The Democratic Watchman. BELLEFONTE, PA FRIDAY MORNING, JANUARY 10,18_88 A Change of Maptere Oen. Grant, by order of President Johnson. has removed "lying Jack" Gen. Pope. from the command of "Military District No. B"—better known as the &ogee of Georgia tend Alabama. The \same order relieves Gen. Ord from the oottimand of "Military District No. 4" :=l l fhigb._ henna . understand as the Stater of Minbissippi and Arkansas Jack Pops is Howell krown by old army officers to need any epitaph. rown he goes. ~Gen.Ard is said to have teguesfed to be relieved from a command for which hq has proved himself totally unfit By narrow-minded and contemptible despot ism as a politico-military satrap, helms tarnished a long career, as a soldier, that had done hitn, honor. We are sor ry for his failure ; but, signally, we can say nothing beceniie his period of power like his leaving it ! flea. Meade; temporarily, takes the place dishonored - be "LylngJaok Pope." Gen. Meade's personal records, and his aqteciedents, including his family training and traditions, ought to'give hope of la-great relief, during his ootn mind, for the people of Georgia and _O sborn*. Bo many records have been blotted—so many honorable names dis honored, in these profligate times, that, like the old Greek, we consider it too soon to pronounce on the character of a man, till he has finished his life Rut, on the other band, a man has a rtyht in the character he has made for himself, till he himself destroys it. Gen. Meade's reputation is very high, and very honor able We have some good reasons for (congratulating our friends- in Georgia and Alabama on the change. It is perhaps, in place, here to say something-in reply to the angry remarks of a few papers about any commends tions of a military man who arerpts such an ungracious as wel) as unconstitution al, position, The like comments hove been made in regard to the gallant • and well fneaning Gen Hancock, at New (Weal's—Military Prefect of “District -of Lotaisisosr• • . • Texas Some carper' say : •• If (ien Hancock moire the laws of his country, he must that he is exercisiNl usurped all lawless power!" This 1s v, _ fate. in thlr be setting pro,. .'y is to follow theories we belipvo in now that the war is over, ware military service, we would gladly ..me l ts any one of these Military Satrapies . 'We would do it for the purpose of contra/hog the Revolu tion We are in a period of Revolution The United states (written) Constitu tion, and acts sir Congress passed in put-finance thereof, are not law of the land ! In Ruch a position Ifqalulu has to yi.ld to-good aureate* venve- There art tinies In the history of every great na tion, when constitutional law is so far knocked out of time, that the min in a dreamer who, to act, confines himself to the written Constitution, or lawn. The true man will ever keep the *peril of the Constitution in Oft mind. Ate will keep 'it in his heart, and strive to work tow ards it But he will not be hound, as a ,galley-slave, to formulas that are, gen ^smelly, disregarded. - Extradritinary po ,sitions justify extraordinary actions The man who really loves our oldtime free government, and desires to see it re-established, if be avoids doing wrong to any person, is to be generally pardon ed, at least, for following the spirit of our political institutions. even to a dis regard of their letter There is a legi timacy of government, in troubled times that seem to disregard strict leyallty Suppose that every high toned gentle man, in the Military service, were to re fuse controlling positions, at the Mouth, because they were unconstitutional The result would be that, for look — or these. Phil Sheridans. and Jack Popes, would be the Satraps of the Military Dial riots ' Arid, it comes in aid of this, that the most gallant officers of the United States Army, knew preciousiittls of constitu tional law. Grant, Hancock, Sherman. McClellan, have never really learned any more of the Constitutional law of the United States, than the excerpts found—in. the Artic lee of War As to everything else, they are.generally, AS ignorant as any other clogs of opera ii•es. This cantbe plead for them, as , an excuse in many things And, so, they, often, do not know that such a thing as high Treason against the United States form of government. We make one lexception. however. What very "Little Mac," Geo. IS. McClellan, propos ed, and urged, the arbitrary arrest of the Maryland Legislature, not for anything they had done—but for fear they might do something-they never contemplated--the act was so lawless—so Infamous—so against what every stilton !boy in Amer ica knows to be correct. that no excuse is to be had for it Some New York po litical speculators. on private account, arc jockeying "very Littlb Mao," in the hope of forcing hini t once more, ots-telie reluctant Demottrati. as their eandidate Wi beg lea*, to fall iliem that, in the State of fiew York, there are over thirty thousansl" true Democrat. who will vote for Grdnt rather than for "very Little Mao " Eighteen Sixty-Eight will not be Eighteen Sixty-Pour. The liar is over. Other questions will control, per haps it is a game of the Bondholdes to TOO Grant on one site. and McClellan OD the other. not oaring which wine. If so, we are betrayed But, withal. If Democrats will only °funnier in their tosighiSorhoods, perhaps we may, before Ms next General Democratic Convention fbr nominating a President, have such %roe that these tricks of the Itotolhold vs will not avail We do not want any military man • for President. The highest interest, of the country require we shall not have such an one This has no regard to the side on which these Generals fought It bold. se rood agslota Robert I: Lee, or -Jos J/obnaon. as against Grant or Han k:immix 11 imports, for-the future of tiro eobntry. that the already exaggerated political power of the military shall.not be increased. if ww4topo fora free gov ernment hereafter Butler or(Nationel Bunk• We copy the following ext ract from the speech of Gen. Benj. P. Butler, de livered in Congress, on the subjeot of tat bunking and cerrenoy: What to the Deli proposition.! Why, it is said we mustnot interfere with the Inational banks bewails) therpatriotioally helped us' during this war. Upon that I take issue with each and eetny as vo- oato of the banks. On the contrary, they helped themselves, not' us. It is 50 they loanelt money to the Govern-. ment. Flow did they do it ! Let lee state the way a national bank got iteelf into (Instance in New England during the war; when . told was 200, five twen ties ware-at 'tn.aurrenoy, o'ff, nearly that. A company of men got together $300,000 in national bank bills,ead went to the Register of' the Treasury with gold at 200 and bought United States five twenty bonds' at par. They step ped into the office of the Comptroller of the Currency and asked to be establish ed as a national bank, 'and received frem him $270,000 in currency, without interest, upon pledging these bonds of the United States they had bought with their $300,003 of theism° kind of money. Now, let us balance the books, nEnt-ebow does the .aaeount stan4! Wty, the United States Government reeei•es $30,- 000 in national bank bill, more from the banks then it gave them in hills other words, it borrowed from the bank $BO,- 000 in currency, for which, in fact, if. paid $lB.OOO a year in gold intereent equal to $36.000 in currency, fdr the use of this $30,000. Let me repeat The differenee between what the United States received and paid out was only $30,000, and• for 'the use of that the Government pay on the bonils deposited by the company, bought with the same kind of money, $lB,OOO a year Interest in gold, equal to $30,000 in currency But the thing did not stop there. The gentlemen were shrewed - financiers; their band wan a good one they went to the Secretary of the Treasury and said, "Let our bank be'made a public depository." Very welt; it was a good bank, , the manager, -were good men ; there was no objection to the bank It was a public depository, and thereupee the commiesaries, the quartermasters, the medical director and purveyor, and the paymasters were all directed to i)e iyotat their public funds in this bank Very soon the hank found that•they had a line of ste&dy deposits belonging to the Government of about a million dol lars, and that the $270,000 theyliriT re oeived from the Comptroller of the cur rency would substantially carry oti their daily busines, and na the Govern ment gives three days -uµ all_its_dJaftn if the, lintilt_wan pressed it was easy enough to go on thei,e, good security They tack the million of Govetoment money so deposited with them and loaned it to the Government for the Government`e ovn_ bonds, and received therefore SGO,OOO more_ bunt est in gold foe the loan to the Govern• tn4131 , 4 , it Ito own money, Ntltcll, to via retfcy Wes equal to $120,000 So that when we wine, finally to balence:the books the Goiersiteent is paying .1,14,- 000 a year for the loan of $30,0041. And this is the system which is to be fastened labeer-ors the country as means of furnishing a cirap4atleg medium ' This, only round numbers for the purpose of illustration, is an actual and not a feigned occurrence You will see it was a perfectly safe operation for the banks, though not a very profitable one for the Government because they held ample security for Government de posits in its •—en 'bonds But the diffi eulty is the G , ernment was paying in tereot all the -rile on its own deposits; and this State of faints in only rendered possible by this system of supplying the banks with circulation by Government without interest 40. Poverty and Misery at the South Numerous accounts front the N'outher'n State+ concur in representing tte demi tution among the rytple as already thus early in the season, having reached-a degree of suffering and want that is something terrible. A well informed correspondent •Jf this paper, who travel ed through large portions of Tennessee, Alabama and Mississiypi, describes the condition there as, in many placee.e•ey deplorable. The planters-Lit may be said of all of them—at,benkrupt Not one of them has triOti expenees thp last year In rthern Mississippi many of them, being unable to meet their obligation', have been cold out by the eheriff,and are utterly improveriebed In Alabama the case is much the same In some Sections the crops have been unremunerative, and the planters have been unable to pay their hands, nosh l ing was done in the cotton fields many freedmen were unemployed--many of them from necessity, saying nothing of thn many who preferred idleness to in dustry. Ifrom Arkansas and Louisiana there comes up a great cry of want and auffering Affairs in that stricken country are complicated and made more critical by reason of its negro population The negtoes suffer as well as the whites, and it is something which, now they 'are free. they cannot comp, ehend, Always, herein - ram pr pro - Rise - 1Y - ifiTh the necessaries of life, and expecting that emancipation would feed' and clothe them even more abundantly. they wonder and shake their beads that everything should be reversed—and that, inqesd of being better, they are vastly -worse off than they were before What-it means they cannot undermand : and many of them can easily be made to believe the worst. Driven by want, par-ay-41e offset of their own idleness, chiefly, perhaps, owing to circumstrnoee which neither white nor black can control, they resort to theft and robbing to supply their wants It is. therefore, not sul•prlsing that we have reports of their "robbing and plun dering throughout the country," kill ing cheep to feed 'upon, and entering homes to rob them of food and clothing. In Arkansan a grand jury of one of the largest rtlaa' lee Itne mede a preettinta tion of these ..uiraprii •ti ,palled on the millitary authorities f irphieotion. Fears are entertained of a negro insur rection Probably i general rising of the negrbes, intent upon tint I robbery; burning. and massacre, aimed at the property and lives of the whites, is the only calamity, which would be really much worse than the the distressing state of things which skive at the South already.—Sentinel ea the Border. or the Salem Witchcraft Charlei P. Upham of Massachusetts, has written i history of the witchcraft delusion. It occupies IMO oidaVo, ♦ol emes, of over one thousand . pages each, and illustrated by ,roips, - photograph autographs or wood outs of houses con. seated with the tragic events of which the beginning is described : "In the winter of 1601-2, a circle of young girls met frequehtly at Mr New ries house, ostensibly to practice psalm ~singing, but their principal occupation was fortune telling and the various arts of necromancy, magic and ventriloqUism in which - Mil — bid infatuation of two ne gro or Indian servants, whom Mr. Par ris brought with him from one of the Spanish West India Islandti. where he was engaged in trade. One of these girls was-a daughter of Mr. Pairts. 9 years of age. Another was Ago Putman, 12 years of age. The'ages of the other girls ranged fr... • crept into holes nod under benches, I threw themselves on the floor, went into i spasms, and uttered strange outcries These proceedings were probably" coin . - manned in sport ; but as the girls be came iadepts they began to attract the attention of the neighborx, and gave ex hibitions of their new socompliehntents. Front d 1p to day they learned new tricks. The village doctor was willed in, who, with Mr Parris, concluded that the girls were 'under an evil band.' The community was excited, and flocked 'to bee their strange actions. Witch books were in Mr T'arrie's house, and the girls probably learned how- witches in England behaved. The girls were now questioned as to. who had bewitched them They named Sarah Good, a poor wretched out-cast, and l'ituba, one of the Indian servants Whether they named these servants under inntruotione cannot be ascertained The time was not come for striking at higher game The local magistrates inquired into the matter, and held a public exeminatiori of the two persons accused In eill+thest• trails the goat oT the accused was as sumed, and these supple people were plied with such questions as these by' the magistrates • 'Sarah Good. why do you hurt these children ?' '1 do not hurt them : I scorn if ' , Whom do you employ, then, to do it !' 'I employ no one The children then go into convul sions •Sarali Good, do you see wit's' you have done 4 Why do you not tell us the truth •I du not torment them.' •Ilow conic they thus tormentedsr •What do I know ?• t tier many inquiries of this kind, the wretched woman finds that her only refuge is in accusing some one else then she says that: Sarah Os born had witched her 'the girls also that Sarah Osborn had be witched them . Osborn was arrested and brousht in She was asked: *What evil spirit have You familiarity with l"None' 'llave you tootle no contract with the alayrl "' •No . I never est* the devil in my life." The mitlltcted children' looked upon-lisr,and go tote oonvuleloom. .Wh . do you hurt these children '' •I do not hurt them. •Wilutn—tio you employ then °' '1 employ nobody, I do not know that the devil-goes about in my likeness to do any hurt' "Sarah thburti was oominitted and I'ttubg was brought in The same ques tions were asked and the same scene enacted 'Who is it that hurts tree children " 'The devil, for suiPat I now ' 'Did you ever 808 the devil'' 'The devil came to me and hid me serve him ' Whom have yoif seen " 'Four women sometimes hurt these children.' 'Doody Osburn and Sarah qood : I do not knpw who the others wt - at' . e then confessed she tormented the eh I dren, and Made some strange revelstio The devil, she said, appeared in bla It clothes sometimes, and sometimes in a surge coat of another color She was asked how she'went to Witch meetings, anti replieu. 'We ride upon sticks , tlood and Osburn behind me 'Do you go through Olt trees or over .them !', 'We see not but ark there presently ' This woman was the servant of Mr Par rim, and the instructor of the of feted children in their hellish arts. John In dian, the other servant, appeared as an accuser in us later Alsip of the proceed. Inge "The delusion was now under full head-way The qext victim wan the wife of Giles Covey, a devout matron, eighty years of age, who spent most of her time in prayer Her examination wo o s a scene for the pencil of an artist. The usual questions were put to her She denied the allegation'', and asking leave to go to prayer, knelt in the prey ence of the court and offered up a fer vent supplication When she had con cluded, the magistrate said 'We did not send for you to go to prayer ; but tell me why you hurt three " 'I em an innocent person I never had anything fo do with witchcraft since I was born. I am a gospel woman • The girls go into fits, and declare that Goody Covey is pinching them and are no restored till they toueh the person accused These proceedings were tinseled at every trial The pious woman regarded the whole thing as a delobion, and to the question, 'i you not see these children cenfpllsin of you,' replied : 'The Lord open the eyes of the magistrates and the minister ' slime bung September 22, OUTRA(I is —We beard last night of an Manion' outrage commuted by the late slave of Dr Bradford, of Montgomery county. The Doctor has allowed all his former servants to remain with him since their freedom, and has treated them kindly itecently he leased his farm to a Mr. Porterfield, and surrendered pos session of it to him After this lateelee tion the :regrow' were notified. plater bY Mr Prriertleid, or Dr Bradford, we oould not learn which, that they must leave. as their cervices were no longer needed Incensed at this, they had re source to the vtllianoua expedient of taking revenge on the (milk. belles and implements of their former master. who had always treated them with kindness A number of nettle were killed by them, plows and other implements broken up. and a fine thorough-bred etellitto literally ripped'open. Incredible as this state ment meg seem, it is nevertheless true, for we have it froteitadisputable author ity. Hugh inhuman sod fiendish sole are traceable to the devilish teaching' of "Hunnicutt and his set." We hope the law will take the matter In hand and visit on these savages such punishment as will letimidate others from like,ent ragee.-4nAherg Virgtntan. Superstition Among the Negroes. There is aw,ong the Southern ,negroes .Prom all parts of lb/4.0900y we hear (and even the whites largely share in it,) that work is being suspended., or tbet a moat ourious superstition ; perhaps wages are being minced. "Phis is as superstition le not the right word for it, we expected it would be: The great cry as there is something very mysterious of enterprise wairhut II blind to enable about It—itis the'belief In "conic," as the adventurers to carry through their they' call it, "conjuring." - The Waits speculations, and the reckless use of our tell with perfect good faith the meet credit has brought us into a debt which wonderful stories In relation to, and is almotit crushing in Its Weight.,'.Prom7 they have a holy horror, of it. How Jo lees to - 01. fare not money, and unsorupu explain is scarbely known to whites, as lous schemes to make many are not busi- Walks all express ignorance coreerning nese, no matter how much chow antibus: the causes, but seem Jolly to undeiwteini tie are made. And we are but at the its Alamo.' A hlaek girl who Was for begilirdink - Of Dili trying fdad we .must years a good and faithful seriant turd- go over. During the period of inflation denly found that ate 6011141 no roirer everything went. on : we 'her head ; she held it stiffly back in a bad as easy sod as merry a time as the most painful position and insisted that wildest spendthrift; But the day has she could not move it. At night the came when our debts must be paid, and spell was off, and she could rest herself. to do that, even' to keep the intarest The frieup for whom she was working down, we must deny ourselves part of inquired in ammeement the cause of her the comforts of life. Per many " singular illnestl, and she told am "eon , barest DeoessF±§36ll it, (so they always designate the dis• ease when speaking of it,) either in food or drink She finally recovered. Another woman, twenty-eight yearn of age, who had been married three timer, and never had any children, attributed it to "cocle." Site says the cook gave "it to her when she wan a etbiht ten years of age, and alter leaving it on her fOr one year, she removed it by giving her a dish of onions and eggs " An other old woman says, ltnt a strange woman, coveting her husband and end ing it impoasible to tempt him:teatime no jealous of htr.that,ehe '•dttie Rome thing" and gave .'conje" to her. Thin woman says she can feel snakes, lizards and other creeping things go front 'one part of, her body to another, and ham of ten seerkpiaam come and look at her.— This lasl -phrase sounds rather indefi nite, being her own words. Many blacks say they have seen 'the things" orall under the skin of people thus afflicted. They say the spell to laid on for a cer titnlernriti irf time, the - patient—to dm or recover at the experationi of the time:' to the • conje" giver desires when “put mg it on," and that after death, as the body begins to get cold, •. the things" tun to and fro trying to escape, , as they die when the blood congeals. The ne groes may ••conje" can he given from One person to another or through nn ac quaintance, that it cannot he neon, that the persons who'have this power are in !rogue wits they tie , and coil go to the duol. and chant until the hops throng around them to obey Tbose who put the spell on can take it off Sit much airaid of ••conje" are most blacks that they will on no account accept food, tlrink, or any article from the bend!, of nuspeetisc pernonn. The notion of "con je ' is now mulch used by Iladecal poll ticiane to compel the bluets to vote an they want them at the entitling eleotionn --Memphis 't it !oar h - Our puritan brethren of New England have started a new prefect for Catristianittng the Indians whom we are exterminating While we carry the sword of •ar in one hand, we must car ry the gospel of peace in the other. We have been at this business of Christian izing the Indian for a long time, but hare never yet, in reality, Christiapized singe tribe The first chartir of Virginia, &ranted by King Ulnae in 160(1', set forth that one of the prime objects of the new settlement in this then wil derneas• was .the '• propagating of the Christian religion to such people as yet live m darktisas and miserable ig penalise of the true knowledge and wor ship of God." The same thing was sub stantially Het forth in - -all the charters, and yet, after laboring more thdfi taro hundred end sizty•years, we have nei ther Uhristiantzed nor civiltied a single tribe of these natives. And what is inure, history gives no instance of one race of men having •oluntartly accepted the religion of soother race If it does where, and when' Thera is no such instance We trust, therefore, that our puritan frier:ilia will spare the •• poor In dian" any further assault upon his ty pical nature See how all our assaults have only spoiled him We have not made a white man of lam in, any par ticular We have only made a very bad Indian of him All our efforts to con vert him have only degraded him (Toni his original character. • Originally he wan ee perfect a red man as we are white men. Undoubtedly he as well fil led the niche allotted him by the Al mighty Maker of the world, as we do the one allottni to us. He was no more designed to fill our place them we were to fill his. The white, red, sad blank rooms were no more designed to occupy . a common level than the. eagles, the owls, and the buzzards were. A mamm ary eagle who should undertake to covert all owls and buzzards into eagles would he as wise an experimenter as the white man who attempts to make Indians and negroes, either mentally, morally, or po litically, his equal. All the different types of men have precisely the same mental and moral nature that they had five thousand years ago. The character of races is as permanent, as the physical twit God no more designed that one elatuld be changed than the other. We know what the physical a,nalgarnation of races results coma itlons of different reels* also 'produces moral hybriday, pots tdal hybridtry—and the end in both eases is destruction —Old Guard John W. Forney, Ming right un the shadow of toe Capitol of the beet governtnent thg, w,rld ever saw, bas caught some of - Ifte wit of our, jocose rulers and haessot up almost se plait a piece of pleasantry as the Congressional joke Ile congratulates (Jeer& that she will 1100 CI take her place by the side of her sister Tennessee, enjoying all the blessings of the restored union.— Now John W Forney knows that 'there Is no spot on the globe where quire is less of happineeas, peace and tranquility than in Tennessee. Rut Tennessee is in' the Union under Radical domieition and be h.tpes to wheedle Georgia into the panic position. Witty Family I Happy (lcorg ! ilc.ppy Tcuueeecc !—The Lend we Lore Col. John 8 Mosby was hissed In the gold room in New York.. • Bo say the newspapers This it the Asst intimation that we bad received that the great gold men of New York wore In terested in the sutlerwagons upon which Mosby used to fall so mercilessly. The revelation is curium, No Work. no wor . or wilts little to do, and that badly paid, how min the laboring man, buy meat, clothe, -tees sugar butter at prices doubled when oornpar 4 vri with those befole the war? He must do without these things which he has look ed upon as necessary tairtte—Thie dictiles ,pf this condition of atraire are plain they are the violations of the well de fined policies of the Democratic party, td which we must return. These consist of a wise and strict economy of the pub-. lie treasury—a certain and valuable our rency, and the simplest ae.ministralion of the government ooneistent with` its safely. We must return to specie pay me Is, reduce the expenses of tifh gov er nt, let the Southern people control A te them Ives and their eystem of labor, that they may hear their burden of the public expense, and use our labor in the channel where it will yiend a reliable revenue We must take the government out of the hoods of the trutltog politi cians. and Ito-iness from the control of the speoulat, ro Lurrrtie l'oton,, How re LOOKIL—We are just upon the eve of, 1808, and two years and nine months have passed since the war ended In all this time their policy has prevail ed !Porch, South, Emit, Weet,everywhere They have expended hundreds of mul lions yearly, and taxed the people $500,- 000,000 to raise the money. They have governed the Seth by military dictators and freedmen's bureaus. They have, by their policy, depreciated lands, preven ted the cultivation of crops, broken `dawn manufactures, prohibited mini gration, created debt, and retarded all torme of labor, oontentment, acid pros- Frilly And now in the clueing home jof the year, we put even to the candid men of the dominant party in Congress, the question which we also put to the public . —What good has beeh done to the while race, to the black race, to the country at large, or to any.„State in the country ? The wretchedness which this day pervades nearly the whole emo tion of the Southern country, is evidence ofthe failure °flour policy. ft in writ tefiveverywhere, eonietimes in letters of blood, sometimes as by , tiro and sword, that you have nearly ruined the land. Nearly three yearn of suspension frem hostilities and yet there is no peace ! Trade languishes, taxes increase, the cost and burdens of State weigh heavier than dyer, and yet these incapables still demand prolonged power and ore now adding new burdens to the South in or der to umiamirr it. Every beer, in the light of stsch a policy, the duty of con servative men becomes more - plain It is to e•erticihir these mcapables and to demand the repeal of the obnoxious measures which are at present Bo many barriers In the way of all peace and all substantial good.—N 'ExpreBs NIGOICR RIGHTS AND POOR WIIITIKA -- Nigger! trigger! nigger! Everything talked of by the Rump Jacobins is fur the everlasting nigger, everything plan ned. echemed and concocted lies solely in view the aggrandizement of ,be “col ored'cuss from Africa." Ile stands fort the chief object of Black Republican eympathy and legislation, stare and NI, tional lie is the big dish at the" feast, and he is the ..donetbrown meat in the big dish lie is the main issue and all The side Wanes—the principal cut a l' Ai - ermine and all the side dishes as well It's nigger a fa mode, friciteeed nigger, fried nigger, stewed nigger, baked nigger With nigger sauce, roasted nig ger, boiled nigger, hashed nigger, raw nigger—nigger aroznd the festive board, nigger up stairs, ffgger in the garret, nigger down stairs, nigger In the kitch en, nigger in the parlor, nigger in the woodpile, nigger as a man and brother, nigger in and out of Congress, nigger on the brain! Good Lord! Is there nothingt—no rights—no interests—no eetrntry for white men? Have nigger', and bond holders only the right to claim legisla tion and the protection of their newly acquired demands' Have the produc ing and consuming rnlllions—wighte of the country—no rights that the pompous and pampered Yankee slave robber aud his army of cheated nigger', are expeo led to respect ?—Sentinel op the Horder " — 4 l i/TErft /in p, -copy one cf our daily richauges we make up the followinw meter of negro doings : A Germau and big obild were killed, and the wife and another child badly wounded, by a negro, near Venice; The details of the tragedy are shocking. The perpetrator war oaughtand lynched. In Mobile, on .the 6th ult.. a burley negro, named Boston Crawford, attempt. ed to commit a fiendish outrage on a little girl 12 years of age. Her screams brought essistaooe.• The negro ran, but wee arrested. A white man was killed, and a negro terribly beaten, near Bigbyrille, Tenn , a few days ago, by nice In (peptise Al Montgomery, Ala , on the Ltb, two negroes ward, discovered in a poultry yard stealing chickens The lady to whom the chioltens belonged, orlered the negro*, away, when one of them raised a gun and shot her. On the 16th ult., Walker Edtuunde, a young merchant, while riding out, near Memphis Tenn., was met by two negroes with muskets. Wltheut a word one of them raised hie musket aPd allot Ed. utuads•ia ,the forehead. The Memphis Bullftin of Deo, Ettb, de tails the psitleulais of a negro outrage ulion a lady; and the robbery of a were, sad mope of the perpetrators. A Rod Not On His. Own rouilds and ~alfeitto(l. , Not long 6114' two man, travelling companies, one trwhite and the other a bit& Rad, called at e r very Deal farm house for noodmadatioriti for the night, via : supper aid lodgings. And Sliding genuine hospitality. the hostess was not long in preparing supper, while her hus band oared (or the horses of the guests. Supper being announhed when they found each provided with a separate ta ble. - • The while brother finished his meal first, and without waiting for his sable friend, returned at °nee _to_lhet_slaing rem, and demander - Of the landlord a reason for having two spparate tablee, when only hi and hie colored friend weke to eat,' The good man replied that in ill matters of that sort hie wile had always followed her own views and that • • er interfered with her arrange ments. Tget The wife chanced to hear all Ibis, and more oT the same sort. So to herself she said, we will see what we will see. The hour of retirement at last arrived, and the wife directed the guests to be escorted to a certain room up - stairs. When the room wes entered, judge of Mr. white rail's surprise to find but one bed, and he demanded a reason for this. The farmer said' that 'in all millers of that kind his wife had always followed her own views and he never interferred with her rrrangements. The rad scratched his head and bal anced himself, first on one foot and then on the other, while limbo showed his ivory, and at length, with a sneeze and cough, declined that part of the accomo dation, but requested their bonnie to be brought forward and the privilege of leaving, all of which was freely granted —Ex. A 'S peoimeh of Military Despotism Near the nouthern centre of the State of Arkansan heed, a few months ago, a young man and his still younger eister, with a young and accomplished wife, whom he had taken to his home and fire side I.:verything seemed bright and beautiful before . them. The young luau's wns,Mitchell In August last— Mitchell being absent, me also was his emote at a neighboring bouse—ft worth less scoundrel came to their Image, whose advances the -young lady had rather scornfully repuleed, and lured a negro Mall to bend a negro boy to tell Mies Mitchell that a lady had• called to see her, and desired her,io return home. After closely (petitioning the boy, the young lady was convinced that ho was telling her a lie, and did not return. In the evening the brother r•turated, and having learned the facte as above stated, anti provoked at the impudence of the negro who had accepted a bribe to send a lie to his young sistivr,dashed him well with a bridle-rein • * * * I , The negro went to Duvall's Bluff andrepart ed to one MoCullook t aggint.or.Aliokreekt tuen'e Hirreau, wro 'referred theanatter to General Smith, at Little Rock. Smith at erica ordered the artest of young Mitchell, and be was ihcarceratmd in the Arkansas penitentiary, in a dark cell, tour by eight feet in size, where he lay for nearly four months awaiting trial by military commission "'Seeing nu eliponi- Lion ,n the part of the military despots to give- him even the form of a trial, young Mitchell's couneel papered about the 20th of rioloher, an application to the Judge of the District Court of Ar kansas (or a writ of habean corps's, but before it could be presented, Mitchell, an honest and respectable citizen of Ar kannaa, died in his cell, the murdered victim of a brutal military despotism— aye, brutal—far more than any act that ever disgraced the anuale of any other government under the sun. —Black litre, (.Ir/( I Standard I The Freedmes's Bureau coot the government of the United Staten twelve millions of dollars, belkig about the cost 4prite whole government of the United litotes under President John Quincy Adams' adiministratlon It consists of an army of,tnalignant Southern bal s am negro fanatics. and needy ad•enturers, backed to their power by the army of the united States They have done more to breed au irrmiteal alienation of the people el its Southern Staten, from the peopl e of the Northern States. then the war Mall it to tbey who have got up the Union Leagues, autonget the no pees. and have made them enemies of the white race. It Is they who have the instrument,' of the Radical party. to Afrioanise the South, and to put th e white man under the negro It is they who nave indoctrinated the negro with the ,idea, that to take the while man's ' land is their right ; end to kill him is a righteous duty All the public riols,and Opt Ol few of the, private murders perpe trated by the pogrom, on the whits pea, pie, are traceable directly If/ the incen diary tescriretrgtrwr-vteme of the agents of this Bureau Everywhere its influence, with but . few exceptionry has been ed gers, to tiltipesioeof the country, or to any steady or...Solent itidnetry *mongol the blanks. It is not at all onrprising.tbat the revolutionary disnitionteis at Wash ington. and rise few Southern fictnn .o on por their paieydshould desire continuance until after their negro policy in the South is completed,—Ex Gen. Merman, I;11 I 4QUIN speech, geld that the South wJazbi ever remember the - rebelhon wuli shame ac well as Borrow The Onneref is right.— W• will even with tiLtame, that a General, speaking the same language with ourselvee, sent s i taong us ionise of boatmen, to rival the deeds of !Willi,— the Hun. The General is right That await to the tea watte retool/Owed for ages with 'deep. lioroltig—whiinve. hy . all of gEnerons natures thrhisulteut the whole bredth of the land —TAr Lund we Gone. The Itepubhoan nerretiopery of New York, are already fighting like dogs and oats. hiii not setished will, that ft new 040 If naablished , Mnd W Its awls:inen to-day It is io be the Rypublar. The Tribune. the 'Times. and lesser fry, have been unlit,* to ex pound true Repuhlloan prlocipbee. so . t.he DOW concern I. to try it, , if it attogas "Nigger" MO "Coppef hei more then the other.' it will a p , lt right. If It don't, It ion'i: as t beettiere *or& embrace all there lit, defensive arid* , eireesive. of j dloal Repot:4,4es, 'piaci p I er—Szehrit4N
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers