Grant.) I dont think he will attempt it, nor that a pretext will be afforded. I do not think the loyal people of the United States were ever before so united I do not think such a vast vote was ever before rolled up as you will give in October next in your .State. > Fellow citizens, I ana glad to have thusacknowledged myheartfeltthanks for the kindness you have displayed to me throughout your loyal city, and to your loyal Union League for its great services. Remarks of Gen. Sclienck. He announced himself as a member .of that body which Andrew Johnson had denounced as hanging upon the verge of the Government, and that body dared to say to him and erable Map Friday (Montgomery Blair) that if they undertake to make two Congresses, as had been intimated, i there will be two sides to the question. If the Congress that counted tiie votes for and made Mr. Johnson \ ice i'resi- j dent of the United States was but "a rump," what in the name of heaven is j that fag end of the ticket of 1864 which now undertakes to lord it over the J country ? He who now denounced the Union party was the man who had be trayed them and gone over to the reb els in front while the Copperheads op erated in the rear; while the party de nounced was the same loyal Congress that had successfully striven to sup press the rebellion and maintain the integrity of the Government. A great deal had been said upon the question of the present status of the rebellious States, whether in or out of the Union. He did not advocate fine- i ly drawn decisions He had never bo i lieved that they had succeeded in pla cing themselves without the pale of I the Union; but as members of a com mon family we werejustified, and only exercised a right, in thrashing the un ruly members of that family. It did not follow that because a man had i committed crime he was exempt from ! punishment for the reason that, by that | crime, he had separated himself from society. Then, too, in taking a census , of the p pulation of a community, you j count the inmates of prisons though 1 they are not at liberty, and madmen, j though these did not vote. So with the case of the Southern States; they i stood as subdued, whipped, criminal : Stales, and before they are restored we asked that sufficient security be given for the future. Any other doctrine would leave the inference that the late war was but a mere contest to deter mine who was the strongest. Mr Johnson and those who act with him hold that the South Carolinian who has had his pistol at our heads, the Alubam ian who has raised his sword to smite us, has the same rights as are enjoyed j by the man whose sword and pistol were used in the defence of the Govern ment. We say to the South: What we ask of you is, that you shall incor porate into the organic law of the land some three common things, and when you have done that, we are ready to receive you. just as we have received Tennessee, which has complied with these conditions. The first is that all the men, women and children in your domain shall occupy a position of com mon equality with those of other parts 1 of the country. They acknowledged their willingness to give this, hut we i insisted that it should be put down in j the bond. Second, we proposed to i them that a rebel in the South shall not count two while there is only one represented in the Government We asked no advantage of the .North over the South, but simple fairness; and yet thero were men calling themselves Democrats who refused to agree to that. Third, we proposed that the debt contracted by our Government in maintaining it shall never be repudia ted, and that the burdens incurred by the South in attempting to destroy that Government shall not be paid. This was what Andrew Johnson him self had taught, but the difference be tween him and the Republican party was that the latter insisted that it should bo put in the bond. fifif" Ihe Selinsgrove Times man im agines himself to be a good hand at "gues sing." He accuses us of being saintly pi ous, and then launches into his usual style of denouncing such people as being cheats, &o. 4or his Udification we may just mention that soni years ago another editor called us an inJUel, which we be lieve is the reputatiorf Jhe editor of the ! Times enjoys. We our rebel- j loving neighbor we are yeither one nor the other, but wish we wkre a great deal ' better than we are. In inducting our paper we endeavor to ineuLtte those reii gious and moral prineiplesViiich prompt human beings, and especial* the young, to follow those paths which Mead to hap piness and contentment, to fltutli, justice and patriotism, and it istjthis' feature which probably more than 'pnee has led the Times to denounce us asjpious, een in close communion with J. A. Matthews, the chief wire puller of the Johnson club and floor manager of what is left of the patent democracy, and in his card announces himself as the "Uniou Conservative" candidate. In Texas and other Southern States we know that term is used by the reconstructed Johnson rebels, but what Mr. Willis means by using it here, h:is puzzled many besides ourselves. We take it for granted how ever that he is in favor of admitting to full citizenship: to civil offices of honor, trust and profit; to command of compa nies, regiments, brigades, and even our regular armies; and to take charge of our navy yards and command of our ves sels, the men who were guilty of the vilest treason and perjury, with all the dark crimes of murder, robbery, and in cendiarism incident to those otlences, on merely tak i rig an oat hofal 1 egiance {which their previous conduct proved they do not regard;; and also, by the destruction of slavery, hereafter to give these same late rebels a greater preponderance in Congress than they had before —with no security by constitutional amendment that they will not again get up a rebellion, or that they will tolerate free speech, such as we have, and administer laws alike to all classes. Next we find the names of Willis and Miller in two or three papers in this dis trict under the head of National Union ticket; in Huntingdon and Juniata the cop papers put them up under the head of democratic ticket , and the Lewistown Democrat don't classify them at all. This shows that somebody will be cheated in the end, for they can no more serve the fag ends of two or three parties than they can God and mammon. What are they, then? Neither fish, flesh, nor fowl is ap parent, and we can therefore come to no other conclusion then that they belong to that nondescript which is ready to reward Southern rebels and punish Southern Union men. On such a basis they can come before the public, and while unscrupulous polit ical demagogues may cry them up worthy of support, reflecting men of all parties will he apt to desire more information be fore they trust legislative power in to their hands. We know here that almost every prominent supporter of Mr. Willis has AX AXE TO GRIND, and one of them at least a Cameron axe —a piece of informa tion we give for the benefit of the Hun tingdon Globe, Shirleysburg Herald and the Juniata Republican, all of whom feign to turn up the whites of their eyes in holy horror at the mention of Camer on's name. James M. Brown, while in the Legisla ture last winter, voted to increase the pay of members from S7OO to SIOOO, thus rob bing the Treasury ox thirty-three thou sand dollars at a single grab. Mr. Brown is now a candidate for re-election. Can you vote for him? Besides, he is, like Wharton, a Cameron man at heart. We And the above article in a few bread and butter and cop papers in this district, which is about a fair specimen of their ar gument and reasoning. We last week exposed the contemptible reference to Mr. Brown as a Cameron man, and now to show how utterly destitute of all honesty or principle such papers must be, we need only state the fact that the pay of mem bers was not increased at all last winter, but was the same as the previous year. Mr. Brown is too well known in this county to need eulogy at our hands. De scended from its first settlers, he is native to the soil; an intelligent and industrious farmer, he understands their interests and knows their wants; a friend to the soldier as every honorable one will attest; and patriotic enough, when occasion called for it, to furnish his own horse and equip ments, ami not merely parade here, but went to the Maryland border during the rebel invasion without payor reward; and while Mr. Willis made money out of the.war, we believe we are within bounds in saying that the war cost Mr. Brown little short of $-3,000; —in short, there is not a feature which constitutes a MAX, in which James 31. Brown will not favora bly compare with Mr. Willis. The Democrat and Mr. Morrell. The Democrat of last week of course attacks Mr. Morrell. whom it calls the great Iron King, alleges that lie refused to pay the puddl-rs and helpers what they claimed, that his estimates of the cost of iron are all too high, that paper ot course knows all about such things) that the present tariff alTords abundant protection to the iron interests, that the whole is a scheme to make consumers pay more for iron and put bigger profits in the pocket- of manufacturers—in short, if we understand that paper at all, it is opposed to the yreatcst interest in this dis trict, which requiring a large capital, is well known to be the most precarious business that money can be invested in. If the Democrat's reasoning is worth any thing, then a laboring man, mechanic, clerk, and all other employees in Lewis town ought to get as much or nearly its much as similar persons do in Philadel phia, and our iron works, mills, tanneries, machine shops, merchants and others who refuse to pay such wages, are greedy people, "coining money from tlie sweat of poor men." It is just such stuff as this that has kept down Lewistown, and we might say Mifflin, county. Present ex perience is proving that we have an abun dance of iron ore—that property hereto fore almost valueless is proving a source of wealth (an instance of which we may give in the recent by Mr. Lewis Owens of a barren ridge of 4b acres for S2OOO,) — that to develop these treasures and give an impetus to business, trade and popula tion, we but need just such "Iron Kings" as Mr. Morrell; but what men of capital will come here to invest hundred-ofthou sands of dollars in an uncertain business wlitm they are told at every election that they are oppressors of the poor, greedy men, &e.? .So far as the strike at Johns town is concerned, and which is not sta ted correctly in the Democrat, Mr. Mor rell clearly proved that taking the differ ences in metal, rent's, and cost of living, the Johnstown pudulers were making as much, if not more, than the Pittsburg; and that they had no reason for striking is apparent from the fact that they were making from SIOO to $125 per month, in the meantime obtaining goods at cash prices on credit, if desired, and a full pay ment in money at the end of every month. Meddlesome people however interfered with just such cries as the Democrat pe riodically raises about "the sweat of poor men," &c., and tlie consequence was that these men lost the best situation they had ever held. That the work- in charge of Mr. Mor rell are not yielding such great profits as the Democrat would make its readers be lieve is evident from the dividends, which have averaged only six percent, for sev eral years; and when we consider that millions are invested —that from 3000 to 4tK)O persons are employed and punctually paid—that foreign competition is constant ly endeavoring to overthrow and ruin such works—such a per rentage is a re muneration so poor that a "National Knion or democratic speculator" would sneer at it. We are perfectly willing to take the is-ue the Democrat and other papers it) this district are raising, and the contest therefore is to be— Johnson, Miller, Willis, Banks, ltoss, Kearns, McEwen and Butler, and Down with the Cambria, Free dom, Glamorgan, and all other Iron Works, Closing of Ore Banks, Deprecia tion of Mineral Lands, and Discharge of Thou sands of Laborers, AGAINST Morrell, Brown, Wharton, Troxell, Glass, Shu 11, McCoy, and Wakefield, and Sufficient Protection to the Iron Interest so as to enable own ers to pay Good Wages to Workingmen i n Cash, Developing the Mineral Re sources of Penn syl- vania, Enhanc ing the Pri eesof Lands hith erto almost valueless, Increasing Business and Population, and thus benefit ing Farmers, Tradesmen, .Mechan ics, Merchants and all other Classes. Johnson aS Cleveland. Our President and his Merry-Andrew, Seward, who disgrace the two highest of fices of the Government, are making speeches of a character that the lowest pot-house politician would beashaniedof. Failing to respect himself the President is not respected by the people, and some queer scenes ensue. We give a few sam ples : At Niagara Johnson said the Republi can 1 >arty might go to the devil! Seward voted to amend by saying "over the Falls." At Cleveland, Ohio, where Johnson made one of his harangues a scene oe cu ed that almost beggars description.— When reminded by the crowd that he was losing dignity, he truly answered u I care not for dignity," and launched out into a tirade of abuse of Congress and all who differed from him in such unbecom ing language that he was finally called ; a traitor." At other places, as far as St. Louis, similar scenes occurred, his exam ple inducing many of his hearers to lose all respect for the man or the high office he hold*. We are we fear exhibiting a j spectacle to the nations of the earth which may well cause all to hang their heads in ' shame and sorrow, for the man made ! President by the hand of J tooth may yet : prove a greater evil to our country and its j future than the rebellion. THE BEST IN THE WORLD • | PHE I'NDF.R.sjGNEtJ IS AGENT FOR THE IMPH iVKD MNCI R BKWI\ i MirillSK, ' which will 1 o filteed upon trial v. ah any other r. i in use. He invites eompetion. It can be tested CO. fa-> to 3 ILI ' with anv other machine to enable pnrchers to choose THE UEST. TERMS LIBERAL. j Give liim a call. [sepl2-6m] \VM. I.IND. S. S. CAMPBELL & CO. , Manufacturing Confectioners, AND WHOLESALE DEALER.-} I.N ! FOK EIG X FRUITS, XUTS,&C. No. 303, RACK STREET, PHIL ADELPHIA. ALSO, UANUFACTCREIIS OP ALL KINDS or gssf" Molasses Candy and Cuoanut Work. j septl2 : 66-ly. P. P. CUSTSNE, FURNITURE WARE ROOMS, X. K. Cor. of Second & Rave Streets, PHILADELPHIA, is now Selling off his Large Stock Cheap for Cash. septl'2'66 3m. FARM WASTE©. r pWENTY to thirty Acres well improv- I cd and accessible to Railroad. .Must i be pleasantly situated on some lake or river: mountain region preferred. Ad dress, with full particulars, stating price I and describing buildings. J. C. R. GARDINER, sepf!2-3t. Pittsburgh, Pa. FARM FOR SALE. VLL that Farm or Tract of Land situ ate in Walker township, about two miles from the borough of Huntingdon, will be exposed to Public Sale at the Court House, in said borough, on Friday, September 28th. 18G6. This Farm contains TWO HUNDRED ; AND THIRTY-SEVEN ACRES and! 130 PERCHES, and has thereon a large and comfortable Dwelling House, a large I hick Barn, and other outbuildings.— There is also a Well <>f excellent water i near the door, and other water on the j premises sufficient for watering cattle, j Also, a youi g Orchard of Fruit Trees, just commencing to bear, besides older trees, ! producing sufficient fruit for the use of a I family. .Those desiring to purchase, will plehse call upon Mr. John Reed, who resides upon the farm and is acting as my agent in Hi is matter. He will give to those who may call upon him, every necessary in formation regarding terms, Ac. sepl2-lt. CORNELIA M. REED. ORPHANS' COURT SALE! \Y T ILL be exposed to sale by public V vendue, on the premises, on Tuesday. OrJober !;, iSfiG, the following Real Estate, to wit: A certain trait of land, situate in De catur township, Mifflin county, beginning iat a maple, thence by land'of —— Dol man, north 4 ! east 106 perches to double white oak, thence by land of Deo. Ivearns, Esq., south 47 east 184 perches to a white oak. thence by "same south, 4.H C west 85 perches to stones, thence south 81° west . 45 porches to dogwood, thence north hit 0 west lit! perches to place of beginning, ! containing 155 ACRES, 151 PEUCIIES, more or less. The improvements consist of a Dwelling Home, new Bank Barn, ; good water. &e. A good part of it cleared and under cultivation—the remainder well ■ timbered. Sale to commence at 1 o'clock of said j day, when terms will be made known. T. G. BELL. sepl2-ts Adm. of G. W. Fisher, dee'd. FAU.II 4T PUBLIC SALE! \\T GJL be sold at public sale, on the > t premises, near Kishacoquillas I*. 0., Brown township, adjoining lands of John Beatty, Chas. K. Davis, Wm. Barr, Jo seph Byler and Gideon Voder, on Friday, October Pilli, isoti. | a fine Farm containing 124 ACRES, with j ii DWELLING HOI SE, good BANK | BARN, and other outbuildings, with wa j ter conveyed through lead pipes. A Good Young Orchard ;is on the place. 12 or 15 acres are well I timbered. Also, at the same time and place, anoth er bract of Land situate at the foot of btone Mountain, containing TWENTY-TWO ACRES, 5 of which are cleared, and the remainder timber land, with a House, Stable, and Orchard of Apple and Cherry trees there on. BOP Sale to commence at 1 o'clock, p. m., when terms will be made known. sepl2ts* ROBERT CUMMINS. \ 1 IHTOR'S NOTICE. I A*-, The undersigned Auditor, appoint j cd by the Orphans' Court to distribute j the fund in the hands of David T. Kline and brands H. Miller, Executors of the j Estate ol John Miller, late of Decatur ■ township, deceased, to and amongst those , entitled to the same, will attend to the j duties of the appointment at the Regis ter's office in Lewistown, on Friday the j oth day of October next, at 10 o'clock, a. j in. Those interested are requested to'at teU Li , W ' P ' ELLIOTT, Aud'r. j sej)tl2-4t. j i ETTERS remaining unclaimed In tte ; i_j Post Office at Lewistown, Pa., on the ! 11th of September, 1866. Burns John Macher S B Bowers Miss Mary Rea J J Bowers Miss Fanny Scott P M Bingiiiaii Isabella * Schoch Kate 2 | ,s Sherman Horace 1 vol ley Diseartus Seidle Lizzie I Long Aliss Mary Young W' H 2 . Mohortor P A Yard Milton • sep 12. E. C. HAMILTON, P. M. OKI'S! t\S' COI RT S 11 E Of Valuable Farms, Dwelii ßgs Lots and Timber Tracts. ' | > V virtue of an order issued om of th f> Orphans < ourtof Mifflii, T e subscriber will offer at publie .c, " , ! le Court House in Lewistown, j; '' le Tljiirsflay, Oclober isili. at 10 o'clock, a. in., the follow in ,r r? \ Estate, viz: k K,l al Number 9. A Lot of Ground Borough of Lewistown, frontin,.- ; le on -M.il street, and extending h-Tu? width to public Alley, boundedm? a an, n , le east l>v lot of Wm. Riih>n,and oe-i e by lot of S. M. Hamaker.wiMi'i n Frame House. Stable and other improvl! ments thereon. i-'o*e- No. 1. A Lot of Ground i,, town, hounded by lands of F 1 i diet, McAtee and"others, contour, e * ( ' ! w A-re and a hah of land, more or Je*< V "v J " 3 *' lof Land in i,' ( , rn . tewnsmp. nilTlin county,bounded ontl* .v .1 oy M.i Street extended. on tZ *nutu by the old Feeder, on the l lots of < 'buries Ritz, and on the \vi"f j?. lots of E. L. Benedict, containing FT Acres, more or less, with a Tw„~ S(o J: Brick House, Barn, Orchard, aw. jl , f good Water,' and other improvement* thereon. No. !'*>• A Tract of Laud in Derrv township, adjoining iands o.' Jacob j Kline, containing Three Acre* and twenl ty-three perches, neat measure, in ;t j„i state of cultivation. No. 18, and ptn-t of! i. a Tiu lo f Land in Dcrry township, adjoinin- <>t|„. r lands of John Himes, dee'd, ij.y r _ sythe, and others, containin one" Hun : dr< -land Seventy-six Acres and sixteen perches, neat measure, more or whereon are creeled a Bw Hi;: • if new Bank Burn,:: fine young 6;.- choice Fruit, and other improvement* with a good Spring of Water at the j . A large portion of it is cleared and under fence, and the balance in timber. :'j s Traet is composed of the MeKee tra.-t and part of the Swartz or Wright tract Pari of NO. V 2. A Tract of Land in | Deny township, hounded by other lands o. John llimes, dec d, east part'if Kwartz ' tract) and others, containing Sevenl v -ix Acres and eighty-two perches, neat nieas. ( ure, more or less, and being a part of the Swartz or Wright tract. Also the' following described lots of pieces oi land divided out of No 1] viz- No. I. A Tract of Timber L;uid in ber ry townsnip, adjoining lands of Philip Mart/ the John I Main tract, and other lamiof John iLinies, deed, on is - a Dwelling House, containing 31 a'.-res and 92 perches. No. 'i. A tract of Timber Land ad joining the above, and other land of j-.hn Himes, dee'd, containing 21 acres ami perches. No. B. A 1 ract of Timber Land, adjoin ing the above, and other lauds of j„i, n Hunt's, dec d, and containing 24 acres No, !. A tract of Timber Land, adjoin ing :he above, and otlier lands of j hn I Hlines, dee d, and containing 23 acres i and lo.s perches. No. A tract of Timber Land, adjoin ing the above, and other lands of John H tines, dee'd, and containing 27 acre*and 12S perches. No. 6. A tract of Timber Land adjoin ing the above, and other lands of John Himes, deed, and containing 2ti acres : and 14 s perches. No. 7. A tract of Timber Land, adjoin ing the above, and other land of John , Himes, dee d, and containing 33 acres and ' 2 pen-lies, and on which is a Dwel ling House. Any person desiring to examine the above property can do so by calling on J. " /Dmes, 1. G. Dell, or the undersigned: and we will meet any person desiriii" to sec'the farms on the premises, Wedues du\ , October 3d, 1860. lerms ok sale. —'i'en per cent, cash on day of -ale, and one-hai; ofpurchase money to pe paid on confirmation of sale | and tne balance in one vear ilimeafter' j \\itn interest, to Le secured by judgment! JOHN C. SIGLEIt, I Trustee. T°^ e r StOC t ,,^ W . ers oft^ J- die Creek Kailroad Conipa i m lk ? . i lot iV*° that an Election will be a he Court House in the Borough - of MiG.lleburg, Snyder county, ?a.. Sn . I uesday, the '2* l day of Oct., A! Ji |-, between the hours of 12 M .. and 4p. m. j l" r t . he purpose of electing a President and I Daoltc Directors to conduct and manage the affiurs of said Company until the Sec ond Monday of January next. By older ol the Board of Commission er'Vv- 1> r. G -SCHNLTRE,IWt. •ixo. 1. Ckoxmilhkr, Sec'y Lelinsgrove, Sept. 12, ]S