Bollefa ! : 11 witiciiatipo ic By p. GRAY 14Ft•k Ink-Slings —Three members of the new “Nlratch Him', cabinet are classically named : Cox, Boric, Hoar. —Oen. Argu; has been promoted for boring, not a hole in the Southern Confederacy, but the War Department. —Omni. Is finding opt that uneasy Iles the head that weer the crown —Ex. Don't know about that. Grant • lies just as easy now as he e\ser —The preps i cautioned against trusting Dr. Wittnore. After this, the e ditor that puts confidence in the Doctor will be witlem --The Huntingdon Glebti having Wed that Enterprise Headquarters .ells "fat ninekeral and bloaters," the Standard man wants to knoWwhen the proprietors got to dealing in their ~on flesh and blood? Too bad. —A Tana her of "big inji R" paid he Prtialent a iSit lately. Probably thee u ere' ennti yes of 0 rant's. Digger {ti raporisem, c,onie, now that he Ii: plenty of 10011 e, In ,pttle Ihnt "little Platter." --We might , tynitinthiie with the IltlicalGrant toe suekeN on the ilk. arter «hick befel a certain ex member the Cabinet, ranged ln• the l aw o f 1797 —in what a slew—art thou, 0, ''lrts art' --The editor of tlic ‘Vntikeslin, WOll9lll, I'laindcalcr, writes . • For mend es the Ware/men We omo: gat along without It %%onder, judging from the 'lumber (01 editoriala you take from it. II ow ore i on, brother Platt ? —Easter %111 fall on the nth lost. This In owing to the temarkablo phenomenon twit them that Moe Mareh oink es his ego/i ht/ Indeed But if he should innke hip hit in a rough manner he might -tnanh thew. and then Mils for Eafitcr! ,The nbove are both bail "gartpH.—) -Tile Standard Mall enn tnkr our hat Brt/c/antc Watchman Thank you, Joe a 6t, r offer 14 n 'nowt Ken , or WI one; but we a afrnhi nc .hell have to decline It —Sfendard Nothing easier in the world ; poHi me. hat . coin parati ye, hetet ; super I:love-11y, there's the rub. --Somebody Pays that ft do{ -tight e the only event at which real cur— rage is manifested. Oh, my ! —The 'Bellefonte Watchman earl Ilneen .01 the gleel-work• we went he "a lager-bier glee, " Perlis)). one might be made to sou our !ogle. Bro. Furry —OW. Yes—giiesri it might—provided unsn't inside in Huntingdon. —The latest and politest way of attempting to pull the wool over', a brother editor's eye. IN to offer him your hat "Ink-slings" of the Bellefonte Iratrhnuts Is entitled to the credit of the Invension The only objection we pee to it, In, that "small tarok"' to be properly pre. lated, should never Be felt flolledelyaleterg StAndard lieuer be felt than seen In the for I ner case, ruu could relieve yourself by ,•( ni Ich mg —Bellefonte's big new hotel le to be called the "Bush Moose Appropriate house, that 0.0)07 a "whiskey sou r" nib roan. Eli, Joe; —Hollidawburp Standard knoi% anything about Rosy. And ire don't often go behind the bush, either—:o taken "whisky sour" though firm is big enough to go behind if a facia wanted to hide himself But you, Mr Standard, could never do s aw, fur to find a Traugh in the hush ,.<l would-be proof positive that ROMP hod) had been making a hog of "him Che llollida .burg Standard flays that N ASIII IM hi !I ell for a lecture in that place, on Saturday evening, the 27th inetant. We know to a certainty that lie IN albu billed for (1 lecture in Lock Haven on the game night. We congratulate the place that he don't go to A Bad Start The 11111(1011f1 public were nuirprized within the short space of a week with not only the names of two seta of Cab inet Ministerm, but with the cneap character of the material, taking both cabinets am the banns, with which Gen. tht.l.!4T proposes to run "the beet goy eminent on earth," etc That a man should be (elected to it high office, merely becnume of him. possession of yrwit wealtli,ait in the cameofSTY.WART, 111 Hutlicieritly discreditable to the coun- Ir), to may nothing of the selection ofa man, igyrantly and blindly, who by 11141 ,wcs palpably,disgllalifled.STEwA RT, It American in no mense. Ilia sym pathies are witli that form of govern ment tt hicji guttrateem the greatest im munities to wealthy itabobi us against the mammas. But it he failed to be Secretary of tbeTrensury, his successor is to better qualified because more mileceisful in mewing the office. Mr. lkwrwlCLL, it biRAphOlllOllS Mairielm -Betfe puritan, is chiefly know ii lo the country am the man of the "hole inn the Linea not nucconi in find- 5 ing a hole in the treasury it will not he from lack of a knowledge of loyal praeOrki. No wonder that the leadem of Gen. 91ttNT'Sflw:n part,' in•Cangrere broke out intc? .. 4.6road laugh on reading ./ the \ fitif VOL. 14. Tint ofliia counecllorß,w•l'cn Baal' a 111111 erable creature,and toadstool of Radical infamy, as IV AMBURNE, of Illinois, was made Secretary of the State—that chiefest of the ministerial corps, never having contained a personage of Ruud der ability than the Wiley titan ART, who any what. we will, will „never he IieVIJ tle quality of statesmanship. That WASIIRURNF, any Irrishburne, ,gould ever ne expected to till such a chair WR9 truly a subject of wonder meat and reasonably enough of merri ment, and it is not strange that he shoullllvel his ono insignificance and clear out of it. 11 ‘IIII.TON Ftsin, an old demagogue. who bits been criers dung to all Inca, is the latest appoin tee. How long he will bold the posi tion, %sect - mot en ; but at sists ears of nge, it tali) be expected Ultra Ir(s n ill either not make an efficient •inlistitutti for Wl'llllll RNF, or Hunt he will do so, and die earl. ne bane such classical individual- its 1i0..a mid llo sie,lhe first for Attorney General, and the latter Secretary of the Knurly--of a hirli the ..hole business partakes to grontcr or leas extent. Who Is Ilene'? We hope nt least he is not a person of ill-fame I But sure it is, the nation, nor half a dozen men in it, out of his bailiwick. in Massachusetts, es er heard of hint before. The legal fraternit . s are stunned with the case, and the inquiry Is still 11.14kM1, "W in Is this ILr to Phis IA a bad start liir the lime Pre , - idea! Ile has offended - the torn who pushed him lot %%aril, and ho paraded him about the country a placard on his Intel.-- 'Match flits I" And we slit to 1111.'111 110%t --to all who him• been sold—match hint M. Let those %%boyar:tiled about the coon try In leather capes and aprions—"the leather petticoat brigade '--let them Cllll to mind what the W %imam IN so often endeavored to imprem,upon them —that in the first place titttvT tuts riot (111711111H1 tolie President ; and, in the rcond, that 110 lN 011141 Moll them :is lie had sold the Drinocracv \Ve told them often that he Wat. n nincompoop --he will now fully corroborate our statempent from tittle to time, and add testimony to the troth. 'With two Callillt.k a steel., 11 . 1 s CAM) to (ill me about what sort of an minim istration we are to have in the next lour tears Rath two cabinets so ridir ulons as to CllllSts 164 I , lrtt friends to laugh at him, it IS Pas% enough to fore see that he H not only a first class if for taus, but that there %% debe no co operation heti% eon the Exiv•titive and Legislative Deiiiirtments. Tn'ly the Republican inns' ei to be eommisserated. Four ears 'of ANDREW JOHNSON 811(1 four years of 11. S. flats.ir are affliction. in eschatige for whirli the bails of Jos were as a grateful bles sing and enjoyment. If it can through the horrid JouNisos night mare and the Cr. S. (lans.t affliction, we will never doubt itw undying vital' lint ve 1110111'11 to ,•!ot.f.leue 00111 110111.4 011 the room( ocen,don that v' may be enabled to get pen and paper ready for the announcement or Cabinet No. 3, mhich may be ere this to pro em of construction ; fir are not theme the days of "progress ?" -WHIM ANDREU JouNsoN be came President of the United ititates some admiring friends sent him a splendid carriage and a tine span of horses. This present Mr. Jon•sos declined to receive„ holding that it was noertglit for uny officer of the Government to receite presents. Gen. GRANT 15 not so serupnlous. Ile has been presented with any number of presents since his inauguration, and. is still asking for tlore. Through the munificient liberality of his friends he has become a ‘yealthy man, and yet he never thinks of declining anything that is offered him. There i in this re sped, as in all others, a vast difference between hum and JouNsos, with the comparison greatly 111 favor of the en- President. -4-Massachusetts 'Wheals are so ev4 knew no law when ho went into chard ut securing two Cabinet officers, office, we Its+u- they will obey them with the probability of a foreign mis- ellen they are pointed out to them by Mon or Iwo, that tbey l ,,nre fairly face- t statesmen. - • ---- tines over their good 'luck. The Bop- GRANT is exceedingly anxionu ton Ti arena. says that "New fAigfand.l for t h e repeal of the toratre-of-offico is getting a 'good share Of roust bee Jaw. lie didn't think, when he wan aud pluni-pudeing, while New York playing lick-spittle in the War oflioe, has to put o p N, id, r imit .t. it is a pen - I that We Might be in the IMMO position etrating like( that-Pennsylvania has !0 I in which he Nyas so eager to place Mr. put tipWitli it BORNE. • JOHN'3O I ,I. -. . . "STATE , ,RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION.' BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY MARCH '26, 1869 Hon. D. W. Voorhees on'Negro Suf- frage The following words of - wisdom fell front the the lips of lion. Dxvin W. \OORIIEES, who recently left hisseat in Congress to stump hin district in Indi ana against the adoption of the iniqui tous fifteenth,atticle. The speech was made nt Terre Haute, and the extract which should be caret Ally read by CV er3 body. It contains words of warn ing thnt should he beetled now : A,governineid could not be built up of filch nuutertnl The men bud had every oprXrtnni tv for nilt nneentent,TifiT had net er riven nhOTO harliariam. 'rliey had had a fruitful land, a land of fel tile soil and mighty rivers, where the wealth of natl., nay lertinillevv, hut it . hnd le•en all to 110 ',urine... 'rho Satan., t h e All. glen Ind the nnelent Itritionv ti eie nor,, eni gun, bit when the tiny /Pinned for them they nth mired upon such A career of greatnevo as adrirts all history. The he gro lint hail the same nil vantages, but the re tult hat been entirely ditlerent 'rlie people or Indinnn until no Much rudner to assist them In lb, , o ionrent The career of thn Afri• eau the p I.t I. nn Ills +trnilmi of what him future • xperionen must be 'ruin speaker Mild he felt no bitterness toward+ the negro, who tram being 11 .. ought into corroding contact n ith the white rite., which tins hie superior, and the Inferior race must gradufilly dimininh and finally 11.4201110 0511flel Il In not prejudice hut wisdom In pr.•erse the st lute race in Its porn) I tumid keep the pow eis,pft has tiot ernment inn the hands of thoite men to whom our fath. Pro gfITO It 'lone yrent has been our enreer under their wt., precepts. • 11• hen I look back I feel as Mimi and Fie nurvt hate felt when driven foith hoot Paradise , It looked back and through the half open gates taught • glimpse of the beautiful Movers, the shady arm es, the sweet fruits and all the luxuries liner had lost foret er So .e to-day stand amid the distraetton of the elements, and Bee around 114 the elfe, t , l of the cur.., of civil war, of mixing rare... of Jarring litcholictitm and er erythlng In confusion. as triton the curse came upon the world nod the clouds swept low siting the treetop., the birds flew shrieking th lough the air, and the Iwasits lied affrighted perm.* the Oath ro-night in the midat of tints eonftisawi and diatunbauce of political princi• plea, .rah•lire elosnis lowering •orer our heads charged with thunder. flashing wah the light ming and ready to burnt with fury upon, as .1 looked heel; hate the beast Ifni peat, where our fathers' precepts adorn the galled' of ottr glo r3, It 111,111 S as 111100411 1, had been driven flout Psrad' it', and 1 1011 g to go bsck and drink 011 e more deep draught (1,111 the faun tains of their et...dont It 14 enough for me to point out what has been noltieretrby their great dur•tnnea It 111011109 1110 to turn away from theme modern Innovators who call the lll selves reformer., and contemplate the dignity and glen of those ancient 'ten 1 , 1 for myself I shallneece how down to thin thing I tronld, an I have Just meld, keep the ,611,4 of Oita ,meertanent .liere our fIO.IIPIS idneed them as hest for your safely, for the safety of our children, and also for the safety of the Mock man 'I hear men who propose negro emeilit3 are the vrorat enemies of the colored lame An for myself, I would threw around the negro by our 10,1 wine iegillllll.loll, the anfege reds of the 1 . 1% I would not put lain in the schools with your children, now up on the tun bench, nor Into the Legislature I • mild 10 lesi that I could be heard all user toy district, and all et er the State , upon this one Hon I would to God that there wan to he general 1 . 111,10.1, and then that tile people might Ine allowed to 11..1/10 tills 1111 1 01 P lit 1110 ballot-bog Then we 010111,1 know whether they wish the negro In the public !reboots, in the Legislature, and beanie them in the Jury box, for that in. what negrolquality-tneans,and .unthilnl °ice lm 1101 make mistakes in this matter 1 , 111 are a greet powerful 111111011, the greatest that the •meld iris ever eeeti ion hate forte nal lil/11. Of people. and 3on ore the strongest na tion line Artkever shone upon The rivers of tiouth Innen ids are ter.eider and deeper than no, their groves ern spire and their (kids groan with the nieheet of the earth. )et they 11111 r no rint, among the nations. 'rimy tondo the aurae mistake whit It the ll...publicans are nos making, and Meow iated rat Infernr race Into tine body politic It lead at teat to all ad. mixture, and finally to equality, and those great countries aro Inhabltated by mongrels and yet they are countrymen of Columbus and the deneendanta orthe followers of the groat Cortes ' I ' I • T! TUT ! -OR A VT ' S Ship has struck another 'reef. He had an old friend named Foci.ns, residing in NV 17,6- tern thin, %1 hom he had settled ution for _postmaster of Cincinnati, hat lint being it resident of that city, some mousing scamp, 71F1 in the case of his $lO,OOO friend Sven ART, hound an old act of Congress which makes 'his last. friend ineligible, too. It reads as fol lows. "And no person Shall hold the office or Post matt, who shall not be en actual resident or the city or town wherein the office Is situated. or district of country mutlly supplied by meld These old nets must be very annoy ing to the General, us all laws are to. highwaymen or apeing despots. hf thin vresterh tanner and his rich back / / () Tho "State Guard" Protesteth The appointment or UMW; MUM- Nut, the Hessian editor of the Harris burg Telegraph, and one of the most corrupt men in the Stifle, to the post masiership, at Harri:burg, has raised a storm of indignation in the. Radical ranks. The Stale 'Guard, editea by W IEN Fort cv, an influential radical paper, speaks of it in this nice : The people of Harrisburg .uero alingusied, insulied and outraged, lost et ening, by the an nouncement that George Bergner had liven ',fade PoMinaster, and ire now obey a popular derrmnri Ire entering n /101Pr1111 protest Ito the name of the Republican masses against this appointment, for the lotion log reasons , if-ff—The Anditooehertirl report .for Ifirdi shows that George Bergner diets nom the !Mate Treasury. that Via, nearly meta U.etuanod dollay .1, one half of a Mob tun clear profit 1 , 11- ring the last four tours, he has annually drawn almost a like,urn from the stone ^more. , In the ITIPPIitIIII., 110 inonspolired all the pilo ting patronage of the county office', which the aggregafo amounted to largo amount^. of =my}, Lector Lincotn Mr Bargiiar WPi. Postmaster Lie four rears, and at the 4'llllo time engaged as a contraefoi fur fin iihdonir the army MO mules and other supplies, so that moire lard, from the National, State and County Treasuries, Mr Bergner mat be safely said to linen made As cheer profits, NOT I^, F. 44 THAN TWO HUNDRED AND !grip Tit iu• HANIO DOLLAILY &rood—A gallant noldier'ii widow, the ti Ire of Colonel S,intnene, was ntropgly reetanmen ded for the name peal) ion She to a Indy of rare accomplishment" and ability, In all res pect, fully ruin potent to manage the pontofilce, RIO w hone great lona In the war for the safely of thittepublie, eptilled her to the gratitude of th#: Republiean party. which Ole %motif,- tionably„lauthough a politleal eabol pre, vo ted Ito tilaanes from putting It to practical el. feet Thad—A gallant aeldler, Mftfor Shaffer, non an applicant for the place, 1111datliently hart rd In , the people. Ile fought hrarele, peritling hi. life the front. while Mr I{PrgilYr wan at h ((((( e enjoying the care and the profits of four )'Dare an Pont lllR.ter tend a If War contractor Fourth—John Speel. hearted War Idemoerat, ono of the md popular men in liarrieluirg, lion girt ugly recommended for the position Mr ' J eri la a gentleman of In tegrity anti Intinette,... genertain to a fault, and fully competent to discharge the dtittel of Portnotatt r. \ dentine Hummel, a tnereltunt and hUAIrIPAP rout, of fine reputation, and a gentle man who rendered the los at server, an. endorsed be the blisilieq.cointlall nitym an applteant for Pestmnster. and whose rippnintmr nt u ould hate given general .ntiu rsuetion hiree—The people of Harrisburg, ninetenths of the voting Republiean to Bergner holding the position, because he is now contractor for printing the proceedings of the Legislature: furnishing all he stationery supplies to the mime body and the Departments of the State Government, Is ono,of the Inspec tors of the County Prison, a Trustee of the In sane Asylum, and a recipient generally, of Re pii bl lean patronage We make there plain statements In no spirit of personal hostility to Mr Bergner, but to giia the Republican MitAlles a hearing. fitment' Grant and the Postmaster General could not, bad they deliberately set to work to do.o, hale uttered the people of Harrisburg a greater in sult than that conveyed in this appointment, which, we predict, will do the Republican par ty more harm thin anything the adminietra lion could possibly perform, and the question is pertinent Will the people submit' if they ran stand the outrage, so can we. —Since the above-was In type several prom! neat and reliable Republicans have appealed to us to call &public meeting to protest 'waned this outrage This we declined to do If such a meeting is to be convened, let It be done by the right kind of men putting their minium toe call, and time i indicate the manhood and in dependence of the Republican party, whose victories for principle have too long been used BY sources of profit by greedy demagogues H e fulflltour duty to the mashies of the Repub lican party of Harrieburg, whose organ we are, by thus protesting against this measure of wrong and insult to them which is in in Gil. appointment ----The Court(' -Join no!, 01 Louis rills, having pitched into (ien. LoNo. STREEr for accepting office under UnAsr, the Erening Sun, of the same city, thin+ combs that paper down. We would j ust May here that we think the h'e'n is right: TLe (intrur-Jonraiol of this date tweaks of this distinguished gentleman to one of a Lod) of "eurrupt and mercenary traitors," who has been ..zeniensly seeking office and putting in practice all the self-humiliation sad abasement that he deemed necessary to Ito attainment. - This vomit,. well from Mr Watersom the oil ting editor of the (hurler-Journal. 'rho idea of calling Longstrect a curt upt mull mercenary traitor in parte ularly anti peeullar ly excellent We may rimy that is reireshitilt The clearer ()niece,e slanderoua utterances is at once their lull. It is like NiLeFingal's gun, ••well charged fir dilek or plover, Mahound tee kick its tonne: over'. Then Jllllll, I.OIIIOItIGIA, It MON, pure. gal lant and honorable mail never lived Prom tire day that the first shot eas fired at. Sump ter, to the •ad and dreary elosins secures at Appomattox court house, he was a field, earn e■t, indefatigable, brave and. without a peer fle was the beau Ideal of the Southern soldier. He fought well and nobly His body is scarred all over by honorable wounds. And yet because he accepts the situation, the whipper-snapper of the (Anurver../oornai berates, derides and slanders him. . . We have a pleasant little reminiscence of this same James bongstreet. We recollect him in the ealm summer days of liii, when be commanded the advance of thp army of North ern Virginia. lily personal was attractive, handsome, glorious and captivating. lie was elery inch a Mall. IRO &soldier. flow well and nobly he bore himself then, and ever after ward history words. We remetobtir a little, too, shout one henry Watt erson, of the Gbarier-Journal, Just at that time. When Longstreet was fighting for the Minfederaey, he was alright& italleiwjahe over the stars and stripes I Longstreet fought to the bitter end—Watter son, his mallgner, wrote on troth rides t Honor and Dishonoi The uneoistitutional amendment to. the United Staten Countltut,ion, Whic gives negroes the right to vote in all the States of the Union, was ratified by a strict party vote, a Itadical major. itv of three being, given for its ado!). lion. The Senator..l who Noted against it were HR Demoorate-15 ; the Sena, tors Who N ': ()ted for it were ri,ll Thidienls —lB. The measure has thug become the jet Of the Radical party 'in Pena. sylvanin, as it has always been the-jet of that paro theoughout tjhe In order to let Yhe people see who are the frientis elf whitPsa remeey and who the contemptible cowards who vo ted to degrade the State and the white race, we publish the names of those voting for and against negro suffrage. Around the names. of the former we placed a black enclosure, as indicating their true character and the Ulm dis honor they are willing to impose upon their State. The following t Pennsylwan: ' fbeirdnre who voted for ne gro lititrrago. 4itllingfelt. Bentley, Ilirievn,(Mer,er) I:err, Colemen Lowry, Connell, Ohneterbi, Errett. Osterhout, Fisher. Robinson, I.;inliniii, Stinson, Sint/Amin, White, r T., Ire. NVorthington Below we Mee the flash of sunlight thronglr this dark transaction. in the names of the Democratic Senators who a/iNotcd against degrading the suffrage br placing it in the hands of ignorant negroe , Look nt them nen, people of. I'enust it atom and remember them as good men and tree., who refused to bow the knee to flaalteo worship the ebony idol which infamous ,et up • rou. or - acme. Pennyyli undo Senators against Negro Sufll ago Beck, Mclntire, Brown, Northnmptoni at tiler, Pu rnett. Nagle, ltpudal Duncan. Araright, Jackson, Turner, lancierman. Wallace. =EMI We hope. when negro -suffrage is a realised fac•tti this State—if, un happily, such a thing is to lie—t.hat the people gill remember that tt WWI not the %yolk of the Democracy, but only the accomplishment of the well laid schemes of the Radical part . % --the nuperstructnre which it has reared up on the foundation laid long years ago. libel suit of W. J. PIIRIIAN, against J W. & W. P. FCREI, editors of the Chsiiin Drino,i at, e hich result ed in the acquittal °Wiese editors, seems likely to yet give them further trouble. to instituted a civil suit against them also, laying the damages to his character by the publication of the ur ticle that brought him Into iispute, at the round sum of tell thousand dollars. This sort was arbitrated in Lock Un ten, on Saturday last, in which Pug -1..; had his former wounds salved over by a verdict itt his favor of five thous and dollars PURII t 1.4 Is a miserable skunk of the genus carpet-bag, and has been- for some time a resident of the State of Florida. Two of the arbitra tors in the entre were Hark republicans and hence the unrighteous derision by which the editors of the Democrat srp mulcted in the stnsofss,ooo. The CORP will be appealed, however, and the character of this Radical scoundrel, Puita ventilated even to a greater extelit than it teas during the trial of the suit for libel. It wlw rumored only a couple of weeks since that this fellow, PURRIAN, and another individual in company with him at the time, were nismassina ted in the streets of Marianna, Florida, he 50,11• persom or person unknown. This, lion ever, dons nut seem to be the eat”.. as I I LIRMA,, is still :II the lanai of the Ili ing. —The Nattonst Rump, at Wasli• tngtom has been ing lessons se dig nity no long, that it line at last found a great many itnitatorsond in rare en sea, legislative bodies have been found whose high-toned dignity has totally eclipseddhe transactions so common in tilt' &imp. A Manifestation of this was. given. , the other day among the carpet-bag Senators of the .111 ort Car olina Legislature, and which is given ns follows in the official proceedings : ezdtariotberfo.ti;tveealit. wwPttiwhig why Mr. Moore romp to a poled of order. Ito saki blr. Love was not , eon lining himself to the sot. 1,4 before the Senate. jir. Love said the Senator front Carteret Whew nothing of the interests of the people of North Carolina; that he WWI ajnere squatter here. , . Mr. Moose, Hein& ear& If Love Is • bar. Mr. Love rep lied. "You are ati —d lier.and a son of a b•—h I" The report goes on to say that. the Presidenu called the gentlemen , to or der, and• took-down the language. On ly a few year ago buck scenes as this in a legislative hall would have brought' the blush of shame to the cheek of ev ery American citizen worthy the !mine, but now they are so common tut to ptuui by unnoticed. obscene, and ,tilthy 'language throve given iv only tolerated pt,iite &ye of loyalty and of earpet-baggin!; o Haat alietu, -t: iirti ' i L rifteenth Amendment. t'kliao not believe says the Cohmtbini 4041IVtitere iv a Italie men in the Uni ,'' 4,08 who believes that the Fir t.l 0,,s :AnneolinenC would reeeive a um j' itf the votes in one third of the , a . jsif- left to II popular vote, end I,,:ii be adopted in futon under the I &gir l ilsur. present revolutionary Con gres4t.l !ha tail ends of their late 111il anitiO'ipotisms, it will either become a de 0 , it - atter, be repealed or orate tt . I war t has d n:got so low as to submit to any dlcteti?l ,or control whatever from their r A 0 ., and that person must be ignurl itif the Anierican character. who A 0 they will submit to bee oil -4 tro 1 le a il ' i , St ! ,i t ki S ag ad t inferior iiiicdntui r s i t t t c b e et h t iie s i ;i : c (7 l , l lesn t t l a ie rt y ie. ilf to maintain as paupers. 1 ' ale Jiods destroy they first. iv su at tending the last act in the great n' onal dramatic farce of the 19th century:. The time is not far distant in / the futuFif ? ' when the children of those who now control, our dystrinies, -,,viii ix, loth to aikhowiedge that their .parent. WQrO in' Ittl'OP6F this barbarian nigger farce, as Pro chDaren of those engaged in the Sisfiliin Villtcherait, were, in a,- knowledglng t absurhities of the acts f i r of their aticeit lf the amendment should be)0000 by a majority of the people, L I). td l e t subunit for a time for the pt4iiiii6 testing - the result of their own' toilf • = but its ads wales are afraid to lelit4l t ).o the iscople, and it' adopted nfalt, , 41anit ba done by what Is lett of the ofvo that unused °bay(' nets to speak" 4E14 agtlinst the a ill of the majority. o white people of ti.' United States ' to submitted to rmr years of insan ' 'Aci, e, which has clot them $1,500, ~ have a - 111100m! debt of $2,500, AK which the big dog of till tan> Oys must be -paid in gold, but they[- :not ••il bruit 111 barbarta a Tuziiiir 4/1.0/, formsl upon them by insana the following ? t c tio .1:".i. Orlean . 4 ~,..v.,,,,,,5ie, c„ if,r, that State voted for the fra , "Lousinna i 0 lii w itglin Legislature notoriously put ptor tier by the milita r .... 1 ry power l'he,tnitt) taro wlmexercised an potent it ford lb reshaping the eon st tuition, as the i rtiubt ( millions of New York, through tht.btAeeted Legislature were nes er chosOit'lly'the people of the State, even under the constitution which ,exists. They hold cyr,,undar nn elec tion made when' trodainnii wan part of District No 5. ' llithat a burlesque on reireventative oforhtnent it is, that such a Legi.latutVAdiould base it in their power to Ma k? hnd unmake citi zens, and break nut if tell enustitutions for thirty-seven Slitti. end millions of inhabitants, many of whom protest egainst such action as a great wrong and acandalonq in iquit) ." NO. 13, ore o "Wh make Ii os or) 1.1 now qui - - In n hurried article, trratem 41. couple of weeks mince, stroking in ref erence to the Aniendmeut to , the Con stitution Isnown nR tne 15lli article. which guarantee.; to the nem** the right of suffrage, we advised 'the poem hers of our legislitture ° to resign and thus defeat its adoption, as- waa Axle ,on Ind' /VOL It was an overnight to UN floc - to remember at that time that to our State Constitution a majority con atitlites a rinormii, arid, conseq,aantly, the Denteicrada being in the neinoritj, their rcaignations would Inlet/ been of no effect en defeating thasnensure, for the Itadicial majority westid have prise ed IL nevertheless. In. the Lithium Legodataxe it takes two. thirds to i.on• atitute a quorum, arid; therelbre, the resignation of the Diwneerntic members defeated the Amendment be leaving, that Locke without then-T:44le nrinither to transact business. In vines or the fact tluat some have flaking why our meuihery , 10 not reN11:11, hope tlll9 explanation wila Idharallletert ,-- If their re,ignietionx an, good, there IA not titter lease dbnke that our Iteinotrs tie Senators lona Iterremem Wives would hieve.-resigi,edlo4 soon as this rla.eratoa was apsallg, hat as :loll' ily:eueil‘l be aro,int)Lialkab tlurreby best they earl stile in their plit era and vale agairst the ia'siaitoa4 schelt)es.' - M/S Pita" wn~ hr i , ces dons Fassovr in Washitigtaiii hilt. "Ile la here looking•up his railroad selioue, which alone was left out by the jobbers ofthe railway omnibus bill. Locking back over the history of the Reptlilicalt party we e 1441 see how foolish %%eft3 our hero Ni orships. This tnan was Crice our delirium of a general. What foolish thillgti we did 7013.4 raid, iininifig, our babies after him, whose solinwy mon ument, will, probably, be tht assoein tion o: his name with Fittitoeffii peak. There ha made a terestrikii, pushing his umnadie; way aller the. wandering, star. thproad he is representing now, is,. if 1 mistake not projected over the route he condemned 20 years ago. 1 saw hint in the rotunda the other ita), and entering the library I took appal) cilitv's lib , of hide. Ile has had six biogrn ptiies of himself published,—a lop-siding of literary justice." dispute. took place at a cookilght in Lit. rardrille, Schuylkill county, the other day, l■ which firearins were fret.ty neod and throe Ten sorionaly wounded.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers