Auntingbon WILLIAM IMEWSTER , i Editor.. SAM. G. WHITTAKER. S iVedneeday Morning, September 23,1857. "Once more our glorious banner out Unto the breeze we throw ; Beneath its folds with song and shout We'll charge upon the foe." FOE QOYIBXOR, DAVID WILMOT, OF BRADFORD COUNTY. EOM CANAL COMMISSIONER, WILLIAM MILLWARD, OF PHILAD6LPHIA, FOR STJPREMS MOEN, JAMES VEECIII4 Or FAYETTE COUNTY. JOSEPH J. LEWIS, Or MINSTER COUNTY. FOR SENATOR, Gen. WM. H. KOONTZ, of Somerset co. FOR ASSEMBLY, LEVI EVANS, of Tod Township. YOR PROTHOXOTARY, TOR REGISTER 6 RECORDNR, '.:NRY GLAZIER, of Huntingdon. FOR TREASURER, FRANKLIN 11. LANE, of Brady Tow'p, FOR COMMISSIONER, Go W. UTTERS, of Franklin township . FOR DIRECTOR OF TOR POOR, PERRY MOORE, of Morris township TOR AUDITOR, plum D. STEVEN% of Cass township. A Political Freebooter. We have said that for his sake we would fain leave the public and private character of Sam uel S. Wharton, to the quiet indignation of our fellow•citizens. We have no pleasure in pro. ducing the dark catalogue of his misdeeds, ws have no inclination to agitate the mind of the public, we have no desire to injure in any way this aspirant, but the voice of duty commands, the interest of society demands, the priceless honor of our party entreats us to proceed, and - - we must obey. When a man will persist ir. thrus tines himself before the %A - Wit* i grr i f acter, so as to judge whether with safety they can trust their interests in his hands. Public men, we are told, become public property, and on this ground we claim a license to view the political and private actions of Mr. Wha, ton, because ho insists on declaring himself a pub lic man, and indeed he has become notorious. No man should dabble in polities whose career has not, politically, been et.nsistent and honest, whose private character is not untarnished, sod who cannot proudly point to the past as a Sec. ommendation for his future good conduct.— No man should receive the suffrages of a free and honest community who is unwilling to have his private and political character, his actions, and his antecedents reviewed before the public. But wo have a still stronger reason to urge in support of this right. Mr. Wharton has attack ed the private characters of some of our most respected citizens, and paraded their private at fairs in the public prints, because, loving their party and the interests of decent society, they have refused to support the presumptuous claitne of this ingrate and reptile, and have expressed their preferences for thathonest man and Chris. tian gentleman, Levi Evans—a gentleman in. capable of performing a cowardly action, or of abetting iu any manner iu treading upon civil law, and whose cheek would blanch and whose heart would thrill with horror at tho recital of deeds which have often disgraced humanity. We have already shown from facts connected with his public history, why holiest taxpayers cannot consistently support Samuel S. Wharton for office. Let us review the ground. After twenty years of intrigue, through and by the means of measures which only Samuel Who: , ton could adopt, he is elected to the Assembly. How did his legislative action merit or meet the views of his constituency ? Let the fact that he was almost unanimously rejected by the County Convention which assembled the next year, answer that question. Not one bill was presented at that session, that Samuel S. Wharton did not alike forsake his party and his friends to support, whenprroci to himself would arise from such a course. We defy him or hie friends to deny it. He misrepresented the coon. ty and has been instrumental in passing bills which have plundered our citizens out of thou sands of dollars. Need we refer as proaf of this, to the bill for the erection of a bridge over the Juniata river, to accommodate one or two individuals in this borough, and which has al ready defrauded and cheated the honest tax. payers of the county out office thousand dol lars ! ! Need we refer to his strenuous efforts to pass a bill which would have ruined the farms and homesteads of hundreds of our hard-wor. king citizens, to accommodate the pocket ofone wealthy individual ? Need we refer to his sol itary Whig vote in support oftbe Locoloco Ap• propriation Bill ? Need we refer to the thous and and one other acts of similar nature. which have stamped upon his brazen forehead, pot Croon and ingrate? We but offend your mem ory, hare working man, in alluding to what is so well known to you. You know that your in terests were sacrificed, your rights as American freemen spit upon, when you petitioned for "a !Ares! of grievaneev," for the abolishment cr, enactments which plundered you of your hard. earned money. You know that our noble old county, so long free from the dead weights of debt, has become empty of treasure, and you know to whom and what you own all this. We appeal to you as sensible men, whether we may not expect a worse state of affairs in re electing S. S. Wharton Has he improved as a politi• ciao, as a citisen or a man, or does the char acteristic dishonesty, deception and deceit ran• kle in his bosom? If so, will not be if elected, repeat the same offences. But no sincere man can vote for Mr. Wharton and remain true to his party and consiatent in his declaration of hostility to Border Ruffian Locofocoism. Let us state the facts. In the year 1853, Col. Samuel S. Wharton was a guer rilla, and placed himself in the hands of our enemy, the Locofoco Party, to be used io de feating a regularly nominated Whig ticket— every man on which was respectable. He did at that election vote an open and entire Loco• foco ticket, and boasted himself as good a La. cofoco as any man in the county ! Since that time he has sought, as we shall hereafter show, a nomination at the hands of the Locofocos of this county. And did he not three years ago when Alexander Mullin of Cambria county was nominated as the American candidate for the Stale Senate, openly oppose his election ; and did he not ask a Locofoco nomination, to defeat Mullin ; and did he not urge his friends to vote for Cresswell ? All this we know, nor is this all we know of his political apostacy, or rather his political charlatanry. Mr, Wharton, if ever he voted a ticket opposed to Locofocoism, done it from policy, not from principle. He was a good party man so long as promotion and profit loomed up in the distance, but the moment that disappeare4, he was, in legal parlance, non eat incentus ! His ninth, is. givtme office or give me another party; and this accounts for the in. consistency of the man. Principle with him is of less importance than money ! Last fall we find him still tampering with our enemies, ready to sacrifice the party for political gain, and depending upon smooth• tongued hypocricy to aid him in the completion of his schemes. To follow up his political history, we find him on the very day the Convention which nornina ted him assembled, threateningly declaring to the President of that Convention, that "unless this here Convention nominates me, I will be nominated by one to-morrow," meaning by the Locofoco Convention, which, it will be remem bered, did actually meet the next day. With this record against him, showing clear• ly to the mind of every Twin who is not blinded by prejudice, that Samuel S. Wharton is in deed and tact a Locofoco, how we ask, can any voter who is unwilling to become the dupe of political scoundrels and corrupt demagogues and plunderers, and who loves his party, vote for or in any manner support this unholy aspi rant What will be the result if we continue time after time to impose upon our honest vo ters and do violence to the laws of society in nominating and electing such creatures ? Is it reasonable to suppose that our honest ..a..........r0nmer - dbsta power, affb who, regardless of very consideration of gratitude, forget them as soon as an election is secured 7 No. We tell you friends there is such a thing as carrying imposition beyond the powers of human erdurance. Itilwas this that fired, with patriotism the breasts of our sires who fought, and bleed, andifinally triumphed over British *oppression, and it is in defence of this principle of opposition to oppression and imposition, that now fires the breast of every "son of the sires" and leads him to oppose Samuel S Wharton. The people have determined to rise in their majesty, and once and forever stop this unholy scheming, and show to the world they have rights which must be respected, that they will not forever bear the yoke of oppression, and submit to corruption and fraud. But no honest man, no Christian gentleman who respects the laws of society, can support Mr. Wharton from considerations of character. It pains us to be compelled to touch on this point, and fait would the band of charity let drop the curtain o'er the humiliating spectacle, this last sad scene in the drama, but it is forced upon us ; our duty as law-loving citizens de mands it ; that. duty is imperative, and we can not however much we might desire, evade it. Where Justice calls %is cruelty to save. When deeds which crst in kindred burning lay, Rise frontless, and insult tlie eye of day ; When Hymen veils his hallowed fi• cr, And white robed Chastity with tears retires ; When plicate faith and public trust are sold, And traitors barter honesty fur gold, , we dare expose corruptions, regardless alike of r the villain's censures or the assassin's dirk.— , To return to our subject. Mr. Wharton is not unknown ; wool? to God he was not so will known in the history of the affairs of our county. We are guilty of an endorsal of all the mis. deeds he has ever planned or executed, in elec ting him to office, with et full knowledge of them staring an in the face, and should we re endorse them by a reelection, the fires of wrath of an outraged God may be kindled. We have no personal animosity against Wharton, but we have a respect for society, and a desire to pro. mote the prosperity of our party. Our opposi tion to him, therefore, does not arisefromper sonal or private motives, but is exercised for the public good. His defeat would in a mean' are vindicate the honor of our county, and it would prove that decency and honor have yet a friend in the voice of our honest citizens. Aside from this man's political debaucheries, misdeeds and imperfections, then, we say there is enough in his private life and dealings to sever him from the political connexion with good men. If pity did not restrain on, we would recite just here an unparalleled catalogue of errors, unsurpassed in the history ofsny oth er man who lays claims to respectability. Some of these are ngt.enknown to yon, citizens of Huntingdon 4nty, and knowing them, (now come, like honest men think of it,) can you°. dome them 7 Can you aid in placing a man in the position of your lawmaker who has no respect for the lawn of your Commonwealth ? Who believes the assassin's dagger and the coward's bullet to be better arguments than "law and order?" Yet we can prove this the eremi f his gentlemen, from facte. Affer try: ing every scheme his immense intellect could its coffers to buy his vote. Hu is hottest and versatioe it, that church. DL. Evens Lou eon devise, and using every art his prolific brain patriotic, and will vote right "first, last and all sistent member of the Methodist Church, and could form to bring us hit° a support of his the time." We therefore eall upon every Amer. unlike his malignant troducer, does net "wear measures, and failing in all, with churaiteristic jean, every Republican and every honest Deno the livery of Heaven, to oerve the devil in."— brutality he attempts to force us into his sup oeratt who wishes to keep politics and li.'gitla His r,ligitin dries not teach him to formtke an port by an appeal to physical force, by threats tion pure, to rally to his support. In dien4 s i offpring, or commit wrong acts. or to drink of personal violence, and has had the cowardly you will have performed your port towards de u,iliolesonie beverage, orfiews falsehoods, or insolence to inform us by a,special messenger. !eating those who are seeking to euttry their inthi the ear of decency with firs. I3ut it teom that, "if we continued in this here thing, there mom by Britter mid Corrupt o,t. It o. hes hits to hive his Coil, Ilk Country and fel would be a bludy time." These are the simple hi g h time we sh told ~eu to it, tli. , hiw-emu, to be upright in his dealings, COlldid facts, outrageous as they may appear. And er have tent in his profession. . . . . yet, fellow•eitizens, this is the man who asks your votes, to be your law maker I This is the man to whom you intuit surrender up your manhood, and support in violation as we hove shown, ofyour duty to God, yourselves and your Look before you Leap. Fellow-Citisens of Huntingdon county, you are about exercising our of the highest preugt, tives known to an American freeman ; a glori. ous right, purchased by the life-blood of our heroic forefathers. As men knowing the im• metope value of this precious privilege we call upon you to consider the consequences ere you act. You are about electing a person to represent you in the legislative halls of your Common• wealth; to preside over your interests and make your laws. This office is an important one, and especially is it so at the present time, as :natters of importance will come before the next session of the Legislature which are of the greatest interest to the people. For years past, the evidence has been unmistakable, that bribery and corruption were making way in• to our Legislative Halls. That bills, monstrous in their character, found supporters through the potent and corrupting influence of MOs. I We are warranted in making this assertion, from facts which have come under our own observation. You should therefore be careful in the exercise of your mighty power to elect no man to this office who can be purchased for a price, and who would forsake your interests, to fill his pockets with money. • Our main purpose, at this time, is to call at tention to the fact that money is now being need, in this county and over the State, to in. fluence the people in the selection of their Rep. resentatives 1 That this is true, no one who is paying attention to the political movements in the several counties, can doubt. And why is this so? We shall answer. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company wants several important bills passed by our next Legislature, to obtain greater power, and a firmer sway over the 1 Consmonivealth, and among then, one to abolish the three mill lax on articles passing over the road. The release of this Company from this tax, would be a surrender of about five millions of dollars per annum Ly the State, a direct robbery of the Treasury, and the means of ad ding more weight to the already over burdenel shoulders of our tax-payers, in the shape of ad ditional taxes, There is also a miserable abor• tion of a company, called the Sunbury S; Erie Raikette.POßAPs° to l Wili t ilTnie nt:8641M0,T,7r its road, and its agents ore now busily at work aiding, by money arid tithe wise, the eleetion or' such men as will best answer their vi!.• rir.s n.: These corporations have detertnne, . . . will succeed if mons will Iteelllll l ,, 'jest. They huve already succeed,,) i the nominations to suit themes 1, •. counties, where a large majority ..., are known to be opposed to the!. :,•. ; ~ achetnes. How was this done? 5,,,, openly charged by many good :.. • coming the virtue of the delegate., o; the le , plc. Connected with these roads are scion ill political tricksters, who have seen the Woe., money has hod on Legislators, and hove them selves been using it for years to liccompliA their vile ends, and they are now attemi.tin,z. the bold gauze of buying up the members of tit, next Legislature! This is a question higher than any mere party question. Every honest. man is the community should see to it that his rights are not bartered and sold like common . merchandise. If the body politic once becomes so corrupt that a man er a corporation having money to lavish, can buy the occupiers of one of the highest political positions in the State, influencing our State Legislature by these cor• rapt means, the rights and liberties of our pee• ple are gone, and we may as well shroud the boasted "virtue, liberty and independence" of our nationality, and inscribe on .r banner, as our national motto,—Corruption and Bribery. The candidates before the people of this county, have taken position on these issues. The Locofoco candidate, Houtz, has refused to express his sentiments publicly, than virtually acknowledging himself in favor of the objects and aims of the Railroad Corporations. Be• sides he is nominated by the influence of the agent of these Companies, and is therefore the supporter of these plundering schemes. Mr. Wharton, the nominee of another body of men, stands equally pledged in favor of carrying out the designs of the two corporations. That his election would be a triumph for them, cannot be doubted. Look at the proof. The day the Convention assembled that nominated him, he declared to the President of that Convention that "if this here don't nominate me to day, I'll be nominated to•morrow,' meaning by the Laccifocos. Thus proving that he was entirely sound on the questions for Anderson & Co.— But we have still more proof. It can be pro. von beyond a peradventure, that Col. S. S. Wharton has received from John P. Anderson or his agent, as a loan, seven thousand dollars, in sec nal mortgage boucle of the Pennsylvania Railroad Cowboy, and this we presume is to be the amount of money expended in treating the independent freemen. We demand from our fellow•citizens a careful and unprejudiced examination of these facts,—for facts they are, and cannot and dare not be controverted. "Eternal vigilance," we are told, "is the price of liberty." Let the people, therefore, be vigi• lant. Let them see to it, that they are not tricked into the support of candidates for the Legislature who would barter away their rights. With LEVI EVANS, the people of this Representative district are perfectly safe. The Raiboad Company has not wane, enough in --"Utir Legislat,.• Disgraced b% ruidd.iroin the 6111, Frtteuten, arise, put on your the icieje,iy 11l your roc., . • feet the ungodly system a hich i,• I you in 'a va,sulage vile. I h,• triter, bind you or, "forged by the tiara or ow tap• live alone" Believe it, you have but to net, act energetically, act iininedately end act to gether. In the mime of all honesty, in the name of honor, religion mid justice, strike fur the right. Remember, that whilst yoo Our a duty to party, you owe a higher and nobler du ty to God, Justice and Truth. On your nuts', fellow.citizen, may depend the success or defeat of principles of Right—your vote may produce consequences of momentous character. American Republicans, we appeal to you to support Mr. Evans. Mr. Wharton hes no claims on you. He is no American, no Repub. lican. "He went out /rout us, but he is not of us." Had there been no other candidates in the field but lie and Houtz, the consequence would have been the election of Houtz. We tell you this in all sincerity ; it is true, and we ask you to believe it. lEe had nothing person ally to do with the placing of Mr. Evans on Messes. our ticket—it was the action of honest dale. I have rend the Jour./ of this weak careful gates assembled in this borough, who despise I ly through, and think you must have got pout dander up" rightly this time. Now I love corruption. We beseech you to examine this spunk of the right kind, and must say that matter, pause and reflect. Let nothing person- I think yours is perfectly right in this ease. al enter into it to bias your judgment, or cocci True, they may any that by supporting Mr. rupt your understanding; think calmly and ie Evans we will s od ivide our strength flint Houtz seriously. Suppose Samuel Wharton is elected crisis a l m e i r e e o ß so u m t o w t litt o e then w t i o i Y d put the -,-what has the party gained? What have you "evil day off Everybody ithows Sum Whar rgained? Nothing. 1111% election would meet ton to be a corrupt politician, a man (minus the with as hearty endorsalkom our enemies as intellect) to make him a respectable Legisla- Mr. Houtz's. If he is defeated—the party will t t o fro r.B rn am utsnpfose elect him this fall to kee i Locos. Then whet? We will be purified, the honor of our county vindicated, have him next fall, of course. And then what? our glorious banner, now trailing ignobly in Why, for the sake of consistency, we will have the dust, would flutter proudly in the breeze, to follow the precedent. And what then ? We haveh he c a n 'tt, m e n ti , m an u i fe . r , the 7 t e 1 0 1 a r t n a l ing annoyances of this leec't. and we would be forever freed front the pester hcillgshnicll • to 'l else. And th en Fellow-citizens, has that "still small voice" what ? Let . echo answer. The truth is, if we of conscience been crushed and silenced in would ever be free from corrupt rulers, we must your bosoms? If not, let it appear in your etrifce now . Wh yslut ze i '•lie supinely on our voting agai n " cuoningt treachery. hppersicy hope, until o ni a ' r gi t!:t ' etti t ies (eUr',ll;yP)otitc"lainn.otr) awl crime. have bound us h an d null liat.'' The crisis is itir ',noble, and why mit, meet it Is Methodism a Crime? now? "Shall we gather strength by irresolu• Icon and inaction ?" Shall we acquire the Don't startle, reader, at the bold question. menus,,f resistance (to corruption) by We ask it merely for information, as there swallowing it this time, and expecting some I are those who have and are making opposition Thing better the next? No I that would he ri to the dogmas of the Methodist Church, a 4 „,0. vetting the chains already Ibrge L d. P ification for office I Old Joint Weiley, that sies ssss• good old man, once said, "no man is acconnta ble to man for his religious belief, and therefore no man should be persecuted by his fellow, for could he arise front the tomb that has so lots; held his sacred dust, and see a• d lwar opposi• ti.e, to the taith he pre.t•'l.ol, he believed and :, , , ~~..,.~,1~-m., ti.,~ ~ i: ~... i ❑l-u t t, t:,.t • )1 , • !,•.. • I ~• rho heaveirlioni r the Filthy arene, • • . 11" e have t•t•o(I el' 111111i4r., Chureli being driven from their n Son t ern !unite, we have read of the, • •. • • fed, tarred and feat hOrell, bea.en, • • , their pulpits. stoned, and even in I v inhuman toots of ICentucky. er slave .holding States, for preaching "Chris, and hint crucified" to the oppressed and isior. We have rend of their sufferings fur the sake of God and their faith, in those senti•barharotts communities, but we confess we were astonish. ed, amazed, to read an inuendo thrown out in a newspaper published in a civilized communi• ty, in this State of Pennsylvania, calculated to awaken the prejudices of the people against a candidate for office, because he was a member of the Methodist church I We are now alluding as every ono will perceive, wlfo has read the ar ticle in question, to an article in the last Hun tingdon American, in which it is asserted, that the friends of Levi Evans aro electioneering for him on the grounds of his Methodism ; an assertion as false as it is treacherous. The wri ter of that article, knew, when he penned it, that it was incorrect, and his object in writing it is too palpable to be misunderstood or lids apprehended. By declaring Wharton to be a Presbytenan, and using the name of Mr. Evans in the connection he does, he hoped to make capital for Mr. Wharton. by appealing to relig. loos prejudice. But the object is too palpable, the scheme too flimsy, and the consequence will be a terrible rebound of public feeling am. ong men of all religious denominations, Pres byterians as well as Methodists, that will bury these dastardly plotters forever, beneath the stern displeasure and indignation of an outra ged canmunity. . . We do detest this abominable practice of dragging religion into politics. It is wrong in every particular, and should meet the (limy , proval of every good citizen. But where it is forced upon us, we can not and will not skulk it. If Mr. Evan. in a Aletlindist—w his tallier and giandlitther, his great grandfather, his re lations and kindred fur generations buck, were Methodic% if his brother 'and his uncle at the present time are Methodist ministers, does flint disqualify him for office ? Are men to be pre scribed because they are not Presbyterians, or Lutherans, or Baptista, and because May are MeihudietaP Let the people answer. if this is to be the issue, let the plotters beware. Let Un judge a man not from the particular church he may belong to, but from a consiguut Chrirtßin profemlun and upright "walk and con- If these man built to make political capital itt of the raet that Levi Evans iv a Mcgtodi,vt, :her will he wolully mistaken. That doctrine, truth, proclaimed by old Wesley, and other shining lights, is too deeply embeded in the affections nod enshrined in tha hearts of too many of uld Huntingdon County's best cit izens, to become unpopular through the silly ravings of a piratical sheet or au addle-pated demagogue. What do the good citizens of the county think of this menstrous movement? Shall our Methodist brethren be expatriated because they are Meilindiats? Shall a disqualification for office he "he is a Methodist ?" What has this particular denomination done to be thus p lithely insulted ? Let us appeal to you as Christians and men, whether Levi Evans is unworthy your support simply because he is a member of this church. Your answer we hope, will bo given at the ballot-box. And Still They Come. Letter from Springfield. Sept. 20, 1857 From Dire of our beet citizens, a ilethotilyl, we have received a splendid communication, relative to the vile attack unottlliat. able argument, and ni t t appear in our next is- Otto. Look nut toe "Senora.," Frt. vat igh, gvntivimin we have received a r, illopro‘ i..g eordinlly of our course, tied in Attenl-tt, or the re.odution presented by • • s 'rtl t nt the meeting on the 4th th to it the one on t , • We were :titling the Bat space, will not pertnit more than one wore litter now. Here is n pr:vnto letter re . eeived from one of the hest nod most promi nent America. in the township of Porter.— Our friend must pardon us formaking extracts from it : September 19th, 1857. Mksonts.Eorrous.—• ' • • I think you did perfectly right in refusing to support Wharton. I received an extra from the "American" office, urging the support of Wharton, on the ground of defeating the Locorreos ; but, if the Ameri can party can produce no better men for office than 8. S. Wharton, I for ore will not support it. The delegate's from this township that vote to nominate Wharton, know• that he was very un popular hero, rind that if it were known they would support him, they would not have been sent as delegates ; consequently, his name was not mentioned. There are quite a number of both Americans and Republicans who will not touch Wharton. They have come to the con clusion, that if base political intriguers will force t hemselves upon the parties to which they be long, they will not vote for them, even If their refusing should he the means of electing a Lo col'oco. I regret very much that an honest, ca pable man was not nominated, as I have cer tainly no sympathy with the co-called Democra cy. 1 hope you will continua to oppose all such men as Wharton, both out of respect for your selves as men, and your paper. Wharton need not blame the Journal exclusively, for his &fora as I heard many of our best citizens say they wool d not vote for him as soon as nominated. Yours Respectfully, Wharton vs. Gwin 27th December. Pa% S. S. WHARTON Summons ease serv ed. Mr. Wilson ap pears, and continued to April, cont'd Au gust, cont'd Nov. con t'd January 1838, con t'd April , cont'd Au- I gust, cont'd Novm'r, coned January, 1839, coned April , cout'd August, cont'dNov'r, coned. ALEXANDER GWIN. Wilson, Taylor, Campbell. Will Messrs. Wilson, explain what the above ni tire shall,. compelled nex Taylor, or Campbell scans? If they do not, :t week. Syr. The Conan aloe appoiated by the Grass hopper Falls Convention of the Free State par ty in Kansas, has limed un address io the peo. plc of the United States, giving a narrativ e of the present condition of affairs in the territory, and the reasons actuating them in their resolve to vote ut the October election. It expresses but little here of fair dealing or 'elevens. There is n special clime addressed to the people of Minsouti, setting forth the state or things, and telling the Missourians to retrain tram another invasion, unless they desire a hluody and pro tracted war. The address concludes. with art exhortation to4ll the people of K naafi to Coto at the election, 1 4 ;) cncit Agtts. A ehiel's antanq (akin' notes. ,Ind Pith, prent it. Mar "Fires" are now comfortable . Crabbed out—Tho noisy little man. la his breeches—The "handsome member' rat - Our thanks to Miss -, fur that halal :, ma baguet. sEr. There has benn no material change-in the market cinch our last issue. A Qnrstion.—Will an honest man support Wharton, seeing Anderson is his right-hand man? Der Particular attention is invited to the advertisement in another column of Mamma? Academy. In demand—Overcoats mat winter quarters on Sunday last. The "Perthonater" was down "about a feet." Cad into the shade.—Tom llyer and Yan kee Sullivan by the pugilistic "member." Ho can take the hat. Query.— Nliere did the "handsome mem ber" get his strength? Not from thi barn burners, we hope. Silly—To talk of "persecuting" a man who would untertuke to stifle the public opinion by his superior strength. Rick—The "handsome member" election. eering and representing himself ns a member of the Church. Great Jehosaphat New penny post.—The "handsome member" has established a line for peddling circular, Ho is on the "trot" all hours of the day. Beconzing sick of their folly—The few tools who support Wharton. Better take some de mi-john pills—they'll ease the stomach. Had better keep Cool.—The individual who threatened to make a "blud".y time. Wo have not much faith in death bed rupentances. Didn't set things on "Fire."—The Shanghai Whartonite of the lower end. Keep cool, son ny, you don't know what may turn up or born up. Wanted to know.—lf the "handsome mem ber," if elected, will introduce a bill making insurance companies responslale for uu-acei dontalfires. dfsr We understand that some paper is pas. sing around to which names are being solicited. Wonder if it's a subscription for the relief of calamities from fire g - A New Trayedy.—We understand, that, if a sufficient amount can be raised, a new tragedy to be called the "Loudin Inn" or "Bludy Sam," is to be brought 0,,t soon. Bah I—Tho _American calla our placing Mr. Evans' name at.our mast-head, "getting up a baby like Mrs. Cunningham." Well, if it is, we never left it at another man's door-step. That's 80. That's 80.—If a certain plunderer would give a barrel of flour every week to every widow in Pennsylvania, it wouldn't counterbal ance one of his bad deeds. Thorn's brimstone Dar Some scamp is peddling clothes film' the county, and represents himself an agent of our friend Roman, up street. Be is nu hnpos. tor and the people should be on their guard, an Roman hits no travelling agent. Ifeir'New subscribers to the . .fournnl' for the week ending September 21d:--Rev. J. P. Per ter, Rey. John W. Buckley, Col. Ralph Bysert, George Menu, Peter Lyon. AodS. B. Jenkins, P. ll.sillmitter , and six rid, l ie camniden. Ld her rip.—From his it • supposed that the "hundsokile .:.• •:: • • ing to horsewhip all who are 1 • • . • He'll scarcely get around before • ,:! Ho it, Samuel—you've gut to hold your hut. , Will soon appear,—Tlio dying confession of an individual from this place, who breathed his last on a steatnboat on one of the western ri vers some three or four years ago, made to the Captain of the boat. It implicates a certain individual in this neighborhood, and Will appear teat week. Look out for breakers. Cnntemptible.—The insinuation to the last American, put in by Anderson, to the effect that he was instrumental in getting a situation for a brother, and we were ungrateful. Wan. der if he forgets 80100 little favors •sre dune, once spots a time, which he has never thought of mentioning. The flour-barrel is full now, however, and oven-wood plenty. "I have licensed them to lie about me."—A. W. Benedict. This is the nine who has always made stick strong pretensions toward Religion, and is in fact a member of the Church. Yet he has tin boldness to come out in the newspapers am "license" people to about me." What I beautiful professor. Is tows—We understand that ono or twc members of that Committee were in town on Friday last, and have hired a couple of poseys to stump the county for Wharton. One of the men is out for oilier, and this will afford him an opportunity for making impressions. The other, no doubt, will meet with a hearty recep tion from the poor working men or the county, whom, he says, "have no rigitt to own cows." Mark these fellows, friends. Beautiful—We were shown a very beautiful oil painting on Saturday last, the artist being a young lady of Walker township. It repre sents a large building, a mill, wo believe, in flames, and in the distance; the figure of a man on a white horse, riding with fearful speed. It is a clover picture, and wo understand our young friend intends exhibiting it at Our County Fair. The fire appears very natural, and you cull almost smell the smoke. Funny—To hear such men as A, B. Arno/d, Sammy Wharton, Johnny Gnash and Professor Bar, talk of the Journal aiding Locofocos. The first two named .individowils" opposed the regular nominee of the Whig party in 1853, when Wharton came out as a volunteer midi. date, for the purpose of electing the Democra tic choice, Andrew Fridley, Esq., and A. Bene dict itrnold supported bin, lustily. Gnash and Bar last full voted for G ratios Miller, the Lo cofoco candidate for Sheriff, Such men talk ing of aiding Locofocos indeed. Better be come honest yourselves, before you preach up morality to others. Pull the mill-lieunis.out of your own eyes, before you talk of motes. That $7OOO Loan. NE I' . I' IT BM iIE THE PEOPLE, that Samuni S. Wharton lan received from John I'. Anderson, or his agent, ns a loan, SEVEN THOUSAND DOLLARS in second mortgage honds of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. Honest, upright citizens of Huntingdon County, remember this and vote accordingly. arr i C At the Exchnnge Rotel, 00 the 6th inst., by Rev. O. 0. McClean, Mr. GEO. W. REED to Miss 11E1w:cm E. Doris, of Yellow Springs, Illoir county. NEV ADVERTISEMENTS, MILNWOOD ACADEMY. Male and Female. THE NEXT SESSION of this Institution will open the last Wednesday of Octobet. The instruction in all the branches will be thorough and systematic. We want it distinct• ly understood that we wish no one to npply for admittance whose moral character is not good. Students will have the privilege of boarding in the Institution or in private families. This Institution is located at Shade Qnp, Hunting. don county, on the mail route between Mt. Union station on Penna. It. It. and Chambers. berg. For catalogue and further' particulars address, W. 11. WOODS, Piu.triL Sept Y 3; 3 .•:it. THE WINTER WSW WIN OF Tllll SIIIRLEYSRURG FEMALE SEMINARY Will comm... Monday. Nov. 2, and conti nue lire months. Terms—For hoard and Dig lish tuition, per session, $62,50; French and music extra. For farther particulars apply to J. B. NIDI2ER,. . _ Shirloysburg, 5ept.2:1;67.-6t. ThinCipal. 100 YOUNG MEN of pleasing address can realize from $5O to $lOO per month.— This it a hire chance seldom offered to those that wish to go in business for themselves.— Full instruction'', with the article for commen cing bushiest, will be sent on.receipt of sl. Address STEPHEN'S MANUFACTURING Co., Box No. 128 Broadway Post 0111?8 0 N. 'Y ~.„ I'. S.—Editors inserting the above three time, and sending the copies of the papers to Company, will receive the article gratis. Auditor's Notice ri o nodersined auditor, appointed by the Orploins'.. Court of Huntingdon County, to distribute the balance remaining in the handy of Thomas Weston and Michael Weston, Ex ecutors of WiTam Wester. deed., amongst those entitled thooto, hereby Ones n. tlce, that he will attend for the purpose Q r ma king said diAribution. on Saturday the 24th day of October next at ono o'eltick P. M. ut his office in the borough of If unt!sigdon, when and where all persons baring claims upon said fund must portent theta to the abditor, or be thereafter barred from claiming any l al, 011N - ItE - Ali, thereof. Sept. I F:457.-4t EXECUTORS'SALE OF REAL ESTATI By virtue of authority contained in the Lbr will and teetunt eta of Dotttor Peter Shoenher gcr deed., the undersigned, his acting eNect, tors will see at public sale, on Saturday the 17th day of O bo e , t of j i n n! ot t , c , rite farm lothe known by-the name of the Lang farm Nitwit., on the Globe Hun and in the Valley of Shaven Creek, Huntingdon County, containing One Iltunked and Twenty-Two acr,, and Eighty- Two perches mike or lean, upon which ano arc, tad a Stone Farm Home, in Fulling Mill (on nt excellent water power) and other Laildin gs „ n 1 ini t .'s°, ',aunts. Saint tract 6 .41, to contain a Vein or (TOO OTC. Terms of Sale.—One third of the purehme money to he rid in ca.•h on the execution and delivery of n deed of cunveya tee, h 1 the axe,- moos, the remainder in two equal instalments at the expiration of one and two yours front the into or the deed, with lawful interest there on from suid date. Piny dollars of the hand money to be paid immediately on the dose of the sale. J. GEO. MLLES, ICGAEL BEERY. ming exc'rs of Dr. Shoonberger, deed. Sept. lath, 18.57.—at. FARM FOR SALE. rimE suliFerib, being desirous or removing to j the west, °Wets his farm situated in West tp., on the road leading from Petorsburgto Alavey's Fort, for.sale. His lam adjoins laud of William Armstrong, Montt! P. Stewart, and others, containing about 265 Acres, About 170 acres cleared, and in a stud .Mate of cultivation. The balance is well timb,red. imrov are n i. . sIF Lo Tho g. Hopuse ,ements and a small ; ' d'',; -. - ; 1 ; Tenant MO° a new bank ,g ":„"'t barn 80 by 15 feet There is also on tho premises a young op, EL.... chard, and water is piped to .the door from lf,A never failing spring of water. This plantation.. is highly prodnetive, being good liMestone land. It is situated within 2i miles of Peters• burg where the railroad and canal passes thro'. The subscriber is anxious to sell at private sale —and if not sold will sell it at public sale, on the premises ) un Saturday, the 17th day of Oc• tober next. a I Terms made easy to suit pyrehaser. _ Tnuuas IJAaII I A tig.26,*:l7.ts. I',ILUABLE FARM F 0 11.1 SALE, In Porter TIC, Huntingdon Co., Pa, The subscriber will offer at Public Sale, on the premises, on Tuesday the 20th of October, 1857, the fares on which he now re,ikles, con taining 265 Acres and 139 Perches, with allowance. 180 acres of which is cleared and in a good state of cultivation, Om balance is well timbered. The improvements area largo frame 4 1 4 IE house and new bank barn, with all•ltga WI the necessary out•buildings. It in very well watered, and is a very desirable location; three miles south.west of Alexandria, in what is called the Loop. For further particulars enquire of the owner or. the premises, Aug.26,'57..2m JOHN DYSART. [Estate of William Bucha OIESOWnan, deed.) N. The undersigned Auditor, appointed by the Orplianst•Cotirt of Huntingdon county, to dis tribute the balance in the hands of Samuel T. Brown, Esq., Administrator du bolds eon of William Buchanan, late of Brady township, deceased, amongst those legally entitled thereto hereby gives notice to all persons interested, that he will ntierd for the purpose of making void distribution, on Thursday the Bth of Oc. tuber next, at one o'clock P. hf. at his office in the borough of Huntingdon, when and whore all persons having chains are required to present the come to the undersigned Audi. tor, or else be debarred from coming in upott said fund. • THEO: cßEgun liuntin4dun, Sept. 2, 1857,—1t ,eit