The Democratic Watchman. BELLE I , ' 0 N 'l' E, PA k , FRIDAY MORNINONOV. 13, 1868 Not Beaten 1 No, not beaten. Demoorats ! We have may not won! IVe have “moved upon the enemy's works," but have tailed to carry them.u.l . We are not routed, thank GOD Our lines are unbroken, our spirit unsubdued, our Courage as high as ever We are still a great ar my, of nearly three millions of men, with nothing lost in the present campaign, and the ante objects to contend,(or that have Just failed to win. The fight goes on ! It must go on ! We cannot give it up This broad,,con tinent, baptized in the blood of the mar tyrs who made us free, and which was thereby not only dedicated as an inher (taboo df freedom to their posterity, but lelt as a free-will offering to all others or their own high, leading, governing. race, cf whatever nationality, who should become incorporatetl into the citizen ship of the Republic, cannot be icirren dered to despotic military rule, and made the borne of a dirmgreliz3d, de based, low-brewed race of political slaves ! No, never! Ily the Heavens above us, and the blood-soaked, sacreq soil be neath our feet, this shall never he' We come of a stock which spurns The chain and defies the tyrant' Then stand to your artll`, white men of Americk ' Though the victory iv not *on, the conse is not lost' Yon are still as great, as , trong as ever' You have still a country, homes, children ' Liberty, in chains, still beckons you to her rescue! GOI, 'f our fathers' can we hold back from such a solicitation" Can we give over the struggle while freedom is denied us? Shall one-halt the Union be surrendered to African barbarism. and the whole to the tyrant's sway ? Will no become (lid' vitiltrg slaves of money-kin - gs, and learn speak "In a lintidinsn'. , key, With 'hate4l breath and elii , ,,erni4 humble nese Perish the thought' Trample on the suggestion, and curse the p.m-re fr , :m which it comes. The grand, hi rule, old Democrat le putty, ever the party ,Jr the COLUary. of the Consticuto.ii, of I.thet.ty to not dead Its work iv ti,l doh , glory in not dimmer! is scepter iv not forever ,lepatied ' I:orn with the Ce public, ever true to it, hearing it on ward in ito stroug at t rv, Mt I 01 , 1.11 g It by its enlightened :tie] putri.,tk e for tie•crity carq, froelom, prosperity, and gretilne , , 11 18 111 8 only 1118100 . C41 I lrty of the c,u.,try,, it te'llie only gu.ti4l,lll CI the , tt the only h lAherty ' It and the Ili .2h1., live ' The) at, lyound in a e,iitim 8.4 they fife 110,21 to a COTllllloli lil•cory Then, t.. the Denweincy r f thr Union, we pay , I,P!..tu I IT T en ye , IT :trrns, re , tie no tr• ••1 , .1 • • I Irll which Ili • r•.• - h I !T but TITI t,TT f,ur I nT ,Tr ar rty in ot ler, I,mk we'l (If potr poir 1 ,N• I r r r .11N, w ntul still fa I• I th. fight. ant ke.p n rt,l I,e• every man feel ii at he pt r 1 . .,r the vt.tr. am' re,.•‘l. 1 . ..111 the W tr r 1 , 101 110111 It V C ,, ll.ltier , d frt eion, BT3III 11etv...,,1. I that illl 1 trayf r IVe ' For thelift tlit %)e. 1111 , 1 for the I.VIS of f,,ur who. o . du AM the rhe , ',, r, Then r.p re. ,I 0 41,11..nke the fight rt, .1, •rerce ag the (to. Itr r y•lti Be every Innn n 16 , 11 r rre thought - to Fare hip country 1 1114 slake ‘g . 1 , 11 ',‘,le Iso lof thr , free ''' • No renr.nt. no doubting, thy ,M ler .halt hn. w, V. hen her.• tl tn , i4 hip untry. and yonder her one at the brig eno, inn prayer to the 1,10., One glaTo e e here our banner floats glortou nil hi ,zh, Then "11, us the young lion hounds on hi, Let the •word flaAh on high, th , Roll on like the thunderbolt I,nr the plain ' We 1,1111. Liu•k in glory, or rntue 1101. 111.,111 —.Yrte York Democrat A Villainous Bargain---Brownlow a Partner irt, the Profits of His Own Proclamation. During the late it rte of the Circuit Court at Stniiirtlle, Dekalb County, Judge McLain pre•tiding, a murder cane was tried, on which Judge Maneen M Brien, of titre city, was engaged. In the course of hie argument. Judge Brien made the startling declaration that "there to a regular partnerttliip exiniing between Milliain O. Brown low and Colo nel Blackburn, on the following terms That the said Colonel Blackburn shall arrest and convey to Nashville all men in that reftion of the State who are ac cused of horse stealing. murder and other crimes, and that when they have arrived iu Nashville, and before they are tried, Ilrewrtlow *hal offer a reward for their arrest. Brownlow and Black burn divide the money - between them, sharing equally in the profits arising from Ilrownlow'e -yetent proclamation " 'Judge Brien elicited this statement front the evidence of Colonel Blackburn. lie denounced the partnership as a "spe cies of infamy heretofore unknown,"and further stated that he `ern:peeled to he stssasitinated for exposing the parties anti that the speech he was then making was the last he ever expected to be permitted to make at the bar."—Nashodle Banner, October IS. The Hartsville Violate sap' of this villainous upspiney : The case 18 horrible details was brought to light in open 000 rt at Smith •illef-trefore the Hon. Judge McLain, and from his well-known rutin punish ing illegal acts, ilia fair to promme that the name of William G. Brownlow will soon figure in the list of iddiotments by the DeKalb oounty Grand Jury, and that he will learn that such exemplifi cation of "loyalty" will not be allowed in the Mountain Circuit and especially in the chivalrous county of DeKalb. "Reconstruction" in Louisiana—A Nbrthern Man's Statement of the Condition of Affairs There. What is the result of these Congress. 'omit reconstruction measures! They ore in the full tide of success here to day, and wq are reaping the fruits. Be hold them : A young gentleman from Illinois is our Governor; a big buck nig ger is our Lieutenant Governor, and we have a Legislature composed chiefly of negroes and scalawags Bargain and sale, corruption omit heft, stalk about in brialight ; find all jobs have their price, an X both are bought and sold as 1 readily f ad as openly as any ether 1 market e commodity. Stato warrants are at forty, fifty, and sixty per cent discount ; and what they lack in value is made up by the quantity issued—not so much to the advantage of the State, but somewhat so to these . who issue' them. Let me cite an example of the way in which affairs aro conducted iii that august assemblage, the 'Legislature. The Senate, verrpropsrly, has an en rollment committee That committee, of course, needs clerks. They have them, to the number of nine—one chief clerk and'eight subordinates, employed at the moderate rate of-eight dollars per day for the chief clerk, and seven dol lars a day for the remainder, making a total of sixty-for dollars per (Tay for en rollment, which is all done by one clerk, and he only working part of the eve ning; devoting his time during the day principally to playing a very good ama teur game of billiards, and a very scien tific game of pool, if any of your readers hands in said enrolled bills next morn know what that is The chief clerk ing, with a polite how, which costs the - Piste - Of totiiiiianti eight dotliirs apiece. Politeness pays, of course it does ; who can doubt it after such a brilliant exam ple, eight dollars per day for a morning how! This is,. our State Government The city government assimilates. IVe have an importation for chief of police; a police fire° of negroes, mulattoes, ere ales, half-breeds and whites,- large enough to protect the city against a for eign invasion ; and yet not a single Wight passes that In not filled with bur glaries, robberies, shooting affrays, murders, and other crime. They do make arrests occastonoll) gi .0 ih e ,1-1 I) Ili just due . a vent/tiling v igolinntl, a valiant chicken theif, or i i s; caking ' pickpocket adorns the police e! nit, end , attests the prowe , s of ialr woichful po I lice These are tire lIIIIIICiI LA! o produc tion of congressional legidation What i are tine results" As a prominent bank er, nn WIL Nl.iyor of the city, remarked in convertatioe with ute, -We ere in con-' slant fear and clinger This continued erettement is destroying our business and trade No- men's( life is safe. No moo's property is secure We In iw not ; when we will be called upon to pr. sect , thp one nr imerifire the other Our tarn ; I , i , are a canstant source of anxiety to iii!, -t- V, e ore liable at any n o „ to e ti t 1,, I e ! ins lectl in a mast bitter, most , Icidnic , tire w term. , and • the poly, the c tin! 1 r 1. , ' , Il t'.e leniency of a nod.. ore -they ! not proverbial" Ito not raLtrie,—lust, 1 mord. r, and robbery. goitre the; e every timicioent " And inch a IDA too' IC -I n mint, vagabond negroes, lc by white) doses Hod rascals' lii,uld they not 1 ravl.ll our WISPS, violete our daughter. and slatightee our chibli en ' u rid then ' 1' itti:ty to h how t ~ SYppl lb, th,,,0, , tag , term lyeinee all moon , to avert this Ifni I. II hog calartilty, , Pot the ex 1 citement :i so great that the leii4i thing ! Intl' hang it upon us S(.11111` newsboy will id y a omit; thletheir rut.l,s, and it ! will 'l7,'it the torch: nr so^ r ergot. will' fire a i n-t.,1 in the not, tend the report ! will have scarcely died as iy.,..ei e the, city Will echo with a thoutintol report! , lire not the negroes prepared. drilled aunt armed ! I,cl brim a pOIICCITIIII'MI I whistle sauna, and they filek slit of eve ry street, by-away, and back alleys in! •worms of hundreds, eager, ri ally and 1 anxious !or the fray For what plied , pose' 11, hhery, lost and plouiler Te o ! ignorant, ten infatuated to Pets, tu kW, w, that it must result in their own de struction, but not until many a dwell ing has been burned and sacked, many a woman violated, end inane a child killed and mutilated, by the furious, ringing passions of a brutal, lustful, murdereue mob It is no wonder that half our stores are closed, money locked up, or Invested in other places—the• little u e may have left -our wharves %Rested , our eanirtiere• destroyed, our 111 mitt fife tortes closed , our mechanics awl work trigmen starving There is no eticurity for life , there is no securely for proper ty , there is no inducement for any one to invest his time or his money in husi nems here, where one half the population prey upon the other half, nor will there be until this question of reconstruction shall be firmly settled upon an enduring beefs—until cOlllO judgment, some rood commonsense, is shown in the -settle ment of it Negro suffrage Is an rrptti i falua, leading ',Jour destruction. Why, military government is preferable, a hun dred tunes preferable, to the financial ruin of the State through the thievery and corruption of an ignorant and riiii tally Legislature; to the destruction of all our business, our commerce, our. Mllllllfactures, and our trade. Why, sir, immediately after the war, our revival from the prostration of the rebellion woe wonderfnl; and, until this negro infatu ation commenced, we weregetting along prosperously ;het since then, !rat and business have il g iont entirely ceased, and five-sixths of the population of New Orleans are ruined men, owning not a dollar in the world. Why, air, the admin., istration of General 'Rousseau, if he was only allowed to administer the affairs of our State, would be considered a post Ova blessing. We would be relieved from this state of perpetual fear and ex citemene; we would be secure in our possessions ; business would revive ; and New Orbans would beagainblessed with prosperity and power, and once more take her pimae as the great commercial city of the southwest, the centre of trade land commerce. And such is the condi tion of affairs—the fruits ofcongresejon al reconstruction—the harvest which the Mongrels have compelled us to reap. A More illiberal, destructive, pernicious policy was never devised ; and its only result can be entire deetrpotion of the financial interests of the South, the ruin of trade3he end of business—till, in stead of being able to support our own Institutions, and contribute to the na tional right, we shall become a class of beggars, requiring assistance, ineteal of giving it, and you of the North will have to beer the burden.' It does not mini re a great deal of forestght t,o annourffic the final result, Weighed dos n, ns you are, with "debt and taxes, the North will finally repudiate these! pernicious doo rines more liberal treatment will he granted us; and, In a ',united country, under the Const4p,..tion, and through constitutional measures only, we will solve the great question of republic an government —Chicago Times. TMR. Negroes Exultant—Determined to Vote in Pennsylvania. The following call for a Negro Na tional Convention we find in the Harris burg Tel,yraph,the State organ of the Rad teals. AN APPEAL—FeIIow citizens qf Dati - 'dm, Lebanon, Lancaster, York, Cumber : . land, Franklin, Perm, Snyder, and Schuyl kill Counties—)lnsTnnan :—A National Convention of colored men will be held in Washington, D. C."ON 4/In tisconti WEDNIENDAY IN JANU . ART (approaching) 18691 The necessity for such , a move ment at the time stated will be found ap parent in the fact, that though we have borne the heal and burden of the day ; held aloft the flag of patriotism under severest trials : more than once mois tened the soil with the warm rich blood of our countrymen, thousands of who went down to death bravely deferpling the honor of the Nation's flag, and to day sleep beneath Southern soil, in un known graves, yet, in some of the States of our Union (which, thank God, none have loved more than we have) we tore partially, and in others totally excluded from the privilege of the ballot box— still deprived of the right of trial by a jury of our peers, and compelled to suf fer taxation for the support of schools and otherinmitutionv, in which we are allowed no lot nor place and from which we receive comparatively no benefit. This proposed National ('invention promises to be one of wonderful impor tanoe—in fact, the grimiest gathering ryas held in the United States, by color ed men—and it is of the utmost hillier lance that all of our interests shall be fully represented, with the beet moral strength. witolont,intelligence and ability we possess —To this end we should meet nod council, Ise should bare a interelittnge of views upon the 'whey In bit pursued, the sulijeCili to be ili"teu4settl, and 1.411e4 to be underse 'red We therefore invite and urge you. Brethern to meet in \las., Conl.iiiion, at Harrisburg, l'a , on Friday, at 11l o'clock A m the, I,tth day rof NOVelllher next ensuing, - and let it , eni such a sound front the Capital our Sta:e as will thrill with entliii.insln the hearts and energies of our people throughout its limit's: rotne prepared with hrisi lIPS9. Lrt every t tillage and haul- Ict ID your rc•peetit•• eolitiqes bQ repre scotch ' Come from [hi; lain fastnesses and plains 1.41 eaCh ,•tileV 111 , 1 -° ple+tr r e l ''Cf, t.ter it. little hunt° of men ' 011,1 .rod ;bent forward lo .petk for, Jur , 'lice ' Come like lirothera 0 I common des, my, aria let Ito .111 . 1t , 1 uar day 111 C —III It grand .lruggle for our lilierrir, ' Ler nv lillVe a grand reunion and a Lapp) irliorit ILe Carlial Of the lILi hey 41 one Stale "I rr I. C 'fliumir L'orrell. Rev C .1 C lravio, I InrrL I' ('riot', II Hor k, \Tarim ferry, L. vi fever, Vlm It Carlyle, VI - talk:in Unlhu,.l R C (rari et), Joriepli 11 Pope!, Gear ge W llllglne (leo, S itinderlion, \kn. II I;ex, %%I0 Carl, 11. I'm • o o n? \I Dixon, Geo II Itr, re, S, it uel !limner t. Jun ilban heir John Jolintion, S'anu e l 11,' Pope], S I. I ! nnell, (halter 11' Toup, John I ;lice. Robert Rev Geo Ileeel), NI, Itrn wn , j o v e nh sniv e l'', NI Gatior, 11MtA Mlller Janie! Till ma., IS in Gil(ra, Elias \I, Stanton II .1. Chirk, Jos Ileynoliix,'E (' Lurriti, and II It lieu nett, Middletown, l'a , Governor Smith, of Alabama, on Re ports of Violence—An Answer to a Radical Falsehood by a Radical Governor. Governor William H Ennui. Radical Governor of Alabama,mpoke IA Li) etie, Chambers County, on lbw 1 1111 inmt In hi twee!' he rut the following clinching denial upon the Breuer part of the Rad ical capital In trade Exaggerated reports may have Cone `N;orill about outrages, and the damage to Union Imen I have always been a l'n ion man I never professed any thing else, and never except from 18112 rffi 18115, have I been afraid to go any where I %%anted to, in 11119 community With that exception I have always felt safe here I have looked on the people of Ala Immo as alpeople who were disposed to chide by the laws, except when engaged in hostilities to the Government of the I tilted States, and I have so represented them on all occasions . Of course there have been many violations of the law,by desperate characters, and I have blamed the people in some localities for not pun ishing offenders Not long ago the Leg islature posited a resolution calling upon the Preeident of the United St., tee for troops to assist the civil authorities This wan done on account of some trout, les, cheitly in the valley of the 'Prudes see River. I did not feel called upon to vote that resolution ; but I did deem it my duty to do what they requested nie and that was to go to Washington Pity with the committee, and I went I went to represe,nt truthfully the Condition of of affairs in Alabama. I saw the Presi dent and told him, as I told all the news papers reporters, and every body else who spoke with me on the question, that a large portion of the people, I would say more than nine-toothy. were die posed to be peaceable, quiet, law-ahiding citizens; and that so far as I was con cerned. I did not believe it was neces sary, in very much tbo larger portion of the State, to have any military farce for the preservation of law and order. 1 wont to say that,so far as I sin concerned, I never.have misrepresented the people of this country, and I never will, if I know it. Whether people thank me for it is no matter. Tt was an honest duty that I did in making these representa tions. --A couple of white men were bp tee the other (ley In Waehlnitdii tie canoe they refuee4 to drink wit h negroee Had There aeon no Republican Party -r "If there had been no Republican Party, blavery wculd to-day can it* baleful mhadow over the Republic."—Sciturtan CobrAx. lied there been no Republican party, five hundred thousand true•hearted, vi gorous American citizen 2 would not now be sleeping in their eternal sleep. Had there been no Republican Party, one-third of our sovereign States would not to-day ho laid waste, its masters slaves, its elaves meetere, and the future full of crushing disaster. ,lied there been no Republican Party, ten millions of American people would never have been arrayed against the coun try that gave them birth, and the Con stitution under which they had lived and prospered. Had there been no Republican Party, "the baleful shadow of slavery" would ere now, have given way to the light of freedom, brought about by peaceful mean" Had there been no• Republican Party, a once happy and prosperous people would not now be burdened to the earth with taxation and the heaviest national debt of fhe world. Had there been no Republipan Party, hundreds of thousani of AHerioan olt I tens would not today be at the point of beggary, distressed for the present and alarmed for the future. Had ther4 been no Republican Party, ten millions of people, bone of our bone, and blood of our blood, having the urns ancestry, would not be estranged from the Government, nor be the subjects of a hate and traniileal oppression un known in the annals of the oivilized world. (lad there been no Republican Party, we should not see lie Conetittition over ridden and openly set at defiance, the co-ordinate branches of our Government acting in deadly hostility, and men, whom-the people have honored with high position, rioting on the fruits of public plunder, disgracing the positions they bold, by conduct that would damn the public men of any semi-civilized na tion on the face of the earth. had there been no Republican Party, the groveling, "brutish African would not he clothed with rights and privileges lie knows not how to exercise, or be ar rayed with feelings of fiendish animosty and haired itgain+t those who raised him out of a state of barbarism to a civiliza lion unknown to his race elsewhere on 'the face of the globe. Ilail there been no Republican Party, we should not see our whole people de iiinratized, our Democratic institutions overthroa n, or sadly changed, and a once happy country tottering to its heal overthrow and ruin pad we never known a Republican Party, the United States would to-day be the happiest, the grandest, and the most enlightened nation on the face of the eared, instead of the distracted, de moralised, degenerated, and corrupted pp,ple that we are Itsdic has cdt , ed America. - Your Money or Your Life, or Both nrnF th?. infamous draft period, the da}s when the bloated bondholder was heard thanking lint that "wt hail gov ernment," the MOO VOCtf,roti cungratu 11111.1 . 1P0 /Ma th in wonderful thing called government." route fret)! these .one bondholders, who, while they loaned thwtheneficient g verninent forty cent., took its priqlll.‘ I Foy for one hundred contu and were aluo able to lure atm,. p, "russ to go into ths or my as ror southern ['fillets, and thus preuerve their own dear care:tries la the w,tr daily put no tiny into the coffers al the riGlt men while it tt,re the poor men from the Itountn of their forniljes, and wit them tip as targets fur 11,0 hve mien' rules, the money Waited bond hollets lard; were heard to cry out in th e jot of their heart., nt escaping the risk of battle, or the nok of battle on the one final, ILIA 011 the stdentlol oppertu otty at growing rich out, nf the war, on the other Ind the firvent thanks li.at "we hod a government - went up fill the national butchery wal brought to a clone But we we would ask the -loyal" money lender, at a h milted and fifty per cent pro aituto, if, when the government dragged torn from the bosom of their families, to be sacrificed as food for bul lets, It hail tilmodemanded the gold from the rich man, on the same berme, a pa triotic sacrifice upon the altar of HS country, whether he wend! have "th'ituk ed God that he hail a government "" If the "government" had tint tnyenti doLs into the rich mows house, to hag his gold, ;mil take it to carry on the war, ta4 it clutched the poor man from 1118 starving family for the seine purpose, should we hare heard the pious howl, "thank (hod wo hayo a government , " No, our You and your free a le and your neighbors, and the town, lluixounly, the Ntate would have re,iiited to a man - Had not the government in good 4 right to draft your money on sight, as it had to draft your servant or yourself Moot assuredly it had, just /0 , 1 good a right, whieh was rie I iglit at all ; and you, Mr Bondholder, would have fought to pro tect your money, and it is a moot lamen table mistake that you did not havo the opportunity If the war making admin istration had a donatitutional right to take men my force, it had the saute right to go into the Wall litreet ha:demand take gold—New York Day-Book COURAOIC 1)OMO1:HATO.-1/0 not talk about waiting four years before we re trieve our defeat, nr recover from the result of the late election. In less than two ye'ars there will be an election again for members of Congress , and judging front the indications of financial troubles and embarrassments that lie in the path of a reckless and revolutionary Congress we may sweep them out of existence in less than two years from this date. But more than that, ?et the Democratic party add a few more to their party vote, in the large Northern state, and in one year from this time, change the Nottthern Legislatures, and the effect will be, as it always hak been, to settle all violence and fanaticism in Congress. A popular demonstration of this kind is equal to a Congressional defeat of ,the Radicals. Then we say to the Democrats all over the land. "Take courage," stand up like men for the Constitution and the Union, and the ilwy will yet come, when it cannot be said, as it now is, that Con gress is 'the (Jovernment. since t he eleotion iiMEMEMN Eloquent Extract Writing of the "olosmg scenes" in the history of General Lee's army, J, Quit men Moore, Esq., thus thrills a ahord that wjll vibrate forever—thus be queaths a 'gem to the literature of the South : "noire stood the mournful remnants of that once gloriqus army, that had dipped its comp:weft banners in the orimeon tide of eight and twenty san guinary battles, and strewn its heroic slain froth the feet of the Pennsylvania mountains to the gates of its own capitol city ; that gave Manassas to Ileattregard and twined the fame of the So en Pines' battle in the laurehwreath of Johnston ; that had exuded the waters of the Shen andoah eternally to murmur the name of Stonewall Jackson; and stretching its right arm out to the distant West, had planted victory. on ektee - drooping bankers of Bragg ; that harwitnemsed four gigantic campaigns, and through all their shifting! and tragic 'mum and under all difficulties and dangers, had remained steadfast and faithful to the last. And, after having witnessed the rising of the Southern oonetellation, as it loomed up brightly on the horizon of war, pursuing, to its splendid zenith, the fiery path of Mare, now beheld, not unmoved, its declining splendors going down in the gloom of eternal night. And he, Ile illustrious chief, whose lofty plume was ever its rallying point in bat tle, and around whom its affections warmly clustered, now commended it for its past, devotion, and bade it adieu forever. Slowly and sadly he rode from. that mournful field, and the cause that he fought for was beneath the foot of Power. Few were the eyes that grow not:moist at witnoyking that departure It was the agony bra groat cause, find ing expression in the sublime soul of its great 'defender And, though that cause be dead, yet, will its memory con tinue to live, and ever honored will be those names that were sacrificed at its altars. And, on the serfill of fame, no name among the list of sminentifotthies will shine in a"‘ purer; serener, or more resplendent light than Hint of Robert Edmund Lee His fame is monumental His name will be placed by the side of those of the great captains of history of Marlborough end ftaxe, of Tilly and Eugent : acid as long as the fame of the Southern struggle shall linger in trod i• lion aniPsong, will hic memory be cher ished by the descendents of the South ern races whiie his oharacter will stand up in the twilight of History, Ike some grand old Cathedral, lifting ticelf in imperishable beauty, above the ohrocts -of Earth, majestic in its vast proporilllTlM afwul in its solemn stateliness, sublime in its severe simplicity." Galls for Vengearice--Hofrible Out rage Perpetrated on an old Lady by Three Negroes. tine of the most horrible and r.v , thing (mirages which ban lately come under cur notice, occurred tri Wednesday !too, an old lady being robbed and r.Lv.ithed within a mile and a half of die city,iLiid it/ broad daylight by three negro be CIrCUIII 4 I , IIIci , is. lel Ottl I , 1 1114 reporl4 r nt police Ilea,' .plari••r., followe Woine , do list, \II , Phelps. an old lady •i hy 3OM I of age, resoling near tVraggs Swamp, about titre" mite, from town, between the 1)111110i oil and fio•etoinient orett roads, came io the oily early xestr rly ireirtitnr: lot ilii 11,!- 1)0Mr oinki rig few pa , . her reiton iodoc t‘iih .dick si „d by her IL ilul he ley thirteen, she was 'rpf 01, 11 1 • A M when 10,111 halt it nulo fr fll Ole city, Ly three negro, 4,,wh0 r In vol 11,r of her Meal ,Itier doing this the ne ernes consulted 'together for a short rime, lif.er which one of them :dozed their licton, and, dragging her In one side /I the road, perpetrated aileiholical outrage The boy had a pistol presen ted at his head, an I was made to keep quiet under threats of instant death Hearing a fire a short distance off, and the attention of ihe negro animas tieing distracted, the boy managed to make his escape, owl proceeded nn fi.t as lega could carry him in the direction of the report After going it short ‘llsiNnce he fell in with a young named John I,teline, was (Jilt gunning. Helloing to him what had het - Allen his mother, 11Ir. Lodine promptly accompa nied him, and upon arriving at the scene or the outrage found the negroes gone and the lady lying in the middle of the road in an unconscious state. She woo taken to her house awl her wants attended to The negroes, finding that their deeds of lawlessness and outrage, in nine cases out Or ten, go unpunished, are daily growing hold, and elfeutive measures should be at i nco adopted to meet out to the black scoundrels who ar running riot through the community?, perpetrating deeds that would make dev ils blush, a punishment that would ef fectually deter others front like offenses. The matter was referred by the May or, in writing, to the Itatlical Sherif Granger, and no action ham yet been ta kers-thy hint to ferret out the guilty par tie.. By delay the negro villians be allowed ample time to effect their es cape and avolkd the punishment which they so richly deserve —Mobile Repaler. ---William Lloyd Garrison, at the last anti-slavery convention, moved "That the publication of the Anti slavery Standard be discontinued Now that slavery is abolished, our labor is done." "No, no, Mr. Chairmen," said Mr. Philips, Greeley, Anna llAckiuson and others ; "Our work is not yet finished ; we have yet a great work before us ; we want that the negro shall vote and hdild office; we want that he shall be put upon the same rooting and equality in , every respect with the white man. —A practical solution of the female euffrage question has just been made in England. Thirty-three women in the parish of Ashford, East Kent, and two others in the East Riding of Yorkilltire, have obtained the right to •oto. Their names happened 'to be enrolled on the registry of voters, and the revising bar rister decided that in the absence of any objection he could not erase them. —lndiana has 11 members ) of whom 8 ore. radicals and 8 domoorats. OUR SHOT'UN ---The colored Radical con•ent ion `nuisance after a. session of three days in Macon, lla, has adjourned. —Th e Int e segoion of the carpet-bury 140131:Th1re of Louisiana will cost t;' , 6,000,. 000 ! ----Gov Bullock, Or Georgia, 11119 iv sued a proclamation im9pentling the col lection of poll tax until after the next, 'regular :motion of titl.4cgielature. —The Californiane are for a bill in abolieli Chinamen Well, gee the Hump at it. They can abolich everythin g ex cept deviltry of all aorta and nixes. --Whore is (freely? A negro Ills been sent to the House of Correction for ikt stoning a Democratic procession T R "outrage" calls for HOMO SPC(IiMII ift of Congress. ( —The Mongrel party in Ohio allow ed K,500 negroes to vote illegally in Ohio and disfranchised 4,000 white' voters Philadelphia in the October electieir The luau who sustains such a party, if he is nOt himself a negro, he •inght lobo --The Monrels of Indiana had to throw out all the white votes of an entire pre cinct in Ole town of Richmond,in order to re-elect the rascal, Julian, to Congress. Richmond must be a good ;ilace to live in—for negroes --At anything like:a fair electionjhere are one-third more Democratic Yahoo in the United Staten than ever before Let themnelvee look at that feet, R u,l then annvrer if there In any just canoe for divcouragcment ' ---Butler hag k bottle of wine 104 yearn old. which ho pretea& a Southern gentleman gave him. Mgr likel y name Southern cellar gave it to htm when the gentleman wan reticent Thone Southern cellar - 4 were very liberal to Butler —I crippled nohlter on the Yew York Central Rood lit been arreoted for ttelling poltlietbl batigem wilhoitt !worm. Uis sin consilted in reprtrtlng the rn•ryy of Seyniolir hn.lF,es over the ti-tuL aril cis sold. —The Mongrel press is very f, n I of calling Democrats " Rut flee what the negro party h.a dune in that line The poor who drr.reotr.l cell in I gill can draw nothing hot c repo Iricki in Ititlg, which aro worth atiqo t Om less than gold This a wee p trty talk about repudiation 'l , l, the Evorrn orgtn de11.419 ITINIITIII.II thore..7itly the l'ittengo /'l,O T-Ite 110/elm ..Iyl "It would he bet ter to idnee the franeln• • In the bln I, of !he 11,1 4 1 ,ur hogrne.. • than 10 gin, it t, the,. who t1..1 only do not rompreben I oe ingtituinaLs, but ore utierly,incli n 1.1 4 ,0 doing b. - /140,..11r. u, I Feaipiug the 4inyiil nn 11:1.1,1 . :111 ut ,I, • I • , if tIl • t i! t V Iho del,l holy Of II Isrell C ME II" , ,r1 , 1 1,. • I / r, I • i /.11 2 I U\ !I: .1 -- ^tre up Ih I. :.• .1. Cr;• !rap .viii 11,1111 g I 1' I, ClIn , I1)111T.14 s h)ts'll 11;:0111e1 (If it tr,mrtr• It I 11,11114 0111 '. 1 t .1 f 411 r 1 , .1- Lnlngirill 1111 w~H ---1110 1,01. MI • 4 1 • 11`1. j ,nrnr , ) • 711 1- '1( Of OW 1 1• !1, ftn , g•ky4 011' •• .1 1.41.: , 1••111• ' • 1 ,1 1,11 41,11 . 11'•. I 1 -I ' t ly li, r I rug, 1 ui !I t !)11; g I l • n ) h : (Cr of lho 21st Pty , 4 lot' 1,1111,1 , - t 111., ul lurpvynutl(ll , •4lrow II ) , ~, dt•nl of II r, of-in t•, N ,r,u la 1ai,40 I.l.lportiun •tol/hug herr 4 is •Ilf: cc I by el pi it- I ill' , Iltil vt.y 14 the lire:Lon,, , ..liulud. ul II hit nllty s here they liber ty - -Thr. Cattiart ha , ortleted the •l Out. , W tvliup:.!( (It.,..ttiv arid .tared in th e I'+t , •nt line „ the bigining of the war, to be rot linnet! to New /Henna. —A Nev I)rli•nnv pap,' ~t th , .12 , 1 , del 0 Pi 101101 4 11 - L . " C 111, 11111 !lige tilirl,hor, of nothing to .10, :thd, %%nli fatniti,..l,•pen lent upon thew, then• VOlOllllOll tleyling m ilin extreme --- Forney says, Seymour i♦ mell, yrl he never loaned Uncle Sam one *MI' hi enable mini to crush the rebellion (loc. Seymour was never charged with steal ing a 'dollar ft mu Uncle Sam, culler and that is more than Forney, can say. -----We are told that North Carolina is taxed more to-day than all itv real emluto would sell for if forced upon tine market In three years the Stale debt, under radical rule—throwing out the confederate debt—has increased $lO, - 000,000. --Notwitlrntanrling the (3011HlitittiOn Of 9 . 1110 prohibits the negro 'front voting, in several dtstriets whrvo the Ilatheak had it majority of the election boardm every negro vote offered *an accepted awl counted. Thin in Radical renp , , , t for law: --Threp or he leading colored rad icals of St. Martinsville, La., publiali card in the Teche Couner, anaioincing their withdrawal from all participation in polities. They do this, they say, that they way live on terms of amity with their old white friends. --A negro named Stevo Lawrence. wan arrested in Memphis the other day for complicity in several murders and robberies,and confessed that lie was ono Of a regularly \prganized gang for rob bery and murder of Democrats. Ile was committed for trial. Such is loyalty. --Carpct-hag (19jprnors are setting a net's, fashion in thel3outh. Gov. Scott of South -,Carolina, it is said, travels about, over the State in company with a woman of color well-known in Charles ton. One paper says he thinks if the Governor will have a colored female for a traveling companion, she should at lettyt be respectable.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers