Bellefonte Democratic Viking] 1.3 Y P. GRAY MIIIEK JOE W. FUREY, A _SSOCIATI EDITOR, ' The State—The Result Wo aro aorry that wo cannot write pf the result in the State, us of that in the county. The figures wont allow us td crow —the facti prove R poor light n •ur side, and ell we CILII do l•• to reflect —rout by the leawn wo have learned, snd determine to battle on as long as right dads wrong to oppose, as long as truth must combat error. In addition to our failure to secure the eketion Of MCCANDLESS and Cool- en, wu balm in all probability lost con- trold of tbo•Bonnto, by &vision in our ninlcs in 'Cumborland and Franklin eountioi,and by bribery and the mmt un blushing '' erruptions in Luzern°. Cum briu county gowns to have gona astray after false Gods, and defeated W. lion. Act Huse Esq. Democratic candidate fur Legislature by some three hundred In Schuylkill, it le reported we loose 0110 MOM ber of tho House and one In Luzirne, thus giving the Itadicithi • de- cidvd majority in that body. From tho Western part of tho Stato the TIOWS Is nut near so bad. Most of the counties we of the mountains, show decided Democratic gains. to Armstrong county about 100, in Hefty er almost 100, in Blair some 200, in Butler 100, in Clarion 100, in Crawford 250, in Lawronen 560, in WnrrPn 850, in Webtrnorland 100,and so on,thrtjyV,_ out the entire western part of the State, but our heavy loses in Philsdelphis,nnd arid the eastern counties of the State, •vercome our gain, throughout the the west and leaves us at the me y of niggarized radicalism to the t of about 14,000 We do not know that the Democracy base any more reason to be despondent over the result of the election than the muses of radicals have. If the labor- tng men of the State who cling to that party can stand It to be taxed and tariff- ad,robbed,and oppreaued,the Demperatic laboring men certainly can ; if radical butinees men whose interests it is to hsve an eeonornicai administration of State ifTalrs and a settled and prospeour condition of business pursuits, can afford such an uncertain ■nd unsettled state of affairs, as we have been experiencing under radical rule,Democratie business men can ; if radical tnz-payers can al% ford to have t b i• State Treasury robbed as in the Ev ease, the Stele funds speculated upon by dlehonest ofcial• the interest on the State debt increased and a lot of speculating bankers niacin rich off of taxes they pay to the Com monwealth, it a altogether likely that Democratic taz-payers can afford it It Is not only Domocreas who fret Ow effects of • corrupt administration ltd burdens and outrages, touch us heavily upon the members of one party at upon those of the other The following are the majorities in the different counties of the State as reported at the time of pulling this pa• per to prece. 'flame marked • are en petaled I•DICAL. Allegany MOO •Armatrong . 0 0 456 lliair • . - 6 " ° •liraot ford •• 2800 • lititler • 200 Cameron . 76 l'hie•ter . 24100 rawlord •••-• 108) Ihuiphin 1606 lielewnre 1360 •Erle . TAM) Forget . 70 Franklin - 2 0 0 Huntingdon 660 , Indiana .. 21108) Jeileraon 100 Lanearder . . 46%) Lawrence . 12001 Lehmann ..... /4' Kean 160. Mercer . . 810 100 1 Philadelnn 000 • Potter . 01.10 Snyder • 40111 onormett ........ Ina , Hilaquahanna.... WW I • Thiga-. ..... Union Venango 600 Warren 4001 Adamn 11440 • Had lord .. 150 Berke 6300 *Cambria . 601) •('arbun . 650 cent r• . boo I l•rion 1100 Clearfield 13(4) (71inton . 675 *Columbia 1000 40 000(64011001 . 30() • F:114 500 1 .1.'1144(0o . 8110 • Fil Um .. 300 *Green ..... 1100 Jun lain 350 Lehigh . 1300 •Luterne... . 1000 Lyman( I ng. ..... 350 2111111ri 50 • 61(u roe .. • . 1901) 11 (01 tgomery 630 Montour .. ....... 260 Northampton . 250 Northu mb' land 60 •I'lk 7(4) lotenylk ill ...... 1000 10111414 n ..... 260 Washington 160 •Waya• . 400 •Westmoriand. 1600 *Wyoming. SOO York ISUO 114Joritios 47626 AinJorllles 80726 —ln the judicial district composed et the Counties of Mifflin, Snyder and Union ; Jos. C. Bucnsa, Esq., Demo crat, has been elected over SAMUIL Woone, Radical, by a majority of ui • warde of 200. The distriht generally gives about 1100 Radical majority. Mr. Ilucuma's election is an endorse meta of which lie may well (eel proud. He will make a just and impartial Judge, and the people have done t hem eel tee credit in eupporting him ne they have done. jEICfIW' VOL. 16 "Grant and is Greatness." The Lancaster Intelligetirer thinks Grant, instead of being dubbed "Use less," 8110111 d be termed "The IMMagnk• cent." Very likely. lie needs sonic prefix or appendage, expressive of Ilia character and his attainments, upon which to ride a second time into of lice. "Old Hickory" won for Andrew Jackson more popularity than the bat ale of New Orleans. "The Little Fox of Kindarhook" was a title which gave Van Buren the mantle of Jackson, so illy befitting loin, and "Tippecanoe" set the country ablaze with excitement for ilarrition. "Old Bough and Rea dy" was a term in which lay Taylor's political success, more than did his ob stinacy in securing the battle of Buena Vista. Grant should select sonic elec tioneering prefix by which lie shall hereafter be distinguished ; and what better than "fbe Magnificent." Ile has been inagtirfieetit in the bestowal of officers soil their profits upon his family and friends. lie Ilea been the recipient of magnificent gifts. Ile re tide', in a magnificent "cottage by the sea," when not perambulating the country or on n flyin. visit to %Vitali ington ; and every atonement lie makes is attended with magnificence, and upon a magnificent scale. And then, too, lie dispenses to inn the bless ings of a magnificently "strong goy. ernment"—so strong that it can bob around Long Branch, "if it takes all Summer," and when Winter comer, it can "owing around the circle" in a cloud of magnificent "smoke." The Magnificent Magistrate makes the peo ple "awoke" to another tune, by wrenching from them magnificent taxes; and if they demur as to their justness, he can seize and confiscate. His government call put magnificent annul of gold into the coffers of the bond tinder, and pay off the farmer, the mechanic, the laboring man, the maimed and disabled soldier, the wt.] ow and orphans iii Spinner's magnifl• Gently filthy greenbacks. He can suspend, ni his magnificent power, the proceeilinge of Courtin of law, and dill out justice at the point of the liavoin lie can employ hits soldiers in Immo dating the poor people of the South, while he leaves the frontiers of the West exposed to the scalping knife and hatchet of the savage. Ile can allow Sheridan and his friends to in Beige in a magnificent ride over the plains after deer and buffalo, while the Mexican banditti are murdering the people of Arizona and running oil their stock. To add to his political magnificence, lie can employ United Staten troop,' to conduct Slate Con ven• Lion. He pocketed magnificent gifts with the air of a prince—anything from a terrierpup to a stone-quarry, or a magnificent residence at Long Branch—and as magnificently din penises the offices of the people in pay. went His wile, with the magnifi cence of a queen, with the aenistam e of Gould, Fisk and Corbin, can make a " corner and pock.', for her share the maguiticent 3,11 u of twenty-five thousand dollars I What cares he, in his imignificent power and state that the people are groaning beneath taxa tion? With a magnificent sang fluid, exceeding that of Nero, who fiddled when Rome ware burning, lie can revel in the curling smoke and Minnie of hoe magnificent' cigars, and become oblivious to all pave lies wag nificent grandeur and power. By all means let hirn be called "Grant, the magnificent," even though the hint° Ilan will be compelled to write of him and his administration, that they were magnificent failures. =MI —The Had cal cauvaes of this county gave them jest thirty-one ma jority. In place of that the Demo crats have almoet 500. Quite a differ ones between the expectation and the result. —Thu Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany, having become possessed of the North Carolina Railroad, a road two hundred and twenty-throe miles in length, at an annual rental of two hut'. draid thousand dollar., on a lea.e for thirty years, now holds contrail ‘ll continuous; line of railroad fr. m Chesa peake Bay to Atlanta, Georgia. The P.4)11111%61104 Ratlrmad has now secured a monopoly of than travail and freights on two great Southern routes, the one s tsm a ihing Iron's Washington down the Atlenitc omit, to N 1 ilmington, Ni rah ri roll a, and the other from the Chesil p isi.e Buy to Atlanta and the central ziouth. "STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION." BELLEFONTE PA„ FRIDAY, OCT. 13, 1871, RUINS OF CHICAGO A Storm of Rain THE CONFLAGRATION AT AN GM EIGHT I NCEN DI A RIES lIANGPa) OVER FIVE HUNDRED LIVEi LDWr THRILLING DESCRIPTION Over $200,000,000 In Property Gone Ciiienttno, oetobor 12.—Oordo I. hr. ginning to coma not of the liorrildo cilium cowed by the awful ooflowriiiion, nod the poople tiro ooregeotiely c.oltig to work. Troops have been arriving during the day from various quarters, including Regular, an. umlaut compare., iron' the surrounding cities. A feeling of security is beginning to urine, though cititens patrol the streets to-eight 111 urge numbers. General Sheridan Is en corn nand mid order will beenferc ed Thieves and incendiaries will rn•- evi 00 no mercy. The most cheering fact since the tire is that water has (meniencell to run in the pipes. One engine nt Um water works has been found sufficiently un injured to be set In motion This re moves in a measure, the terror of suf fering from us lack of water Tho flames on Sunday night drove them wildly to the lake shore, Desti tote of everything there they only es caped being consumed by wetting blank ets and covering the'ruselvos. eLIINPING IN THE WOODI A large camp has been ferment mu •ide the city ; tents are being supplied to some hut thousands of people are sleeping on the ground. In the west ern district women and children throng the streets and are cooking their food at Pmall tires built along the curbstonrc At least ten thousand wealthy business men are to day left penniless Policies of insurence are looked upon as worthiest', as, on account of the n:ere whelming extent of the losses, itlis not expected that they can he paid. It is now certain that the loss of life has been great. A whole wagon load of dead bodies witscarried through Wabash avenue last evening It ie literally Cron to Pity that there is nothing remaining of the north side, from the river north to Lincoln park on the r orth branch of the river on the west to the lake on the east. This per• tion of the city, except along the main river, where there were business blocks, WllPoccupide by dwellings. Two•thirda of the population of this district were German and Scandinavian. These peo ple are now homologic HANGING INCE/W.IIIU TO LAMP POSTS Fifteen hundred citizens were sworn in last night as an extra police force, and the secretary of war authorized General Sheridan to employ all available troops for guard, and issued an order for one hundred thousand rations Five hundred soldiers are on duty This precaution wits necessary, for, as remarkable as it fluty seem, there were fiends who- still sought to extend the disaster Two men citm:ht in the act of firing houses on the West side were immediately hung to lam(• posts —one on Twelfth street, near the river, and the other three, miles away, on Clay borne avent t e, North side This sum mary action has checked the thieves and murderers. =1 The newspapers will be again started in a few days or weeks The //011Jos eph Medill, of the Tribuno, who is one of the hestveist sufferers, succeeded yes terday in leasing a building on Wash ington street, at the tunnel Ile also purchased two &guider presses used in a job Olive on the West Side, and has has I li•g rnit IA est.t for paper and type, there being nothing left hero Mr. Story, of the 'Ames, will erect a rough one story building, and begin the Issue of that paper as soon as the material can be secured. The Journal Is provid ed for on the West side Tho Pose, Re publican and Stoats Zeitung will also ar range for business as soon as practicable, but everything must come Iron. else where. There is nothing left PROVIDING FOR TUX TIOMRLIGIB Water for drinking and household use is secured from the lake and parks, and for horses from the river. 'l here are a t ihousand people camped around the artesian well, four miles out, and perhaps us many at the lake, upon lerton and Victoria avenues, near the prairie. The people are being fed in the remaining churches, school-houses, in sheds, and by the roadside. VII 0111102 , 1 Or Tug TIME Late on Sunday evening a boy went into a stable on i)evoken street, near the river. on the West side, to milk a o wear yin.; with line kerosene lamp This was kicked over by the cow, and the burning fluid scattered over the straw. This was the beginning of the great fire. The wind blowing a stiff gale bad possession of the flames, and the beautiful buildings, Chicago's glory, lay before thorn. Harrison, Van Huron, Ado ins, Mon roe and M adison straits werti soon. rehthed, the intervening him kis :rem (Ii 'river to Dear born treat on the ce-t, ime,emad. The 'Amps, Trawie, Pose, Republi can, Journal, and ~thi.r newspaper of fices, the Western News company's block & heater's establishment. the Drake block, recently built, Far well & Co 'a, all worn soon in ashes. TUN WOODKN PAVESINNT TOOK makingnartluuuatxsheetofU/ I lln CS, W miles long by a urnlu wido. bring Mil Id InnE.,ibly ,urvlve ninny 111 111- Utl.s 1111/I.k later block li.ll find the ird hot cod shot highi.r !Intl high, r and proul further iinil further until the north , mloof vinnt sh*Pt of ilnino from tho never to thin lake tit ono tune, no h*tnittilwr, In thin people Ono, it wax expect, 1. 11111-1 peri+ll. One block an all the vast Ineonern toot r.•uuunetl nt tin) ‘tz: The 74 'butte block The etettom bout.' natal Idiiniure block, tat 1011111411trfl ,moot, bad 1 11 / 1 111 . (1, nut 011.0 V who 111111 I ough t the fliattots hero thought tat lenot Oils block could Let rav+d. A patrol of nom nwopt oat lien coatis and put 01.1 (hones an the aide wane, anti another jolt ol• 1111.11 wnlrhod that roofs At half itat,t re, ell 0 . 1 Inrh 1.11 1-1 HMll'llllll sole , and ow•t. of tip.• nn a 'tent to 4 , 1.1, red or fond A Wool bl.r went lu deep in the tbitne bu tin„ but there W 11/ n clotrtgettf wool 'l•he flumes rencheti Nl'nlet3h nventot, :Nude ON , I. and M 11 htGwr st em,, 11,111 coon M theatre cntight fire Ina tow uniitsirnts tips Tribune Wan in fhuu 111111 nt the lost 111.111111 i. 1110 1411 . 01 , Ito; men were 1111 - 1 , 11.1.11 anti r•wcuwl fr. MI Ibe flame,. By IOo't•luok. in that ft,rl , - 1104111 this remaining block was in ashes I= Thousands of persons and horses inex tricably commitigled ; pour people tit all colors and a lintl es , and of es ery (rum Afr ica, road with exi itt•tnent struggled with each other to get away Hundreds were trampled under foot Men and WOllll.ll wore limited with and their household goods, to who, skirt+ were clinging lender infants, half the,sed and barefooted, all seeking it place of safety Hour+ afterward these might have been seen in vacant lots or on the streets far out in al. au but to, stretehed in the dn.! Those are the suffering lambs whom Christ now calls iin the rich world to feed Mid clothe God help him if the heart of nuts shall I • • obdurate I One of the most pitiful sights woo that of a middle aged woman of State street load ed with bundles, struggling through is crowd singing "The Mother Goose," ker), Ci,lekery, Unto) Crow," I Went to the well In wash Olt (00." etc There were litindri•ds of others filci•WlSl• distracted, and made desperate by whi, ky or beer, which from ext. an II thirst they drank in absence of water in great quantities, who spread themselves in every diree4ott, a terror loan they met It is fearful to Mink of the loss of life It is conjectured, with good cause, that nearly FIVE HUNDRED DAVI HENN BURNED TO EMEI We saw four men enter • burning building, and in it moment they were overwhelmed by a falling wall. There was a crowd of urn around the corner of a building trying to save property, when the well yielded, some of them were buried beneath it About twelve or fifteen men, women, and children rushed into the building of the Histori cal society, a fire proof building, for safety In a row minutes the dames burst up and they were burned to death A mong those who took refuge in the building was the venerable Colonel Samuel Stone, eighty years of age, for • long time connected with the locality ; also, John B Gerard end wife, Mine Depolgrone, the noted teacher of music It is feared that Dr Freer and family were also bi.rned, as they were in the building and have not been seen since Mrs Edsnil, whose husband was mur dered last week, and who was suffering from an illness, was carried away for protection to a building which wis4 afterwards consumed, and it is feared she also ports lied TUN. KMANCIPATIoN PitoCriMATIoN DM All the hooks and papers of the 1111.,_ torical sot tidy, including the original copy of the famous Einem :piano, Pro elnmastion, Prmodent Lincoln for which the society paid $25,000 were destroy ed It is feared that a large number of children, 1111111ltiql of the Catholic orphan society on Stitt.' id.reet, were also burned, as many of them are missing On CI i cago avenue, a father rushed up stairs, bearing duec children away, when he was over ild(1 . 11 by the flames and per ished with theist The mother was after• wards 81,11 on the North wet Side a raving maniac In the •i~hbor hood it family of five parr The list.of such fatalities t. i long, and can only be fully verified atter the smoke shall have cleared away There are hundreds of families on that side who saved no clothing, but barely their lives. Among these is the family of Perry Smith, formerly president of the Northwestern railroad company. THE LOSS $300,000,000 A careful survey of the insurance to day shows that there was written on the property destroyed over $200,000,000; add another $100,,000 to this sum end a fair estimate can ho reached of the loss. All the leading merchants who have been seen express their deter mination to resume business at once. The Evening Joro•nal and Tribune bopo to publish small sheets to-morrow At a meeting orthe business men to-day a spirit was manifested to at once set to work to REBUILD THE CITY AND RESTORE BUSI- 11:3 A special meeting of the legislature is to be held to provide means for aiding the business mon and providing employ ment for the poor. eVA yrrir t ( Better Then we Think "As homely as time," "ugly as time,' "hateful no tittle," and like expressions reflecting directly upon the character and disposition of 7 illte, should be ac companied wit 11 11110•111jen I ionm, for Time treats people just about as they treat him. !tinny pem le fluid lie lb !wither ugly or hateful. N.) one livco who does not ooniettines find Time agreeable 0 initial)) ; say, at least, as agreeably ne be finds them. (Attunes the ones who most fondly denounce are thoie Who lefts' deserve 1114 favors. If We strive earnestly to keep our record clear, TIIIII . good huitioredly chucks us mule, the chin, and all..rd, us 'ill w e need and wont, or faithfully charges tip in a double entry account of this world's transactions On the credit page that which shall enrich and happily 115 111 the next world. The expectation of futiiie e ...id in the land where all wrong are adjm.led and mercy seasons police, NllOllllll4 111/111 a strong soul through a dark, unhappy earth life'; hut from choice let us work to deserve and lulu.) friend., pri.perity, plenty and happiness both here told herealler Time and eternti are i either stran gers or far apatl..h.unll%rjLn.l seperate. The soul is iiiiimat .1 f. no the hour of its birth, and this is the beginning of our c, scions, eternal life. Corse quiently we 1111181. 11%e tier.. as we would have our record stand through all eter nit,'. There is just RP !WWII prospect or a [ono ti lot for years its hem, racked by pain and diseume,getiing well in a min ile a u+ (here IA of it poor, world.tossed soul entering upon the perfect rest of heaven, before its mortal tenement is fairly coil in the grn.e, or the blinding spray of the river Denth is lifted trout the immortal Such considera tions are commonly dismissed with the conclusion that thee are mere vision. my having nothing to do with the practical things of this world But they are mistaken conclusions. It is the little thine,. which make up the aggregate, and "the sum of tile in in trifles." Each thought fail adtion, however PI 111 ple, ham its effect upon the eternal whole, the snow its each stroke of an artist's brush etleets the charac ter, beauty mid perfection of the pie tore he is pitintinr. The trite way to enjoy, is seek out the deep meaning of simple things. This idealizes and smoothes rough path wave, for it given tin real poetry in the mulct of hard prose The immortal portals are tint envel aped in Impenetrable darkness and mystery to the soul which ever looks up, end aspires to reach and act upon tie own highest conception of morality, justice and right. But it in a whole loletime, we were riot blessed with if limiwes of the glort one future, common cerise, reason, and policy require its to "act well, our ran" fir thin world alone, for therein all happiness Ilea. Death is a station where we purify from the travel•atatne and duet of earl h. But many a scar, or wound, or de facing remains to be erased ; only by the help of God and angels strengthen ing ill to grow out of and beyond all the contaminations of earth life. It is safe to keep the tact in view, that a thing intuit be well begun to end well, and for this world alone, for we all prefer to enjoy hie rather than to he miserable. And only by having high aims, and a strong resolution to deal fairly with ourselves and the world, can we be comfortable, and not find Time ugly or hateful.—Elm Orlou. --There are thousande who know nothing of the hle..ed influerice of corn lortable homes merely for the went thrill or from dissipated hahite. Youth spent in friyoloing arnueements and de• moralizing tuisocintions, leaving them at middle age, when the physical and intellectual men ehould be 1 / 4 r, its great est vigor, enervated, and without one laudable ambition. Friends longsince !oat, confidence gone, and nothing to look to in old age but mere toleration in the community where they ehould be ornaments. No home to fly to when wearied with the etrugglee inci dent to life; no wife to dicer them in their dispondeney ; no .children to amuse them, and 110 virtuous house hold to give zeal to the joys of life. All is blank, and there is no hope or succor except that which is given out by the hands of private or public char ities. When the family of an indue trioup and softer citizen gather around the cheerful fire of a wintry day, the homeless man is Peeking shelt^r in the station house, or begging for a night's rent in the out building of one who started in life with no greater advan• tages; but lioneety and industry built up that home, while dissipation des troyed the other. —The resolutions of the Meow chloetts Republican Convention ignore Grant. Even his office holders did no dare to present an endorsement. "Man sachusett'a favorite son," the Iron. "Chawles," line been ;too meanly used by Grant for him to expect sympathy again in the land of Plymouth Rock, Bunker Hill, and the Great Organ. --Why is the figure nine Ilke a peacock? Because it's nothing without its tail, • ~ —The young woman who merrlu■ en un worthy man taken her Lord's name In vain. —Two thoingind hands, manly children, err ongegra in picking cranberries on the marsh on of Indium. Ttnna, Reed WAa killed at New Cu tie 111.1 wraft by 1111 accident on Mahan neck Con! Company'e Railroad. —The beet mannered people aro not ultra N..... of On, mid het:Mare they arc not, they are diffusers of grace and refinemoalt. —A ettild five yearn old Into boon found In th Baltimore Jail eheirged In tho criminal, do , ket with being "a common thief', —ileorge Wilson. of OH City, we learn from t'.o Darnrk , lied on lest Monday or delirium left lila family destitute. I\ O. 40 —A well and rig on the Pat Canning lease, as. City, wan totally destroyed by Me on last Saturday, and ono man seriously burned. —One Elks Hudson wns Indicted and brought inuilty by the Northampton county, Pa., court for being • "commou scold." Sim was nand $lO2. —A child was born on the Fial'limns and Ohio railroad, at the rate of forty mile. an boor. Wonder If the young otiap will always travel through {hi. - rale of ware" as feat? • —A men In Oeergia recently received • lA ter inclosing thirty cents In fractious' cur• rency, liccompitnied with the words. "I etol• • feed of cunt from you durieg the war." editor of the ()heeler Republican, has been shown 200 copper coins, bearing date from taco to 1740, the coins being unearthed bye %entle rust ti while plowing. ' 4 —ln Philadelphia two peaceful Germans were badly beaten by rowdies. ,A polittetnan who woo autpdtog hear talking lb V.lffrAir pan, woe notified 01 tho outrage. and said Ire w ui attend to it, but that was the end of It. —Er-Senator Hendricks of Indiana, H %V B.,biroeabeck of Ohio. and el thiegotro r Hanish, now of New York, are to take t i g i ls e ta They wit —Maier Hodge, the defaulter, has been pen tnneed to ton years hard labor in the penlton iiary In addition to thts Ito le to be eaahler od, to forfeit all pay and allowances that ma" be dun hum the nnlOnnt of hla Oirering,llllll $448,400,00 —At Weet Chester, on 1 hursdav, We. Amanda Sppenem, colored, aged about 00 years, wee shut dead in the back yard of her resi lience. by an unknown person An old mus ket, with which the crime was committed, was found to the yard, Berkshire papa observed to his (laugh. toe. beau , 'Jim I if you weal Lu you can have tier ; but l gon't want you hanging around here unless - you tne•n busituilsa. If pat Intend to marry bur, hurry up. Cur I caul keep awake nights much longer. —A lady had • favorite dog, which she cell ed Perchance - A singular owns," said Borne body, •for a beautiful pet, madam. Where did you Plod it? 'Oh," drawled she, "it watt named tor ityron's dug 100 remember where he says, "Perchance my dog will bowl " —The gambling hell at Now Brighton, Penn. whore the roan Went was killed a day or two ago, bar been burned to the ground by the ex cited citizens In the house was stored a large quantity of stolen goods, and was a place of resort fur the worst sort of ottrioatims, —"Ella, my child," said a prudish old meld to • pretty oleoe, who would mini her Oar an pr ty ringlets,' if the Lord had intended your Ii to be curled he would bate none it him at " "no he did, aunty, when I was a baby, but he thinks I am big sluttish now to do is myeel(." —Brainbrldice. Oa. must haws salubrious climate fur babies 'I hey haws about 1.6 W In habitants, and the city record shows an aya rage of fire new babies per week. When the -es fails utt soot• woman will catch and often triplets. Ono nd nursing a quartette &lees of laudanum at different Umea, but thr fact becoming known, et phyalcian M. promptly called to arrest death, and mcceeded. —t Jlnkey"angina on Thad' R. R with • pleeping ear attached. ran issalunt • ballast tram near Mapleton, Huntingdon cotlnty, on fliurodny lasi, •nd the firenum, Fieher by name, was inetanq killed, and WO. Mimes, the engineer. rhos ingly Injured. Bulb man attempted to •••• Moines's's by Jumping (rum the angles. The Foot• About the Chotera In Rue- The London Lancet has received • communication from a medical corres pondent, writing from Slawusa, govern. vent of Vol hymn, Russia, who thinks that we are taking an exaggerntai view of the extent of cholera in Iluip elan provinces. In the district hi which he has resided for more than six years, the epidemic bar, upon the whole been less during the prisent year than in those preceding it. 6Q14041 of the larger towns in the midland, Northwestern and Southwestern prof inces have been chiefly affected, In the Province of Volltynia, with the exception of Kiew and Odessa, there have been but few cases. The.apidemio much resembles dyeentary in a great many cases, being accompanied by hemorrhage from the bowies. Owing to the flat nature of the oountry, its clay substrata, and the heavy rains during the present year, It is feared that the potato crop will prove • fail. ire The pensantp, living as they do on field produce alitiont exclusively, are compelled to have resource to other and less wholemorne articles of torn', such as radishes, fresh cucumbers, drcs. The insufficiency andliad character of the diet induces diarrhea / and a pre disposition to cholera. flue corres pondent blainestli balite of unripe fruits,. which the mulatto consume in large. quantities, and uleontrolled abuse of sanitary laws foe very much of the ex isting disease. Although he considers the English authorities can not be too invcii alive to prevent the introduction of so formidable and subtle au enemy as cholera, he avers that the acootints which hava•ppeared in Olio country of the awful epidemics of titan disease in Russia. give nevertheless,, a very exaggerated expression of fact., appearalrom atatistica at the Lana Department that nineteen thou- Baru' settlers have male bona fide en trios) on public lands will in the ILK year. Since the passage 91 . the horn". etead act in 186 there have been one hundred thousand entries. These alone make twenty thousand more landholders than there are in Great Britan. How ninny a kiss hae been tie en, how many a curse, how many a look of hate, how many a kind worry, how many a promille has been broken, how many a SOU' lOW, bow many a loved one lowered into the narrow chamber, how many a babe hae goes from earth to Heaven—bow ninny a little crib or cradle stand 4 silent now,- which last &turf*, eight bold al* rarest treasure of tin heart. Everything. Anklin, Venting° county aa, week to commit sul • being dliikiippioted In
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