= 1~ e (!gl 111 HUNTINGDON, `PA. Wednesday morning; irov. 18; 1867. Wilt . . LEWIS, ;EDITORS MICH LINDSAY, Selinsgrove paper says that "Geri.' Grant is like the dutehman's hog, on Will sides at the same time." 111&•Thaddeus Stevens has written a long letter itywhich ho denounces the National Banking System and favors the paying of the National debt with -cgreenbacks. . , . Supremo Court has: decided 'ilia Railroad - Companies eaarun their earp on Sunday. The, qtreet..ears run opclag •Sunday •in Philadelphia the, • f t3rtine. a's any other day. •. • - -110.." Is impartial suffrage right,oris it -wrong.? We will, - .heimtisfied with one reason, at a time. We will not pretend' ,to take a,position Mill :we hear .what you have to & Ameri ca tt.. , ,; •' • . ;• : .•: • - -W'rOng--;-bee:ause•al.negro is not ilet°This President,' has pardoned W. aohnitoii of SollidaYbarm -- some time ,since l conyietcdand,sentenced to 'the ponitentivy for dealing in and passing counterfeits;tbe petition for 'pardon was vsigned by many , 4 ireminent," Peiinsyl vanians, and citizens 'of, Blair county without d'}fltinution ,party parelMsed the - Pan .Brindle railroad, ,on-Wednesday last Soy one million, nine hundred and sixty thousand dol lars.• :This route was formerly known - the- Pittsburgh and' Steubenville -111Ailroacl and ie a'briMell'oi' the Pitts .bUrgh Columbus .•; , - ,The Degrees of Southern States vote -viith the Radicals because they , believe the Republican party in the North is in .oiror , of raising them to a.poli,tical equalitywith the, whites. If the'Rophlicau party North should throw the negro suffrage plank over tioitrd, wouldlhe . "negrcics -South ; still e ontikh'te 'support the, party ”oso,,Yorney's - .press of Thursday last came out in fay*. of Grant' fici Presi dent. ..Sorne days ago rorney sai4 the .I:cepablicap party would tale , no step ackward, but would continue to ad "voeate and 'support men sound on the 'negro suffihkO question. , Porney's sup port of Grant hail Alieitqt alarmed tho Conservative,Republicans. ?A ! cable despatcksays the' Papal Revolution . in.Aalris ended.. This has been a: short , struggle between the no torious Garibaldi and the papal forces. Gdribithins - troops met nrtli ,repeated successes until they reached within eight of Rome, at place called Monte Rotondo. Iforo a .battle ensued on 'the-3d of November, kr which Garibal di was capture and pis forces com- teti " : DAkING U tins 56't 'eleotions: the' RepUhli -cans everywhere used Stanton. and Aberide,o, „auspokon Radicals, to ad lwance:their cause— ?nen these- distin. gesatletnetr Were"spoken of as on the high road to the Presideney,but iior.witere are the Y-they havo been Ihroysra aside by their radical Admirers Land availability urged as a substitute. 'Bach if; • ; Cigx. 911,ANT AIM THE REPUBLICANS.- -Them is danger of a split in the Repub lican 'party. •`,.l.'he Grant and anti-Grant Republican's fire getting warm--fierce. The Journal American, the Republi can organ of this county, having rais ed the 'name of Grant as its choice for -President, cannot be:expected to give its readers more than one' side of the questicinvepropose'to gi'vo the oth er, that ,Republicans ;generally may know what :is going on in their party. Grant ici•stili on the fence, with the lienest Radicals of tile 'Atipnbiiean .par ty,opposed to him. The office-seeking Republicans generally : for • him, in hopes that-should he be their candi date they would stand-a chance of ri ding into office on the strength of his military'; iinliirity. - .." The Radicals will:stand cm( agninst Grant .until_, he . . cornea down froth ma' neutral - position; and should he declare in favor of Rad iCaliami-then the Conservative Repub ]icana' woald drop him—and defeat liMif.homirated: Aer - There was a great meeting of the "strong' minded Republicans" at Wi3stehester, on Wednesday evening last, at whieh Wendell Phillips made a speech on : the “Political Situation." On - the Presidential question ho said ; halie4i6"6,-eaVraiditi'at'i4;accepta ble'tb-the eonservatiVe'elenietit of the Repdblican-party; it aches for him': It is'possibli4if we' do our duty:either that a.bettei• man shall, be at the head cif the Government;arthat this puppet (as he will be in statesmanship) shall be so bound down by pledges and so committed to radicalisin that he shall goiti merely as a servant of the rad. Mal element of the Republican party." 1 1'116 follOWingrbsolution was adop ted by the meeting;' That' we do not believe in Radicalism that is dumb; and, .•there for,O; we "warn the Republjaan party tigainet . the fatuity: f noininting.Gen eral Grant for the Presidency, in MC hope of saving the part's life . by the rinerifibe of its prinmplia:' TliO'Rddie s als "not - favor Grant's numluAtiun or election unles i s they have Wm pledged to, their.Padieulisra, pub licly or privately. .. October and November elec tions have passed, and with them has passed away a great part of the power of tho Radical party. This result is nothing more than we 1311\430 6eatedly predicted; for the masses Ofjtle people could not silltain he 'orin:ny, party as riedicaWas :that ;whichrthe: loaders of the Rehlblich.n Oki•ust. upon th4s , fallo'w:ers, and ou the coun try: That party was kept in power to restore the country to its pristine flourishing condition, and was not ex pectedto take ad,vantage of its supor tO•advanco its most ultra meas• urea and schemes, which it knew to bo 'cllstaotOfttl to the people. They did not reckon the consequences of their scheming, :ancf,, now they experience the sorrow of defeat. They have, by their poWeir in Congress; koPt a Stand [fig army in the SOutherriStatob, Which IS Increasing o,e ; taxes every ,year'; they, have established .a.Freedmen's Bureau, , whiohbas'and is takiiig ritil lions of dollark:of the - peOple's'ireasury 'every year ) just'.'f9r; . the purpose of feediug,und clothing ll ignorantvand in dolent nogrods; they have, , fer the , par , pose of strengtheningtheir party and lceeping l it In &War; given the vote, to all the negtoes,.4n 2 the,Southere States over twenty-Odo years.of 'age ; and, ad ded 'to'this, they , ho.vi3 kept the eopn tryin_a continual tutniail,',by a warfare bn the A:esidont, and hy , the agitation, ,of dogmas' which should.have been laid! aside untihbur country. Was restored 'and' united on o: . pernicinent btisie. , Pursuing such a policy they could nriot o.nid.,catt not be :supported ; by thinking, WI reflecting. mon. For they Were' defeated, and should they not ,prodt; by, the ex poriOnee' of thd present but Continue their radical course, future defeats aro .in store for them,: while perhaps un ,foreseeciudisasters are in store for our country., .Theit: course in , Congress this whiter will'he elosely;scrutiniZed, for there is the spot from which have sprung the edicts that have. dictated •the course they were pursuing. They still have power' to work much mis chief or restore. harmonious relations, not only between the two branches of &our Government, but also between the tWolsections . of our groat- country'. An ' . ,entirelY',differont' , poljey', wilt `lionlto be punned befciro they,,pun hope. to succeed in tho future'; ' for- wo take it that the recent voice' of the• people is the outspoken' evidence of Weariness and disgust with.. the Radical "rule or raid" policy. • „ WHO SIIALhRULY3 I—Tho're aro many sincere men who are solicitous for the Welfare of our country;. and knowing that its peace or discord 'independent on-the course of its rulers, are asking .thetnOlves the - 'auestion, ,who will rule over-us.' Looking at the results `of the .recont , ,elections, they dread the ascen dancy of the Democratic party to pow 'or, fearing that its loaders will be as radical ono way as .the Republican leaders are the other. • Of this fear.wo also are possessed; - for we cannot but think that:the conspicuoui exponents of the'ideas of .that .partf 'during the I ,war wouldbe„unfit rulers:for our coun try when . .the War. is: closed.:' -Whether • the Deinom:athi party look upon the. results of the elections 'as -'an evi dence of the succosapS, their party, and proceed to claim such Radical Demo• crate as Vallandigham, Voorhees, Wood -or Perldleten, as their` candidate , 'for the pexi . Prosiddrit„retneinsto be seen. The first truth, however, that that pa'r ty should boar in mind, is, that the vote of the Democratic party, as a party, would never have given themrsuoceSs. There were Coneervatives in each par ty, and there were disgusted Republi cans, who refused to veto; or voted with them ala'a choice of evils.' Then ;again, theiereCordduring, the .war was of such a character that we fear wheth= or any candidate they could bring on the ficld,would , be successful—although -a War Democratmight 'stand the best chance. , We rely, more on the candi date of a' National Union. party, com posed olcouservativt3 RePublicans and Democrats,than we would on'any oth er;' but in the event of no such party being l organized, then' it would be for tho Deinocratic party to coalesce with conservatives and give us a conserva tive Democrat. Under such a ruler,w'e - coUici"-Yeel safe, , and,, ,expect a, speedy reconstruction of our coun try., radical Republican. or Rad ical Democrat as President; would fill the hearts' of our peoplo:,wiEa dread from the fact that either JWould pursue the policy dictated by their own imagination, or that of. the fol lowers' of their' own ilk. A rhati•for the ilmca 'is' a: COnServ'iitlve • Union man.. • rtm.Puring the pastyeek' Moro than a dozen goodUniomilepublicans com plained to us of the conduct,of the lead ers of their party. They regretted that the'principle's of ' the Union party of thei war bad been set' aside and the party itself disorganized by the radi cals and-destroyed. They could see nothing but defeat in the future, unless it was possible , to reorganize immedi atelyupen the, platform of the* old Union party—a .platform upon which the "boys in blue" fought down the re bellion—a platform of principles we have never deserted. The progressive platform of the 9r.ganiza• Lion ,v2ill'soon give the,old Democratic organizatioMall the States-the Union party gained during the war. tel-Tho first snow of the season fell this morning: It was a sprinkler. The November Election. More Anti-Radical Victories! Statoielec2tions tools place on the sth inst.Xl? N'Ov'tork," Massachusetts, Mar3l4d,lip ' hig*t!,. Illinois, Nevada, Missouri, Nav - Sersci, Kansas, Wiscon sin, and The results are aboutrtlm Same ( i l as were in the Octobereleciions...i(eciiiy Anti Radical pins. Last year the Republicans car ried the State of New York by 13,789 majority. Tbis year the Anti-Radical majOrity will exceed 40,000. The city of Now York gave 01,000 majority against, the, Radicals. rMaspclinsetts has gone Republictln:by about 20,000 —a loss since • last year of 40,000. Maryland gives in the neighborhood'of 40,000" against the Radicals! .New ,two Or threc thousand Anti-Radical Majority—last year it gave; 1500: Republican majority. Illi• nois,Michigan, Nevada, Missouri, Kan sas,,7isconsin and Minnesota; have gone Republican, by greatly reduced majorities. In Kansas two amend. 'merits to the Constitution were voted Ode tozive negroes the right to vet:e;aricl.tihe other to give women the right to i vote. Both were defeated by large majorities: Will' - Congressmen open 'their ears andlcsten , to the voice of the people.? xt6,_Tho' New 'York' World; Demo cratic organ; speaking of the anti-,f,ad-: keitl victory in, teat State, says not do .to. .assume that wo have won by a simple exertion of our own party atrength. The fact is' true, whether we recognize it. or not, that we are' indebted for 'this magnificent and manifold triumph to citizens who have.not, for the last few years, acted with the Deinocratio party. In this, ci ty and in the. neighboring towns of New Jersey,'to our knowledge, Repub. lieans have voted tho Democratic tick ets; and we suppose we must have had mote or less assistance of this kind in all parts of the country. • But a larger proportion of Ropubli ,cans' haVe staid away from the polls and lent us indirect aid almost as val uable. Our success in the future will depend upon the continuance of this co-oppration." - What the World says 'of the anti %Radical' - Republicans: and ponserva• fives, MaY lio ,Said of the same class of voters in every ,State ; in the Union. They votectetiWglitDemOcra tic. tickets as a'choide of'evilsi But where the same' Cote Will . be counted next year.is another, question.: Tho. Union Republi cans and Union• Democrats may. have -a Presidential candidate of their own. They may also have Congressional and Legislative candidates, and they may also be strong enough in many coun ties to put candidates in the field for county offices. The anti•Radieal vote, outside of the Democratic organila tion,_ is strong in every ,State—but there must bo organization to succeed with Union antiradical candidates. The increased vote for the "Democratic party" this' fall 1,4 net, , a permanent strength—it was a help for a special purpose only—to chock.radicalism. , m.",Qu .l 4ighbors.pftho Globe.seem to bo, anxi to,havo.our,posqion do• fined in regard •to,,nni7i,c,isal!t3kiffrage. Wo can only sarthat.ik 6,ey- ; wish.•to qUustion us, go.willpginptoion,c robord; where tbey,ivill: find us. i ' 7 —Jatimal ct; Apterictitt. • • , • • We quote from, the ,:rebord of our neighbors of the Joitrnal & Akerican : "The great RepUbliean'Org'aitizeiioiz, based and built as it is, on the eternal principles of,itifttiee, and equal political right to all then,liifilhont regard to race or color," has 'moved 'steadfastly forward." --- T Jottrital American. will dispute, the fact that the Journal& American works faithfully 'with. the Republican oFganization ; and in doing so it advocates "equal right to all : iiin,:w4hout regard_ to rice or color."' . kour record, neighbors, is satisfactory—a little more so than any answers you might now feel disposed to give after,,hearing — , the news from Now, York, Massachusetts and other States in N 4 bleb • elections were hold last iveolr. '• The hetivY, 'Republidan kisses in all the'Btatcs iit'd crushing ar . ,guments against negro political equali ty, and perhaps they. may convince you that your organ Nation made a great mistake in attempting to 'force the negro race up to an equality with the white Republicans. . FIFTY THOUSAND EMIGRANTS COMING 7 -Commissionerion, of the Gener al Land Office, is in receipt of a letter from A. W. Atwood, Esq., of London, England, making inquiry relative to obtaiding a quantity of land for the settleMent of 50,000 emigrants, which it is contemplated sending to ;the United States. The CoMmissionee has replied, referring•te'the 'groat body of unoccupied land West of the Itissis- Sinpi,'atid the facility for obtaining, tle . to the 'same,'onder . the provisions of the Pi•e-emption: 'and homestead laws. atir-'2wo men recently died sudden ly at a Canadian tavern after drinking oup of coffee. The landlady called the police, who suspected her of pois oning the men. She protested she had not, and to prove the harmlessness of the coffee, drank a cup herself, when she also fell down dead. An examina tion of the coffee-pot showed that a bunch of Matches had been boiling with the coffee. naPresident Johnson is to be sere naded at Alio White House to-night, bythe Democrats and Conservatives. It is expected that ho will reply at length. Wo will give his speech in our next. wa..liegistration in South Carolina amounts as follo ‘VB tes 45,741 ; ne• groes 79,585; black majority, 33,844. So much more for negro supremaoy. PLAIN Phila. .2110inirig Post, a new daily paper, endorsed by several large meetings of leading 'Rad icals, speaks plain in opposition to the nomination of-Gen, Grant as the Re p4i.licitn nominee for the Presidency. e girte below .a ,few ,Cxtracts from the , Post : - . "When the peopliiiika direct ques tion, they wish it ,amittfored by the man to whom it is addressed. Stich a' question they have asked Gen. Grant, and to us it scorns somewhat presump. tnous for Mr. Washblirne or 'Colonel Forney to volunteer a reply. That Col. Forney should give his opinion that Grant is a Radical is right enough, usk, aslir. Blair may give his opinion i amb, Grunt is a Democrat. 'We- can take their opinions for what they are worth.' But, when Colonel Forney puts his op iniopinthe place of Grtint.'s- answer; we „reject it as counterfeit coin. It won't-pass. . • -"Tho Republican • party is pledged, to Impartial Suffrage, to the absolute destruction of all - tests of color or race in t-holaws of the United States That pledge will be kept by the majority of the party ;later and bpirit it will be kept:. Wewiltnet,break it for Grant;, we will not break it to obtain success we will,accept defeat before lye will, consent to give lip one jot of principle in our platform or to wink at the slight est infidelity in our candidate. , Thiti, therefore, we would say to all Republicans,—stop before it is too late to stop. Refuse to endorse Grant till Grant has endorsed Radicalism. Meet his silence with silence more profound. Do not let America see the shameful spectacle of the Republican' party, mo-, ying in crouching•procession to offer, to beg, to bribe, any man tri . become its leader and its candidate: Let ue-go otir way, and if GoneralGyant believes as we believe let him ccinie.to us. , • "Our poSition is that if Grant is the, most popular man in the country, as his friends claim—if he is a Radical, that/ then he was bound to give Radi• calism the help of his popularity. We assort that his refusal to say ono word for us was direct aid to our enemies; and the greater his Republican admir ers prove his influence to be, the great er they make the injury we haye suf fered from his silence." , • VIRGINIA. The Recent Electioa- - -Startling Facts [Carr . o.pondouao or the Philadolphil Daily Nova.] NORFOLK, Nov. 1, 1867 The evil results which thoughtful men feared would follow the attempt of the Republican leaders to •drill the freedmen into their ranks' are Surely upon us. TheSo leader% schooled the colored people into the belief that the whiCe'libolik - of the Smith were their enemies ; that the people' of, the .North were their friend 4, and, .would sustain them in the attempt to.put down and trample on their former. masters, The poor durkies,were:but top apt scholars. They arrayed 'themselves against the whites, and the regult is the two races are now diYided hy'ariet'lines which will never morn be effaced. , The friend lyfeeling, heretofore' 'existing , ,between the' whites' and blaelc iS'gone forever. It,is had.for the whites, but far worse fiir the blacks., lAg,art impartial looker on,' I • Must say thoconduet'Pf the negroos in the recenyeampaign . has greatly lowered my catenate not only of their moral souse, but of their great sagacity. Soy 'oral l'esPeetriblO'gehtlemen of undoubt ed integrity '•,itnd 'capabityL—original Republicans an etufsisteet"Union Men throughout the rebellton;'afferedtheM selves for thP,conVentien, and in every ease Were rejected hY;the'negrooe, and illiterate men of their own 'color, or Jrnorb•dcgraded'Whitee,preferred. There 'is not a solitary 'hien' of education among the soyenty-odd Radicals cho sen; but among thdrin ire eighteen,ne greeS;One Mau who Can 'neither read nor.write, One p'enitentiary conviet,one white•man With a black wife and sun 'dry other moral or intelleCtuid duricis ities::ltwill undoubtedly be the mean. est body of men (setting aside the few ConserVatiVe Members)•that over , as sembled' in the United Stitte's • a'nd doubtless the only constitutional con vention' ever elected, of which two thirds of the members had never read a Constitution' 'and did not knew the inerinin&of 'half the'WOrds used' in the itiStrument•they were chosen to pre pare. The fact that scarcely ' a thousand white votes in the whole State Were cast for the Radical' Candidates, ought to open the eyes of the northern peo ple to th true condition of affairs here. In Richmond, where there are several hundrad•citizons 'of northern birth.-- Many of them ex-army offieers—but thirty.two, white votes were _cast for the Radicals, and probably not one fo'urth of,those were northerners. A prizeticol acquaintance with fhe condi tion offkffairs here drives every respec table northern man (=ERE ARE NO EX CEPTIgNS) into the Conservative ranks. A. few ribrthe'rn mon WO1'0 : 0,110SOD to• the Soovehtiod, but 'they ,are of the Meanhsti'lYpe. ' For instance„in the ItaYripton, district, a so called ColonCl White was elected. This individual resige r ed the position of gajor in a 'N. Y. reghnent to accept the position of sutler, forivhich performance General Butler ordered him, out of the depart men't. It seeMs that' about ono per cent. of t4e, white population' voted the Radi• ciittieket; and'abOut'thi3 same propor tion of colored people voted for Con servativeandidates. It only requires a feW month's residence to cure the strongest Republican bore of his radi cal notions, unless he, is a' man who prefers • the , company 'd nogroes to white p'Ople, as is the case with the coldred white above mentioned, and a few rare birds' of tho same feather. Ought . not those facts to oxen the eyes of the 'reconstructionists in Congress to the folly of their course ? They aro doing incalculable mischief to every body in the South, white' as well as black, bui, mainly to the latter class; fbir no ono now can doubt the result of hostility between the two races. With puldie•oPinion at the North, in favor of the blacks, they might stand forfora while in opposition to the whites, but with the case reversed they will havo'no show at all. . Gloomy is the future of thb poor negro. His worst enemies arehis.professed friends. 'PENNSYLVANIAN. IlEir For plain, fancy and 'ornamen tal printing, call at the "Globe" Office. Sbeeeh a Senator Doolittle. qingtor Doolittle on the Political Crisis Senator Doolittle, of Wisconsin, de livered.a speech in the City Rail, Mil watikee,--'on the eveningof the 28th nit, The following' is a report of hie;ro.-; marks Mr: President and Fellow Citizene, —For some mouths past I have Bed absent from my native land. I have been removed from the exciting scenes of political strife. I have hardly read _the ,political. uonspapers.of ,my own country, but during,, reop,ths..T. have bad leaiiided yofreet mfidt(lipti.n the situation of our beloved country. From, all • the- reflection,. and thought 1- Whi'ch CoUld bring tobetar upon it, I h!lv_e_ been, conflrined in the belisfs whieh )YtIS for9ll trpOjyrne: more than • two years 'ago,matuely, that the policy •whiettwitp then proposed , by .M.r.lfin 7. (Min ithipediately„upori the surrentler of the armies'of the Rebellion, to roe- Akilizt; at .gned'the States of the South, to have.therifrestclied,, to,all - their 'don stitutiOntdrikifte, :and to their, repro sentatien„in: the :Union,' Wita jnst,, the only .wise, the only' con#titu 7 , Ilona! policy (APplause.). .From :that, limo forwardihave . struggled'tO carry thiitliOliey , into effect. I believed .then, and I ern' tieKirfora: than over firia.in the 6Pieion;• that it, two yearSAgo, im ntediately,upon the'surrerider of the artnies'of the Rebellion,,the,StateS:.of „the South' had 'been recognized with their constitutional rights, and adMit tad to their , representation—in the Union, undk;the - policy• of 41... Lin. cola, all Ahe.diffleulties which noiv sur round us, bOth'fitiancial and political;• lwo.o id; liafie:pas46d. .(Aptoduie.) I believe - that, years' ago, that poliei 'had: been •ffairly , adopted,' the bondS'of the Government of the United tates this . - cla.y, , six per cent.; would coMmand•lo4fetriluni in,goldin every money,centreof the world. (APplause) I will state fact—which It hope no ono present, will forget',l liaviOnet, no intelligent Man in' Europe who has not expressed the same opinion, that, ,if our States,of .i. the ji Seuth • had been Ad.' Mittodlb l'epreeentatlon in the Union, that the whole ,world:could see that we were onapeople, — one nation; with all the States represented and taking part in . our legislation , our six ,per .cent. bonds would not only be at par,' tut would command' - it'premium in gold. Why. ript,t‘Why, Shotild not the Amer ican securities 'at six per cent.' com mand a high premium in gold, when the English three, per cents. command ninety-three per cent. in, gold? No earthly, leason' •(in be except that, thesaStates are apparently divi ded and•dissevered;• that the States of the South a4q,,lcept out of. the - Union by this radical policy. I 'charge this home to the leaders of' that policy. The whole responsibility rests upon that radical policy, which, trampling the CouStitutiOn under its, feet,,violating their• Plighted faith and the policy of Mr. Lineoln, the often avowed.policy which elected him, refused to , allow' to ten States of tho Union all right to representation. (Applause.) Fellow citizens, it is riot'iny purpose to detain you for any length of time. 'I only wish to express in a few sentences two or three thoughts. , The great, all ab sorbiug idea,-which underlies radical ism is precisely the same idea which underlaid secession. (Applause.) W hat is that idea ? Let us not deceive our selves. Ideas rule the world.- What was the idea ghich,led the South into Rebellion'? It was this. „ The Consti tution has no authority over the South• ern States against-their Will; they have a right to withcfraW:froni•the 'ae thor ity of the Conatitution at pleasure, and therefore, after the passage of their or dinatiped`of secession, the Constitution was practically dead in thaStat i b,kof South. The ,people. of the Son th tweet to war to, enforce .that idea.:,. What did wo do? We maintained preciaely the opposite idea, to. wit f—That - the Constitution has supreme _authority over the States of the South as well as of the North, and that the States of the South should be made to acknowl edge the supremacy of the -Constitu tion. To maintain- that.idea we called • two Millions of men to the field. -'We poured out our treasure and our blood like water. To maintain that idea we created this debt of three thousand mil lions of dollars'. To maintain that idea five hundred, thousand of 0111`SOM3 wont down to battle and. to death.'' By the blessing of God we were victorious in maintaining that idea of theeupremaey of the Constitution over the States of the South who' n we, at length,' after a long and terrible war of four years, compelled, the South. to surrender to that idea; when we compelled - the pc& pie of those States who made their ap peal to the God, of battles.to dee:do the question 'between us, to surrender the controversy; wjien the, South yielded and acknowledged the ,Constitution to be supreme, and, that the . flag of the United States: was the flag to • which they owed - : allegiance ; then'-up rises Thaddeus Stevens,, Charles Suniner, Benjamin Wade, and °the: radiCals of the North, to, proclaim sinew, ; the idea of the secessionists, viz., the Constitu. Lion is no longer , the supreme law. of the land in the States .of the South ; that we do.not hold thd State. 4 of the south by 'constitutional' authority; that wmhold them by the sword and the sword alone; not under the Constitat ; but outside the COnstitution,, by a power which is above the Constitu tion. That is the idea of radicalism. It is not only akin to, but it is Mead,- cal with the idea of secession. It istlie essence of rebellion against the Consti tution of the United StateS. Whether it is asserted by Jefferson Davis at the South or by Thaddeus Stevens at the North, it is a new rebellion against, the Government of the United Staten. (Ap plause.) We have by 'force, of arms put down the, Rebellion of the Seces sionists at th'e South. Wo de:not ex pect to be Compelled to ,put down this now rebellion - at the North by force of arms. (Applause.) We expect to put it down by moral power alone, ,by'ar gument, by reason, by porSuasion, as wo have done in donnecticut, in Cali fornia, in Pennsylvania, and Ohio, by the power of the ballot-box. (Great applause.) Mr. President, I will not detain you any longer. I trust the Americans will rise in the majesty of their strength, and by their moral power, by calm reason, by earnest and truthful argument, and by their votes proclaim again the supremacy of the Constitution of the United States in the States of the South,not only in spite of the Secessionists in the South,but in spite of the radical anarehistsandrevolu- tionists in the North. (Great applause.) I can very well see by tho election re turns that a change has come over the spirit of_ t,llB,,nottott7. When I come to RaciriA U'OW'Vthe -place where I have lived felill4fte•On - Years, tarn not met by arlinfl#,tited mr*WhOvould prevent Irt,e'dromitipeayOg l to 'Ate people of my oivi toyn. [Great' applause.] A migh• t.yfehan - 0 is bbing&rpught. (Cheers Arili jt 'gFeat- :apPla44.! It I attend a nahULini inlhe n'erifiboring county of riditottig, to proclaim these doctrines there, in which I believe the very ex istence-of constitutional - liberty to us , an d to : puy i ch i I clretr,i erjAvolved;',' there 'will'6e One' to interrupt and insult mo, to prevent their utterance, or to; interfere with ins in au3 mad'per..,(AP plause.) thiiichange , ? Simply the work of time. Men are beginning to;ren.qol4e•regsen, set - The'dkeitemeut . and"paSsions, ,an,tl prejudices which war has °nen : - dered aro Rassing away, and-cool, clis : ,passiOnate.judgment.is once more as serting its-legitimate sway. I thank God for what I already see, and I..thinle we shall have occasion to ho yet more thankful for what is 'yet ,and; vigtohged •4ap plause). ,Blood Thirsty, speecli of a Neirfi, WO:storm, November 9—An excited meeting 7as:held at the ;hendgitu;rters Of the blacks last night. • A committee was ,appointed, to • wait, on, General . Schofield andi•equeSthrm to ordel :the city election. Lewis Lindsay, a colored' delegate elect to the Convention, made a spec* iii. Which he' alluded 'to the ,AiSehargei of noo ° Toes. for voting the Radical ticket: He said before any of , hischildrim should suffer. fpr f food„the, streets,Ot Itichriaond,shotild ,run :knee deep in blood. He thanked God the megroes hud learned to use swords and guns. ', All 'efforts'Of the more poade ful negroes to atop/ these ;demonstra• tions were'wildly hooted'down. The ettixens here•are,appreheasive oftrou `tile,'.: Ai.r.*,lY4irclwelr and 'Ottit white Radicals left the meeting. , ' 6.eo'An explosion 'of boilers • took ,place 'im;!Pittsburg by. which twenty lives werelost and many persons'seri ously injUred. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS: STRAYED AWAY: . r - The yearling CALVES, 0110 a Rteor and the other o heifer, both rod and white, strayed front the premises of the undersigned in .Ifendet son tosyrishinobout the litter part of April. Auy information as to their whereat, nits will be rewarded. - n013.3t mout s lSON'S COVE'YARM Pdlt Th s Farm h situated on l'lnoy Cteek about font—miles front Williamsburg, adjoining t•pringi4ld Furnace prop erty. It contains 165 ACRES, of which about 25 acres is young chestnut timber,' all maler geoefenco. The Iraproreinents are a lint, class BARN, nearly new, with Wigon Shed. Corn crib.&c.; n stone D.F.F,LING HOUSE, also now; log Dwelling, large and well selected Orchard, etc., etc, Them is an abundant anpply of water by means .st'ca paciouc cisterns which in seven years exporiouco hero never failed to furnishing all the water raillited ; alio by the clef lc which bounds the farm. • Etirthcr particulars may bo had on application to tho undersigned, reading iu Huntingdon. '' 121 ti Huntiogdon, Nov 1:5, 1857 V " ' TAJABLE FARM AT PUBLIC SALE. The aAscrilmr will nen at public S.tle, O,I7TIIUIIBDAY, DECEMBER 12Th, 1867, A valuable UAlt3l hittutto in Line°lE township, Hunt ingdon county, bounded , on tbo east by land of William lint ikon, on the south by land of George 1.3 on, and on thu not di and west by the ltaystown Branch, (and with in three-quarters of a mile of Eutriken's Bridge.) con taitiing 280 AflitEs'',ahimt '2OO acme of which are cloarod and in a good state of cultivation; the bc%lllllCO roll tim bered.. The improvements are a largeß,. 110UFE, conv!mient roPiY;;6rpfile9, q .liu'r e !B,L t i ARM, and all other outbuildings. Togethor with noces,try miter fa— ellityal not excolled by any in the 9ottuty for conveni 'ehdo; and a goad Orchard.' The Farm is suitable for dividing in two tracts, lowing another spring of never-foiling water thereon. For further information inquire of ISAAC BRUMBAUGH Near 3farklesburg, Nov. 13, 1861-31. FI,NED • FACTS INDEr,IpLY I'ItHSSED will always triumph over simple 119. envious. . • Thus it Is that this community gives testimony in fa vor of the well known establishment of H. GREENBERG , TakragliAriTir .V2lllOllO HILL STREET,. HUNTINGDON. Whilst it is not his purpose to deccivo the public by clamoring "low prices and better goods" than other dealers, ho simply Invites all who wish to purchase In his lino of business t.r call and satisfy _tlions . sels!es tint with him n patron once gained is never lost, that Is, t•tho proof of tho pudding is in the tasting of it." Ilobas just received Ids winter supply of, iltnlt 'MADE EV01T334 , 1(r) • FOB MEN AND BOYS. 110 has Maria large ossorttnent of the most substantial and fashituMble Hats, -Caps Gents' Forilishing Goods of every desCription, and made up from the bast material. Always on hand the finest quality of American, llna Itch and French-PLOTIff,CASSISIBRES and YBSTINGS, which are made up to ordor by good, experienced work -111011, in n manor themist fashionable and onduimble. lie eastern city i con afford a bottoPeri, mire varictlstylo of goods that cue baleen I in my solectlon. •,- 41. :{OY. 13,1857. t . ...Merchant Tailor. E M 0 PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY R9BIEY &I, MARSH, MERCII4I4I7 TAILORS, AND DEiLSILI IN READY-MADE CLOTHING, FOIL MIN AND BOYS, Dare removed to the store room on thin corner of this Diamond, opposite LOWLY' Book Store, whore they intend to keep constantly on hand thin !utast styles of Reedy- Mode Clothing - and piece goods, comprising AIIEFEICAN, =ILIAD AND PRENCII CLOVIS, ASSINIEItk;S, AND VESTINGS. CLOTII.3_, 'LIASSI3IkIItNpI, AND Vt.:STINGS. CLOTHS; cusonitcgs, 4NO Also 4 lame leIPPly or OYI4IICOTS, made up 19 the most faehionnltlSetyle, oud sold et greatly reduced prices. Being practical workunen of many yearn experience, thoy aro prepared to make to order Clothing for men and boys, and guninutoc neat, durable and fashionablo work manship. They are determined to r pleaso everybody. 44- All are invited to call and o.swinine their new stock of beautiful patterns before purchasing elsewhere, II: lIOIILEY, ago. N. SIA ItS/I nol3 1807 LOGAN ACADEMY A First Class • High School for Boys Its location is healthful, rum tube Itu4 convet.iout, seven miles east 01 Altoona, on thu Patina. conga' rail road. .Next term bogins NOVI:3I6EIt 411,, 1967. .! Apply to --- - It. IL FULTON; Principal, eo198m• Antictown I'. O.; Blair co., Pa. SALES.,--Byi virtue of Lj write of Lev. Fa. and Fieri Facies directed to me, ill expoee to public sale or outcry, at the Court /louee, in tbo borough of Huntingdon, ON THURSDAY. 28rn DAY of NOVHNIBER, 1867, at•-il o'clock, P. M; the tollowing deseribud pruperty,to, wit: - All' that certain ireal estate known as file Rockiiill Furnace property, situate ,the townships of Cromwell, Shirley end' Springfield, In the county or Limiting:ion and Stato of Pennsylvania, consisting of the following described real estate, viz: . A tract of lurid situate in Cromwell township, cootaiuiog about twenty acrea, being part of a survey in the name of William Chambers, unblock Log creek, on which Itochhill:Purnace, and 'the buildings ap purtenant thereto, are erected Also, a tract of land; lying - on the. Clark Logmountafn, in Cromwell township, claimed by improvement, bound on the north or north east by a sur :soy in the name of James Morris, and oii,the South west by an Improvement of William i )looryi,cmihkiniug 400 !term, MOM or kW. Also, a tract of .latid . Cromwell township r in whole or in part, and on the tap of Black ,Log mountain, the same being ps t of the improvement 'of the said William Moore, for which a Warrant of 200 acres wus l taken out by James 31, Bell; dated the Bth of FebritarY,,,i. D. 1830, bounded on the northeast by the last mentioned tract, and oz the south or south west by a tract surveyed in the name of Nathan Ord, containing 200 acres, more or-dens. • .. = • :1' Also, a tract of land in Springfield township, andon;tife;toicof 131a610Logg. Mountain bound on' theMortli Or north east by,the,ined.mentioued tract, surveyed on a ivarratit 'IU the :ntima'orNathan Ord, and containing 4:1 acres nod". perchen. ,7„ Also, a trade of land in Springfield township or i Crrinisyell,tp2rnship,fintreyed . on warrant in the name of, Joules, Brown, containing 304 acres and 03 porchdik. Also, - ft ' tract-of- land .in-vronawell or Springfield township, surveyed on • warrant In the name of John Duffey, containing 150 acres, more or Ism , Tim 'right ' and pr.vliege of diggidgj raising and carry ing away bon ore on, tho 'anti of Andrew Ripple, ire Cromwell township, as per article or agreement recorded! In Huntingdon county in Record Book X, page 340 , Am , Also, the undivided fourth part of a: tract or land in Croaiwell township, chutuinlag about 200• acres, Into tile eitato Of thigh Logan, Junior, deceasid, ad joining lands late of Bids's): ,5; Cromwell, about 40 acres of which Ore cleared. Also, about 550 acres of land lying: on Sandy ridge, and parts adjacent in Croinwell and Shir ley township., surveyed in tho minks of.laneChamb.rs, Ithuhana Colhoun and others, two dwelling houses being erected on the survey in the nanny ofJado Cliambors.- Also, four adjoining tracts of land, lying on Black Log mountain; Bonito:lst from said Par. noon, in Ccomwell township, one surveyed in the name of Tames Nixon, containing 1166 acres, 65` porches; ono surveyed in the name of Henry Joteph, containing. 412 acres and 139perchas ,• oneatirveyed In the name of James Henry, coorainthg 427 acres and 154 pitches; and the other thereof surveyed in the name of Henry James, cod , - !Mning 322 acme f end 62 perches. Also, a tract of land in, Cromwell' township, lying on the Black Bog mountain, southwardly: from said Furnace, eurveyed In the nanie of James Ilor.• rid, containing 454 acrod and 33 perched. Also, A tract of land in Cromwell' township, sorvayed in the flame of .goraolias Howard,' eontaining . • , f Also, 11, tract" in the name of Joseph-- us Murray, in said township, containing 122 acres and 126 perches. Also; - a tract, in said township in tho• 'nnme of poituas Bond, con taiiihrg.,3.92 acres, : - 2,2 porcbos... Also, a tract in said townshipin the• name of Richard Ashman, containing SO acres.. tract in said townslup, con— taining 200 acre; mid to JAM. 31. 8011, as the property of George Cornelius. ' Also(the undivided! halfora tract in. mid township, in the Dome of-Joooph Grubb.. Also,'A - trant townsh ip, con— Mining 200 acres, sold to James M. Bell as the property, of Mathias Ripple, deceased. Also,.a tract in!.said township, core. tabling 31,4 acres, bought by James 801 l from JacolS N. Coughla:Jur, one acrd of land part of the Andrei - Nip ple form.. ,Also, the right to take iron ore from the Cunningham ore bank, as fully as the emus Is rested in theca. ; ,"1.1 , Also, a traet in said township, con taining. 100 acres, more t or IFss, sold as the property of Mallow Also, s, c,ritet in Springfield or. Crom well townships, in tbrzintiAte of Jacob Weaier. containing 338 acre., and 100 patches. 1' Aleg,lall'their fight, titlo and,inter• est of, in and to the'•lingh Logan Farm." Also, all'tlioir right, •title and inter eat oc in and to two tracts sf land its tho name of Isett Wigton & Co., situate In 'the township of =, .one thereof containing ISO acres and 72 perches, the other time...l' containing 270 acres j apd .68 .. percless., Also, all tho , libiondlints"right, 'title title and interest in and to a tract of lend situate in Crams, ell toss nsolp, Huntingdon county, containing 130 acres, more or, less. adjoining 'antis of Samuel Lloober on the south, slut Aka Price and 1. l'iltiter on ths west awl east, rot merly owned by Hezekiah _Rickets, having lindalorge an`l • 'Furnace" therJon erected; heyenty.flve acres Of 'enured._ Also, a tract Lifland Situate in CrOni• well townshlVidtreyed Inlim muneon Athol In, contaltdisi ISO adretil morwor' loss; adjoinin'; Lind liow or late of Au row Shemer. quips. aud_James Shoffis r, on the east, D. N. Corocherg and Dikton Sam on the west, about 10 acres of witich.aro cleared, having, a small house and stable erected thereon. Being the dams' two tnscts Of laud which were convoyed to said Bernard Lorenz and Levi G. Learner by deed of Thomas Orbison, dated 20th Ndsomber, A.p. - Also, A tract of land - in 'Cromwell twp , surveyed in tho nam of flioni.vi Bond, coutQnine 392 aura's, - and 92 perched. Also, A train of land in 'sat!l five county aforeimid, surveyed in the mime of David Drown., containing 400 acres. . Also, A tract of land in said twp and county aforeq.ail, eisrvoyed in the name of itichani Ashman, coniaining thl acres,' it being the same tract of land which was conveyed by Trnusurer's deed, bearing date of 19Th day of July A; Thomas N. Divon, who conveyed the same to James M. Bell. Also, A tract, of land iT,said twp.,, county aforVsitid,'Contailllng' - 00 deres, thirty of which ore cleared; adjoining lands of Benjamin Cornelius, 'rhos. T. Ciannweir, dec i d.,'aral Black Log Mountain, which ill. M. Bell, put chased at Sheriff's Salo by Daod, booriug dote of lath thy of, Apia, A. 11,, 1836, as the property of George Cm cellos.' Also, The andiOleil, one balf tract of land in Cromwell twp., surveyed In the name of Jos. Grubb, adjoining lands of John nutter and others, which the said James M. Bell, purchased at Sheriff's Salo, by Deed, dated the 15th dcy of April, 1530, as the property of Peter Cornelius. Also, A tract of; lhnd in Cr o in twp., adjoining rands of Andrew Ripple, and lying about the foot, of Black Log Mountain, containing about 200. acres, and haring two leg houses and seine cleared land: theleon, which the said Jainos M. Bell purchased at Or.. phone' Court Sole, as the property of Matthias Ripple, siceoused. • Also, A pierce or parcel of land in, Orono, ell twp.. homoled by land of Andrew Ripple end) others, containing three and one half acres with log dwell— ing house, stable ' and with sinith'illop thereon, which, the said James 31. Bell purchased from Joseph Coughon, our by deed bearing date of 7tlr oflOctober, A: D„ 1830. Also, One acre of land , •part of the farm of Aridiew Itip - pleOuiretriforel:takdki,t laid elf mid paid for under the article of agreement with the said Andrew Ripple. • " Also,,The right and privilege, of ta king and using Iron Ore token from the Cunningham Ore'llank in the said township of Cromwell, being the scone Heal Estate mining privileges wilichwere conveyed by James M. Bell and Mary I'. hi, wife, by their deeds, bearing Ulb of January, A. D., 1847, to Bernard Lorena. and I,ri G. Learner., t • Also, All the right, title and interest of, in an d.tca-traet of land in .Cromwell,tlip t i. Ted coml. ty of Huntingdon, !Opining hinds of Wm.Vordan on the North, and land of ott..tho,South,ntal lauds late of Thomas Cromwell on the West, containing 100 acres more or less. Twenty five acres are cleared,"which t cott & Wigton purchased at Sheriff's Salo by doed bearing detour 17th of November' A. D ' 1810, as the rroperty Anthem Hippie. . Also, all the right, 'title and interest. o f, in and to a tract of Taid situate in Springfield or. Cromwell township, county :aforesaid, surveyed on a, warrant in , rho rams of Jacob Weaver, containing 388 acres and 100 peiches, which was convoyed by 'froasuror's deed bearing data of.l6th Jane, 1838, to Henry Mathias, who, with Calharino - his wifo, by their deeds, bearing , data the lOth day of April, A. D. 1848, conveyed ihe some to Het! & Wigton. Also, all the right, title and interest of, In and to the Ilugh Logan Firm, sitnato in the said township of Cromiifell.„) , Also, all the right, title and interest of defendants of, In mid to two traetsref lamtin the name, of knit, Wigton Co., situate in the - mid township of Cromwell or Springfield, one thereof containing 180 acres and 72 perches, the other,7o acres and 58 perches, togeth-. er with all and singular, the furnaces. buildings ways, waters, water courses. rights, liberties, Privileges:bored- Rumania, and appuftenances wltatmover thereunto be longing or in any with appertaining, (excepting that part of the iloorgo Antiguau survey which. tho said Inett, ton & Co. heretofore sold and convoyed to Samuel Boater. containing about 30 acres. Also, excepting that,part of the sir,- coy in Clements, ofJoseph • C rubb, , which Ito satd, Isett, Wigton & Co. heretofore sold anti conrefegi to Alva Chit co.t containing acfFii• ' - Also,and,reserving.flir the uso of and to the owner or owners of Edward Furnace in Shirley township, in mid county of ltuutiugdon, for tho ass pf sold illi,etil carrying to the .owner or owners thereof in nsing or carrying onanother Furn. Coin place of said kda'prd Furnace, at, ;about or near the same die. Waco from the Cunningham ore' hank, the one ballot said James Al. Dell's right and privilege to take iron ore' from what is commouly known as the Cunningham ore' bank, in tho said township of Cromwell.) V A L ,By virtue of sundry•writs of Fiorti, Fades, I will ekposo to public soh on FRIDAY, tho 29th of NOVEMBNat, or imutediotely after the rialo , of the above named roil .tstato, the tollownl2 phrional Property VIZ: 'l7'hoad of - males:lolwatt of VW .. 6M 7 elk hors° wegons,,3 two horse W 440110,1, coil awl bar., nes.t.:3o Rita of hoot, apd,to ulo'gears, about 35,000 bush. els of 6111116 M, 1500 cords of wood, a large lot of colliers' tools, mimes touts. lot of lumber end stoi oak plank, .wagbo hubs, 3 wining ears, 1 pair platform scales, flour scales, 1 cutting box and fodder ertalter, 1 Jack stow, and lot of now wagon boxes, and o.lsrge lot of tools, wheelbarrows, baskets, cars, tools, to., about fur nace, and any and All other personal property of defend ants, eubject to lof And ualo. Seized, token in executi no, and to be sold as the prop l erty of .I,eyi U. I.panter, and aanill Lorenz, zuhreinistratmx of ileruard Lump, deceased. JAS. F. BATHURST, Sheriff. SLIERIFF'S OnICE, lillutiugdon, • - - VERY F A miLy will pa l at i.kitis . ,Fanoily Gracory, ovary . articlo usually kepi., in first class_ Oratory stores. Ca I . 4 for what you want. ' ' •