LIE 11ON I it,.)k. DEICt - Outz.Al , • 0 I.l.76Lisur.D fuusDAriory A. T. preirr.ll:teic=rn.. OFFICE ON PU111.14: AVENVE,' • Tit HEE DOOHA A BOVL SHAMIR'S RIDTEL. 1 • TnreNrs.—sl,o per bnnum in AnVANCIC St will he chance and tiny cents per annutti. *Lida arrearages, at the option of the Publisher, to pay s t collection. etc. , Afarsna -payment preferred. B itn.TISEttIiNTS %Ili!! be inserted at the 4' #1 11, rgnscc , of ten Hoeg or IOP t fir the first.ihree iii•l cente for each additional week—pray.rlown. •Yrtts, ntlitN, who advertise by a-:11 be char:red at tl rates; eta.; ,For nes ...hare. or true. one icor, trifle changer #9 fl"h .I , l•li,inna!,qutme. at the rate if 6 1— N.-, cr.,' it :riven olscept thre of known responsibility. ~. _ B USINESB' CA RDS. i A LEAP of CIMBENT MS . TOW . • __,............ , : :HENRYC I TILER, • - 1 From the National latelligencer. D , ; V. , ETt , i in D i r t y , llotod,: er i T b tee , klehli , n .e ltrei s lA n l. 4 Tr i te ! The reader will find in toAay's Intelli -51.w., war..., i"ood.,:i Wire ai,ol Brooms, !cad of Nevi- ginner a copy of a paper drawn np by ifttrion. Pahltr irenne. . theilon. . 1 .. W. Cris fi eld, of Mary4and,. • Itttturo-t•, P.t.; May 113:141II.-ly . --- and authenticated 'by. the signatures of wi.l. FICNTTIIifi crsaria .... gm; lir nraIMER. 31 eessrs. 31 nzies, Crittenden and Mallory; _ • \\- M: 11. ' COO P ER ct:'-(7'.0., - .. . ' of Kentucky, .which Las for .its . objent to ~. ii-3 \x- , 1: , !-•:r. , s in — c riljme n .1 . : : [ . sut i t m e ri t i oz . vg n o : t ik enTr . give a derail e d re p ort o f an intererting in --1 , J'.. e- ..i_. . terview had,on the 10th of March last, at I ............ D. ; "g&B"- ' the F.xectitiv - Mansimh between - the AI cCO I.L - 1. - .11 lec SEARLE, ' -President of, the United =States and •cer . - 7TORNEYS and vounrellore at Liw.—Montroee, PR. . : 1 adr •. I.4presentatives from the border .s. ~ :th,.. m I.at mull,' new Vl:aiding, over the hank_ . __ ._ . . ____ _ slaveholding states. This interview, bro't '.) 1. ..V . if, i.I.OI:T..WIIEATON, about h 3, Invitation of the President, had .r.CI.,ECTIC PBTOICIAN' at -- st*RngoN DENTIFL relation, it!Wilt be seen, to the purport 117711,1)R. if 1747:C WHEATON. . and meaning -of the proposition contained lechataleal lid t , orchatt Ponti.t• rrotottly of Ainetstotton, in the speail message communicated to •,,,t . . Y. t,o,ler :?o•ir prof,peion.ll per% ion to all who oppre- At:. the •• Reformed Ihttetite of‘Phy,tc; care and Congress'by lilr.l Lincoln on het oth of 'iiiilfAl op,rilione on Teeth: !with the Most ',denude and I ilprov,T .1 si t.. of, phteWork. -Teotb cetrect.ed eithou t _ • v Marc+ buit •recommending the pat age -atta tth:1111 work wortantett.l. ' • : ' ta t • a Joint resolutilm declaring " that the • .la.'t4s.on, lone tuts. ...O t .. r• United States, in prder to co-operate with ' - • ,- I. & l)1.. it. mr u ti SON, ......'" (;7ll N ll !':N " tri'Tg• - •Ximitta". Pa. abolition of Slavery w ill give to such ~ ( ot,-,. in I,hthroo-• new ball:bur.. steer g 1 ite llama, sit ItAttal operothtntt Will h . 4 t. • *tate pecuniary aid, to be nsed in its dis :wrrm-m-k.tl, coon style am d ak• artret. .. - . cretion, to compensate it for the, incon -•.1 r. - oi.Nts•rz..n. : READ. , rtilience, int Nil: and Private, produced by : Y:.:`Z.- t'. -0 & 1,-':" EFAIL • • -', such change of_ system." • . - 1 1 1 7 0,171-1.),-ANNINCE to the Public • Jai this conversation, as will appear v that they have cotert. Into . et partnership for the , from the memorandum,. the President un- Pra nt jell of t EDI2.,'INE: & Surgtiry , fiil4 t ,(l to,such of the members.of Con and are firt•parellto attend l ei e ' ll eaila In•the line of their .I...ffeSs (Vont the border states as:Were tires pr 4,°--ion. Oillre—the one formerly occnpicd by Dr../.; C.- - e r n on his i nv i tat i on, t.he v i ews of pu b l i c otsameut. I.,..nuxnAFF. 1 • ~.my 7 Sat. . . policy which had dictated that recommen dation, and at the same time he took the o,pportunity .to intimate' the considera- i lions of dirty which might be expected to.; guide his conduct in certain cootunctOres ; aching tionipolitical complications, as al- P. 1.45- If KS, ..± ,':1so in respect to cerium measures as to 7.1,' , 111; IN AIME TATLOR.4-outroee, Pa.. Shop I which his interlocutors confessed some so in Finely Block. over Store of Read. V, mum*, Heil. tide: • .t_ F.•-o•r. All oar& warranted ; to to tit andltnish. . ' •••to H ., jam .iy, • 1 IN that this paper has. found. ire way .- , ,,,1 rer dont on short netice.:ln beet style. to the public, (as we twist presume with the authority of its signers,) it may pot be improper ,for us to say. that the memo : randiim, at the time of its composition, f mas confidentially eotimitiniented to the 1 editors of this paper for our perusal,. that l we might have the advantage of .possess ling an authoritative and authentic expp sition of the President's emancipation message of March last, and of the motives under which that message wss penned,_ as also of the views of policy by which the President, proposed in' the future to guide Isis_ steps tinder the-difficulties arid uniliarris.inentiZ to which be -was.'subject ed in the matter of slavery and, its rein- .!()[IV S 41 7 TTER, • 1,1 \ oN Montru..ic. P. Shop ••ver 1. N Crgrory. on :11ain.41reet. ;11 ['Aron., he oulirita a continuance —1.1,14111,.; u•ui..,if to (10 all w.irk 4atiaradoniv. C u t• tint. dont- on 4hort anti warranted to dr. _ HL. July *tr., Islll.—tt. .T(.)IIN , GitOVES - _ . . ._ I:tASIIICYN.‘TILE TAILOR,-Montrute,,Pa. ,Shop ; 1, , A r Ole II tptist Meeting llon*e. on Tuennike t•-..t.t All “raors Stied prompts, In ark-rte elite. en tiug done on short notice, and warranted to, tit. . - . . L. 11.- IS3ELI., re El'.ll tl'i , Cl‘,-h ii,. Wet che.i and Jewelry et the 11l ee,rtc,i notice. and on reaeourthle terms. All ~,r e , e I - re e i i-1. Shhp in Chandler and .lee.otir s -1,,,, N. , 7‘111. , ,r... Pa-. _ - ' . t bc2.5 tf W)i. W. s3rrni it, co., Cg I.`3INET AND CllAlit .11 - ANITFACTURERS.—Font nf Nn ~ r cist, Mkn.tnkf.e, ang tf C FORDIrAII, All [tulle : rcliairlur done neatly. jr2 y AI3EI. TritIZELI„ Chemimic Dye Warr. IN;itt,t.ilo. V:a..isll. Win (3,r-rfe, Fat,,y Jeri:tr.; Prita• •-rl_ , kee: t i'ATENT El 'I( 'I .:s.; t I. tf 1') D 7? A N x.Y. M. rt,•.re..l 411ir , at -TArl. Hotel. New :%1 11% ISGI. MEDICAL CAD DR:E. PATRICK. Pi.‘•DR. E. 'L. 6'ARD,IqER, T ITit ‘Ii'"ATF: of TIM 31EDIVAL - DF:PAinfENT 1 . 4 1 tl.ti cor - A,F.caz_ bnve - foramd a riyartileirohiu ~ !‘l.-I, v itlel.l4lSartfern.andlrr FireVart , d t,, Ltl h3.lrit.*6 faithfully and punctualiv.that is vt, Chi•lunre, rcn terms ilbintitedgazah, lar.i•- • I); ...: :- •- .i.: , 1 .Ipktin;ties of fireF.YE.. ritrgleal opera ,,,,, ; ~, L i,. .. 4 , ..,.^r....,0 •1i.t.A.a.0..p . a.-tcn.lali3 4 attendeti to.. rizr. ;,,,.,,... 7. - e).fi's blare... °titer Itt TV theta aa. t. !. J;; r.:l Al: 1.4.. r.:. or cr , r.ntrr prgriDCt t akett impay • 'l, 'i i .C. 1.4 yllnu. a ti,l 601 i DOT DD. .2.. ra... Mtc tth. latt.—tpf • t —, IL\ YDEN • IIitOTIIER.., . cr MILS:S.II.E 11F.LERS• IN 1. - .7.*.a.Z.NT_M .INTC:rXCI2%II3I s • I FANCY GOODS. DAN - DEN. 1f; liAl - DEN. i NEW mn.Fioni), PA., • HAYDEN...I I'. E. BRUSH, Aj. D., StiNl : LOCATED PE.II‘I.I.NNTLY, AT E.J."' ;' ' 4 ,3 1'1.21 `'I;1 attend t., the _talcs of hie matey/Aim promptly. Office of d. Lathroios 11h+1. TAKE.. NOTICE ! (191/112. Pala rev 11. - 1r.1,411.4e55, Nlti.iirat. and tuna, INra. ! 4.,iurcmcut of LoC4 tiler add Soots and ou Tanner's% Stibop ou 4,Liz Feb.gth. A. P. h L. C.IKEELEB FIRE ESURA.NCE. -- THE INSURANCE - CO'. OF NORTH iiMERICA, dT PHI/ADZLPHLS, Has r.l stabliihetCan Agency in gtontro se) TJ.' Inaarua•er en. is rhe i (Thi-on dr.' AqTI CAPITAL PAID IN ....... TTi rates ate as low as tdo•e of ant gotid company in 'New York, or riorWurre.u.r.d Its liiretttirt are among the fle,t for t•onnr tnd laterite r,ey. Alen - nit G. CY FFIS. Pref. Jury 16. 152. BILLINGSSTIIJC D. Ag.t. 32E MOE! I\SRANCE COMPANY 2 , Or 2wovv.girc.ris.. t',ASH CAPITAL:'ONE MILLION AS3EITS Ist July! 11160, 1148 Luausrizs. " S. Smith,likei: " Chin. d. Martin A. F. Wilmainb _ at Pollute br.n . d and renewed:by the annentcten. at c ...Ili,. or., door above Staude:gliotel,MontrOft. Ha. BILLINGS STROUP, 4faer.. I. 33.:1:r In. rt. z rx• er ILlAS....ll;. , lrcceived a lar.p.i mock of .. cieri Storer.. for & Parlor..oihri. and Shop pitepoieti. for Wood or Coal. with Stove Pipe,Zinr, 4b, is select and der-Arable, sad will be Bed tivg mo.l rn - nrable tem:Lr for cask. oft* Pro:Agar Atonths,ll«sm - rA. .Milford, Oct. 25th. lirA. . W • - •! ;t e , :.1 , !; , ! 4 •44 . m in t T tnl t. 1.0 ;. itaff..nnl et Intr.. /.:Sn t - t.tntvit Tri.w rr,,t, • •r , ;„ t tnra. If taa,•••••nt• 1141.1: It :a the •-rt •.1,411.1...4,1 for iraea....- a; •he ehr4tt. l ime .. or .1;...eb.,;:t. IVllLkr , ftttt Cun;:h. 1. , t tr • • .11 '4t1911:-sr tern, hirl [ht. (114114tillU. ar.r.t fhr hinm • ...stxtoe.np• • - •-. 9lllxlet can , .-:nl -1 4 . - - anpliona. and Dratlr.4l kte.rium:‘, whieh 1 will rt .rue (re° try alai!. il.. Chemid. 44.2 Bread oryy. IC T. jnll —4ok 1... _ xneet l i him to have oon i veriation in expi s anationl Dafidelion Coffee, .of Lis thervime Of the 6th; that Mom he t • t, I ,__ . 4 ITEU.TIir tkvers7e. °se pond a(thfseetee IrM had Rein it in; liel'etill or. the gentlemen' .1. oankc al, much or two pomade of Coffee. For ( . . ...r.l.r. by . . ' - . ABEL TPRRILL, then present hiht visited him, at had a. . ' - voided any annaion to themessage, - and A-TUIiBELL i he theFefore inferied that thg impefi of , h;• ttarrel. Sark OF Pound • We Join Ourselves to no Party that Does not Carry the Flag and Keep Step to the . Music of the Whole VOL. 191 ,1 We need not say that this expOtion of the President's views ;Ind of his con tingent purpoies, as announced by him at that. date, confirmed .us in the intiwessions we had derived il'om the special message itself, without' this Presidential *Arnica taryi tho Ugh the circumstances under which we were favored with access to the 1 piper fiwbade us at.the time to make any j tqe of its'contents. -Nor should weltave Nhott4dit it proper to make - any reference : even to the existence of such-a. document itltts publication in . another - quarter ad not now matleit a part of the history of 'the anomalous times through which bur eituntry is Pis'sing.• The reader, .after a piwusal of the paper in question, will rea dLlv understanil. that.ont surprise 'at the "liew policy" rinaugurated under the President's emancipation proclamation of last September 22d, was not diminished by our knowiellge of the views and con siderntions which he had so frankly an t •. • ; ileum-ea on tint eetzsion,of the conversa tion recited in the memorandum now pub ; lished. THE PRESIDENT, AND TILE BORDER STATES Memorandum of a convOrsation between President Lincoln and several Represen 7 - tativot from the Border States, on the EntancipatiOn . Message of the Bth of. Mardi 1862.1 Fri . = the Lnniirille Prnocrixt, Oct. 28. We publish this morning_ A' wort of the conversatiOtrtetween some represen; tatives of the herder 'States and the Presi dent of the United Starts. We have had a manuscript Copy ofit at nor disposal for some time, but were not certain its ,publi.. cation was called for by the progress of events. It. however, part of the histo ry of the timeS": , It relates to a subject upon which the parties to the conversa tion hare no churn to secrets. Besides, the subject is disposed of. The reidy the horder States to,the propotlitiou of the Presidenton the Stlbject ofernancr a tion has been accepted by the States they represented 414 conclgsive , as fir as we can. judge by their acts 4 and the Presi dent appears toltave citauged his opinion, and yielded to the radicals of his party.— His conversation does not show his posi- tion at present, , but what it was at that time. - 1 I tsno.no:. • - UEMORANDL73I OF CO.ItTERSATION. • j " Dear called at the request of the President, to ask you to come to the House.jto-morrow morning, .at o!elock, and bring such of your as are-in 1 WssarisoTira', March 10, 1662 ; Yesterday My return' from eliiireh }found-Mr. Postinatiter Blair in my room, ;-writingthe ahOre note, whieh he inimedi • sumiended land verbally conininnitta. ted thep,resitlent's imitation and Oita, I.tcld thatthe President's purpose. was to have ciiinversatiiin with the - Delegations i of Kent ucky, Missoitri; Maryland, Virgin., lis 'aitn•Delaware, in explanation of his, • irtiemtag.e of the 6th inst. Thik morningi,t hese delegations , or such of them as were in town, assembledat the White Hogse at the•aPpoiated - time; land after'itomelittle delay were admitted t‘. an audience,l -Mr. Leary and myself Were the only Members present from Ma ryland, and . 'I !pint were -the only nient hers of theldelegat ion at that time in the city. I know that Mr, Pearce, ofthe Ben. ate,"add •Mesirte.l Calvert:and Webster of the House were absent., - ; After the- usoal saint:Woos, and We : . were seated, the President said in sati l 'stance; that had; invited us to ' OLLARS. 0319.27. 1,001.68. President. 'lce ••• . i., . . . . . .. . 'fi. . , .. , • . .. . . . . . . . . i . . . • • , ••.. .., . ' . .. . . . . . . . . , . . . .. . .„. . . . , •• . . . 1 ~ . . 0' ' ' '• • ..,"' ••• . .. ... . . , . . . . . . : . . . . . . . 1 the mesinge had been misunderstood, and. was regarded as inimical. to the interests we represented; and- he had resolved to talk with. us and disabuse our malls of that erroneouritriprelufion: The President then, disclaimed any in ; tent to injure the interests or wound the jsensibilities;of the Slave States. On the ! contrary, his purpose was to _protect the one and respect the other; - that we are engaged in a terrible wasting and tedious war; immense armies were in the .field and must, continue in the field as long as the war lasts ;:that these armies must,' of necessity, be brought into contact with , slavetrin the States we represented, and in :, other States as they advanced ; that slaves would come to-the camps and eontittual irritation was kept up; that he ;was con , eitautly annoyed by conflicting and antag onistic complajnts; on the one aide a ocr i tain chins complained if-the slave was not protected by the army; persons were fre quently found, who, participating in these views, acted in a way unfriendly to the slaveholdir; on the other hand slavelicild eta conitilained that their rights were in terferett w#tly their-slaves induced toab scond and proteetek,within the lines; these complaints were: numerous, lot and and deep; were a serious annoyan to him and embarrassing to the progress of the war; that it kept, alive a'spirit hostile to the Government in the States we rep-. resented-; strengthened the hopes of the Confederates that at some day the Border States would unite with theni, and thus tend to pi:olimg the. war; arid" he was of opieion, if this resolution was adopted by Congress, and accepted by our States, these causes of irritation and these hopes would be removed, and more" would be accomplished towards shortening the war than could be hoped from the greatest victory achieved - by the Vlnion arinies • that he made this proposition in good faith, and desired it to be accepted, if at all, voluntarily, and in the same patriotic spirit in which it was made; that enaCari patina tros - a matter exclusively under the con trol of the Sratea, and must - be adopted or re jetted by each for itself; - that he did not claim nor had this Got-eminent any right j to coerce them for that purpose; that such was no part of his purtiose in making this proposition, and he wished it to be j clearly understood'; that, he did . not ex .pest us there to be prepared to give him an answer, but lie hoped we would take the matter into serious consideratioti, con fer witlione another, and then take such course as we felt our duty and the inter ests.of our constituents required of-us. Mr: Noel!, of - Missouri, said ja his State slavery was not considered A permanent institution; that natural causes werrilto.t. in operation wlirch would, at n.-6lioint day, extinguish it, and , he 11...1. think that, this proposition was neeessar.• thr ' that; and besides that, he and his friends felt solicitous as to the _message on se count of the different constructions which the resolittion and message had received. The New York Tribune was for it, and understood it, to mean that we must at:- cept gradual emancipation according to the plan suggested, or get something worse. - . I - . The President.replied,,he must not be errected; to quarrel with the l 'lsTew York Tr3bnne before the right time ; he hoped never to have to dizi . it ; he would not an ticipate eveirts. In respect to emancipa tion in Missouri, he said 'that - what had been observed observed•bylifr. Noes was piipbably trite, but the operation of '•lheSe natural cruises had not prevented the irritating _conduct to, *hiclr be had referred, or de stroyed the 'hopes of the Confederates that Missouri would at sometime range herself alongside of them, which in his judgment the passage of this resolution •by Congress,and its acceptance by Mis souri would accomplish..• • - Mr. Crisfield, of Maryland; asked what world be the'etTect of the refusal of the States to accept this proposal,Cand desir ed to know if the President looked to,any policy beyond the acceptance- or rejec tion of his scheme. The President replied thatlehad no de signs,beyond the' t refusal olit!, Mr. 31enzies, uf.Kentucky, inquired if the President thought there was any pow er except in the States themselves to car ; ry out . MC; scheme of ethancipation. i The President replied-he thought there could not'be, Ho then went off into a course of remark qualifying the fore ! going -declaration nor material to be re peated to a just understanding of his meaning. Crisfield said )ie did not think the people of Maryland looked Upon slavery as a_permanent institution ; and be did not know that they would be very 'due -1 , taut to give it_ tip if provision was. made ; to meet the loss, and they could be rid of the race; • but they did not like to be 'co -1 creed into emancipation..either by the di ' rect.action of the Government or by indi rection; as tSrough )the emancipation of `slaves in this District, or-the confiscation of Southern property as now: threatened ; and he thought. before they would consent to consider this propotiltion. they would , require to be ishirtne.d on these . points. 'The President replied that, "unless be Vas expelled by the act or God 6r the Confederate .armies, he 'should occupy that house for three/Om and as long as he retrained there 31aryland had nothing' to fear, either for herrinstitytiona or her interests, on the points referredto.". I 31r . , Crisfield iMmediately added : AtIllr: •I President, if what you ally could be beard by, the - .people - of Maryland, they.would consider your proposition with a much I better. feeling -than. 1 tear without -it they . will be inclined tQ do." I • 'The President.- ' 4 That (meaning a pub- :liestion of What he: said) will ;not do;- it would fOroe,me-into x•cluariel before the . priiper . time;" • and, again .intiniating,:•mi he had before•done i that a quarrel With the "Grerlidy faction". was impending, - he said he "did not wish lb encounter it • • tore - toe proper.tinie, nor tit aU it could Ibe avoided."-.• • _-.- • • • I Dovernor Wickliffe, of Ky., hpn a: 3 / 4 yd him respecting the ctinatitationaiity s of his solieme. . , The Presidett- replied :yon may :suppose, I have , oensidered‘ that; :and the proposition . now submitted -- does not en coiuster Aar ociastitational 4We:thy. It MONTROSE, PA,, TUESDAY, NOY. 11, 1'862. proposes simply to co-operate with any State giving' such State pecuniary aid ; and he thought that the resolution,- as proposed byhun would be 'considered rath er.as the expression of a sentiment than as involving any constitutional question." Mr. Hall,. of Missouri, thought that if this. proposition was adcipted at all , it should be by the votes oflhe free states, and come n 8 proposition from them to the slave states, affording them an induce ment to put aside this subject of discord ; that it ought not to be expected that mem bers representing slaveholding, constitu encies should declare at once, and in ad- Nance of any proposition to them, for the emancipation ofslavery. • The President kid he saw acid - felt the force &the objection; it was a fearful re sponsibility and every gentleman must do as he thought best • but that he did not know how this scherCe was received by the members from:the free silitt es ; some of them had spoken Whim• and received it kindly; but for the moat-part they were as reserved and chary as we had been and he could not tell how they would 'vote. .And in reply to some ex pression of Mr. Hall as to his Own opinion regarding slavery., he said he did not pre tend to disguise his anti-slavery feeling; that he thought it -was Wrong, and should continue to think so; but that was not the question we had to deal with. now. Slavery 'existed, and that,.too, as . well by the act of the North as of the South; and iu any scheme to get rid of it, the North ; as well as well- as the South, was morally bound to do its full and equal share. lie thought the institution wrong, and ought never to have existed 1 . but yet he recognized the rights of property which bad grown out of it, and would-res pect those rights as fully as similar rights in •any other property ; that property ran exist, and, does legally exist. He thought that law wrong, but the rights of proper ty resulting must be respected; he, would get rid of the odious law, not by violating the right, but by enceoraging the propo sition and offering inducements to give it up. Here the interview, so far as this sub ject is concerned, terminated by Mr. Crit: tenden assuring the President that, what ever might be our final action,. we all tho't him solely moved by a s high patriotism and sincere devotion to die happiness and glory of his country; and with that con viction, we , 1).,old COnSidt:l . resleectfuily the important sug.p.sti.i..-4w After serif , cot% z,t war new,, ieLirtA• proceeded 10 ar, d paper. J. W. CRISFELD. We were present rt-the interview de fcribed in the foregoing - paper of Mr. Criifield, and we certify' that the sub: stance of what passed on the occasion is in the paper and fully given. J. W. MENZIES, J. J. CRITTENDEN% R. MALLORY. • . March 10,1862. An occurrence attended_with fatal re sults, took place in Philadelphia - on Tues.l -day morning last, about 10 o'cloCk. The circumstances are as follows: Charles 1-1.1 Alburger, aged 14 years, a son of Adam Alburger, residing in second street below Moore, was in a slaughter-house attached to hiii fither's.residence, in company with several boys about his own age. They, wer' engaged in playing "John Brown" e., going through the' fornis of hang ing, ttc., using a dog of Mr. Albarger's as the victim. While-engaged in this a musement, some of the boys playfully placed the strap, tiled as a rope, around -the neck of young Alburger, and proceed ed to dravi him from the ground by means of a crank used for hanging meat. By some unfortunate chance the strap tight ened. around his neck, while his feet did not t ouch the ground, and he was-hung in earnest. His companions becoming fright ed, not attempt to take or cut him down, but called for the inmates of the house.— Some of the women made their appear ante,-who cried for help, and brought a passer-by to the assistance of the unfortu nate youth. lie was cut down After hav ing — hung two minutes. All possible means were at once taken for his .recoy ery.- Five physicians were ill attendance, but-' their -united exertions failed to re store him. After suffering much agony, he expired at two o'clock on Wednesday. Several dead mew were 'drafted one town in Schuylkill county, and the Carbon dale Advance says: The enrollment was not taken regularly in the'third and fourth wards in 'our,.city, consequently the draft has cut up some queer antics. Among those ;drafted are : Charles TuOlan, who has been lying peace fully in. his grava for some years; a man named Finnigan, who %vas drowned LIM. A pring ; and also . a Mr. Doudican, aged abont 75 years, whose enfeebled - limbs can scarcely support•his tottering frame. It has been suggested, by 'a profane friend, that. the President call a special resurrec tion for the first' two named, and order the tatter to report. for duty in .Florida,, near the "Spring of Everlasting Youth," laid lo have been found on. ,that peninsula by the early Spanisli adventurers. _ frilr'Ott Monday last, says the Senses Fulls Reveille, it fashionably dressed and very pert young lady (white). was seen promenading our principal streets, and visiting one or more stores, leaning on the arm of a big, ugly looking niggerz-appa= really her-lover if not her hushand. Such - disgusting" sifzilts will prab:,tbly':liecorne mole fregtlent as aboliti9a polivy uereiop itself:' . . , . A eats., of dpsence n: in ais ?) rilltU b i y a .voung innn : win) , mpat:king l asttincent. The yoUng-lady in lighting nie out, after having Ossified a. delightful evening, in bashful trepidation,;.blew out and drew 'the eandle,behiwl the door awl kissed if: . • yankee writing frotri the wilt . to ..' his - father, speaking qf its great matrimo nial facilities says : Suppose you get the , girls some new teeth sknd send' them out. Boy Bung In Sport. Drafting Dead men. ==o=El NEGRO FZIANOIPATION. LOOK ON Tills. PICTURE; • ' ret thos'e whose policy it is to liberate and put arms into the hands of 3,50?,000 negro slaves—those who have pledged the faith of the Government that there shall be no restraint put upon them in any effort they may make.to gam their free dom—let the blood-thirsty Aboliticinists contemplate the picture resented _to them in the followmg narrative, and shud der at the hcrors they propose to re-enact. Let 'all men of civilized and Christianized feelings contemplate it, and resolve Ithat while they live and have brain and .heart and thews ‘ and sinews , to..resist] the atrocious policy shall not be inaugurated. Massacre ofthe Whites by the Negroes of St Domingo, at the Close of the Last Century. _ Theldoodlest,plcture ID the Book of Vile." z THE MASSACRE COMMENCED. , . - It was on' the mo rning of . the 23hi of August,'l79l, just before day i that a,gen -eral . alarm add consternation 'spread throughout-the towns of the 'Cape. ' The inhabitants were called- from their 'IR& by persons who regorted that all the negro slaves in the several neighboring parishes had revolted, and were at that moment carrying death - and 'detiolation over the adjoining . large and rbeautiful plain to the north. , . The'Govern or and tnost"of the military officers on duty as-. genibled-together, but the 'repris• were so t confused and contradictory as tO - gain bat little credit. ' As daylight began. to ,break, the sudden mid successive arrival, 'with ghastly countenances, oPperisons who had with 'difficulty escaped . the massacre,. and flown to the town for protection, brought a dreadful confirmation of the fatal tidings: The rebellion first broke out on a plan tation called - Noe, in the . parish of Aeln, nine miles only from the city. Twelve or fourteen of "the ringleaders,. about the middle of the night, proceeded to the refinery or sugar-house, and - seized :on a man,- the irefiner's apprenthie; dragged him to the front of the dwelling house, and there lie Wed him into pieces with thei vett thisseS ; his Screams' bionght: but the overseer, whom-they instantly shot. The-rebels now found their way inte the apartment - 4)f the refliter, and massacred him in his bed. A young man lying sick in . 111 S ellanthq was left apparently dowl:,,f th... , womid inflicted by their! eut ,,s,es _ He. had strength enough, however !0 esrc.c:l to the next plantation and relate the horrors he liad witnessed. He rePort ed that all the 'whites of the estate which he had left were murdered,. ereept !only. the surgeon, - whom the rebels bad Colon elled to accompany them , on the idea thin, they might Stand in neeiof his profeision al assistance. Alarmed 7 by- this iniellig enee the - persons to whom - it. was com municated iinmediately sought their safety in fliolit. •i The revolters(Consisting now of all the, slaves belonging to that plantation)pr'ocee-. del to the houSe of Mr. Clerfient, by whose negroes ,they were immediately joined, and , both he and his' 'refiner were massacred. The murd s erex of Mr. Clement was his own postillioa,(coachmen,) amen to whom he had always shown great kindness. The Other white people' 'on this estate contrived to make their'escape. •At this juncture the . negroes on estate oCM. Faville, a few miles distant, likewise rose and murdered five white persons, I -.-one of whom. (the attorney 'for the es- 1 tate) had a wife and three daughters. These unfortunate women, while ing for mercy ofthe savages on their knees, beheld their husband and fattier Murdered before their faces. ~For themselves ,they' were_ devoted. to .amore horrid- fate and were carried away captives by the assassins. The approach: of daylight served dnly, to discover the sights'of horror. -It was now.apparent that the negroes of all the estates in the. plain acted in- concert, and , a general massacre of the whites took place in every quarter. On some few es tates'indeed, the lives of the women were spared ; but they were. - reserved only to gratify the'-bratal appetites. of the ruffians, and it-is shocking to relate - that many of them suffered violation on the dead bodies of their husbands and fathers ! . mr.- STA NDA RD OF THE . NEGROES-TILE BMA' OF A WHITE INFANT. , - , In the town itself the 'general belief for Some lime was that; the revolt was by no Means as extensive, but a sudden and partial insurrection , - only. The. largest sugar plantation on the plains was that, 'of Monsieur Gallifet situated about eight miles from 'the town, the negroes belbngs- ing towhicli had always been treated With 'such kindness and liberality, and posSess, ed:so many advantages 'that it :became a proverbial expression - amonk the lcliver - aike people, in speaking of any man's good fortune.. to say," ii ist.heurevz i un-- refire de Gollifee,".(heis as happy as 'one of Gallifet's negroes.) ' Monsieur , Odelue, the attorney Or agent for this . plantaiion,' was a member of the. General Assembly, : and being fully perstnided that the negroes belonging wit would remain 6rni-in t eir obedience, determined to repair thi her to encourage them'in opposing the ins, rg ents, to which end he' desired the .asSist ance-of a few-soldiers from the town guard, which was granted him. He proceeded -accordingly ; but, on approaching the ;OS tates, to his surprise and grief he found ,all the negroes in arms on the,sidii,6l. the rebels, and ( horrid : to tell! ) their standard was, t hel body -of awhite - infant,, which they had recently Impaled on a stake.— Monsisur . Odelue find advanced - too far .to fet rest undiseoyered, ,and..hoth• he And . ilia li-: .7,1 ~:1,., ficesirtip - attivit lihn 4 with most ; of ti;,lA,il..iii T s, were killed wiiiiptit trier -ti. - Tiv” or. three of the patrol escaped I k;,iligilt, - anfl -conveyed the dreadful.ti:', dings to the inhabitants of ,the town r - :,.. MANSIONF) ANIiCII*riELDS SE:T:010?=,. By this time all orrnost of the white Verson* had. been lontid° several plan tations, and" being massacred or , forced ;to seek tlieir safety in flight, •thn roans' -ex changed the nerd for the .torch. The buildings • and cane-fields Were - every where set on firei'and the conflagrations, which wore *OM the town in a thousand .different quarters, furnished a NO-. 45: prospect more shocking, and resections more dismal, than fancy can paint or the powers of man describe. - Consternation and terror. now toolt.poa session of every mind, and the screams of the women and children ' ' runviing from door to dooy, heightened the horrors of the scene. • A WIN ATTENOT TO PVT DOW THE Ifli! 1 , • , OROES. - - 1 • 1 The Assembly continued tkeir delibera- . tions throughout the night, amid the glare of surrounding conflagration.,e inhab itants being strengthened byle nu mber of • seamen from the ships, and broUght into some degree of order and military subor dination, were nowdesirons that a detach ment should be sent out to attack the_ iltrotigeit body of the revolters!. Orders were. given ' accordingly, and !Atom!. de Touzard, an officer who had distinguished i himself in the United States service, tookl the command of a party of militia and the troops of the line: With these he marched to the plantation of Mons. Latour, and at tacked a' body of about four theusand of the,rebelvgroes. Many were deitroved, but teittle purpose ; for- Touzard, 'And ing tie number of 'revokers to. iiwrekse to more than a centuple proportion of their losses/ was at length forced ' tb ' retreat. The governor by advice of thetsembly, now determined - to - act for som time sole ly on the defensive; and,) as it was every . t moment to be apprehended th V the :re volters would pour down upon he town, all the roads and- passes leading into it were-fortified. At the same time an em bargo' was laid on all the shipping in the harbor—a measure .of indispensable ne cessity, Calculated aswell- to. obtain the assistance of the seamen as to secure a re treat for the inhabitants in the:, last ex- tremity-, To such of the distrif ~ict parisheitas were open to communication, either by land or by sea, notice of the revolt had teen trans mitted within a few hours after Advice of it was rectified ati the Cape, aid ; the white inhabitants of many of these paashes . had 'therefore found time to establiah camps, and form a chain of posts; • for a short time, seemed to prevent the rebell ion from spreading beyond: the were, pr ovinci , . -.Two of these camps how ever, attacked by the negroes-twho were. openly joined - by the mulattoes ;and forc ed with great slaughter. At tendon the %likes maintained the contest !for seieti . houric btit were overpowered by the infi nite disparity of numbers, - andkompelled to give way, with the loss of upwards of one hundred of their body. The survivors took refuge in the Spanish" territory. _These- two districts' • therefore—th whole of the rich and extensive plain of the Cape—togethei with the contiguous mountains, were now wholly abandoned to the raVages of the enemy, and the cru elties which they exercised on shch of the miserable whites as fell into tlieir hands . Can not be remembered withodt horror, nor reported in terms strong- enough to convey a proper idea of their atrocity. TllB nonaims - INCREASE-WILIT , MEN SAWED ASUNDER. , • They seized Mr. 'Bien, an officer of the police, and having nailed him aliVeto one of the gates , of h i s plantation, chopped 'off his limbs, one by one r with an:axe. • A poor man named Roberts, aicarpenter by trade, endeavoring to , conceit 'himself from the notice of the rebels,' was discov ered in his hiding place. The savages de clared that he should die in the way of his occupation. Ak.cordingly they bound him between two boards and deliberately sawed him asunder. , Monsienr , Cardinean, - a planter of Grand Rivlere, bad two natural sons by a black woman. He had manumitted them in in fancy and-bred them np with great tender. ness. They both , joined in thel revolt— and when their lather attempted to divert them from their purpose by sooilling lan guage and pecumary_ consideration, they took, his money and then stabbe4 him to the heart. I 4 All the white, and -even the mulatto children whose lathers had not (joined in the revolt, were murdered without sleep tion„ frequently their mothersi t Young wainen of All -ranks were - viol a s whole troop of.barbarians, and then gen erally put to death. Some of them were, indeed reserved for the further! gratifies l, flop 'of the lust ofthe savages; a t ii others had their eyes scooped out with knife. DAUGHTERS RAVISHED WM E PAP I I3E.PiCir, OP , - . THEIR FATHERS • . - -. In theparish of Limbe, at a place called the great Racine, a venerable planter, the father of two beautiful young ladies, was tied down by a savage ringleader Of a habil, who ravished his eldest datightor in • his presence, and delivered over the ether one to one of his followers... Their! passions being satisfied, they murdered . both the father and the daughters. I ' In the frequent skirmishes between the foraging parties sent out :by .the negroes (who, after having burned . everything; Were 'in -scarcity .of provisions) } and the whites, the rebels seldom stood their ground longer than to : receive: and return one singlevolly;hut they appeared 'again the next day, and though Aber , ; were at length driven Out; of 'their intrenchments with infinite slaughter, yet their 'numbers seemed not-to diminish. - Ai eooi as one body was cut off anOther ",appeared, and thus, they succeededin heiassing and de stroying thii whites by pektetual fatigue, and reduchig the country to a deriert, • _.. 1 'TWO TIIOI7BAXD fERSONS 111.0131karaw. , To, detail the various conflicts, 'skirmish es, massacres, and . scenes of. glaughter 1 , which this exterininating , war 'roduced, -were to oiler a disgMiting and frightful picture—la combinauen of horro Where. in we should behold cruelties unexampled iii the annals ,of mankind ; ; human blood poured forth - in torrents _; the earth bleak ened with ashes; the air tainted with It was computed that within two months after the revolt first begM, upward of two thousand white perso n s 'f all con ditions, had been massacred - - hat one hundred-and' eighty sugar plants 'ons, and about trine hundred coffee, (comae and in digo'settlemenvis -- VW' been deinroyd— the buildings thereon 'being consumed by fire-;-and twelveltindred Christian fami lies reduced from opnlenoe tii ink &WA* ALL KINDS of JOB I%lllllli - G DONt. AT Tim onucr, QP.THS ID Mild 3E4,4. _ NEATLY AND PROMPTLY, • ekb LT 4 .1.1 . vx ANI2 1.1.7 LIVE" PRWER . e rns Office of the 31ontrilie Dr•mor:rrtt: bee rionltly been supplied with a new iLd e of type, etc., and we are now prepared to prifil p; iciness", etc.. etc., ID the beet style on !hort aw,tl,e. Handbills l'osters, Programmes, :In ft • otiterktuft of wink Inthisline, done eitbrdit: to orc.. r isine'si, Wedding, and 'Ball CAI:J. Tickets, etc., printed With neatness and limey''. itiatices' 'and Constables: Blanks., Deeds, and all Mlle! Blanks, on hand, or primed I. ..r•.c ler J o! work and Blanks, to be poldlot or dell , . , o(misery as to depend altogether for t heir clothing and.sustenance on public rind pri vate charity I . Of the insurgents it wnA reckoned that upward - often,thonsand li , l perished by the , sw.ord Or by : fatnirii , . ;il,l spine hundreds by the baud . of .the excen.: tiotier I .. . .• , , -OLD ABE'S PESO,- IN ENGLAND. "The Landon Times of sayF : Even- n this crisis of the, war, the flit itapoitint.pirtnf the list: intelligen r( - fere to a political and not - a military: tm,v , :- ment.. President Lincoln has sepa:•::te,l biniltelf from the moderate Repttblican,, and folly accepted tbe extreme ~pohey. of the violent zealots the party inclndes itl:- otit einnbieing them: .He has played'his last card. He has declared icy a pro , TAtil-, ation Abet in all the States that havejeturtied to the Union on the fir„rl.,f January, the slaves shall after that date I,e• free. It, is a politiCal concession to abolitionist wing of the Republican parry. When the Union existed, its CartctllLttiya gave no right either to - the President• or - to the President and Congret;s combined.. to abolish slavery. The Abolitionists :Is elin,* that the war has conferred the right; that emancipation was .d " thunderbolt placed iri the hands” of 31r. , Lincolif with which to destroy the South and all its.sn cial organization at a bloW.• lle has accep ted the assumed right, and launched the thunderbolt ; But he is 'without the power to enforce the decreed, The North mast conquer every square mile of the Soutlim States before it nut make the proclamation' more than waste paper: The' policy has dictated the proclamation is, -very doubtful. • Nothino , was needed to deepen the hatred of the eolith*, butt if anytliii could determine it to Contimle the war t., tt last extreinjty it is this decree. Democrats already denounce it as imeon atitutional _; the moderate t Republican• condemn it as a measure that can have tv. practical result. It will have no effect ot the Sent)), which-bas long acted as ngni sz an Abolitionist government at the' ' Nerth. and anticipated all it can do by any Lind oflegislatton. In 'the North itself it i; likely to be only another element of ermfo sion. the - abolitiOnists it is held to be a sbert, and- easy mode ,of compelling peace The „Northern .goversiment con templates peace, but in moSt shignk;, manner. Exactly when its ini4itary fln , l political powers - are most broken it threa-t -ens. It continues to refuse all reou7nition of existing facts, and clings to constite• tienal and 'legal' tions. It insists tl••.t. • the storm-of ay as swept away nothing, trid offers, n t.ertain conditions,to the war itself. In .about "ninety days" hence, or on the Ist of January,any Statr. returning representatives, -as heretofore, to the Federal'Congre?.so , ll:4l, "in the al,- sence of strong cOnotervailiiil , test irn oi: y ' be considered as not liatviii! , revolt, _ . .ull. The election return:shall - I,e ‘titer, -,c . ' conclusive evidence'? that the State I,:ev. seceded—orUT:loi to'di.ath - in that eon tion ! 'There is strong eituntrvailin' tiinony in the bloody battle-fiells in V.! - giniain.tlie-many thousands of :C."6rthern Men whb,lie buOed there, and the enorr ons debt created. No legal fiction ..an make_sach. testimony - as this of no eff.';:t. There is something ludicrous in suell r. proclamation, solemnly made bytho Fed eral Government when its owu capital almost. beleaguered. Immense artnies not fight in their sleep,nor did the tens c: thousands perish, in a dream, that the to rible•confiict can; be so sasilY forgotten- Senator, roote'i Abolition Joke ~..Theln. Solomon Foote, who- has 14,7: been reelected to the United States ate, made an address betbre the merub of the Vermont Legislature, on the 2.1 M. instant, • slr. F., who is a coniervativu ligpublican in the course of his Speech, ,perpetrated, an amusing joke upon the radicals among his audience—a joke by which heydrelr cheers from the abolitior. gentry by traria. Re said: ' I .am for making this an abolition way,' he cried in his stentorian voice.„. (Cheer from the iadiears.) "I repeat, I am an ABOLITION War." (Shrieks of jr:, from tile abolishers.) mead, genli. - men, that I atnifor the ab'ol'ition of—th: • rebellion." (Not, a , cheer from the abo:,- tion.side, butt - deaferiiiig applause from al ' others.) -; The above-shows:what abolition patriot mean: They,. want war so tit they can rob the treasury and steal niggers. The donot want to abolish the rebellion nu . ti!. other ends are accompliabed. far The Western mei% havaile.snb. joined iter,n: - -Married—Oh the I6th of OctobeillBC2, Mr. Henry Kendall; of Tawawa SiZinzs, to Miss 3lttria Barnet, of Ice w Orieans.L::: • The groom is a .yonng white man of rt-- pectable parents; and the bride a youw:, colored lady. Two days i "previonNly I - voted the abolition ticket, and croway ; : - his devotion to thecause by-taking Mar -tO !dins& tier life. [Oat! of Old Abe's p.:r lambs in thus provided, fin' - Look out , a black republican gain in that quarter. -,An 'English farmer recently-remark - :•1 that he "fed his land before it N;3 4 3 rested it before it.Was.weary, and ‘C•ee.l, it before it was foul." We have . sehltr-i seen so 'mud agritultural ',wisdom in °:.e sentence. • • —Somebody has written a b.ok on 'Li., art of titaking;pt,ople happy witfithd Sy? We are in nn excellent condition :vs be,experimented • know that I am aperfeet bear in ri; said f fine young farmer to hi, sweetheart, No indeed, you . nix: not, slit , replied,-you are moresheep than a bear r ,-you have 'never' hugged the yet. —Mrs. Partington Says its s eonfedc ra sliatnetui the cabinet people-at Waslth. ton to allow our men of war on aie.Puto..' mac to'hug ti.; Mary Land Shore-solon. - An abolition paper very candidly sny, ,s : • "No body pretends that the prnelamatl eu Pt constitutional. ^ This is true—but adde,"Ard.nohndy cares whether it This is not tree. "I hue no purpose. directly vet inturady. I t , f ru with the Inktltution of silvery In the State* where Ist!. theliive I have of 4 titottd lositr to do so, Ilaritino WILLOW* to do so."—yroalitoooto's last, Aditiost, .111sedt IW, 140,
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