fflnuor,raticatchman ti a Y • Enasq, pro laoruarua Bt.LLEFO'NTE, PA rank', MORNING, NOVEM . R. 10, 1865. TERIIIS.--$.l per year atm:. paid to adrauce. $1,56 ',MLA paid inZ4Narice, aild.B;oo.wilan n-t "aid before the capitation of tbeyect eilirur being conwelied to be bee t from home this week s has left rho WATeunati-under the control of f iead, 'rho Rlll furnish matter for its = Mises of Success B.titue of our friends seem inclined to depend and to dice up the Cause for which we have so long strucgled, be t:mue of the rmult of the recent nun. 'herr argument is, that if the I A tteriean people cannot diseiiminate I netweeri good and evil., if they are not title:to choose that line of poLicy which — Must be the beA. for .the country, thty are unfit, for self-government, and the nattiral and inevitable con , tc. - ptcm:e nut be the establishment of the ti cry kind 'of government of which ti.o Abolition party are adiocates : Thy say that our people, by their,aetion. fur the la,t tour ; ears, have a n-yved thetn-Ll: cs cap-IDia of maaogtag and coinio,:taig so complicated a goicroutent as ours, and that th 3 government, by a low of na • tare, is gradually adar,ting itsed to the capacity td lti Lalzons. • We w:ll a !mit that 012 c , :ldtr:t of --our--peel44,r-the-i-a-st ZoTli carrlinw "eilmost made 119 waver in our fa 411," but we are not yet willing to give up, l our confidence in the capacity of the Auserican people td maintain the gov ernmetft established by our fathers. It is certainly discouraging that a party should still he kept in power and it, theories endorsed by a vote of bhe peo ple, after its principles base been tried and the result has been the planting oS et'brnal enmity between two portions of the country,' the slaughter of millions onr fellow nuns, awl the beginning a•dm,potism, which, it not soon over thrown, must result in the establishment of.`a moncrehipl government over the rune of our Republic. • . But in it right to want the whole blame Upon the masses of the people? Are not we in part responsible for these re sults? Have we done our whole duty? Dave we not forgotten to urice the claims of our party as we should do 7 flnve we wet failed to keep countlntly before the peopro the great features which - distinguished ours from all other governments? Could we not have done much that we did not dg- to instruct our fellow mon in their duties as Mauna of the Republic? Hays we not taken it for granted that all of our people tinder stood-fully the theories upon which our government is built, and come before them upon minor questions while they Were being led astray upon issues which involved its very life? These are tines- tiont it would be well for every wejl in - formed Demecrat to ponder over bef, • convicting the people of the c eof igtirance, for to rote igno tly in a Democratic Governme is among the highest crimes, w mild not despair nteall wc---ewts—der failed. if we have neglected our dut • e best thing we can do is to be re diligent in the future and when we have corned success, we will have i'. 'We must increase the circulation of our papers and of all political documents.— .1,•:t each subscriber for a Democratic journaf do all in his power to get hii neighboesah't4ke it,Sand wove all, la bor to em'eer.l the circulation of the pa per.: of your county. A county paper may be conducted with less ability than thoseof our large cities, but it contains the doings of your local politicians, the proceedings of conventions, the news from your immediate vicinity, and is the great bond of Union amongst working Democrats. Those who cannot take more than one paper, should by all mean.: give their home paper the prof eren-e. iVithoitt it, -each- man *lrks in the dark, and with no co-operation ' with throne who shcahl be intimately as.oeilted with him in the CO11)171011 calve. When we once know fully what is to be done, hovrever.diffieuLt it may we ar" arlvancod half way'''. in the .work. The:county paper will keeP•You posted' ss-to- wihat effort will be requir ed to arrompliA a particular object. and tue.mis of making such cliort. • We would venture the asser tion that those of our party who failed to vote at the recent election: arc a ma jority of them; 'melt . who do not take t'hepaper.s. Then let each one become an agent fur the circulation of his house paper., let thrice of a I community who ire able, maim a rum! tube used irr sup itlyintilsoir poor neighbors with- rea ding mattes; of a proper kind: The stake we play-for is not merely the offi cers of the country but the life of the Republic. The difference between our party and the opposition is so wide and marraididal that it is • impossible that the government cawbe safely administered by_isotht '''Orcourse we -believe that ouly party can be trustee{ with the Administration, and not one of us can jwstillaldy refuse to do all in pj , power to eatend.our influence. It is the . cow- Ltd 'wit! I f }i i nks of tbb blows he will reeeire iw a contest, bar, men think r e 141:1448e they will strike. Let us t n• prepare once more to -Meer the e sell despair only when we I ace Jane al we can XlO , in rain. A Lesson from the Enemy. Napoleon retuarked i lthen at Bt. liot lona, that he had 'taught his ene4iiiels how to destroy hit. And strange as it' may Aemn, he neer uttered irnAli us more truthful. His first victories htartle:d and alarmed 'the world, for he had introduced a new Pyslem of war fare. and his success was as remarkable as the novelty of his tactics. For rears him ad% er.arias blundered on 'in the old way, "fighting it out" on their " line," While he leached. at their ef forts and roae higher at each attempd they made for h i s overthrow. But ex perience taught them - a severe lesson.— John Bull iithalll woke op to the fact that the world had utorpti'sonte since the days of Cte - 4 - y and Agineoitrt,and that td triumph over Bonaparte they must fight with his meal-ions, and maneuver thei'r force , after the plan employed so sue= cc=-fully by him. And they triumphed. though tboy had often fought him with superior numbers and though he .never led an army to bailie with greater pits poet, oft-n ve.b. tgall Lei he met the Britbdt en the disam s• field of Wa rn\ terloo.' - _ , . Narrile - in W'as a grcai man. he never uttered a sentiment swithout thought, and there i, a world of meaning in that remark of 'hi, which. wedifo' tpioted.— It' . is always profitable tcriuudy the tar tic:. ~;fthe enemy by whom we have beat b0at.... , ;.' And thi- rule is applicable a well to political con toots as to the,-toore 4;peuitst.ry strife of the batile-field N,) matter how contemptible may 1. , • the prinei;de ,, advocated by a politi,:al patty., alien it i• suitieientriy powerful to de.f.'az u- at tl,e polls, we niay 1t atzt a u-ei . tal le: -0:i !.), (ib,en iDg how they 11.1+,0 obtained the victory. Notv tee are very well aware that the Tlrty at uresent opposing the Denioc rzlerhap resorted and will again resort to means which we cannot y stoop to use. They come before the people in false colors, and shirk , every issue which runs the slightest chance of being unpopu lar. To prose this we need only refer to the vehement manner in Ivhicli They disavowed all intention to in terr•re ,ti!!1 the institution ye' slavery. let uu sooner had they obtained power than they plunged the cuuntey into the-most terrible and destructive war of modern times for the sole purpose of abolishing slavery and of perpetuating the power which they had so fraudulently obtain ed. But all these movements of the enemy Auld accomplish little it' we would learn from them the great cause of their success and practice upon it when we have learned it. It, in true they are worthy fanatics, and labor to propogate their theories with ati energy' and determination which only fanaticism irDpires. But it is also true that fanat icism must yield to the owl, calculating foe villa is ever on the alert, always prepared to resist an atta'ek and always ready to make one.. The fanatical di ciples of Mahomet swept three 11 of the civilized globe like a. calarreb, the cold ernians and the less turned backward 1. -- able battle of Tours. The why the Abolition party has yet, they were overtime Wooded, but watch tida of their at the in IRE •n able to prevail against us, despite the absurdity of manylf their theories and the dangerous tehdency of their principles, is because they are thoroughly organized and always ready to more, at a moments notirr. as 011 P man, for.the or -afflpics'lMMTirranri,7o., I hey itriT secure to each member of their party the advantages 'of all the abilities of all their leaders. They circulate the say ings of their "wise men (?)" broad cast, their presses arc kept constantly busy and their members.all supplied with the most plausible arguments which their leaders can devise. The great secret of their success is in one word orgaitization. Like the conquerors of Napoleon, we have only to learn this from them, and practice it, and then march GI the Wa terloo where their standard- will go clown forever. If they are fanatics, we claim to be patriots and philanthropists. Surely patriotism and philauth:opy are more thaq a match for fanaticism, dot low and vulgar relic of the superstition which bidned the witches a century or two ago in New England. Their prin ciples .are death to American institu tions, oars is the only party which can gather up the fragments of the Great Republic fr'oui the mire wheie they have cast them and 9.9, , e our country from a dark reign of despotism.. Dem ocrats of Centre county an effort win ere long be made to. organize our party as thoroughly as it should be. Let eve ry one be prepared to enter into the work with a will, and in a year from this time, ^ti earth can Suc cessfully s —We 1 though not officially, that those representing "the Government" saw fit at the last session of the C. S. District" Court at Pittsburg, to enter a Nolle Posequi in the case against the editor of this pa per, which had been pu4ling there . foe several mouths, thereby+admitting that the prosecution' had &self commenced without adequate cause, and that no .conviction, even itthe hands of a• perdc ed abolition jury could be had . l • No one will suppose that those who institu ted the proie.edlnga against the editor of the " Warm:mem" would have fore• gone the pleasure which his conviction would undoubtedly have given them," bad they been}-mni t filitd by any means to have received a verdict of "guilty" of any grime or. misdemeanor. When dab editor reatives (AMA notice of ti e abandonment . of this lOC attack tnien his liberties mid riebta be has alter things to nay of and contorting the km. dii ideal who stated the proceeding" as *7l as the mod yea wli ich protn ptod them thereto. -We think the people are en' tided to know the character and -hal; it" of,tionie eflhe human mitt they have Been *aiding during the past few years. It maybe tharaotne ors irie par lleuhie _friends of the editor would prefer him to keepaptiet on their account, but ingrat Mid; is not an editorial vie°. "Free Labor." Lunalists, ignoramuses, senrw still, insincere nrol disloinest wrlers antler., 110 i ay immensity of tli.cti4sioh -just now on the'maliject of ••Frec tabor." meaning by this term the labor of negroes, when forced from tneir normal condition and natural re lation to lbe white people.• they are left to their own volition and guiannee. The oe ;fro too twenty por - conr, tesi brain, Mid thertfor; twe,ntz per cent, less mind, and with at% o% goo* strueture of grosser any more imperfect development: faculties are, or course, of corre.nonding Inferiority word,he is a perpetual mi nor, an unchanging and phanglets subordi nate, who ii.s.,untursll)• stol neces.nrily Hub inito to the rule of the Critic:lsiah siS the child does to Its parents, or the wife to her husband - Vile rule and guidance of the white 111,1111 Orel" the negro is inherent, or oceri.oting, for'it i 9 fixed forever in be organic structure by the hand of fled, sail nil human power: fraud Or dunning. can e e l. it *side. (AV. "oboliett" it, and rite whole combined lure.: or it %roan kind. Acting to gether fur rlilLnt,3 of yeirs, van nerer chat.% le or ttiod,i 4 t. lu reseeet what. ever. It. Abraham Linsolu Mid issued a procin nr.ttea aboits'iing the color of the negrst. and ..liirew JohllnUll. with roe, 3011.11 e world at I 13 buck, .111 , 1 the "Free.lrnm•s Iltirenn" to Loot. 5h.1111.1 t.triVe to carry it (311 t, give the migro the eider of the wlitte man, 01 c.,ur-e 4sesot:e would "see its tioractienbility. and th^ efiort to f;:se ititn the "freedom" of the white man criunlly Impious, monstrous mind wicked : indeed is putt and parcel of the sa tie monstrous aline nton:usd the decrees of zlte Creator. In .111... r —9ll: e d and h:t to hie own the negro ti a 11,10ig. dieirthenT" --- itictr - v this moment to it'dt what is When his' tor) irit takes cognizance of him, and just :what he will be millions of years benne, for 11;9 bruin, his actual phys!cnl structure, ad mit, of no progress when isolated. Brought to - America, and tibmatKin juxta position with the superiorly organized and superiorTy codowedCaucasian, and his 11111- Sal I , "e qualifies. benificently designed for his good, called into fiction, this inferior. non-progressing African 'heathen" becomes n useful Att.l harry creature. and fulfills n 5,1 iI , oic is our if', If ter , ti , tar w)lbotit his labor sortie niimir degrees of latitude. in the roost genial and fertilt ri gione, must used° remain forever barren wastes, The mind of the - Caucasian and the mus cles or the negro, the intelligent guidance of Itit; superior being and the industrial ea, pacity of the inferior, thus become the' agencies ordained by the creator, for the growth and production of the great tropical per ducts, cuff" sugar, coffee. &c , which -are. 50 essential to the happiness of God's creatures. The lieu°, in his native .tfriea„ and let his own guidance, produces no surldig or anything nhAtever lbw becool : Hal of exchange or cominerce it left to - does support rem, for the wis rtild othot'w;se be at have perished in the firm St in juxtaposition with the he multiplies *till morn rapidly. rer.fore it is obi nut 11.41 Gut designed in for a jaxtaptemion not only re auks in ragt goo.l tip oth pt, but ittr:,enci r.ably and tuexpre-“ihly Increases his own .well being. The negro increases in the South three per cent, more r,tpidly than when isolated in Africa, and therefore his condition in South Carolina as a n.eful, Christian. and. in it sense, progressive human creature, is just that much superior to his African con tlitionsif idle, non-producing, euako-wor shiping . flat a monairws crime against this negro against God. a,7,ainst ourselvea, anti common sense to boot, in just'now•in the full title of experiment. An attempt is inside to make the negro fulfill the role of the white man— that is, In re form or rat no=de the. Nr,,rk of hie own netanTal aptitudes and multiply himeelr, (low of the Crorttnr fault, and lie w, genera , lotl white tie;pg tke I 144f1i vf the , operiur eatica•dan. If the "Refor mers" had begun with the physical organ ism, had first attempted to change the color dint the hair, then the feet, the hands, lege, muscles, tendons, &c., and finally contrive to add twenty per cent. to the brain, nod indeed hail really re-formed the negro structure on the model of the Cauca sian, then Abraham Lincoln St Co. might say, with some logic, "now we bare recrea ted thli being, and reconstructed film an the .!bite model, we may reasonably( hope to make him exhibit the faculties of the white niati, and work, and fight, and vote 911 that line" with some certainty of success in our great Work of rectifying the wretched blunders, of tho Almighty." But without the slightest attempt/at re forming the phr iml structure of poor Sambo, they took off their coats and went at him to change his fnottlt les, a thine of t‘ourse just im absurd no :t weiihk be to make a sawmill measure line, or alllch perform Yankee Dandle The negro n Januti-a, &c., left to his , own guidance, equats,down on patches of land, grows pumpkins and bananas, Insd though the climate is so genial, does not propagate himself, for he is disturbed by the,"government,".;which, while it does not guide or rule him, prevents his natural Af rican aptitudes. The sole place where the negto multiplies himself, and therefore the only hope for bun in the future :s in the in terior of Hayti, where idolation has permit led hint to go back to Ws natural aptit udes of snake-worship and complete obieism. There he hits Lost the French language, everything *Stated frorrithe superior race, and it/again a unless, non-advancing "hea- ' then," and if thin hideous lunacy prerailit ' long enough, when the mixed breeds die out, and the white blood is utterly extinct in these islands, therttireenegro will recover his natural or Ifrican condition, and then he will again fulfill the cettimand of the Al mighty Cren'or to multiply and replenish his kirfd. But what-s future for its to con- i template! a huge Alfrican heathenism pro jected into the very befirt of our great con tinent, and not only tratitiormin these fertile and baautifid regions into desert wastes, but annihilating on this continent all those great tropical production's, cbtton s sugar, coffee, &0., so essential to the Qom Ina and well being of countlase millions a God's creatures. _ - • We' repeat'-'tlie fact, everywhere; Bare in the interior of Hayti, within the trerglcarre gion, the population is either stationary, or it deolines, and no where does It lab) r or produce any Burping wealth, the slight pro duction in all the islands ,or the Antilles being the work wholly and absolutely of the Chinese, or Coolies, stollen 'froth ABM, and carried-into those islands. In the northern States It is vastly worse. The negro; without capacity for labor, is dying out pt the rate or dye per emit. per annum.. 24 t 1,0111111% tibia laboredsolt produced stitlfbient for their support, of Bowie dray .would increase and multiply thenseelvisse add qv/retire the simple feet of their gradail extinction settles the,. question. When the mason of iedirldtal areeeirlly 11 od them, they wort, become welters,. porter, boot bricks, white-witsherik &et.. but we venture to my, without fear of contlntlioti that there is not now, nor has there t _r been, en inalanee in the en. tire not-theta 3tates, 'of a single/ typical negro regularly and" pernurtninrty — enstild in pr.lutttrt. llibur. Monte of &Lem, aptl eqpeetally tiff•tbt mixed breed, or moogrelo, treie antilrafk, and acquire Considersige property, but *e repents that tioel ti !mira cle, '•Free Lobar," or a negro left lo his own guitlace, and addling to the snot total of public wealth, has never been witnessed iu 'the northern antes. At the ratio of extinc tion shown by the atensua, willtuathe nest httadreti years, or' le-s, the negroes or the northern 1418401 will be Vyn.li . y extinct, and theta., e .I's munition, ortroatiloi . , teittb. • • . is not a cdn,lition, notliMg a,. a plisse, or so,.ial disease. resulting trim tureen per version of the laws of organism; anti it is jolt as certain, supposing the ntadttess of the present Prevails, that within 'the same time of one hundred years, the white blood of the tropics will be utterly extinct, anti that extinction is the precise pottoy where the negro-(as now in the inter For of Hayti) will'recover his clri ginnt anti restored to &natural condition, he will again multiply anti replenish tire earth, tho t igh, as oh,erved, not su rapidly, and ilteref..re not happily, as Irten lie Is guided and c.ired fir 'a juxtaposition Frith the superior race, as in the /South. . Summing up the fereg dug facts and in ductive Cacti, the subject sr:retie thus: tat. the n!gro, with his Lowe' org tuomi ind in ferior facultie., cantiot of himself heroine a pr4ducBr•of wealth any niece than a‘chilfil can, for lie is•utdee•l morally a child, a per petual miner, an inferior human cre.iture, that cannot c telprehead cree,,u - L suit tieni.LL to secure a !tome good. , 2nd• In the eht;rirexpefietice inki•id, the neg.. 9 imoloied in k frit 1, iir the Feline eiele.e, non prod,tetive, and ttev•ndv.tucutg h ea:hen lie roluet , 4 nothiap in the troptel, the ."Itt)-I.:."ltoet" l 4. l ttele 'wing e milted to thretue.l hy el.tt- then -Ith pr etitee. ',quit e ; to t northern States, and !ug out at the sate of tour per cent. ;.;,h. 17,2 r, !hr L. t,ty th 4,11 ihe 11e In (1 , .V , rch he and the 11 ,, , , c1 11 0 / 1,19 die , ) oat, Wrl I , lllaipt,lvd, lmr r. .'tur , d, Inc Of WI itui 1.11.1“. - I(er , then, u oil I Le the col of•the great Abolition binary of the eNit or) the 11111Al1 elPertlltOta of refot Wittig the Work of Gott, and toreing the uogru i to fulfill the role of the white utith, vri. 7 11.1 out in .levz oying half a unlliuu of .tto z lroik in the Smolt, nmi rtvtre• thing lille a hundred tholieam! .. V.itt 4 ,t•oriJ in the iYluntls, awl ending ,(not whet e it began, that k, tree niggertial will have dis itiiiieared, and P.4§ hike white men where negrees 'Antninatml in number ; nn,l lite tifiginal negro au.l while man again re cp peor, pkt no made them. speco ' callli •••• ltt• 11..1 pernotiel to exist t , ,getl:en, aide ii. (hot Halm al relation of stir'retnitel 0,1 soliorantation fixed from the beginning by the hand of Ilml. this, which should ho.worst i vt the tykd monstrous madness of thin pow added to beyond the ea: - language to espreta, to 'Johnson to carry ou it y, 15 11 - y of 1..4n 1; effort of Nlr re - decree of the late eittottneipto four 11111- peuple. If its eineg vett, ,ineoln, and Iwt "refetniera," olished" the twenty per cent. mere IbruLam LlllOO huns of w Aiwall:it.,A of the whites, why it would norm that then there would be seam gtottlid to go op en ill their grand caret prize agaiu-t idle ILL lurid order; but a ithotit (lite they are of course blindly nod°. monstrously butting their own beadi and smashittg their owe brains against/ the ..preelutuatiens ' of Je hovah. With an army ttf three hundred thousantl men they have beaten down tee will, and fnroih . ,y, for the time hying., rent-pal the natural control and guidance of t lig white people, while Kee , her hundred thuudand, as the ••i'reedmnttS Irttr.latt ' ea,nem n, calloti, are hits? al la, L., t❑ e •rrutntnt; anti peril rtino: 11,0 riegrno.... an a.. 1., r, tol-r them ino;ttable of re: , l nl'3lloll at) their normal condtt len beer:titer. • If certain outsiders should °Me' r n house, and seize atekhind the head of trreTinitly, and'stand guard uvet bun while where a,•i: egage , l in corrupting and debauching Ins wtfe and children, MO as to render his natu ral control and guidance of that family im possible, in the future. it would surely be obvious to the most perverse and depraved wretch in existence that a monstrous crime against the nature! order of things wee tieing com•ntitted, met military &Ape,- isse-weer---erghe nt"- - i-trirrriv -- purrpts while the '•l'reedmutub Bureau• are busy in corrupting the negro 00119 to de s troy go .ciety in the rutin+, is elpinlly, and, indeed, in some re.peetseON en more awfully crimi nal. Since the Worldt began, and, indeml„ as long as it lusts, Au - human sin or mime ever equalled, or,ever can equal this effort to "abolish slavery;" as the lunatics term the domestic subordination of tho negro, for, unlike the sihalar effort of the _Euro pean governments in t•lie West India, 14- Linda, (here Is not a leader among these moral monsters, from Garrison to Dickinson, who would not prefer death for his own family rather than they should practice the ••principles ' lie is su awfully striving to force on ihe people of the South And if future generation, ever can forgive Andrew Johnson 1,1. to...loming. nn •insiruvnmt fur entbreing the proclamation of Abrnhant Lincoln, it 1,11 he because, unilLe the noilbern Alitirdionist, be dooms his own children to the cent:non ruin they are atti ring to force on the white people of the, Small IA conclusion, it is scarcely neoesary to ciAuire the probable end of this experiment after ''gree Labor " The control of the whites strickch down, and the labor of four millions of negroes abolished, the foreign ,commerce of the country and New f.:llland manufactures inu.l be abolished of course with 'theiraboliiion of southdrii pooductionr and northern labor, already' tolortgatfid - "to J.holislN hat of Abe negro in the South, can ot to be lased much longer.top pay troops and agents of the "Freedman'',lite reau," and indeed tot support the ImPless negroes theineelves, torn from their homes. Thu monstrous madness, therefore, Mk"' soon collapse from sheer exhaustion of the country, and the simple problem then is the resoration of the natural order. If the ne gro is so debauched and demoralized by the hideous and revolting wretches that are now teaching him to becomea white than, that he cannot be r estored to hie normal condition, he will be driven into the north ern States, and there massacred beyond doubt by the returned soldiers who have been made the ignorant dupes and blind instruments of the Abolitionists. But the negro is easily restored to his healthy rela tion' to An white man, and if Andrew John sbn'Weref dew to remove his bayonets; and restore self-government at the loath, we doubt not society,aould entirelyL . l:ver itht healthy action wit in the peiti This, t nd to Whii:llt*tt liekroorat Sonth; should labor, and' mit' Who' fancy running away fio den madness by a Souther¢ max, must turn and faop the madness and work with us for its utter overthrotf. Wooletyll not overthrown in the South, and - never can be restored until Abolition is destroyed; and thew it restoreb itself just as nadurally seen epileptic gets up and walks after the fit lies leis,him. Old4luani. --.lt is reported on pretty good anther rele 4i it, that Pr of Johnson ban requested the Morn fCI MeClellan from Europe, with the int n oon of appidating hip Sani tary of War. A Son of - Old John Brown Advises tb. Negroes to Arm And Deinand ' Rights. On the 28d gine number ,of tegrocs; from different parts of the States, met at l'ut-ni-Bay for the purpose of celebrating, the anniversary of the Miming of the eman cipation prom:lan:alien by President, Lin coln. The crowd present called upon John Brown, son of old Ossawattotnie Brown, who resides upon Put-in-Bay Island, mud' invited hint to address them. Mr. Brown accepted the inrltSLlOf and—addressed the negroes. A liepublioan friend of ours Who was present, and in whole veracity we have 'he greatest eoutidenoe' has furnished Ilb %fill the following synopsis of the main points of the speech: :Mr. Brown opened his remarks by refer rlngr- to thlt which had 'milled them together, and 'after Wee complimen tary reultrke in regard to .P4esident Lin coln, nod a lengthy diseerldtion Upon noble , luedities of the black race, be said : “Nly colored friends, you hare now the right to one box, and that is the dartraidge box ; but there' ure two other boxes which you ought to olaitu. . One of which is the ballot-box, und the othe'r is the jury-box- If the white people fail ,to giro you these, and if you cannot get theta in a peaceable' "way, l advise you to awn yournelres and •Ilenuitid your lull rights front the gine:a larm.” rd order to itnpte99 thief idea more firmly on the tnindzi or hie bearers. %lr. B give the el•IIIC11Ce ur the number of negroes iu the United states, Cuutsda, anti Ilu s ytt,aild b.I ist • i'h eon be elepondol upon, ate! will Aid your olrugglo for your rigtWt " Mi. Mown, In µlit:Kling to the ouloutia,- i ion robotic, ow “There is •ootoi talk of colonizing you, toy colored bretheren. in mut far cif State or clone. I advise you not to listen to any rush /it muneirous pri.pusrt ion. Do not go, but, ou,the contrary. tetnain here end figUt for your rights necehmary. Vou. will ho aided in the contests by min:, of your white' doeAlvehltv- Th. .ron of.inAlt — JhtirlSrohn *TIT never deceive you. ' &e. In concluding his rpvech, Mr. ffrowu gore the negioe4 the following adtice ; “Renicinher your arms, keep your bay onets bright, uud be ready for the comiN. dome." It is hardly •necessary for us to e;ftineht en the speech of Mt Brawn. Om readers will Ita ly understand what means. They ruewdl that he IM but owing in the foot steps of glin lath who was hung for get ting up an tae eetiou in Virginia, captur ing the' erinnent artoory at Harpers Ferry, of fur the murder of innocent pc 1.1.. "- The younger Brown teems to ate inherited the insane ideas of hie lather ae s d, if possible, to inure bold in his enunciation of Lis opiniuuy than way 1118 :1 1 1Asler.-01hura Olaiu) NeirS. --The W.r(d gives the following 1 - id of distlegulbhed gentlemen, principally citi— ?,eue or the :Nate of New York, who have abandoned the en-called ••Uuimt party" and ate now acting with the only trite Union , party in the eountry, the Itentocratic party : Alontgomery Weir, hitt i'oetL.setor (Jen ernl wider Pruaiident I.lutotn. Lucius eseut Cuuiptruller tlt this mute. Martin Bh:tear, Supreme Court Juqice. henry N. Stucum;\ Major tleuerat U. 8 Army. John Cochrane, predent Altuiney Gener al at Hinte of New York Daniel L. B:eLled, Slajur Oenoral U. 8. ruj John V. l Ekinowl, or New lurk, jato Sti;,rerzo• lto Judge Kirluw ut N[l.lt.9n, State Sell at or. ' Robert Campbell, of Steuben, lute Re inthltettu Lteuteuunt Ltuveruor of New k. HlOl I6offia4 B Carroll, of Iteneselaer, ex lienatorand Cann) krprztiser. D. 1.) Templ.)he Marshall, late \er ul Officer. New lurk-. If the leatler , f tllll9 abandon the Reiteb liefine, what t-.T!o become of the rank and fi ------.--. - Wc - nottce Mar h press quite getter ally speaks of Holt's late hanging r at Washington as: •a Judicial murder flow can judicial when the jadodary had nothing to do will*ily Whether the parties hanged werninnoccut or guilty, the public , can have no intelligent opinion, because tliey_Ltad no trial. dolt's military impost Gott , was no ionrl± like a !dial Wait n gositip nig-match or drindoen need inn' hewed wo men' is a food. Almost all the witnesses were the hired pimps and spits of Stanton's department —a set ut vaiLabouils and thieves! —common liars !--aal tit instruments NUCiI a court. 11u1 have not seen the end of this lawless affair. Holt and his blackguards win yet stand in the crininalle tu answer to a bench cf./to/yrs fur the part they have played. Throe is a silent scowl ripen the public face, which means that the thing wilt yet co no into the courts or law. II all the patties were ten GAB guilty, that dues not lessen the ciliate of Hull add his villains. fly tite r lows, Ilult and hit villains are guilty of the crime of vtanslaugheer, and they mayAet, alai we trust in God they will be, tried 'and punished as the law onlaiam. In England not many years ago, a military governor of India was hanged for a less offence against the civil law, even twenty yours utter his lairless court-martial, *lf Holt does not &eine every night. of a rope about his neck, it is because he is as much fool as knave.-01J (hard. "A fIrt4n,ILEAB - '1EXLIIB+1110N."---earotty's Philadelphia Press is out to!dny irra leading editorial, denouncing the Hpisctipal con vention indle severest terms, fotnot passipt . Mr. Horace Binnei's radical resolutions, congratulating the Almighty upon the ab olition of slavery (fur that is just the meaning Of them.) The.Etlitor says : "A great national bosly of Christians. called together for the holiest of puiposes, and after a great war agaiust the most un holy of rebellions, to thus made' to sit with closed lips, silent and deaf, even when the lately armed and ram utterly defeated reb els are penetrated with on overwhelming sensmof their offences, audpenitently admit that the band of Clod is visible in the tri unrph of freedom and -the destruction of slavery I This is not only a sad,—lt is a %homeless exhibition." Yellin the Demone of Discord are in a htd vhf Hoar NIKO' would haver fulthid h,is heads, bad the Episcopalians felmivied to remain divided against tbeenseleus.. As it is, Satan must grim and bear it. Peace on Earth—not hell on Earth—is the hat that has gone forth'. The Press by the way, speoake.of a pretest. Term the "Bishop" Vinton. Who is Os eminent "B op" Vinton t— N. York Ex prem. reidlled soldier lately Oared" a' dna bora, for 16le In New York, width hi laid woes grans raoer.'4 "Clan ho run veil fast r"inq'utred one of-the apeotatorw.. i. yes.' nald the moldier, "be was rode 6"3 , Gen eral Hooker di Chaneellorvllle." The wag sold blabbers° fur *3OO. The Infamous RepubMeen Friiids*Pllll , . , mdelph/s. At the lett snoods. PhOlptilit the nominee_ or thie. Jlll* PLY Commissioner, Ile. Elitist. wee 4 1 11114401 by the vole or the ,;people of PhliedelthWend Major Wen?nr, Itenteeestlo eAnOeste, was elected: Mr. Olitendoet einitll party vole nearly 10 OM' 3lnjur'. l Weitier's ma jority was - 1,&90 votes. Col. Mann, the lteptiblicau nominee for District Attorney, on the same tickett with Gi I , hod nearly 10,000 quajority. Yesterday the so called "soldiers' yulti' was returned to the Pro thotrotarY's -- Ity_ttite-vote Ni; (Area was counted elected ! ! ! This egatitio fraud has taken the people by surprise. Even lhe Republicans are frightened at. the audacious attempt to cot at defiance the popuitir will. Men of all parties begin to ask if the Republican par t!, id sot rotten. This attempt to • , treat an elention_ne .though it had net taken Ole" has stirred the public mind to a state of great exasperation. The emegcopublictuis7 feel that .therhaie trifled with 'the elective franchise once itio often—they 'have over shot the mark These "soldier vote re turns" show patent frauds. The Wiwi 'are opt folded; the envelopes are all or one kind they acre melted all et the seine peat office, on the same day, Jost In time to come to Phi adelphia for the lett meeting of the return judges, Friday, Vet. 27. They were insdnuarked New Yolk. as coming (rem New Orleans, bet there'bad VCell arrival from' New Orleans ntlfeteYork-fOr some days beep these returns , weim mailed at New York ' . J Froth! on fraud, utter cont,:mpt for the rights of the Peop!e, itistdei,tt and audicious disregard thellaittest prittetklee of hon= esty and ettn prudence,. mark this last ef fort of the .11Lepublican party to defend fhb will of the people. Men el Perina“i anis, ore you content supinely to peraitt such outrages to pass. unrebuked, on the sacred right of the ballot. Men of PerinNylvania, arc you willingby your want of intert,l in the rate of your country and it+ in•ititittionf. its free government, tie free ballot and elections, to give up your manhood nu' litical rights to the ticTiThltean par , which cheats fur "'power and coniun raude fur I place. Itiun up: men of Pe. • prcic um., Con ' r Lu a u r 4, to free ballot. iiegio nt together, )(tong ono. to Nee em of g;oventruttel trot) deetruet- frauds of tle li.•pulioa•l party. Re dmbor whet, it cost your fathers to estab lish a free government, the right to vote„ and itie - Tiority of the ballot, ll ill you stif fer the.Repithlican party to deetroy WI and you triand idly by Awake t arouse! or ganize! ! Let the ory go forth over 'the hills nod valleys of Pennsylvania-6 rots -1 V %It ViltE-AS lIONNST or let the consequences '•fall on us and our children." souud the elarkin the mou—organize organize ! Nu* is aid hour to begin. A free vole, a fair soeouut, or despotism,—Porini t rnion. newspaper cpllitlg itself Deinocrat ic is not ashamed to say that Aid-ahem Lin coln wits the flutter alibi people "t Of whet people? The negroes we hope in meant; fur we will nut be considered as belonging to ally people of whit It Al/1111111111 11,111e0111 we. it lather in soy nense. We should be glad to let Atirnll3l44.-Liticoln rent (inlet in his grate; but its long tie his triende will bring hiin up before 04. so 11)11g we shall express our contempt unit horror of everything that belonged to hi. life. We knipt, of nothing in hnn that nin 1,11 of h ush east eppcole. 11121 jokes were en eletent• (UM no gin iletnau at thew.—Old attord. —A Nsw tut It daily gikvor the inui :outs of Shentiat's• march unottr the htllttteluv fuse stung hooding . 700 Int I. drab : Robbery, Lore, Ntlegt dm I Plunder " That wto n I . :011 mi ug •. 81 . r looking lute to l J • ilegn) —olst (;11,frfl NECV .117 V E COURT PROI'L 11/.1 Whereat!. ahe 110[101,1,1e ' 4 a tnuel Linn, prealdrut judge o f the court of eouttnon pleas In ehe lath judtvial ti,trot, e.tlre.ting of the ,canto., if I entre, eleurtlitlJ and Chalon, and the Honorable, John ri. Pruudfuut and Samuel r`trutieekel, ca 1 1 .4sfieillte judges In l'entre co., having inetted timir precept, to mu directed, for holding a court of oyer wad ttrtuitter and gun era] Jail delivery at Bellefonte. fur the county of lua.a.traf.a,ll4-4 01 ..,,,,..050 o VII the in liouttay '4,f No% erul,or, 1 'fl:'i, hellig the ::',' day of (Le wohtli, and to c , Ji.tito, ohtwck . .N oti,u is therefore bomb e lven to the Cur- Oriel', JIIA.I I II , VI the PU/11 . 01111, Cull/0411114 of the .6,1 county of Centre, !hilt they be thew and there 111 tl,eir p,per per ore 31 r 1 o'clock in the afternoon of •ut‘d days wlth thefr T rd., intrn yajemF, elmolo u tiou e , anti other r/I •pabruhoces, to do those thing", which to their o es upper !lei • he done, and those who are boujd in te e, mia me- to proeceuto uganivt the persons that u ur a a 1 1.40 en the stett of Centre county, he the o.. to ptusteete uiralmht themas shut' be ,f - 1 2 .ii ti k , ' - '''' rfren un,. my band et lisdlofrute the Ith day 01 Novenit,or A. D. ouo tifrand eight hun dred and sixty the, and th: ghty-rstuth year of the independence of tile ited States. Sheri Office, ftteHrt ltll CON LEY, Ifollefupte, l'a. Sherif. Y; , AA 17 , NIA.SONIO 710 CLIESTNET STREET, has now opened' LACE CURTAL-Nrg, of his own importation. nrocatelle Curtains, Damask Curtnine. wool Rep (hrrtitirts, Tatin Loin. Curtains, Nottingham Curtains, Mind in Curtains, • Cloth, 'fable and Plano Covers Constantly receiving Novelties in CURTAIN MATERIALS, embracing the Celebrated Smyrna Clothdand MODE DRA.PERIE; ,; , WINDOW ISH A 1 17 in every Desirt4c Style Color or Price y I. E. WALRAVEN, No. 719 Chestnut St., Philadelphia. Nov. 10, Tos-3131. 'MOT ICE. Notice *hereby given to the heirs and represewiatfves of John finlike" late of Fenn tawnier in Contra county deceased, that the undertigned hav'ing been appointed by th'S court of common picas of-C.4140 county, as commissioner to take tdstimony to prove the contract diode by sitter dehedent Intik! lifetime with John Mei/ad, fur the mule of certain ,Teat estake in sakd comity, will atketal to the duties of his apPolnement at the Rutstein office is the the - borough' oftellefottei on fiegarday the ihtW day of November, R. D. *SO ; wt#o4o,;partud interested are notified to attend if pay psi proper. stev 10411. „ B. T. sudePat• O'ffort E : Ectrronif Letteri Testamentary On the Mdat . of / Catherine 4anklivieeeseed, late or Potter F:uera abip, having been gragood, the subsertm.he requests all person - 8 itnowhis thembel its: debted to raid mines to' Mahe lmmedhtb-ppsy madt those ingirquolaiqms to ktimem,.tli k om. duly authenticated by law OWieftlement, J'ATICII K. RVITIMIS.' itor7lo—ilt Oreembny Frvp, Roti,Aßs 1114, ARD. A peeket bOok orintebileg ititottwebiz dentin ffse stollen frostlfm. George D. Rum baker. ai tbe.stere of Isom say on Thum/iv last. The above reweriVerill be raid for tb. return of it to ihirogice orig. Warier-11,0r May 'e NEW' ADVNIIMINDIENT:i: ~ VA!..._,..... 21.11111 FF SALM My virtue of sou try writ at Lasser amiltal * Vas liiiirui lhopowri ies..ed tritt or t' ii diktat of a .mullin pPitits It entitles taint,. studio me ill teetredi gill list tripes.' to Pahl,. sale. it{ the tomtit h.nilob, id t the herwieh ,r BellefOnte. on Niamtity. 111. 27th day of Melton. ber. A. I). 1+155. the drerribeil prows 7y t.w ti All dist friaintato 'ludo out or ire. : of lied. shuttled in Pet ar-rtrireship, rent.. tottlity. sod described ni fbllows: Me r i t ~.1,,7 et, a chestnut tisk, tbrit e d'hug lands r.f 7 ~,,,i F. rinoy a uth 32} dipmr, ,eau D 2 t.t.' er te it u-i; thence el gig liii IS rit John Neff north s_i d 'grans. UM LI psi h.. t. ilgaey - tfei..e Long lap Is of Henry Ida bee porth..34} it gre. , ma' 61} petoh.rs to a *next dint e a twig li t trki DI meta nr Route 5 i dereas, wee 7/ p., s h . ea to the place °rime:3l3lex: contain hug 24 tiers. and 134 perebes, net tuna ure.'thisterru ereetid • ramie dwelling house, and lank hunt with let ururements and superstitius+. Seized, taleu in execution, and to be told di the proterty 4( Louisa llopeireite ALSO, a oertein two lint plain trim. dn a '. .ling ho um, rlitui tad iu pal( Moon townaltip. atoi adjoining landau( Samuel Inewolug 1 , 1410 Li „d ikl Spencer, frontl e nion ?alike road leadi ng I, Ifs' —ot9g Anil the other there .ffn th• warrnirtoe D.ll, Joseph J. .Idler, enritsin•ns 113 acres sie.l Ll Latiin 1., 11.0.11114,1. 1111,1 to 5..141 &i the prilliarty of !weld. ft./Wynne • k,i Da% id - -- gra° COlllllll/UCS rt I o ' clock. P. M. of disy. Sheriff's Office, crg,lniae =et= IZEI.iISTER'S NOTlek.S. 11 he following accounts blue- bite eixatuined and pasted Iy And female !lied af record in this calico for the isupenoion of lisirt, legatees, creditors and all uAers iu any lk ay in terested and wilt toe pretedtad to the Osplieu's Coon of Oeutre eounty to lie held at illelletwate, for allowance and tiontinwation, un tredneeday, the 2Vt)f of I'Veteuther A. 0,1865. 1. - Ti.. siceatift of Dartlal Werfttaltilotrator of *stet* of Julyao #ult lab of sines town ship eceased. _ 2. The account of George Weaver, goonlleo of Manse Harper, miner eleild of !)serge llorpar . ,, lota .if Miles township dsweased. The neeount of Peter /lister, guardian of Mary, (reorg. , and Jolla Stoves, minor elkildnui . of Joel Stover, labor Putt...twit. diltseasiel. A. The account tit Adana /aisy. eaocutor of Ac., of John lltiffniatt, late of Penn fewstahip deceased. 5, The aueonnt of Franela Joeion, guardian of l'cter S.ladol, tumor child o f if .cteg sau k d i g, late of Centre coiltitS' 5. The Prequel of Nathan ./. Mhrk.U. adeal•- ietratot of dr.c., of Flatten, k Nestleredie f late at Lil,ertc toutcthlp deeea ed. 7. The Recount of Not Mitchell as 1 Daniel W. 1101. e=eenture of :be lase will wet testament 4.1 John M. kucas, late of Csraran tau n.liip tfeems:,l. . The see mail ofJohn U. trafter ~ f dir . of Conrad Drolgarl, We of Y ti igrod. wlt Admis ,kr, , tqa.te, of r4tter tu,‘ uah.p • e 1 0 . ' Clitt ll uu bt J. IS itt tI, i guns than th Ibulerhar. minor ch 31.1 of Fttvrith I tfarlavher, late of t:Aroaitip eemmiNf. 11. 'fho aceottul .r.r Nathan Beak, adzatelatra tor er dte.,ott Robrrt flesh, Isle of 3.lariltu tow a ship dertntt•ed.. 12. The aetount ur Thomas ISiteo4 adtalhla• trator or dc.. of Jortmimb Itorrolog,late .t 11a1f. moon townehlp Bocettee4. 13.. The hndl , 0 , 1•Yal er Michael Shaffer Sr , guartitan of John Itrbet, tamer elsiid Of Abra ham Reber, late of Mitt, towahhip deeetatol. 14. The nreoont itol.trrt it. llutvont, whole. i.trator tot 10.. of John heau4agar, Isfe of biota: towttabitt deceased. 15 . '3441.5t .aal. of ( I .or i e. -I.l4reawat4- end -.rei;:tilth Seine. ext.uto, if the lx•t wilt Ilia t , Staltt. Irt Ut Jae. I rofill , tart, late of uito der e.tat .1 113. Thu Itt•einlnt of Darld }lmp*, adtatulatra for of John J. Mover, late of liajned too 1,11 ip Jc l , c l aaed. 17. the nc.., , unt ./ . 1' Robert Ifolinte, r uardllks of.Eteeta 1.; , and Jared tic flard;cle. mainr children of Willoda Harding, lata of Wal ker totteship devearail. ' 18. The account of Michael Harper. intardialt df Amelia sad David Ifesterclan, minor abil- Jaen of Jubm'lleatermao, late of Daum towt' - attip deceased. Nor. IL-41. Olti'llAN'S COI'Rt BAIA. - of' theerP lan', a court of C ' i l ui l ire't u urt3l. - ;• will Iwo elposeil to public II sti e at the 1.9,b1e honorer Sawn Furey, hi the borough 95.- - flovrard, SATURDAY, NOV. 11, 1865, t - p, tn., the following I:scribed rola- Rate, to wit: • irided one eighth part of a tract or in Howard township. Centre society. houddad ntr thy !with by Held Eagle creek... the east by lamb. of Is:. J. Mitchell, J. Z. Lung and Jutues Whitrhan'', on the 'bath by lauds of J. P. Packer and James 110nr17, and on the treat by lands of Job W. Packer and others, containing FORTY acres, more or leis. ALSO, the undivided ane.tourth part of 0 . certain tract of'l i situate in Howard town ship, Centre count , bounded and described as foltovis, to Wits On Mb east by lands of J. P. Pieter and Montgomery's heirs, on the south by. lands of Jacob Baker, orithe west by lands of Samuel Reber and other!, attd on the north .by lands of James illevelly; eentaining acres, more or less. Tweet ow . Sat.a One-half fht, purchase money tore nekton confirmation of tile sale, and The residue PI one leer thereafter. with iu lomat, to be secured by bond and mortgage on the preinlies:' _ W. ALLISON. Jlt“ Adrier of fet. or Rciturceo Ourtieffits, dee'cL Oct. 13, 416-4 t. : A MiIIIISTUATOS'S VMS. di r ‘i ttsie or baminiatration us the prep tow late 6f Morns nslap, og be pante! . to the osier signed, sa persons ing timemsele es indebted to said define, are requested tobeate inineediste payment, nod the.. buring,eleiros mason As 'erne ptseuent Olent duly Aothenl l isated for seasonal. " • D. B WiIiTJA. ND. JUN U. KELLAR. -Jalartiriefrators. 6c t 27-6 e. #UPATAita No pcs, . b oh Thee tuidereled de leaded , uppeldod Ooee (*men 1110111110, to dia 4,Sbeeto ' t ing eoodie tar of news C•Deeed o 4111140 !,hiji 0 , 4 1 ortedevd Aereezeidi' Do ha d swag those legally so •Wleerde4Ptd Ail $o lb. deetios of Mee apsoddeeoid 04 Deide k i dee liE . ii 01 of &m mber, A. D 1845.4 Ti (Moire kr. Ai Ms Aikatibilie, ' .• ' ' -.— . A. 0. /vac!. ' *kr 41 , ... i•ifisor. . . . _ A DMINIS ATOR'S NO'WA , Lorton ot‘riAbottrlotrorloa on tdi oo tago,ofJojra Loom. We of tpworbiP. ttoo'll, harlot brotoi rod to tIM indirrigood , peroOtor lo to , oala ate hereby recluogoli Woke lalodistorotorout, Anil those having °lobos, tojoremot duly altbant l- 11 Wad, for settlionisAt. • J4l4ll3mreACatizt") Octia-et. • t Esto, Jt. CONWAY, S'hwtir tEom. Nurrens J. I'. GIMPIZAIti, Rsi ME
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers