61obt. EIINTINGDON, PA. I ;VelinesdOg morning, Oct. 14, 1868. . _ WM. LEWIS, HUGH. LINDSAY, } EDITORS The "Globe" has the largest number of papers of any other paper published in the away. Acteertisers should remember this. OUR CANDIDATES: "ws. WILL FIGHT IT OUT ON THIS LINE." FOR PRESIDENT, ULYSSES S. GRANT. POR VICE PRESIDENT, SCHUYLER COLFAX. L ELECTORS. irmrinor W. RETUR', SAMUEL Mona. BENJAMIN F. WAGENSELLER, CHARLES 11. MOLLER, GEORGE W. 'LLIEIL, JOHN STEWART, JACOB GRAPIUS, TAMES Stu., GIESE? C. Jorixsox, JOHN R. Maria, WlLLusi FftsW, ALEXANDER W. CRAWFORD, TAMEN G. BUTEN. PRESIDEIVTIA G. Atemusos Come, THOmAis M. MAMMAL!, WOMAN 11. BARNES, WILLIAM J. POLLOCK, RicatAßD WILDLY, Clines W. HILL, WATION P. }ILWU, Jose 11.11etlattuaeT. Yam,: 0. nowros, /sum ECUS; Mezzo lloorze, MM= WILLIAM DAvis, Monday, Octoberl2. We write this before the voting com mences on the first day of the fight for peace. Whatever may be the result in the State or county to-morrow, Tuesday, we are prepared to fight on —fight on until the grand battle shall be over in November. We do not ex pect to be defeated to-morrow—but if we should be, we do not intend to sur render until completely surrounded by the enemy and our last load is dischar• ged. The country can only be saved by bravo hearts and strong arms— then, Union Republicans, stand . firm and the enemy will be completely rou ted in November. The army of rebels that once surrendered to Grant's for ces, must not now be permitted to control our Government. The fight is just the same as then—against the reb els, their sympathizers, and their can didates.- Union Republicans, resolve unanimously, to keep in solid line ; and resolve unanimously to do better in No. iernbor for Grant and Colfax. GRANT, COLFAX, and VICTORY I must be our rallying cry in earnest. The Rebels Can't Rule. THE PEOPLE for GRANT PENNSYLVANIA FROMIO,OOO T 016,000 OHIO 25,000_ MAJORITY. INDIANA 7,000 NAjORITY We have met the enemy and they aro ours. Tho contest of Unionism against Treason has again triumphed, and patriots everywhere can rejoice. Pennsylvania will give Hartranft from 10,000 to 15,000 majority. Ohio will give from 25,000 to 30,000,and In diana is . expected to give over 7,000. Philadelphia will about hold her ewe, which is ~000 Democratic. In Harrisburg the Republicans have elected Hays the Republican candidate joy Mayor. Allegheny comity gives a Republi can gain of 2,000. Mifflin county is reported to have given 20 majority for Hartranft—a Republics.n gain of over 200. The probabilities are that Brown and Martin Republican candidates for Assembly in this district are elected. The rzews was received in this place with intense enthusiasm by the Re publicans, while the Democrats went despondently to their holes. About fifty of onr citizens turned out after midnight, headed by martial music and twelve harmonicles, and paraded our streets, awaking the na tives. They serenaded Mr. Sam!. T. Brown, S. B. Chaney, and others. Huntingdon County Returns. • etas township. 7 lEartranft 122, Boyle 49; Campbell 122, Ent 49; Morrell 124, Linton_ 47; Brown 124, Martin 122, Miller 50, Taylor 46; Neely 111, Africa ,Franklin township —ltartranft 169, 330y1e 101; Campbell 169, Ent 101; Morrell 169, Linton 101. Huntingdon, B. W.—Hartranft 176, "Boyle 138; Campbell 178, Ent 137; Morrell 178, Linton 137; Brown 189, Martin 166, Miller 142, Taylor 120; ,Neely 162, Africa 150. Runtingdoli, W. W. —Hartranft 134, 530y1e 113; Campbell 135, Ent 112; Morrell -136, Linton 115; Brown 143, Martin 126; Miller 119, Taylor 106; Neely 120, Africa 131. Tod township—Hartranft 105, Boyle 46; Campbell 195, Ent 46; Morrell 106, Linton 45; Brown 106, Martin 106, Miler .45, Taylor 44; Neely 101, Africa 48. Union towir.skip Ilartranft 109, Boyle 53; Campbell 109, Ent 53; Mor rell 109, Linton 53; Brown 110, Mar tin 109, Miller 52, Taylor 53; Neely 103, Africa 60. THE LATEST.—iorrell elected by 800 in the district. Capt. Neely elec ted by five or six hundred.. The whole ,county tteket •elseted. The slanders :against Neely did'nt win. His slanderers crawling into ve ry small holes—very small holes. Almost the full vote of Huntingdon county is returned. Republican ma jority over 1. 1 099—a gain of 250, Let the South Reorganize its own Gov- ernments , On the 30th of Juno last, Frank 31air wrote as follows to Ur. Brod ie:1cl: "There is but one way to restore the Government and the Constitution, and that is for the President elect to declare these acts null and void, COMPEL the army to undo its usurpation at the South, DISPERSE the carpet-bag State Gov ernments, allow the white people to reor ganize THEIR 011 7. 137 governments and elect Senators and Representatives." It was the letter of Frank Blair's that secured him the nomination at the New York Convention, through the influence of Preston, Forrest, and oth er Rebel Generals, fresh from the scenes of bloodshed consequent on their rebellion against the United States Government. We have said and still say that this is a revolutionary letter— one that was written to please the Southern leaders, and one which does please them, and they will demand, if Seymour and Blair aro elected, that all the sentiments expressed in the let ter be carried into practice. Not only aro the reconstruction acts to be de clared null and void, but the army is to be COMPELLED to undo its work of keeping the South from rebelling again; all the State Governments now existing in the South are to be DIS PERSED, and all the white people are to bo allowed to re-organize THEIR OWNgovernments, and elect Senators and Representatives Remember that the latter clause dons not say that the loyal white people are to be allowed to re organize the Government; but it clearly and distinctly implies that the "white people," embracing the rebels in tote, from Jeff. Davis down to the conscripted priva to so lately in the rebel rank; shall ro organize their own gov ernments, and more than that, they shall elect Senators and Representa tives. Loyal men of the North, can you, will you permit sub an insult to go unpunished ? Can you counte nance the man that will so boldly de clare that rebels shall rule the Govern ernment they tried to destroy? Will you vote to place such a man in a po sition at the head of our Government who will permit the rebels to set up their own Governments, who Will com pel the .army to undo all that it has done in the South. If you will do this, then go back to the rebellion—un do all that Grant and the boys in blue did at Vicksburg—all that the the boys in blue did under Sherman in his march to the sea ; ellthat our Union Generals and bravo boys did to suppress the rebellion—undo all that we did to prevent secession and restore the Union ; let the Southern people organize their own Governments under Jeff. Davis, and lot the South secede. If you vote fur Seymour and Blair, you vote for just such a state of effairs. No reasoning man can discover anything else than revolution in the utterances of Frank Blair, and if he votes to place him and his colleague Seymour in pow er, ho is a party to the revolution that will follow their election. Voters, re member this on the 3d of November next. Leui qw.all Handbills of the following character were sent, wo suppose, to all election districts : INiTcz,ti. To those having Lands to Patent, as all the unpatonted Lands will have to be patented now in a very short time, and in many cases the expenses will be huge. Therefore, we ES Republicans, who are interested in this way should look more to our own interest than to partizan feeling. A County Survey or outside or away from the county seat, is Amite a useless officer, but one at the county seat is a very important one at this time. The Prothonotor or Register might as well be away off in one corner of the county, as the Surveyor. The Republican candidate lives in the most out of the way place in the whole county, whilst the Democratic candidate re sides at the county seat, and has his office with J. S. Africa, one of the oldest Survey ors in the county. The Surveyor ought to reside at the county seat where all the papers can be kept together, and in many cases save vexatious delays and often pecuniary expen ses. Thereon we the undersigned Republi cans throwing aside all party feelings solicit the votes of the party in favor of A. W. P. Johnson, against whom not a disparaging word can be said by any party. P. M. LYTLE, W3l_ll. WOODS, Wu. P. °EDISON, J. SEWELL STEWART, JAMES STEEL, JOHN SCOTT, WU. LEWIS, J. It. &arson . . The above "Notice" was mailed from Hun tingdon in an envelope, post marked Oct. 12, to "Ed. Green, Esq., Mill Creak," and re ceived by him, and was by him brought up to Huntingdon. We never attached our names to any such paper, and the person who has sent out such notice has forged our names. P. M. LYTLE, WILLIAM LEWIS, W. H. WOODS, J. It. SIMPSON, Wn. P. Oamsose, Joint SCOTT, JAMES STEEL, J. SEWELL STEWART. UV - Soldiers, if Wade Hampton, N. B. Forrest, or any other rebel General, were to come North and invite you to join his army, would you do it! And yet these same men are to-day muster ing recruits for the Blair and Seymour army in the Southern States. Are you willing to follow such leaders, who tried to destroy ' your Government? Remember, Gen. Grant raised recruits to fight the rebellion, and ho did whip the rebels. No, will you forsake Grant and take up with Hampton and For rest, by voting for Seymour and Blair. We hope not. m ..We shall see who has been hurt most by the slanders of the Monitor. Never before was there su . ch desperate means resorted to by any party to do. feat an opponent as has been resorted to by the enemies of Capt. Neely to defeat him. If he has received his party vote it will be an evidence that the Monitor has completoty Oat ell character for truth with the people. Ponnsylvar4ia,'Oliio and Indiana re spond to Vermont and Maine. Now for IN,T,ovomber, and victory for Gi(til,t. ttgL.The Democratic speakers con- I tinuo to prate about how they intend to pay the National debt, if they get in power. The propose to issue one currency, and that currency will be tho "greenback," which is now talked about equally as much as the "nigger." The country is to bo flooded with greenbacks. We will have plenty of them, and of course they will go to pay high prices on articles of every description. For instance, if green backs are issued to three times the amount at present in circulation, we will be obliged to pay three times the price we now pay. Flour, by the bar rel, which now sells at $ll and $l2, will then sell at $33 and $36; beef, by the pound, for which we now pay 14 cents will then be 42 cents, and butter will go up to a dollar or more. This a very consoling subject to contem plate, but yet it is evenly so, for the more greenbacks, the less gold, and ' with the decrease in the amount of I gold there is a corresponding increase in prices and if we have nothing but paper money, the Democrats will issue enough of it to increase prices on everything throe-fold and four-fold if necessary. The poor man will then bo the loser, for his wages will not go up as fast as prices, and the credit of the Government will bo worthless. If the National debt is to be paid in this way, we must confess that we can't see how it is to be done, unless as the De mocratic platform boldly declares, a tax is laid on "EVERY species of prop. erly according to its value." If the la boring man can stand a fax on his working tools, let him vote the Demo erotic ticket; if the farmer can stand a tax on everything that he produces and on his farm beside, lot him vote for Seymour and Blair; and if there is a voter anywhere who wants everything ho owns of value taxed, let, him vote the Democratic ticket, and our word for it ho will got enough of "taxes" brier° his party is in power six months. A Picture for the Contemplation o Irishmen. We place in parallel columns for convenience of comparison, Colfax's letter to the Fenian COmmittoo, and Blair's speech before the Fenian meet ing in St. Louis, in Septothbor, 1866 : Mr LETTER ml. tfleS SOCECIT. 1101150 WEPRZSENTATIVES, GENTLEMLN-1 ROI liith Washington, Feb. 20,001. you heart nod soul, and DEtrz ma—From the time heartily my, ''God bless the that I saw the gallani and Finnegens." IA voice—the lamented Corot an, no brave "Fantails, General."] 1 know In battle, au heroic in cap- what / ant talking about, tivity, was the head of your and Imy Fomegans. teen organization, I have felt a radon awl laughter,l and I warm interest In it, though say that I hope to see Um knowing nothing,of course, came eoaieh and ptosper, of Ile internal machinery, and eh 111 bless the day when Its obligations or its ritual. helmet is governed by Irtell- Remembering gratefully men. In accomplishing- this 0,0 historical fact of warm laudable undo taking I will sympathy expreened by an do all I can to omelet you. I lu ish Pat lament far our fa-I wilt puce myself, if nerds there when struggling for be, at your head, match the Independence they won with you to Staten bland, for no, regarding Impel - till) oveititie your embarkation, every weliditreted and pat- null Mond on the must ele tietic endeavor throughout voted bluff of the enact, and, the world for nationality, as yen raise the green em end roloicing that en tinny Morn over the store sad loyal Walt:non have enrolblattipus, while your want ed tliellleo/ros to the army.. e, under full headway, ate of the Union, to save their turning their prows to the adopted country from arms- east, I will say, Good bye, chy and deutroction, I send God bless you, and may you you, in response to your re- bo noccesafni In your under. pleat, the enclosed $2O. taking. May you lift the which nould be larger but 13ritid, Lion out otitis bents, for many other demands ou'and meat from his grasp ithe mot aid grin of the soft; but is bother or not you Shall succeed In this endeavor, tray each and all of you re• main in Ireland or else, whore, and never again set foot upon theme idiom I Yell lore mauled there, and we linspretfully yourn. 7.ICILUYLEIt COLFAX luau get along without 3on Irishmen will be asked to vote fo Frank Blair. Let such as these think of the sneers flung into their teeth by Frank Blair: "I will lead you to Sta ten Island and oversee your embarka tion for the Emerald gem of the sea; but whether you succeed or not in your enterprise, may you each and all remain in Ireland or elsewhere, and never again set foot upon these shores You are wanted there, but we can get along without you here." How an Irishman can swallow the insult and vote for Blair, is inconceivable. No Irishman possessing proper self-re spect and love for Old Ireland can vote for Frank Blair. Only the sod den slaves of party 'domination wilt do it. Irishmen, vote for Colfax. Iva... Nothing in the world is more certain than that Gen. Grant, when he enters the White House, will take immediate steps to insure peace in the South. The South itself has a tolera bly clear idea of him, and his manner of accomplishing objects. it is from this fact that a few simple words from him declaring his intention to protect every man in every right, will of themselves go far to accomplish the object. Ho will do no unnecessary thing; but ho will do everything no. cessary to accomplish the high resolve to have peace and security in every part of the South. We shall therefore have good results immediately follow• ing the election, months before Grant succeeds to his high office. No sane man need be told what must be ex pected should be be defeated and Gov. Seymour elected. The Tammany Con vention gave now life to every bad element in the South, and licensed all the bad passions of the demoralized and rebellions Southern population.— A heavy and impenetrable cloud will at once obscure the future, if Grant is defeated and no man will know what to de or expect. One or the other of these two conditions will follow the election. Which shall it be tee. Senator Patterson, of Tennessee, President Johnson's son-in law, has an nounced ,himself as a supporter of Grant and Colfax. He has made sev eral bets that Grant will be elentnci, and expresses the opinion that ho will receive 300,000 majority in the popular vote for President: • wa... Prepare to givo the enemy a total rout on the ti . d of November. How Democrats carry Electious, Sohn Casey, an honest Irish laborer on the Clearfield railroad, was sum moned to appear before the Legisla tive Investigating Committee last winter to testify in relation to the frauds committed at the election polls in Philipsburg, Centre county. As' a law abiding citizen ho came to Harris burg and told the story in his own honest way, which is recorded in the Legislative Record, page 1411. It reads as follows : "John, Casey, sworn—l was working on the railroad for Mr. Collins at the October (18G7) election ; was boarding in Phillipsburg, whore I voted with the other men ; Mr. Lede took me up to vote and gave me the naturalization paper, and I put it in ; cannot rend ; am as ignorant as a baste; I put the paper in my pocket; cannot tell what became of it; I was nover naturalized; never was in a court before this; Ledo told me to vote; I was working near Mr. Collins' store; came the day that O'Meara did to Philipsburg ; 1. voted Democratic." Such is the testimony of an honest Iriehtnan. These words aro the ver batim report of the testimony given by Casey under oath before the Inves tigating Committee of the Senate, and four days after the examination when the above was elicited ho was found in the road near Clearfield, brutally mur dered; &eaten to death with clubs. Ho bad undoubtedly boon killed lest ho should tell more, and to wipe out eve ry trace of the crime at the polls, on the night of the murder, two men, on a forged order, obtained from his land lady all his papers and destroyed them. Dead men tell no tales; and the agents who seduced John Casey into committing a crime against the country will probably never be known in this world. Leading Democrats, Gen. Kilpatrick, the impetuous cav alry leader during the late rebellion, portrayed the character of some of the present good otd Democrats, in ono of his speeches at the Soldiers and Sailors Convention in Philadelphia last week, in the following unmistakable language. He says: "Who have we to oppose us? The same mon who opposed us during the rebellion, both in the South and at the North. •Who are these men at the South who have joined hands with the Northern Democracy ? Why, Robert Ould, who will be remembered by many here p'resent who were confined as prisoners of war in the rebel pens. He is the man, who, on opening many of the boxes sent South by your loving mothers, said he thought the articles too highly seasoned for Men of seden• tary habits. Then there is Wade Hampton, who said to mo that he would rather his arms should with er than live with the mudsills of the North, and that he hoped to live to apply the torch to every Northern home. He a front seat in the New York Convention. Then there's el-Governor Vance, of North Carolina, the man trho'addr`ossod his troops with the'remark that'he wanted thorn to fill boll so full of Yankees that their heels would stick out of the third-story window. Hound Wade Hampton bad gone into the guerrilla business, but a ride ofl3o miles on an old mule which I gave him had the effect of dissolving that partnership. Then there is For rest the butcher, who surrounded a garrison of four hundred men with a force ten times as strong, and, under cover of a flag of truce, marched his force to the rear and murdered nearly all the garrison. He buried living and dead in the Banio ditch, and nailed no• groca to houses and fences, and there burned them."' General Dix and Grant. A private letter from General John A. Dix, written from Paris nearly a year since, contains the following par agraph : PARIS, January 16, 1868. "I have thought for a year that Grant should bo President. The pres tige of his name will enable him to do more than any other man to heal tho national dissensions Which seem to me at this distance to be as far from a sat isfactory solution as ever. Then ho is honest from both instinct and habit, and he has good sense, perseverance, and a modest estimate of his own ca pabilities. I have no doubt he would call able men to his councils and listen to their advice, and 1 believe that be would be a firm conservative and suc cessful Chief Magistrate." WHAT SHERIDAN SAYS. A Victory Now as Necessary as in 1865. On Thursday a week last there was an immense re-union of the Boys in Blue in Philadelphia, and here is the despatch of a LIFE LONG DENIO. CHAT, GLORIOUS PHIL SHERI DAN, to his comrades in arms : FORT Ilaux.mt, Kan., Sept. 30, 1868. —To Gem Charles E. T. Collis, Phila delphia :—Say to the Boys in Blue that it is as essential to have a politi cal victory this fall as it was to have nn Appomaltox in'lB6s, and.that eve ry man who loves his country should vote for Grant. PIT. SuErunAN, Major General, U. S. A AZ-There were ono hundred and eighty-six Southern delegates in the New York Convention that nominated Seymour and Blair, ono hundred and ton of whom served at ono limo or an other, in the rebel army. These mon ,controlled the convention, and now they demand of Northern men that they should support their ticket. What voter can so far forget respect for him self and duty to his country, as to vote any such ticket. Their very desire to have you vote with them is enough to induce you to vote agaiast .them. VirThe Chester County Journal pub. liihed at Downingtown, heretofore a neptral paper, has hoisted the Grant and Colfax flag and is doing good ser yiee in' ,the Republican cause. `LET US HAVE. PEARF4,' FULL RETURNS FROM OLD CON NECTICUT, Unprecedented Republican Gains, Four Thousand since last spring—New England Unanimous for Grant. flAatirono, Conn., October 9.—The returns from the town elections in this State are now all in. They show large Republican gains. Ninety-nine towns from which majorities aro reported give a majority of nearly twelve hun dred on the popular vote in favor of the Republicans.. The aggregate De mocratic majority is 3,888 ; Republican 5,052. In these towns are included all the cities and places where the De mocrats received their largest majori ties. Full returns from all the towns will increase the Republican majority to nearly fifteen hundred, making allow- Anne for the fact that the Republican vote in Democratic strongholds was light, and that the Democrats made an un• usual effort. A full vote would show a greater change in public sentiment than ap pears by the figures given. The pros pect is that Grant will carry the State by over two thousand majority. The Republican gain as indicated in the spring election is nearly four thousand. Grant and Seymour Contrasted. I believe Grant pre-eminently a man of administration. I believe ho has not only laid the country under obli gations to him which we can never re pay for the services ho rendered dur ing the war, but I believe ho is destin ed to lay the country under greater obligations. Ile will give us an ad ministration so temperate, so divested of passion, free from all malign influ ences, so wise in its selection of men, so judicious in carrying out measures, that we will see date from his admin istration a reeontinuation of the ad• ministration of Washington liimself— (cheers and applause)—a man whom in many important respects ho resem bles—(applause)—and in no respset more than Ibis—in his wisdom in tak ing counsel of wise men and in making his personal decisions reflect the wis dom of all the councillors he can gath er around him. if General Grant sits at the head of the Gevernment of these United States, there is not a single workingman in the nation, not one poor emigrant, not one dusky creature that by his pine-knot candle reads Iris spelling book, that will not feel that he is safe and seeure after Gen. Grant is President—will know that the Re publican party is the party of the com mon people, and every human being in the United States will know that the power of the Government and the party of enlightened and Christian : people will bo all in favor of the great est security and the greatest measure os liberty at all. (Cheers.) What is his antagonist in private life ? A gentleman not only most re spectable, but kind and amiable, of polished and winning manners against whose private character no man has brought a shadow of reproach. But Seymour is not a man of ideas; ho is not a man of -victorious will; not a man who in dark and difficult days seizes the right path, and then though all men leaves him follows- it to the victorious end. Neither soldier nor general, he is a man that, will be man aged by those around him; without a record in the war but a bad record, lie would hang his burdens on the govern ment He is not the man that ought to be'entrusted to shape the policy of an era of liberty. Never by speech or by any act of his life has ho shown himself to bo the right man to place in power on those terms of liberty. A layer• makes the best statesman, a general makes the best civilian. The man of idear is the man under whom this nation will rest most secure and safe.—Bcecher. More Results of Democratic Teach ings. From tho Now York Commercial Ads trliser The official investigation of the Ca milla (Ga.) massacre has hardly been completed before we are called upon to chronicle another bloody butchery at Opelousas, the capital of St.. Landry Parish, Louisiana. It was another deliberate preconcorted movement to crush Unionism in that region, and restore rebel supremacy. According to the New Orleans "Bulletin," a viru lent Democratic sheet-, ono hundred Unionists wore hilted and fifty woun ded, whereas only four Democrats were wounded, and none killed. The Crescent, another Democratic sheet, is confident that Radicalism is done for in St. Landry Parish, at least for this Presidential campaign. Mr. Vidal, member of Congress from Louisiana, established some time since at Landry, the Progress, a Republican paper. It has been edited by Mr. Bentley, who likewise teaches a school at that, place. On Monday last a squad of Rebels set upon Mr. Bentley, in the presence of his pupils, and proceeded to Qbastiso him. His friends gathered to his rescue. Ho, however, urged them to disperse to their homes, assur ing them that ho should sue out war rants for the arrest of the ruffians who bad set upon him. Meanwhile, the ox-Confederates began to assemble in large numbers, with arms, and soon became an uncontrollable mob, thirst ing for blood. They proceeded to the Progress office, threw the typo and press into the river, and seizing the French editor, Mr. Durand, took hint to a neighboring wood, whore ho was lynched. The foreman of the printing department was compelled to flee for safety. Now began a cold-blooded, heartless butchery. The fiends scat iertd through the town and neighbor ing plantations, shootingas they wont, untie one hundred and fifty . .btaeka fell victims to their demoniac fdry: The latter appear to have Made no residt elle°, as only four of their persecutors were wounded. 'Such, in' briecare the details of this horrid affair, the ac counts of the New Orleans Butictin, and Republican substantially agreeing. The fleeing foreman of the printing of fice has arrived in Now Orleans, and states that the -rebels have determined to kill or drive out all the Unionists, white or black, from the Opelousas dis trict. The New Orleans Times (Dem ocrat), of a late "date, has an account of an affair at Shreveport, which re sulted in the death of fifteen Unionists and three rebels. The other day a par ty ()farmed mon surrounded the house of Roderick Hill, a Republican, resid -1 Mg at Ashpolo, Robeson county, N. C. and shot to death a young man, a Re publican, while in the act of being married to Mr. Hill's daughter. The bride was likewise seriously injured. These and other similar outrages daily occurring throughout the late Confederacy indicate that the spirit of rebellion has once more become fairly rampant. The teachings of the Dem ocracy of to-day are having their- nat ural effect. The dire spirit which per vaded and controlled the Tammany Convention has permeated the entire late Confederacy, from North Caroli na to Arkansas,.and is bringing forth fruits in abundance. The, late, Con federates accepted the platform and temper of that body as an invitation to be g in the work of anarchy, and they have not been slow to act upon it. Tammany warmed into life all the smouldering elements of the Re bellion. Fresh from its counsels, Gov, Vance, Hampton, Forrest, et al, pro ceeded southward to herald the glad tidings that the Democratic party was to secure for them 311 the objects for which they had fought. The people have believed this. Misled by their public men, they have believed that the Democratic party was certain of success, and would achieve all it pro mised to do. They have believed that General Blair's programme would bo carried out, and so impatient have they been to carry on the work that they have not able to wait until the Democratic party was duly installed in power. We have in those Camilla and 0po• louses butcheries •a foretaste of the scenes which would transpire through the late Confederacy were Seymour and BlGir successful at the polls. Tho announcement of their election would be the signal of inaugurating a war upon the Unionists irrespective of col or. The Mobile Register, Tuscaloosa Monitor, Montgomery Mail, Mobile Telegraph, and ,other exponents of Southern opinion have already assur ed us that when that day comes the "carpet•baggers" will have to travel forthwith, and the blacks follow after them unless they mend their ways.— Said the Richmond Exnmiucr, the oth er day :—"They (the whit.* will de monstrate their superiority to the no• gro race, in a manner that will make the naked havages of Ethiopia, for cen turies to come, howl with horror at the name of a Southern white man." If now, with an impending election, and when the World and Richmond Whig, warned by Vermont and Maine, aro counselling moderation, these un repentant rebels indulge in such pas times, what might wo not expect in the event of Seymour and Blair's sue cess. Happily, however, no such calamity awaits.the country., The election at General Grant will put an end to all this Rebel outrage and wrong. Par doned Confederates who attempted to overthrow the Government will learn that those with stood by the Govern• ment have rights they most and ,Shall respect. They wi.l be made to learn that freedom of speech must and Shan prevail from the Potomac to the Rio Grande i that we must and shall have peace in face as well as iu name. Meanwhile the Washington ,anthor ides should hasten to aid those of Lou• isiana in making a thorough examine, tion into this last butchery, and fixing the responsibility where it, belongs. LOUISIANA. Report of the Committee on the Peace aml Good Order of the State—Law. lessness and crime Unparalleled NEW ORLEANS , Oct. D.—The joint committee of the General Assembly appointed to investigate the peace and good order of the State, lion. Hugh J. Campbell, chairman, report that with in a short period,2o4 Unionists have been killed; 51 'were - shot, and 143 otherwise maltreated,-making .a total of 398: The report states that they have examined personally 1-11 witnesses, have received 81 letters from various responsible and reputable citizens, and have taken 850 copies of affidavits from the originals iu the possession of the Senate and douse Committees on Eke inn and floz.urns. Your committee aro of the belief that not one tittle of of the murders and outrages actually committed daring the time embraced in our examination appears in the pre sent report, owing to the shortness of the time given and other cases above sot forth. Your committee have rea son to believe that if adequate time is given to take even such testimony as may be offered to them without search for it from different parts of tho State, the facts will disclose a state of law lessness, terrorism, and crime that is unparalleled in any civilized country, and disgraceful to the age in which we live and the Christian character which we profess. Humanity sickens at the contempla tion of a bigotry so ferocious and a hate so remorseless, founded solely on political differences, and having for its impelling motive not resistance to op pression, but an unruly desire to coerce the sentiments and actions of others, and a blind feeling of rage and venge ance toward those whom they cannot cow nor silenco. IL is the mature conclusion of your committee, founded on the testimony before them, that the State of lawless tress and unpunished crime prevalent in this State is chargeable not alone to the desperate and infamous characters wiware the immediateagents,but to the apathy and silent connivance of that large•and respectable class of the peo ple-of the ,Stato, who, while they would acorn py'rsonally to commit, any of these violent acts, if they do not actu ally sympathize with their perpetra tors at least refrain studiously from any efforts to restrain or bring them tojustico, and aro therefore justly lia ble to the indictment of the peace-lov ing portion of the coma - lenity for the ofi.ence of permitting such misci•ecnts to roam •at large unpunished'. • 4Z - 4-School Books of all {clods foi Roo c tt Lewis' Book Store. • ' • a NEW:ADVERTISEMENTS FO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED Totes notice that Andrew G. Neff has filed to the °thee of the Prothonotary of tho Court of Common Pleas of the county of Iluntingdoh. Ida Trust Account as As. sigmas of David 11. ,Campbell, of Penn township; and which said account mill be presented to said Court for confirmation and allowance. nt the moat, Nosoinhor term, and wilt ho no confirmed cud allowed unless exceptions are flied thereto. J. It. SIMPSON, ocl&Iw Prothonotary. TH.E NATIONAL DALT, 2EI.3ESEPMAIL I E7III.426:24Tir, HUNTINGDON; 111113 Restaurant is situated at the heed of Franklin Street, to the borough _of Runt tingdon, tend to open during the day and ma'am. The beet of Wines, XX Ale and Lancaster Beer. The table/ will be supplied with the beat fare for the public, add the proprietors will melte these who call on thorn feel at home. Jiaralte Hull will ho opened for Poetivale, Partleg, A nitaionients, etc. RlollTillt & SONS, Oct. 14, 1765-3 m. Proprietors. 1) EGISTEit'S Loroby given, to all p N ers ° L i t e nt h er ' Osted N tl o ta t t icei3 the fol- lowing named persons tiara settled their accounts in the Register's Nice, at Huntingdon, and that tho said accounts will be presented for confirmation and allowance at an Orphans' Court, to ho hold at Huntingdon, in and for the count,. of Huntingdon, on Monday, the 9111 day of NOYEHIIER next, (1868,1 to nit: I. Administration account of Jeremiah Eyer and Gide— on °major ' administrators of Peter Crazier, late of War riorsroark township, Huntingdon county, deceased. 2. Administration account of Abraham ifTeight and Wm. li. Wallace, administrators of the cant e of Samuel P. Wallace, late of Morris township, deceased. 3. Administration account of Isaac Taylor, Executor of the last will and testament of Elizabeth Cullman, late of Casa township, deceased.. 4. A4minlstration ncconnt of DaVid Clarkson, executer of the last will and tostrment of Jacob Estop, late of Union township, deceased. • 5. Administration account of Thompson Harlin and James Martin executors of the last will and testament of ferias Martin, deceasod. 13. Final account of Isaac N. Sheets and Thomas Cook, administrators of Jesse Conk, late of Carbon township, deceased. 7. Final administration account of Mrs. Jane Keith, administratrix of Adam Keith, Into of Franklin township, deceased. 8. Guardianship ;recount of Goorgo Jackson, guardian of Bella and Joseph Ilahangb, whew children of John llebaugh, late of Jackson township, deceased. 11. Administration account of K. Allen Lovell, admin istrator of the estnto of David McCabe, late of the bor ough of Huntingdon, deceased. 10. Guardianship account of Fredorick Harmony. guar dian of Carolina D. Withington, ono of the children nod lulls ofJohn Hoover, late of Shirley township, dec'd. 11. Administration account of David griller, adminio, trator ofJamos Dakor, late of Cromwell top., dec'd. 12. Final Guardianship account of George Eby, guar— dian of Miles M. Howson, ono of the heirs and children of James !lampoon, late or Brady township, deceased, who has now arrived at his majority, Register's Offico, 1 Gout.. Oct. 11, 'O. f NOTICE is hereby given to nil per sons interested that the following Inventories of the goods and Chattels sot to widows, under the provis ions of the act of 14th of April, 1851, have been filed in the office of the Clerk of [lto Orphans' Court of !looting• don county and will be presented for "approval by the Court" on Wednesday the llth of NOVEMIEIt. (1868,): Inventory and appraiser - neut. of the goods and chattels. which were of Ocorgo Shank, late of Warriotsznark top, demoted, ns token by his widow Nancy. Shank. Inventory and appralsoment of the goods and chattels of D. T. Couch, late of Karroo township, deceased, taken by his widow Caroline°. Conch. Inventory and approbternont of tho goods and chattels which wore of Lewis Keith, late of Lincoln township, &cowed, taboo by his widow Mary P. Keith. Inventory end oppraisemont of the goods and chattels which were of Adan. Keith, late of Franklin township, deccancd, taken by his widow Jerno Keith. - Inventory and appraisonont of the goods and chattels which wore of E. 0. Colder, late of Porter township, deceased, token by his widow Rebecca J. Colder. Inventory and appraiseinout of the goods and chattels wh kb N 1 ere of ()corgi:. W. Porter, Into of Jackson township, deceased, token by his widow Sarah Porter. J. E. E3.II3CHER, Clerk Orphans' Court Huntingdon, 0at.14 1864. LETTING OF PAVEMENTS. Sealed ptopdsaltr for the cointimation of pavements in tito Wmieward.iis required by °Mame relating to the side walks or pavements in that part of the b :rough Amnon as West Huntengdon" passed let day of Mey,'lBoS, opposite the lent of the tootles herein mulled who have lulled to comply et ith the requirements or said o, did ince, will be received by the undersigned until men o'clock, p.m., on Saturday, the seventeenth ilittunt. OVIIaSuS. Fisher .0 Song; John Foster, Baptist Parsonage, —_— Delilite!, John (loiter, Joseph bine-1111bn . , 11. A. Decker, N. 11. Corbin, A. euzzone,' Dutton Green, II (.1 WOHVee, John Lloyd. S. Boyles, ut, {turtle. Denote It. J. Nilson Bail, F. Oarlock, lot, Henry limiter, Jaw. Sampson, Abraham timid,. John Fleniwr, Chi ietin Is Decker, Mn., Spoace, A. Itet, p , . J. W. 31.11 torn, 12$ 1:13 o'3lstrra, 200 Dontel tlel nnut, 13 John O'Donnell, 25 A. A J33,01te, 10 J. *troube, (4) Wit 101 114 121 • do Intrid Nigh MI, 23 do John Hamilton; 24 do The person or persona to wham the construction of said pavement inns be nitutted nill bu required to giro ap• proved security fur Ilia completion ol the work within Milt! dni 13 qter the letting. 361 15.1 175 16'2. 157 US 57 sti 11 73 bit ALSO.-Ih•upoeola will be received op to the same time fur the lighting and cleaning of all the etroot lamps of the borough. Bidders will be expected to state the e= at which they will perform the work-per month. Ether party to hare ;the right to terminate ttw contract after thirty days notice. One muntlia pay wig be retained by the borough na a guarantee fur the faithful image nut ncv of the duties . of the lamp lighters. By order of the Burgesses arid Town Council °Mlle Borough of Iluntingßon. Rant ingdon, Oct.ll Fail Styles for 1888. A LARGE AND WELL ASSORTED STOCK OF LADIES' AND GENTS' FURNISHING. GOODS, AT REDUCED PRICES, Jmit reelvetl at IVI.cIVEE)3IIPsit (Succoseor to W. P. ItIIDOLPEI) VMPI2 Or? MAIIIIOSI LADIES' DEPARTMENT . . Lt titts.departmont, which will at nil times roceivo my strict attention, I harm well assorted display of WINTER GOODS, Dram Trimmings, Cloak and Sample Trim mings. Dreps Button., Gloves, Valle, Zephyr Knit Shawls, Nublas, hoods, Sontag., hand kerchiefs, Fall hats, Belts and Belting, Velvet Ribbon.. Comet., hosiery, and latest eta la Sacques from $5 to $3O. GENTS' DIIPARTMENT. Nate and Cam, all et)les, from 50 certo to $lO, Shirt., llsawere, Gloves, Neck Ties, Cole Inca, liosiory, and every article kept to a Sleet clue Fut rilshiog Store. HATS AND CAPS A SPECIALTY. By promptly meeting the wants of all, I hopo to moot with such patronage from the public ms will enable me to ketli continually on hand a largo and Well- selected Warm of ilrht clam gamin, Whilst keeping up to the fashion in every article, 1 will also soil cheaper than the cheapest. O. McNEIL, Opposite Loistere New Building Huntiogdon Oct 14, MS 11. " Vir , Prepared Sinapism or Spread LSTARD PLASTER Warranted to present unimpaired its strength in any climate equally nuth the Ground Mustard. The al tention of Physicians. the Drug Trade, and the public generally, Is respectfully called to the oboes ape• cial ty. designed to inert a uan t u Melt is bettered to ham been long felt among the appliances of the sick room, viz: Au easy and expeditious method of obtaining the remedial effects of mustard, without resorting to the of denary mode and troublesome muitard poultice 4.ith 111 attendant titscomforta. Pot up handsomely in llves of one dozen each, In three different sizes.' Price .70. .87, nod $t par dozen, ,„ A liberal dineoiint ttl tho 'Wholesale Trade. Prepared only by 8..7. CREW, 25 North Sixth Street, Philiolelphin, PA. july 15,'38-3m, spurn.,, Ipoll3Elt FOR SALE. • hunlq, Plank, Shuling, Joists, Roofing Loth, Lap apd Joint :Mingles, threo and four foot Plasteringlath; too solo at 31uuufact twees prices ut jell —Notions, too.numerous to mention for sale at Lewis' Book Store: ' J. E. 9311ICKFA, 'testator 645166[H. Itingb MEE! lIF:NRY GLAZIER, Chief Burgess 11. CLIGSIIER, - JA511:8 PORT, 43 go. JAcrisos, Colorants.) on Streets 1=33