Bellefonte Democratic Watchman BY P. GRAY MEEK JOl.l W. FUREY, Assam/as Roma Ink Slings —We're baying some weather now —Vermont bas a baby that weighed 17 pounds at its birth. A lio-Icely story. —The champion skater of. 81, Louis is a fema with a cork le—limb. We come pret near saying leg. l i i tTl --W. W . RC/WM, &RACE GREELEY and some other pfd women are now furnishing editorials for the i.. Republi ran. —West Virginia roads are so rad that the poem there Ring— " Thin rood Iv not pnvvnblo; Not, oven Jacknnerable. —lt is a significant fact that every fletialqial candidate for whom GRANT thrrw his influence was defeated. Straws show, &c. —We are told that an inherited for IX generally a curse. Neverthe lesq, we should like to be cursed in that way a Mlle. VALMAIIETII LUCKY died from NillrVlllloll and neglect, in Indiariapoliti, the other day. The poor Woman WAR lucky to the lant. —Weatitioreitind county dogs kill sheen. A good remedy to to cot their ta w., o fy (We mean the logs' tails) close up to their ears. -The Johnsiowners are talking about establishing "industrial association:'! That's right—go to work and do some thing few yourselves. —Ebensburg brags of a horse that can go a mile in 2:90. That's nothing. We have several here that can go a mite most any time. —There are vitrionq vermin/iv of the Starr-Fay Irv - inaction, at Altoona, afloat in the newariapers. The leipt aid about it, the better —The editor of the Hollidaysburg Standard is mad about something. Whnt'a the matter with you? Don't you get enough to eat? —Wild eats are so plenty in Aloha ma that, when doge go out to the mourning, they come home at night bald headed ohmic their --A laav In Naehville ban been on a Iffiq tar two or three months—a blot f. <L(.'v got over it now i it MR)' that prand 4,,,, r ,,,101 for chewing For n0de ,, t‘,.14 we hope !hey lire not I. , io , petnied very high. -(inv. Or %RV made a speech the other ilay in favor of acknowledging liud in the conidittition of the United ' , tams tut( Keller have the kliniglity first acknowledged about Ilarrinhur4” --Neck-tie parties are the rage now Redford had one the other day, and Budge than' F. has appointed one for Wilhatrimport on the first of February, when the Sher II - is to present u neck tie to !Await) BRITTON. —An Albany wornnn lately baptized her husband with hot water, for set tint; drunk. The foot died. which wasn't fair, for it 1...1 the a...i able widow to the expense 01 btu y lig clothes to go to the funeral in. —Mrs. FRILL, of Philadelphia, thought the world wasn't brit* pee. pled fast enough, so ehe gave birth to three little daughters at one tune, the other day. Mr. Fatal. thinks' she slightly overdoing the contract. —A fellow peeped through the key• hole of a girl's bed-room the other day, in a neighboring toWn, and now says that be can see almost aa well out of one eye as he used to do out of both. A knitting needle was what was the MEI Somebody sa id: " The nicest thing in bonnets, a pretty face." An other chap [Mid, "Nicest thing in hoots, a pretty foot." Now we're to have "Nicest thing in gloves,a pretty band," and then Nicest thing is hoist', a Pret ty le—are that alone, will yon? Its not safe. —"Guys Lo sr omv," says an exchahge, gives hir "Bright Side" here to night." When she was in Bellefonte she not only gave us her "Bright Side," but likewise her dark side, her right side and wrong side, her up side and down side, and, turning completely round in her excitement, she gave us a glimpse of her back— ir. — FITZOZIALD, of the Philadelphia City Item, alter abusing Gov. Gaarty for three years, has suddenly changed his course, and now praises the Gov ernor as hard ag he abused him before. The Dent man has get a libel suit on his hands, and the peosPect ahead looks *High. ParNiona come handy sometimee. Hence the why that this ie thin. g7l i LEE 6 VOL. 16 A Prediction in Course of Veriflea. tion During the last presidential contest, Gen. FRANK BLAIR made a speech in which he prophesied that iffien.flaznir was elected President of the United Suites, ho would not leave tfie White House nt the expiration of Ilia term of office, butvThuld hold on, even if he bad to use the army .to accomplish his unholy purpose. This is not the exact language need by him, but it he the faith of what he said, and sums tip in short the substance of a prediction (lint seems very likely to be realized. ilafddy an) body believed that Gen. BLAIR tntnlit what he said, at the time; the general opinion being that it was all intended for political effect. The Radicals Looted at the idea, and even Denmeratm smiled quietly over what they considered Gem "hifati hale " Dot 4 . 1 . ar1c the sequel. No sooner was President GRANT 1118ifliled into the office than he surrounded ritimelf with military officers. There was a general at the entrance to the White house, and one at its exit. A general to conduct you to "the pres ence" end one to show out out. Gen erals Colonels, Majors here, there, everywhere. The private secretary was a military officer. , Citizens were nowhere and the best and almost only way to get to see the 'President was 11l don a Military regalia 114/(1 go in on the strength of "the army." In hie corn munications to Congress the medium of conveyance was a military officer, and in every Jepartrnent about his person soldiers were preferred to civil ions. 'rims it commenced, and thus low it coi,t hilted, until the White House is now looked on more as a guarded palace than as the residence of the plain Chief Magistrate of a plain and unpretentious people. The employment of troops, too, to control elcctions, is another evidence of liassfr's desira and intention to usurp forbidden powers. Unwilling to trust the people, he has interfered with the right of suffrage wherever an opportunity has been given him, and has all along acted with one end in view, and that end the permanency of his own personal and political power. Ity the employment of officers and soldiers to perform the duties hereto fore performed by civilians, he has at tempted to familiarize the people with them, IT that the shock may not so astonish and appal them when the (Inv arrives fOr the aecompliediment,hy military nil, ut his grand Coup d' dal It in very evident, from all that ham occurred pollee OR OCTS election, that (11:n, Hi.tlit understood the character of the nit it he was talking about, and meant pint. exactly what he naid. He knew (lit %NT to be edistitinte, self-will eil, I) ruin ruuuc , tl and ambitious, What Ire knew then, the eonstry is begin ning to lied out now, the conse ituelive in that considerable anxiety is beginning io be matilreflied 111 regard to the Prenolenen course hereafter. (I BLAIR'S prophecy has been verified thus far, It is reasonable to suppose that it will hold out to the end. flow ever, if worse conies to worst, the Dem ocracy will have something to say in the matter and, backed up by the strong arms of the people in defence of their rights and liberties, GRANT'S an: ticipated usurpation may yet. result only in ruin to hiviself and his all ire. - WILLIAM, Of Primate, who war red "net against the French people, bnt their- Emperor," hoe accepted the imperial crown of Germany. In other words, he has made himself autocrat and general tyrant over all the inde pendent German towns and Staten, who have given np their treedont for the sake of that will o' the wisp, German Unity. WILLIAM, king of Prueeia, le now Lord over them all, and their pea pie's necks are yoked to the car which drama Prussia's master onward in his career of usurpation and blood. The French Emperor has long been overthrown and a prisoner. Yet the war gore on. Paris, beautiful Paris, in lost becoming the smum of Prite,dati greed, and her mar itfeent palaces and work. of art are falling beneath the destruction that in being poured into her. The king of Prussia uttered a lie, when he said be did not' war against the trench people b u t againetA4heir EmPeror. 'that 'Emperor he maintains in imprimoned state at Wilholmehoe, "STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION." BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY, JAN. 27, 1871 but the sod of France lie daily soaks with' the blood of that people against whom he solemnly declared he did not make war. This hoary-headed monarch, who already has one foot in the grave, will one (lay tremble before the Great Judge of all the earth, when required to render an neconnc for the deeds done in his mortal,body. Misconstruction The following poem by Bitcr II %WM Wati ilrht published in 1862, and is ex yeeilingly tunny. It, shows the rithen 1011811Ctql of anticipating tit legs "I wan with Grant"—the ntratiKer nael, Stahl the fernier - Say ne 11101 e, 1111 t rent thec , imr. , at ley cettage lettelt. For thy feet 111,, weal y nit ann." I WitY With (il ger —the etrielgel meld Said the flume! "Say no fee, -- I wallet, alt at my frugal hoard, And eat of my !condole store "How fare,. coy boy—al y toddler bey, llf the old Ninth Artily vorp 4 I I will rant Ile bore him gallantly In t he Menke Or the 1 eat 10'4 roar ' "I know iitm not," said the aged man, "And no I re:lurked before, I was with Grant"--Nay, nny Said the farmer “Say no more': "He fell in battle— I see, alas' Thou dlds't smooth theme things o'nr— Na,y, ripeak the Irulh, whatever It be, Though It rend my bosom's core " ' How fell tie; with the facie to the foe. Upholding the flag he born? oh I say not that my boy disgraced The uniform that ho wore!" ellinotlAl, " Sala lhu aged Man, "And %hold.' have remarked before, 'I hat I ass with linant—m lIIInuiS Somee threa year, boiorit LIM war Thnn the farmer meekly him never a word But twat him with hta hat lull care. That agr_d man who had worked for 4;r.4nt tiotniree years before the war --After more than ten years of Radical rule, and after millions upon millions of the public lands have been given away to soulless corilirations, and the money of the people squander ed in the mobt unheard of extrava gancee, the Radical party of New Hampshire, Rip Van Winkle like, wakens up, and, in convention, pasaca the following resolution : Rea°load, That the Republican party of New Hamar...him looks with alarm upon t inform , to to squander the public lend. In t n in L. teat of achemes tweircit by railroad peculators lobbyists and stock gamblers • • • Diii any body ever hear to like 1 Tine poor, old, sleepy New Hampshire thing is just beginning to protest, alter nearly everything valuable hits been thrown away. ARer the people have been robbed of their lands, and the money in the treasury worse than wast ed, here conics a Melds protest from the Radicals away up iii New !ramp shire. Go to sleep agnimold lellows ; the country can't bear to Moe you dm turited Resides, the I/envier:try are taking things In hand., now, and will sa%e 't nit to sinte 01 %tau-belt...et —The Philadelphia Sunday Mer cury is not'eatisfled with Ll,O delegate/3 ehoeen to represent that city in the •rent Democratic State Convention. It congratulates itself, however, that there are a few good men among them who cannot be bought or sold. The mass of them, it says, "are not of a kind to please respectable people, or such as will be likely to gain Philadelphia murti strength with interior delegates in the important business of making State candidates." This is a bad state of affairs for Philadelphia, hut we trust there will be enough "interior delegates" with sufficient honesty and fearlessness to overcome and control whatever of roughness may be found in the convert Lion from Philadelphia. The bushiest' of the next Democratic State Convention will be to select good men, and we shall have them, in spite of the unfortunate eelectione which our Philadelphia friends appear to hate made for delegates. "Parie is France," but Philadelphia isn't Pennsylvania neither will her delegates control the next, convention. —Those jolly chaps down at Har risburg, yolept "Legislators," hasn't done anything yet of special impors tense to jolka In this section of the country; otherwise, as Captain D WARD Curets would have .said, we should "make a note on't." When ever anything occurs that is of impor tance, we shall publish it.. —Theie's something in a name after tali. A Geromo named Komi, o/ upper Mrotch Chunk, shot himself with A revolver heennee he WIVI called a private instead of a musician, io a historp of 04n. ALBRIGHT'S regiment, —Democratic prospects are good ILadical newspapers ate very bit lei upon Col. Milt/tar h eca n se l ie dillsit't refuse to vote with Ilia party on, all !natters pertaining to the contest ing of his own Scat by Mr. 1.1 nod his friends. They affect to look upon this action of the colonel its 11 great outrage npon their party nod as /1.11 11116111Shilig I,icro of indelicacy ; 118 if they Banta I hetit godly of the Nalllo thing a thousand rimes over with in the lust lit e yci s, The fact is, it S,Tnator !mar had allowed his personal inielcsi to influ ence his course on this nue-tion, the tricks of tile Radical politicians !night have prevailed to ointt hint hom Iris seat notwithstanding the 'mgt. majori ty by which lie ,1:1-; elected. AM a Democrat, he teas bound to vote with the party, and hail he not ,lone so,had he just remained quiet and said troth 11g, he would have been guilty •of rt gross violation of his duty, and would have betrayed the trust reposed in him by his own iinittediate constituency and the Democracy generally. The Sen ate is Democratic by just (tile vole, and none of our Senntore have any right to play into the hands of the Radical., for fear of being considered "immod est" or "indelicate" by a set of imam's, who have never exhibited either mod esty, delicacy, decency or any other virtue, since their part, it...mined the reins of power. ( ' ol. DEell HT dal eVW iv RH he ought to have done. Ile was elected to do just as he did do, and Any other .course would have made him a traitor to his party. The attempt to contest his seat and throw him out, alter the people of the first distiict had chosen hilt, by the magnificent Majority of thirteen hundred votes, was one of the basest, lowest and most malignant pieces of rascality ever attempted , and his refusal to meet the outrage, face to face, and, by his own vote, crush the life out of it, would have placed him in league with the conspirators. We are glad Mr. Dscumr had the inanli neam, the boldness, the conscientious sense of right, to stand tip and do his duty, regardless ol the storm of con tumely and denunciation that he It new would be rained upon him !fe l has proved himself a man and a ,';ermim, and shown that lie cares more for his country and his party than tor himself. All honor to him, then, for his cour age and bravery to do right' By this he has defeated another detnagoguicul ettort to swindle the people out of the legitimate results of au honest and in dependent suffrage, —The Walla Walla Statesman, W. 11. Nee vu., editor, published away out oi Washington Territory, came to um leaf week, dreamed in a complete suit of beautiful new type. The Stales man in an able AA itftni good loqking, and in doing a brave work for the Dem ocracy of the far Went. —The CharleSUM (West Virginia) Gourici has cornizienceil the pit blica• Lion or a neat little daily. The editors talk very sensibly about it. They do not expect a very large circulation -- an, indeed, how could they, when there isn't a railroad near the place. But it is intended as a medium through which to supply the legislative pro ceedings at the new capital, to the pea ple. —The Copy Hook is the rather sin gular name or a paper that reaches ua frl'om New York. It is published by the Blackwell Manufacturing Compa ny, and devoted to the work of induc ing printers to abandon type-setting and buy stereotype platen, prepared by them, for their newspaper columns. Thie,iCelaime, is a better way than get. ling out or insides printed away from home. As we prefer to do our own type Netting, we have no use either for printed outsides or etereotype }dates. To an enterprising editor or one 'who desises to have control of hi! own col. Immo, both are humbugs. —The Athens Gleaner, from Athens, Bradford county, edited and published by CHARLES T. nuarox, Esq., reaches us this week. It is rather a good-looking sheet of seven columns to the page, and is gotten up with Mr. HUSTON . ' usual ability. Mr. Humor it will be remembered, was formerly editor of the Lycoming Oasefle. - e ei ilia A Morally Brave Man Journalistic The Moral Degradation of thy Govern ment in the Honda of Gen. Grant. Under the above caption the New York San, (Radical) makes the follow ing comments and touches upon a point that intuit have rollick every (A servant Democrat nit one or the pitin. rid chtfracteristies td the times—that is, the moral obtuseness of public senti ment. The most degrading acts of of ficial peculation are practiced, and yet the criminal is not even socially ontia. cised. Pnbltc corruption exists to such nn eiktcd that the senses of the people seemtriltuve become accitstotned to it, and fhil to regard It in its proper light, or to visit upon the offenderiT the con— denotation Inci Sap; the an: i• It is surprising how little indigna tion Ss Et\ Vlteil ni the country by tile degraded moral tone M/1111 . 11 General tilttlit lON Illtrodhced into (lie conduct ill the national gmerimient. Ile has appointed 111(.11 to the highest places for the mole rei1..0114 that they have gre en 111111 presents ; he has conferred up on Ms own and Ms wile's relations eve ry post of power and emolument into wli ieli they could be crowded--all lIIIY regard to their Muesli or in fitness; and lie has kept Bancroft Dav is, the bribe-taker, in one of the most important offices of his administration for nearly a your after the legislature of MaßNaeillieetts had proved and pub lished the fact that he lind taken a bribe of ~ ? ,&),(N)0 to betray his constitu ents and defrauded his clients. This is not , disputed ; it cannot be; the rtvi deuce is irresistible , and it stands among the authentic public documents of Maistachnsetts. Davin has not at tempted to iletiy it or to palliate it in manner. l'he fart is confessed, the tummy as brazen ; and General Brant gives it his approval and inal,es it his .iwii by keeping in high station the man of whom such things are known to be true. Andisuch is the tyrrany of party that even men like Henry Wil son, Charles Sumner, and George W. Curtis, who especially represent the conscience of the Republican body, view this fact with silent 'Nub eseence ' flits is a state of official morale nev• er before witnessed in our country •I'llere never before was a President who would hay, thought tor a noi ment of retaining in a place of honor a man who had been proved capable or betraying the most solemn trust for n There 14 not today in all christendom a public man who will etand up in the lace of the world and openly attempt to defend the retention of such a per.on m ()Ilk.. It wnm re served for General (trent thus to Ind defiance at once to the public con science and to polilicel e xpe,lteitcy. I'onr, infatuated, foolish man ! pre ferring to heap useless favors upon one proved to ben brtheAaker, rather than to gain lor himself the respect and con liilence of those who esteem honesty and fidelity an milimpeneable requisites for the exercise of authority in a re publican government ! —One of the Senators of Rhode Is land, Mr. Sprague, is considered the wealthiest manufacturer in the east. II is father-in law, Chief ust ice Chase, was Secretary of the United States Treasury during the war. Both the father-in law and son-m law were great union men at the time. Their loyalty had no bounds, at least, in profession A nom who would not conic up to the point of loyally required by Lincoln and the party, was denounced and of• tell arrested and imprisoned, and this Senator Sprague would be one of the foremost le having these mandates ex ecuted. Now, how does it etand with this man when the truth is brought lo light? It is thus. During the. war, he, through the Secretary of the Treat' ory, his lather-in-law, would trade mu nitions of war and articles necessary to prolong the war, with the confeder ales for cotton to be used in his large cotton factories in the east. A resolu tion is now up in congress to investi• gate the matter. There is no scruple as to its truth, rumors to that effect having been prevalent long ago. But the whole inevitigatian will prove a mere white-washing concern, his im mense wealth, much of which he made by this disreputable will be suf ficient to buy enough Congressmen to clear him of all charges. —Citizen. --The Republican papers have a "live issue" on hand just now. They are discussing the question whether it is not better for the Republican party to quit house-keeping and board out— put up the shutters and make an as signment—or as Wendell Phillips puts it, whether it is not best, now that the party is dead, to bury 'the Corp... "Its none of our Amaral," but we feel sure that "something has got to be done." As Abraham Lincoln said, when a dog was blown to pleoes by a charge of gunpowder in his stomach, "The dog, as a dog, will never be of nee any more." Live the Democracy t—Ex. change. —At Liberty, Bedford county, Va., on Wednesday. Dr. W. 11. Rob erts, a dentist, was shot dead by 'Wil liam W. Sohntson, son of Hon. James Foote Johnson. Five shots were fired by the parties, one of which entered Roberts' heart. Joh'nson ill in Jail. Spewls from the Keystone -IVadeinhla In threatened with a water famine. -Poltevlllo ban 103 licensed hotels end rem MEM uiton Is sold to hare thirty-two whole 1!31!11112 —Philadelphia had flfty.nine fires, fri the month of itemindier. —Nearly eight in 11110118 of tho Slate dobt van fall due prior to July 110,1872. —The area of Philadelphia la many thousand tierce larger than the area of London. __Mf - , O. A. Harvey, of Lock Ifeven, ham pnr ehneed the Flemington foundry. NO. 4 —Vonatigii had 11 intixii and twilit foldivai 1110 l‘ci.k, by which •2Hi were pained fur a min 1 7 ,Idred heti retired front the Lyerdn leg Mondani, en interest. in which higliturchan =I —Among the recent acquisitionn to the rmm nfecturn g eemblishmente of 1 kto 11.1tole .Itle shoe factory. —'l he Weriere Preso,of Mercer county, to out for Chi& Jiintive Thompson for Prooldent of tha lloitod btntrk. —Three hundred and peventeen children rare udn, LLled to the Pennsylvania house of loAt yaßr Ebennborgere got up n concerto Mil It ert nblielong 11 reading room Iteeripte,Bll. ex pen Vel., Slat —A a line owl wan Kieft In Becks county Iwo week whlrh men-are,' over five feet between Ire Pp. of the wings —I in the 14th Inst . Airs Solomon Bower, of 'erry eminty, presented her hu.bnnd with tire., .11% mg dinightern -1 .nilditnlnil true , . bridge has been erer e.I by the nr.),,(i 'ro t . Rnllruad l ompany over he venal ut llointingdon. Fire Company, Of 11•111 dity%latrK s wt ill 10 , 1• I N hall, "1,, M4.nolity 1,1,1 lig m•xt, tqo 31(11 11,1. me hnndn•d and twenty flve rnell were liacharged from the department of eonetrue ion In the Philadelphia navy yard on Mittir• lay The election IP over. —Nearly SLOW has been reeelved for the re lef of the MtWn 'offerer. by the late Ore from 'irate todlrudunie. E. 8 l'arker M Treasurer —David Sansly was senteneed to nine years In the Berke younty prison for killing Mary Strasser, of Hamburg, last t'oetoher —The tloseillOr, it ti reported, hes Elppolitle,l A uaushia Tro set, or Lewistown, to he APlloCi iito Judge, ries Judge Banks, deeeamet. —C,11,1 Itlll Hum ner, non of Gen Sumner, who salt« ki'led In the war of tin rebellion, in in command of toe troop,. at Garll.lo barrack«. —A hog weighing 1,31115 porn) dm nitn recently received at Pnttntairg (nip flancock county, n 41 to to , 010 heavieat ever received MEI —A little girl aged twelve years, named LiZZIC Miller, woe fatally berned by the ex plosion of a van of estbun oil, In Johnstown I= 1 I . Wright hay hen appnint« , l a leetur er by (amid Ihrislorwsof the Sons of Tern paranoTin Penn4ylrania, with pow `l' to organ tar I , %LIM, —'l'L nee burglar hpre h'en raptnrt,i fn 1140,,tirotnery county within the pa,t meet. R/111Ing them John and Pgtedinut, twn notort 11=12=3 --The ga nn o law has been changed by the preaoni LoginUttar., Hunters can now take turkeys (not tame ones,) La , imp t4l to January 141, Instead of the I ith nt Decetnlker t Immertetory frr the making of Emer 1.911.1 foment •'lrxlh Vegetsble I hopping Ma chine sod t4r 'Excelsior Clothe, Frame" tr abtiof lo tp, ered•tell 111 I Are k listen —Mr \ stlentAne Flekit, aged g 7 year. and 1.: dap., d ied in 01Irer toanehlp, Perry County• tlll Thorin.ny the 2gth flay of Iteeurnher, lie was the oldest Man In Perry county —The nurvoy of the new rallrond to run from New ,laford. Adumt. °minty. and soterwort the Northern Cent ria' itt lark, 1i ileall completed "rhe Irng•h of the route Is nlntern —Jane Hanlon, a married woman 14 I lit, tam rg. died in that ity on $u day, of defirtort tremens. She had been ilrinkinientin 4 liquors noventeen yearn prior to tier death —A Man named Nay was shot kir time by a man named B,ar, in Altoona, taut week The plea urged by Star in that Fay had undo, intimiwy with Its wife. Fay, nt Inst seems ntS. Is still living —Dr %Vat I' Connlngton, of Philadelphia, well.knoon mu•ietau and composer, undl4 thirty years leader of the Walnut street thea ter urehe.lm, vas found dead In his bed lay morning AldermaSlV 0..3 , , On Anealgter. on foam day tont between SIM and $175 whielt he had In ten. tied to tleiatett In bank. and Hanniel Fagan, of the 'tame eny, loot $1.50 which ha had Jnet draurp from bank. —Th. nuobber ears IN'esited at T) tune from the Tyrone and Clearfield and Bela Engle Valley road+ 11114 161,11traingi to lite Mail] Imo during the year INTU, was 40,511, an Inereare over the year 184;0 of 10365 oars. —A delicate yottitig man of l'ittsburg,inepired by the Alcoholic cont.:atm or many a Wes., die. romfitted three policemen of that city and tied. The orAoers of the law freely need mace., and ono of them Mod a revolver at the modern Sampson. A CCIDKNI.-1 1 4r. John Iticheeon, of Juniata township, whilst engaged in hauling_ railroad floe wax merionaly Injured, last week, by one of the tine rolling oer the wagon upon him lie was Injured Internally, and lien In n rtitlent condition.—Montror. —A ring drove:belonging to Mrs Fronk Spykor, of this place. died last week. The bird had been In her possession it years; and how old it was when she 'obtained it site does not know [(never had a mate, but died an "odd bachelor."—Letaisbsre cybre.wi, —The Young Mena' Christian Association, of Lan - taster, by formal resolution, rail upon nil members of Christian' }} ehunhes to eke g decided stand against the sinful prto•tit43 of drinking or encouraging and countenancing the nee of Intoxicating liquors sta a beverage., Scalars itecnuaii.—Teenclay last, Mrs Afrioa, wife of Mildly Attlee, of West Huntingdon, slipped and fell, whilst passim( along t h e wide walk, near her own rash:teem, dislocating her bip and trekking the bones. The injuries nue. t"ined ere of a very serious character, It will be many months before ehe will bo atwupsgafp. —Monitor. —Fillmore J. Shannon was conSilleti ir. Hoe. rishurg of having committed * mordensor "tumult on Edwin T. Tunla an the 19th of Decenshor Inst. Mr. Tunis visa aptsullkod in the yard' 3 rear of hit owls ;ohbed of NO or I'ls as ' e gold watch 000 len for dead, For , tunatelyll' *slowly rerover4d age ldontAs fled his stailant.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers