1 gi emoctatic Watchman Terms, 1* ■diwnd. P. 0.11.&T MEM, - BE - LL FRIDAY MORNING, !AARON 18, 1884. The War. the maniere of Otedtee, 'elite opera uomly rieryilsl2o***ent of the - ,[ply ham ceased, !thermal* has been busy in gettiwg bark to Vkitsluirg, where we under- Maud his command now rests, Ile accomplish.' notlaing of importance but he dleliwellon of some private ptimeity, and the carding away et some thonsande of aiggCre. whirl* the tax-pay ers of the North will be nommdleil to keep.— The Aye says there barn beeu a complete. re.og ganiaatinoof the foutemade of the Federal ar mies. tleneral Orturt has bgen made Cominan der-In-Chief of ill the armies. with Ilulleck as Chiefoof-Ateff.• The benibinartord will be la the Add. General eiheristin is to contained the Western Departmeat vacated by Grant, cot:Mis ting of East Teanusans, Chattanooga, Vicks burg. Arkart.a.. Ate. 'pep. Mr Phones mac -0.104 Shemin* kt Viekburg, and (learns! Wi'- liam in a few ifitys will take command the.,krourof they. flidowiae. (letters' IVal- Isee is to take charge 4f the tilienniiiionk, 'super seding; B elly. Ameripan Women-. We have read of the Spartan mothers, %I'M *Mit their sons to tattle with the ins Juliet ion to "return with their shields or ret urn tin them," — and . while 'ire - Wive ()run wondered at the want of natural, affection tliey displayed. we could easily understand the maternal pride which prompted them to give Utterance to such sentiments. however cruel and barium; ous war may he, it has a sort of facium t ion which has be4itched mankind from the earliest ages of the world and women urns beartheir fins share 01 n, ). • for the w.irs which have d evastated the earth- through all time. In the days of chivalry, it Was part - of the education of an aspirant for knightly honors, to spend a large portion of his Youth in the. socie ty of ladies, and from their lips he learn ed to brave death, endure hardship:sand Play enemies. until when he entered the lists he would rather die than turn his bark upon i foe, to meet the scorn of the women. These days of romance am gone they disappeared with the mists of the dark ages, and we lave been taught to laugh at the romantic chivalry Of -those who wielded.weapons'in defence oehon or, or in hopes of fame. Yet — treSe old knights were brave and, true, generous and houoeal to ssoidd sooner _pariah. than strike a fitllen fe, or insult those who wore defenceless and unprotected. This was perhaps owing •to their early IlifittitTle ladies and the iiirri ty of their education. All this we can understand. We can appreciate the mo tives of women who urged men .to battle who always respected the wittier sea, and would perish in defending them, even if enemies. But when, in the noon of the ninetessildi century ye hear ladies breathing out slaughter against the. t en • of the adjoining States, arid... Urging their warriors to the eenmtission of the_ most horrid deeds among the women. of the enemy, we confess that We am at a loss to know the motives which prompt a fe male heart to such thoughts of wicked: ness and cruelty, It must be that the demon of Abolltiou is amongst us, and as of,old - he has sought the female heart as the moat susceptible. The disgraceful scene recently enacted in New York Ci ty, of the presentation to a black regi ment of a flag wrought by the hands of the ladies,and a promise by the females of love and honor to the vagabond triggers is sickening, and can only be accounted for by their being possessed of some ter rible demon, a thousand times worse than those which entered ,the wine of Judea. - • We esti - sear go into a house in the North whore some of the proper Southern ladies is not seen i ssession of women, who have--scht forth their brethren and frnandr4 to plunder and de vastate the South. Books, 'musical in etrufnents, and eyeiy thing portable is stolen wherever our armies march, and conveyed North. This crusade upon the women of the South is urged on by their sisters in the North, and we have heard threats from females which the most brutal soldier in the army would scorn to execute. TEL every town, village. steam lkad and tnilreed car, all over the land will be found the fairest of the sex, ad vocating the destrgtion of their sisters it by supposing that the devil has sought to destroy the human family through the eamo mediuni he used five thousand tears .ago. It islorrible, and cannot Who bring upon withe wrath of Hat rem But thank God ! &tall our women . are ro easily led by the devil. Ten thous and prayers go up daily from sorrowful haute tothe throne of the Most. High, for the restoration} of peace, and for the happiness of all, 4 otb 1 4 . forth and South. Godspeed the day when .their petitions Omit he ausirered and the country rev tared tolts.antiqut order and harmony. Mar their efforts be sufficient to cast kb* tie-black demon,which has taken 11061MODS of Wakening piston., - odhorsaYethe PO . cithiSNotilt teruld do wall toga to Ipg hemp," In ourestimation they . eenalnitziaita;ar to` go to-• t wit WM, ea himmith hemp. .;,‘ IMINIINIgNiIIi Oirlle tanmay ts eir $ ... Ike . riot forY Amu mf Ur ial iOnii*O atieslogiii to -'iiilYll4 . mss iir s iitlase than fait" eV iii imiatitaig. ~ 1 A Oonsirsiisois. 'Aen the rev ialinii•wh braille* our - aimOen into being*EWki AT : ass not the ifitilpl . igita, sit thai_lrefOlnitiori inns to sever entirely their ednieldinti-Alth Great Britain, they simply *hued their n_.• as Britisheubjectsaani — took, • , arms to maintain them, The revolu tion had been quietly programing -for half a eenturgt /Ad. 3911 Pa . at Lexington th 6 first bloed was ahellstiad the excit ed and maddened pebipilituthed to arms, they I„,a no intention eirept to rid them selves of (Vitae — ling soldier' who • hit,d been quartered among them. A thous and sacred ties still bound them in thd mother country, they venerated the ens. teas and laws of their anoeseora, and it vise not fLathe purpose of overthrowing the Authority of England in , merles t hat the lley,olntiontiry wait was en-: ced ; hut simply to secure to themse the rightsl4i which they were entitled under the English Constitution. It was the iitubborness and cruelty of George 111 which alienated the alfectiornt tit:- the colonists entirely, and finally &cite' theni' to withdraw ft:ern the British Govern ment and establish one of their own. In vain was the warning voice of the • elo "(pent Lord Chatham raised in tie comp ells of the king, in vain were the efforts of the friends of freeilom and peace 'to, • co • convince the tyrant that his urse would 'result in his,own discomfiture and die grime, and that the opitlions,of the world were against him. He persevered t-hia-oeurae-of heaping one injteri-itp, on another, in making war upon the Col onies, and presecutiug it in the most cru el 'and Unrelenting manner, and ,the re sult, just as wise statesmen had fore seen, was the utter overthrow of his au thority and the establishment of a na tion which became his formidable ri val, and the souive of his constant an no 11.1100. • motor. " en the civil war which is nowt, ing oneConntry in blood, first com menced, we do not doubt that more than half of the people of the South loved and venerated the old Union, and would gladly have lived under the old Govern ment, with the asiurance that their rights would be respected. We have the declaration of the President that in a majority of the seceded States, the real sentiments of the people were Un- I ion. Now who is to blame that the whole population of the Southern States has learned to despise , the old Union, and to submit - to initiations ,worse than death, rather than to re-unite with the North? Whose fault is it that the firmest friends of the Government of the United—States have bCcome its bitter enemies? The proclamations of the President, the stets servile—blow -gross, and of such men as Ben Butler an _ Burnside are a sulacienC. ans-' wer. Abraham Lincoln , Is personally responsible for the present dark and ter rible condition of &flubs, for without hit; sanction none of those wicked and uncon stitutional measures could litigarried out. Ile assures us that' history is sepeating itself, and we believe it. We believe that his acts of tyranny and oppression are resulting just as those of George 111 did in the past century. And now as them the warning voices of the great' living and the great dead are raised in vain, the clamor of fanaticism and the promptings of revenge alone are heard and obeyed, and if, as Mr. Lincoln says, hititory repeats itself, the destiny of our country will be a dark one unless our policy is changed, which can only be ac complished by removing the madmen who control it, "Misoegenatiom!" We notice asvoid now much used by Republican Journals, which is not towbe found in the Dictionaries, and we sup pose has noverbefore been used in the English lang, , iw.nt has been intro duced W.' the radicals of the Wendell " and in all probability eminated from thatworthy himself. It is used to soften the horrible Hens which are conjured up by the term am-, algamation. Such a word was never needed befoto in this country, as the one which heads this article; because thou.. who favored the idea it. represents, have never before been in a position to carry their schemes into practice. When un: der the rule of wise and great men our country ;vas prosperous and happy, we needed no word to modify the disguat, ing idea of white people marrying nor: grods, or of having negro bol* without beiag maivied. All swab% people. looked upon such a thing as something which would only be practiced gy the lowest beings who would perhaps be elevated"ty amalgamation with the 24N can race: But when the worship of me. gm* has been introduced ny the domin ant party, and practiced by them from the dreatestto the least, when the most refined of Northern ladies proznise "Ire and honor" to the lowest rfisk of ;fie pees, it is time be alarmed. s Mn Hissachusetts girls are sent , to Head to carry out practically the ideas which the "saiscepacatioa" was in troduced to represent,' there-istrund to fear theslietatting pit which has been dug for the .cialtraditiim Or the - white' race. The Devil is tsar at 1, he ighte withal° old weapon!, end• navel- alloinv Or emissaries to lire, fdr. nd Bettru mint. Binni . he dimnacid the ?fUnitM . Leagie.' his progress has been rapid, 'sad in alt bia elforti fit tisitie is hbr cloven thet**l44/1 - 11tehfible. than Itt the inventiereaf this word. Rehm ct,l7 rnysileiMdhissreft designs ender fair nameeissdpilm ipit *anew; htrio**- ised moths/ Ei0440414144, 4 0;:g sow her : 4 'l' 113 = X7l• sate *mate, • * ... ' , Py.tbe booking.t* . 0, • ' Qui: thvolit! :, .. in the ..t.4 , tti "Demi tear ~: • ' ....,; ..- - teilyui bit ;Wain& ignd . . . • ' , , -1 .114011 ed ''4 , l legal and Constitutioul inaimgr, as the :mooratitcletermined-italuntibe4-it it Commenced at all.— Oar prediction of last week has been fulfilled ; Mr. Penny 'resigned his speakers/4 and was re-deded; thus not affect:MK the conditioivef the.Beneeekthe. 4* Dept that his rintigiuition wits fin admia' - eltm - thet theisenlelaw tette - patio pad.) , in this ear. as in all .o4ittrs, Was constitutional arid right. 'Thelkotof the election of DVASt, (flair did not effect the legelity of his position as speaker ; and the course of the Abolitionists in this instance. as in all others, proves them to be diaionest' and mulornpulous in the furtheraniSe of their plane. From the first meeting of the Legislature, i they have done nothing but denounce the dent : ocrats for squandering thetpeeple's mon ey in wrangling about a^point fixed be yond a doubt' twilit* -then) ; the term traitor has been freely used in the Ren ate against those men who nobly strug gled for therright.; yet no sooner does itbecomapamible for them to carry out. -their schemes in anotherway, than thby straightway admit their dishOnesty and the rectitude of the Democracy,. and el ect Mr. Penny by a majority ofone which they no doubt obtained dishonestly, but which unfortunately cannot be demons trated. • Could the Democratic party succeed iii all other eases in driving the Abolition 'hits to the wall as it has done in this,what horrible wickedness would be exposed. The revolutionists did ndt yield in this ease from any obligation of right ; but Bi l mplitocauso they werwforeed to it by the strength and energy of the Demo. eratio members of the Senate . ity of the measure Of both Federal and State Governments are carried out a gainst-the solenin protestations of Demo crats, and in open violation of the Con stitution and laws. Like all other crimin als they deny this charge ; but if the peo ple-Will see thoirown interests and put Democrats in a position to do .it, how soon will the..eowardly usupers be forc ed to acknowledge theiraritnes, In the Senate of Pennsylvania, a Democratic minority forced au Abolition I t SJORItY to own their evil designs, and to obey the law. Give us the slightest majoity, and we can consign the whole Abolition par ty to eternal oblivion, EMI Abolition orator says his patty is the "child of rmeessityt!' We do not doubt it; an old proverb teaches us tho one-abutter no-law" the condition ofithe American people proves that the other raped, none. —Another call for "two hundred thousand more," has Just been made by the authorities at Washington. Gather to-gether your gold and greenbacks, oiti tens of Centre county, abolitionism wants your money now. ,It will demand your mite hereafter. Colonel Dahlgron's-"Order." "One more unfortunate," Mato DAVI.- ORIN has gone td a bloody . grave, and hie mu tiliated body—for his wounds were hardly healed when he was sent on his last desper ate errrand—iwadded to the heap of ,dead that has been piled on the soil of 'Virginia. ,There is something Teri ia in this. Awl it le made more so by ilia revelatiens since hie death of the actual object of this edven titre. On his march—lto say the 'Abolition papers—he scoured a negro noncombatant, and persuaded or compelled him. to bo his guide to Richmond, through the network of roads and streams, great and small, which encompass the Confederate capital.' This negro, either by accident or 44*n—the for mer quite as probable as the latter—from Ignorance or I , tupidity, took him in d Wrong direction, and DAHL° Rex banged him—tut an incentive to his race or, es VOLTA LIS said. Meg ago of Admiral Area's murder, "poor encourager la alarm." This, was, to say the least of it, ehatpar justice then was meted out to Roe Rey's spy. It so happened— thus again spy the demoniac. of the Aboli tion press—that when Colonel DAHLORXII'II party dithovered their error, they were in the neighborhood of the house of Mr. SEDDON, the Confederate Secretary of Wier. In their rage they burned it to the ground, and would; (horkegairi we. quote), "have thrown the oefahriet, if they had. found him." But it does not end here. • On DAHLOSIIee person, when killed, was found an address to his isiddiers, and a Bert of-order of- the day in case of success, intwitioh be directed them, after releasing thaLleederal prisoners, to arm them end "then kill Jeer. DArts and his Cab inet." And this revelaticla is made end pub lished in. Administration Itele4P•Peee, and read in leagues and alubi, at sanitary three and Christian commissions, without a word of dissent, or eritiolem, or rebuke. It le' thought all right toe tier untamed Men if they be "Rebels." Now we have no (IWO 'anion to overstate feats, ter to do lejestioe 16 the dead, who were mere agent* or min isters •.er to the living, who erp ;esponsible tor tide deed of wrong. We InlYe waited to see if it Weuldlbe eekamed i . es._pe 1.,,,.-... or Jusiiiiiß, It boa bete! ueltier, but it hos been assumed to be right, and Boding it so we pause in sorrowful wander ever the. fact ,---ixi amassment at Utoi • insanity 144°14 st a moment like this, imitates Muth • tde of Week deg warfare. Whitt wolU been Mid if on the woo° of (how* dale, or any other Confederate MOM' WO fell at Antietam or Gettysburg, bid .ban' i% ti fOmed me 40 kill Mr. Lincoln, Mr. ilew4 led: M. d their sitseelletse• *link i whilni'lluit ' Mt Mote l boor raised at snob . , We that tbei' War dertaleat, dlosvOw this bloody 9TH , der.— ... 'Meow wr rains nem Taai.--The oppo• &lon goateed thaketiki right' are a dew sable theory l litlatent -ha otabbl not sea Ike neabsetty eta Viritilde or 'a Pressutylysitat—a Steak Oareltaa or • Mali. 'esettasetta Ohs" of -the same :party. bare ,seuteadal 6pwily-tbilt-theltara Low should be wiped oat en& that we should be but.one great consolidated The first I'l=lstaireasde , ht Aber 11101111aViltataa ' I>t far onkiprikethaOir Ws theory of the ' ler& Ike xer Salt was reteratriss d abalillei spa o,- larpalt=e.etAdkusar Vales. Mir. ttlolait etagretki rid liad• Thi g 4orehissi witpratkipgy ,A(Are. moto =gl ANHOIS TOM E? /.,111•44pusi!.p ti l 'wlgl4' r4"1" Gum • ttiyile sir Ada* end • p tut Origin, and to es of the usinstural war tiktch:arWuhilip.ek e 1/siblt i 'TO know who began it, fahtfairesthst noun" to find our way out of tlabyrilith of her- Tors tber enftfedi dt Tortatipbtiliblir fur. the bitter, burring hatred which liar sprung up between tile Northren and Booth- run amnions of our ; sea - Apse Who were breafdl AL L, ".f , l beittarter of a'n ~; ;;; I t .7 ". 7 • • '.--•- f , !> jqho . lso i width ham', rolled du un %axi. the whole' land' Who 4 • :the "ottges" Which ltgie for a- oat of Republican htlittrrials f - • - I Pest winter, when the ligielatope of-ldsa saChusetts was balder:Wally trying to repent in Vropoelog to repeal its uhoonstitutlenkl hope liberty bill, a dosument of pages, entitled "Bentham_ matragei,.., awl signed by thrill men and three weaken, you laid befbre that august tinily, which. , was published by the legislature as a regular state document, number 121. That, three oldwomen and three , old men of Boston should get up such s pbamphiet, surprise nobody. That the Maseachneet talegisieture should publish such a thing as a stattidocu ment, surprise nobody. But it 4s ft standing insult to the, intolligenoe of the northern peo4 to pretend that there is either Justiele or truth in saying that these "outrages" began with the South. The North began !theta, ih unconstitutional and incendiary warfare upon the . institutions of the South. The oldest "outrage'" recorded in this Mae shohusettardate docuutcht is located only eighteen years back, but it its mire thin a quarter of-a-century Sinai the North began its "outrages" upon the constitutional rights and domestic. peace of the South, h pernailt• ing and fostering the organisa4on of Aboli tion soetetten; and the publiostion of incen diary tracts, for the evened - purposes of f.n..017-rite Beath to give - up property in - ' aslavei%" Or to induencethe negroes to out boir toasters' throats. As long ago as 1885„ the organ of the Abo litionists, the Emancipator, said: "Slavery must be abolished, if not by the fear of the sword, (hen by the sword iuelf 4 . another organ of Abolitionism the fiction Rights, said; "Be the consequensee what they may, say the alaveholders, ne.will not give up our property. TAsa you Inuit take the consvuences. The second annual report published 15th of January, 1884, declared that three were tbitii In oilstones two A,ei*ed anelAfty publics tlone adrtmatlng snob prin ciples as theme. The.dfaionefgator of A .gust, 1886, stated . that there had been formed, during Mem:Moth of July; the New Eng land litatee, and In New York. Penn s ylvania and Ohio, t`wentg-six new an - 11-slavery socie ties, pledged tiThlirsame _bloody business. TL e following statement we copy from the work above referred to: • "This number of the Enmocipagor Is the first of a monthly rertes. !twill be issued to a great extent gratuitously. Already 50,000 copies. of .the small paper entitled Means Rigke have been sent forth, and 50,000 mphs of the Asti-clacery Record for July. Next month the maw series will be repeated." _ _TheAllotting statement was made vp by the Emoneeplator of the number of papers distributed In the month of July 1885: Human Rights ..... ....50,000 copies. • • A. d. Record 50,000 „ Emancipator 50,000 Sim ea Friend 25,000 TouL.—.:_. Whiett . xottlit be two inillons one hnnd'ed Woo - react annually, of these I - noonale - try . WU= inents. The Slave' Frigid, in this list, was professedly a chilintpaper, was written in a very simple style, full of 'hooking nar ratives,. and was c , vldentlydasigned to -cir culate among the "Slaves, as small quanti ties of them were repifetddly seised in vari ous parts of the South. In this word the slaveholder waa represented as "s robber," "apirate," "a tyrant," "a scoundrel who ought to die in egonfes." In 1837, the Anti-Slavery Society adver tised a list of over seventy different publi cations, besides various prints and other articles of simalar design. , The following is a specimen of navertisements which ap peared in the papers at that time: "Picture of ■ slave in dpiine. with a negroo's complaint in poetry. Bj J. P. Whittler." ' Anti-slavery handkerchiefs, ornamented with four ants, and extracts irvom the - "Sieve's Priced, printed with indelible ink, price beets. perdue:). "Anti-slavery seals, giving a fair hnpreu of, a slave In chains, on sealing•way ; price, single, 3A cents." • "Meter lamp of a, slave in chninn;Ca ? single, ..50 ctn." And the object of all We' was to inflame the passions of the mods ignorant of the northren peciple, to stimulate them to open "underground railroads," to steal negroes, and to put into their ;heads the means of arousing them to slauglider their meters. This A'nesacipator, from which we haveAl 'ready quoted, admitted that the Abolition ists had sent missioparies and school-teach ere into the South for the_ purpose of pro pagating their hellish aootrines. It said, "Let them driveeut our misaionarice and sohool-teaohers, we will Use that as an ar gument to rouse the Christian world against the sin of slavery." A very enlightened morality, truly, to good tniesgreittries to inspire the impact • with a thirst for their masters' blood! and then, when the masters drive out such mitt- I 'Jotted.' from their midst, to hold them up 1 as "tyrants" to the Christian world! Arid we send money to convert the heathen of foreign' lands, while we have sash redid.: ing "heathenism" at our owe door's 1 In the name of a righteous , God, if we hare • either prayers or money toire, let up tund them in trying to convert s the Worm. 414.ries and assassins Who for twenty-tire ,yearet have been alleertsd. to carry on th ooo plats of revolution, and blood in our midst. Andthere are these smoag us who, after all • this, have the effrontery to talk about 'South. ern outrage, I" • , u'i Four years lard August, nine Yankee min teem and 'Yankee pedlars were homed Is. the a of Texas, because A was • Clearly proven that they were arming the. - blactintwithrpistishtrand furnishing - them vial, of idryohaine, with which to slaughter Val Olson their masters. And we dove not yet.fort. how the entire Republican Froo/ 1 1 1114 Ithe„Let army of lves, at the. "contras Which, ' le-an swer for thatirlorbant at the jest of the .1401,1071 Nor shell we em.forget Alukt. A hablibilPo was raked over the just bang too. otaa old Xamese.ltorwilkt aruthurglar, , *Oh a agooderoge.Aew ha g 8 " iirl t irentr4! _. Withal lostionatitiot ter kineusoriminite aleoglOor of the itka, men, Iftanewetatt• 4bgarlal Tito Mai 4f Uwe emosefoks mit .04114 .(k_ .eatrege" by; thooesOde or wet Abolition lieokohelil444 WA* - r0n0 4 4.4t0 ,se nightl with °deice 50 . 4158 Wilkey 3 0 1 W7 1 "i4SEAMIWIII." Vot bie *i t, bee& V ' - • '• ". • .lo the ' , VoittAhgeli w whisk ire have fiofir Life bare Willy, ems, in introdeotlos to ' . trig Wit of Orlin' bareiflVOk 4114019411te of tke North boo! t o alooth 'for period ote l Torrit g a g ro ollotrirp_Af# are,mooSto*ibllaikik Wen, • MIL-W4 041 0•Illk i l t l .4 l ?"iip _ forNaik pommy 4 4pr; !it the omega* , WWI -of Pkgi , . .i. . __:„ 4, i Wives. . . Js. '7, . law o , . • . ~i, eentifortkern men find from usjisit sutidoisin se bim7 r i t • 17 th e . may, is ii sa7 mare ilisniapposs is ousts atjastina •by , . r i rc t ato '' . , ) 11 oit ..40.- 7 4 . vie , 4.• 0., ' : _..x.7.- . la " be **oh.- a. .eraw. e - nertervsnotetsd - Abolisisonn • strporthem »pinion snd - Night's lesisly lion againsttitelustltutivnk nitainitlea*** ted righ4 sphilit the constitutional rights Oaks Smut; the devil of semaion would' never hove bombers, itulAbialnion • at a4a,.Ast ,lut.veboan,,, ;,pfOssfrofis . siu4sp- PY i t iii sleet st es° u Di , iiinfiniii6 — :,ThTitiilll64fho ' 147,,.. • Thii shows who began it . An shows 'thtway Mend it too. log • No intelligent man supp,ost ibut the sword over Gan *tore the An '--Iroz. in every possible event, the sword'is pbworline forrooonetnietion. To manner ' and mush is not to ?afore, but L o.deetroy. We may keep op 'env:bring end chrtish ing to the end of time, and If,we offer noth ing else, we , shill never lisingback our sem, ered Unktin., While the Mrord is •doing 114 Work of vainly enforcing obedience to fan, let the whale North sit once and forever re- , cede from its hostility to the buithintione of the South—let. Abolitionism be thorughly crushed out, and that will prove the heaviest blow we can deal at .rebellion fillet will be crushing the head of the Die-inlion serpent. But to talk of sestoring the Union while Abolitionismislefthowlingramput thrmigh iv - as--Ralf of it, is as foolish u to think of dry log up a timid by attempting,to dam up its mad waters, while all its fountains are lift open. How vain! How foolish 'While lbe 'wordings nselesslY at the, throat of re bellion in the let the ballot, let public opinion, let spout, end press everywhere lig at the throat of the reel author of, all the mischief, Abolitionism in the Niirthl-041 "A Reba Mon" on the Peelle Coed According ter the theory of the Congolids , Hoarders, California and Oregon are to-day in open rebellion egaieet the United States government, WM, in feet, have been .evev ranee Congress enacted that the peopleehould take bite of paper printed by Mr. Chase es money. California has constantly repudia ted and spit upon this law. South Carolini, in her worst nulifiestion never went fOrther an te peo e o tit aye gone in opposition to this measure. So "rebellious" are the dispositions of the Californians, that it is said not to be a healthy business for any one to even so much as hint in that State of forcing the greenbacks upon them as legal tender. A Roller greenback passes there for 80 cents. or whatever may be ifs value ac cording to the premium on;gold in the-New York market. The result of this nullifica tion of United States laws is not at all pleas ink to the functionaries at Washington, but exactly how to deal with it is a delicate ques tion. The army and navy officers on the Padilla coast, who are, of course, paid in "legal tenders," are.. petitioning for more wages, as their present pay, after doduorng' the discount on it, is not, ft isellegentomifir cleat for their support. Will Congress pass a special enactment to relieve these men Will it recognise the validity of California nullification . We are now in the midst of a gigantic war for the avowed purpose, in ma , ny quarters, of compelling the southern States to submit to the laws of Congress. Why is' an exception made as to California and 9regon f True, the oases are slightly different. The-southern-States. by enact of sovereignty, withdirrN from the present et eral Union, and declared themselves ex empted, by virtue of snob withdrawal, from obedience to all _Federal laws. California claims to be a eofislitutional portion of the Union, and yet her people nultfy such laws as they deem ob-noxious, and are thus prac tically, though Dot theoretically, oat of the Ifni on. 175,000 ~ We oak *thy do net those who pretend to be such sticklers for State submission to Federal rule take this California re:Millen in hand? Why make flesh of one and fowl of another? Or, is it necessary first tiisubdne the South and strike down the very fountain and source of State rights, and then turn their armies northwariLte exterminate what little may be left of it hero? We confess, however, not so much to wonder at the coarse of the people of California as we lid at the course of our own people in the northern and eastern States. TMM Congress should pass such a monstrous set as to make paper legal tender for all debts, involving's. it does, the violations of contracts, and that the people should tamely and slavishly submit to it as they have, passes all human comprehension. Gold and silver are, atmording to oar Consti tution, expressly made the legal and only legal currency. Compulsions' sots cannot affect or alter this constitutional prevision, or change or modify it in th e slightest degree. Subservient Judges like those in this Stute, who decided the legal tender clause come, ' tutional, *lll yet be classed with Jeffries and other names born to m infamous immortial ty: It is well understood that the Adminis tration dare not bring the question before the United States Supreme Court as tlnie trench now stands, as the Judge' will not, even for the sake of "military necessity," bloat their names forever by'renderingseteh a decision 1111 the "government". demands. In the midst of an invasion of over a million of armed men, when every home and every fireside is at stake,the Confederate Congress have steadily refused to make their paper I currency a legal tender. Whatever' may be the present war, that ammo on theyart of the southern Congress mllistand out in beilit relief man act of devotion to their orgetio law, even in a wee of dire necessity, unex ampled in thru6rld's history, while the in femme desiothoh of the Federal Congress of forcing upon the people whole elude of the, government's paper promises to pay, armee; 7, will befoeter,a standins reforesoh pad is repudiation in Us worst and m=leus fbasawr with every dollar it forces upon the people it -tona a pertain pea mintage for whir*, it renders no equiva 'lent. It robs the greet laboring olaYses without amt.,fudievo_ PsYinf thcm. --; But all wrongs 'Am their punisament,ao this willdoubtless reset upon the people who have submitted to it with- fearful - Tower. California, bs: the amuse ske has pursued, will save herself from that dilmsal finantial vash that rseir sterol all i tiii=s Statue in theta's. dibewill pals , tha_war suseatOad, and whew We Owe through the' us greenblek hese 'that now VlO: mm ies and demoralisesihn. people by in ill ith44lllolr ad extra megaena end ire sak e.. l the -prostration Incidan~t Shassto, %literals bd sound ati4 halthyvher !Mancha system sets, and her .ple prosperous , and happy ay Bopk.- loAirimgemti aixTp . • lab tioat—lt pelatertat Ilibbee at pietee Met on beedat that the Atha' of the Contention We of Pewee that in “treeborn French oitloopo . bet, Vier44r9Vl/141n:.015k. tittberldtfbei). , , , 001C.,tito0*** Tti't 4rmia l4 ' r• == PR - • , brow or NZ , refereim t 4 the : ot. Gum •!. are mitisisit : globtbleeo laillipred j, , Planed and ant .weallby Ripublioace 'ma-go:yid 111 - 451s:' — Thtwilipuld . . , Dud the mimes of these guilty instigators or Mobs should be carotid's preitamd, so that there need be no mistake mode l . It li matter of remirk that nearly army one of • . • • leading aboliti9pistaarente4 ofwealik. 'and prominence whb encourage lb, mobs. They are the oligandi of our Sta g ) a the North. They are the natant( LA the white laboring max They 'Atria , Jug satire about,the negro_ than simply as a means to aooomPlish tUfir ends in destroy luet.lttrp?orwhite mans fad getilig rid ltr his banana:o l in elections,' and- to4reveit • Intluoiniie Id frz,ining - thi polity of oar Govinzudent is Os prOteetton pc the white man's item "a a free citizen. Thise thitige should not be forgotten or-zoldikezi. • ,ffsratortsm.—Antalpmation, or, to use the term applied by the lascivioue nigger-biving "lady" Miss Dickenson— Miemegnation--has gained a stronglooti-kold in New York: On the 6th inst., a negro regiment rigged out in brannow• uniforms, with whitegedter booted and gloves, and, a "splendid silk banner," theblindivrark .- iPf. 'the mothers, sisters, and maidens" ,of the N. ff.' Loyal. League, were areas up in front of the league club nob, alters a Mr. Charles King offered the "love and honor" of the aforesaid - matrons, maid., est., to the ebony•erdwd, in the me* taddiv and voluptuous 'Minds:nom and to, which ,the lair .miseegenaticmiste • responded by the waving of linen and upheaving.ot Tenderly throbbing boatels,. The papers Ray that no w),fte soldier' ever left that city for the the atre of blood and carnage, or ever returned with honorable emirs gained — in a oottiffel for* nigger equality, that received anything like such a demonstration for the ,reason, we supPoee, that Rotti . the fullnese of the heart the mouth speaketh."—West Chester Jeffe, mates. Tut FAz.es PRomtsiih or ABourrovrew.—' The Abolitionists told the people lost • Poll before the election of Curtin, that they should vote t tele ticket if they *lobe.' to see pie were grossly - belied, forbefore 'l'OOl%OlM vote of ibe State was counted a draft was or dered arid made for three hundred tAnusand assn, in spite of the fifteen thousand abolition loyal majority given for Shoddy Curtin. The Abolition candidate was successfel, and wliat has beenlhe result? Why twe more drafts, one right on the back of t u lle ,other, have been operating on the country; *lar ger expenditure of lives and treasure ; and still the people have no evidence whatever that the rebelliort is any nearer a close than it.wes,before the elaction. Thus the honest masses have been deceived. Can the Abo lition hordes succeed In leading them on any further in their owo ruin t They have been shanging names, cheating, robblnand sail ing under false promises ever' shied they had an existence. Senator .Pomeroy, of Kansas, the author of the famous anti-Lincoln circular, made a noteworthy speech in the Senate the other day. lie declared that the Republi can party wan dead, that it had fulfilled its mission, and that it would be necessary to "Organize a brand-new party to carry out the don.trineeetnnirrnsil ftmdem._ IA dt. riry clear, from what he said, that the honest radian? Republicans. have made up their minds not to snpport•Mr Lincoln, and de spairing of carrying the June convention. owing to the enormous patronage of 'Me ad ministration, are about to enter the political field an a new organization.mitir Fremont as their chosen leader. TMe will make the eon tent lively. —Tun OSAWAN RADICALS WANT A MACK. WA/1111,7(MM.- At thehanquet of a Gorman Natinal Club, held in New York a few eveninga since, the first regular toast "George Washington" was responded to by Dr. Nrakowitzer in a very lengthy nddresa. The speaker dosed his remarks with the following words: "May our children live to see the day when a black Washington will adorn the I"roaidential chair in the White Rouse." _The liohnea. Co. • Farmer,lsay the Sanitary Fair at Cleveland "is little better than a nigger show, and it is said those who are kaoli' as trentoorats cannot go , itttltottt being insetted. A gentleman attempted to take a finemar ble bust of lioughui and was driven off with hisses and cries of "Copperhead," "Traitor." ete. it lady lining up aline portrait of Oen. McClellan, which was kuseked deep, and she was pushed. net of theluilding.' 'Secretary Seward, writing to a mess meet log of the U. S. Christian Commission at Philadelphia, speaks of 'the Sisal States, the loyal Gorertioyt, the loyal . Cowie, the •loyal Ministers, the 'bye Console, the best Doctors, the foyer Tett:there, the loyal Cler gy and the , loyal Press, as maintaing the Union." We shall by and by hear of loyal chimney sweepers, loyal boat-cleaners, loy al rag-pedlfiers, loyal soft soap Antlers, loyal Lagar, loyal pigs and loyal toads.— Of loyal thieret, we have o penly and to i Aware; Slumtwood, of the Distriet Court, of Philadnipide, one of the meet sitle jurists of the dissented }Hem dor' opinion of Ms o litpuges. judges ihistssind Stroud, in • °see where Teri tenders nog" hi 4 been refined in pszmint ers nisi pronounced the set of Congress estaldishin a paper leg tender, its inteoWstitntions The opinion !bough it dissenting Voice, wi hare its Inlineisee Nikita midis erthoisit rood i 6. ~ NE " 43:Alia0Mra.NTS. . . DO YOU W. 15.8 TO WI 017UPD ? ; • . BUCHAN" • PNGLISU DR PULP 'las than 1111 Pam the wmit oases of a • •► ea Primagare reisaj) Mama Weak— nem, set Thinsel,:semuli end mar tolto Pitotitloar no matter from what Gana pro.. AIM& Ptiae,O ,Mar box. Pent jpet paid, try undies AMlket; of an order_: s itt*Anftor JAlalltifi.•11111411 , , •• • finttlon me . MieroltleUtr,lB%-441n; ti 4 • ' A"1 In tie Orpheus Qouriof aselii eeseter, . . ' • &Me PM 44.044etee • 494. mloujto .b.=.2 4 IIiTOT/ON v. ~: ' • '. ,• , •:1 1 . • . ~ .1.11 • 111 , 6'oolo Mary „1140411- 14. widoit of ftee4" Um 411,4 her jpe 410ga it Pt• of tbe * it' 'We 4etr, to rebilb . tbe= 4 - MUM, • • e Mei wpb. te bbefiel4 tend Ifoe4xidtenialien ' itellaeldgpl_ilw 41146., 1=21V11.1). 71,14of t aW yid* % WWII 1 116"4.0100 1 ' :r. 4R4'0,.. 1 . • 1 -,.. -- •• •.. 1 p..1 ,• 4 14, t , ;sibtrakiB4l/4 , r4f,i r , • , , Qqvi A: 101,. 'IA ofto )1 •.t 111 Mtn& -* ."4-• .$•.4 1.4 - 41114;.0 •111**41;4•SWILE- NMa j&B,CARE. ‘. 'l'• .c • : i • • -.; • • " ie. US /MIR !NOT 1 ' Ninth, son* Thn suiNeribiriiiii 404, -40:40i. .A — S — befiFo ' embracing al Ajte new WWI or thlt beg ' stokes --bolted peered, to the late 'idvtut§s:eigr i , sad will be meld st 4eiet , • Velvets, litntesele, .11ireibi Sad , • Vessistse Cattar, - _ • 4 4 , de. Denton' who aro stoat Amishlit* ass ;toques lad td mote us sziastlititho 'oho* goods ',stilton& to isw a kbag thole' Malftialli la mob' ieldueemedi bidbeld'ott silifitdrot • hdl. dot#plows& - • ' kiiemolok. sts SLUR K. Mrs, Much 13, 11-41 mes. MILLINERY AND 0 o.lkB • ovisitr vuitorTi of tats laical insportaßom, and of Um 'nowaot said moot liuldoosbleletyloo. OUR STRAW DaAutrarxr . comprise every varteti of Bottikete t ifw and Trimmings to be Seoul in tbet 10e ; of the lessee eed nest approved shalsi Nig styles. .540kitingallarly 11 100616 , . Tosin lesspsettally, • WARD o. 10% 100 i 10710seth fisteond Bes., PIIIL'A Monk 111114 18114.-11. 0 /iPIIAW73 COUNT • Bi virtue of an order of tut ogler of the Orphowl'Coult of Crotrementy will be em pined to public 'sale, at the Court he..., in the borough of Bell forte, on • MONDAYAFRTL Mth ' r at 10 o'cloilt. r. M.. MI Mutt Mind* montage or lot of ground Situate is Burnstfe_Twp, _Combs e....,bounded and tleeerlAed as .fitiktr" Dfltin - • ming at m-While Oak Slur=, thence by land 'of John Walls, Nord two de e med Last, 181 per elms to a post, thence by land of Divehi Oswald, North 891 draftee Won 122 , omelets ps. It post, thence Sontit.two dogitfibiWest 179 . ritkhos te a port end atones. them.* Smith MS degrees Nit 127 torches to the place of beginning; mania'. int 11 • • . e' nett meneenr, on which is meetaill hew iflank- • frwoM imam, .i . setd. large new bank ham and oth er oat-buildinge,known as the property of Mar -I.ln Long, TERMB OF SALE.—Ono half Alse parch/um Money Imitend oaths eonfirmation of ale- and the.reeldne in IMOyosr therinfthr. with inteseet, to be twountorby hoed mad mertgago ow the premises. mijryllc March 18th•1884-3t. Administrator. SWALLOW two or three hegsbeads of 'llueltu ..Tonle Bitters," "Sampanla," "Ner. v ono Antidotes," de., Le.,and after you aro ant- Wird with the tesult,theby one box of OLD, DOCTOR BUCHAN'S ENO LISH SPECIFIc PILLS—eml be maim to health and vigor in Ins than thirty days. They are purelyycgits Me, pleasant to take, prompt ' and- sandary in their egret* en the beetle down and alttrerre: mentitutien. Old and young can take them with advantage. Imported end stadia the IS ni; ted Strum only by. Ft. 8. BUTLER. Station 8., Bible house, New„Tork, Genital Agent. P. 6.—A boa sent to any address ea receipt erc t lre—sildrJr.Li_thre-Ds//erpoat firm US!: NO !—Brell AN'S HP ri• I - 7f(l Pll4s an the only Reli"hl• Reined', fur air triseasea of the Seminal, Vrinitry anti Alarms *)lien► 24 roe ors item, anti he aural Om dollar a gar. Oa. ban will per - feet a cure, or money refundsal. dent by mai L on receipt of price. 7311118 & AVMS. Station I), Bible Hams. NOW Tort Oeneral 'Agana • March 13th, 1384—.3m. 1 1) . Nr . 1/01111112 ARCM ITP. ARK ormwca TOR BPRI.XO 1863.. 100 pea. si. Taney GILI[O. 00 pew, Indut Silks, $l. 190'• Good 81iek.8119.. 290 " Ordered Plsdle 81111 w. • 4 - -4,l,idne Black Silk Iflrilfl7T. Meek SinlP, $6, 5. 4,3, 7, liar yard. Brown dilko, $6, 64, 3, 7, 1 per yainil. * bloke Antiques, all NAM. • 'iMOitialetiont grarradialak . alagnifineat'Omesdrop. , „ Itiebut, Oidadoo• and PrOo/ow. Bpting EiIIAWLII.. flow ilosoolaold N. 11. (formai aworan 4ooDif. eat of Moe, Wror March 11, 1,854.-3 m. Penneylrani., t Centre County. -"` I—J. P. Gepheatt, Clerk of di•Orphane Court afraid County et &metre, de bsrebp certify, that at asterisk:nig Copt bold at Beilefuste ter nib daj'ofJaneary A. IX 118.4 Were the Ilunora able Judges of said Pend. Ow mho ti o a a rub) was araatad pppooo {be netts And Orpresents- Oro afioldt Jlrcaxns Stoo'd., pa o.m. into :Comet , es, the fourth Meshy of Apsdl .mm 4 to except os refer to nerept, at skew raw° wby 'the roll estate °fluid dlissoisood should not be cord. ' In tattion'y iriumgcl hielliefooirto - hit my band andtataxed the rest of saki 00021 at Behr , fonts the 2hth da of amiliad. A 1884. J. P. 4SPRALT, -- AU r AL4IO ',&NulD:mm-7, t , Mach 14 'l4-41t. ' • Sheriff, vil3ixti t ).lBTO .• Paws R • rtrazumux, AND firaboll,NG APPAII4II tea„ . Yeslby 44. co .A. 6.? °7llEira-wi alt. era sonslutly Ca Woad r . ,w .Jail! witimots. .• sportaminspot, 8. IL Or: 2811141 Walnut. . l*Astik 41 '61..4ui. • • '' • ' 4 :44,. 114114106 4 1 10 . " 'ti Bth '64 rasa MOTO% 81:40. ', w pr . e e ms is lb. habit 1141 6 0 t II .''' l r 4 ' I I ra ta • r for Or • -r: ticr,;.., .boihat oloata to 0 4, - „, , ` I* , aim 'impose eferitiolt Tbittello . 1 of thil Cloaltraetristirliptel trtilleresigli*e iat MkeY Pa ituttr mak& it , bit*: fettsiebeti. suob 'reheating. Ti Aikto Wei . at• • t 3mlieorcnotro zrelmt "Id We * ll .4 ' * WAst pal no A rai , to . 4 ,1, 7 / - ilteer, whet* . vet ?'l . It 61.1 , hit ..,, soceptelt *staide, • *rk A . "tvlo• -;...54, WC 1 . A ram 4* A • Ai* ' ' *4".1 ,Of thleatontsejr ' ,OPINP4I - 41%-4 A1i044e14 • ilkeettileAlli, .A , A•nt ,- —40.404 0 14 '• , ' '• . tr ' ailliiP~gs ~,. v , .„, ..: it .. , ...7.,..*.14,„,..,.-.., . !who AD , eAßPEtthd;sc: OIX7PILALT Iroo k Nike ; • • 4%1 N
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers