt in now pcmring upon it, and eventually almost expect to see it crumble to pieces amongst the duet of die late Empire. The people of Em rope 110 not seem to possess the ability to govern themselves, tint lean upon the stair of royalty In assist them on the road of destiny. Aid though thin Mat! often becomes the sword of the tyrant and slave the hands that rest itts - m it, they seem unable to divorce themselves from 104 support, or to erect themselves into independent freemen, scorning the and of king« and princes and relying upon their own strong right lawn and free born intellects for powi r and wisdom to guide them through hie pitfalls and quagiiiirem of national exis tence. 51 11N 6 And so "Long live the King!" Thum shouts both prinee and peasant, while liepililicanisin hides as diminished head and Monarchism strides along in all the "pomp and circimistance•' of reasserted power. -ROIiKKT C. SCHEN( K the de(eal• ed Radical candidate for Congreen in the third thin di. , trict, hn. determ Hied to contest the seat of bin sueeesstill Democratic competitor,Gen. CA111 . 11K1.1.. This is 1111011 t what we expected. We knew this red headed Radical thief had neither honor nor magnanimity. Ile has had his hand in the public purse no long that lie cannot bear to take it out, and hence has made up his mind to appeal to his Radical compeers in Congress 1) sustain him in his dishon orable and outrageous position. Gen. the Democratic candidate, was fairly elected in ScitErfca's own district, but, because his majority is small, this infernal rascal and his "pills" are determined to overact the will of the people in order to keep him in a place that lie has disgraced and &lin which lie should long ago have been ousted. We are not surprised at thin action of thin dirty Radical pimp. Ile in ut terly unprincipled and unscrupulous, and would hesitate at nothing' that would gratify Ida inordinate desire for office and money. lie in a natural ty rant and oppressor of the people, and, when clothed with power, as during the war, "cute such fantastic tricks be fore high heaven as make e'en the an gels weep.'' But we hope that there in yet honor Hioni!li in Congress to do Justice 10 Gen. CAMPIII , I,I., and cheat this aspir ing scoundrel out of the object of his desires. We nay we hope no. but must coulees that we have but little cool thence in the impartiality of the Rad' cal majority in the House of Represen tatives. It is more than probable that ScuaNea will be given the sent to which Caseaso, wee elected. In which cusedhe Radicals will again tri umph over the will of the people. Scurtscs deserves n coat of tar and feather+, lout not it seal in Congt —Last week the run ore of war be tween and England were very fierce. Thi-i week they have not HIRAI bloody wipeet. "STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION." at, ( Among our Exchangte Speaking of bells, suggests the thought that there are a great many different kinila of bells. We have church belle, cathedral bells, court- house belle, school bells, sleigh bells, cow bells, "bell the-cat" and female belles. And EDGAR ALLEN Pox once wrote about wedding End fire bells, in which lie nominally jingled together a good deal about the "tintinnabulation" of the bells. BILLY SEWARD, too, had a hole bell, which he "tintinnabula Led" slightly whenever be wanted to arrest a free and independent Anieri , ran citizen, anii to show how easy the thine w•ls dnne,hr once coiled the Brit. iTh nu nvarr into his private office. and exhibited to him how mncl more pow. rr lie possessed than Queen Vicroal But one of the most effective bells we know anything about, is the big hell in New York City, which Gov. Hove mAN was to have tapped in a certain contingency, ou last election day there. About this, the Carlisle Volunteer talks very pointedly, after the following lash. ion : During the Lincoln adminktration, hi. Secretary of State, Seward, tinseled that he could mend a political oppontatit In a hartlie without trial and without aeru.ntion, merely by "tapping n little bell." On the day of the election in New York, the gallant Go• Hoff man propmoui In Make n.e of a bell too, and a very big one at that, provided it became no 'canary Grant, taking the advice of had men, hail cent 4.nno regular t p. to New York. to be motioned near the poll. on the day of the election The object in view wan to intimi time Detnocretr and to give the negro... and Radical repenter, the field to themselve• Grant hail married eleclionn In the South In the, way. and he wanted to "try it on" in New York Governor Hoffman, however war not to be frightened, and he at one,, railed out ten thounand of lies trmipm well armed and equip ped, and had them quartered at the different arrnorien in the city Ile pobli•lied an order directing that when he required the port ire• of him troop. he WOlll4l ranee the great hell of the city to be lopped twelve time. Grant'. commander Peeing all thin kept hour.° very chi...ly Neither he nor his troop, were to be seen during the whole day, anti Gov. Hoff• mate. bell ear not tapped, the election pan ed off quietly, and the city robed up a Demo efelle majority of 52.1100 1 lint a ritiirnition attempt war this of Grant . .. , lie auppotted i hat he could, by a military show, intimidate the I/ems-rata of New York' What an idea' He may practice hit brutalitier Upon a rort.rate people, but let him not attempt it lon State that ham a DertMeret a. li. Governor Had a ehot been fired In New York by one of his troop., the whnln four thou...nod might brave. been pot to the evrord Go• Pug hell moved the city from a I.lootly civil contend If Grant ha. Reline enough to profit. by thin le.son, It will tin well for him and the country After the dimanters at Fredericksburg, where thousands' of brave men were chain through the lolly and incompe tence of their commanding general, who would ever have thought, that A 141ROne E. BURNSIDL WOlll.l again ap pear in prominent position? But now we hind him running about between Perin and the headquarters of King WI LTA Ay, a self constit tied pellet.- maker. 'chits far his efforts have re nuked in failures as ridiculous, though not FO fearful, PM his attempts at Fredericksburg, anti the more he flits to and fro between the Frenoli and their enemies, the further off seems to lie the star of peace. 81l RN sin,: is an anti—undoubtedly, an ass I He don't seem to be aware of this himself, but everybody else in, and the consequence in the whole world is indulging a loud "gulTaw" at hie expense. We believe the addle headed fool really does imag ine that he has brain, enough to make peace, between the two contestants. But, on thin subject, our colemporary of the Columbus (Ohio) Crisis has sottietljing good to say. Let us listen to lion a minute. The attempt of Ambrose Burneitie to play too tole of a eel( conntituted diplomat in the affairs of Enropo, running about the head pouters of the hostile governments If he had a roving commission to sat do the affairs of the world. must appear LIS Europeans superlatively ridiculous, an it Is to Americans contemptibly rheum'. Hs must hay,' paid the Agents of tho Associated Press handsomely (or the contlnuous advertising they give him In the dispatehea. whore his name in daily paraded along with that of King William Tillers, Bismarck, Napoleon and Gant hPllll Mitch ridicule ham been Justly heaped upon A merle/tem in Europe, for their inordinate anti vulgar vanity, ignorance and toadylem, but this Yankee Adverliaing trick of Burnside exceeds all previous performances end it will surely have the effect of adding to the con tempt and execration whirl) all rightdhinking, Americans nave for the butcher of Frederiek• burg and the author of "Order No 3.11." In thin coon ry Burnside le regarded by many of Ida own parlinlane an n blond ering blockhead, Ito brought greet odium upon the adminie trait/to of Lincoln by hie elope' arrogenee and infitmous tyranny. His 'Order No. 3s " by which he undertook to suppress newspapers, shoot editors and destroy the prone, was the ash V 111°1°m:try for which he in remembered, and that was of such no execrable nature that !denote himself denounced nod counterman ded It. His lawless arrest, mock trial of vet. Nottingham Rod his slaughter of an army at Frederlekshorgare About all the acts for which he in remembered by millions of his country men; and as to Me ability, ho has not enough to tun a little lino of ateamboate between New York, Brixtol and Boston, without having morn Recidente then pnenengere. Why this exploded humbug should be perm Merl to roam Rhoul like An lotermeddling Yankee, 'elver. lining himself by meant, of the war in Europe, rennet he understood except upon the ground that the leaders in France endure hit entice as an totiming dbernion from the heavy dare, And gluon Oral, s by which they ate 'furrow% de! It would be a good Joke on the old ty runt if lie Month! fall int. the tumult of ennui of 1110 Fran,. tirem. non spy, nod receive some of the medicine of imprisonment he wee so,in nonelv („nil a mine log upon his own ornintry• -men vtliett Ito stritlii..l its the ell/0111,1011 polite ly 13 emu of Ills Northwest. SO nuu•li lor lii RNSI DP% Mit, while lie is going hither and thither, making a fool of himself generally and bringing the American name into contempt, we'll just let him alone:for a little while, and turn our attention for in spell to looking up what in on the carpet, poli-' tieally, for next fall. At that time there will be a.State election, and an Auditor and a Surveyor-General aro to be chosen. The question in, who shall be the Democratic candidates for these two positions. It is a little early vet to ,speculate much upon the subject, 'but it is always advisable to he on the lookout for the best material. The Williamsport Slondavd thinks it has hit the nail right on the head when it presents 11. 1,. DisrrEsutcn, Esq., late of Clinton but now of Columbia coon• iv. for Auditor-General, and Ilxv,atitrii WIIITY tin, EII., of Erie, for Survejor General. Mr. Di xrrrNIEIACII is the editor of the Bloomsburg Colombian and Mr. WHITMAN: of the Erie Observ er. They are both lion hearted Demo. crate, talented and able mein, and pub liah most excellent papers. They would make State officers of whom we could be proud, and we shall give them our hearty HI/ pport, if nominated. Tire Standard thus throws its flag to the breeze : Nest Fall the people of Penneylrani& will elect an Auditor ("mend. anal a Surveyor lien end That these officers may be chosen by the Democracy, It Is essential that men of Integri ty, capacity and popularity should be placed in nomination. The strength of the two great parties being nearly equal In the State, the Democracy can not Afford to Relent any but first class men for their candidates No one will deny these I rtiths. and admitting them, no inn should he named, for either position, wao does nut fully come up to the requirement. stated Considering the importance of the Interests involved, it can not he regarded se too early, to suggest names for the consideration of the members area party. We name, therefore. for the post of Auditor General. a gentleman eminently suited foi. the office, and that is, Henry I, Dielrenhaeh 1 here is no man with in the limits of this broad Commonwealth, better qualified, no one more deserving, and no one—we are fully convinced—who would reeeive a more enthusiastic support Mr Dieffenbach ham been known, for many years to those connected with the preen—in this fitate—as the a b le editor of that sterling toper, the lot k Haven Dintsocret Hie position in the State Department, during the adminia. !ration of Gov Bigler, brought him In contact with nearly all the prominent men In the Slate Amongst his large circle of acqualntan• ties, no one capable of judging, doubts his co harty to fill, with advantage to the people, the ighest office In the State, and no one, who Is homed, will question his sterling Integrity He is now the editor of the Bloomsburg Co honbion, and although the Democracy of Co. 1111T1 1 / 1 1% deserve his editorial servire., yet we know that they are too true s . to...gallant, to ree fuse to release him, for IA time, for the benefit of Our great old party. For litir•eyor General, we suggest the name of another, who lo as well qualified, it. equally honest, and deserving. as Mr Dieffenbach We name Benjamin Whitman, the able editor of Erie Observer To great abilities as a writer, ho has added superior hominess capacity which are demons d by the great sweeties, and leading position occupied by the Observer Having attained man's estate before leaving his home, near Harrisburg, he bad an oppor tunity of forming the acquaintance of gentle. inert from all parts ef the State, anti a rest aerie., of near three yearn In the Northwest has made him well known to those of a *tui tion which deserves arandidate We speak of the number of his acquaintances for the rea son that they are so many witnesses to his worth. In view of the fact, that, in 172, the candi date for the Supreme Bench will no don bi he in the Kest, and the candidate for Governor in the Southweet. no objection ran be urged to the locality of those we have named for the positions to he filled nest Pall The profession of Sincere. Dieffenbach and Whitman will not be objected to by any one capable of appreciating the laborious services of an editor Will not their political brethren of the press of Penne.lvan'', unite with um in .eking their nomination/ They hive but to eek, and the Demorreny will grant their request. In answer to the query in the last paragraph of the above, we have but to say that we propose to present 'our own townsman, Hon S. T. finuor.av, for Auditor General, at the proper time But 111 the event of Mr. SOU. cesr's,lFclination,we do not know wlio would be a more suitalle man than Mr DISSFSSFIACH. AS for Mr. WHIT. SAN, we should be glad to see him nominated. 'Aviv° Issues.--tirant is a failure. The Radical party Is dying. The eausen are plain. The people are op posed to negro suffrage —especially to having it forced on them. The attempt to control elections by military force 18 odious to a free people. Taxation is too high. The army is too large, and costa too much in time of peace. Cor ruption is the rule in all branches of the government. 'f he present hankitig and hood system is a robber% and swindle on the people. The tariff, in stead of Being adjusted simply to raise revenue to support a government.econ omically administered, is subverted in to a system of extortion, to take money out of tiuti--cariatuning eh...Ns—which compose the great 111108 of the people— all to fill the poekets of .ve,4ltlty mann factureis and monopoliste. The and expensive system of re ronalroetion of the Smith will not long er he. tolerated,. The tax-payers are tired pav•ng for the eilneation of ne eroea, or rather furnishing ninds for the Freedleati'm Bureau, to enable car pet huggers _and aksaliawagn to elect theineek es to office, contrary to the will of the Souther,' people. Radical ism is atom played twit. Even the rooting Chinaman cannot save 4. C/or/on Democrat. Spewls from the Keystone —The census of AUeon• In So be retaken —Philadelphia had a violent snow storm last lialurdaj. —Pittsburg rowdies •muse themselves smitvhing $l6O panes of glean. —The fiehoylkill river le es lots now as et soy lime during the summer. —Going to law Abdul s pane of glean noel two citizens ofElunbury one hundred and Walt) dollars. —A rock weighing twelve hundred lens wee thrown a stiort dlatanee by • blast, near Coltish, We, a few days ago. —Titusville has had a fire, whioh destroyed a lank containing 1000 barrel■ of oil. Ilia loss in about 1115,000. NO. 46 —The roof of alrerd College weighs PTO toes. The cool of the college wee $1,033,121,71 es au dited. :1_ —The executive committee on a grand In duntriel eghibition In Philadelphia, are mak . Ing quiet progrene. — i Philadelphia has twenty-Ilre charitable thirty-three asylum• and nine 'cup roriellce --Charlen Hnyder of Mauch Chnnk, Acciden tally killed himself on the 21st Inst., while en deavoring to shoot • eat. •-.Amerlean Niglio abound In Washington county and many ar• being captured. It Is needless to any they Sr. not golden ones —The Register 'eye "rive applications for divorce, from Altnona.were entered on the OM Ind., •t the IfollidaTeburg court. —Mrs ?garfish Clark, wife of the haulms master of the broad Top railroad, died verj suddenly at fluntlogdon the nther day. —% rad fora t.achere• Infantile, to be held In liollidaymbura on the feth of December, has been leaned by the Reboot Department. —Two hundred and forty-eix deaths occur red In Philadelphia lan( week, which la nine lees than the correaponding period lent year. —lion. .1 Glancy Jones, formerly of Berke county, thin Mate, I. likely to be elected Uni ted Stale. Senator from the Stale of Delawere. —The Penney',anis Central railroad cmpa ny propone, It le reported, to establish a line of ntearnehlps between Philadelphia and Yo- rope. —Hon. W W Watt, Mte State genator from Philadelphia, died et hi■ residence In that city on the lath instant. Thie make. the Senate a tie, unless a new election he held. Hon O. Dawson Coleman, late Senator from the Lebanon and Dauphin diatrlef, will be, Itl■ raid, the It.heal euncildale fur VW' Trawl,. urer —Edward nallagittor, • stevedore, dropped dead at Arch street wharf, on Saturday, as he wan carrying a basket of potatoes from • sloop lying in th• river. —John Minion, the man who first outrarid and then murdered little Mary Mohrman, In Philadelphia, has been found guilty of murder In the first degree, and will ha hung. —homer Sample, formerly of Lewletcrwn, Mifflin county, fell Into the hands of Indians a few weeks ago while on hie way from Texas to Kansan with a dna• of cattle —Jud•on A. 0110 A, a young married man living about • mile from Dimmoek Corners, Susquehanna county, committed suicide by shooting himself In the hesrl• few day. ago. Paol Hhoeppa, now under eentenoe of death for the murder of Mary M StMoat:lke, is maid to have had ..tsars] coploue lung hem orrhages mince him Imprimonment at Carnal*. —The butler Erred. edited by "Uncle Jake" Ziegler, lay.: We commenced bu•lness in Butler thirty elx yearn ago, and now In 1I there are but sixteen person. here who eons. menned toislnee• when we did. —A quarrel over a re ..... ti seat at Alfons* on ‘Veeinesday evening resulted in an alterca tion between two young men named Burk• holder and Arble, in which the latter atabbad the former four or flra Unto's. The injuries are serious. —The Mayor of gerrlablirg recently vetoed an ordinance of the City Council compelling the police officer, to light and eltlngnieh the public lamps in that city On Wednesday eve ning. at a special meeting of the Council, that body rapeseed the ordinance over the Mayor'• veto. —The capital Invested in nine steal menu. factoring establishments In this Mate amounts to 114,500,015 L The annual prodllets amount to 14,400 loon The oaten for the various *stab lishment• for the year ending 1570 amount in the aggregate to $1,200.000. The amount sold In the modern end western cities by th•agenta of the respective firms •ngeged in the menu feature of steel amount to 81,200,01.10, malting a total of 13,400,000 -Br•hamberlio Bowellsky, a Poland's'', aged rrevent).ine years, has Just been imprisoned In Pittsburg for stealing a coat and a pair of boots. A J recharge was found on hla person showing that the prisoner had been a soldier in the Austrian wars of 1813 and that he had been honorably discharged There was also a certificate discovered sating that fichamberlin was horn in Poland in tire •year 1791. and tin• other document informing the reader that he had been a soldier in the Crimean war, and that In MI he came to this country Mews in Enter —Some time during Satur day night some of the tsnye In the neighbor hood of Sixth and Susquehanna IVO,CIIIO erects ed en effigy of Hanlon on the lot on which the body of Mary Molirman hail been found. The figure was snitched to a pole flied in the ground. Daring yesterday morning It large email rollected on Ilia lot to nee the flgure,and It in alleged that while the crowd were gaging e woman approached, announcing herself to he Ilanlon's sister, drew a hatchet front be* orient her elonk, eta down the effigy and car ried It away.— The Day. —The Lucerne Powder Company'. mill and dry house* at. Wilkes• Barre, were destroyed by an explosion on Thursday morning. It Is thmorld the explosion in the dry house was caused by sparks from the clothes of • man who ran there (ore efuice Some freight ears standing on the railroad track were shattered. Thomas Horns, ellgif eer, was so badly injured that he died noon after, and Oscar Shoemaker Man severely burned. The company loses about slo,ooo.—Cefunsbion. DAIVILLI, Nor, 14.—A young lady named Ann Kernt was killed this morning at Beaver's tint• eel•heed switch, connected with the 1.. & B. R. R. Several empty coal cars were being let down the svelte'', which has a grade of three (eat to the hundred, when the borne attached 10 the eatrlage In which she and another young lady were riding, became frightened and harked off the road, felling down the bank eight or ten feet to and upon the track Just in front of the descending ears, which passed over and ernithati the Indy named and the horn*, killing them leniently The lady's eon). panlOn escaped by Jumping from the earring. before it went down the hank. To change find t.i .lo hotter aro two different things.