The Democratic kVatchmari. BELLEFON'h, PA FRIDAY MORNING, NOV. 20,1868 What Next ? WEND ELL I'III1.I.11•J lINADS 1 W =lll Abolitionists and all earnest Radicals are now Flinlitioned to add reed themselves to the work which is yet to ho accom plished. It ban become' Sid apparent, through what has transpired in Georgia and elsewhet 0, that the Reconstruction lasts require careful reviiiion and per-, fectiug in certain particulars. the no gross and loyal whites of the South greatly need the means of 'self-defence The question of confiscation, especially with reference to the forgo amount of rand fraudulently conveyed from the possession of the Gaited States govern ment to the hands of rebels, should 'be at once considered, in.the interest of the landless blacks, to whom, by virtue of their past unrequited twit, the soil right fully belongs. A system of national education which shall be comprehensive and at least co-extensive with the cite. sion of the ballot, should early be inau gurated by Congress. The measure of prielstry importance now to be promptly initiated and adopted on the re-assem bling of Congress, is an ailiiionni amend went of the Constitution forbidding dis franchisement, or procription from offi cial trust, on account of race or eolor,in any State or Territory of the Union Such on amendment it adopted promptly by Congre.s and submitted to the legis latures of the several States, would, withaut_doubt, over Ire rakifte/ IV the requisite number It is urgently de manded to guarantee the ballot toSouth ern colored men, add ti enfranchise many thousands in the Border mid Naeletern States. This meascre should not be postponed IA- the connulerati,n of the Foriy -first Congress, but should be promptly acted upon nn.l adopted by the Fortieth "Let us have peace" has been many times reiterated during the cant. paign jut ctpsed. One danger before us is the a , ll4ption that the fact cut Grant's eli , cii4cri in will iiit•iire ' ut ttitttoll , ll .4 and those who Ave •nu lo I awn, ctivnly Sourhern nno‘ lery k do, Innunr 01. h 1 1 114 1%1111 , S itthrtn 1. - g.s.anures are permit ted 111 Terrell] tie rucii Ili,zln blinded out rages as tine expul , iou 01 color ed useful. rn., to Goo:gni, without due pt l ini4lll,“ nt, It rich are r - nouted Inn take melon+ in tlm 11,,W,eofIleTreoenna lives wino mate trout nlnnor c! , -1 who - rein colored tint wine 1 . .1•01ill . 1.1• MS were pracucxlly eicludcd trim the polls, "peace ' rannot be , realtrenl Tine or - glut is .11 1 1 !h.. 1.11, 01 e)1111',i111 11, nil I Irtl ul ill , In il.)1 • I u.l pn • i lft . ly ii.•re ~ n nningnon. to Inn, It nln•nun'org n In went :in our p :Inks Smarm In n lure, ti, Inn IsloN w I .vd , %, erTecla ' 'ln crli•t" 1 0 Tern,i , t no lc Pi .n 1 no .„, c 11 1111 non i Pill Oi nl Vl4ll LI Let , Kith the 111 , I I, I rol I:1111 , r, .11 I I hi' Yr. . of :00.1 of Ole new n0 , n1 , 11 till, p.. 1-1110 a, 1, IVY .01,114 IL' •u III! . ni 'II 1 non yen , V•iiu '0 Hi the ii•Y It. I • h I of 1.011 a• 1: 11., re 1, 1 pare . ), et N• ~ eel 1 1 I, Ltu and WI 1111,1,....1 . 11 , •11 n,n Wl'll the 11,11 • 1,-- 1,1 rt arl,l al, 1.1111 -.111 the rtglst In 11..,d the, v. unn6•ot..l to the negrie ,•Nl . ry 41 ll* : I II 111 ey lee well nil, way i• w ird• tag 4.1 1.•• ,f 1 1 .1 , 1 :• he (ore tsrout rn issaiseutat,4 1t heir de libernn. rganir•A I, 'lie negru 1, ri.•lii• Hitt. 1, for rrrr i••si bee e , 1.11 . 01ir r r i ii ru e lk who thAy he Pro-Civet 'lett ua have 'peace then, by prompi:y hone write 'mike f .r p ess e,. Theis. w era which , •1 co+ h, f,ni be , t;iiit Hir slave horb:r4 111P1r /1 . 1 . 11 lay IS full let iiiirr,qt lie an„lun,ut,ln sod Itadiralp, lie whom the na tional e.,litlict mean, tiirthing urlre 111111) n lire re part)-an slid with 01.01. W day tint 'irony trininiihi• pier have 111,11 won miler riucum staraay. e,I nlver , t• oppn.ul,u much mote in,rnitniatefe tin an Hu) thing we are likely in, Inlve ta,er i c r.nler 4111 1111' near luttite Iti.p.,iittntts life 1111.11,1 1 •1,11 y to have, bar now. art 11111,110, 10gIC and right alt• un our eels 11e have but to press urge 'illy Cecil jeer•, vet iogly our de mand and out p.-t l e rare a guar antee /If ultins , ste eolifplete The Tinset, the l'use, the tterahl, 'and the —canikerval Prem . ' tor wham they speak, already exultant ist what I . they deem the eclipse of Itatitealistn, reckon without their lo.st 111 Pllj , poMllll4 11 19 he within the powei of General (insist, if, att they allege, filet! lies •lirliusition, to materially tririornet the pi Ogrl'elel of itad• teal reformatmn in national politics If the Itepublican party coneenta to be thu instrument of that tsensfieent reformation all will lee well wits. both the 'Tiarty and the country. If it refuses+. a will (11/11y be worne for the party. Thera It no half-way house for permanent lodgment betwen slavery tied gentitrio republi canism The only truly formidable op penente the RllbllllC/11,1•1 ever Isa,l were the brain championaf the slave eye tem while theirpirwer write COellefll4*Ve with their nation and their acknowledg ed North and South ;heir day is over The varne , t Radicals are th 6 positive force in the new order of things. The tendency of (Isis century Is to universal Rail i oral iteplll/14C511113111 It looks very queer that Demon• racy and the principles of the Constitu tion, which Democracy upholds, have sustained a defeat in the recent conflict —but by no means so formidable and overwhelming a defeat as the Ratlice.l press would have their reader! . believe --The money panic in the East does not look like "the universal confidence that was to folliwThe eleallon of Gener al Grant," of which we hoard so much previous to hi election. "Stand Prow under." BILENT-UIpIREI 8. Grapt Illustrated Campaign Slanders--- Hang the Harpers. We o,thimenil the fullutviiug, from the Ciroiwnati Enquirer to the attention of our renders Why should Democrats iud the circulation of the putlicatione of the Ilarper's, which pretend ~to he literary and yet are grossly partisan " - We have discovered a scrap of candid truth in the Now York Tribune. The enierience iOtio rare that we feel inclin ed to give our readers a iikare in it, owl we desire to invite the particular atten tion of those of them who adhere to the Demooratio party. Here ills : "When the labors of the canvass come to be measured and valued, if that L ,e•er is done, a largeshare of the credit ol our victory will have to be given to Mr Thomas Nast, the celebrated artist. Ifis political cartoous have been the most effective election papers ever published in Almeria's." Ttie channel through which these most "effective election documents" find their way to the public is Ilarper:s Weekty-a paper Which has the effrontery to style itself a "Journal. of Ctvilizatifa," yet fins its columns from week to week with appeals to bigotry, passion and preju dice, such as might be more properly ad dressed to the understanding of a Com manche than to the cultivated sense of a Caucasian, The political pictures designed by Nast are the most prominent feature of the weekly, and so completely give the tone to its pages that the entire 'Meet may be fairly said to have become a common sewer of political Nast-iness No words could have conveyed more ma lignant, infamous and dlagriceful glan ders' upon the larger portion of the Imerican people, than have been con centrated in the cartoons with which this fellow Nam has ornaffiehted the paper referred to during the late cvm paign. We have reason to believe that a very liberal percentage of the support of the Harper's publications has been drawn from members of the Democratic party, who have thus contributed the means for promuleating Slanders on themselves It iv well remembered, that nt vbint thi period of the commencement of the e t -- hellion, "Harper's Weekly ea.. 11'111 with etirrit•ing of an en! ir •Iv addre.soil spe , ~!ly to the projhilice, of Southern 111('D 11 he 11 tile war cut off the herr; from c tntinication with their Southern patrons, they executed a puma), ro tint 114 411 H. 11 ale any ever accomplished by the “New York Herald," and from that day have devoted themselves, with untiring per severance and mare' lwy ingetiiiiiy. to the trt , k of maliening the :-'oloh sad t i e people and the Democracy of the North by. turns. It is 11111 f; that DV:noel-1114 .911111.1145111.14 t their ti.elf respect by ex pelling the tiny I Ilbile./111111.4 of in( t nal 111.“111ri. I f literature fr , do their home 1111 ,111•1111•44 1101,4, and wherever else their intim use oxtail. There ore .etei al other .t I ,, r 4 w hivh conipare to advaty ago to lit rear-34nd airtiiitic jot nt with any of the llarporit and have this tin pollobt and coromvtvlahl , that they ca,V, to xiou,e unit iii•truel their render. w Phew elxndrung •itiy ti 4 r' , of I hem Toil on, ye White Slaves p,x-11 'm11411101,1 rs 1 he nicanior l'hins, Irmo New 1 i rk for I Iv erpool, 1..1.1 pi I In 111•1tit•••Iny 1,1 )1 . ‘N Lite • the 'North I.iu Iwxr luu I 1: Ii cal tunes nt ef now 3u wo.i p eyll e piper lon 10111.1 p ay a it ilional debt of nearly aree dollar., with !toms', all lee gold and silver , you must pay Silo twelve lo twenty millions x yeses I , support of the Freedu cn l s Rureau, y , vt metal pay about twenty • igla till'llolll,4 a year to the national batiks for isvuireiz Raper money for yen, when toe rented yy,tt, o i,overn merit e.,ould do et with hills or no el penbe , you mull p.ty fifty neilkeins year for the standing airily in the Semite ern States, you wend pay sixty thous and for government otheials, revenue officers, Anti other • ireo...iery I , eAc.e, when sixty theuvand could to 11,0 work 11.1 well tinder proper managener:nt, and you mutt pity hack, la the way of a rap ages, all the money expended I.) the Itadicalii tit caoy log the. elee Rah for tisane.' roil one 'Ye wlidc hjaVeN, your 111111.1erp., 101 teal alll Incrats, want more money, and they will have it ' Rah foe bonelhol dere and the national bankers' Snout but toil on for you Rik sold 'nth nll%,ry for four long years 10 COllll. Shah tor Butler, Sumner, and Mambo your thaeirr at lamt -Krchetreele How Radical Promises `fire Verified Those who wire silly enough to be lieve the Radical assertion, mode prior to the election, that with Grant's euc cent; would e•otae ouch a happy trite to buminems 14 the country ham not seeu for half a century, have, we presume, learn ed to know the vahke of promises from such a gource. To-day the stringency in the money market is more severe than it has been for years Government se curities have declined at the following, ruinous rates, as compared with the quotations three days sines : "The lung wizen and the 'policies have fallen ofd three per cent ; the old five twenties, three eighths , those of 1861, two anti three eighths; of 186 b, Iwo and alfalf ; of 1867, three and L. qu • trter; of 1868 two and Coven etglithe, and the ten forkiee two per cent " panic prevails, moot sweeping in its character, and which threatens to In volve thousands of business men in, ru in. We advert to thisufact in no'impirit of congratulation, nor with /I desire to aggravate the evil but simply to show how egregiously trusting men have been deceived by Radical promises, and upon what foundation were based time assu rances giien the people, that with Grant's election would come prosperity as well as peace.—Ruen mug Iferaid --Wendell Phillipd hav chosen as the subject of his lecture next Tuesday evening, in 91e Parker Fraternity course Boston. the following title: "After Orant--What?" ----For a good homo payer, euscribe or the WATCHMAN. The Vote for Congress. We give below the Soto for the several eandidafes'for rongress in this Slate, as returned to the office of the Secretary of the Commonwealth: I= 11,745 B,IOS 11.1m)t1, 1) Berry, II - 6,337 BICCOND DriTRICT. (14eill, . . ..... Florence, 11„91:1 2,1120 THIRD DISTRICT. 31effett. D 13,836 Myers, tt 13,729 ROORTII DISTRICT Kelly, R. . 17,07 Nicholson, 1) 1b,248 FIFTO DISTRICT. Reading, D l'i 199 Taylor, It 13058 SIXTH DIATRICT Stiles, D 15,247 Retteosch,•ll. 12,568 , 2,679 HEN ICNTII DI sTRICT. Townsend, It Monaghan, D 9,481 EIGIITB DISTRIrT. 11§LI, n 13,73 x I Fit ert, .. , . ..... . 7,472 -- M 1,268 NINTH DISTRICT. Dickey .R . 11,991 Swarr, D. ..... . ... 8,674 I=l2 12.501 12,276 Cake. R Conner, VI,IO ENTII DIPTRICT. Van Auken,D . -.17:92R . I 0,323 -- 7,605 r rr," , It TIMP.I.yru 111FTRI , T Woodward, I) . . .. 16,647 Strong, It ....,.. 14 4tlll 71i IItTP►MTiI I , I4TRICT \lereur, It 12.723 . holett. 11) .12,412 I .ol YNTII 1.1%T1111 T I: • rr II IA ',tom 1'2,9112 I=l Haldeman, I) .11, It 2299 \ r - oc r•!rr 1 , 14T1t14.t qui, IL I "..11.V.t K rnuiel I, . 5119 Y. , TI I 1 . 11 1,1 , 111 I ‘/"Tre,il, Vi 12.1111, 1,10.4,1)1) . . . I I,OOG I=l A nu-trot.v. It I ;(1) 1 4 1- I= If 9u 't 1 " I I ~ h lid I, I I:r. ~n, II I=l tr 16,267 4.111 M.lll, Vt Ili• I nnl =1 ! -,. r I) ( % yll , I( MEM I=l 15:17:, I ,a :+n I 't I=l 11. i I 11 11111 M t h I.) =I 12,7:7 Donley, IL .logl , I 1, Il - 1. 12:; 2 , ,1 k I ,'I7 RIVIII . III IVA JOT ity en tonglebN It Will be open that the ff.vl4.eal. 111.1- pyi y for Congre-omien In t h e .. , tate, 14 Minn 4•s. than that for Ilartratift : 4 11.1 anipliell If the !ludo - Alm continue to put ' , urn heavy weight!' upon their ticket its Kelley, Mercer, elivoile, Sekfielil and l'etottia, tlicy will have no majority at the next ron7retoonal election - l'ettrrot Naturalization and( Voting Theis is Ili lletl nnoatnceptton ie (1,0 public intuit in regard to the connection between these two processes They do not necessarily go together, a' , w g, aur ally itupposed A man may be allowed to vote without being nit oraliced, and be naturalized, and not be allowed to vote. Naturalization confers citizen -41114 not, necessarily suffrage The fed end , laws natui)lize--thi I a "el of the seversl,lStates regulate suffra.;!e Peo ple do not vote P1M1,17 because they arc citizene. Women are citizens So are childrer?` So idiots tend lunatics. But they do not vote. Each Stag centrols this matter for itself Putting. this question upon its true basis, and taking the correct view of it % the naturalization Liws s6nuld be re garded simply as a provision for giving the character and protection of citizen ship to persons of the white race mini grating to this country fir permanent residence, so as to secure those who are thus adopted into our American family against any clam of allegiance on the part of their native sovereign They should have this character aad protee lion eakp . deil to them the monient they land upon our shores with the intention of permanently abiding with us and sha ring our fortunes We are deoidedly of the opinion that the naturalization laws should-be amen ded in accordance with this idea. This five years' residence, the declhration of intehtion two years before admission, and calling in witnesses to prove this and that, are all flummery, Let's have an end of all this noise about naturali zation frauds. Let the certificate of cit izenship be granted to every white man who resides here and wants it, and leave the State constitutions to prescribe the qualifications for suffrage, and the State laws to guard against illegal voting.— This will simplify matters, and get rid of a deal of corruption in politics. The first naturalization law adopted by the Federal Govern meat required on ly two years' residence in the country, and one in the Nieto. This, was passed in 1790. In 1705 it was anSentled so as to require five years' residence in the colintry, and a declaration of intention to become a citizen three years before admission. In 1798, during the Presi dency of old Johli Adams, the prejudice and bigotry of New England prevailed, and the law was amended eo as to re quire fourteen years' residence and five years' declaration/of intention. This was immediately following the suppres sion of the — popular rising in Ireland, when a large influx of Irish exiles, flee ing from treason prosecutions, was an ticipated. The Puritan instinct of New England, which then controlled the Gov ernment, not only lend to the adoption of this measure for excluding these ex iles from citizenship, but also carried . its hostility so far as to get a law passed empowering the President,"by his arbi trary order, to expel all Alians from the country. The Democratic party elected Mr. Jefferson in 1800, and in 1802 it got a majority in Congress, when this in tolerant New England legislation was wiped out. Residence was reduced to five years, as it stands now. But. this I condition, as we have before elated, ah mers no good end, and should at once be removed. DRY. RAI Ilk). LA./ 1,859 When the matter shall be put upon this basis, all white men resident in the country will stand upon a common foot ing. Meet of the States now require that, to be qualified tb vote, the citizen shall have been a resident of the State for one year, whether .he be native or foreign born. Leave this whole mutter to the States, where, 'constitutionally, and in sound policy, it belongs, and lel each for itself determine the period of residence, but make it applicable to na tive and foreign-horn alike This will clear away many difficulties, and get rid of n deal orfraqd an corruption.—New York bemorra t. 3,290 BIM Now that the election is over, and there is no danger of damaging the Itad ical cause before the people, sev eral of the leaders of that party throw aside all disguise and come out boldly in favor of enfranchising the negro in all the States - I 7'l Forney, in his Prc3a of I:l6it week , speaks thus : 'l'oft/11101i justice, conunox humanity, awl cotntnon gcnt untie c.ill on 1/1 now to enl oith the ballot the colored 111110 in every State It cm] be done safely sell successfully. We hare no h a l election to imperil note. 11 e are on the wave of success... The Italics are our. Forney proceeds to show how this great work le to he accomplished Ito to not trust the people. by no means That would be following in the loolvieps or Folbet.4 of the Ito' public lint ho calla upon CongreAs to complete the good work they have com• menced to enfranchising the negroti of the Solitti:by proposing "an amendment to the l'..nAittivion c tiring the power to vote fo- national put posei and ethos on colored then. rind, ~foal r , ,g , lttlons frith ,fine ruin " Such I tnrndmtul, when ratified by time kurtils 01 . the Stales would be the law of all ME HSI Ile thee shows that negroen now Yo:e ahnolutely In tonetet n Staten, :tint quali fiedly in t rit her , -- utak log twenty one —an , ' when V irgin,n, 11 , •:n.li pi nod Tex is are tubliolite.l, making twenty four Stain, in which the negroev nre now invented with the rizht of suilrag•—isn't leaving but Pm e to vrettra the requinite number of Matey Tli 01 number IS 111. II C1161111 . .1 will, elllif C , I tally cut i . 11, 1 . 4.1,11 Stnte , whereat the Rados ill con iron the Legivlattnev, and wherein ne groan are not now allowed to vote, nod which I,e,4inlature., y•Ly+ Fornet , ore I,lllte tea I (•• ru. , lq il, a" • le•h••• 111 r 16r i•• el flies rrrpreht e Ali hl Thum *e bare the entire pr,gr minim e 11e thank Forney for thin early no.l frank 10/or+ a oh the purl ill his rally It iv pre, ,ely what the lit:mot:rain have been cone:l3l4 pre.lie:ine,, but %owl: has hi en ay previntently acnied by the It adica's MI I= I.lq. the 1111/1414 Of 111, RII4IICIII pertti now conietnplate the eillerltiugletit 1 11 which they fire .o 110011 10 be Inv - l'airTot "tioney is Scarce." tg-1,1111) nt cow e (0 II fl 0111 all lii i rt.ttii "%limey is Scarce and I/1141- 11 , 58 4 11111 " I\ ily Those who read the clear and atatesolaulike speeches of Ifo•• error :-.4eydnour 01111 have 110 difficulty in learniug the reason 'the unwise leps• fatten of the party in power it' at the bottom of the trouble The Itadieal , paity destroyed the State Banks and set up National Banks and in their rice! Ender the old system, each state could establish an many Banks and authorize the Inoue of an much cutrency an the wants of its in habitants required But under the Na tional Banking system, net up by the 101 , 11CM14, 011Iy a certain amount of Bank notes can be issued , and instead of ap portioning them among the several Stab according to the wants ofthe inhabitants thereof, they were given out to those who were the first to apply for them The New England States with character istio greed, madedmite to organize Banks under the new law, and gobbled up an undue proportion of the National curren cy. tle,vernor Seymour shows that Mass achusetts sucked up fifty-seven millions of it, while Illinois, with double her pa inflation, got only ten millions .11hcde s latted has furry dollars of the curre?eY to every one of her inhabitants, whilst Stales in the middle and West have only ten dollars to each inhabitant Thus it.comos that money is scarce and business dull in the middle and went ern States Thome who voted for Urant voted this condition of (hinge If they are incemmoded and suffer by it, they will have none but themselves to blame., Those who voted for Seymour and Blairfor the *Mediate restoration of the Union—for the reduction of govern ment expenditures and the consequent reduction of the public debt—for the lightening of taxation—for • the more equal distribution of currency and the revival of business that would result therefrom—theee"will have no cause to reproach themselves, let matters go an they will. They can rent in the con• nciousness that they pr9formed their full yly. If evil emtes, thiCfault will not be theire.—Exchany,e. Negro Suffrage The National Democratic Doihmlttee There ie Such a thing as a Democratic National Committee. We are reminded , of , its existence about oncb in four years. It issues a call for the assembling of National Convention when a candidate for President is" to he nominated, and the Chairman calls the delegates to or der. If it has dune anything mare than that during the eight eventful years which have • just passed away, it has done it so very quietly and so exceeding• ly unobtrusively that it has• escaped the notiqe of the sharpest hewspaper repor ters. le There no wrrk for such a body There certainly ought to be, The Dem ocratic National Coihmittee ought to be a power in the land. It is only reason• able to Suppose that the different States select one of ablest and most sagacious mon to represent them in this body Can they.find no work to do? We think they could, if the right kind of a man were Chpirman, and the body made up of active and eagaoious Democratic pol iticians. It ought to be emphatically a working body. Its meetings should be frequent and full, and from It should go forth, from time to dm,' the word of command to the Democratic hosts through out the nation. Without attempting to interfere obtrusively with the local or ganization in any State,it could do much tp effect such unity of effort ao wild conduce largely to success It ough,t to be in fact what it in in name, the head of the Democratic party, directing its movements, had marshaling its mil lions We hope to see a change in the method of action purtmed'hy this body It can be made _potent for good Meettlig of the difierent members front tine to time would enable this committee to review Ale condition of the pithy to every State of the Union, to advise and direct con cert of aotion—ohlilt important eitiestionti; and to pould and shape the policy of the party Were the organization such tin it should be,its words would he law to the party, its Ittlfice would be heeded, and its directions obeyed an implicitly as the orders of a commanding general Organization is the only thing which the Democratic party wawa Wherever ire organization in close and perfect, then It resist all assaults mind constantly increnseain nimibere The head of_the organization is the National Committee If that proves Ivrly ' ineflici.nt, an it has done for years. Lion can hitch an ex ample fail to he productive of evil Let the Iti•nit eratieNattonol Commuter show that it I 311 some life lierelltter Let It do;T•trork which hes before it Let its n 11 1 / 1 41 . 411111.H4 and CH1,11:I And then let v s igolotts sit.t.on follow clog upon delitter won Let us have a working Nationnt C0111111;1 tee To have 14114 WM 1111141 have n sou Ling Chairiono The body of the pre.etit Commit tot. 144.4 140 444 VVH 141144 V, 111,.t.il Knoll ii alio "ate 1.1.1 e and v. i'ding to do re 4,4,14, 11111 we greatly fi nio L loot, t head Let in hate In theitu tiro Ai I , r• oitai of 11144 N. 114011141 t 111,111IIIMM wit 4,11 4 - 014 4,01114411/Ing 4,114.1 111 dill log nu portant 11411 stn the Itlmlosy I Oh - I , ll'ly. 1111 , i daring tile Convention, 1119.11 to dtive 11111 will, ut 111111 , 1 i - eir ,ve, nl Jet. toe k i tto.ri I he! , r Horrible Negro Outrage in Georgia Swift Retribution Follows. 11• r hnvt• ILA• l littetillim I c1,,i3i11,11k I u• it `Mmrin•i ,1"4 , 111 Enllllol , 'i it Int), un • ful••anv 11/ 41 !A1.% V.• 111111 ml Alzi.ter nt 4 re•ptebiltle 11111..1 Antly, Viii II II Ilp.l 110. d, wit. tnel rn Ihe of the t t.in r wtly it, selittitt 1111 i) Ili . • lay to,riorb{ 1.1 negro named who pc's( lst.l• hbr Will 1r llgli 119 i king h , r 011 Ile )1.11 . 1( of 1 1 ,1. ',PI I, :bet I, 1:1t1 • 11.1 the earth lle the I ti'it rartle.l b.t.t lorilti.:r unit , ge Ilium htr t0r.0.,0, which t•he resistol to 111 , 1010mo+, el tin r nuJ ability lu Illy 14411111 e 11111111'1,11,1 11,1' /11 r :4,•vvrely user the beat' until lace, iieriutisiy injuring her e . tt s, and flitting her 111 , 11111 with 'l4lOl mil ! resent her knurl Frlnla Ilse elleei terrible Ilt Milli, lit site be •, tilol the Goal arem•ll.- 10101,1;614 nod I, ft Inn r apparently .11.0.1 m the ro.ml Lupe after she was thi.eovei,.l lu Ib l ,, pitlible Clint/111, p alAgi link. a II) Is help, near by, whAti, Ur itournelle being called to nee, -It it , 1 1. , her 11.111,1, wild she rscoveiol no far an 10 be ald.. to dentguate the tleniou who had con.onitteti the outragi. l'ursuii was then mole for the wretch, and in a hit e while be was found con ceitled upon the premiol, Of Sirs Bar rie, when he was 'tenfold find taken to Swaibitfoi) . and committed to jail. A large crowd woo IL 4 reillhled at the latter place—the election being held there-- And weal excitement win produced when the facto became known There wax, however, no attempt made to inter fere with . the criminal , who was subtly budged to jail That night, about 11 or 12 o'clock n crowd of person..., numbering some forty or fifty, went to tut., house 01 Mr. J J Moorning, the jnilor, and demanded of him the , jail keys. not demand he TO fumed to comply with, when they threat ened his life if the keys were not pro duce& Under this alternative the keys were presented to the party, wil4 iwmnt nudely proceeded to the jail, took 'ig negro out, and carrying him to a tree just outside the town, swung him up to a limb, in winch position he was found next morning We learn that, the young lady is still In a critical condition, but her physician thinks she will recover. There 1 / 1 111 great excitement in the county feu• a day or Lao, but it has passed elf. and all is quiet the now Tho negroes in the vi cinity all express their approbation of the sudden and ,awful punishment in flicted upon Pearce, and good feeling prevails between the races. -...2lausia, ttl a. , Chrpniele and Sentinel. Nunno StivenAus..—To show the.con sistent adherenoe of Radicalism to its pledges, Forney's Press urges the imme diate agitation of neer() suffrage, for the North. Before the election, the platform manufactured at Chicago laid down as a muted principle •that IL° question of suffrage in all the loyal States properly belongs to the people of thoet. Slates" The moment the election is over, it is proposed to establish it, through an amendment of the Federal Constitution Such is Radical consistency. OUR SHOT GUN --Three negroce have been admitted to the bar of 86uth Carolina. --Tile Radicals have lost their two th irds in Congress. I ---Radical principles -410. m nil you can get, and call every other man a thief ---We can withput liffieuhy.loy.mour Radical mainriliee than we like. _The radicals keep blowing about their majorities. "Imt us have peace " --The lerealities cannot lie rege r d e d a success inviting up Democratic nia jorities. --With a hundred beggars for each of the sixty thousand offices, tfraot will hare a jolly limo making appointments, —The radicals releived twenty eight uegro prisonere from jail in lilemphie the day before the election, to give them the opportunity to vote for Grant. —Fifteen hundred• negroes were im ported into Shelby county, Tenneenee, front Northern Miesiseippi, and noted for Grant. --We think it safe' to notify our Democratic friends that they tined not apply to the incoming administration for appointments. Considering that the law in ''for. [dust them," the Ohio negroee did good voting on the 8d inst. The Richmond radicals have thrown Hunnicutt and hitt paper overboard, and retold:shed for their organ the "State Journal." ---Negro constables ia Louisiana, when nerving a warrant, first shoot tlipir mati no as to nave trouble la arresan g him. --The Now Orleans Picayune says Pollard a Life of Davis will bo a •'libel and a lie from beginning to end."- -Doasa'tthat involve sheoong.? --Secretary Seward's marriage is said to have been prevented by the re nitristrances of his filthily against h is ringing that little belle --lie is a poor soldier who de , wrie his colors on account of a d , teat Ile is a coward who abandons his political principles on account of n•political re veres —Tire carpet. bag Legi , laturo uf Mieeti ,, ippi line li:ruled a bill forbidding the grand Jury from examining th. bond , ' of oPieere .triot her vpecteien o f "Let Iry have peace " Wendell Philips an wide the wonderful ilincovery that Andrew John lone -the trevronalde chief of Ili it nor truternity" brit, ',flown p i p e r readery uv lip in 'ill': Klan ...guild of negroey mink ,„1) nn .itcce,ful attempt to I urn the town of Lex legion, Maier tchuvetts, ou Ihu IP•11 -of :'eptettiltet fhe tire woe . 1 1 ., :,vt•nr1 in time toprarcut n-warinitnettlnliirrntrn - 1V lien the tie* Ciingr e .q the lit •I Ici•-ine, will he to .j , i•t 1 inocr.,t 1 , / r. produce the 11111. of w for in o 'pi , ' by lie :•t or r..otalper colornit:ee f.- - I ue .V 1.33, Tit Ile thot rittu 11A, 110'04 11.1 !the lin rJ eli trN n party t 1,1 ,10%, ti e wi.4l 1110 line, , erl,f• porty r,'lllll lilt 1,1111.1.1111 r ..ven Le;zr) aye 'milli/ I I it try ;dun? inf. 11011.11•., uu i I r .1. al Thvy fill nil r I" , II Ilia l• tgm , but it l t , ,ry Idles - 111.) 1,1 o• st rlc4 pupyi 1114 ,I. 1,01, nn I 4 3)11 by • h'r T. clira -11,1.1er \ y 1.11 , 1 1) Ilig 11110 Sq. 111 I hi .1. 1 'be --1:v, ry I, 11 rd by the I roil 01 too olecticn, 1., • it , 1•r.1, 1 10 gel 11111113; . 1 . 1 11'i 11, I. w d I g - - r.4.11C1j-1 h tve , 1;111 1.1,1111 11'14 101101 11110411 PI , 1 1 1,1 1111. •,"41y al, tche.l 1n 1.11111, y at, , 11.1, prop 11 1 if to illyth .1,11tr4 11 y.. 41 I:. ~,Iy ' t:r tht. i lrrtion I c, ICI I I, :0,110 ”r I(1111..fr' . I I • .!-;elt. River, ' which I' ink re 1,11,1 !bet ;Sell River waY uut lerge Nene), , h.. WHY n going t , dt Lnkc '• Irrtn , ,ral arid r,leitl Ils„ht+t yea.r, there were upward 4 of thirteen ihott.tiwi five Itun , lre.l vottint:t 411 slit. fur crime . :ioventy rißht of the ea,e4 were for murder, unn.Lwlhter or rept. - - -Tax payers, (lon t coinf kin of taxem and hard t 11.11.9 PO 1011 , 4 It. you Vote to perpetuate to power the party that hatesle (trot 11[1011 ynu, and t 11 1 ,11.11111 the party policy that cait4r, the other' -- —Money tnattery a're clort3 ni thl4 Lime--the grain market down businetta ttull--titnett herd #nrl Grant elected •What.ta to follow, we knot) not, but we muppotte the radical,. eon till tf the peo ple will only belteedthem. --- Affairs in Florida are el ill to a very muddled condition. The Governer and Lieutenant Governor are at daggers' points, each claiming Ihe right to 'Tim ine machine " Pistol's have been cal led into requisition, and there is no tel ling what will be the result of Radical scalawag muss. ---„Colored Philip Grose, of Liberia, has been learning dentistry in Spring field for five years, and now he in going back to Africa to practice it on the can nibala of his race. The mastication of the human flesh is said to be rather hard on Cu9'ee's grinders. --The "conseience, fund" in the U S Treasury received seventy-five dollars more last week Pity shoddy contras tors and radical Congressmen are not of Rioted with a conscience. In that event our National debt would be paid hurtle diately by the restitution of their ill-got ten wealth. ---Where wattid the party of univer sal suffrage be without disfranchisement' Just figure it up: All Virginia diefran oh ised, 170,000 votes; all Thxas,66, ooo, all Mississippi, 70,000; all Missouri, 90,000; in Tennessee, 100,000 ; in the so-called reconstructed States, 170,000 total, 606.000, Tben when they have taken this out by disfranchisement, thiy by negro suffrage, juggle in 760,000 ma king in all a difference bf 1,356,0 00 votes. 'Can an election so carried be considered a fair one' is this the voice of the people?
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers