AitniorratirOAttlunan P. GRAY ME R, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR --------- BELLP.FONTE, PA PRIORY MORNING, ,MAY "26, ISO TERMS.—S 2 per year wbeu paid in AA ranee $2.50 when not' paid in advance, and 6;110 when not paid befalls the alpiratit,n of the'velr. The News. A plot of the negro soldiers at Meinplds.to murder every Confederate paroled prisoner there, was discovermleatud thwarted last week. Thursday night was the time fixed for the was aaere, but white troops had I.een pieced on guard, and when the negroes atteMpteil to sally from their quirterr, they Met a determined re nitence. In the fight which took place twenty 'of the Disguise were lulled and wounded. ,Sinee theik,ther haVb been. strongly gutuisl . ... gene ral Waahbul-ne has been supersede. in coin mend at Memphis, by iieneraiJohn_il. :41uith. Oct Saturday afternoon Jelfeririiilidi Is and his fatuity were still on board the stesani, Clple • in Hampton Roads, Alexander II Stephen• and Col. Reagan were removed to the gunboat which sailed, it is supposed, fur Folt Delaware. Clement C. Clal waa not capture( with Jef. Tenon NA ts, but. voluntarily y; no b up to stand nn thichargis of hieing implicated in the assassinntion of Mr. Linco , n, Jacob,' Thompson offers tessurrender blin•elf ,f he "Anil be guoranteed a fair trial on the same charge A NAshvilio despatch announces the capture of Isham G. darns, Confederate Itbveno,, of Tennessee, towher with Rate documents and humirtdpi , ,usan.ld , Ilan in speeic. There is a rep ,rt from Sew Or:ean, of the as sassination of the Confederal., I corral h,vl,:, Fnalth by a :Major .McKie, in consequence ol theluulty teals tho latter irtiss, outs! suesu cotton speculations , . General Herron has occupied Clinton and Osyka,,,ist Louisiana- The people in Louisiana are represented as overjoyed at the end or the General Sherman warrliefore the War Com mittee yesterday, testifying in relation to his conference with Johnston. Ills 601'inl report of the conferente will shortly he pithlishol. Five Isms of the arrhis es of the later Confe.l - Government have been brought to Waah- Ingtha from North Carolina. Jeremiah Clemens, formerly United States Senator from Alabama, died at Ilunty lie on ti..turday last. AltitigTED AU. N. -On Tuesday last the Editor of the WATCIMAN wad taken ill- to custody.by the Deputy United States Marsha) tsf - Ma District, and conveyed to Pittsburg to answer a charge of coun seling resistance to thedraft, and with advising drafted men not to report.' Mr. Meek arrived home again late on Thursday, T;ine the worse foi his little jaunt, much to the disappointment of some of his abolition friends, who had given it as their opinion t';:at he was at ' last, finally disposed of, and hoped to hear of his death by hanging, or :-'une other such dire intelligence. This makes the fifth time that the. ed o itor pf this paper has been . arrested through the instrumentality of' abolition bloodhounds. It seems to be their in tention to pursue him to the death. 17wy will fail to ac , :ompliAlL tlvir In consequence of' :‘lr. Meek's absence the matter in this paper has been pie ' pared by a friend.. deficiencies, ~ should be observed, this will be a suffi cient excuse, General Lee and the Baltimoreans. We see it stated that over forty thou sand dollars have been raised in Balti more for the relief of General Leo and family, who, it seems, ,have been re am:yid, by the confiscation of their prob efts! in Virginia by the Government, to, a condition of absolute necessity. It VW thought that these subscriptions would amount to one infrared thousand &Mara before they closed, in Baltimore alone. This shows the estimation in which General Lee is hell, as a man, by everybody. an I will, no douh r he most gratifying to the general himself. Of emirsi,ahoTition4intrnals will denounCe this generous proceeding, and 'ileac it as another evidence of the sympathy of "rpperheaflism" with "rebellion" and " - rebellious chioftains." We look upon it, hnwever, only Its the sympathy 0f.1.4-• warm hearted people for a brave, genar t,„ mw, and humane, btit unfortunate man. j In the course which General Lee took in the war. ite acted upon his honest coo -1 victions of right and wrong. He has been a noble enemy, and a foeman wor thy of the steel of the most honorable y r of our commanders. lie has been a hu.- O . ; m,lne. and merciful leileradand,alt hough .-.:, '1 the Fates stilre against him, awl he is ‘,l) . nniv a prisoner on parole, he yet retains t Fe respect of both friends and enenne. i , '1 he money raised for him in Baltimore, •k: therefoh, is but a testimony 6f the esti ,r: !nation in which he is hell personally, • t ' au.' will he so regarded by all honorable • i minds. Those little souls who cannot • 1 1 rise above party malignity, awho do a not, know whet a great tpingie nk is to be t • I magnanimous; who are acivated by that • e t basest, of all human passions—revenge, ,:, ;: will denounce thie act of the people of .t , Baltimore as a ded of treason for which Itli theyshould.be made to suffer; but all . ) good Mel who have the real interest of - the country at heart, and who desire the • ', restoration of the old, cordial feeling be `,tween the North and BOUth, will pro ', , nounce it a wise step toward the accom t Ptishment of that most, desirable result. . It , The hearts of the soutifele people are l', ? not to be won by acts of petty meanness, or by the inflietion upOsii them of a Ina '''4' t, !MMus revengeohat would, now that they are without the 11115$1/5 to . help themselves, be disgraceful and infamous. Onl.Tie contrary, all those acts which go to show that the northern peep:care not disposed to be otherwi.e than magnani moils, will be sure to be.,appreeinted by thew, and will redound to our undoubt ed advantage. The generous act'of the Baltimbreans in presenting so large a sum of money to the fallembut still fav orite general. i e 'e. will have- its due ef feet, and may,,'under the cirt ntwdanees. be the first step toward.. a entuidete re, toration of the 'old kindly feeling . be twee!) the two Qectioto. • , --J Hon. Jere. Clemens , , __ Jere. ex-roitel Senator from Alabama, diva at Iluntt rdle. in that State. h few day , a4 ,, .We are not informed a:: to the isamoliitte can-e of hi. death, but font our L. trowt alge of the Mau, we art inclined" to 1,, e he is wily another' viethn bf that unforrunate habit which destr k o ,, ,, s o ma ul of our he:t men—we man the habit of ut luring too freely in the irse of in Jere. Clemens was one of the moet talented 'men of hii, day. lli, geniu, brilliant,•and his infagination elorynent, glowing, and for. id. • lie has said and written stone of the molt beautiful things on ree n:11, and his published sile,eehes are mull, of eloquence and, intellectual power. 'lle was con.idered to he one of the Mo.t: brilliant Men in the United State, Senate, anti the chamber of that auctht body has oftentimes been charm c't int') Acticc , till as death by the m agi c of hi-. doll' nice and the poetry of hi. nought. Mr. Clemen, teas al-n a novelist of fine ability, and hi,. book. have•alway When the Isar broke out Mr. Ch men-. in common with mo-t, of the 'nen of North Alabama, liteld out. for the izos criinicht a+ long a, his adherence was of any avail; but ashen the ‘ Stateprsel the secession ordinance; A.eing that it would be thele-s to aaay I-"tbeer contend tigdand. the Itralar current that sea- fa-t li(rnyine the country into revolution, he Hi iii with the new order of thin,,-, and hcea'nc a major Volleval in the - Alabama State three-. For a while he occupied a prominent po-ition among. the leaders of the South, but finally recanted, and a hen the I 'Mutt] State+ troops penetra ted to Hunt -ville, Alabama. he volunta rily renewed his allegiance to tilt - 0 lo s crnment. rued ag ,in becatnJ a supporter or that Fe I •ral can-c. Since Oicti, bou. ever, he Lai lived. in retirenn..noeso ting hini-tdi chiefly to litertiry pursuit,. At the time of hi, death, or shortly be fore thadestnt, it, h- said he cut, engag ed in writiu4 a romaine of the war. Whetht'r the book hatl been finished or not, we tlct not know. Like too many of the most talented men of our country, Mr. Clemens WA - i hi, own worst enemy, and while, at the time of his death, his mind was yet brilliant, his body was but the wreck of what it hail been in the hey-drQ, of hip, rCIIOI% the cry of , c o pp e rh.Npi ' out with the end of the war which cave ri , e Iti2W names and new epithets will be applicA: to ;he Democratic party. But. as there is no:hing in a name, and as principle , never die: the alorion , old I,,,rty, under whose mild a,:d boUignant reign our country attained its place among dr' nations of the earth, ha; nothing to fear room the revilings of itc, anemic Like a rock in mid-ocean, ovtlr who-e breast the 'Takers beat in standsit a , eternal a, Truthherself, and as immutable a , the principles upon which. it is fuanded. The gates 91 abo• litioni , m shall not prevail againAlit, nor shall the waves of fanaticism o overwhelm it with shame. Gather around its stand ard, 0, ye peoplc! and plait it gloriou fold_s so high above ti/.2 aspirations of its enemies, that all the oppressed of the earth may Pee it; and rush to claim a share in its blesshms. ----General Kirby 'Smith, whom we mentioned in our last issue as having successfully withdrawn his army. into Texas, with the intention of carrying on the war on his , ingrfrok, has, we ty)4a, been 'ilioassinated by one of his own offi cers, with'whom he had some difficulty What his men will do now withouttheir , leader, we do not prcrend - at know. It iv probable, however, that, the control ling qpirit gone;-his army will disband and.take the benefit of the amnesty prin. I &illation, or make their way into Mex ico, where tkole is now a first-raft chance for adventure. --I-President Johnson has issued a proclamation declaring all the blockaded ports, with the exception of fire in the Staie of Tex,as, ripen to commerce with foreign nations. This will give a re newed impetus to our foreign teadegand reinvigorate bpsincss in all directions. The . change from war to peace is so great that people hardly yet realize that hostilities have ceased, or that the white winged messenger of good will to men has onee.more set foot in ourland. But when our immense foreign trade begins to re . % ire, and our people become as in tuested in commercial pursuits as they once were, the blessed fact 'Aill become more palpable to the L masses, and joy - and hope will once more reign in their hearts. —Let us thank God that the war is over, and the dreadful slaughter that has so lung desolated the country is at an end. Truly have the American peo ple for the last four years been a nation of,runurners,,and mem years west yet elapse before the bleeding woundshaussed by the war will be fully healed. Let us hope that our country may never again be witneso to Bud/ a scene of blood and woe. %- , --Next fall the dennieracy of Ce.n tre county will once more he called upon ; • e7ot.ce that our cotemporarics of the to Cockle on their arun : s upport of , republican press, together with not a few their principles and their party. Are ; Dopers that have churned to be DenmeratiC, they preparing for the or d ea l? A re are bu=y in the Manufacture of golden vis their weapons in order'.',... -A kicsPerato b ion w, s ig Th o r r ti n ie te f u t d u e r ia e l of o t f h e c slaverountr.t it.;pbottretande effort .. will be made by tat tifipositinn to' these papers one not knowing t 3 o - the contra carry this county. and plant the r00t..3, of ry a sold suppose iihat the people of this abolition-nigrerisin in this vineyard of country bad far eighty years been groaning f under the weight of terrible ills-inflicted by pure iletn.wratiii principles. We 'trust "idaserv. and that the cause of those ills. the tletivolat of• Centre county will beirui.irrnoved. we hate now only to kohl e , m p re l ie nd, in ti me to avert 'our lilts and catch' each his full of intim. titer-ride and . unending !dealings. tophe of abolition triuMpli. the twig . "slavery,. these immaculate papers gay. ' nittule of the intercota involved. and be- 'dms been the terse of this country." Well even now to organize their 41 "" alai be no, bin we are not able to see it in' 11 ' 41 ' 1 ' 1 " any better than we are able to We have nothing, to frar prOVided every I t discern lbrottgli its extinction "such nn , luau does his duty : we.niTh to , bounded proeperity and happittess nit these , itt .1. 4, upon thet..mind of eter)-ileinocrati wioeacres of the press foretell. Up ter the ih the comity the i.t, t there .is a 1 t'rcgking but of "" rebellion, no nation was I ever so prosperous and happy as this. with great nork to be ..16.10, awl that each alithe curses attached. and not a. rude of Than niu-t dtt hi , part in order to secure ; that prisperity was attributable directly* the find. of close so better 0 'deuce the ueeinti . pli: , linieta. of the whole of the " of tite excoleneelq stir form of r , ovornment allotted task. IA t ii tact be kept.in a „,l o f the „ lioness of th e " people under rymenitrariee, the time the elect it cold,' have Int eitfu , mishr.l than has been lion day arrives. let the dearrovratie exinbuled the citizen sold lens in their tr of Phis county b e `') ur g' ini" 31)4 '; - Th i a foug ht l / ggldl in f:r 'n' a ntn r,i n t ul , t ;r at P t, e n rP icifu7litae A a t t . 'wa l ly for the flay that there mill Se no colon -tie polo icht 4 tos to power inado the :shadow of hope fin the opposition, struggle one for tlw abolition of slot-err Had slavery really been such a curse to the people of this country as in now vepresen ,..ted, our our soldiery would have manifested less love of the oil robot - TM the old flag, and is..uld have hod for a battle cry "down j with a constitution that tolerates slavery, - but on the contrary'. their arms were nerved and their hearts warmed by their recollee , dons or, the blessings rather than the cut ses who, thev had realized 'tlint slavery is an 011,We are tel writing to deny . but in its abolition we ars to con front a greater evil. We have not only let the elephant loose to roam at will, but we have filled the breast of his keeper with it thirst for vengeance. We hate gained the nholit ion of slavery, and will! 44 the duty of keening ail earring for. at piddle expen.e, four millions of beings totally unable to care for themselves. This It try Do Means lituttrat wit liriV' - rg'ain ` ed. We base entailed neon ourselves the necessity of maintaining 1 ,, r yea's to Collie, a stnoiling army of at le ist one botelnsl thousand men, to keep in subjte.zat hot and to enforce the obedience of tire people of the Souldi We have thrown away as a worthless bauble the spirit of comminsti , C. 'which a wiser and better statesman than any 1101 C laving. assured us in a voice or w ts the • rthrl rinrople of republics." 110 have loaded ourselvis to the earth with a debt, the interest of which is a gear er “curse" than African plat rev cot, hl by any pos.ihili'y hope been. time have exchanged freedom of speech for lied, loin, ail treedolll of the press fir the arbitrary will of petty military - and chit officials. This is no p . ,cture or prophecy. but stern reality —nn'Undeniable fact *Mid it is in the lure of tbese stubborn truth', !bat unthinking men mid eitili4l.llzed presses seek t console themselves welt aleinnv impo-d -lde of realisation. It is for better for the people to know and be prepared for the worst, than to be deceived as they will be if they heed these visionaries —Pontiac Juck sontary W. While. ei-proyo4 mar shal or this ilistriet. Wrjtci :11(4ter to the abolition organ of Clinton qiiinit'. in which he ju-tities the Lod; Haven ria tees, and sttiri, - ; that he is in favor of hanging all Northern rebel , . Now. if we arc to judge by thi- it i dixdual would be much liet.ter at iptagi",ty around other peoplc . - riiwit, "and turkey than at anything el-u. as rumor say 4 be hail con,i.lcrahle experience in this br.pielt or the ititity;ity "bit." Opposing the Government ra," C:C111. lyu a, strtix - dized pro, of the patty, and more pa t 'mutat ly hit p,,rt ion or it,coutndie.l renegade Democrats. has maintained itsCU by fighting at mythical enemy which it was pleat I to C ill .• copperheadism " T1,115 gorgon 1,11 eta many he ohs as the fabled dra, and. 1.1.110.111 ill its character dint no tiro of them moil I eoaclly ague as to its 1111,11 ilitng 1101 in accord ance with the 11 1 11 01111 nevi ficedom dog and the wholmet:e ph uo l et of ti o; go veraielit .1/y r odic tl office lo,blers and• c.miractotp, whether it was Ille tenets of allaiWiglinid, the w ~r Dintform of (len McClellan, thtt ternis allowed by Grant to hoe, •or the pc 1,7 c M 1 singenient of (;, , o s;,, , romm. lin-, m the uptulou of Ili, truly ,loyal, and gond; been ‘, rank, feat, r ing treason," —,copperheadi.m,' , 'c If it ka.l not been for his bugbear, fliich sas twat, .1 `• the foe in the rear, — It 11 bard 14 tell- what a hug. , number of set tors, outer-holders, bar-room politicians, and galvanized preachers would have done In elliihtt their patriot to zeal and—keep out ; of the army. Although it is stated by those gentry that the Ile: meratie party has for 1 tour years opposed sod embarrassed the government, we fail to ace wherein. unless it lio that..our party has furnished those self styled loyallate• with a pretext to stay at home, when their valliable services could have been made available in the army—if 'lnot as soldiers, at, least as cntrenchers and general scullions. ln no other way has the.' Democratic party opposed the government.' Its members are to be found lu every rep- tent and division of all the armies of the •overnnaont throughout the entire war, and c taxes to carry on the strife have been borne as equally and willingly tio the Ahu r a. Lion r:aity ham borne its •+bare The cry of olq•.•aing •ennbarrri99- . tug' the government was only ittiseil hy do"-e of the• abolition party who staid nt home---ovho had iiciertiuni.) from the start to stay at home— and who e. - ,ulllll t hare been Ihnshed into incasing their precious, fine-cloth persons in the truly blue, or risk iru their ti I it fel carea'sses to Intifilation oil the battle•fields Thee bar-rosin, fire side heroes the babbling, blatbeeing con serfators of. •• t rue loyalty . ' and " never-dy ing (never ily tug In the army, any h o ve. ; t o ed a cloak to conceal theirpec vtlattng raids upon the Public I'reastiry, turd tl , at e*y sufficed for their purplve. 'I he ad inin,,striti;on at ‘‘aslttiigton had probohly neither limenor opportuntly to watch that class of ' , loyal - ;tants:les, who Lad attach ed th en , c l ees to the goternment, and p was only through the ever watchful Democratic !arty that their plunderings were brought to light. Dad it not been for the clock af forded by the Democonry upon the radical .cormorants, itet(impossible to tell where the stealungs wourd have ended. Ere this, no doubt, the government would have been in hopelesspankrußtey, through the rascal ity of its- Barnacles alone. The records of the hundr4l's rf o,srt,B martial that hare ad ready beesi , held, - shove canelustredy Mat those tiho were loudest in Haw cries of "traitor," " *pp& "treaioti t ie , ounist lir Psniorra(ic party, II It E RE, E 31IE LIRGTS r PIXEL/PU:ILS AND TUE GREAT EST SCOUNIGSEI S. • lint if, during the poet four years, there L. 14 been alt,v truth in the false charge made &piWit 110 D 4,411 OC 'Oppositw' a.k . entharrttssing the, government in carry ing on the war, that charge will not now hold good, when the war is praeacally ended. And yet the cry of Me radical leeches to just as loud, not louder than ever. Democrats aro not, even now to be allowed to say a word aboufan office-holder or a contractor with out bringing upon thernaelves the charge of 'treason' and "opposing" the government. Democratic evidence must be impeached and not allowed to bring any of the "truly I loyal" to disgrace before the people, Nut condign punishment through the laws. The ' , truly loyal" speculators in office, iummles, in grain, in ships, in stores, in army cloth-1 iog, in arms, in cotton, in arable lands,—in fact,:in everything pecnlativo or speculative, must be saved front exposure, and the private fortunes they have made out tr f the necessities of 'arnatton must be preserved to therm and their helms. -.That is the secret of the cry now nista OT "no more opposition to, or embar rassment of the gtvernment " To test these quest ionsfof "loyalty" and "opposing the government," we would pro pose that thohe of the Democratic loaders in the North who have been charged with disloyalty and opposing the government be put to trial on these charges, and then let an equal number of the •' truly loyal" ho seleete:l,hy the Democracy, And put Upon their rrtal, in the some manner, on the charges of bearing false witness and specu lating on the necessities of the government. Will the " truly loyal" consent to this fair end honorable way of adjustment, Rita of reinstating the long disused laws and courts' We knew, however, that. they will not. They fear to be brought to the touchstone. So long' as they aro free to propagate their slanders of the Democratic) party and its leaders, with no fear of being held to any accountability, so long will they fight against the supremacy of law, and, with the gressest of falsehoods, appeal alone to the ignoranoe acid prejudice, of the mob to screen themselves• But, for all this, their course of criminal Vtonduet must have an end finally, and a settlement with the peo ple whom they have defrauded.—Patriot and —Why TITTsn unaervierra gun like an offioe-bolder? Because it kicks mightily Aim it is discharged. Our Gain A Didgraceful Riot—Several Persons Seriously Injured. A pinflic, consisting of a party, ofrtspeeta hle'ller mans, assembly! at the Girard Park oh Nlonday afternoon and were enjo}ing themselves' pleasantly until about etc o'clock in the evening. ..1t that time a lot of butity-jumpers, thieves and pickpockets made their way intei the park. The intru- Mere numbered about one hundred. Mr. P. Iteichter, the proprietor of the garden, soon afte'rm ants °beer t,ed one of the crowd at tempt to pick the pocket of one of the tier twins lie attempted to interfer e, when he WAS immediately set upon, and a general 1 row uncured. Knives and billies appear to have been used very freely. St.veral of the Germans were badly betNi, and some stx or eight were stabbed and seriously injur : e I )tr Reichler was stalilleil several tunes Ithitll/ the'head and neck. and nail also bra ten he hnik of toe head ft was thought he could not recover, bid yesterday morning he was better, and it has been :H -eel tallied that his skull was not fractured 'l're'dicr, who sine in the eivitgy s,if Ileichter, liis nlsii attacked *ail receiseil Alinut nine severe Two of the gang of roughs were shot. it 19 said, by n revolver in the hands of Mr. Itegliter, who fired after being :manned twne of them is named Schaffer and the oth er Joseph Walter, who is known as Potomac Joe Schaffer was seriously wounded /lb the back of the head. V, niter was wounded in the grom. Huth note taken to St. Jo seph's Hospital, and titter having their in juries dressed were removed elsewhere. The police were notified of the ilistur bane° as soon as poshible; bitt by the lime they reached the ground the riot was over, and the roughs had left the premises. Therefore no arrests was made. Two knives were found where they had been dropped by the rioters Ono was a large bowie knife, and therother a dirk. Both hail blood upon the : thistles showing that they had been used in the • The Cirrespondence between Generale Haileok and Sherman Poundlleek to General Sherman As you will be in Richmond in a few dap, allow me to offeryou the boepitilities of in house here, where I shall be gratified to ceive you and contribute to make your s - journ here agreeahle. Genera! Slwrinan'to Ila Your proffeeed hospitality Us respectfully de clinch 1 had hopgd to pass through Rich mond without the painful necessity of meet ing you. Your recent advisory despatch to the War Department Is stirtolent explana tion. General Ifallea to Genet:al Sherman. • I regret your declining my invitation, and the unfriendly spirit manifested in your. note. you knew the feeeling in which you are held at the War Departmeht in reference to your agreement with Johaton you would appreciate the motive of my de spatch to which you refer. Permit me to assure you of my kind feeling toward you personally, and my high admiration fur your services. General Sherman to General Halleek: I think I understand both the circumstances and the men sufficiently well to appreciate the motives of your despatch. Both you and !dr. Stanton sent me warning to beware or aseasside. I, did not then know that the authors of the warning were themselves the assassins I had to fear. POCK6T Pieraiors.—We have one million one hundred and twenty-five thousand men on the armypity4oll when the war closed. About one-half tho number were in field together. The other half were in—the na tional treasury.dhest. What a saving of iaxatiow-i‘ will be to get rid of this vast assembly of drones and sinecures, who draw nothing for their country'e difenoe but, their salaries. CLIGRRO is Staled that about 12 per cent. of the" War Department clerks, hitherto employed in the. Bureau of Deserters, have bean dismissed—a begin ning in tbe leaf of government retrench ment Result of Emancipation and the War Last Sunday evening the residents of Cheviot and vicinity bad the ordinary quiet of their vllltage disturbed by a rumor to - the effect that a women, named Frances Groves, .had poisoned treechildren, a pair of boys, the elder two years of age and tho other something more than one year 'younger. Nothing could be definitely ascertained concerning the truth or falsity of the matter, which was talked of to the exclusion of every ether topic until the entire _neighbor hood was in a state of „the most feverish excitement, iu the midst of whiel a messen ger was dispatched to Coroner Clarey, who immediately repaired . to the 'house of Mr. Simpson near Cheviot, ,at which place the chiltrrea died. . It 4pears that the woman who was until about nine months ago. a slave belonging toa 'master. whose name slie took, as is the custom with slaves, and who resides in Ken lucky, Atellk to the house of Mr. lii:npson on Sunday eyening, with her ciiildren., She dint} beta an inmate of the faintly seiner time before,. and no alt. talon was paid to her until about tea tinie m ethen she suddenly called !or help,' stating flint , her child. was dying. A physician wan called but he found both the little mutterers dehd.t After' inquiring the syintoms and learning that the children had apparently been well enougl? (hiring the et4FIV do h e concluded that the only way by.which e could account for their death was upon the hypothesis that they bad been poisoned. Sortie one then remembered that the moth e t h a d, far porno time Teen anxious to dis pe*Ce of her eltiltilren, had 'asked several 1 , (TR011 . 4 to udopt them : find enderivoied fo hove them sent to some chnritable tem,. nod this sticiety seemed to the excited minds of the ‘people,to be proof that, des pairing of dilasing of them by this topan., she.lind, /IS it dinner re.tort, determine , } to slny them. 'lire only remedy for such in Mate of ex citement presented itself inn legal itivesti gotton Into the crone of their death, and l'oroner Corey was Tnimediately summoned tin• this purpone A partial inquest was held iin Sunday night, but ns a post obi/um ee.aininati‘n had to be made, a verdict has xuat.y,wl.l4..e. sreowderell,-- -----;- woman Frances Groves, was brought to the city and confined in the county jail en, await the result of, the inquest. The 5111111111C114 of both the babes were takettout MO o'3o brought to the city for fhe purpose of having them nnalizeil Thin will doubt le-75s ilischit.e the method of their death if lion been used, and the result of the analysts will perhaps be •made known to day. iVit. liner stated ell the facto in this some what exu•aordinary case that ',aye anti far horn made known. The excitement in the Ylillage won immense, and has not yet en tirely eu b •ine•d. If thin should prvive the tragedy it now seem,. whipii in quite likely, it will e;ceml anything ellthe kind that Min token place hero for a number of years Onciranalti Gazette. Eusec‘Runci I.lO\R —Since the orgnnivt. lion of the Federal Government, eleven at tempts 11/INC been made lo resist its suutiori ty. The first wan in 1782—a conspiracy of Home of the officers of the Federal army to consolidate the thirteen Staten Into one, and confer a supreme power on Washington. The'..mmind L7BB, called Shay's insurree lion in litssachuttetin. The third in 1791, CAWed the Whisky insurrection of l'ennsL_ vanta. The fifth in 1820, on the question of the admission of Missouri into the Union. The nisth was a collision between the leg islature of Georgia and the General Govern nient,t he Cherokeves in Georgia. The eighth was the memorablemullifietilion ordinanell of South Carolina, 18,12. The ninth was in 1842, inaliode Inland, between the Suffrage Ansociation and the State authorities The tenth was 111 lfCift, On the part of the NI Or-. mons, who resisted the Federal authorities in Utah. The eleventh was the late attempt at secession. a recent addres4 to 11 delegation from Pita ia, _President. Jontisou declared that he Lad no pledges to make as to his fit tore policy. and referred them to his past record for the principles which Will go ‘m hint hereafter Ne lily every day he to liar :lased by CD:Unlit tee!! sent OD 01 V% ash ington y t he, radicals to leach him his duty fhtts far they have received . the cold shottl• der. 1% hat a grand opportunity ho has pre sealed to him to make for himself a name that will go down to posterity She brightesto. ,on the pages of ofir country's history. By rejecting the mad teachings of New England fanaticism, taking counsel from the conserv ative clement of the itgion, looking to the Constitution for his guide, and by carrying out in his administration of the goverment the principles lic.has so often eclared to be nearest his heart, he will gatbe ound Urn • bulwark of strength such ns no Chief lag istlrate haft been able to command since the Slays of Jackioo. A SiGstrtyagr Fact —lt is to conserve- Alva men, an,evreniely gratifying as well as a significant fact, that, the present mom ent when the Looutry has success and glory written all over its standards not one of the uturie of those 'Filo have produced these re sults is linked either in feeling or organize, lion with the lantana] portion of the domin ant political party. Grunt, Sherman, Slier j_dan and Thomas aro the men, not one of /whom is a fanatic; not j whom fought or over struck a blow i ar simply for the putpes-0 of giving freedom to the negr o Butler, L-nks, Shurz, Phelps, and a whole host who were made generals because of their earnestness in the "cause of freedom," have without an in.ception been kicked out of .„the way by the trite sof:fliers and victors of the war, the men who fought solely against arched rebellion.. and tidTer in the rlnterests of humani ty. tl---Det rod ,Pree l'reer- Ruder rote Gs:must Lee.—Ti:Ts stated by the'rebel prisoners and paroled men of Lee's army, now in this city, that during the last two weeks over forty thousand dol lars has been subscribed by the wealthy secessionism of Baltimore and vicinity for the purpose of relieving General Lee and his family from actual suffering for the com mon necessaries of life, cause by the con fiscation, of his property andithe destruc tion of all his household goods and chaVels by the different armed bodies who have domiciled themselves during the last four years at his mansion on Arlington heights. They' also affirm that the sum woulCbe in creased to one hundred thousand dollars without goir4 outside of the limits of Balti more.—New Fork World. AUTOGRA PUS. —.Josh Billings expresses our views on the subject of autogrohs pre cisely. Ile thus replies to an ankious cor respondent, who asked for his autograph: "We never furnish ortograffs in less quan tities than bithe packig. It is a bixiness that grattS men have got into, but it don't strike us ax being profitable nor amusing. We furnished a neat and very dear frie iid our ortograff, a few years ago, for 90 days, and it got into the hands ov one or The banks, and it cost us $175 tew get It bank. We went out or the bisiness then, and have not hahkered for it *Mot,. . . "Sic &mesa TTRANNIV"—The telegraph reports that when the assassin of President Lincoln leaped on the stage after commit ting the murder, be brandished a dagger and exclaimed!"Sse Savor Tyrannis." "So may it ever be with tyrants." The arms of the State of Virginia Is s. man with ono foot planted on a dead body, and brandishing a dagger in his band. The motto of the Slate is ••Stc &taper Tyranilit.,' Massachusetts Freedom. PG RITA MI RA N ' PA 't —blie/7141/ and Hel lish Affair.—Monday forenoon, the yiiung women employed in the shoe manufactories in Weaver block cent a Jeputation of their number to Samuel At Boardman, who keeps a livery stable near the depot, with a awe requesting hien, as - he was reported to Eire matte come unfeeliog ind traitorous espres , sions witflr regard to the assassination of Primideor Lincohi, to display the American flog upon his• premises bolero I o'clook, and if he had no flag they offered to furnish one. No notice being taken of the request, the the workmen in these establishments sent a similar meseav, and with no better success. At 1 o'clitek the young women, some thirty or forty in number, called on Boardman with a flag and assured him if be would take it and display it all would be well otherwise he woiiiti be conipelftld tb do it. - Boardman retreated fetids office, aathrea felted to shoot the first person who entered. A lady steliped in immediately, saying, "shoot me if you 'will; but you must display Ahe The worktnenAite,n came over. brought him showed him .ft and gare hint the choice or displaying the flag or taking a ride through towo. •He.etild refused, and was mounted on a rail, anti the prooefsion started down Emerson• street, a negro leading the advance, the women fol lowing, tlien came nil and its rider born on the Atmt al of eight men, with hankers and rear guard, and followed by as crowd of some kw() hundred prisons. •A halt Vito made on Main street, in front of Lycdum Iffill, and. a large placard with the word .•Trahlor" was brought out and placed on I is, breeet. ,Ife was carried more than two miles, and then returned to the point of matting, but he still refused to display the flag of his. country. A. kettle of tar and a bag of feathers tied been provided in the meantime, and upon his deliberate refusal to even take the 'flag in his band, fie was stripped to the waist, and in a few moments he was a strangelooking bibed with feathers. Ile still refused to take the lag, and was mounted again upon the rail for a second ride. 'After proceeding some twenty garde he succumbed, nod consented to raise the thig on his premises. This he Ilia in the aresence of the cro.vd _ • ''d find permitted to retire. n is re ported to be in n d ying conditken,„ It is stated the benfine was poured on after the operation, producing bad ettects.-----Bur lingten Journal that the wAr is pr'aclirally mill ed. the great principles of our republic— the 'questions discussed by Washington, A.lntllN, Jefferson, Madison and flirmilion-- *ill come up again fresh before the people; n od with more significance and importance Ilinn ever, Let every Democrat, whose pa silfettllo tomidcil upon the principles of free government nail the rights of the people, Bland firM, :tiwiftly as the never-ceasing wheels of timr. we are approaching a day in which first pro-Ties nre to he nml in that day, the Republican party with ils incumgrtious elemenrs m ast be divided and soh-divided. The nom who believes in the doctrine of .Tefferson will rally round the Democralie banner We are rejoiced In view of thectose of the war. EY Lad to racy. po , lice •altair .at North Adams, it faseachni , etts, the other day. Two passers of countet felt money were in the vicinity, and ten officers came within eight of their "victim"," and raised a line and Cry, whereupon rogue No. I seised rogue No. 2, and after a 'herd fight Landed Ohm over to his pursuers, one of whom remarked !lint he believed flint he way nn necornplien, but on being aqsiire.l that he was n North Adams man, subsided. On theresnmittetion it was, however, found that the. fellow hail not only saves) himself by the adroit trick, but hail Inky off all the counterfeit money which was ncrcesentv toconaict luienomrnde, so that both escaped. Srmven 11.'111.1 PRIG llr aV: o -The Spring field j \lnas ) Repriblie , rn hos the following - "The alat'm for 11r. Stamnpr's personal Wet)" hos subsided how, and the gun!)l of soldiers nhAut his houSe in WashingZon is nn longer neeesstry. The. anxiety — TaWie from the four thou just nb.alt thr hour the Preshlen was shot an the theatre t wo •stranga and enspirious looking nieln!'aviltiously for him Ile hnispenrul to 1,4 cut; find to lists fart he is indebted for missing--n friendly rail from his Congrosßionl rolleagoeu. Messrs. Dawes And tioorli! Of such k ouil, undoubtedly. nee mode many of (Ito nnzie firs and alarms and kelisslion iII with which Woqbington and the ccantry now . zery naturally r hottn4 " NEV AIVERI'ISIEMENT:4 To the Heirs and Legal Representatives of caul Emerich, dec'd. 11101ENNFTLV \NIA. CENTRE COUNTY no. 1. J. P. Oephart, Cterk of the Ur i phan's Court of said count, ;of Centre, do here by certify that at an Orphan's Court hold at Pedlefonte, the 3d day of May, A. 1)., PM, be fore the honoridde tke Jodges of said Venn. On motion nerulo rrpaßn granted upon the hei and representatives of Paul Ihnerteh, dee'd, to row into the Court on the 4th Monday of August next, and accept, or refuse to accept, or to show cause uhy the real estate of said dee'd should not ho sold. --, In te.dimony whereof 1. hare heretic tn S !let my hand and affixed the real of said Court at Bellefonte, the 3d (lay of May, A. I). 1565. - J.r.ftErll.Ußr,r.n r. RICHARD CONLEY, .Vheriff. She ifrs Office. Bellefonte, May 26, 1865-6 t. PENNSYLVANIA, CENTRE COUNTY as. I, J. P. tlephart, Clerk of the Or plum's Court of the said county M Con. L.S.I me, do heroby certify, that at an Ord phan's Court held at Bellefonte the 3,1 day of May, A. D., 1865, before the honorable the jetties of said court, on Motion a rule was graded:l:won the Heirs and representatives of John COI in, supposed to be deceased, to coma into court on the fourth Monday of August next to show cause why certain monies arising from the relit estate of sail deceased should not be taken out of court - 11y A. Jana Hoover (late Cur tin) and Elisabeth Curtin, of Allegheny City, as children and heirs at law of said deeoased. In testimony whereof I have hereunto eet Thy hand and eixed the seal of said court at Belle fonte, the 3d day of May, A. D., 1865. J. P. GEPHART, a 0. f". 11.1CIIABD CONLEY' 'Sheriff. Bimini 0616 e, Bellefonte, May 26, 1865-3 t. ARCA NA WATCH. _ AN ELEGANT NOVELTY IN WATCHES The cases of this W.tch are an entirely new invention, composed &six different metals com bined, relied together end. planlahed, producing an exact Imitation of 18 carat gold called Ar cane, which will always keep its color. They are as beautiful and durable as solid gold, and aro afforded at one-eight the coat. The ease is beautifully designed, with panel and shield for name, with Patent Push Pin and engraved in the exact style of the celebrated Gold blunting Levine, and are really handsome and desirable, sea so exact au imitation of gold as to defy de- McCort. The movement is manufactured by the well known St. Jimer Watch Company of &- rope, and aro superbly finished, having engraved palate, fancy carved bridges, adjusting regula tor, with gold balanced, and the improved ruby jewelled action with line dial and skeleton band., and is watranted a good time keeper. Those watches are of three different sizes, the, smallest being for ladies, and all are Bunting Owes. A case of six will be sent by mill or ex press for $125 00. A single ono sent In an elegant mo rocco case for $25; will readily sell for three times their cost. We are the mole agent, for this Watch in the United States, and none are genu ine which do not bear our trade mark. Address, DEVAUCH a Co., 13 MAIDEN LANE, may 26 Ai„ New York. -laAr A FORIONE , EIIIPLOTILERY TOR tVIRTSODT p rPet sale of Jewelry, Witches, Chain?. Lat vinunctßiogs ' Silver-Ware, German Frenc h F q acy.o. 3 e t le, de., worth over . ”oo,oho —all to be avid without reserve , Everyone to' have some . thing,valuaUe. LIST OF THE ARTICLES. Gents' Gioia Hunting Casil Watches 186,1/Cite El:io,tld Ladies' UoW Enameled Can Watches Gents hunting Care Silver 'Watches . Gents' Sold+ Waria, clouts!' - time...., • 6041 sitehea in Mag. k Caws Gold Plated Watches Erato eta, for Ladles.. .,.. Diatnowl Dings- ' 50,00 Mild Vest andigfEcli, Chains, 10 t Oral Bawd Bracelets...' 4 00 Chasedliold Mraeatets...... 6.09 Chatelaine Chains andiJitard ehreins ~,, . .5,09 Solitaire and lipid Prouchea, Lava & Florentine 'Brooches. 4,00 Coral, &friar, and Emerald Brooches .......... 4,01 Mosaic, Jet, 1.6%, a, sad , Flor entine Ear Dr. pa 4,00 Coral, Opal and klinereld Ear Drops 4,110' California J./lemon% Ereast Pins „s„ 7119 (fold Fob and Veal Watch Fob and Vest I tibtoaSlides ; B.Y) Solitaire Sleeve 'Buttons. Staida, etc :LOU lold Thimbles, Pencil', 4.01) Mint:Otani Lockets 4,0 U Minlaturc Lockets—Magta Spring (kid Twitli Pick", Crones, etc. 3,00 Plain Gobi flings, Chuccil Gold Ring. . Stone Set end Signet Ring., rultfornils Diamond, Bing., Ladies' Jewelry in nets—Jet ■nd Gold .s owe ry in sets- - Cameo, Pearl, etc... ~... Gold Pen+, Silverlun Bolder and Pencil.. o°l.l Pens and h old Illinuat ed..... .. hold Pen., and Gold Extort- rain Holden Scher Goblets and Drinking Cups ...... 20.00 Siker lastors, slid Cake Basket . r.. Silt er Tea and Tel le Spoons and Forks, per dolen Scher Plated Tea Yids and 'ogee Cr,tr . SO, er Plated Ito Pitcher" and 51olactses Copy._ ... 25,00 See ain't the most popular and widely eireu Intuit periodicals sit) of our Hytablishment . Front (Sc n Piernieh " Pt LI lifliy 25, ogs We take pleasure in calling the attention or our reldery to the annonmement of .klecitirc Devatigb k ('o'r. Urea% Sill* ut .kiwidr:., silt, r Ware, and I'mm) t ;o m i t , in icier i nk iii sung a,:- umiW. We are personally belitilimnted with the members of Oily min amid k nun them to lat t en- Ginner] of Ftor:ing worth and inlegrily. The, *MA of Foods, for variety and extent, we tins scarcely seen paralleled. Ft ant the ".(firs„* J Fueliion," ihreeh 1, ISCS Yleceirs. Den augh S Cc's. (treat :4 le of Jots tar*, etc., Olelie4 VI) the 15th tilt., and we vet, tuts to soy that no finer dmplay of goods woo trier exhibited by any tstuttlictliment tit this city. The la lies thronged tboir bazaar almost to sufloeation, although the streets were Ten dered nearly impassible by the melted snow and shish. Wv. predict for woudurtul t- CTII4. = Our lady friends should tint the extensive estatlielueent of Messrs. Pet augli t Cu, No, 15 Maiden Lone, it they wish to indulge them • 'when atilt a sight which they will long mien,. ter. Such a proftision of elegant Wat t hea, Chains, Ring*, Mirriogs and, in short, ofl4or - airy of every route, kind and description, eir Deter before witnessed. Their silver and pla • led were 14 superb and almost east* into tha elinde the other splendid ostabll•hmeiits who li bore lug been the boast of our city. ft te et %filleted that their stow/ is worth not less thus re million of dollars. Pogo; the Tt Au aairatittaure of "r . Pr 19 u trite 1/101 iiirard W. Ite,angh A Ce. user rota, us In +peak - tug tit the highe.t turns., of them. They urn among our oldest 51unleff Lane Jewelers, and liar. Jung oil n 111.111 and eni rattle reputa tion. Fr.•ru roe "Stowe T,ietuny•' April 2 t, 11865 Al/tux-of the 'lnfidel 111 uric office have vpocu lntrd to the Enterprhe of Meosrm. Deg augh S. 4 , and though noire of them have yet reithrod •n tortutte,' all exprear thentuelvee »ell viewed. 1111 their tontine. Two of them by eurkiug utter inure hove made over $2OO each within viz. week,. HOW YOU CAN UIT A PRIM Fiend Ticcaty- five rents tout, and as sOon 11 . 0 reeeise it we will mail you n Vert:firers showing What you are entitled to, If the article Ur erti• Hos please you, send hack the Certificate and One Pains and we will forward you the'article, no matter how costly it may hei If the article is not what you wish, elate. when you rind the Certificate and dollar, what other ankle of the fame velar: you prefer and we will send it. If you wish inure than one Certificate salads us $4 /11111 we will send the; for $2, eleven : fur $5, thirty; fur $lO, eirsty ; for $l5, one haingrod. ilycnts are wanted in tie Army and in every place. We have on immense stock of goods to disposo uf, and need a large number of Agents. cur terms to Agents are very liberal and come even of our Lady Aginte aro making from.ss to $2O a day. We give Agents 50 per cent. un all Certificates they sell pro' ided they remit nut less than $1 for eight. Airlr• Write your nauleandiaddress distinctly, and say onfLphiir a neresstiry, OljtAlti) W. DEV AUOIT 3 CO.. I 5 l'itoiden Line, Now York May CIINTRE' COUNT r es. The Commonwealth of Pennsyr. ania to Jacob Sankey. John Sankey, $ll , l tett James Sankey, Executors of do., and s. the heirs and legal representatives of John Sankey, late of Peon Township, dee'.l. greeting. You and each of you are hereby sited and commanded to be and app or at an Orphan's Court to be held at Bellefonte on Monday the 28th day of August, A. D. 1865, then and there to viewer a certain bill or petition orlohn Ring hard, and show came why a vartain agreement between the said John Sankey, and the said John Reighard, should not be made and 'peel dell performance thereof decreed. Witness the Iron. Samuel Linn President Judge of the said Court at. Bellefonte the 28, day of April, A. D. 11365. r. P. CEPII.IIIT, r. 0. C. RICHARD CONLEY, Mar/ pheritr's Olde ' Bellefonte, 8 ° May 20, 1865-6 t. CRNTRIi COUNTY at. The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania 01114 to George Livingston, Exeewtor of die.of Henry Vandyke, dec'4e.tul L. the heirs and legal representative' of said teary Vandyke, deed, greeting: You and each of you are hereby cited ant, commanded to be and appear at as Orphan' , " Court to be held at Bellefonte on Monday, the 28th day et AuguaLnext, then and there to an swer a certain blind. petition of Bond Valen tine, devisee of A. B. alentine, decd, and show cause why a certain aontraot or agreement be tween A. B. Valentine and the said Henry Van dyke, deed should not be niade, and specific performance thereof decreed. Witness' the Non. Samuel Linn, President Judge of the said Court at Bellefonte the 21th day of April, A. D., 1885. J. P. OBPEART, C. 0. ft RICHARD CONLEY, Bkarijr. Sheriff's (itfice. Bellefonte, May 28, 1865-41. PRINTING NEATLY EXECUTED AT TUE WATCLUMAN OFFICE. • 50,00 ME .Ic,oo ENE 75,04) OMEN 35 00 EMI LI/ I U Itlo,i o Zilt.ln , UV lU.OII 20,w , UZI BEI 11111 10,00 11 (to • 10,0 ) lu.ut. EMI MIDI EIEI . f,,00 MB ISE EOM 24,00 50,00 40 t2i;" ima EOM 13251 ME
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers