Bellefonte Democratic Watchman. BY P. CRAY MEEK JOE Vl. FUREY, Amours le _DITOZ Ink Stills. _l n war a death to try to stop a cs noon •I. —The weather is as cool as the en thusiasm of the Radical party. —lnsults are hard to bear, but th e re is one thing we can put up with, sod that is a good hotel keeper. —Potatoes have corns down to 75 antes bushel. Let them fall another quarter, and we shall be 'wide& —The politicians just now are the very busy bees in the human hive. All other callings seem to languish. —Wild cats in North Carolina eat up the little nigglers. If the cats in. crease, this will solve the African problem. —The Huntingdon Globe has an item headed "Everybody knows us." That's the trouble—everybody knows you too well. --The Bellefonte ladies are maid to dress more becomingly than those of any other town in the State, not even excepting Roopeburg. —The Raflzman'e Journal editor says his pile of greenbacks is low. Judging from his paper, we guess his morale are low also. —The Democracy have nominated Ptlvcaresv WRITS for Governor of Maryland. The name and the party correspond, —Candidates are se thick as leaves in Vallombroea. And, like the leaven of the shady Valley, a great many of them will be trampled on. —The Globe says "one thousand em igrants a month are pouring into Oregon." We thought that emigrants generally poured outoof instead of into. —The testimony thus far taken be fore the Ku Klux. investigation com mittee, shows that the South is gener ally quiet and peaceful. Just eui we slid it was. --Somebody, striking at a popular 'leonine's,' asks if (lamer is to be the Long Branch candidate, who is to be the °Lies branch nominee? Echo *newer's, 'who —When BROWN goes to the Legit'. la tare there are to be immediate and perinTheiii reforms' inetituted. This generation will hardly live to see that happy day, however. —The inevitable Janis LONLIAROZR says that, at the lowest calculation, he lost at least fifteen dollars worth of rats by the late lire. Poor Joey— what will lie do for pies now 7 --The Massachusetts Radicals don't like BeN BUTLER as a prospective can. &date fur Governor. They think they have better men. We think they must be hard up if they havn't. —There is an old man in Monroe County named °coitus L ABA R, who in 109 yearn of age. Ile is and has been a Democrat all his life, which in un doubtedly the mason of his great age. --About the most sickening thing we have seen lately is the report of Mooaa's lecture in Bush's flail nn Monday evening, in this week's /le publican. The lam paragraph en pecially entertaining. —A paper sympath ices with COLFAX, LOGAN and other prominent Radical lights, and earn they are Pick from over work. We guess it to 0% r scheming rather than over•work aunt Ilea done the 1,1181 eiess for them. loicCeteDLees, the Deinocrai standard bearer, .topped to H unk doll on Friday evening lad, and way serenaded by the band. The Globe says there was no enthunianni, hnt then the Globe 14 it little gn•en 10 lying. -- URt\rB Ill.llarl CORlllllBNiulier, lien. PARKER, has resigned. PARKER is an itimitell, but he is said to have made a very poor Commissioner. fiat then GRANT is a very poor Pres' de I. Wh.it right the man to be better than the 11111$1er —A hand of negro ontlawa are roaming through North Carolina, kill ing and oiiireging itiottenon s a people. Why don t the Kii Klux coniiiiiilea in. teatigate thief matter ? II these lilitek tatoundrels wore whits men all Radical• ism would stand aghast. As they are ruggers, nothing is said. —A little child of JORIPII Attoantsost, of Iluntingdon, about three years old, had its head completely severed front its body by the care, the other (lay It's mother witnessed the terrible sight from an tip stairs window, but Was unable to give any assistance, What can we think of the carelessness that will allow a little child to wander upon a railroad track in II place like linittingdon, where trains are paoling every half 'tour alnrott ? VOL. 16. What Our Party Has Dona The Democratic party is the party of the people. It is the party that has made this country the greatest on the face of the whole earth. It.ie the party that formed the Gov ernment, making the ruler responeible to the people for the tame(' of hie pow• It in the party that put into prac tical opiration the great resultsachiev ed by the patriots of the Revolution, giving to the oppreesed of all flagman a home in a land of freedom. It ie the party that triumphantly carried the country through the war of 1812, and vindicated the rights of American freemen upon the high seas. It 111 the party that rebuked the im pudence of Santa Anna, and added mines of wealth to our resources from the golden moil of Mexico. It iOl the party that has made our flag respected and feared by every lor• eign nation, and our vessels honored upon every ocean. It is the party that has always stood up for law and constitution, and placed itself between the oppressor and the op pressed. It is the party that for sixty yearn administered the Government widely, religiously and economically, with a due regar I for the rights of even• citizen. It IS the party under which we had gold and silver money, and the neces• saries of life for almost nothing. It is the party that has always op' posed taxing the poor for the benefit of the rich. It 18 the party that upheld the rights of the States, and protested, earnestly and powerfully, against the wicked and wholesale prostitution of that .Vay• na Charta of human rights, the Con stitution of the United States. It in the party that adminintern equal and eXact justice to all It in Otte party that, nince the late civil Mar, han prevented the dominant power from utterly overthrowing pop ular Uuveriiinent 111 America. It is the party that is opposed to that hate*—ilesiasea and abominate* SIFYR.IIir, and all the diswiei ing and horrible thing* that will cer tainly follow in its wake. It 111, in short, the party of the Wtt rra MAN, believing that to the Caucasian race, and to the Caucasian race alone, was given the intelligent government of the whole human rat, Being, then, the party of Principle, of Patrinti•on, of Intelligence, of Rea eon, of 'Virtue, of Religion, ul liumani ty, of Justice, of Constitutional Liber ty, of taw, of Order and of Popular Right, where is die man that, in thi. enlightened age, will be CO benighted nit to vote against it? Surely, all' mien will support us now, when the lollies, the plundering., the corruptions and wickildneswenot a weak a.. 1 trucculent, designing and evil ad • minimaritt , un have placed the ship of state up.rn trfirt,ll 1.r.-itkers that are every ~,,, 'nerd. thre telling her wotul and Mimi destruction. Arouse,. White Men --- Democrats— ,rue Republicans—everywhere, and fir to the rescue. --Tlloleas TuDD Ltxcot.x, second , 4011 of the dead President, who was taken ill a few da)s After his return from Europe, died l i ck Chicago, on the 16th Instant, of dropsy of the heart, and lily remains were taken to Spring Held and entered in Oakridge celnete ry by the ride of his lather. Young LltcolN was a great favorite ul bin mother, and it is said that lady takes hid death veo loud, lie accompanied heron :or Eirttpt und, Mince ri the P rodent a ilea 1, mother and son have been so much gether that this affliction must be peculiarly hard to bear. "T.l O" LINCOLN, an he was familiar Iy called, was about 18 or 19 yearn of age, and a young man of much prom- We grieve for his early death. lint !Twit he liaa Ire gainef by ft. —Count lie has issued a proclamation Hlliwun.ing that he 14 about Gr leave France in order that his presence In the country :nay no longer give colintentinco to agitation, and In , asserts that when Frenchmen are will ing they can !urn) it goverment Nob de tied nu:versa? q t ro BELLEFONTE, PA., F 'IDAY, JULY 21, 1871. A Know-Nothing Breeze The majority of the Radical journaln endeavor to hold the Catholic Church responnible for the late riot in New York, by which eo many persons were killed and wounded. This they can• not fairly do., nay, more, they must distort the truth and invent their facts to make it in any manner appear that the Catholic Church, an a Church, hail anything whatever to do with them. From Archbishop to priests. the whole Catholic clergy of New York city warned and admonished their people not to participate in any_ demountra lion of hostility toward the Orange men, and 'vitrified their hands of all the consequences that might follow a die. regard of their friendly and sensible advice. Nor wan any respectable por tion of the Catholic COM 11111ni ty found among the rioter*. (In the contrary, the men who annailed the Orange pro ••eeeion were inenilierl of Yahoos Irish political organizationn, who have no regard for the church after it hen re• tutted to countenance their evil and din. orderly designs. We repeat that it wee not the respectable Catholics who participated in the riots; but the rab ble wan made up of the lowest scum of New York city, and numbered in its ranks many men who were not Gattiu lice at all—fellows who belonged to tin church and feared neither OA nor man. It was the same class that mom posed the COllllll,llle ut Paris, and the Catholic Church can no more he held responnible ler their acts than eau Re publicaniem in France be held respoll Ode for the outrages, cruelties and horrors perpetrated by the Commune But Radicalism, in thus attempting to disparage the Catholic Church, is but making another effort to reeu•ei tate front Its almost lorgotten grace the lung•atnce buried and despised cares's. of Know Nuthingtom. It wants to once more hear the cry of "Doan with Catholicism" and "Place None hut A inericane -on Guard to night." It wants to agai n enter nod night lodges, with signs, grips and passwords; and rebuild upon the ashes of the fast decaying party of the yres ant, the • dastardly, outrageous. lin Democratic and LI II A trier ica or k aniza tion of the Pait Such we believe to lie the object ut the !indica! papers by their Wllolllll'4 upon the Catholic Church, in connex ton with the New York riots. We have yet w vee the ling one ul them which does that ChM', II the justice to may that its clergy I xerted themselves to present the.hmtorhaiice an I refused Li, couuteliaitee the riotous proceedings. Yet much wan the came. Atil still, in the lace of all this, Mese rascally journals cry out "the Catholics 1 the Catholtca I" But the I eople are no longer fools to be deceived by the bray tag of theme eases of journalism. —TI. Weekly Leader, published at Kennett Square, in this State line the following paragraph in a laie A brave writer le Moak, of the fiellefonte Wsrcum 16,e Can picture Ur 011r•V veP. thin I hmmeratte phhosolier to hie well known and moat elegant editorial sanctum, grinding out lila shalt* veutincea, 00E10 of your ithrvii epltheta from his pen lie laud+ the Demo crai• in plain Engli•ii • Jeferson Davi." he asp, he a patriot, a scholar and a statesman " "1 he Dentocratib party ever has been, and by the grace of God, will continue to be, he white man 'a party" imagine the legislative Meek, after (hi. prophetic aeotence, hopping nom hie pine, aria dancing 4,ouble-eliuffin to the tune "nigger In d• amok• house " Just so. "Nigger in de smoke house" is where the nigger ought to be, or in ecrite other place of the kind where he could be intuit useful to his white superiors. %VP are not for put ling hint into ottioe and exalting hint beyond hie comprehension, like our Radical friends, but believe in placing him in his proper position of stiliver‘i ency and keeping hint there. As for harsh epithets, we do not pretend to he CHICHTRRYIELDIAsI in oni choice of termik. We don't desire to wound any one's feelings or sensi tali tees, but al the 8111110 tune we propose to make ourselves understood, and our exact meaning may always be found in the words we use. We speak plainly and to the point, an much as we can, and wish that more of Our Dentoor the cotemporariee would do the s'ime thin, , , When we called J/IPFER son D tv is - tt patriot, a scholar and a atateaniarr, ' we 'untidy stated what we believe to be the truth, and that "the Democratic party ever has been, and by the grace of (hod will continue to "STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION." be the white man's party," i 8 j mkt as true as that the world amid!, Will our friewd of the Leader take it upon himself to say otherwise A Singular Fact Under this headVone of our ex changes comments on the recent ter rible railroad disaster on the bridge over Harped' river. 'file facts stated are worthy of the attention of railroad men, and higlily important to the safety of the traveling public. It says: The recent terrible accident on the Nashville and Northwestern Railroad, of a train breaking through a rotten bridge, by which some twenty persona lost their lives, and a large number ""ere wounded; developed tl e follow ing singular fact :le timbers of the bridge over the if arpeth rk.ver, through which the train broke, apoi/ being ex amined, showed no outward vigil of decay. Though externally sound, the broken timbers were filled with a rot ten core. Not one of them but was rotten in the interior, yet they had a sound shell of from one to two inches in thickness on the out side. This is accounted for upon thesupposition that the timber (wnite pine) was cut in the spring, when the sap was up, and while the outside dried and seasoned, the miner sap soured and caused the rapid and premature rotten within. The detect wan a hidden one and not anspected. A lew hoors before the accident the bridge had safely !maned a loaded freight train with a thtrty•flve toil locomotive, and was to the officers of the road who looked after such things, 'above suspicion. We have, In common with °then', wonder soi at the meagre report furs lobed the piddle of the doing of the late lin°iocraUc Editorial Contention held in H.H.f..t. The proceed ings an putillehed In the Waycarse were excreeirely and We have excellent grounds fur the 1.1.101.1111.11 I that the report fell far abort of t ring a faithful transcript of the proceed ings 'I he troublesome 9th resolution furnish the text for one of the moat ' heated terns' ever experienced by an editorial body Meek, inefienhaeli and others made rampant epee, lies eget net the new departure, while the cu lie cop. saw in it leave• and fishes The result was that the•nti-departure chap. were squelched, and the 'nigger" pre vailed in that Tyrone Hasid All of whiair may be true from a Radical standpoint, hut is utter non sense front a Democratic perspective. There was no trouble in regard to the 9th resolution in the Democratic Con. vention here, nor, in fact in regard to any other resolution. I'he Denulcrnt ir editors met here detesmined to do their duty titaide the party, and nn for the purpose of raininga ,114ttirloat) CC . The procredine of the Convention were entirely bartitunioti+, and neither hiLls. nor Disressa.icu made "speeches" agalli4L the "new depar ture." The editor of the Herald in trying hard to find out something about mat tern that lie knows nothing about, but lie will have to go about it with M ire judgitieut than he manifests in the above par/graph. E,i,ett a blind man may see what he is aiming at. ----Tbe ex-Emperor NAvoLtak r ported seriously ill, and his private ph% vit tan, the celebrated 14. tixt.vitt, ha been sent for with all haste. We hope the Emperor may not be sick unto death, ac we are yet hoping for good thielp for France through litm, in dace the inegent THIERS experiment should tail, Be, in all likelihood, 'twill. Undoubtedly, the dethroned Emperor is the .I.lwar man in public life that the premet.i age loot producinl in France, and hie death, ut our opinion, would leave that country in the halide of a let f factionistn whoa motto appears to be "rule or ruin " We coniess that we have but little faith in the present re publican government in France, end are in almost daily expectation of ice overthrow. ---A (lei' s all, Secretary Hour wit.t. is not to resign. He thinks he'll hold on awhile yet. His six thousand dol. lars a year are not to he sneezed at, you know, and then there are the pick ings, besides. Bouzwzid. knows a thing or two. Hie Senatorial chances are rather obscure just now, and a bird it the hand is worth ela%en or eight in the bush, so it is. That's what's the matter. --kir. John Ustzlo, of tinew Shoe, sent us a stock or oats nn' Wodnetday that measured four feat and six Inches In longth. Uzzl. knows how to MIK big oats, as tt all ma ehlykeii,.. Wendell Phillips Wendell Phillips', the man who has been credited with furnishing thel brains for the Republican party, du ring the years, full of bitterness to the country, of its existence, has been in terviewed at his summer residence at Swamped, Massachusetts, and after the manner of a man who has had his way in declaring party doctrine, he speaks clearly out anti says that he does not 'see much hope for tbe Re publwau party It is like an old fam ily, all its merits are under the ground. The Republican party is a ghost haunt• ing thigrave of its departid strength.' NothingsrAo save the party from de feat. He further says, unless some thing is done with the Ku• Klux before December—in other words unless Grant with his subservient soldiery over•runs the Mouth, and overthrows the local governments there, preventing any thing like a full and honest expression of opinion, that section of our country is lost to Radicalism and a Democratic President will be elected in 1872. These are the declarations of a representa tive man of the Radical Marty, and that they are deemed important by the thinkers of that party, is manifest trout au article which appeared in the Tribune the morning after this conver elation was given to the public. In it Mr. Phillips is mercilessly snubbed,and told that if It. cannot hit upon a better man than Benj. F. Butler to lead his party to victory in the gubernatorial election this tall in Massachusetts, then indeed has Radicalism sunk fcry low, when a miserable scamp, stichists lie is known to be, can alone save it from annihilation. And Phillips says this can only be done by Butler, be cause be, alone, of the numerous can didates for Governor, is base enotigii to make promises, in a confidential way, sufficient to have all New Eng lund antagonism centre upon liilll. Capital and labor, prohibition and It cense, woman suffrage and a restricted ballot find nt him a character as crook ed as his eves, and a conscience etas tic enough to stretch fronr Cape Cod to where the Berkshire hog roots out a scanty support alter things succulent in that barren soil. The three strung 'ea men in the Republican party to day, are the most dangerous and cor runt in it. History finds no parallel to them, as cotemporaries, banded to gether for power and plunder. Sta ler, Cameron, and Murton, to name them ought to gibbet them on the pil lory of public opinion. Yet in their hands is the President of the United States, and in his the destinies of this Re pu hint—Ex. GEORGE ALFRED TOWNSEND, the well known RePublieltin letter writer, has toren out among the wilds of the West, and visiting the frontier posts. let tern to the Chicago 7'ribune, he tells his experiences. The following con cerning Grant and his petty spites and re.engen in readable : ARMY GOP OY (11:YIERAI. URA\T (Irma cornew up frequently at these posts, and tftw of the °nicer.) adhere to ht in, while nearly all are land of Sher man. 'Why are you, gentlemen of the reg ular army, lukewarm 110311 Grant, himself it regular ?' I maid to an MB cer on the plants. 'Oh, he has so little of the leelings of all officer. There was Tompkins, Quartermaster, the raider of Fairfax. Grant's wile went to Tompkins when lie was Qu•rterniaster at Washington, tor an ambulance, and Tompkins, niak• tog some light, satirical remark upon her pretereace for coaches, was forth with paeLed ott to Alaska. That was the IMIgII/01111111y of a President. ii the .111111 old Dr. K--, a regu lar army surgeon, was bullied and tor mewed because Grant wanted bon to take hie divorced wife back to his bed, to pay her $75 a mouth out of his pay. The Doctor was on the Pacific slope and lie married a woman too young and gay for him, liar conduct passed misinterpretation at lan!, and the old man had no difficulty in obtaining a separation in the evidence. Site went to W ash itigton, arts red the Presider, t, and the order came to Plateful to the lose of $75 a month out of his pay. The Doctor replied, that he would stand court martial first, and the President ordered loin to Alaska—this by way of banishment tor contumacy. being tougher than please) the Preen he was in a little while ordered on to New York for court martial. The woman appeared there on, the arm id General Mc'Dowell, but the court h ritlily acquitted the ohl imam En raged at being made a fool 01, Grant now ordered the Doctor to Arizona, among'the Apaches, where hie remains at the present. We array men know all these mat ters, and talk theni over in our tents, and reserving our opinions as to what sort of a President Grant as are never undecided as to the degree 01 his ty. To interfere in the dotneeti o &Taira of officer., and ip•Oit his high pe indult to revenge little Pliglir9 and phi worts, is fighting it out on his line, Um *will) , severe thunder Storms hue° vkited the suburb+ of "London Nally el Ur( hvs were •et on pre by Ihrbtnint; end destroyol i mtd u number m' we', Met • Spawl• from th• Keystone. ,~ —tipirttual !octanes sae bomouging quilts low mania Barriabarg. —Edward Wheeler, of Crawford county, Wel four children by diptberbe to COO WIN& —On Wednesday of lead week,Jonaph Irwin. of Llyawnere, mum killed by the kick of re, hone. —Over two boandrint trithitnae ore In pro• gross of erection in kw city of Titusville et the present tires. —Spring shirkers', owe be tni bought In Bethleharn st 62 cents per pair. Bias of chickens not mention?. —Mr. Wno.Eltosk, of 130010td eouoty, sYrodb I g hty.t.irer year., OE sit of Me own her siting his yews: No CO olsty-fbevrioson In ono day NO. 28 —Mr. Amway Wert:. aesedeersenty.three years and reshiLng In rntuk.lbs county, raked and bound eater two cradles at tars Dante tints dur log the late harvest, e perlodof alight days. —Jame. Timminik eon se Mr. James Tim. mine, of Minion, WM orthrfized • priest of the Catheria (Murat' on iftindloylast , .t St. S.rn• ard'm Chant+. Pathan. Reardon end six vlsll.' Inq prfootto officlanre. —Norrtwlown had an nininintto ens. The youth wna nand the rbdta maiden the same au, On Mal lc harnell not that the young ni,t wan willing enough Ingo and the abdinues Imo 004 read► MIL —Jos he• frlaredon, egoist thirty-five years, of Defoe eve county, lender beeletaa at • o'• leek, o o Wedneedery even too ',visualise the Erteurelloo Hose*. Minot Se oily, mak earsisrd Qv kto elm Ana drowned. AL body U. been reeovered. —Lhonld Allier, rosbtilliog nets Evanstnarg. Crairforti vounty, • soisilor of 1212, and a Clirld.lus, snow worlaJog edi .l (of the NI& an.) uuut.talle lag until b• 4 [lose, fueling unweir, wont to bed mod Boon bireathitni hb last. as If going is deep. --Cameo/ has pronoun...el wortteao• of QUA Lawry open atl the friend • of Curtin la this Stale. As tha tlenator •LLe by the oar of the Presland, I i kei he nirpoixt by the ear of go* the Curtin moo will mot eyes seta bit. of the prohibited fruit, —Lkieita W. Davis, Lee. one at the Radloaf loader. or the Ring, at Harrisburg. and eon cootors of election frame., to Philadelphia, has Dives **militated for ONO 801141 'Senate In the Awl district. He la tbs. kind of amen to keep on lop, there days of tedieel raaeality, " —A Philadelphia young Incbroppenzed al the ballot Caps May, on tbo Poore) of July. In dram made natively of white lace, whlnh wee perehased In BreaeNs ni a intst of about SIMI. It Is kept ban alt-tight oast, and the penlight In never alloototi to fall upon It. —Ai an evidenwai d lbw Insmenae yield of the wheat crop sad Ws exceee over last year we will give the siwilemitmet of a farmer near Hoc Itaniminurg. Be says be b d twenty fire acres of wheat burn whieb he olitalned ion buehais, while Wet year an sere did not yield more than tea Wasn't', —Nish°las Haillesaa, an old and respechid citizen of Haldsz icessandp(ermstrons valley 4 died on Monday last from the elfeot• of a paralytic stroke sad was purled on Thursday. He was eirisitea diners no Saturday last, while at work In his Irma He was Wight y-one year, of age and wra aoltilor la the war of 1112. •• —OO, oral Richard Coulter, " Fighting Dick, - has town chosen chairman of the Demon castles consmitnse of Westmoreland county. This menus work. and Harry White may mat* up hut mind w a harder contest than he (gm •user been ea aged In Veneral Coulter will pronsoute the political campaign against the Radical trion•ter with all the energy wl lam, he used to itkpisy in the 11.14. A Philadelphia Judge has decided they pro cession has n, right to interrupt the ordinary trit•el on tM streets The case arcs. on an order given by the Mayor of that oitypihrii no street car should be allowed to croxii.Actertain street while a procession was poet raf. which order a.. disobeyed by nee of thy lines, and the question finally reached a Jc.41144 ii•l•r with the result as abovv,atirAell. —The Lanedde editors hare mitten Into a nieo little trouble with mach otter. Soreetlm agn the Reporter putelahed rea.artielis about John Shupe, or the Press, e latch the latter considered libellous, and the -aiatre Mr.iihupe took steps to put the law In lore. antinst Mr Wegner, editor of the Repe-Ser. Wegner was arrested is Philadelphia os..,Fridar laid and bound ever to epbeat at 4s swat term of Court. —While In Franklin Or .* ndtp lAt , we had the privilege of examinitikwhen Is claimed to be the petrified rernsinevnh • human body. Abrupt one half of the. hotly hp present. It bears the full appearennnof . human being, and no An not doubt be•that It Is what It Le represented. All who.hsure aeon It Sr. satistl•i, that It en/Pe lived emit mare./ ; and had • Nil In, The petnfaottion wen found a •hort time ego by n party PP( soreuriner. Millie running • 'lnc In Cranberry kamo•Nlp V•nango sounty.—. R.( Brad., h.lep.aant, Forney hien )01 r e•rre•pondant trawling through oonth aisaualles for tom• tine*, his buslneom being arw boat up ma•rial Lon, ring the Monett! Iwo". R• ha• dually below cam pal lad to tell &Iloilo truth, mod in his 'woli latter to the Pruo; tau write. a. lone.. ; beats be bolters that amnesty, awry geo ttral, and asiawstptlnif from Its prostals Ds only Jefferson Darla and a half-J(l.l4ra almilar tendert., .sold be a wise measure., 1:1 will re move PLO•ILOU , Ie from this ono* G r their animoeltor against the tige. Govern ment, wad any and all Justlfbwsikto for these outrages.' A Werner piper Pays . man named Hebert-, a workman ht,tbe noel mine of Norte A lions, at bharperjlie, was found on Wetinesdey lest, puspenthekby be neck In the coelmino. It Is popposed Abet the man hanged himself' for "fora Joke," w.•G/M had newer been anything menially wtpabog noticed shout him except that he wax.. n fond of practloah Jokep, and the one Ntitipli boa him his life wee Intended to frightesiot. buy rho wee workiag in the mina at 14p tame• Ihe deceased was an Englishmes, to birth, and bed herb srn• ployed about Um, coupw of klutrpsville Apr a long time. —The Jitigarania. Madisonville, and Indian spoil, Ratitroata Via hi - D.4 at Cinoignail on Monday to lib, Plionsylvanla Itai4read for nine-sine years from August I. Thbt inoindes the toad.from Columbus to Cambridge City MO Madison, I tolimon, gives the Tann.ylvania tkooetrelling interest In the Ohio River bridge at Loulevide, the sole feasible. cores. totho great Loulavilie, Nashville md. Are Orleans Railroad, and, If t'sey can stioceed In ooalrol• Rig the Southern lines tl.cough yhe Atleailo Gulf States, as now setoott Prott.ltittt Lakey alit rhonopellse the buaineap of the Sonth men more effsultially than, they now d,u that of the Meat. Titus ix the gaunt line 4.stianding, and nonoeothig Immitune tlit.tro.te of the most 14•ltliiii3 region+ unite V1.1:0* 'at Mis`l'"ifli with tlot pm. of l'',l , elryst, sem.marJ tvtdo Now,