THE _HUNTINGDON GLOBE, A DEMOCRATIC FAMILY JOURNAL, DEVOTED TO LOCAL AND GENERAL NEWS, &C, TH Circalation—the largest in the county. 110ErffillraIDOR, 26 Wednesday, November 18, 1857 Ta School Directors Blank. agreements with Teachers, and or ders on District School Treasurers, have just been printed and are for sale at the GLOBE, Office. O:7°A. Teachers' Institute will be held at the Green Tree on Thursday evening, Friday and Saturday, the 19th, 20th and 21st inst.— The teachers of Jackson, Barree, Oneida and West districts are requested to attend. Emi nent teachers will be present to lecture. La dies and Gentlemen are respectfully invited to attend. I):7'STUDENT AND SCHOOLMATE, A. MONTHLY READER FOR SCHOOLS.—The November num ber is before us. Like all others, it is well filled with interesting matter. An idea of the value of the magazine can be had by reading the prospectus of the new volume, which will be found in another column. Goon AnvicE.----We do not know of any ad monition better for our readers at the present time, than the subjoined : "ADVERTISE.-Dull times are perhaps the very best for advertisers. What little trade is going on they get, and - whilst others are grumbling, they pay their way, and with the newspaper as a life preserver, swim on tho top of the water, while others are sinking all around. Advertise liberally, and you will hardly smell the hard times." Every word of this is true, and it will be worth money to any business man who will act upon it. Reduce your prices to suit the times. Small profits and quick sales are much the best just now. It will be of no ad vantage to stick to the rates asked in prosper ous days, anethus fail to sell. Retrench ment is the order now. Therefore, advertise your goods liberally, and let the public know where cheap articles can be had. Advertise, and let people see that your head is still above water, and that you go on selling on ad vantageous terms. There are plenty of cash buyers who make their appearance about these times, eager to pick up bargains. A Mournful Occurrence On Saturday morning last, a party of half a dozen or more lads from this borough, in cluding William, son of Wm. Stewart, of Alleghany street, aged about 12 years, went to the "cut" on the Huntingdon and Broad. Top Railroad near McCahan's, opposite the town, and were amusing themselves by alter nately pushing and riding on the locomotive turn-table. The table, constructed entirely of iron, is very heavy, and being nicely poised on its pivot, moves very easily and with great momentum. During the time the table was in motion, it was supposed - that little Stewart attempted to get off at one of the ends, and before he accomplished this, (being then sitting, with his legs hanging down,) the table met the platform of the track, catching and pressing his legs between the end of the table and the planking of the end of the track, a space of only ONE 'Nem His comrades, frightened, ran off, and their cries attracting the attention of the neighbors, they, by taking up a portion of the track, relieved the poor fellow from his dreadful situation and conveyed him to his father's residence. His legs and abdomen were dread fully cut and mangled. Doctors Lucien, Mc- Culloch and Griffith soon arrived and skil fully dressed the wound; during which oper ation, as well as during the time he was fast.. ened by the " turn-table," he exhibited a heroism that would have done credit to one of maturer years. The injuries were too se vere for his system to repair or endure, and in the afternoon he expired. Let the dear experience of little Stewart and his deplorable fate, be a solemn warning to parents and guardians to not let their children and wards roam about unrestrained when so many dangers beset their path. WHY LADIES SHOULD READ NEWSPAPERS.- It is a great mistake in female education, to keep a young lady's time'and attention devo ted to only the fashionable literature of the day. If you would qualify her for conver sation, you must give her something to talk about—give her education with this actual world and its transpiring events. Urge her to read newspapers and be familiar with the present character and improvements of our race. History is of some importance; but the past world is dead, and we have nothing to do with it. Our thoughts and our concerns should be for the present world, to know what it is and improve the ?.ondition of it.— Let her have an intelligent opinion, and be able to sustain an intelligent conversation concerning the mental, moral, political and religious improvement of our times. Let the gilded annuals and poems on the centre-table be kept a part of the time covered with the weekly and daily journal. Let the whole family—men, women, and children read the newspapers. SUPERB LIKENESSES.—We have seen some specimens of likenesses of several of our cit izens taken during the past week at the " Big Wagon," on Smith street, which we unhesi tatingly pronounce the best ever taken in this borough. The gentlemen are complete mas ters of the art, and furnish as correct pictures as can be taken anywhere by anybody. They will remain but a few days. The Tariff liumbug The small fry among our political oppo nents, says the Lancaster intelligence?, con tinue to attribute the present monetary em barrassment of the country to what they term the "Free Trade policy of the Demo cratic party." They tried to hoax the people of Pennsylvania, by preaching this doctrine, notwithstanding David Wilmot was one of the most ultra free trade men in Congress in 1840, and voted in favor of the tariff bill of that year and against the" pet bill of 1842. But the people of Pennsylvania had experi enced too many years of profitable labor un der the tariff of 1840, and could not be made to put faith in what the opposition press said upon the subject of Protection. If the oppo sition parties were sincere in their advocacy of a Protective Tariff why did they nomi nate David Wilmot, a renegade free trade Democrat ? The whole hue and cry about Protection just now, is made by the opposition to shield the Banks and speculators, and to mislead the people. It cannot be possible, says the Delaware Gazette, that the Black Republican and Know Nothing papers have forgotten that the last Congress was controlled by men opposed to the Democratic party. Do they not know that Lewis D. Campbell, one of the Black Republican leaders in the last Black Repub lican Know Nothing House of Representa tives—the second of Burlingame, of "meet me at the Clifton House" memory,—was the Chairman of the Committee on Ways and Means ? Have they forgotten that this noto rious member of their party, (Mr. Campbell,) introduced a bill which reduced the duties on goods coming into the United States, below those of the act of 1846 ? The tariff bill of 1846 was repealed by the Black Republican House of Representatives, and the substitute for that act approached nearer the free trade standard, and went into operation with the sanction of the opposition press, on the Ist of July last. The tariff of 1846 was not in operation at all, when the present embarrassment of the country commenced. It had _ been a dead letter for three months. It is true that a large amount of goods bad been brought and warehoused under the tar iff of 1846; but these purchases had been made with a view of securing large profits by entering them under the lower duties of the new tariff. It is a fortunate, we might say Providen tial circumstance, that the Democratic party will be once more in the ascendency in the the National Congress in December next.— It is the only party that the country has ever been able to look to for redress in times of trouble—and to it will the people look to ef fect a more solid basis for the currency. A 11.1ETALIC CURRENCY.—The wide spread and blighting effects of the bank failures upon all the industrial interests of the country (truly remarks a cotemporary,) have served to open the eyes of the people far and near to the evils of a paper currency and of the necessity of returning to the metalic system designed by the framers of the constitution. How often need the lesson taught by the ven erated Father of his country, that the " wis dom of man cannot devise a plan by which the credit of paper money can be long sup ported"—bow often need this lesson be im pressed upon the minds -of his countrymen before it is heeded? The present is a fitting time to effect salutary reforms; and we are gratified to observe that throughout the Un ion a wholesome sentiment is growing up from which the best results may be anticipa ted. Particularly are we pleased to see the democratic press, with the Washington Un ion at its head, pushing onward this grand movement for the redemption of the entire country from the rag-money reign. An able article on this subject is copied in 'another column, from the Richmond Examiner to which we beg the reader to give a thoughtful perusal. The total abrogation of the bank ing system, and adoption of Constitutional currency, is getting to be the democratic shibboleth all over the Union. " A TALE OF RETRIBUTION."—Three days ago a man worth upwards of $40,000 died in this city. lie left a vclurninous document, which he called his will, and, upon opening it, his wife and eldest son, a young man, found themselves cut off with legacies of $5OO each. lie gave as a reason for so doing that the young man had once attempted to murder him, aided and abetted by the wife and mo ther. The occasion to which the testator re ferred in making this dreadful death-bed ac cusation is explained as follows :—One day, some years ago, this man, 'who was of brutal disposition and addicted to drinking, was beating his wife so severely that she consider ed her life endangered, and called upon her son (the young man referred to) to protect her. He did this in an effectual manner by_ taking up a poker, striking his father across the head, and felling him to the floor. The father cherished the recollection of this act to his dying day, and scught to revenge him self, as above, by depriving - the offending par ties of their lawful inheritance, though the will will not stand under the statutes of the State of Louisiana, and the dead man will be balked of his vengeance. It is due to the young man to say, that he is of feeble intel lect, his imbecility being the consequence of , the brutal treatment of his father, who struck 1 him to the ground when a lad with such vio lence that an injury ensued, which has affect ed his brain ever since. So retribution for the cruel blow of the father was visited in kind upon him by the son, - who knew no bet ter than to beat his parent over the head with an iron poker because of that limited appre ciation of the " propneties" and " humani ties" of life for which he was indebted to the 1 father's rnaltreatment.-11 7 . 0. Delta. gi'Read the new advertisements re - - At a meeting of the Executive Com mittee of the Huntingdon County Agricultu ral Society held on the 10th inst., R. I%l'Divit and Geo. W. Speer were appointed a Com mittee to audit the account of the Treasurer of said Society, when the following resolu tions amongst others, were offered and adop ted : Resolved, That the report of the auditing committee be approved and that the county papers be furnished with a copy and reques ted to publish the same gratis. Resolved, That all persons knowing them selves to be subscribers to the paper presen ted at the last meeting, for the purpose of raising funds for said Society—nowluislaid or lost—be requested to pay the same to the Treasurer. Resolved, That the Secretary be hereby instructed to procure the Book of Record be longing to the Association, to enter all the proceedings therein in regular order, and that he be compensated for the same out of the funds of the Association. J I,l' WILLIAMS, Prst See'y. James Gwin, Treasurer of the Huntingdon County Agricultural Society. Dr. Nov. 12, 1856. To balance in Treasury at settlement, $464 94 Jan. 13, 1857. To Cash re'd. from 11. N. M'allister, Esq., $1 00 " " " J. A. Nash, . 215 315 Receipts at Fair held 14th, 15th and 16th October, 1857, as follows: To Cash rec'd for 430 Tickets of annual member ship, $430 00 " rec'd for G 65 Tickets for single admission,l66 25 " rec'd for 3 lie membership Tickets, 15 00 ‘• rec'd from W. Barr, auctioneer, 5 00 016 25 " rec'd from Dr. J. Dorsey fur lumber sold on Fair ground, 12 46 " rec'd from D. Grove, " 0 10 65 CC a A. Willoughby, " 10 00 46 CC Jno. Hildebrand, " 12 38 44 6C F. B. Wallace, " 6 23 , /, CC 44 Jas. Maguire, " 4 62A 64 4i B. M. Higgins, " 9 40 4: CC Simon Coder, 64 . 5 a a A. S. Harrison, " 1 62 " Wni. Africa, 66 50 " it W. Boat, " 3 15 CC 44 Wm. P. Orbison, " 20 00 CC " Win. Williams for coal, 290 a 46 Win. Dorris, Jr. lumber, 10 00 " " S. S. Smith, two barrels. 93 105 07 The following named persons paid their subscrip tions to the fund raised to secure the 3d an nual fair at Huntingdon, to wit : To Cash rec'd from Jas. Bricker, 500 " " " Wm. Williams, 10 00 C 6 64 David I'. thvin. 10 00 LC it Love & M'Divit, 500 30 00 To Pronouns on best 2 yr old colt at fair in 1855, presented to Society by Ifays Hamilton, Esq., To Commissioners' or on County Treasurer for 100 00 103 00 Cr. Nov. 24, ISSO ByCasli paid Brewster ‘!..: Whittaker for printing, $1.5 70 ac " G. W. Garrcttson for flag, SOO " S. S. Smith, gate keeper, 800 31 73 Oct. 14, 15 and 10. 1857. cc " J. M. Simp,on and other , , po lice men, 40 50 '• John Blearier " " 5 00 ‘; " Wm. Y. Miller " " 44 00 143 50 " Brielter and Reed for lumber, 00 30 44 " Wm. CtteirnOVer " " 15 40 " " John Warfel " " 28 10 ~ " Thos. Crownover " " 47 04 " " Wm. Rothrock " " 315 100 01 C 4 " C. Cents " poles 15 00 ~ " C. Colds " Hag pole 000 17 00 ~ " Jacob Miller and others for labor in preparing fair gro'd and building sheds, tie. 77 37, f 44 " Jacob Miller for lload wood 150 cc " Bobt:Woods, patrol, 374 64 " John Flenner tar crying sale tic of lumber I'so . ,c " Jacob S. Africa for hauling 300 57 62 44 " D. P. G win for Merchandizo 577 n " James Bricker " 6CS " Fisher & M'Murtrie " 1 0734; t " Wm. Williams for 2 barrels 150 14 1119 o " Wm. Williams Tr. Ex. Band 00 00 cc " S. S. Smith. gate keeper cf:c. SOO c: " Win. H. King " cc 700 15 00 44 " Dan/. Goodman rent for fair ground 46 " Danl. Goodman for hay and straw 753 27 50 cc " Wm. Lewis for printing 30 10 46 " Win. Brewster •• 11 75. cc " John A. Nash " 19 25 74 10 n ‘. Orbison, Dorris cl: Co. for coal S Si) cc " J. Simpson Africa fur postage 50 64 " Afred Potter 13 days plowing 450 " It. C. McGill serve as marshal 10 00 c. - S. IL Shoemaker ‘• 300 cc " James D. Campbell " clerk 43 00 n " Bobt. M'Divit 1 year salary as Secretary 13 00 40 50 <4 " list of premiums awarded to exhibitors at Fair 356 50 $1129 S 9 1537, Nov. 10, By balance in Treasury, 192 53 Audited and approved Nov. .10, 1857, by the undet:igned committee appointed for that purpoNe by the Executive Committee of the Huntingdon County Agricultund Seel cry. _ . Sad Result of Cruel Punishment From the Louisville Journal we clip the following : " Some three or four years ago, the son of the Warden of a prison in a neighboring State—a bright, intelligent, handsome boy of seventeen—was detected by his father in the commission of an offence, for which he no doubt merited and should have received an application of the rod from the hands of a parent. The father, however, instead of applying the punishment useful in such eases of youthful delinquency, arraigned his child, stripped him of his ordinary clothing, shaved the hair from his head and dressed him in the striped garb of a convict, confined him within the walls of a penitentiary—there to remain until the unnatural parent should see proper to release him. For weeks, the boy, unable to help himself, underwent the rigid discipline of the prison, and performed the. duties assigned to the convicts, the most hu miliating and degrading of which was to ap pear in the public thoroughfares of his na tive town, and assist with a team engaged in hauling. Citizens shook their heads, and public execration towards the Warden be came so strong and decided that he was com pelled at once to restore his son to liberty, and he came very near being turned out of office.. As soon as released, the dishonored boy, broken in pride and spirit, fled from his home, and for a long time nothing was heard of him, until at length he turned up in the California courts accused of burglary. lie was acquitted, and about a year since re turned to the Atlantic States—going from one to another of our large cities, and plung ing into every species of dissipation and vice. A few months since, be was arrested in one of our principal cities for arson and robbery, had his trial, and received for his sentence ten years solitary confinement in the peniten tiary—and but one week ago he was brought back to the home of his boyhood, one of a gang of 30 chained felons in charge of the Sheriff. He met at the prison's threshold, his own father, still the Warden. And so near father, mother, brothers and sisters— who are all respectable members of society— he must serve out his long and dreary term of punishment. )se:'-See the fourth page of this paper. 't It is a nicely balanced question whether laws should ever have existed for enforcing the collection of debts. Credit ought to be the result of honesty. Credit ought not to be given to those who pay from fear of com pulsion by legal process, or from apprehen sion as the pecuniary injury or social dis grace attached to delinquincy. It' is amaz ing what a world of villiany, strife and trouble would be eradicated from among mankind if legalized credits were cut down and destroyed. We are not sure, that as society advances, those relicts of a semi-bar barous age—compulsory collections of debt, indiscriminate and unrestricted credits—will not Wholly disappear. ' Among barbarians there are no credits and no enforcements of payment. Among semi -barbarians, reckless indebtedness grows up, and along with it harsh means of enforcing its liquidation.— It remains for an enlightened age to dis countenance all credit except such as may be founded on character, at least to the extent of making the qualities which command it the exclusive guarantceS of payment. It must be confessed, however, that we are at present far from having reached such a point of civilization. One half the labor of government and the employment of courts is engrossed in the enforcement of honesty between citizens. The greatest corporations in the land are organized to deal in debt, and employ a corps of officers more numerous, more extravagantly salaried, and more costly to society, than the civil lists and standing armies of monarchs. We think ourselves more happy than the people of the- middle ages, by our exemption from civil wars, highway robberies and a hundred other forms of open rapine; but we forget that the conflicts between the debtor and creditor classes of our. population employ a host of collectors, lawyers, sheriffs,, constables, ju ries, and bailiff's, more numerous than the armed belligerents of the ruder ages,lhe ag (r t ,reffate of whose charges, fees and percen tageso would have compensated the damages and robberies of those ages a hundred times over. Calculate, too, the sums of interest levied by our banks on their promises to pay and the Black Mail of the Scotch border would seem the token of mercy and modera tion in comparison. Calculate the two and a half per cent. per month snares taken by our usurers from old field bonds in the coun try and negotiable notes in the towns, and it would be difficult to find a civil war in the history of any country which has proved a tithe so destructive of the substance of its population, as these merciless exactions. 3 00 41 Indeed, our condition is worse than was that of populations torn by civil wars and ravished by . armed banditti; for, then, rob bery and aggression were conducted at the risk of life, and the chances of losing one's substance by an unlucky engagement with hostile forces, were compensated by the chances of gaining booty by success. If the highway ronber proved a poor match for your own prowess, instead of losing your purse you would obtain kis, well lined it might be with the fruits of better success in some previous venture. But with us robbery is legalized, the booty is all on one side and the loss all on the other. Even the State comes in, in the case of banks, as their part ner in taking interest on their debts to you; and, in case of the usurers, to compel you to pay them back their principal, and their plunder to boot. If we concede, however; that the abolition of laws for compelling the payment of debts is inexpedient and impracticable, now that a stupendous system of. credit has grown up on the faith of those laws; yet, it does not fol low that we ought to continue in existence and activity all those agencies which unduly stimulate, augment, aggravate and perpetu ate the credit system. Most potent of all these agencies is the banking system of mod ern times. It interposes to change the whole basis and nature of 'Credits, and is the most active hand maiden of the compulsory laws we have alluded to, in shifting the fabric of credit from off its true foundation, of mutual integrity, and good faith between man and man, upon the robbery and plunder basis, of what the debtor 28 worth—what quantity of visible property the creditor and sheriff can wrest from him, vi et arnzis. Credit, to be healthful, ought to be, as far as possible, di rect, that is to say confined to the original parties contracting; for then it is very apt to be bottomed more upon personal character and confidence than upon the mere property supposed to be owned by the debtor. This was the spirit of the old common law of Eng land which attached wondering solemnity to the execution of bonds and writings, and very much discouraged the transfer of bonds front original obligees, by assignments. The object of banks is to deal in paper credits, to come between the original parties to credit contracts, purchasing written obli gations as merchandise, and thus turnin ,, the eyes of creditors in making their contracts, away from the mere honesty and integrity of debtors, to the inventories of their pecuni ary wealth. The effect of the operations of those institutions is to obliterate the element of personal confidence from dealings be tween man and man; to render many con tracts which would otherwise be for cash credit transactions; to expand and multiply credits inordinately, and to build up the whole fabric of credit upon the property schedules of citizens, rather than upon their known personal prudence and tried personal integrity. But the effect of the banking system is not only thus to shift all credit—from its proper foundation upon individual providence integrity and confidence, to the misanthropi cal basis of property seizable by the sheriff —thus ignoring individual character and ob literating individual confidence, its chief evil is to be found in the enormous addition it makes to the credits of a community, as use less in the hey-day of prosperity as fright fully destructive in the gloomy hour of panic. The whole mass of credits represented by the operations of banking is useless for any valuable purpose. The banking capital of the Union is now three hundred and seventy millions of dollars. The stockholders who paid it in received certificates of bank stock to that amount—which stock- is a class of paper credit which the country was as well off without it as with. The money paid in, which this stock represents, was exchanged for paper discounted by the banks, a great part of which paper was made by borrowers of the banks merely for the purpose of get ting loans of bank money in exchange for it and the rest of it, that which was founded on actual business transactions, took this form of credit instead of the transactions being for cash, merely on account of the fa cilities of discount furnished by the banks.— Thus, this three hundred and seventy mil lions of bank stocks and the equal amount 20 00 1322 4a R. GEO. W. ;;.'PEER From the Richmond Examiner A Chapter on Credits. of negotiable paper discounted by the banks with their unpaid capital, are additions to the credits of the country, which the country would have been better off without. The circulation department of our banking system has produced a like system of useless credits. The banks are authorized to issue their notes of circulation to the amount of their capital stock; and the amount of bank notes which they put out falls not a great way short of the licensed amount. It reaches now two hundred and fourteen millions of dollars, and was put out in exchange for the negotiable notes of their customers, made in consequence of obtaining bank loans upon them. Thus the banks owe on account of their paper money two hundred and fourteen millions of dollars, and their debtors owe them an equal amount for their circulation. Thus, in consequence of the existence of the system, four hundred and twenty-eight mil lions of credit is created as a useless addition to the credits of the country. The banks also loan out to individuals a large part of the deposits lodged with them for safe-keep ing, swelling credits also, in that amount. Taking the actual figures of the official re ports the additions to the paper credits of the country which have been uselessly created, by the operations of the banking system, are as follows : Actual debt of the people to the banks as reported, $684,456,887 Bank notes in circulation, . . . 214,778,822 Certificates of bank shares held by the public, 370,834,65 G Total ::,q,279,070,395 Thus twelve hundred and seventy-nine mil lions is the amount of paper credits thrown broadcast over the country, by the banking system, uselessly, without the possibility of producing a single new blade of grass or new particle of material wealth or actual sub stance to the country. We repeat that, we are very far from hav ing reached that high point of civilization, when vast standing armies of the officials of the credit system will no longer burden the community—a part using every exertion to multiply, ramify and magnify the credits of the country—the rest engaged year in and year out in forcing debtors to a compliance with their obligations. Until this accursed system of credits shall by some means, be curtailed of its mammoth dimensions, and until its countless retinue of menials shall, by some merciful interposition, be disbanded, we shall continue to suffer heavier depredations under our boasted civil ization, th•i.n ever did those generations be fore us who lived amid continual rounds of civil strife and were robbed in every dark place and on every highway by outlawed ban ditti. Pennsylvania Railroad The managers of the Pennsylvaniarailroad should. congratulate themselves, that, in tak ing so important a step as that which they have announced in their card printed in The Press of yesterday—the postponement of the payment of their semi-annual divi dend, due now and payable on the 15th of November—they should be warmly suppor ted by the public journals. The fact that every daily paper of yesterday endorsed the motives which induced. the Board to take this step is not alone a tribute to the good sense of the Board but a happy indication of the certain restoration of confidence to business circles. The old-fashioned mode of doing business was, pay as you go. The Pennsylvania railroad was constructed upon this idea. It stood out from all other improve ments, in the fact that the whole work was paid for at the completion, and its other ob ligations resulted from its necessary connec tions with those lines without which it could not have commanded that great trade of the West, which, by every natural cause belongs to it, but which was sought after by the rail -1 road thoroughfares of New York and Mary- laud. The policy of passing the semi-annual dividend was, therefore, not merely justified by the sound and safe curidition of the Penn sylvania road itself, but demanded by con sistent adherence to the purpose upon which the whole improvement was originated— namely, that of paving off all their debts be fore attempting to divide the profits of the concern. In these times, there is no railroad which, of necessity, can control so much trade 'as the Central road of our State.—lts stability and solvency—compared with the condition of the Baltimore and Ohio and the New York and Erie Ilailroad—its durability and the admirable manner in which its af fairs are administered by dons Eloomt TuomrsoN and W. B. FOSTER, EsQs., must attract to it the large proportion of the through trade from the West. Far better for the company to decide to pay off its obligations than to follow the practice of those days of expansion for which we are now paying so dearly. We feel justified, thercfoic, in add ing our own testimony to that of the other city papers in support of the course of the Pennsylvania railroad; and we hope that the example they have set—first, of cutting down all unnecessary expenses, and next paying off their floating debt—will be followed in other quarters.—Ph h a. reess stk inst. BANKS or• Issue UNCONSTITUTIONAL.—The Washington correspondent of the Baltimore Sun says : "We have alreacl t y heard the views and intentions of several distinguished and able members of Congress on the subject of the disorders of the currency and the cure for the same, and learn that it is their pur pose to bring up the subject at an early day of the session. What remedy they will pro pose for these disorders, which carry ruin, periodically, throughout the country, is riot stated ; but it is to be one that will go to the source of the evil, and restore the constitutional currency—suQh a currency as Washington and all the fathers and founders of the gov ernment contemplated. The State banks of issue are clearly unconstitutional, and so the present Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States will decide, when the question shall be distinctly made before them. THE SON OF PRESIDENT TAYLOR.—Richard Taylor, Esq., only son of the late President Taylor, is the Democratic candidate for the Senate of Louisiana in the St. Charles Dis trict.. This, we believe, completes the list of the sons of our distinguished patriots and states men who are now acting with the Democratic party. Fletcher Webster, the son of Daniel Webster, has acted with the Democrats for several years. James B. Clay, the son of Henry Clay, is the Democratic member of Congress elect from the Ashland District, Ken tucky. The sons of Ex-Presidents Tyler, and Van Buren continue to adhere to the Demo cratic faith. J. Scott Harrison, the son of Ex-President Harrison, is not a Democrat, but he is bitterly opposed to the Black Republi cans and all their political ideas. There is a good deal of significance in these facts. PHIL A DELPHIA MARKETS. SATTIRMY, Nov. 14.—FLOUR.—Some little export de mand for Flour, and, with moderate receipts and stocks, holders are firm in their demands. Sales 1500 bbls com mon and good Pennsylvania and Wostern extra at $5 50E4 $5 623% 7 E1 bbl, including a small lot superfine at $5 37%, and WU bbls 'Jenny Lind extra' at $6 75, A steady inquiry for home consumption within the range of the same quo tations for common and extra family brands. Small sales of Rye Flour at $4 50, and Corn Meal at $3 25 s bbl. CRAlN.—Rather more ''‘l'leat offering, and demand hav ing fallen off, prices are less firm. Sales GOO bus. good Penna. red at $1 23 11 bu., and 1500 bus. prime Southern INbite at $1 35, afloat. Bye comes forward slowly, and commands 7:361/75c. Corn scarce and in good demand, sales 2000 bus. old Southern yellow at 80e, afloat; 1000 bus new at 56c ; 400 bus. prime dry, same, and 405 bus. white at 00c. Oats unchanged-2000 bus. good Delaware sold at 32@34c. bu. 450 bus. New Barley sold at 87 cents, SEEDS.—More inquiry for Cloverseed, but receipts aro trifling—about 100 bus. prime were taken from wagons at $513 64 lbs. Nothing doing in Timothy or Flaxseed. E GLOB E.—THE OFFICIAL PAPER OF CONGRESS.—I publish now my annual . Prospectus of `lna Damr GLOBE, and Tau CONGRESSIONAL GLOBE AND APPENDIX, to remind subscribers, and inform' those who may desire to subscribe, that Congress will meet on tho first Monday of next December, when I shall recommence publishing the above named papers. They have been published so long, that most public men know their character, and therefore I deem it needless tO give a minute account of the kind of matter they wilicohtaire. The Daily Globe will contain a report of the Debates in both branches of Congress as taken down by reporters equal, at least, to any corps of short-hand - writers . .in this; or in any other country. A majority of theM will, each, be able to report, verbatim, ten thou Sand Words an hour, while the average number of Words spoken by fluent speakers rarely exceeds seven thousand five hundred words an hour. When the debates of a day do not make more' than forty columns, they shall appear in the Daily Globe of the next morning, which will contain, also, the news of the day, together with such editorial articles as may be suggested by passive . ' events. It is also my intention, from time to time, as occasion may require. to publish my reminiscences of the public nun with whom .1 have been associated daring the last twenty-eight years. Anecdotes of General Jackson, and the leaders of the party which he conducted, and the lead ing men of other parties, will, I believe, be interesting now when partisan bitterness has abated. In becoming the reporter of the debates of Congress, I deemed it proper to say that the Globe would never be n partisan paper. This 'pledge will not be forfeited by intro clueing as a contribution to history the political traits of character which distinguished the public men of my time. Although I am, and intend to remain. a thorough Demo crat, I will never obtrude my principles in a way to make them obnoxious to any laity. But in regard to persons and events which go to make up history, I hope to make the Globe an honest memoir and with that view lam re solved to speak independently of all parties. The Omgres. , ional Globe and Appenelix will contain a re port of all the debates in Congress, revised by the speak els, the ines , ages of the President of the United States, the Awned Reports of the Heads of the Executive Depart ments, the Laws pas:ed during the session, and copious ill,b2Xr, to alt. They will be printed on a double royal sheet. in book tbrin, royal quarto size, each number con taining sixteen pages. The whole will make, it is believ cd. het IA een 3,800 and 3,000 pages, as the long sessions for ninny yea' Inure ranged. between those numbers. and the next :union will be w hat is termed long one." This I bilieve is the cheapest work ever Sal in any country. whe ther a reprint, or printed frum manuscript copy, taking ihr det:t the average number of words of the long sessions since the year 1 S ii. The average number of pages is 3;576, and the average number of words on a page is 2,39lrcon seeuently the average number of words of a long session is e.2e0.772. Ae I have sold to subscribers that number of words for six dollars. it follows that they have paid Zess non six und one-half cents for every 100,000 words l have .forn 'Vied them, while I have paid my reporters $6 29 for erns 2.:197 words, of this work, in nwnuseript. lies any oilier bookseller. anywhere, ever sold a book in the first instance while it was new. at so low a late? I believe net: and so strong is my belief, that I hereby agree to give to any person who shall prove the contrary, a coin pli•te set of the debates running, back to the year 1833, in.d.ing forty-three quark) volumes, which will sell for $5 a volume. An act of Congress authorizes these papers to go by mail free of postage. Tile next session will be, with n it doubt, an unneually interesting one, as it will be the fleet under a new Administration, and several complex questions 'inlet be discussed in it ; for example, the cur rency, Kansas. revenue. and other questions. The Globe ill be. therefore, the only source from which full debates can be obtained. TERMS. For a copy of the Daily Globe one year For a copy of the Daily Globe six months For a copy of the Daily Globe Miring the session... Fur a copy of the Congressional Globe and Appen dix, and the laws passed during the session utl; note-% current in the section of the country where a suls-criber resides, will be received at par. The whole or any part of a subscription may be remitted in postage stamps, which is preferable to any currency ; except gold or z4ilvvr. A paper will not be Aent unless the money accompanies the order for it. Washington. October 27. 1537 FiIHE CHILDREN'S FAVORITE ." TILE TEACHER'S AID-THE PARENT'S FRIEND! PROSPECTUS OF VOLUME V. THE STUDENT AND SCHOOLMATE; A Monthly- Reader for Schools Associate Editor—A " NO SCHOOL OR FAMILY SHOULD DE WITHOUT IT." As a Monthly Reader for Schools, this work has been ex ntively introduced into Schools in nearly every State in the Union, and it conies to them with something new and interesting each month, to awaken iTOSiI interest in the m ending exercises. Thus it supplies wants long felt by teachers. Try it in your school. Besides popular articles in the Natural Sciences, History, Biography, Travels, Stories, Poetry. Discoveries, and the Arts, it contains. fur heading Exercises. Declamation and School Exhibitions, OriglnaCDialogues, and New Speeches, with marks fir emplinis, tone:, inflections, and gestures. The Teoeher's Desk is devoted to suggestions and hints to Teachers, Parents, Pupils, and to important items of valu able intelligence. Our Musum is supplied with an interesting collection of the rare, curious and amusing in literature and art; to gether Ns ith puzzles, enigmas, charades, questions, anec dotes, Sc. Thb: Magazine intimately unites the lessons and exerci ses of the school with those of the Family, and thus be comes an invaluable aid to stimulate youth to self-improve ment. it i 6 pulaished monthly. containing 3G octavo pages im each number, amply illustrated, ft,rming a large and valu ahle yearly yolame 01 nearly 440 pages. TElt3lj-81 00 A YEAR, EN ADVANCE. rive Copie:t. a year. kOO Eight Copies, a year, lit 6 00 Fifteen 10 00 Twenty-five L°l6 00 6- The Poetugc on Tin: STUDENT AND SCHOOLMATE is may six rent; (1 'u hen palit in advance at the Post Office where the Snhserilx4: receives it. Sample numbers rent grafi , : to persons desiring to sub scribe or form clubs. Nuw is the time to subscribe.• All letters relating, to "The Student and Schoolmate," slmuld ho addreesed to CA LKINS & STILES, Publisbels, 34.8 Broadway, New York-. novIS Agents ~canted :NEW GOODS! 1`.4 . EW GO-ODS —lna AT D. P. G WIN'S CHEAP STORE! ,Tor DAVID P. GWIN has just returned from Philadelphia, with the largest and most beautiful assortment of FALL AND WINTER GOODS ever brought to Huntingdon, consisting of the most f7sltt ionable Dress Goods for Ladies and Gentlemen, such as Black and Fancy Silks, All-Wool Delaines, different colors; Printed and Plain French Merino,Outbre striped Belai n es, Barred and Fancy Delaines, Lewtt Cloth, Coburg Cloth, Mohair Debaize, Shepherds Plaid, Linseys and Prints of every description. Also,—a large lot of Dress Trimmings, Fringes. More Antique, Vell'ets, Buttons, Gims, Braids, &c. Bonnet Silks, Crapes, Ilibbons ' Gloves, Mitts, Veils, Laces,. Belts, Belting Ribbon, Whalebone, Reed and Brass Skirt Hoops, Hosiery, Silk and Linen Handkerchiefs, Silk Neck Ties, Zephyr, French Working Cotton, Cotton and Linen Floss,Tidy Yarn, Woolen Yarns, Wool Coats and Hoods,.Comorts and Scarfs. Also—Collars and T_Tndersleeves, the best assortment in town. Jaconets, barred and plain; Mull• and Swiss Muslins, 3.lorcen and Sloop Skirts, Irish Linen, Linen Breasts, Shirts and Drawers, Linen Table Cloths,. Napkins, Towels, &c. Also—Bay State, Waterloo, Wool Shawls, Single and Double Broths. Shawls, Cloths, Cassimeros, Cas sinetts, Tweeds, Kentucky Jeans, Vestings, bleached and unbleached Muslins, sheeting and pillow-case Muslins, Nankeen, Ticken, Checks, Table Diaper, Crash, Flannels, Sack Flannels, Canton Flannels, Blankets, &c. Also, a large lot of silk and colored straw Bonnets of the latest styles, which will be sold cheaper than can be had in Hun tingdon. • Hats S; Caps. Boots S.; Shoes, gum Shoes. Hardware, Queensware, Buckets., Tubs, Baskets, Churns, Butter Bowls, Brooms, Brushes, Carpets, Oil Cloths. Fish S: Salt, Sugar, Coffee, Tea, Molasses, and all goods usually kept iu a country store. My old customers, and as many now ones as can crowd in, are respectfully requested to call and examino my stock. All kinds of Country Produce taken in exchange for goods at the Highest Market prices. lluntingdon, October 7, 1857 OOLLEN FACTORY and FARM FOR SALE OR RENT, in. Jackson township, Hun ting( on county. The Factory has machinery in good or der for the spinning and manufacturing of yarns and woollen goods, turned by Stone Creek, a never-failing stream. The farm consists of fifty acres of good limestone and bottom land, in a good state of cultivation, with an apple orchard, barn, and five dwelling houses thereon. • Information in relation to the property will be giver! by J. Sewell Stewart, Esq., of Huntingdon, or the subscriber at 31cAleavy's Fort, Huntingdon county, Pa. Terms will be made easy to suit purchasers, November 4, 1557-6t.* TJAMES' Collars and Undersleeves in great variety, at D. P. ONVINI3. $lO 00 5 00 5 00 6 00 JOHN C. ItIVES. (novlB-3t.) = R. PopE D. P.. GWIN ROBERT STEWART.