.~~ira~~~~~~x r . GRAY PEER, Itergoa Aso Paoraszvoa. /oil W. IMMIT. Assommrs Iliprrea Err!mi3mi FRIDAY MONDIAL', DEC. 14, Isl , ycar when paid ID advance _ . in advance, and $3,00 when not paid before the expiration of the year. EIMER 111=1321 ifilßuainees of an important ebarao • tor, having occupied the aniire time and attention of the editor in-itiol, during l a the past and pre t week editorial dutici have devol entirely upon the aibueiate, who 'ueg the forbearance of Ida reader for whateVer deficienciali may have been noticed in the WAirnmAlv. The limit "Rank Movement (I) against the Jiieebim.' In reply to the query of the Central lint. last week, as to what the WATCH. MAI-would say of the 41fi7trauke News e resent itsterted clip ov.'i the Round trace of Dentociey into the rotten harness of negro suffmgemun. we have only to re mark that whenever a heretofore demo cratio paper joins ham& wittthe enemies, of the Democratio party: and attempts to make the people believe that either im partml or universal negro suffrage is a is a democratic measure it that instant ,ceases to be a demoeratie journal forever, and heroines the opponent of the very rause that it has hitherto professed to serve It is a cardinal principle of the democratic party that a negro is not and size nnf he a citizen , and that any legis latirn v.hich attempts to male him so, 1,3 bestowing upon him the right of suf frage, unconstitutional. The Demo crane pal ty held. and ha, always herd that thi, is a white man's gtoernment, nod that none but white men are enti tled by A right interpretation of the Constitution of the country, to any par ticipation in its Executor, Legislative or Judicial branches. A , negro has no more right to vote than a monkey, and fr the same reason—want of capubi its at undeNtand the duties and responsibil ities of a citizen of a free republican government. The Chicago Times has now the credit, (!) as it will hereafter have" theinfamy, of having first suggested to the Demo cratic party the abandonment of its life long and cherished principles for the ouktf of political power. A's a priinfly measure it cast its line into .4 the turbid stream of Western Democracy, which had been muddied at the beginning of the war. and has ever slue been restless and ~Infused, Anxious for any change that might bring them out of dp.° dark and agitated waters, many of the biggest fish in that uncertain stream, swain ea gerly to the bait and swallowed it, hoot. and all, forgetting, unhappily, that the change they sought fur might eventuate in a jerk from murky waters into some thing still darker and more hideously uncertain. Like a skillful flsherrnan,the 'Timm wikei it felt the tugging at its line, quickly dre* them to the surface, and mist them with remorseless joy into the black republican fish-basket of impartial negro suffrage. Here they 'are at pres ent, wriggling and jumping around, like a genuine fish in •a.dustv road, half smothered by the impure and stifling atmosphere of radical niggerism, and ., gasping and longing fora drop of the pure and invigorating water of Democracy. But /inch water comes not to them.— They muse go to it. If they can escape from the basket of their captor, and flounder through the mud and mire of niggertsua, which they have unguardedly got into, and which lies between their present. position and the pure stream of constitutional democracy, all may yet be well with them. The great river is ready to wash them clean. and fit them once more his the habitation they so unwisely and foolishly left. But. if their effort to saps Amid fail, they must push wiriest the pale and without the rites of the Demeermie ehureh. As long as they remain in thatlesket of iniquity, either willingly or unwillingly. they can net and EAf not be recognized as mem os of the orthodox democracy, and aced list expect to participate in any of its benefits. But, fortunately for thti country and the democratic party, the KIISUNTi do moceacy cannot zee the point of this lit tle .fishing excursion of the Chicago nmes, which it calls its "great flank movement against the Jacobin." They cannot comprehend how a movensent to secure suffrage; to the negroes of the North and BdUßli, on the part of the Democracy, would be a bombshell in the camp of the enemy. They cannot see how the South, by anticipating this long wished for object of the black r .publi rims, would be stealing the radical thun der or overthrowing the Abolition party. They cannot see what good would result 'to the democracy of the country from such a course, and hence they have fail ed to nibble at the bait so temotingly thrown- out by that journal. 99 . ,,the eontrary they have esteemed the ;Manse recommended and advocated by the Piano to be fraught with evil, and a complete departure from all the time honorod,priticiplas for which they have fought from the inoePtion of the party to the present hour. And we are glad toreeord'ehat a large number, probably a majority of the Western journals, take the same view of the ease, and refuse to follow in the wake of the cliicsjm. paper. What the exact idea of the Times was, when it concluded to take the astonish ing course it did, is not very clear. It pretaufat,t bat it was the best thing the ' 'Democratic party could do !It professed to believe that the adoption of the negro fterela idol by the Democracy would hawk the talk ent of the radials, - and everMateln the field and.oomplete over threareet Ihs,party. - That the neve vote mould than be seemed to the 'De asmsuoy, elhareby placing it once-more in - panic cad them% world have time to oi t , attend tenhirteriff and other mportant potisked-issh es, irate ago I sight of in .„,_ the overnwering shadow f the negro -- "eglisetionl" Iti - stiott. it argued that such a course on.the part of -the Democracy irmilkOkAlho .viasa v dinagioa Gat of politic', imattpititairklb , And forayer, taiaLlitasiranitto Sleleetrumi rtsanquili dihhtittonslideV 1 ••••-•• • y, - • -,' . „pegs Seta 411migeb. ko rill than*, adoptiag the principle of "Agra sulhatiktl the Democratic party would be giving up one of the most cherished planks in its platform. It forgot,to say that by so doing the Denmeraggeroidd be faleifybig their' own record—eadag their own words,and doing the vityk; nog iallitmoss thing they have all their lives been op= posing the Abolitionists for attempting to do. Besides this, they would have bectraidinkuhe radicals to humiliate the South, wilith Founts and spits upon the very idea of negro suffrage, and which would rather ridr, another war than have this damning, this everlasting disgrace jut upon thorn. Traitorous motives have been laid at the door of; the Chicago limes in this connexion. It has been charged with an attempt to betray the. party into: 7 the hands of its enemies But this it can not do Whatever may have been its motives in its extrltordinary cotirse, t here was never anything more Certain than that the Democratic rattily will never consent to negro suffrage as a part of its p'atfortn: It is committed irrevocably to the 'doctrine of white citizenship, and as lung us it remains a party it will resist every affewpt to make the negro the po ttitatlor social equal of the white man. It will stand by the South in this matter as it ought to have stood by the South in 1861 2 and thus have prevented a fratri cidal war, the effects of which we are now experiencing to a still more hitter extent, if possible. than during the years when the thunder of the cannon and the charge of advancing legion. were heard reverberating from nue end ortlie l an d to t he ether The Democracy •cout at negro suffrage. And the limes tell+ not the truth when it sari ''it i+ inevitable It will lICA er eons • upon the. people if they lid/ that i Nhall not. The DemocratiC party hale willed that the white man shall he the eitizen of this Republic. and 13 mg Jour nals the Times, the lirdon I and the Milnaukee New; mu,t Ntand flout undei The Message On our ouvoile to-day we publish in full the message of President Johnson, to which we invite the earnest attention ar reader, It is a document worthy their perusal. and givi.s a calm states tomilile and impsrtial view of affairs As we aid last week, the President up holds firmly the line of policy be marled out long ago 111 regard to the re,t,.ration of the Southern State, to the Union dud solemnly impresses upon Congress the necessity for the immediate admission of their Senators and representatives to their seats itt that body It cannot fail to be gratify tag to eveiy conservative republican and demoerat in the laud, that the President his thus Courageously stood between the South dad the malignant hate of her enemies. Whatever he tinny lime done heretofore that was not in Ary" accordance with the Constitution of the United State.. it is pleasant to know that AttnitEw JOHNSON is not a coward, to be deterred from the filifillitient of his duty by the vile threats of the would be destroyers of peace and Union It is gratifying to feel tl.at in this instance he is clearly aware of his duty and responsibility in the preniiscil has the mouLand physical courage to demand of the info mous Rump that justice be done to the gallant people of the outraged and ted South. Thus far the Radicals have come to grief, and their devilish boast that the Rump was "master of the situation' is proven a lie. They thought the Presi dent would be frightened by their threats of impeachment, and would •make such concessions as would insure to them the easy and speedy,hriumph of that peculiar policy of "reconstruction" which would mike the South a desert and its people slaves. Rut they *ere mistaken-- they "reckoned without their host, 'and they find the odds against them far greater than they imagined. The President has interposed his executive arm between the Solit'V'and ruin, and "if worst should come to worst, - he may make his power felt in a manner that these designing scoundrels will not dare to trifle with' .The people will thank ANDREW JIMN sow for this, and yeirs hence, he will look back at his conduct in this solemn hour of the Republic's extremity with pride and pleasure, thanking God that he was thus enabled to stand boldly 4" wecn the people and the damnable con sz4tors who were seeking their de attuct A Perpetual Congress The radicals are playing a dangerous game fur the country. One ofahe most alarming indications of this ix the fact of the recent passage by the house of Itep ripientatives of the bill making the ses- Sions of Congress pernetual, rnstead of 'the good old fashion of an adjournment for six or nine months during the year, a/id/atop now proposes to makiithe sittings, not periodical, as heretofore, but perpetual, without any adjournment, except what few weeks of a recce+ Con gress may see fit to take of it. 9 own tic cord. The object of this extraordinary pri.- ceeding is to, checkmate the President and to counteract his influence for good, and to prevent any possible restoration of ti'a Southern States to the Union, except on terms that the Rump itself shall dictate. By keeping the public mind of the North constantly excited on the subject, and widening the breach be tween itself ad the President, the Rump Congress hopes to deceive the peiple in to a support of its infamous and destruk tive policy. To do this it is necessary to be in session all the time in order to counteract the efforts of the President Cur the restoration of the Union o terms compatible with the feelings and inter ests of the South, as well as in accor dime with the magnanimity end gener osity of the great team of the Northern people reatolisrOeir now fallen, but for mer galleurand eltivelric foe. The people can now, see whither wo ire drifting, and to what a dangerous finality the triumph of Illmiditionisui tends. The Constitution has been over thrown, the sacred laws. of the land have t"tt disregarded, and the rights and liberties of the peoplware put in jeopardy. W.batie tole the malt of all thislsLet the people ponder. well this , wooed= 'amid Judidairby the alarming record of Orge= few peen, les thenteeelt, to un rWeelenaboir long- thin Repoli.= gov einiminbean =mime= themes Aimee are now lirogrossing toward anarchy, oonsolitiation and dictatorial power. We w)letnnly believe that the best thing ndsew Johnson can now do for this innate) is to take the power :nto his own hands and &Torso the Rump at the point of the 6yonet, as 'Cromwell did the Parliament. This would hardly be more unconstitutional than the 'disgust ing, infamous and grindihg legislation which the Rump has Fastened upon the people. The Future of the South . _ ~ Therm/ hetelligencer intern but a triteeent, when it nay n that the future oft South is iit the hands of its young teen. Ilow many of them are quaff:ollg themselves to tonnage its fair torie'g, r eoutrta its railroads. mine its ore, work - its machine shops, and cultivate its plantations? Professional men it has in abundance—able law3cri, accomplished physicians, eloquent speakers. These have their uses, but the growth of a State depends less on them than on the character of the men win) manage taderpruse.. What is mo , t need edit) the South to-day is that the )(lung blond which fought for it so gallantly should work it as determinedly On the plantation, in the shop, in the fach%ty. there the South is to effect its die re t o ration. The vtaing nwn who dog tretn-h -and fed on hominy and poi k. who went clad in homespun gray and slept M cold or ram or , Jove under t he campy or the bei‘ens to further the fn titbit's, they Islie‘ed, of their native hood eau now do noble ser% laying bold of t m twig s lathes, guid ing its spindles, handling its locomot But there is want ot capital . .No mat ter They hate youth, health, bur, ambition, and good abilities. They ha, e emir murals e for which two ork - e.in with a will, and .mere., ndl VrIM their efforts New Publications Wlll. IVOLTNY Or TIM Soi ni E.IIIPd by AI In Gilmore I. I, I) , New Ynrk ‘llieherilmin & Com tinny, Itrimibriiy e have received ft nisi the ittaltli-beltnn tileibat vol unto of nearly five 11111111,11 pi pee. b.! ing . the abore nib. It to is collection by theiNlnent ttovelit:t and 1.01.1 %% Ill lnm tilltn.tre Simms, or South eavalina. of the wer poetry of the South, written during tine terrible years of Ibe tii tlm 111 nn ilex to the frelutg. and pay.mn. of the Son them peep!, ditring rlllll time. It t. 111. .how toig the teleette allil 1111111 Ing lure for the Sundt which Will the utelet lying principle upon which they tmetell 1 111 , 111 , 0 W !heti grand and gloris.ll, rn gglrfot 1 11.10petl enee The poemn are all nsorr or lees he tot trill Sonic are magniheent, while 110/10 t,re eon, mottplace beenilie a eptrit of Inten.se pairio•setn an'.l lo•e of eoutwy which re mind. one or the brave old days. of '7ll ••1 111 ,- 1 1t11.9 that tried 1111.11. Collha " Mr Silnniv himself to among the contributora. Willie the volume Is poncho. I by the 1101.1111n1t..1 rfitiatotte of llon 9 It Meek Henry Tititrott, Paul II Ilityne,.llberi Ilike,John eon, John Eaten Cooke. Jane T II Croes, Carrie Sinclatr, %one Veyre Diorite P. Mr. Caroline 11 thr•nie, and wally other.t 13> =I r Goer %looK. E4o bear Sir :—ln your Issue of the thith ult you have on Omelet 11 . t the eutijia - of '• Thanksgiving," ih which you say that you do •• lint httlieve Hint God order. and and direct. political sO urr ' , and furthermore, you • do not believe that all the variety of forme of government in lb., world are the work. of Ilia hand " That yen are in the main em reel in the, opinions there cannot be nny doubt in -the minds of believer. in the Bible We are informed by Divine rerelattlM tliqt God operates to the affairs of men in too wnys, namely • Itt directing all that in good, nod in permuting 'all that in evil No ,ent ran lake plane anywhere whhout Ilia duretion or permi•eion God is not the author if evil, The Bible Income ue that Had celecte,l the Abr unit, brunch of ilie Sheinetic on red family of men, •• io bee ept•ctul pc plr unto himself oho, all people that are upon the Inca of the earth "v %%lien they were few in number Ile rent theni down two Egypt "seta the Iniquity nt the.l m, rile r 40[1111 befall," where they lived, • in the beet of the as twelve tribe., in 9116 place, to the Egypi tun Oo•ernment. receiving 1 1 / 4 !.3 *ZVI 111 , 111111110111 g Coetr rib nl rein prole twos and holding their eleven. until Owl/ grew to be an aim) 600,000 eating, eacht see of the women null children, or a mixed tonlinti-e of lemons. when they mete btought out writh a mighty hand end an Outsiretched arm, - to:punish Ilie Amotlie, whose iniquity wan full, alid to take pc..• lion of the ••proinieed land " To ean them from the flesh pots of Egypt, Pharaoh was permitted them and to show the ilitwer of Cod,l'bxi nab was permitted to manikin a deter:wool ton not to let God s chosen people go to do a work that Ile had it4tigneil .0 them. Let the,loregoing suffice to prove that Goil doer, for a wise purpose, peruolt all tilt it in wrong as well as direct all ihni is I glit Before entering fully upon the wrrk as- signed to those people elloseu•horo all peo ple upon the (ace u 1 the earth —none -equal, to them—God iosiipited ecle..iaatic a and civil governments for their uve The two were closely blended, ye t l•sn perfectly the tine that neither should encroach on the powers of the ether The ectlesiastical goy ernment was to teach the commands and lowa of God, and in the course of time was commended to be to submission 4. to every ordinance of men for the Lord's coke.": The civil government was so orgenized as to impose on the peoplf fife responeibility of no ruling through their chosen represen tatives, as to p '• the right. God had given. The rights of mon are God made; the rttponsibility of preserving Gat,. right. reeled upon the people, who ruled through their approprtaie represedfatives. Such was the Hebrew comnttinwealth, instituted by God in the wiblereess for the nhildren of Israel, preparatory to their Fothg ..vr to take risseMion of the proMieed % Vt . ; and to exterminate the heathen negro undoes that occupied it. This‘ifebraw commonwealth was compos ed of twine trebes or nations, so confederated 4s to sot like one lotion It was a govern ment by represent:Oen theAaws come di rect from Owl through Mosep and other; and this public officers were chosen bp the public velem. - Boob was theor?'i; x o_f cleii sfdYelitment, and of °oversew, t gem. wentatios, in which the represent dillies were b. subjects and not the masters of the rio phi ; but eater more than tour hundred years in.abe days of Samuel they fmpiously reject ed the free government that God bad gin them, end asked fora king: •that we also may be like all the nations; and that our king may judge nu, sod go ouebefore us mud fight oar battles." God told /Ismael: " liatarkna an to the voice of• the people, in all V t thy eq owe they • • howbeit yet protest JoMistily unto them. and . L. aling them ate manner of the King that alialt . reign over them " Gird said : •• I gni'ettitie a Xing in mire anger' ; nod Poon they were mad* to confect., Ilia , , •• we hove edited is all our vine, Ilse evil, to risk um it king " In the eonene cf ti mer ten tribes or nation. refuel to live tinder rho tyrniiimirrulet 'de liberately adopted by 11,b0b...i, because oftho silly and wicked ndri2e of tho• young men" , and oat uFi a government fur them selveft and when Iteholionin htid rained no Immense army wlttr — the chew of coereln; them So return and suLmit to hie tyronnieril swan, the Lord. through Shemeinli, Pahl to , L Itelioboom •• P e clic. cot go up, nor fight ngnieel your hretherfl return every nom to his too thus thuny , ado/1e of ice So much try troy of e.t.blishing the nor reel noes of our'proimeit bone, which may he mitinineil up hi !hest:tett words. that, • God iv ;rated upo'n 'the throtie of the univerii wielding the destinies of trillions lit Ili mere pjenirtire" •• The cut ire history of the , world Is. but history of I - he.ltukne de crees " Civil government lA of Divine Mi.. A./ r The' s referred to aro eiregvhi.ve 01 [limy interelrees. nine', our time unit') our space will 'not mho it of our when ing 10 311 10CSOill ; nor is it neeolsory, becon-e tin rotelligi ace /11111 goy.] ni , tise of pore render. will cenblu thelll 10 111111, the morn, apple per.. 11 a Yfference to one or two other inipiorilitit filet. The Ilenolti lion of 1771; re•titiiiil w the overthrow of o tret,c 1' went of gOverunient inner ildi teen Toluu den dint hecoins, Feer,.Sa er r, In 00.1 lioldrrrodeprg Stu:, er )ttfoion, for ilie let tett are eylioniiiiiiit4 II :dna an entire neriratioo betvren tutu Siaie the entidili•ldnetit of f l ee crd nod fire eeli d govetionenis In nothing I ie (Atwell 111111`ponlent of the Slain., or vale, I.i le.l independent of rind govern 1111 . 111 Or 111e...h . ir, owe of rind tiller., die •oppiii 1 of religion Wlls 1.41 in i t. o wn es r 111.11, NY 1111111;1A 111,1,111111,1 i. the how. et 111e4..1.1 promo Igaie I Lyn filnlifol nun , volimitiing • to every Or.llllllfler 01 111111 for ,he Lot n hr," or, in (whet w0r.1.1 11/4 , 11111n from nay and all inkerfer ence ut IYie nIT I in of civil go•evionlint. VI ilie ilenotion moon Protenmotniol lie, wet e mile to shine equally in the fury or or protPCll.l of 11,e Sllllr No Prefer mire greet. to 1.1111, or soy nf them': all of :Lem tt, re :Mil Ire irrl 1011111111 d own 1111'111+ Or f/1111111111111119 for f Ivor oolong ilie people lor 11111 " 11 1 1 1 1 f 1 .111 ' I. to the use. of the (Tito eli under n her ty -tent war .° liberally /minded to n toitilioryPer morn thou seventy.pi Imi ,he enriotmi of a free civil govern ment hate been bilioring 4,-volve the Union or fp/ 110.1 onerlln ow the oinoin oI ilia 11 , iiiteil State., with the Vlee of enialill-hing conviibilaiwil nil tonal govei 11111.1111— I,IIIIOCI stied Or 11101111rchiroil in principle, for the hivt thioy-Ilit re ye,nr the oi I. of the ch•rpy hove been in 1,11,4 :hir 4 nfnm 11, mud jtopiiing con vpirnry irrying nu Ilio,r ~el-./nun wink tinder Om falee nun IlypOrrllloll pretest Hint nll ilie rter. of men ore eiloal to each Wilk,: Will:11,01V 1111,11 Ire lone in 011eof one I - 0W.111,414 •hOw., w roOlrnry ilia will and hew of Coil, nod therein, a lEEE ninfttl annottiption : 114 ,1111 is any what or conformity to the laM of Coil fly rho law came a knowledge or sin Wtt bout the low there 1 1 1 110 1 1 111) Step by ntep have theirs co...tor:oor, in Chinch nod State descended to 1110 lowest depth Cat ti 10 Jay wetind /he 001111011/ Chr/.11.111111.111e1er, who in °ripened to the novereigaty of the people, to strange allisnee with the open and avowed infidel, who in tie zenith unix power over rted government, gpenly pro clnunn throngh n 1110-11111[121101141 . 0110.0 - Let 114 get one pawigt of feet 4,1.1 argument be neath the yonder citadel—the lit hie I:odortlinict 101 I hit 111 destructive) willwer do notch until It conies boldly ottf giants! 11110 " Tlitni we arrive nt n Cl..nr knowledge nr iindet•ianding of the dooble 1.111 pane of the conlontitenv m ('hutch and Slate which 14 to overthrow t rioTIVI/ /tut! tree erleviavitCnl go•ernmeniv and elect nu then 11411.11 idea pollen for the Stote and a furred py•tein of rontritiot 101 l for n . faii111,4408111.1411y of DoWa il ie vpr,A4l„of infidel prineltilett, xlin.h n retinford iinon•ily hale no longer ionver,even if ihey had the inch. tioin, p 1 .41111 Finally we .)ty 1 0 1110 ftirudv of cotlmitl 114.1101 Ithe, t 3 ,of fiee ... e il r' 00111• Den I goveo 111111'11i' geniaally, epppott the fionli• to! and coti•lvietil porilon of ihe 11/1111.1.ry, who are ir)lng 10 manual. ilie gdvernmenta that 11,1,1 gave the pall 100 of it., Itevolu -1400 of 177). in 17147 , 141111 11 uv leave ilieni no eau, to complain 4.1.. 41. spa tr. ha thin riotrve"hea one only hope Penn a , Dec 3, 1/161; 7 , li ler 1.1 hop , 6 ‘er Radical Plans for Swindling 'rite recent notion of It. Serrate in re orranstoir the Committees by placing t Ow n, I lion an 1 I.l , oollffir .41 the tall at their rtoloieliveeotiiint tee. Otte not iners'y lire reettit of inshenoney and politociti opleen ft had its origin in Itnger motive\ The ,chat ogee were !M.Nly Ilit oleti , l4 not mo tives for teniortng three men ill nountotelt .thle integrit). and getting entire ItiktHe'd COli rol of to ectrely 11. e tlitee coniintrerit in ithieli there IN the Intgeoi opportunity for enornions private solo and public tistitott lt,to linr• (unit', 01 the gigolo!. job Inanities:. to be done this setooott The Ihree commuters are `Floonce, Toot Office.neol Post Roods, 1 1111• All Affairs Sod Voiotia N'bet C 01111411,11.1 there may be with iriven- IM S. on the part of the Patent Committee. and whirl promised die.mon of the spoil• re,olting from Goreitueent contracts grew ing out of soppose.l Oh•ertonent necessities for ROM, new patent to be granted. careful watching will hereafter develop What a gorgeous opportunity for public ',binder opens in the letting of 0011111Ct4 and tile laying mit of new !Olin routes, or reopening of old ones, a. moat be .lone through the 01.1 States or new “Territories" of the donut —antl ... pki this chalice for a division of our Uncle's money, and n ptrtitton of our Uucle'e pockets Willi contractor@ and agent., is a brininess Willett comes directly. before the committee on l'o•t Offices end lhist Ronda. though It properly belongs to tile b,partment itself I need not remind you that the whole In dian oppropriatiOn business ia a stupendous swindle. second only to ihe enormity known as the Freednien's Bureau. • Erie, little while the Committee on In dian Alfau Bull for a coo) couple of hun dred thonanntl doilsre to ••make a treat♦ wit It the Creek. Crow, or Chickasaw tribes." Thia means the appropriatiqo of a quarter of a million or so to purchase Chic .go or Cincinnati whisky foam name 'loyal" man ufneturer who will ..divide"—enough to aseenthle in the vicinity of come fort on th metier nod keep drunk for three dote I we or three thousand Indians —Sunday Trans erupt —Not long age Wendell Phillv. the pioneer of Radicalism. declared Ina epeeeh in Philadelphia tient •-Wilson. of Illamischu eyelet: ha e promised to give mei better Presi dent in 1869. But there is titres yens in tervening. Are we to wait that time Are me to troll until the i7ensocrrthe ports, increase in power I " ' After these nod, simillr petul ant, deolsratittom le it poseible that the President with • majority of the whole pew p i le of the Union nt his hick will quietly shhmit to impeachment and overthrow ? Pefriot g Onion. A Glass in which Weak-Kneed Democrats f See Themselves as Others See Them. Use following extroci renin w loiter wellies, by lam. Mimes 4pw. I entry, will gill weak-kneed, mingingioti polity democrats nn good a sight of tbim• selves as probably they-ever bad, and may lend some of them to lay complvicly asham ed of their past core: litre permit me to any,'in all frnbknesa. 'het the Democirstic comic la, the State would hot have been c0...mi1l .n 1 to trail tie banners Di the dust to tey. had it not de twirled lie own etondard lo , who were willing to hazard persechtion, Imprison ment, nay even death emelt' m t elonse of rights . — lneatimable to them, • and torntldit toe tu tyrants only " There were thostrut the Democratic party, I regret to say, who 00War.11, jotted in tee hoc-and-cry rained by our poltiikal otiversa rite against each men. miller afunted lip 01011008 or n petty Jealousy, or from .Lose of tear Now I see I hem loud wombed awl defiant when dan ger tartuver So have I seen on *OlllO bright •itetungr all ertioutp , when all nronnd 18.18 ealny,lntid both ihrla Irighten or disturb, a If b the peering heath of 8 I greet hogs, anti nettle Ikeair resound with their notiy cry lint nu sooner hod some 1010001ecout m 01110 burled nOOOO.llO their nitil•t, than all win/ quiet an the grave, mid 11.1 n head I emained above Oho surface liter men, like the frogs can ho loud mid numy enough when. no ' danger Ihreatelin. ru de•ett die men who hove been Walibded y cause. es only to imitate the purpoi see. who, when one fit their number it virit ' ,.keti ft tom pile lie withoiti, the Whole 001.001 01111111 i op Ihe scent atilt blood, ref upon Into to destroy hum A party dim metes not such Ireitimearpl Ike 111,81 or deht of 110 .01pp/1010re who has ezetted the wrath of the polihtwtl alters r calm .t nod w 11; nut succeed, konl what to enste Jaen 10.1 dereire 10 11/10 II MA Ilie 011 0 1, in %ph )0141 polilifn I opt °hems 'The mote 141 cal. tail lie•I and alehaal die smitanter4 of their clued the more determined is their delehse 10 111 11111 'I be niote Ilia toe nsonds 'ltem, the more fierce 11101 comet:cone is tie ai tiggle no 00 %MTh Ira els They leek their 01. o , llla togPihor, and lain Ii rainliar) .•1 their battenst totoil them Ili the fount let the el imp le tit the adreisaty 11011 you otter lesson. ilmit have been taught by those slit inking 1011 e 1.1.1,e1.. xllO 11 1 .1.0,11. g., 10 11.111 the Deno,' ate p 1113.101%0 nal) Iva/ .hem 1 1 11111 iltsaster 10 disaster Fitt the Inn; taw 3 . 011 1 . 0 in tl/0 selection of cantlidalet alio, you hate been governed Inn 11111011 II) VII 00eg...0 0100. 1 11.1 1 Influenced you to chtio, Don own wl.O were the least ;autos toits 10 your tipoments—forgettitig that the num who were ilowe•eil a nit the barer*' little of lb; I.km/tau. should hate been al all °theta the torn of y otit Tom politic app •nos 01,1 1 err guilty of such weakness nod molly 'The 10e11 meatus; wl niir lime rages het, est, ate the hien gt then rbotce, and 11101 getwitilly the 0.00 win triumph Ifemetelies ilt la, that tit 11111 es like these, the torn m your rooks of 0411111 1/0111111,11 11 1001 11.1 vrr,rl, spa tk I ivornitly .111 e t ar 11101 Of wham yen .110011 be %%%%% ditorustlitl There is a weak spot som•wliere, 111111 ii you I, 011pti with 0110111 whet. the niarov unity offers they will hoist Lko ly 6etrhy yon These volley iliolgeti 111,. 3; t 11 ailed lour, either 111 111011 11C, reliatoh, or politica II weenie tight, we ate tight. it we ale mug. we me vatting If we as Ilennurram tire • tab tr let UN in the to- Illre 0101111 by 1111,1C 1 110 ,1 . 111111 illOOO 01 110 bear them 1110.4 Inittelft 1111,1 the thick of the 0111101 . or else take doiett aut flag and go over to the enemy -M Cron 111,‘Enii. Juan C llur-rKIB ninon. meeording in our dispoichen, /ion (et ol for pardon. claiming Ihni,the gen erol drrnds under which enorn l• Lee . +6 - a mlrreintereil ore npplienhle to hint We certainly con .re nn rhoemoe fortioUbllng 'lint they rite npnlicolde In Lint. Lnl, wheili er I hey nre m not we should rejoice. rind nllOllll.lO, of he bon po 'ands would repine on Iris red tart] front 1114 long rind weary enile We feel surprised and pained dint Inns pun -I.li went Lon been so long rind prolrneueul We uLwk I lint he Lan hero treated wink nil neeen•nr3,uudr•r• red Rini 119101...1ux hni Ph neßs ond nererrty The troubles and men int sulferuign that Irene whitened his locks, even in lila innithoud s prone lihrertlinwn oat to him Ilse war west owl deepest or turt le., id tena Of t6ou•nnd+ of hue epiriln het there ,I 1•11 II or in ln General Breck• inridge's ease that should eon, the n nee ty wh irh Inns been gra teed to id her es Con fulerele Absent of htn rank to be witlll el.) flout him lie know not The ilo.critalne (lnn against Ito...cents to in nunccountelolo, nod odious Ile went, like hosts or ether, into the service or the somb: man he ~ab, t.ol, no more obligation.) than ih i not who went Iwo the; service And hill high hear ing ilitoticltont the war was m err celled In I f l/e9//1//1., Ninny of the Confellerete lender.) n ere tilt irced wok cruelty. won Irenchery, vittlt (Motel citlonoty. 101 l not rt word nits ever spoken egninet hen NO malign ',e d it I. stament t vitt for n 'molter( lila pore eaditclo oil ' 111. Ivlty bettor. Inn knightly dill/41r), Inns noble lllOLlerfUlon w Ills hour of ClelorV anti I.IIIIIIiIIIIIIIg [leniently and littolue•s to oil whom th e innuuex of oar put Into his poweriwete universally time andciotrl ocknowleilgeil (lettered Breckno lace to a proud man .1 l e is ler too luottil to ,olnte 1.. faith Wlint• eser oldtgiet ten hit may take lie will bike wuhoul mentor reservationlf restored to the rights in; citizenship. I e will ins a good en 11011 nl d n Vnitliatin inns. lie in OHO of Kew uoky's master minds, ow), derodng n• lot to no donbt prepered to do to the welfare of dun 1.1,1 Some 1111.1 Li. nld ettottoty he eau moles ¢re.iinitil unpnnnnl st vier, —h.uarollt journal. A Rom svrte Scout —The 71141 nit purl, C olo n r e h n t, obnot St 0:el: man noinol J tote.. Henry Nletitegior. who cams in this country in 114011, end in'lHl2 inu.ted PP I\ so l,ltrr Bee/ming din:timed wish n rolitee's life, lie "deserted ni the end of Ore month., and )entotz.ll rfti lroni where he Lod pierton•ly bled droppttur n pm t Or own nerve end ettlltng Itunselt .littnee Henry Ilse wife. - al he Itn.l tuticitetlju ISnS, no, :lie only one knowlng of thftt siren : lll.ton, Ile st•cond 'PI ti nohletusn nu I would of t.tieri.etl to the tenuity • PIPIPA tl hie brother tel ti li.eltelor This et l tally petted unknnwn :n they otingel In aher end search willywYerywhere mode for tic o gent heir log been sent note, ru lilt. VII.. It y tor 411 e piortn.e. Ile conk] pr traced no turther hut, Ohio and reel.? wn• to advert itting Ile cjteneed it he ndver ona eoptot•iptr It he on olleeold c:( the Untied Stetek olficerusLtirrest hint for hie old Oriole itlytlettertinn. ITe'ilstairnye all the pipes, and records which could re tublish LIS Ideal! joy Of tills cireuntelenee hie wife wan kept in ignorenee until just before his tleinthAtich occurred n week non lest Alnntljiy Since hie death hie wife lint a•ceria toed the true pool ion of Af fairs. but it lawyer, whom Mlle lite consul ted itt of opinion that the eennal eetshlivli the identity neeet miry to claim the proper iy. which will proliehly revert to the mown of Englend, the old man's childishness he, me thus deprived Alin wife and children of their lawful inlteritence. —A petition numerously signed, is circolming at Boston, playing Congreas to no amend the Qnnatituion that each State in the Union may determine for itself line status of hp ch item, but that all election. for Federal °theory shall be road and Illegal in any Slats where there im any proacription on account of race or color That in a shrewd aciteme After the addition of such a provision. the States which proaaribe on 0000001 of raoe or color would he required to accept the Federal Conan notion as “lbe supreme law of the land." in Term( to lo cal auffrage. "anything In their enostitu tinos to the contrary notwithetanding " Pairtot 4- Union RADICAL RA•CALITY.—But n month ago an election in Baltimore for the office of mayor, held under the , ropsrvision of the Polies Commisoioneett. •pfaTtited the radicol legistal ore of the peer tons winter, molted in the choice of n radical by a mai jority of over two thousand. llowever.pub lie opinioh wan no eonlirmed in this m i st'. by of the old Conandooinners that Choy iron eompelimi, in opue of themselves and party. t concede to the Democracy one inspsetor of clemlona for each voting distridt and the result of this was that Doititnore elty went Democratic by near three thousand, sad the Slats legislature woo carriedoss we/I os four nut of Ave congressional dint Acts. If a conviction on eironmotantiol ividence pan rvsr taluattecon, it can In this canas.--/ik. The Tr4lnors of the Wand Crash Fur a abort lIW put there bay% been premonitory symptoms of tat flnanelot stop n Oat' Is yak dept loud le'tomhle doWO In granterintropkeibe comer wealth that the greenback intimion bo ereottal,,Tho speosiliSteelheind itelWere In stocks. and in the neeessartre of life, have already received a simmering blow Trade is universfilty doll. The mechanic 'arm languish. The shipyards are idle. Hundreds and tiplusande now in New York ore out of emplopnrni. with no prospect of any abehd. The superintendent of ;he Five Points House of Industry Nuys: ..Ikritt'frtend of and worker among the poor —to those who are unemployed anywhere, do not come toSew York! There are thousands emu. and wowing boys cat of employment. sad nosy of them in a sufferitig condition. There are scarcely any breeches of work that knee not an oreretrmk of workmen, and hundreds of men could be hired here for little more than the board. Let unemployed men go anywhere in the comm.) , and work for their board rather then come to New York." God maid Mtwara wh•l is in more Tor our country. The voidness of Abolition has -truck out of ecialence at's, tingle btow 4,000,000 r bales orcotton, 400,000 hogs, heads of angan, and over $2.000.000 worth or rice. nage three etspie articles of cam mtrde are nearly gone, anti h pea . ple may try to think otl erwine, they will rectintit gone no lung an the Abolition policy continue.: to nee onr country. Thin is n fart t hat mny in well be looked stiunrely in the face filet as last. , It its estimated that the., ore flurry tliorannd Southern men in New York city who bore come here ninon ;he clone or the war Thstakenking down or production in the Mouth in the Mole canoe it. titit the recruit of the wor.as ninny rap• FS — lf the labor or tent of the Smolt had it been disturbed, she would ha•e rapidly cupertited The etfects or Ilse war would ell now have been scarcely visible. Hui to overthrow of production 111.1 oaiped to Southern people to poverty, nod in the ol it will down the whole it °unity with What need ul building ships in New ark to carry COIIOII, suitor 101 l rice when ere ut e none to cur-) • The 1/I I lures that ire arready token place ate but the pee tarot' the financial loom The Norili lout anent wenbli only in fall e harder writ the hour ol tie punishment is arrival —,r 1 . Doc nook 01.14 v e believe ohm l'ref !dent John on Inneu • e 1101 t Ile 1110140.1 . 11 1.011,14 . 1011 01 lite dt ctault O ni pluck ul Prenulent Jgek• sinl Mi. were Jock.on :rang. mud 10 his lice. Lc wouhl, se ibink, net 11. i. n•rnlu- tionitry romp of it Congress reefing into stilisoliines tinder the well applied author, ty of the Court toilet, It Odd puritan of he Slnti•+ litlyttipt tu.gcct the oilier portion. Ir ... I epre+rntation, the eiveletl 'tore It IT'. lit call upon the esecative to enforce the colisttiat tonal rtglita itt the injured ty The 1.8110 to olietoly tootle by the Rad unlit, owl it Jackson - were in the Prestilen. sal Lliati, they ...told err quick foal heir ottietios tattler the • wholesome pressure 01 coto.tituti ..... law The nitstake to to ad nutting this laction 01 revolutionists, thus .1 'not. of Stoic representation to be C'on yrm long a. the Pecs 41911 continues to net upon tile hist. ill thts nii.tinke. we see lit toe 'tope of Its being able to preserve lie Cllllllllllltion of our country It one h ilf or two tloitcht tit the Mate. may, after ejecting from their seals lie uthrr h,or or third, proceed to pods 1,1111.1 to Korot. the whole, then the Constitution lo overthrown nod the Itepublm is ended. The whole of tolinittistrotion was a llirtirierrhy snit not a Prexstlerrry After his death Con gress grasped't his bloody dertatortal mon th, And tlit. to premsely ill fight with Mr Johnson , or perhaps lint Lincoln trim the tool of Cortqrtnionol ehrirstorlhor. and Mr Johnson refn•ing to be such a tool,bas become the greet object of Congteseional wrath. Mr Johnson talks well, end acts weir , : but he leaven nearly all the power of official 1101105 Id the kends of his enemies . so they are mating WY throat. with Ills own patronage Perhaps it is not nn evidence of it want of pluck, btu there. certainly something wanting to such a t ohey- Ofd Guard. ItAillett. Tovuttrs.--The New York w ar /a r,ppolly tin on the 'object : All their brocade rests on the ennecion•nr uucrar•ctots assumption thot litotes may be pluirbed for not ratification Pray, tell us by wh.t. authoray.' Prity l tell us by whet nteihod . If by no authority_ rind no method—as any person nut-t readily is • who iilleturitH till onswer—why it llre no.genrp n tticeneouLly dinned tn our cars, that the late eleottolle bare decided t hat• the South mull either ratify the amendment or take the consequences? Consequences: The only constitutional consequences will ye. tbnt the Courillotton remains pus lief ed The Cotst it uifnn I,llllllning, it. eplie of the 4epuhlicans, unaltered. will they con• defettiol to,tell u• who( they propose to do oltout That they can proceed no forth et figatoni the Sott:lt by liters congre.otlene I lego.lat ion they bare confessed. Why else do ihey demand aniendritent•7 They were an strong in Congress, at the last session, es II in pne•ible tot any poly ever to be Na congresslgnol sway Camille more complete ibilds ninjortly of both Houses, capable of riding lough-shod over the •eto ul tie President. With the uncontrolled nosier. they went as file WI It. wall possible to go w ob u ont rcli gross. open and flagrant of ilia Constitution on would de lent their own object by bringing them into collsion with the judiciary As egaiti.t. be Supreme Court a twonot birds majority avails t (tilting. potent its it is ogninto the President The Iteponhenn. party, thee, has prilerelkil nsfar 116 11 can go by mere congres•ional action and tt atu neither Amend the Coniiiiiiimo to get more power puni•lt Staten for defeating proposed /Inientlmento estisawooti.—Thereare 01111;1. of Judges on the pasts of which call forth ex errai trout every tentler,nnil which 1.11•13 been rendered immortal 111 infamy. This Vernal of the history of the United States will add pyre. al 10 the black hot. Among thell,l A. ill be that of Underwood. Fu tole rend.. of our lii•doty will winder more that such n co etiture should ever bore Inreplett with the jnntcutl ermine than at his Ileltl The Itichniond Enquirer of the 11111 Clollg c him with having ketied pulgtomit of cotifi•cat on meanie. the lee .iniple of the property (1( n Virginian in or tier to obtain the residence he now occupies, and then by notierhand pram IC.. liblenr ing lire house ni n wrest deal lees Iban tie real sable' The Judiciary Cnmminee of he llonne of Representatives having jtnt derided that the fee ample of condemned properly is not fat felled under the combats • ion law, Judge Underwood, jt Is charged, pet idiom bolstering up his title with cer tain judgments, Ale., unite, an attachment process. to. renew decision of the Ctrou Court of Alexandria nee declared these pro ceediuge 41,d null, and the properly will revert to its legal owners. 11/ Lai will he thought of the jostle., of an age in which such is wretch as this was deemed fit by the driminant party to occupy a ptomment posi tion on the bench The ern of Jeffries and Scroggs will he made respectable by clou t rz i -Laneaster Intelligence, Tux Faar.mas.—We extract these para graphs from a late charge to a Grand Jury by J,udge. henry D. Clayton. formerly a gen eral in the Confederate army. To remedy the evils growing out of the abolition of slavery. It Seem. two things are necessary. Flint, recognition of the freed om of the race• am a fact ; the enactment of Suit and-humane laws, and the willing en forcement of therm Secondly, b 7 treating them with perfect fairness and justice in our contracts. and 'in every way In which we may be brought In contact with them. By the first we convince the world of our good faith, and we get rid of this espion age, by removing the pretext of its necessi ty ; and by the second we secure the services or the negroes, learn then; their places and how to keep them, and convince them, at 111,4, we are- their best Mends. When we do this, feu on hope that society will revive frota•its present nbeek, sod our land be crowned wi l kh alutbdant bermes. • We need the labor of the negrpes all over the country. and irk worth the effort to se• eat% it. If it would not he extending ibis charge beyond what I commies to he a prop er limit of time for its delivery, I might en , large upon this subject by showing the de• pressing effect oron the country Web would be produced by the sudden remove( of NO much of its productive labor. lita-d effect would be the•decreeseal value of the landa—deeressed agricultural Aoroducts-- decreeeed revenue to the Statile and coun try. epistle, from these sourees, UllOllBlll4 actaadam ronalta. . Another Wei... 4 f lASheep's Clothing. ..i‘,... North Of indle•ftpalle. in a pleasant little Indigos OH •ge, milli family by the name Ale Dalin, litho reOrem Harrison noun me. livilsigAiliate t layears ago. Cl the re( t ram e they left At It lor their new home they bed • await . daughter, who, in the sueoeudlng iisavito' drew up to be a love ly and accompilehed,woman /Some year or iwe ago. • youttg,and pg•pqyaeseing mini. ter of the klethiavt persbvllol4, - named Da vidson, wee sen tto the village where. the Dunne resided. Ile was not only prepos penning in form and feature, but was very -plausible and Insinuating In bin manner. and 'Ware's Ile became acquainted with Miss Dunn, and the acquaintance ripened to lover-like Intimacy. Giving he young tidy end her porentve understood th at his attentions were of a matrimonial nature, he wee received by the fam.ty and Mende In the light Olen accepted online. Time pass ed on, until about two months ago, when the vinyl., disappeared. The fggiiives were traced'io Indianapolis, where all clue of their further progress was lost. A ' I days ago, a neighbor of the father of Miss Dunn, well nnquainteil with her from chit hood, happeoed to be In this city, and chanced tot meet Mary on Fourth si-eet.— Knowing the anxiety of her aged parents to learn Ler whereabouts, he managed to fol low her without himself being observed. arid tracked her too notorione bonze of na eignaiion on West Green street, below 121 h. where she and her destroyer had taken end were occupying Is room. _Returning home, he imparted the ditcovery to ,Mr. Dunn, who, scoompanied by Iris son, immediately came on here to recover 'the lost, but still dearly loved one, They succeeded in field ing the pt or• ruined girl, hut the false min later and false lover, gaining wind, by some means. of their preactice in town, made himself source The par,i‘epeniaiii Dots an gladly accompanied her father wed he, they home, having realized the troth that her counter never intended to make her • lawful wife. It woe well, perlinve, that the villnit,..“Plnld not he found. tilairvre would In nil human probability., have to record -another deed of blood, The erring" st.d deceived girl line return. eil to the 11119.11T1 of her hIIIIIIV, let 118 11011•, to entre as innelt en poeenLlr the .tory ..r "tier groat sin by n tile of irrepronislinlite virtue one sincere t epentance.— Kentucky lints isLpe —Tti . e • Boys in 111110 " in thin l o cality. having been u-eil liming the Ate elect 101 l lino "poloritot organisation. the wire,pullern of the concern now mopooe to keep it up • an it nailitory plaything Ilouljleae it 00111,1 he very handy to have a niilitaiy force ready' 111 reelol 1110 act tan Or the Promlent. mid put down ••northern sympathisers." .. ,To 'result the President is now a snored duly, allt.ough n whorl lune pities It W/111 rank trenhon AI we C/111 any, is. that if ministry organisntione Ale 10 he maintained by one pollen:nil party. the ramp enuree should followed by the oilier We live m time. when a bayonet line more elficsic.y 111/111 a bible As the citizenn are invited to the boys In thee splendid work," we hope illslll they will look in no onsionally, and become acquainted with the men who ale to be trained .1. cut the r throttle an the conic course ill pursued throughout the state. and for the 8.11110 din hollenl 'ampere or puttillirdVien all oppom lion to mongrelism, it in a molter 01 pulley to be prepared for nnyiliing that a deve rate and miscrupisloim faction luny attempt (.11sela.)Jackaonmn. ertioemento Nell] abb Y ou omit brie. CLOTIIINO You want, ull rt.t, to get ■ (1.01, article. You then leant tt as Cheap se Poeeibls iThls ls natural and right enough. IThe QuOgtion Iltuung to Buy It I. your Punsom•t. interest to "con.rder ' the following facts There is organised in Phil'a, an unnseuse es gabisshment, to wake ArrelAss clothing, and Ito make It cheaper than icusdemasp The mate- rials are bought direct Ifrom the best American ',and European mamas, i turer., and thus constd• erable be ear ed. Full I pro •es are paid to work izen, so as to bstanttal and hand some garment. ; the alesmen and Olerke are uch that customer. can Tully rely upon themand lerery effort I. made to Foie.° and suit patrons, so as to keep as well as , make ruction. The re I cult of combined Indus- Itry. system, and close ,application of all the ,rt.plor err, lIIs secured a model establishment, '73: style of lelothg,:7 vasul ,lATlt wee. We have, Isl. Gent'. Rowdy-mule CLOTHING 1!d flperbeflepartinftll. fur 1:4111111 . 0 and • r Boy. Clothing. Custom Departio.nt to trinket,. order. lth. bleuCa Forttiebing tioode in large Variety, WANAINAKEII AND BROWN, °air et am., S. E. oonner oth h Masi ,ket. tr. Philadelphia lore-Somples sent by. :mail exprers, when derired. 11-49-1 y V . ALI'ABLE FARM FOR S4LR - The robaerlber offers at private vnle fu-ut titasted I Marti. township, .nd adjoin ag property of the Agricultural Cullege eon tinning. 170 ACRES AND SIX PERCIIES. Thalami it rolling and In the best state of cilltlvat ion. in ell cleared except, 20 scree, that Is well timbered. Upon the property in erectet • good two story trews house, splendid new bank barn, cribs, sheds and other outbuildtasgs. There are TWO LARGE. CISTERNS a splendid young orchard of choice fruit, bpd all llingoiven were. Out would male a denir►- ble home. NOd pannels of now post and rail fence, with othem.improvernents have been made late I,y TERMS —One half the pure's.se money to he pehl In hand, the balasice In Yearly payments .4-/ve hundred dollars each, 4 made to -suit purchaser. J. B.MITCHELL, M. H. Bellefonte, Pa. @MEI M;=MAII ACCIDENT INSURANCE COWART firiOrpal Office, 133 South Fourth •trace Philadelphia. TIIEONLY ACCIDENT INSURANCE COM- PANY OF PENNSYLVANIA Chartered March 3, 1860. Capital, $600,000 Imams agalast ALL ACCIDENTS... A xiewal Nitric. Issued for any sum from $l,- 000 to $lO,OOO at a premium of only ono half nor cowl, iesqping the fnllamount insured in ease of death, and a compensation eaeb week equal to the whole premium pan'. Short time Oasts may be had at the Prinel• pal Oillae, or at the various Rallinad Sin ions No ManicAL EXAMINATION as RllO3llllll O . Componsation is given each week la ease of disability LOSSES PAID PROMPTLY. LiWlB L. 110 U PT. Pmtdri., II Rl.d RY C. DROWN. Searetaiy JAMB IC CONRAD, Tre•sarer. DIRSCYORS. Lewis L Haupt, lidiCha Tla•Airt.. P. R IL Cd . . J. R. Rlngilay, Pm:11400r Cablinental natal. 11. O. Laimarlas, 737 atal49 Dock West. P•ael C. Palate& Cada National Rank. Jamas M. Nina!, dim Conrad id Wallop. 613 Varkat anat. &web Lead., Ista ljaa Bop'. Ps. R &Co. - Andrew MebW7, aouthweb& aoraftelldfd bad Walnut strew. TBnilr ruisisez, Qjfiliral Agent Pena's. K. Pemba:3, 8036 Marliaa gaml. W. w. Warn, dra. of Harts k Reward, NI 8. Tltbri West. Poo3sl Wood sodlieforaisHois ftwal2222 JAIIIBB HI RANKIN, 422 t, Milton Remo, He 2, eidennits,l?2.. Ne 2 ,211, 11111-122 • icbr oft~du: A tuntows NoTiiot. Ia the lustier of the pulltles of. tbe pm/ fatale olllnbertflo iertigned en "editor appointed - by sal court W. ►seertals the Liens and debts whist said ea• tats. and to Oaks dialFiblliiolll or the MOSSY trilling open the partition of said estate, to sad ►wing those legally ;Witted thereto, will Wend I. tbedutlee of his appointment at his olive in Bellefonte, oe Monday the Tab day of hammy, A. D. 1867, at I o'elnek p. m. of Midday ; when and where all persona labirested pey attend it they see proper • A, 041:11111T. mdi tar. Dec 14 '66 31 NOMB TO CONTRACTORS. • Ruled proposals fee repairing ofeoeuty Bridge ere, Bald Eagle Creek, osar fiebeselis form on rued leading from Howard, ills to hook I keen, will be reasiredl by the Coatis's.Moen of Centre eoonty at their Mlles In Bellefonte, until 11 oclock m. of January 7th, 11167. The bridge to be let to the lowest and bast bidder; for further particulars enqoire at Cumbilselon ors Office Bellefonte Hest JAL L. GRAY . . ...IWO MORAN, JOSHUA POTTER, Clerk WM. FUREY, Dee 141_ commwooners. _ XllO TIIR 11KIRA OF JOIIN 11ARBIIDER -1 tlElL—Take notice that by virtue of a writ of partition, lesue4sus4 of the Orphan.' court of Centre county and to me directed. an Inquest will be held et the la o resldeore ofJohn Ilar.h berger, deceased, in the townahip of Greg, and Ninety of Centre. on Thursday the 24th day of January, A. D. 186 T, at 10 o'clock a. m: of said day, for the purpose of making pertititio of the real estate of Saki deceased to end among his heirs and legal representative., if the same can bg done witnout prejudice to or spoiling of thy. whole; otherwise to value and appraise the same acmirding to law, at which time end place you may be present, if you think proper. Sheriff's Omen, D. Z. KLINE, IDDelniiie, Dee Id, ,'56 at &err.," TO TIIE 11ElltS OF CHARLES DINGEIL Take notice that, by virtue of a writ of Partition, ten tied out of the Orpheus' court of Centre county and to me direeted, en inquest 1•111 be held at Ain late residence of Charles Dingle. deceased, in the township of Walker, and county of Centre, on Thursday the 22t1 day of .lanuory Alf. 1807, at 11l o'clock a. m. of sold tiny, for the purls.e of making pardon of the real estate td ssl4 deceased to and among his lows and legal representatives, if the MIS ten be done without prejudice to or spoiling dr the whale, ollterwtse to value anti appraise the sante according to law, at which time and place you sunny be ttresent, if you think proper, hhetliP. Other. D. Z. KLINR, Brlleloar, Ike 14, '66 at Merl", A DM MIS I R ATOIIB Lott!. of adminictration on` s olie es tate of Jacob INA!. deceased, late of Hartle township. hat log been granted to the under eiroter., they retitlest all per.. knowing !beni gnlyee indebted to raid estate to make Immedi ate payment RIM those heylog rialtos spinet the mime to present them duty authenticated for settlement. . . JOHN OiNGERICII, CHRISTIAN OINORRICH A dna ttttt rtor• NOT 23 ;Wilt A DMINISTRATORS NOTICE. Lettere of administration ot; the el , [atom, f John Wolf Sr., lite of Penn Twp. deed having - been granted the undereigned, they reticent all penning knowing themselvel Ind, Wed 14,Auiti notate to make 'illuminate payment, and those hating claims to "resent them d u ly aa thenticated by law for sektlement, • F.LIZA WOLF, JAS P Fl%i ITII • Ad eitn•straliars. Settlement will be mode by Joe. P Smith Nov 2d 01-1868 'Net» atibettionneuto, $2OOO. win buy the boose,lnt,slable &e. known as the L ,d,ge ar Masonic Hall. The ren tal up to next Spring is •nd has been $225, a year. Liberal time given for payrnent•Adesired. Apply to Dee I t JNO. D. WINOATE .I) lBS°L ' i r j l T io l c ° o N p . artneniblp heretofore eliet. leg between A. Baum and J Hirsh ler, tonnes eon. to A. Ileum & Co , in the wholesale liquor and retail tobacco buslnese in Bellefonte, has this day, the sixteenth day of Noeenkber, DM, been it isolved by mutual content. All debt. owing to the lino to be settled by the 7th day of January 1M67, and settlements to be made at the old stand, with A. Baum or J. Ilirrhlrr. A. BAUM. J. untstualt. Dec. 7tb, 3t-136 A.M ERIC AN ARTIST'S UNION ! ASIRRICAN ARTISTS' UNION' 'AMERICAN ARTISTS' UNION': The American Artists' Union [estiblisbed 854] minnow. the,. in °Nig to extend the sale .1' the following well known and highly popular STEEL PLATE EMIR AVINGB The last intriper, - - - 26.42 Departure, of the Pilgrims, fur Alfieri., 27x 361 Lending of the Pilgrim Futheix, - 27126 Fuletelf Mustering hie Recruit. - - 2500 Shakspeare and has Friends, - 27x31 Cotter's Saturdsy Ntg t, - - - -22.12 e Village Blacksmith, - - - 27:32 51anitest Dmtany, (Fortune Telling) - 21x20 The Massacre at. Wyoming m 1770 - 28:30 Mount Vernon in the olden time, or Washington at 30years of age, - 20034 The escape of Almoner MacDonald from the Mamoru of tilenom, • - 26134 The Madonna. - - - • 20:04 • • They have deemed expedient to fifer them to 'Abair Blends and thy . public 'it one dollar and fifty cents each, the 'pace heretofore .baring been two dollars each. and for the ritfrpme of stimulating the getting up of Club* they have determined to award premiums to the getters ep of the Clubs. end in addition thereto to die. tribule amongst the subscribers the sum of $5O - to money and paintings as 8000 as the sale shall hove reached 100,000 engravings. as it nor Intention to advertiser ery entensively, stud ea the engrhvings are well known through out the whole country, we bare no doubt that w ill, the low prit e we i barge for them, and with the exertion which wilt be put forth by our merou• triends, the number will be reached in • short time. As soon aa it is reached the sub scriber., through their Cla b Agents, will be no tilted by • circular letter front es, naming the thus anal method of dudribut inn. CLUB KATES. Single E growing fl 50 melt—by mail free. For $l5 will send 13 Beg and 2 to the chili Agent 20 „.• 15 " 4 " 20 't 5 o " --3 n 0 25 - 35 " 30 " 7 0 50 " 50 " a Silver Watch " 75 " PO " a Silver. Lei er. 100 " 110 " fl Maine Lever. The club packages will be Mky securely pack ed and forwarded by Reprises. Any person may get no clubs and forward the amount either by Expecte. sight draft, Post office order or in a registered letter, and in all eases the Engravings will be linmethately wet and fur each engraving it imethered rept:Act/1e and receipt *Oll be 'notepad in the package C. O. 1)- SMil l aa•—Persons wishing to send for Engravings and pay the Express, when they are received, will be required to seed .with their order Si to lb armordlog tg its amount, and this will be credited on thelebUl, LIST OF PREMIUMS To be distributed. One of $lO,OOO money, $lO,OOO 5,000 " 0.000 Plea of 1.000 " .6,000 Ten of 600 " 6,000 Fifty of 100 " 5.000 One bundred elegant Oil paintings, richly framed Landscapes at MOO eaeb......10,000 Two build rod-elegant Oil palatiop richly framed Interior View, ats6o amb......10,000 • 00,000 The AIIIIIICAN ARTISTS' halo* would add that thaw pranslumsare to be °moldered emir to We light of a floe gift to their patron.. of am iteghavings are Ibmlsholl them below their pear kit redoes, and as the vest Is of engraviiige th , 'after the plate. mo procured, rery trldheg. ey can eaaily afford to make the distribution, large •• it ie. We trust that oar numerous friends Omagh out the country end Casades will use their ut most exertion/mu , that.if potable. the distribu tion may Ire asde soon, and It can be done If they are at all active. Ladles here often muds excellent Club A genie for us, and we solicit their kibd efforts, which will out go unrewarded Lot one or more energetic persons in every town aid vilikupe s in the cosatry examinee as aeon as le ltre.”'lrlyiso doing and st t Fie'yalw large a 4pel'a as rof Intr•datingiriegsnt capsulate Intel fluallles, cud thus aid in madman/1 a taste fee t h e Mae Oral and relined. Addams Orderg be Bee. Amerceai 'Artiste tinted: 23 Nasals" Now Talc. - ECM COAL, LIME AND LUMBER. Mud Dlitatoe wdßhlaokio Au thrice, otod, wood (ad wood beret Ilme,plauter fog36l6. iddawl664 wallow imalker oawed to•r dor. An 00 at the lowitat market rails. 011 ow ooti yard 0.60. tW vaath OllCtliw lisld Vslikelhdlwala Depot. • 011101. 81101dTLID4111 A CO. asgeanve 1111AO1IINB STRAIN' at ' SURNIODWA
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers