Bellefonte Democratic Watchman. 13Y P. ( - MAY MEEK Jug W. FURrY, AssoCIATI. Entroa Ink Slings —His majesty, Ulysses the I, Dicta tor of the American Republic, is now wiling hie loyal sohjects in the West. —in whisky dens In I.lcoininf; county.— G/Ar. That's the way--talk about your neighbor's faults and forget your own. —The passage of the Ku Max bill m attes Orant the Dictator of the A meri can Republic! To this trondition have we come at last. ---Ilicows says, "Labor ll is wealth." or roam, then, those wholabor are a ll wealthy• necounta for his impecuniosity. —The Altoona lurk 11111 n Tymrl) inn ntnnll Wdv. l oT PAo I,lw)s, perhaps it in. We beard that lie has rather-nn exaggerai 7' tel paunch. —The krrublira(criefi out, in the most approved stngehtyle, to the fellow who poisoned Mr. Unte's chickens, "Fond, beware I Cease your wicked ncssl" Ilow —We arc not responsible for the fallowing wretched attempt at a "goak." "A paper called the Magnolia Flower blooms in Ark (MARK but the editor complains that he does not make a PCPnt " —The editor of the Republican in viteg the public to admire his new breechaloons, which he says were pre peeled him. We guess ht presented thorn to himself when (lie owner of the shop was out. - The little boys play it with pebbles in the streets and the big boys play it with dornickm down in the saloons The difference is, one is called ''lup.rbles" and the other "hiniarilei." Vou know how it is yourself. —Miss Sallie Fageley, of Tyrone, tumbled from the lop of the cellar steps to the bottom, through the of ficious intert»eflling of the bee) of her shoe, which maliciously caught on the top step. She was bail'iy hurt. —Our contemporary up street puffs Itosn's hotel at Nittany Hall very highly. All we have to say in the matter is that if Mr. Robb over eels Itsiinv down to a good square meal of wilials he will find that he hp been t Row: e.l l.y the time he gets -It Isn't um, hut a Waster* paper .0,0 1 says that general Butler would tale no a ppointment front the present administration, even 'loitered hint on the point of a niter fork. lie might not take the appointment, but the ad ministration would do well to keep an eye upon the fork. —Servos her right, What bllkktliCAP has she to go to ':gittin' up her back ?" A young lady at Richmond commen ced crying on the third of last month, and hasn't stopped yet, and her /ather «aye she can howl 'Dreyer, but she won't get any two stsittings out of bin) to buy a bustle with. —Corn men, of the Huntingdon Moni tor tried to coax hrs mllblgerlberg 110.0 payirg him enough to buy a power press with, by publishing their harneB in a nice "roll of honor." But they were all too tncslest to have their names published that way, and Flo poor Corny has to do without his power press. —The Aurora itoreafis haring honor ed Ebensb9rg with a visit the other bight, the Alleghenian of that place at tempts to account for it as 10110WS: "Th. words' ere Latin. aurora meaning MeAll In g boreal MAIO the Me taken together meaning the northern light. They always come levee us in the nighttime." Korrekt I Oood boy—let us pat you on the head. You shall have a pickel for supper and a ginger cake to wash it down with. Neat t —Lzwis, of the Huntingdon Olae, is likewise a grocery man. Of course he devote considerable space in his paper to athrtising, hie fuseinese, and is all the time blowing about hie "Red Front." We have been told before that he had a red front, and it just now oc cure to tie to askivirtrwhether it is his own groceries or those lie is in the habit of getting . at the Morrison ffoutte that give it to him? We merely ask for information. —The Iteffifonbe Weichtorte, with nil lho progumpllon that &gibber sometime* itemlimev, 11Wor say It has been clue of the moan* of con verting the itrinoner i fin the Jail at that Oa,* 0 , Furey of fork*, could you fropose on the peer, utifecttintit creature*, *nett so In famous IlheL—Hunf murk,* (1101,4. No libel about it. Fact every word of it. They first read the WATCHMAN, which opened their eyes tp the great Democratic truths taught by the Bible, and that fetched them down upon their marrow bones. You needn't wonder atit; such things nre common occuren cell in every locality where the Waren- MAN circulates. —Marrying an editor to denonii mated a paper wedding. ji tat VOl. 16. The Apportionment The apportionment bill which we print elsewhere scents to be about the beet the Detnograey in the Senate and Muse could do. It is, of course, not altogether satisfactory to us, but at the same time it is riot satisfactory to the Radicals. In racy he bitterest opposi Boa it met with canto from them, a n d they would have willingly squelched it could they have gotten any better terms from the Democrats. But although the latter were not able to get just what they wanted, and what in corn mon justice they ought to have had, they nobly stood their ground and pre vented tire Radicals from getting what they wanted, 111111 what in common Justice they ought no/ to have had. The bill, as reported by the Confer envy committee and adopted by the Legialathre, is a kind of compromise between the opposing and conflicting -dements, its initch its to say "it you give us that, we will give you this ; or if you will agree to do this, we will agree to do that." It 18 based upon the vote of IF,CO, and gives the Radi cals seven 0( a majority on joint hal lot—one in the Senate and six in the (louse. '('lire et first glance looks tin fair, and it really is unfair, but it is a vast improvement upon the apportion ment of IHBd , tattler which vte have been suffering for the last soca years The Rathcala wanted and expected to get about six maturity In (lie Senate , and lifterin or twenty in the (louse, but the vigilant watchfulness if the lie mocracy has reduced those figures to one in the Senate and six in the (louse. This is considerable of a triumph, and shows that our senators and represen tatives have been true to their duty. Nobody feels this so menstb'y as the Radicals themselves, and they are but illy pleased at thefiaa/r. The result of last elections licniongtratea that their majority nt the Legislature Isangto,,,py but a thread, which ix liable ofl without a moment ' s warn ing It the Democracy could reduce their former large majority to len on joint ballot, and men secure for them selves a majority of one in the higher branch, iiiitkr the apportionment it I . which was most infamously Rad teal and unjust, what may they m+l be able to accomplish under the pre-cut arrangement of the districts 7 Th is is a question that is pregnant with teat fit I possibilities to the Radical nand, and hence the uneasiness of that par ty, ern the whole, the Democracy have reason in congratulate themselves on the present favorable condition cut things, and die cheering prospect lor them in the nature. (Vi are told that all il»ngs work together lor gout( to them that love ; sn, also, may we not hope that they will work together for good to them that love their coun try. The Ku Klux or Force Bill We shsl/ not apologize fur publish ing the following leadei,, from the Putsborg /'no, , our editorial COllllOl on. It is so 11 ry appropriate, so significant and no inuch better than anything we might ourselves be able to write on the great outrage that Con green last week consumulated upon die nights of the People, that we feel it to be our duty to insert it without. furthe comment. The Pont lia': '"skAcyvill be seen by the clostfig acts of C'ungress, the Force Bill, with the most of its enormities itnehorri, has becorue a law, and a'portton of the country is turned over to the absolute rule (it. the theta tor.Presidem. l'he great writ of right, which for centuries has preserved the Anglo-Saxon race from the exercise of despotic power, and guaranteed them latitude of personal liberty enjoyed by no oilier race, in broken 110%1 , 11, and the right to suspend it placed in the hands of a candidate for the Presiders cy, pending the Presidential campaign. This surrender of the safeguard of liberty recalls to our coteuiporary of the Cincinnati Enquirer, a prediction made almost a century ago. It was made to Col. e/4,1' LA Lift ICNS, a South Carolinian of Revolutionary thane, by HENRY SHERBURNE, then a prominent member of the British flootte of Coot• mons. lhtnog the war of the Amer. icon Revolution, which lusted from 1775 to 1785 SuEitisußNE Ranked ,in in Parliament as among the staunch est friends of the American Colonists, uniformly opposing all the measures "STATE RIG S AND FEDERAL UNION." BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1871 of the British Parliament thatlooked to their coercion and subjugation by forte. Ile wan no early champion for the recognition of our independence. Colon's! L %eardsfi in 1780 was sent on a diplomatic mission to Europe, by the Continental Congress at Philadelphia. HO wan so unfortunate tie to he taken, by a Ilritish cruiser, find was conveyed to the tower of London, where be TV la ?led until the conclusion of the Wilk, lie was afterwards the guest of Mr. SnritneßNE, when sotnetlriiig like the following conversation was reported by Cu lone! Lao/tens to have occurred between them, "Well, it in all over , you have got your ilidependenee, and you know I have contributed to it, but I greatly doubt whether the result will he fortunate for you." When Cod lvi nevv erpressed tits surprise at StICII a remark, and desired to know the reason for it, Mr. Slipli t al' aye said • "Well, for instance,th ere is the great writ of habeas corpus, which has COSt, as EllgllShatea no much idoOd and treasure to inanitain. We -know its advantages and the necessity of guarding than, Pot it has most you nothing. It is' a part of your birth. right, and never having had to fight for it, vim will not prize it, and on the first occasion of trouble or violent par ty contention you will lose it " Colo. IItdHP,NS wan increilidonit, and 104 'lured his English friend that his fears were entirely groundlesii, and that the Americans would always stand by the great writ. This was eiglity seven yearn ago, but what line comet. pane T Here we are making a surrender of that very writ, fur an almost indefinite period, with the approbation, as it would appear, of the party in power. That which a British Parliament would not do i.n easily run thrortgb an A meri call rung:rem, and our President is giv en authority to make arrests and or der punishments, with/nit authority of law, in a time of the most profound peace, fully as absolute as that enjoy ed by the Czar of Remain or the Sultan of Turkey. In view of all this, is there riot countless reasons why the American people should not at once arise and save their political instita Lion from total destruction 7" The Editorial Associations The Democratic Editorial Aesocift lion will meet in this place on the sec and Tuesday in Jane, and un the Wed nesday following the State Editorial Association is to assemble in William • sport. Many of the members of the Deinocr Rho Association lire also mem hers of the State Association, and we do not see just exactly how matters tire to ,be arranged so that the one will not conflict wort the other. I t is like ly, however, that Democratic Asso ciation), which is to meet here, will conclude its business on Wednesday and adjourn in tone to join the State Asaociation in Williamsport on Thurs day. This will doubtless be the pro' gramme. In fact it is the may way wl / }, it wail L r fire,l. In reference to 'lies, !Ant:tidier In telltyencei remarks. "Arrangements are being perfected for holding a Stint rater meeting of the l'Aitorial A ssocot owl of reurrayiettMa at Willattraport. The ti It; fixed upon is the second Wed nesday of June. Just ut that season the country will be must attractive,aod a trip such as is proposed cannot fail to be full of pleasure. It is probable that an excursion WU' lie ttiado to Watkins' tilenn, in the State 'of New York, which in said to be one of the most beautiful spots in the United States. Arrangements will be made with the ditrerent railroads of the State, by which editors will bre passed free, will bullet . ; accompanying them. The mailing will lie one of n social rather than a business character, and the prospect in that it will be largely at• tended. 'rile Democratic Editorial As *Jemmy', meets at Ilellelmite on the second Tuesday hi June, and it is on derstood that it will adjourn in time to allow members to join the State Edi torial Association at IVilliamsport, The Preeldent hate hewed a pro clurnatiott miffing an extra session of the tienste on the 10th of May. There is evidehtly.eoute devilment yet to he accomplished that war not put through at the regular beBsi on ' tisr all day yealentay. //t) $313,000,000 A year Atirionting to Senator JOHN BIIEIIRAe, who is one of the great lights of Rad lent will cost three l uu ldl ed and thirteen million." of dollars to 'run th e Government for the present yeaf I duet think of it. Tutnee II UN ORE.II AND THIRTEEN 1111,1,10 NE nP HOLLARS I (lan you imagine AHCII a SHAH 7 Call you comprehend its vastness? It is fear ful. And all this to keep the Radical party in power, and a horde of offmees filled with the scum of the earth. !fear the Lexington (Mo.) Caucasian, the editor cif which, the famous Co). lißti made ROME calculations based arm this enormous- amount of looney 'Three hundred and thirteen tnilliuns of dollars)--'That's Senatir .101 in Slier maws estimate 1,1 governmental ex• poises, for the present yes r. Ami these 'estimates' always fall millions below the troth ; en that 'deficiency bills,' by the score, have become part of the regular business routine of the Congressional Malefactory, But take this head•radical's own chiseled-down estimate—s3l3,f 10,1100, aye .r. (oily that, and nothing more. $53,322, for every year since the creation. $167,379, for every year since tierniracel•suspend• ed star gleamed over' the manger of Itethlehein. W2,5,A57,f0r every yeaf since Colionlitia steered his tiny yacht from the harbor of Cadiz, in search of a newer and a grander world for every year since the psalm siiittling old Pilgrim Dads first ..et toot on Piero milli Rock, to plague and hlai•t one ilerlllSilliCre. $2 2.51,795, for every year since the birth of Washington. 'Three hundred Bad thirteen millions a year 1 $211,0A3,333, a month. $857,534, for evisPy day in the }ear. $35,730, for every hour of every day in the year. $595, for every minute. $991, for every second. Rain or shine, good crops, or failures, in sickness and health, profit purity and adversity, with every clock tick, every throb of American heirts, every pulsation, N)S 1.1.AF01, AN I NET ONE. CENT 3 1111181 lirni) into the coffers of the "heist government" the sun ever set On." Think of it once more, good people, aria then ask yourselves how long this thing is to continue? How long are you going to allow yourselves to be rob bed and ruined and nifilie slaves of ? Is it not tune to strike a blow for freedom ? F or God's sake, pause and think Newspaporiet __o ne of the liandeoine4t bone that comes to this ollie.e le Geo. P. 'tow eit.'s American Newspaper Re porter and Advertiser's Gazette, [MA ac W ALLMON, editor, a weekly journal o newspaper intelligence acid devoted to the interests of printers and publishers. It is beautifully printed, and edited in a manner that makes it attractive not only to the printing fraternity, but to the general public. It is a valuable advertising, medium, an 4 we totntoetal it to such of our patrons Re may desire to advert' He beyond their immediate virmity, Address (Ito. ItoaliLl. AL. Cu , Park How, New York, (Times building ) Eveniny Leader is the title of a well-edited and very entertaining Democratic daily journal that now reaches us from New York. Jima 11. Wsnit Jr. Co., are the publishers, acid we think we recognise the smooth and •ersatile per) of nur friend "Hayes" in the editorials. The Leader is a newsy and spicy sheet, tpul deserves a wide circulation. —We have received a copy of The People's * Literary Companion, publish ed at Augusta, Maine, by E. C. AL- I.LN ti Co , with E. C. A ti.cav as u u ut• aging editor. This is an eight-paged paper, containing 40 wide columns all of which are tilled with attractti and wait-written stories, sketches, poetry, ,lc. No advertisements are insert cd, and the publishers otter liberal pre miums for the getting up of clubs. The Companion is now in the ninth week of the second year of its existence, and appears tobie taking rank among the first of our Hurry papers. --And now we aee told that the Pope is seriously ill, and that great doubts ere expressed in regard to his final recovery. Thisielsad her/S t for iho s topo le P. good old wan, and is greatly beloved by his people. But the news of the dangerous illness of 1119 holinesti will be received with great joy by the Radical know-noth ings of the Rm. Buns N stripe. To these fellows, who, a few years ago, shouted 'Down With the Catholics and d--d the Pope,' and 'Place no Irish or Dutch on guard to-night,' the sov ereign pontiff has always been a great bugaboo. Consequently, we lofty ex pect to see the Republican and other papers of that class come out and 'thank Uod,' if the lope should die. However, the venerable head of the Roman Church may yet recover. We sincerely trwit he may. While there is lite there is hope, and hie hohsees is 001... yet co 0111 bin that he may live many years longer. Thank Heaven, the disgraceful days of know nothneg• ism have pa 'lea away, nod every good man can now speak of the Pope with respect and good will. --The military barracks at Car lisle, 1(1 0118 State, have been &scot) tinned by the order of thefiovernment. We think thus is a hasty and ill advis ed step on thr part of the Administra tion, for where now will he the protec tion of the loyal portion of that Com nimoty arid part of the State against the Pennsylvania Kll K XerB ? It is really heartless in (fit .1 T to desert his (trends in Ihis financier The Apportionment Bill At 111.0. the two honees of the Leg)» !attire have agreed upon an apportion went hill. On Friday, the 21,i4t inst., the followingatit adopted: EGO= = Chester and Delawrarc MumgorroNry ••• Burka and Ntdittarnid,di . . „ Barka Lanmater . . . lichnyk . 1.40140 and Carbon . Dauphin and I,edparton I,IIZeTII.I. Monroe 10111 Bradford, Susquehanna, ‘Vayno and Wyoming Coium bow Lyeoining, Montour and Halli ran Cameron, MrKIMIII. Potter 1111 , 1 Tioo. Perry, Nortlminberlitild and it Union Clinton, Cambria. Clear(laid and Elk . Cumberland and Franklin . . Attains and York . . . Bedford, Fulton, Blair and 4,,14,e,e( Centre,Juniata. WHIM and Huntingdon Allegheny, of N" (into two are to be elected in /871 arid ono in 187.1. . Indiana 01 , 41 Westmoreland Fayette and ((retitle Heaver, Biala, and Wash/noon cu r io°, Armstrong, JetTertion and Forest Law ranee, Moreer anti Venungo craw lord . . Erie and Warren . I 337:111:1= ladeluldit . . , Adam.. Fra,lthn . Arimitrong liunver, Butler and Washington 4 tiedfork nod Fulton . I WM, Itradfurd and Wyoming ..... 2 Nnek• . Cambria . Potter and McKean. Carbon snd Monroe .. • . . Allegheny, outside Of Plttitourgh, ...... Fttst, Second, Third. Fourth, Fifth, Sitith, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth and Fourteenth warda, Pittithureh 1 Tenth, Eleventh, Twelfth, 'I 1 irteeotti. Fifteenth. Sixteenth, S.renteenth, Eighteenth, Nineteenth. Twentieth, werity first. Twenty-second, unl Twenty•thlyd wards Pittsburgh ... Chester . . 2 Centre Clar•on awl Forest . Clinton, Lyeriming and Sullivan . 2 Colombia.. ... Conitwriand . Dauphin and retry ... Delaware . Erie , • • Elk, eltlllernh and Jefferson • .... Fayette , • •• Huntingdon . . Indians Jontata and Mifflin . . Lancaster !Ananias Lehigh • ••••• Luzern° .. . Montgomery . Nortitaminon ..." ....... ....... ......... Northumnerland and Montour Pike and Wayne ... . r. or tiehuykill Snyder and Hilton . Susquehanna and Wyoming ..... 2 'flog^ . Venango ...... . I Warren . . • Westmoreland 11reeno Somerset ... .. RAILROAD LAW.—The Pittsburg Chronitk says a railroad case bas been decided In Illinois which i s worth noting, because the circum stances are of very oominon occurrence, and It is well to harp the principle. governing such cases generally kgown. Ono of s largo tune rat party, who took passage open a tzittn, to go a distance et twelve miles, was tdandirar upon the sigma the platform of ono of the care, holding nn to the railing, when tin estatilictor came along collecting fare. he making change for a hank note Which the passenger paid for his fare, the wind earrieJ away the paper as It wan Wiling from the Inutti of the conductor to that of the passenger- Thu lat ter, In attempting to regain It, and, as he was then standlno oh the edge a the platform, or Ott the directs', lest his foothold, and Nil agslusli en unrbsnkmont, was thrown hack under the caret and killed- The Obi stenevita Cull, but there woe otandintroosoM all of them. In an golden against, Ow company, under the staleth,t, to recover dommages for the death of tits deceased, it VW hcid I "It was the negli gence of the demµsed, ooj that of the comps, _ _ tly, which catmeti r hlo Aeeth, and there could fie Singef emenot be excel* ea Uo MUMMA" ----one night return ed to his domicil in a state of uncer Cattily (Litt was ridiculous. Poelnn ! . heavily against the dubr, it opened,an Tommy tell sprawling across the titres hold. His prolonged and ineftectua efforts do regain an erect positi. aroused his wife in bet in the nex room, who said rt., • iortfiat you ? What is the metier V `Yen, Its mei not4in's the matte 'ceps thin bee's got to . o lunch honey it'n wings to g-g-git into the hive.' —A Detroit buy presented hie mother with a chignon, and she said ho was a good little boy, hut when she missed bor copper boiler, and found he had sold it for old copper to a Junk dealer, p►to made It warm for him. How peo ple's minds will change about boys. Spewls from the Keystone. —A now oil wen on Church run yinitto 200 harreln per ‘luy —Clarion hos ilfty pumping oil proiltioe beta it hist nod •M) barrels a day. --Tim .11114110 W of comber from Lock tfa yen by eitnal Ow Illhor week reltellecl 1,634,201/ feet --Thorn aro Ii vo applicants for legislative honors in Payette county, and twelve (or aa• moeinte judge 110 ban 700 plipiln in her common SCIIOO4I, the .1“10 WWII ban MI buildings in ootiron of erection —John H. Meyers, a nboomaker of Pittzburg' pegged Ilim.yelf oat on Friday by nutting his throat with a razor. NO. 17 —Joseph Moyer, of Fell tovrnahlp, Elk coun ty, ass killed o few dart ago. by falling off Ms vrjoron and breaking bin seek. —iieneral John A. Huller, on vrhosn land gold was firm discovered in California, has !twitted in Lancaster county. —A Likko Eric whale, otherwlge thAvtignr. nina4nring four feet In llwlMr,•liae Bent liitaly Irani Hein to lervrtAburg pavlted In n box. —A gray wolf weighing i'di petunia was shot and killed In Erie county on Weilneeday WO It oi euppoinnt it uiteapett from a menag erie —Mrei rat harino Moore, of Reading, Ina her home on IVedneaday, and Nlrloo ban not been heard of Dorneatin Milli:WV In asaigned an 1•1111,411 !Vier departure, —M 11 Brooks, who wan convicted at Wil. it ~,,, vport twit summer, for panning saunter' fig!. nmnry and poototWelt to the penitentiary for n unmbe r or year., loin been pardoned by Prettolont itrant -11torii tan fellow calling blinnolf Pomorrty up in the on reginnii trying to organino Heeret wtelotiOn. l'hargiuKll4o initiation fee $lO 0100 0, the rent on limn So far 110 has rollll , l n^ 4144.41W1,14 Merrill, of thia oily, tuts been 111 , 1 ,,nied, by (i,,vernOr henry, to the povilion of Major liellarai of tine National riiiitriia of thin, the Eleventh military iliatriet, nomporieti of the 1•01111i111 of I.yroming, Clintnn and Cameron Hoven itrpabliron —Art. an early hour on Um morning of the 16th, throe men tinderiook to ferry Mr. A. Itorelitod arroan the riror at Parknea handing. but Ittateatt landed hint on a nand bar sod iT11 , 41 to rot, him of n oThsl.lerabla rum of money tto rtteneattfully realated 0111 mis ery/Mb, —West Chester, April, 22,—Two men nwmeit Rolwri. Delfts, were loll ed, near this pinee, while standing under In tree, during the thornier norm of yesterday afternoon They had royal red llg•rn for shel ter, when the tree wan stroek-jy lightning, knetsotty k Ming 60th —A tope worm maasuring, seven Nerds. hae been taken from We Kneen Klatt, wife of Mr. Benjamin Kraft, of thin borough. Mho had been in had health for the pact year, and nt tunes had heroine so proatrated that Petra of her recovery were entertained !The has now regained her health, and, from present appear anew, may Its,. fur many year , rork Gazelle. —The ('hambershurg Puiyier ()pee" reports a raw of ram • er ettred under the treatment of Sire David IdUle, Iry the appheation of a naive. the 0 . 1, 'IA of rrhieh she etnamed from her father 'the cancer eta about the aloe of a hone, vratout,located just lietow the rhaht eye, and after One week's use or the remedy, the tutor wa• entlre;y retnnyed The p*ltent's twee in ffneh►nan —lieeently ciworge M HI/he died in Chester In his ninety second year lie In re. Ported to have had the connumpthin nearly all hin life. htn phynlcian having ensured bin before lie Wan twenty yekr• of Wge that !no mold not survive the next two yearn. Ellin was no pale and thin for forty year" previous to 1114 decease that he was known an the walk trig nkeleten, and yet he In helloed In halo been a [Lin two exception' the oldest man In the cOililly —Mr Anson Garret, of Cheater eonnty while plowing on Monday last, an nil clewing, turn ed up no old earthen pot containing thirty• three old Spanish dollnre, detect 1776 and 1760 end one American dollar A11,1..11790: the crock wen very rotten and fell to pieces from its own weight In P. few 11101 - 0 furrows, Mr John Iterker, who was Mao plowing turned up an other eontain trig about nine dollare end a half In email change, ranging from quarters to •ii and It quarter cent pieces. —last Tuesday night some mlacreard• ob structed the track of the N C W., thi• side of Lien Roc', by Mewing heavy timber and railroad silte weratix the track, piling as many an from three to tire together at different pines for the distance of about six miles The Cincinnati Express struck the first but fortunately nn injury resulted it was soon dl,corered that further obstructions were nn the track. The employees of the train aroused the people of the neignirorhood who kindly tutaittleti them to remove the liin whim Ow train lts,l safely on its way.— York Onset!, —Tile (sant/tile latetligMter nays Of all the many blast furtiacen In our town and vicinity. the email one linclooging to the tilit6lttllA iron company la the only one In operation, and thin one came near blowing out one day last week, for want of coal. The 'stoppage of these fer ns/4m neoetallates the throwing out of employ• client hundred* of workmen, and leaving a ♦ant amount of capital unproductive It has been an enforced stagnation, but now the fur noten are.likliorn out, but little ditTonilloll fn ,manifonted by thri owners to put them egoist to blast until the priers of iron tidy /COW.. to It high figure. Although pig Iron has adrnneed some four dollars per ton pine, they blew out, it le too low the manufacturers any to tempt them to put their furnaces in blunt.