The Democratic Watchman. BY P. GRAY MEEK JOF. W. FURRY, ANSlttloals En:ToR Terms, $2 per Annum, in Advance BELLE FONT E, I'A Friday Morning, January 13, 1871 The Governor on the Watch Towers That portion of CloverllOr (iF. \HY'S Message that refers 14) the employ ment of Federal troops to controltlec lions+ by the people, has wog univer sal commendation fr o m the Democrat s is and independent press. Tilts form' ble and leaded way in which he ex presses Ills sentiments, has met the approval of the country, and he stands to day somewhat higher in the entuna• tion of the people than he has done at ally time since his election to the Chief Magistracy of this Common wealth. There is one right dearer to the citizens of a' free government than all others, and that is the right of soil frage—the right to peaceably assemble at the pills to ilecide wlio Pld] and who shall not be their public servants, Any interference with this right. Is a 1110 w at popular liberty, and sure to bring upon the bend of the perpstra tore the just wrath of WI lifillgllttlit ea :mushy. Prior to the admitoktrations o f 1,r,r0 5 , 5 ., itch (fa tvi,sueli a thing as military olterierenve by the Plot ern meal with elOctiftins in the States, was never heard of. It was reserved for these two to act the role of the tvrnnt, And try to rwiertttrn the fundamental principles upon which our Republic is founded. Latterly, this interference has been carried on with a high hand, and the outstretched arm of the Presi dent has 11910/111eil to control and direct everything. The voice of the people has been as nothing to him, save where. to all occasional instance, It coincided with his ttcws or reaffirmed his policy. In the great majority of innlances, South and North, these he melons of the. people have been against hint, but wherever be saw that such was Itkely to be the cane, prior to the election, he sent his armed men to be used in ,vernaetng the opponents of his letogns and measures. Particular ly to the Southern States were these acts arbitrary and oppressive , anal his success t here encouraged lino to repeat them in the Nurth So it happened that troops were sent to Philadelphia in I hillier lad, and to New York in November. tOO% erawe the Demur racy, Fut tuttatel, however, the Ilctnuenttn• Ineellt I% e of New Yuri, could nut be frightened, and threatened to :retaliate I!i6 the Stale trtmie4 for itrly inurte relax that might be attempted by the 'Thin had the etket ul ret•nt• ing tildnit.rrupted election, and the cu me~ l nent triumph it tho I,elimeratie part% .1;1 1 . 1.11:olelphtl, 111, IL+ 1111,•1,1,1,1, ill i• .1 k;lli rl I itc Pri•••liiv:ot r 1111 GO% vrflOr for ,11,1 H ., ' It 11.11fral 11, /111.1 pil,ed the tnaittr mer 1t he t-rr+ me danger, late Me,,,,ge, give+ uUt•t- alley to the lollowmg mgolticnot i:II MEI RIO II uupl I 1e,,,,, lee) of Inx th.it tho pr... 1•1), ..f , 11111 , 11., 1; felt • 11114.1.. It Ile/1 Er Ije he , It Iv, the ir J.', o• mieuloal•.l 55'!11, IC ge. , l I the e Xelk t+. .r{ I. 11..1 le 11/".• 1,111 11, 1•4.1 Ilk Cl, hell ' ,Pll I .11111 , 1 1 , 11, 11 nil,(111 1v1.1.11 nioll.ll 1111//1...i , I 111,1, V 0 1, 1 1, 1.1 13.13. ad 1... 131.1.ry , 11M1 1 on, wnlll.l I nitmil 1.. ion 11 1,1 I,rll 111 1 .1111 1 1n111 111 ( ,nl,. am, co, re et. lour o 1.11 11 11 ele nil etele , prr.i re Al,ue 1101 t ,“ pub l ,t ta il.• 1...1 It, u 1 111 ‘l.le• nl,lll/111 II 1'i1114411 1 I phi I. I) 1.4 1.1 I 111,. 1111,t,0il 1/,‘,. it Innn ,),, , 111 11. 11 114, 11.."114 dy. VI 111 1 1 1 \ll ,1111.1111 1 . 111 t 1111, 1 1Lilly ',lot' 411 d Ulll • 'lt 111 4 \ 1.11, 4 .1.1 1 1. sin 1,11 tile 011 1 , and us 111/ V 411111 .014 1,1111. P I 1111,11 1 4 . 1 111,1 4 ! //VI 1 • 4.1d1 1// t I 1,11 MIS (31141, 1431 Of 11. i 3,1311 .33113 1 yonirllll, 11 1 1 1 ,11 In I In- .111 II 1 I .110' I 11.kve linglll 11 111 . 1 1111, 1 1,11. .4.11111 14‘.1111 111 1 . 1 1 11 1 , 4,11. 1 11 t 111 II . 1 1 41114 It 111 4.11 ,11\ 1111111 1 .,11111.11 .11,11.1..1 1114 01 Iginguage like the above, coaling fromliv3lls cram- of l'crla. , ‘ vaioit, In yeemareol dent of the mat "light I. IP , 11111illela to (VII \ Wet thq .1 ,1 1 1,1 / 1 ,;: of that I,lly the coliairy i 1 In the hall , lll of :t darigeriti- -t hi-tory Se President prove., Ihim, Duel gm , -. In sho‘N teat 1.1 , 1.1 nutting ;Li peini : ll,,,i poliiielil po,%er. pled and lie nnui that geto troop. to control the ti,iitlo.ro eleclion4 and eveti t0te..11444i it ni th 4reat States of Penngyl%anitt and New V§eprlc, would behitate at uotbing to 11181(0 hint ell a l'a.linr,trailtpling, belief - 111i his leet the blood-bolight oi . the peo plc, in hie desp , ,tio, and fearful Etudes OVCV. OW 111111. ut I erul,hcan liberty. iVe ale glad that ti , ivernor iir ta) ham at lit,d opened his eye:, to tlii dan , - - -The Peat of Col. DEctugr, of gera that menace this SUtii ir ii i Philadelphia, recently elected to the 00%mi tb Sl'lllol' 1.% an overwhelming majority, through lie int . :town- ~ 4 1 1 11 1 1 . 6• 41, to he contested, it seem., by • the Con-titittion mid I, , n by di, Al imheals. we It see what will filtration at ton. ereatti r all , " 111 •1 to. let him he a faithful sentinel of the people on the ulwarks of freedotn,and much of his pa• transgressions will be forgiven hint. San Dginingo The President's pet measure, the San Dotningo.jor, received a cheek in the !loupe of Representatives tt..,Wash ington, on the 9111 instant, by the de feat of the rilsolfition to send a com mission to that country. The lender of the administration Party in the lIOOF4C On that day was dodge Ou Tin or Indiana, who exhausted all his in genuidy and all his knowledge of par liamentrtry tactics to get the measure through, but the cool, clear-he:tiled mitiingt4nent of FEUNANna Wiwi., on the Demoit . ratic side„ frustrated every attempt. Had the absent Democratic members been in their places, the effort to get the commission sent would have been defeaced for this week, at least. The administration party wanted to force the thing through without debate, lint (hey "slipped up," Oil this, aid were compelled to hover their tone to a more conciliatory style. What will be the final fate of this San Domingo matter, it is hard to tell. lIIU4 11 . 1 , 101 OppObl 6.11 rn his own party, mud it comes, too, nom men. `Own , he 'can't whip in in 1 " 'Tenni' on the subject, or, Monday, Mr. Wouv alluded in wiCkring terms to the hri her). and corrupting influences used by the President to secure the passage of the measure, whinh njakes it evident (lint the e‘ecui IV(' Is more than ordi toady interestitil in the nun Per. San Domingo has been his hobby fur the last fifteen or twenty months, and he seems determined to secure the an nexation of that highly colored region in one shape or another. We shall await developments, Motley Protests And now Mo"MEV protests against lon removal from his post an minister at the British Court. In a long letter to secretary Fist' he expresses himself in terms that show that he considers himself very unjustly treated. he Paym that at the very moment of his limplacement he was "engaged in as delicate and confidential a correspon ' deuce with yoursell (Fist( t anti the British Government upon several nn portant [natters as could well he con. tided by a go%ertiment to its foreign agent." This In probably true, but Mr. NfoTIEI tarot remember that f ;it tNT to not as oilier men are. (Iran tilde is not an element in the President's composition Ile does not hesitate to sacrifice his heat friends to the attain nit fit of 1118 own pernonal elk. For Home reason or other, 1 1 1 1 1T1.1.V deln ' t emit him, or Home lier , mot aronnd hum and hence him removal The minister complain beeallSe be in treat ed no better than other ?WM 11 . lip v, hitt it hp, rim ni him iit intentional error, /hen he ought to he .all-hieh I/) Coale 111/all. 111141 let ihuign lake their eourw gilt A\ r and RI 11.1,K and Moirro• are 1111 W fllllll tug our goNerumental eon cern, and they are "milking a nice thing out of it." Rut thank gi./o , lflenS, the SC/1,/11 let left to them 14 a btirt 4,111. Its Ml , l by a Change will Collie. We nee f, kr free trade We fk Bete m LW. mg what We Ilet'd Where We (An get it the chentie , ,t, mei belling who we hate lit 411.1,4,Sewhere We mist Ir it This IM the rim gl`l t ir.le , ecret of lIILtIMIaI Iry well ILS indi Nidtiaiipr.perity, and by and Ly It %%111 be the acknowledged , lortrole W.f.,' the count r% The nil rr 14 "pr,,lerlion'\ . In Hived out , 11,a,4111,1Ch Wit}11 . 1,111) ', 1,1,1 I%h :tre "protected' are Ow vtealti.ieNt men m the land. I it.l :01‘1.,1!, ever hear ot a tariff for the protection the po,,t. man? giieFt: !WI. The !roll 1111111111:11'llirerti It! the old) chltia that are "pnaeet d" n, l'etw4yrvanta, hat the tnett who aork fur then] get none tit the betiefittt of suell prniect UM. Free trade In the tot the rlln of the tartn. 1.0 the people begin to open their rire h, own intete , ts The "pr,flee. ram bowling has %tilled them long l'imitg'l. Wilke lip! It gettmg day Illyhii,!111,1 the 1111718 trod ehadee of the I:11 fir flight are rapidly d!mappearing. --Pour hundred and twenty five curdles pet khed in the flames of the burning Italian ship Ancona, hound M ileoa for Cnllo , w h en near Neptune 'eland. The fillip Wan alma• dorm! by the eaptaln and crew, and a hundred and twenty of the coolies were picked up by a San Sal ad or ship, The remaining 42 met a horrible death. The ''Late Lamented" on Negro Suf frage. ABRAHAM LINCOLN wag lately the idol of the Radical Party. What he said wasTaw, what he did was unal terable. And even though he is now dead, that party like to quote him,and bold him up ns their great representa tive and exemplar. Very well. In J 405 Mr. LtricoLN Was Ihrilfplllllleatt candidate for United States Senator against STFrllits: A. Docnixs, the lit tle giant of the We't. The campaign was one of the most memorable that ever occurred in the political history of the country. It gave Li N('OLN national reputation, and made him the RepaHlican candidate for the presiden cy afterwards. Together he and Dot 1.11 traversed the State, delivering the mot powerful and able speech es. 'the result is well remembered. Dotamts Watt elected by a nutjur ity of eight votes in the Legislature, bill the reputation made by LiNcoi. , -; in the contest was the ladder upon nhich he climbed to bat lot ire elevated 11,1110 a. Put our object is not to speak par IlelllarlY about the re--idle of that cam paign, but to show,as 1,1 , 0 01, , , 181 1 111tt ed t•Ct much by the Radicals now, what los opinion Iraq at that time upon the quest ion of Nun, lcuttrage and Negro oflice-loildim In the debts beta Ceti 111111 and the great Dot i.I to all the ex riung questions then at issue were fill ly discussed, and at one of these meet lugs Mr. 1,15., oiv Openly expresbed his t leWS as 10110t.Cti . - Mr I,lln oh, rrard 111111 gentlemen —\11111• 111 104 at tie hotel 10 daw, all elderly gent cretin vaned upon the to It now Inltether I Parr f.tl or of 1,10.1110 ml; a 1,0,1 eytalitv hetureen the negroeg and white pen plc While I had net proirrererl Io my , ell on 1111/1 or.r . loi 1011 to rrriV tnnelt 1m the 'Ol hreet, Vet 11'r Ivr 11.111,1 I 01 0 11)410 I wlllllll trorriir perhilll the I,llllllli, In enving .ottlething in regal 11 to It I till] rev, then, that 1 aim not., nor ever have been, in hirer 01 hringing,,, , mut ill any WU' Ihr. r.or . lid and pollt• 1. ni 1 rill 1111 V of the n title and hlaek raeu.—that 51111 11. 1 1, 1.111 er halo wen ill fltuer of vaisA IWI to/ere for pg,rx ol.novor, nor tt/ gnnG Ming 11,•bi roihr lo ",Nr//10, r, frith 1111111 prop(, lend IVT aavm addition to thin, 01111 thPre 1 11 , 110 , 1P11l rhlreerrnire helweell the 1,1/1 1 1. awl 11 role, w 111111 I Ire!, e 11 ( prever tot l o , l t /Jo Iwo 1,, g I. , gether nn term` of 1 . /al and 1.1/1111 . 111 14115.1111 V 11111 11111111111111 :1+ Illy% 111111ot Po lit e lido !hey do rellllll,l loPel her Wrote 1111101 I ro p1e.1110111111 , 1,111 1 41 11,110 Pryritroll Ornri I, arr no /11IV other 1111111, kir It 1,1,1 of lIIItVI, TIIP 11 PPRION POSITION AM SPANS!, TO 7111 irr 11111 011 1 " Such wan Mr. LiN(.II s's; ()pinion at that day, and we believe he entertain ed the 801110 %Jews, ately, until pie hour of his drat~ rireurrHtterres compelled 111 m to depart from them to eeriain extent, in obedience to the demands of his party, but we think that all lIIS I tuipli).4 - s and teclingh were again , -t the doe Vine now en boldly and twid loudly advocated by the Radical Party. Thun it will he :.run that the tery turn whom the Radicals allected to idoli/e wan oppo , e4l to the pet doetrint• of that partt now. In their quotingn from why don't they ' quote hint WI Negro ? If him own 1(11(9 are infallible on other subjects, the% ought to be su on this, and we 11 , 1,1-o• our Radical friends to hereafter trgre.tt light. Mr IA lot 1 lit lu•tr h that MO long nv the white and ()tack man remarried together in the mint' country that there must he the position ut ,upitor 1101 4/Yelloo, uud 1101111,1 1,11114(11, " 114 118 any other nian, I t hoot of having the su rerun poeitinn a-e-ntzne,l to the white rare " !low do you get over 'hi., R1011'111." Etther 1,1 N was a dent 14.z.gue then, or )0n are deniagoguen now Von ran tithe hull ut it lin het er horn or the iidenitil, ‘ou pleatto -I)var Little VI \\it Itt 111 1111.8 'non Mat Ile .01 Pre . ..1.11.111.1...1N, ()I colnideled It rri ooillieed I . grelit. bUceetoi, 1101.1 we =EMI ail. glad 01 it, fur VroNit's rake 'l'lll. Inllr witch, limvmer, might hJI,. bet employed her time than m calling Munn a IJoe6 id marble lido the im personal appearance of the "late We Walk if either his fealare•+, Irvin or actions should he perpeti . itteil in monnnu'ntnl marble . Ile strutted Ins brief nettnort on the public stage, and then went lo his long melmald, wherever and whatever that IN, .1s IL , •17liehI111111, him (I.lititry has no re a son to lie prowl of him, nail the sootier the bloody memories with which h e in eiitioected are forgotten, the bet ter. is -- now we are told that Setia• for MonroN will not prosecute the fel low who pitched into his character in the Sunday Mercury, MORTON IX wise 1 ,, 11 11 8, Il e hetotVa his ChantCter will hot stand littlish knocking about. its toad shape already, and line to be handled very gingerly, or it will go all to pieces. fie knows, too, that the rubs It would get in a hitch with a newspaper man would rub it all out. So we are told that rVfoicros is pacifies]. Seuelblc Motttoss. - --(Mr friends of 7'he Paper pub. the Governor's Afessage twenty one hours in advance of all its compet itors, whereupon one of its coternpora ries kilned itrremtless." The l'aper C 1,-1 , 1e14 the term complimentary to Death of Hon. John Oovode Hon, Joni CovObe, member of Con gress from this State and Chairman of the Radical State Central Committal:l, died very suddenly at the United States Hotel in Harrisburg, on Wednesday last. Mr: Covone was on his way to the Capit<fr, and his sudden death comes very ptartlingly upon the country. Ho had served seven terms in Congress, en tering that body in 1855. Mr. Covens; lived in tireensburg, Westmoreland county, and was defen , ei last fall for Congress by lion. HENRY D. FORSTER. rho particulars of Mr. CovonWasull den death, as given in the Pittsburg Om:mere:al, are that he left home on Monday last and accompanied his fami ly to Philadelphia. On Tuesday he re turned to Harrisburg with his wifeoind that evening spent several hours with Jouv Cr.,eriA. About four o'cicick on Wednesday morning be awoke his wife, complaining of a terrible pain ribakit Ins heart. A physician was sent for, 'lVrtioq, gave it as his opinion that the pain would blue lif6i in about an hour. Mr Coyour: exclaimed, "Have 1 so long to wait as that f" The doctor wits about^taking his lonw., when ilr. C again very sud denly ejaculated, "My r:•kl, I alit ' anti immediately expired his reinaini were accompanied by n con-lira 'ee of the Legislature to hits home in Westmoreland county --,‘ Radical paper, the Itfononga heht llepuldirfm, sayfi that whisky is the c•nnse of the pi enent D e mocratic majority in the Senate. It accuses the late Senator WAIT, who was a Radical with living a drunkard and killing him, self by an inordinate use of rot-gut. We don't know whether this is true or tint. It is a pretty hard thing to say about a man after he has gone to— well4 "anywhere, anywhere out of the wdrld." But it Groves one thing—that whisky is a very common beverage among Radical officials Heretofore whisky has been charged with being an eXCIIIIiiVeIy Democratic institution, hut now wo have it, on the authority of a prominent Radical journal, that its use by Radicals has given the Sen• ate to the Democracy. Hereafter, let there be no more said, by our virtuous (+Kiruna up town, about Democratic drun k en ness --The resolution to appoint com missioners to visit San Domingo Cwr the purpo , e of reporting upon the pro priety o annexation, has passed the If ouseof Representatives nt Washing ton, with Mr. Amtmen's amendment attached to it, which declares that the support of the resolution does not pledge the members voting for it to the presidential scheme of annexation. This Is riot !Math of a triumph lor (;RANT. The resolution will now go to the Senate where it will likely be de laeti for some time. --Some of the Radical papers think the I lovernor's Message too long; eltectally, we pre4mne, that por lion of it which relates to military in terlerence acub elections. We dun t cure particularly about IN length, so long as It enunntateet such sound doe trine as is contained in that part of it. We k now it has been a long time since the people read such sentiments in a Radical state paper. ---Congress has appropriated:l',stiti for an Ivan uensin to I;eii.Sh O. minister to Esgland. It seetna the valiant General has a mutilated hand, which he got in running away from the .'rebeh," at Big Bethel, and can't write with Si he will have to employ 1111 !r n anensis. And rongresci he ill pay low $2,51141 Liberal Con gress. Ilappy Ainanuerieni. real in (h e n :•4( K in the title instant, IlLstiv W A RI, BEM E salary MLR rained from $l2,($N) to 20,000. llow's that for high? Preaching has been a good business fur 11 EN 111", But then the Lord caljed (rim to work jo It very lucrative field. He can't help his m oney . (If eourne he don't want it, but then they force it upon him. Hon. Erna %in It ts.iss, the first Auditor (general of Pennsylvania, elec ted by the people, died at his resident e in Lewistown on at Friday. At the time of his death, Mr. Kinks was one of the associate justices of lINH in coun ty. Ile wits an honest wan and a good Deit)Oernt, and as such the people will regret him. --It. W. klAriCkir, Esq, of Pitts burg, the Radical norninee for State Treasurer, was elected by the Radical majority to that office, on Wednesday. DANI EL 0. BARR, Esq., a gallant young Democrat, of the same city, was the Democratic candidate, and received the full party vote. Now that this question is decided, we presume the regular work of the session will go on. --We are indebted to somebody for a copy of the proceedings of the third annual convention of the Y. M. C. A. Journalistic. —The Democratic Signed is the name of a new jonrnal just started at lifercer. It is large, handsome and well edited, and an able advocate of Democratic principles. Its editors are McKmourr and (lsouns It. Gantinu. We extend the Signal our cordial congratulations, with the hope that it may never fail to give the signal when the principles it has espoused are endangered by enemies within or foes without. staunch Democratic sheet, the vi ord Gazelle, enters upon the New Year great] enlarged and im proved. It is now :lti-eolunin paper, and prides itself m its good looks• The Democracy of ledlord have reason to be proud ol . 9 4 trity organ, and should gi libe oh paying sup. port to a o i s. -Thv American Newspaper Repor ter and ./ Ivertiser's Gazelle, published (ito. I'. Itony.m. & has been eh) ton weekly of mixtetni'beanti. fully p d pages. The Gazelle is invaluable'to printers. S late of the Bridgeton (N.,1,1 rhromcle, has pur chased the Chester County Journal, at Downington, l'a. --The Perry 'ou fly Democrat bas been enlarged to a 32 column paper, an evidence tails general good health and political prosperity. The I)enio erat Las 'teen a faithltil sentinel oil the outer walls of I)einocracy, anti we are glad to Bee that it is so well apprecia ted. Late Publications THE ALDINE I'RKS - 8 : Sutton, Bowen A: Co.,,23,Liberty street, N. Y. Two dollars per annum. The hohday number of The Aldine Press is the most beautiful specimen of the typographic art ever seen itt this or any other country. It is superb-- elegant. The illustrations arc the very finest, and the literary contents of the very highest order of talent. The Aldine Press rs published at 23 Lib erty street, New York, by Sutton, Bowen 4 Co., monthly and is devoted to literature and to demonstrating the ex ceeding beauty with which handsome types on fine paper can be made to print. Every number is profusely il lustrated with the love nest and softest of pictures, making it the most perfect and beautifully printed journal in the world. Price $2,00 per annum in advance. Tuc SorTIIERN AGAZINE: • Bahl more. Murdock, Browne Baltimore street Price The January number of this able and influential Southern periodical is be fore us, and should have been n o ti ce d before this, It one of highest-toned magazine,/ we have, nod will compare favorably with even the Mile)) vaunted Harper, or any other of the "crack" magazines or the North It 104 ably edited, and its literary character 14 of the highest. It is Just as valuable as it can be, and 110411 C the less so because it ennies Iron) "Dr x me." In tact, we rather considered that awl additional recomlll6lldat 1 . 111 . Nl,ll YURI% ( hoiekvnt Y r i to BOW. 1 \ 1. Atii Soluiy E Slorae. .1r , 1 'oinpany, :17 Park liow, S. V. Price ,'7.1,00. IVs have received a copy of this valuable publication, which in a murk of two hawked pages. I ts elieapnean ought In place it In bile Halals of every and the fuel that all snhnrnhery to the Aele lot I, (Nis( rer, will receive it gratiotowdy, !TON paying their huh ncriptions one rear in advance, nbould he a great inducement to become Flub .wcriber•-. 'Fhb; almanac among other eurii , itien, contains a reprint of the first directory ever publi,iheil of tiew York, in 178 t; So rare was this hook that, four yearn ago, a single, copy 01 It brought putdie auction. The Obscrner Year Book and Alumna,- in a coinp . lation of great await and value Send and get it. --The Young Men's Jachnon An nodal ion of Allegheny county, gave a grand banquet at Pittsburg, on the 9th instant, in commemoration or the glo lintl/Istory at New Orleans. Speech- CH Were made by Ex-Seturtor Cos •N, 11011, W. MECLE INI,, and others,and letters read from a 1111 in Ler of distin guished gentlemen, among whom were Hons. (leo. •PENDLETON, CHARLES FRANCIS A LIAIIB, THOMAS A. 11Eri• mimics, M. C. KEJRR, B. F. MYERS, H. P. DEcii and others. 'rbe occas,. ion was one reit joyinent, and a fitting celebration of one of thegreitt est achievements I AAtherican history. —A country exchange Ha} n: "Squire Muchmore won't try picayune cases much more, unless the court fees are increased much more than they are at present." —An Omaha man penned up a neighbor's cow and then sold him mill( lin' three weel<4. The latter has The Weeping William The Philadelphia Day le noted r its enthusiastic devotion to the caw. of France as against Prussia. E v , since the wer began, The Day has t ken sides with the French. it &fete ed Nneni,RoN, with brilliant aid lity,an since his overthrow, it attaches itse with the same fidelity lodic cause of tl Tiepublic. In a late issue it gives ICU si a sarcastic whack, as ri lows : "One of the war correspondents fu niches the American public with tl gratifying intelligence that King W i linen in intensely sensitive and spill), tactic, and liable to the severest tie VOlll4 shocks' on witnessing the stare ings of wounded soldiers, and can o hearing the "dead march" played t the hold of a passing funeral. Th gushing correspondent even says th "the aspect of the battlefields on whir were won his imperial crown and th immortal glory of Pruesia„rtind of hi house and name, has made him sir nigh unto death, and unmanned hit fur many hours afterward." Wi n ] the world will profoundly pity Willis! it will rejoice that this temper of ten dernesa has at lest overtaken hin Things were not thus with this ills trious personage when he was only prince—when some twenty too year ago he swept the crowded streets of th • Prussian capital with grape and en meter. Then the shrieks of his ow people, tnen, women anti children,wh were killed and maimed by his ortle t dot not awaken the soft sensiltdin which now overcome his majesty, th "Emperor of (lermany," 'We can now understand why Wi Liam Mouldered when, some 111(111111 ago, he shrank from naming the nam ber of slain in a certain deapatrh to hi queen, and we can appreciate the ex tent of his royal sufferings since th, time over the tens of thouaandskille or mangled in the war which aloud have ended at Sedan, How much lo ger will tide tender-souled sovereig consent to torture his exquisite gene bilities in the bloody work which a ready worries his sad heart so seriou Iv? How can hie nerves bear such t dings as the bombardment of Pan with its two millions of people, mui bring to his anxious ear 1 Or is it o ly slaughtered Teutons that touch lo tender sympathies? "It is a pity that one who rules "b Divine right" cannot carry out hie dt signs without having to endure sue agonies as afflict the annointed VVi liam in his humane attempt to annili late one people that he may 'unify' an other I Yet, it must he gratifying t, his admirers to see how math he willing to suffer for the welfare of hi people. Though, in his present stat of moral sensitiveness, the death of single Herman must shake his being t its very centre, and even the sight of wounded IThlan almost unman bin yet King William is willing to procee in a war that must yet kill tens of thou sands of his fellow countrymen' Hon of what this dear, kind king must tin ler before' , "this cruel war is over What oceans of tears he is destined ye to weep! Niolie will be nowhere, ant Job Trotter is doomed to a total eellim The Monarch of Advertisers What nu Enterprising Doctor made 1 a Judicious use of Printer's Ilehnbobts Princely Turn-out. if elinhold'm log fileigh MIR out in d Park yetiterday, with a load of Jude and (knerals A Sun 1711111, mect in the Doctor, :mike,' him how notch th bells cost "They're gold plated. There 37s of them They cost me $973) amAwered the little giant of the medic world. o n further inquiry the report , learned that the harn ess enqt near) $4 (WWI, arid the buffalo robes Thinking that a man with such a tur out might to he worth something, tl reporter came down town aid hunt up the Doctor's assets. lie Mutt them to be as follows ; Five sten" brown eUnui nlurr,s'u4 lirowlmray 111141,1 , Pr0.4t1,• 1 . 1111111. ro in pi I gate n.lJenr•r 111,4 e.. itrriagupt, harrivmu. utt,l the tinitml turnout In thr• vrnrld filort,v nl Long 14ratnell nt 1,11;.; Itnm,•h ( ~ ,ttave4 ut Long linuloti 2 - .. . Flirtutur. 111 cottagen. liy Lend 111 1,.,11K liruarch 12", Htoelt In hi.. Piil . .il eiltilla illb,prnliory fall The reporter learned that the I>o,• tor on as, in addmon to Oh) above, set eral lots on Niadition and Filth avemi. and some on the IMillevards. 'rile r. porter was assured that there was not pencihatiark against all doe properly The Immor's husnu•xs is mimeo... 'l•he orders have reached $30,000 an. .titlyeel in a single day, Set en year ago he come to this city with $2( in his pocket. Now lie is worili millions, and spends as 111(101 more as any man in the city. "How 'lid lie make hie money asked the reporter of the 'Melo. agent. "Through advertising liberally ir ot tl w newspapers," was the reply, "sa a onner, Small & Street, Ayer, al. , 1a e." The Doctor is advertising in newspapers. lie buys hie own mer chandise, and contracts for his er tieing in such a manner that lie is pie pare t to discount at seven per cent. pc annum any obligitmon flint may he presented. The ,r)oetor is empliatlea llm !le has it Hpeciel fondness L r yacti , arid is spending large HUMS 01 . 111011 q procuring models of the Dauntless. proposes to decoratO his drug store tt it these models.—N. y. Sun. Tiler° tiro rPrinin gossips in who r ,, ernblo long and IWiStOll trn 111 , 1 VP inn faint El NM OE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers