.-.X 1 union of lakes, and a union of lands, A union no poicer shall seeer; A union of hearts, and a union of hands, And the Amtrican Union forever! M I F F L I nToYV V WcduCsdny Morning, Jnnc 21, 1865 "FEARLESS AND FREE. A. L. (il SS, Editor. Lev. 25 : lo. Jfd- Proclaim Liberty jjj' Tlironshont the l.:tud jt'T- t. ALL the rtf Jt Inhabitants Thereof, tT THE JVXTA TA SF.XTIXEL -a has I ho .tiryat Circulation of liny paper pub lished iii this Count. It is therefore llic hnt aJrertitiny medium. It is a 1'apcr, truly loyal, ably conducted, a fir3t class Localist, arid well worthy of the patronage of every leyal citizen iu tlic County. rjERMS OF PUBLICATION The Jixiat Sextinki is Published on Main Street, nest door lo the Post Office, Milllintowu, Juuiata County, Pa., on every Wednesday ai lie rale of 2.00 per year in advance and $2.oi) if nut paid within the year. We wi.h to do a cash business as near'y as possible. We wish to deal honest ly and alike with all, and therefore need not be asked to vary from our terms by nny ouc. Thankful fur past favors we ask the continued upport ami efforts of our friends. tU " Treason must be made odious; Traitor must be punish cd and imporer ithed. They must not only be punished, but thfir social porcr, must be destroyed; Ani after mahin-j treason odious, terry I nion men ami the Government should be remunerated out of the jtoeh ts of Unite who hare in flirted litis yre ft suffer' inj upon the country.'' President John son, April 21. lfrG5. " Notes of Third Series of ?30s now ready. The demand for the Second Series of the 7-o0 Notes was so great that the Treasury Ierartuient was unable to j.riut them with sufficient rapidity to fill the orders. It will be remembered that a hundred millions were subscribed aud paid for in a single week. The printing presses have finally suruiounted the diffi rulty, and on Wednesday, J uuc . 7th, the deliveries of the Third Scries commenced aud will be continued with the same promptness that marked the supply of the notes, of the first aud second series. It has been this iutcrruption of delivery at the time of subscription which ' has given au appearance of falling off in the popular taking of the loan, the great body of small takers being unwilling to pay their money unless they receive their notes right in hand, to carry them home. It is expected that after this week the daily subscriptions to the Seven-Thirties will run up iuto millions, as they will uu- doubtly be stimulated by the opening of the farmers' wool markets East aud West. It is not at all likely that the Government will ever again offer so desirable a secu rity as these notes, and about two hundred millions only remain to be taken. With the close of the war the national expenses will be vastly reduced, and in vestors must look for a sharp reduction :n the rate of interest as soon as the pres ent loans become due and can be paid off. There is no reason why the United States credit for Money should ever again fall below its credit for eouraje. The same t-pirit that preserved the geographical in tegrity of the country will place its pe cuniary integrity on a par with that ol the most favored nations und that will represent a rate of interest under rather than over four per cent. The Gettysburg Celebration. " There will be a grand Fourth of July celebration at Gettysburg. Gen. Howard is to deliver au Address and Geu. Gcaiy is to be chief marshal of the day and has gone there to complele arrangements for laying the Corner-stone of the Monument on the Fourth ol July. He has obtain ed from General Grant permission for two bands of music, one regiment of in fantry, one battvry of artillery and one Mjuadron of cavalry, of the army, to be present at the celebration. The regi ments have not yet leen designated. .llftYl'V .Arj, nrn'.t ,. t - 7 I money. Thotc indebted to u. (i,r l,n .... ! per for a year or more and all owini? uy"JC" of American Iwepublicaniim, aud for job work or advertising will please I the fiucst illustrations now' .before the jif'icc that we -rant our nionv. " ' worll: ' Sul- The action of Tennessee in all matters relating to reconstruction is of unusual interest, not only because she occupies a, a leading position just now among the Southern States, but because she may b e supposed to indicate in some degree the policy of President Johnson, whoso in fluence has been potential there for the last four years, and probably 13 so still, if he choose to exert it. It is well known that the Legislature has denied the right of suffrage, for the present, to men of color. The Senate, by a large majority, has now passed another suffrage bill of a novel character. It confines the right of voting to those white men, otherwise qualified, who are "publicly known to have entertained unconditional Union scutimcnts from the breaking out ol the rebellion until the present time.'' Provisions arc made for proving tho fact of loyalty beyond question. All other persona are excluded for six years after the passage of the act, and may then be readmitted to franchise by petition to the Circuit or Chancery Court, on proof of loyalty to the United States, in open court, upon testimony of two or more good loyal citizens. . If the loyal citizens of North Carolina for instance, wi'l take such action as this and inflexibly aply it at the polls, the peo ple would be better reconciled to the with holding of suffrago from the negro, be cause there would then be a better chance of ending-that crass legislation which was the the offspring of slavery and is still our greatest (lunger. Hut there is a more excellent way" yet, and that is both to disfranchise the disloyal men so long as he remains so, and enfranchise the the loyal man without any recard to color. That is safe, that is right, that the principle of our institutions, that the point to which, in the order of a wonderful Providence, we have been brought, and we ought to evade it. One thing is very ckitr to our minds. No State can be safely recognized in the South which excludes colored men from the suffrage. It may, under mili tary duress, have the forms of govern ment, as in Louisiana ; but few now wish this humiliating spectacle repeated. It will be much more likely to demonstrate tho impotency of the white Union men to control, as in the election just held iu Virginia. The ' alternative of gov ernments in which colored men partici pate or no government at all by the peo ple, will soon be made apparent, and per haps in view of it politicians may be compelled to do justice which other eon-: sidcrations have failed to grtin at their hands, ':: General Graut in Patterson. On Wednesday last, at noon, quite a number of our Citizens were favored with a view of the illustrious Grant. Tie passed eastward on the train accoin panicd by Mrs. Grant, Col. Parker (a famous Iudiaa warrior, chief of seven Western tribes of Indians, and chief, also, of scouts on Gen. Grant's staff.) Colonel Dowers, Col. Babcock and Mr. Dcckwith. The report of his coining was circulat ed aud a crowd gathered. Had it been positively known, there would have been an immense assemblage. ' The General came out on the veranda of the rear car to give the people an opportunity to see him. Immediately th crowd began cheering for Gen. Grant, and cxpressiue to each other their gratification at having seen the man who whipped the traitor Lee, and the great soldier who has made the name of his country forever immor tal iu history. . We looked around for the chaps who bawled at Train, but they were orderly or absent. They are cither lowly learning sense or are well cooled off by the drubbing given to their friends McClclIan and Lee. A t all event they knew their places this time. Gen. Graut makes no speeches. He docs not appear to know his fame. The whole appearance of the man, as he ' pre sented himself to our observation, was that of rigid plainness. His countenance denotes deep thought, truthfulness and determination, without a single trace of ambition visible in its expression. lie iuokcu to us iikc a man wno baa ever pressing on him some stern duty, some labor which engaged the attention of all his energies'. About his Derson there is nothing which the world would recog nize as distinguished. . He neither bears hiuiielf with or conducts himself towards others, with that superiorly so peculiar to men of rank, and which he of all oth er men to-day in this country would have a just right to feel. If we ; dare take ! him as he presented himself to our vis- ",n 1 h- nra,lt la the best speci- Suffrage in Tennessee and Negro frage in the South. Vallandigham on Democracy. In a letter from this arch tra:toi ad dressed to a Democratic Comniitte ' of Lancaster, V.i., he speaks as follows 0 the present couditiuu of tho Dcuiocatio part?. . ; "Without more of courage, more Igor more audacity, if you please in grapling with great questions as in former prs, the democratic party cannot, ought not to survive, and must give way to a yorager and more vital organization. If it is to remain in its present comatose sttei now tho beginning of a new eph in public affairs, it were better that it Wild be buried out of sight at once." , As Vallandigham says, so let all the people respond. Let the rottonr treasona ble Democracy of tho last four years "le buried out of sight !" It is "dead and stinketh," and who desires any longer to smell its putrid rpmains ? . John Mitchell has eome to grief in New York. Gen. Dix put a quietus on this imported traitor's ptn, and it is not likely that Mitchell will have an op- ortunny to disgust loyal men or dclisrit Democratic friends by an exhibition of his hatred for a government which saved his neck from an English halter. Crime will not have received its just duo until all such men as Mitchell have been sum marily dealt with. Our Government should offer to exchange Mitchell with England, for some of the rascals who have taken refuge in that land from jus tice in this country. The exchange would be perfectly fair. liar The Democratic papers in this md other states are claiming the majorities given by the main aid ot rebel Wp in 1 the recent election in Virginia, as -g!o- nous Democratic victories." Nnr- could be more consistent fhnn .nl, claim, because it is true that of late roars 1 as now all Democratic victories km : is I bcllious against the government, and all ! thaf' nearl' a3 fi,r from this a,fcr to Jon is that has been and is rebellious, can onlv!.11 lh,S 5f a" i!ver min-',eJ with be accounted as Democratic. Oini;r, vui more suvcr in weight tnan c?- The Richmond lie public says: It gold. The Company have only two hun is stated that 75 pieces of property in ( dred feet working, and ont of that they Richmond have been already libeled for ' are now realizing about ten thousand dol coofiscation, which is only a beginning. ', lars a day. There is this peculiarity The proceeding is in rem,, that is to say, about it, that the deeper the mine ex agaiust the property itself the owner ( teods the richer and more profitable it not being made a party to the cause. The becomes." term of tho Federal court at which the1 ' libels will be produced and acted upon! IIow ,hc Johni" are S"iB8 H,nc- Ml t. 1 .11 ,i n ii "" win uc iiciam tiiei au. General Howaid vestcrdav tnaninJ rcceivod a letter from South ' Camlir.a j oaths of allcSiaDCC as a passport for trav which gives a gratifying account oftnc iC,in fare anJ good character. To this colored population totally different from cou,I'kxion has it come. The defenders the statcmcat of The Richmond R.-pub. ' c,livaIrT. e vaunted ISersckcrs of the lie . Forty thousand fieednien iu South ! nIne,ecB,h century, one of whom was to Carolina are now industriously at work ! ?cvo"rfh'e Yankees in 1?61, slinks home cultivating tho. soil an,! O nnn n,.T..i I in 18Gr beaten, unarmed, beggared, shcl- children arc attending school' regnlurly. m. It is said that the only joke Gen. ; Sherman ever perpetrated was on cn-J teiing the capitol of North Caroliua. I Turning to a regiment of veterans who J where marching by the State House, he j called out: "lon t you tlunt this is a good place to sing Kalcigh round the flag, boys ?" BQi, A large fire occurred in Ilarris burg on Wednesday morning last it was in the heart of town and doubtless the work of an incendiary. The upper stories of the Telegraph printing office were destroyed and the loss ii about $6000 one half of it covrrcd by insu rance. We picked up a few specimens of the melted type. Washington, June Sth, Gen. Can by has, by orders from Secretary Stanton hunted out and arrested the man who of fercd last winter, in an Alabama paper, to be one of a certain number of persons to pay a million dollars for the murder of Mr Lincoln, "and he is on his way, under guard, to this section of the country. t,Judgo Underwood of Eastern Virginia, has taken to Washington the papers relative to the indictment of Gen erals It. E. Lee, Corse, Ecll and Long street ; and Lilly Smith, Letcher, Case- nova, McVeigh, ' and somc forty othcr civilians, indicted for treason. ' j 6T The work upon the Capitol exten ion at Harrisburg is going on, and the foundation walls aic already vp. The extension ia made iu the rear-of the 'pres ent edifice, and is intended for committeo rooms on the first floor and for the . State Library on the second. Less than four years ao Gov Magrath of South Carolina declared that rather than be taken by the Yankees he would blow hid brains out 11a has been taken, but he still survives, from a cause which every one must imagine, to wit, that he has no brains to blow out. Governor Ilolden of North Carolina ha-! invited the leading Union men of the State to meet him in conference at Ilul eigh before tho promulgation of his forthcoming proclamation. ' ' ' t'. Geld and Silver .Vines of Nevada. During the past year additional discov coveries of gold and silver have been made in the region flanking, on the east ward, the mountain ranges of the Sierra Nevada, which renders it probable that Nevada, with its immcasc treasures of pre cious metals, is destined to exert an influ ence hitherto having no parclle! in the history of States. Of this legion, Bishop Simpson, of Philadelphia, says, in a discourse deliver ed in Music Hall, in the city of New York, a few days since, while speaking of his late visit to Nevada : "That wealth comprises that which the nations of the world have never yet con tended for. Were the debt ot our na tion to amount to 20,000,000,000 of dol lars, there is wealth enough there, when the debt is paid off, to give every who re turns from our battle-fields, muskets of silver in place of iron ; and when our iron clads come back into the harbor, j there shall be silver enough left to plate tnoso boats more heavily than they arc dow plated with iron. I do not speak from idle speculation, but I speak of 'hat wealth from observation and actual calculation. When in California I visit ed the mines, and I thought the time might como when they would be exhaust cd, but in the mines of Nevada there are no sucn indications visible. Xne more the mines arc worked the richer they yield. The extent of the ledges, contain ing the precious metals, no man has yet been able to measure. I will mention S'DS'C ,nsWHCe. gre you some idea of th inexhaustib!c supply. In what is tcrnQeJ the Pl ir mice. a s'nSIe wi, as h cal,ed tLcre. s fiftj-five feet in tbickne9a Uncs only at an angle of fivc dcZTes- Think of tho extent of gold. There is more gold in value than I :i . '. -i ..... Thousands of rebels arc now going copies of their homeward exhibiting tcrin I,is chivalric Pf behind a ccr- tificatc of fctilty to the Government he was goihg to destroy in tho wantonness of his strength and bravery. And the most persistent of these loud-mouthed traitors, now in the valley of humiliation, whine about being overpowered two to one, forgetting that they had threatened to drub us soundly, and teach us our place, one to five. Letter from Fortress Monroe. Fortress Monroe, June 9th 1SG5. j Friends in Juniata, After a silence of upwards of tw years, I again, resort to the pen to iuform you, concerning things in and around this place Well I suppose the first thing you want to know, it concerning the welfare of Jeff Davis, fomcrly President ot the would-be Southern Confederacy. We have him here safe enough; notwithstanding, the papers have him in Washington, and had him in before he was in. But I dispute that for I came off that guard this morn ing, ne and C. C. Clay were brought in on the 22nd of May, and placed iu separate casemates, where chances of es cape are not Iikc angels visits, "few and far between," for they are none at all. I will tell you how they are . caged and guarded and let you judge for yourselves, whether they have any chance to escape in any way whatever.- Their prisons arc casemates (arched rooms running through the walls from the inside to the outside of the fort), built of stone, brick and ce ment, and has a heavy stone wall dividing the casemates into two' apartments with iron grated doors, locked. The front or inside has two windows with : iron bars over, and a heavy door locked. The rear or outside of the walls has nothing but a port hole for a casemate howkzer,' with iron bar3 in it too. The floor is of brick wi:h a board floor on top. The room is about ten feet high, and the ' walls about twenty-five outside. The wall is a moat about eighty or ninety feet wide, and from eight to twelve feet deep with water, which rises aud falls with the tide. That is the prison. Now for the guard. There is a special guard of two officers of the guard, one sergeant of the guard, four corporals and seventy-two privates, inde- pendent of the main guard for the fort and water battery, and mount with knap sacks packed, canteens and haversacks on, undress uniform. Four guards are put outside of tie moat to allow no one to con gregate orj look with glasses or make signs or signals, four sentinels on top of the ramparts and parapets, four in front of the casemates, four about fifty feet out around the casemates to r.llow no one to come near, two and an ofacer of the guard in the first part of the casemate and two in the back part with Jeff. The Fame with Clay. When relief time comes, the officer of the day relieves the guard in side the casemates, and keeps the keys. At first the officer of the guard stayed in the whole twenty-four hours without re lief, but now four are detailed and reliev ed every six hours. The guards are not allowed to talk to Jeff. A casemate to the right and one to the left and one be tween the prisoners is occupied by the guards when they are off of post. The rooms aro nice and hare thade trees in front of them. No one but Gen. Miles, Gen. Ord and General llaileck has per mission to cuter the fort now without a pass from Gen. Miles, who has charge of the prisoners, aud whose duty it is to see that he is properly guarded, not even a Major General can pass without a pass. Wc stopped Howard, Srlioficld and others. Persons inside the garrison can pas in and out, and Jeff and Clay's families arc not allowed to enter. Jeffs baggage was one hand trunk, which was taken c.tre of ly live assistant Adjutant General for examination. One of the men who helped to bring oB the trunk, heard Mrs. Davis say she "didnt want to go south, she had uo place lo go and noth ing to on live and would starve. She want ed to go North." She had four children two girls and two boys. Ouc of the boys is cailcd Jeff. Old Jed's a little uneasy uow. The sentry walking on the floor dis turbs him. Hi sai 1 to tho oJwer of the guard " Your men at Andersonvillc got bad treatment. I believe they could not eat the corn bread. It did not agtce with them, give them Durhoua, &c," as if he only found it out a lhrt time ago and was surprised to hear it. lie said it in such au innocent S;iv. Conimi-nt ein ihU V - " - I leave with you about how they were treated. I see some of the boys have buttons they cut oil of - his coat while asleep. Wo have five fifteen inch smooth bore guns mounted ou the ramparts, each of which throws a round uall of" four hun dred and thirty to four hundred anJ thirty-five pounds as to density of metal. The Liueoln guu is one. They are now mounting a class of thirteen inch "una, eleven or twelve of them. Tho I'uion un is still mounted ou the beach outside of the tort- It is a thirteen inch rifle. There are nbout one hundred aud sixty guns, mounted on the terraplein or ram parti, besides about eighteen mortars. The water battery consists of forty-two forty two pounders which i outside the fort. There are being shipped to this place a lot of old guns from Richmond and some odd hioking ones anion:? them. Travel between llichmond aud the Xorth is brisk, every boat is loaded with ladies and gentlemen going to see friends and curiosities. They carry to the North all sorts of momentocs. The trip from Dal- more here is made in one night, from here iu the day time, thus affording an apportunity to see the sights along the river. The fare from Baltimore to llich mond is S7 or $7,50 to here about $3,50. The boats are of the first class and two or three lines running thremrh. As my letter is already Ions I will close. S. L. McALISTEK. IST The opposition papers, says the Lebanon Courier, are now greatly agitated about the Union party bciug broken up by internal dissensions. We recollect that they were similarly distressed last fall, and made similiar representations, but the election showed the truthfulness of their statcnic nt by running up something like half a million majority for the Unionists. As the gicat head of tnq Democratic par ty is now ia immincut danger of having his neck dislocated, and as the body of the party is now about caving in from galloping consumption, we suggest that a decent respect for public sentiment should induce these Copperhead editors to dry ap. . B"th England and France appear to fell considerable uneasiness concerning the disposition toward them of the Amer ican Government, aud the American peo ple. The language of the two govern ments is anything but defiant. Both arc now paying u? more compliments during one month than they have done during the whole four years of the war. Both represent their relations to the Govern ment of the United States as most ami cable, but endeavor in vain to calm tho apprehensions of the public. ATOTICE TO RELIEF AFPLU IN CA STS-Tbe following resolution was parsed by ibe Board of Kelief June 13, 1865. and ordered to be published in the papers of the County, to wit : RuolrtJ, TLat as the exigencies of the General Oovcrnmettt bare passed awaj with the enl of the rebellion, the duties of the Board of Kelief have also tome t4 an end. Notice is hereby given to all persons inter- ested that there will be no more tncltings of said board held. liy order of the' Board, JAMES S. COX, Fret. Attest A. J. GREEK, CVk. June 13, 180.-U TVrOTlCE. The School board of Fertnan--LN ugh Mliool district will meet on Saturday, June. iMth 180-',, at 2 o'clock at Jacob Wills in MitHintown, for the purpose of meeting all those who may hold receipts for aoncy, ad vanced to the bounty fund of said Township, fur the purpose of exempting said towonhip from drift. Said receipts to 'line frtra Feb ruary 18ti I, and to receive Touchers or said receipts. By order of the Board. JuneGtu'Ci. WM. GIVEN', Srcy. TESTATE NOTICE A Kilatr of Abraham Halttman dee'J. Notice is hereby given that letters of Admin isation on the estate of Abraham Ilalteman. late of Monroe township, deceased, have been granted lo the undersigned roiding in tha same township. All persons knowing thenr selves indebted to said cstae are revested id make to immediate payment and those hav ing claims will plc.ise present them duly au thenticated for settlement. CHRISTIAN HALTEMAN, ISAAC UALTEMAN, Administrator!. June III S0j-i'it. Ran Away Six Cents Reward. Iy AN away from tho subscriber in Spruce; Vllill township Juniata county on the 1-th of June John VV. Crawford an appren tice to the farming business. Said boy i ationt K years old, somewhat stoop vhoul dered ami about five feet high. AH persons arc noiilied not to harbor or :rut him un my account aal will pay no debts of his ontrucling. The above reward will be paid for his re turn but no (hanks. J. F. G. LONG. June 1 1;u. ut TWORTi.Vr TO TiX-PAlTR 1 XU COI.LEC roll. Hy the 7th icetton of the Act of Assembly, ISfil, it ia nwlc obligatory upon the Treasurers of the several counties nt t'onimnnweallh to pay over, annually, to the State Treasurer, the whole amount of Stale taxes due, by the FIKST Il.VY OF AL'GI'ST. under a penalty to tax payers of having FIVE PER CENT, added lo am. Mint chnrged auint them in tho Duplicates. The collectors are hereby requir ed to proceed immediately in the collection of TAXES, nnd demand from each tax-payer ia hij duplicate th amount so charged arainst him. so that the Treasurer may com ply with the law. All persons who fail to pay over their Stale taxes, by the FIKST OF ALGL'ST NEXT, the Collectors are authori zed to add FIVE FEU CKNT. to the taxes of all delinquents. Payments must be ma le by Col!ccors to the Conniy Treasurer or before the 51st of July next. By order of the Commissioner?. June 1 td A- J. GREEK, fieri. JUST RECEIVED. I"' of Rundell s Konsr. roniirs and PCI.I.EV'S complete. They are of the teit style and will lift from I SIX TO EIGHT IIl'NDRED TOCNDS I ai fne draught. I ir. Patterson by For sale at the cheap store J. B. M TODD. .Mayil. FARM AT PUBLICJALE. THE undersigned Administrator of Estate of Jshn Luntz, will offer for sale at pub lic outcry by order of the Orphans' Court, on the premises in Delaware township, Juniata County. Pa., about two and one half miles North West of Thompsontown. on SATURDAY. AUGUST 1JTII. !?. A tract of laud situated as above stated and bounded by lands of S. O. Evans. David Walker's Heirs. Margaret Stinson and others containing about Acres, About 65 acres of which are cleared and un der cultivation, the balance being tiinheituud. There is on the premises LOG HOUSE and LOG BARN, an Apple Orchard and fino Spring of Water, TERMS: One-half of the purchase money to be paid on the confirmation of the sale by tne Court and the other half on the first of April next to be secured by judgment. S W.K to commence at 1 o'clock, P. of said day when attendance will be given by the undersigned, from whom any additional information may be obtained priur t the sale. SAMUEL J. KURTZ. May Cist 'Co-Is. PRIVATE SALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE. THE subscriber residing in Fayette town ship, Juniata County, Pa,, offers at pri vate sale the large and valuable farm known as Thomas Kimcr's, dee'd, situated one mile east of MoAUUtenrille, nine east of Mifflin, five miles north of Thompsonstown, contain ing IH7 acres, 140 cleared, the balance well timbered. Adjoining lands of Joseph Lon,g and others, and having thereon erected a largo STONE HOUSE AND BANK BARN Stone Spring House, the water running in the Spring House and thence in the barn yard, never failing water, new hog house and two brick ovens and other necessary buildings, a good apple orchard of grafted fruit in good bearing condition, cherries, pears and other fruit : also s good lime stone quarry well opened. The laud has been well limed and in, good order. For further information call on the undersigneds JOnX KINZER, or MRS. MARTHA KINZER. May 24th . residing on the farm. HOUSE AND LOT FOR SALE. TUB undersigned offers for sale a valuable house and lot in Thompsontown, Juniata County Pa. The House is a good Frame wU a good Kitchen attached and having on the Lot a good Stable, with carriage shed, and othcr out buildings. There is also a well "f water at the dour. Ir. FREDERICK SORC, mar:!Ut-or.