TERMS OF THE GLOBE. Per annum in advance Six months Three months . A failure to notify a discontinuance at the expilation of the term subscribed for will be considered a new engage. moot. TERMS OF ADVERTISING Four lines or 1e95„..... Ono square, (12 lines,) Two squares M=l Over three week and less than three months, 25 cent 3 per square for each insertion. 2 owaths. 0 months. 12 Months. 50 VS 00 Q 5 00 00 7 00 Six line , 3 or le:±9, Ono square, 5 00 8 00 10 00 7 00 10 00 15 00 T squares,.. Three squares, Four squares,. llalf a col ni , One column Profeisional and Business Cards not exceeding four lines, ono year, $3 00 Administrators' and.Execntors' Notices, 5 1 - 75 Advertisements not marked with the number of inser tions desired, will lie continncd till forbid and charged ac cording to these terms. • 186 0 . SPRING AND SUMMER GOO D S . FISHER & SON are now opening the largest and Gcst selected Stock of Goods ever offered in this community. It comprises a full line of Fashionable Dress Goods, imitable for SPRING & sunmEß, such as Black and Fancy Silks, French Foulards, (Chintz Figure's.) Fancy Organdies, Ducas, Challie's Lawni, English Chintz, Ginghams, Lustres, Prints, Sm. A large and beautiful assortment of Spring Shawls. A flue stock of richly worked Black Silk Lace Mantles. A full assortment of Ladies' Fine Collars, Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods, finch as Collars. Cravats, Tics, Stocks, Hosiery, Shirts, Gauze and Silk Undershirts, Drawers, Sic. We have a fine selection of Mantillas, Dress Trimmings, Fringes, Ribbons, Mitts, Gloves, Gaunt lets, Hosiery, Handkerchiefs; Buttons. Floss, Sewing Silk, _Extension Skirts, Hoops of all kinds, Sc. Also—Tickino - s Osnaburg , Bleached and 6' Unbleached Muslins, all prices; Colored and 'White Cam brics, Barred and Swiss Unsling, Victoria Lawns, Nilln souks, Tarleton, and many other articles which comprise the line of WHITE and DOMESTIC GOODS. French Cloths, Fancy Cassimers, Satinets, Jeans, Tweeds, Denims, Blue Drills, Flannels, Liudseys, Comforts, Blank ets, Sic. Hats and Caps, of every variety and style. A Good Stock of GROCERIES, HARDWARE, QUEENS WARE, BOOTS and SHOES, WOOD and WILLOW-WARE, which will be sold Cheap. We also deal in PLASTER, 'FISH, SALT, and all kinds of GRAINS. and possess facilities in this branch of trade - unequalled by any. We deliver all packages or parcels of Merchandise,free, of charge, at the Depots of the Broad Top and Pennsylvania Railroads. COME ONE. COME ALL. and be convinced that the Me leopotitan, is the place to secure fashionable and desirable goods, disposed of at the lowest rates. Huntingdon, April 15, ISSO NEW GOODS! NEW GOODS 1! I).P'GIPIAV'S STORE. D. P. GIVIN lots just received the largest and most fashionable awl best selected Stock of Goods in the mar ket. consistt ng of (laths. Cassi acres. Plain and Fancy. Satinets. Kentucky Jeans, 'Pa eeds, Beavert cells-. - Velvet Cords, Cotton Drills,' Linen Duel:, Blue Drills, and other faskionable Goods fur Men and Boys' wear. The largest and best assortment of L a di es , Dry-s Goode in town, consisting of -Black and Fancy Silks, All Wool Detains, Clank Detains. Alpacas, Plain and Fig ured Braize, Lawns. Gingtunns, Ducale, Larel la Cloth, De Barge, Traveling Dress Goods, and a beautiful assortment of Prints, Brilliants, &c. Also, Tiekings, Cheeks, Muslins, (bleached and unbleached,) Cotton and Linen Diaper, Clud!, Nan keen, &c. Also, a large assortment of Ladies' Collars, Dress Trimmings, Ribbonds, G loves, Mitts, Gauntlets. l lo leery, Silk and, Linen Handkerchiefs, - Victoria Lawn. Mull Muslins, Swiss and Cambric Edging, Dimity Bands. 'Velvet Ribbons, and a great variety of Hooped Skirts, &c. Also, a fine assortment of Spring Shav:As. Also, Boots and Shoes, Hats and Caps, Shaker Bonnets. Hardware, Queensware, Wood and Wil low Ware, Groceries, Salt and Fish. Also, the largest and best assortment of Carpets and Oil Cloth is in town, which will 1,, sold cheap. Call and examine my Goods, and you will be cons loved that I have the best assortment and cheapest Goads in the market. ALif- Country Produce taken in exchange fur Goode, at the high est Market Prices. D. P. GWIN. Huntingdon, April IS, ISGO. EUREKA!! EUREKA!!! LADIES' CHOICE!!! PATENT ELF-SEALING, SELF-TEbTING, AIR-TIGHT FRUIT CARTS Just what was wanted—a CONVE7 , _ENT air-tight cover, to 6110 w at all times, the exact condition of the fruit within the jar. It is so simple that one person can seal up twen -Ig-dr ou r cans in one Vill tie. Or open. seventy-two cans in one minute. No fruit is lost in using these cans. for should any one be detective. the cover always shows it in time to save the contents. Tin, Earthen, or Glass jars, sold only at the Hardware Store of JAMES A. BIIOWN. lluntin,g,don, July IS, 1860. 1,000 CUSTOMERS WANTED ! NEW GOODS BENJ. JACOBS Has received a fine assortment of DRY GOODS for the Spring and Summer season, comprising a very extensive a.isortment of LADIES DRESS GOODS, DRY GOODS in general, READY-MADE CLOTHING, For Men and Boys GROCERIES, HATS & CAPS, BOOTS AND SHOES, &c. &c. The public generally are requested to call and cXamino my goods—and his prices. As 1 anidutermined to sell my Goods, all who call may puet bargains. Country Produce taken in Exchange for Goods. BENJ. JACOBS,callic Cheep Huntingdon, April 4, 1860. COME TO THE NEWT STORE FOR CHEAP BAIOJ.UNS. WALL CLEMENT Respect fully infirm the public that they have opened a beautiful assortment of DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, QUEENSWARE, &G., in the store room at the south-east corner of the Dilmond in the borough of Huntingdon, lately occupied as a Jew elry Store. Their Stock is new and carefully selected, and will be sold low for cash or country produce. FLOUR, FISH, HAMS, SIDES, SHOULDERS, SALT, LARD, and provisions generally, kept constantly on hand on reasonable terms. Huntingdon, May 9, 1860.. JL ROMAN. NEW CLOTHING( • FOE SPRING AID SUMMER, JUST RECEIVED AT 11. ROMAN'S CHEAP CLOTHING STOKE. For Gentlemen's Clothing of the best material, and mado in the best workmanlike manner, call at H. ROMAN'S, opposite the Franklin House in Market Square, Hunting don. [April 4, 1800.) T HE best Tobacco in town, at D. P. GWIN'S P. GWIN keeps the largest, best • assortment and cheapest shoes in town. Call and examine them. beautiful lot of Shaker Bounetsfor sale cheap, at D. P. G WIN'S. CALL at D. P. GAVIN'S if you want I._) GOOD GOODS Splendid variety ,of Carpets, only 25 cts. per yard. FISHER & SON. F you want handsome Lawns, Delains, and other Drees Goods : ,s . o to D. P. GWIN'S. $1 50 75 50 insertimi flo. 3 (1 , 9. $ 37 4 $ 50 75 1 OU 1 50 2 00 IZIE Esma 9 00 13 00 12 00 ..10 00 '3O 00 20 00 FISHER & SON FOR SPRING & SUMMER MB WILLIAM LEWIS, 20 00 24 00 50 00 VOL. XVI, Is Insanity Contagious ? Several members of a family affected with insanity, (says M. Baillarger,) and whose symptoms are exactly the same, are occa sionally brought to asylums on the same day. In questioning one of these patients we may anticipate on what point the other is insane ; as, if we make some inquiries, we probably learn that both patients were not affected in the same time, but that one had been attacked some months previous to, and had communicated the disease by the degrees to the other. Thus, M. Baillarger has known delirium transmitted from mother to daugh ter, and from mother to son. • Mme. P— and her daughter were ad mitted to La Salpetriere at the same time.— Both were mutually convinced that - their food was poisoned ; that they were followed on the street ; and that aquafortis, &c., were thrown upon them, which exhaled poisonous fumes around them. The second example is still more curious : —Mme. X—, a remarkable intelligent wo man, much . respected by her two sons, the elder of whom was twenty years of age, be came seized with singular madness. She imagined that she was a somnambulist, and, that often during the night her husband made her give consultations of which she had no recollections en waking. She supposed that he gained in this way large sums, and was Constantly demanding this money from him. - Without enlarging on all, the reasons she advanced in support of such notions, it will be sufficient to say, that by degrees she im parted her idea to her oldest son, who, al though he did not live with her, saw her al most every day, as, on quitting his work, he was obliged to pass a part of the night at home. The accusation of his mother excited him. Ile had some very violent discussions with his father and even went to the authori ties to inform against him. Insanity then beea tne so evident, that the patient who had just been enlisted, was rejected on account of mental alienation. This yu,nig man •and the girl P— both recovered. Ruth have explained how the absolute con fidence they had •in their mother exercised something like fascination over them. They declared that, su far from suspecting any de fect in their reasoning faculties, they were, on the contrary, led away by their convic tions. M. X— has acknowledged that, under the influence or the constant quarrels arising from the unsuspected insanity of his mother, by work or want of sleep, his mind was agi tated, and that he was then impressed with the ideas which he now stated, as constituting his insanity. There are at present in La Salpetriere two sisters, who were brought on the same day, with exactly the same symptoms of insanity. The elder is a widow, the younger is married. The former imagined that her brother-in-law wished to poison her ; and she persuaded her sister, who lived with her, into the same be lief. To guard against the effects of the poi son, the patients set to drinking brandy, and it was from this time their insanity became more pronounced. The younger, who was under the care of Mr. Baillarger, admitted that up to this time her husband had been very kind to her, and that, during the eight years they had been married she had no cause to complain of him, but she is not the less convinced that he has made more than a hundred attempts to poison her. In another instance M. Baillarger has known the husband to become insane under the influence and by the effect of the annoy ance which his wife inflicted on him. What is very strange in this case is, that the wo man, no doubt of a superior intelligence to her husband, had driven him mad by com municating to him the idea upon which she was herself insane, and actually had him sent as a lunatic to the Hospice de Bictre, while she herself remained at large. Facts of this nature are somewhat rare, but they explain certain interesting questions in phyological medicine. AN ECCENTRIC INDIVIDITAL.—The head of a celebrated mercantile house in Vienna has recently erected a mausoleum, which no one, even of his must intimate friends, is allowed to enter. The walls are covered with black velvet, upon which appear the arms of the proprietor. Upon a platform slightly eleva ted stands an open coffin, candles of black wax at its four corners-. At the foot of the coffin is a plate of silver, en which are the name and date of birth of the future occu pant of the narrow abode, and a space has been left for the date of his death, and this he evidently expects within the coming ten years, fur he has completed the record as far as 180—. - Daily he is accompanied by his friends to the door of this tomb; there he leaves them, enters alone into the edifice, lies down in his coffin, and causes a concealed or; gan to play lugubrious music. Then he goes forth to the world again, dines heartily, and converses with a gaiety of manner which charms all his guests. STINGLESS BEES.-Mr. A. O. Moore, of New York, who went to Central America last year, has just returned from Guatemala, and has brought with him two swarms of the sting less bees common to that country, which he has given in charge of Mr. Parsons, of Flush ing, who will propagate them for the Agri cultural Department of the Patent Office, which will in due time distribute them, if it. is found that they can be kept in any part of the United States. These bees are of two va rieties, one large• and the other small, and both quite different in all their habits from the honey bees common with us. For one thing, there appears to be but two classes— workers and queens. The largest class are about the size of our common beess, the queen being much larger ; and while laying eggs appears very clumsy and unable to fly. The honey is deposited in egg-shaped capsules, more than half the size of hen's eggs, fas tened to a plate of wax only upon one side, and sometimes arranged quite horizontal in tiers .one above another. In one of the alleys in Fourth Ward, Philadelphia, fort✓ -two persons, black and white, live in one cellar. [Ficn the Tyrone Star, Sep. sth.] A Sanious Poor.—On Thursday evening last, there was a wedding at the house of Mr. Henry Burkert, adjoining this place. Our young German friend, George Trautwein, took to himself a bride, in - the person of a buxom lass from Alexandria. Of course there was the amount of feasting and dancing usual upon such happy occasions. Between 10 and 11 o'clock at night, however, some rowdies from town went over. They were all the worse for liquor, and the consequence neces sarily was a row. During the fight that oc curred, a young man by the name of Dickson was stabbed, and Henry Shenefelt, (who is charged with stabbing Dickson,) was so bad beaten with stones that he is still confined to his bed. Upon the oath of Shenefelt, Joseph Pruner was arrested and bound over to the October term of Court. Other arrests, it is said, will be made. It is time that an end be put to these disgraceful occurrences, which have become by far too common in our bor ough. But a few men are the cause of them, and if an example or two were made, it would have a wholesome effect. FALL or Two BRIDGES.—On Wednesday last, whilst Mr. Jacob Berry was driving a drove of cattle over the bridge between Gays port and Hollidaysburg, in this county, the floor of the bridge gave way, precipitating twenty-seven of the cattle about fifteen feet down into the water. Several had their horns broken off and were more or less injured, but none were killed. For three ears this bridge has been condemned by different Grand Ju ries, and the neglect of the Commissioners to rebuild it, will probably cost the county a large sum of money. This accident compelled the ore wagons to cross by means of the plank road bridge, and on the same afternoon it also gave way, leav ing no means of communication between the two places except by the Pennsylvania Rail road viaduct. A MYSTERIOUS AFFAIR.-011 last Tuesday evening, Mr. John Shriver, of this county, went to Janesville, in Clearfield county, fur the purpose of purchasing a farm. lie had a large amount of. money in his possession, which he carried in a belt upon his person. lie staid all night at the hotel of Mr. Jordan. The next day he made arrangements with Mr. Wesley Nerling for the purchase of his farm, and after dinner, whilst an article of agreement was being drawn up, he said he would go into a piece of woods, which is upon the place, for the purpose of examining the timber. He went into the woods alone, and from that time nothing has been heard of him. -- The community in the neighborhood of Janesville is in a great state of exeitement.— It is believed that he has been foully dealt with, but we have not learned that any one in that neighborhood is suspected. A BRAVE BOY. —Little Jimmy Cats, an orphan boy whom Mr. Robert Waring is raising, a few days since was bitten upon the leg by a spotted snake. lie was alone in the field at the time, but instantly cut out with his pocket knife the place that was bit ten. A few ulcerated sores have made their appearance in the neighborhood of the wound, but beyond this he has sustained no inconvenience from the ,poison. He is not ten years old, and for his age certainly dis played a great deal of courage and presence of mind. Mr. Waring's farm adjoins Ty rone. An Eccentric Doctor and his Patient Of all the professions, trades or occupations that engage the minds of men, that of physi cian is the most diversified. In locating he has to find out the constitution of those he is called upon to visit, for it is frequently the case that success may be owing more to a deep and thorough knowledge of the constitution than applications. As an illustration of this, we will relate an anecdote of one of our old physicians, who, if he finds physic will not cure, tries such other means as the case may require. Dr. D—had long been the attending phy sick, )1 of a lady considerably past her teens, and affected with certain disorders incident to a want of occupation and the care of a fami ly. She sends for the doctor in season and out of season ; he rushes at a 2.40 pace, and finds his patient physically perfectly well but sad and lonely, and of course afflicted with the blues. All that he can do is to adminis ter a tincture with a few drops of peppermint, and the patient is well for a day. On one occasion—a cold blusterous night —the doctor had just turned in, wrapping himself snugly in his blanket, with the hope of a quiet sleep, when a loud rap aroused him. "Who is sick ?" inquired the doctor. "Miss Sallie Strickland, sir ; she is most dead ; expect she'll die before you get there." "I'll be along,' says the doctor; exclaiming to himself, "that Miss Sally 1 I'll try to cure her this time." The doctor plods along . through mud and mire, cold and rain, studying his application. When he arrives at the dwelling of Miss Sal ly he finds her, as usual, in rather a depress ed state of mind. "Doctor," said she feebly, "I expect to die every moment ;I am very low. Can you do anything for me ?" The doctor feels her pulse; nothing the matter—merely wanted company. The doc tor becomes communicative. 'Miss Sally, I was having a terrible dream when your servant awoke me." "What is it ?" she eagerly inquired. "I dreamed I was dead," continued the doc tor, "and descended into the lower regions," where I met "Old Scratch," who invited me to view his dominions. The inmates were en gaged in different occupations ; some playing cards, others swindling their neighbors ; in fine, all the pursuits they followed during their life, they continued there. When Satan got through showing me round, he• exclaimed to the four quarters of his kingdom that they should all go to bed—"for, said he, "Sally Strickland will be here directly, and there'll be no•sleep iu my region for a month I" The doctor's speedy departure was increas ed to flight by the sight of a broomstick flour ishing actively in his rear ; but the remedy was effectual. —rErs~~'~tt~_=— HUNTINGDON, PA., SEPTEMBER 12, 1860, Secrets of the Ocean • Mr. Green the famous diver, tells singular stones of his adventures, when making search in the deep water of the ocean. lie gives some sketches of what he saw on the Silver Banks, near Hayti:— " The banks of coral on which my divings, narrated in the previous chapter, were made, are about 40 miles in length, from ten to twen ty in breadth. " On the bank of coral is presented to the diver one of the most beautiful and sublime scones the eye - ever beheld. The water va ries from ten to one hundred feet in depth, and so clear that the diver can see from two to three hundred feet, when submerged, with little obstruction to the sight. " The bottom of the ocean in many places on these banks, is as smooth as a marble floor ; in others it is studded with coral col umns, from ten to one hundred feet in height and from one to eighty feet in diameter. The tops of those more lofty support a myriad Of pyramidal pendants, each forming a myriad more ; giving the reality to the imaginary abode of some water nymph. In other places the pendants form arch after arch, and as the. diver stands on the bottom of the ocean and crazes through these into the deep winding avenue, he feels that they fill him with as sacred an awe as if he were in some old ca thedral, which had long been buried beneath "old ocean's wave." Hero and there, the coral extends even to the surface of the water, as if those loftier columns were towers be longing to those stately temples now in ruins. "'There were countless varieties of di minutive trees, shrubs and plants, in every crevice of the corals where the water had de posited the least earth. They were all of a faint hue, owing to the pale light they received, although of every shade, and entirely differ ent from plants I am familiar with that vege tate upon dry land. One in particular at tracted my attention ; it resembled a sea fan of immense size, of variegated colors and of the most brilliant hue. " The fish which inhabited these Silver Banks I found as different in kind as the scenery was varied. They were of all forms, colors, and sizes=from the symmetrical goby to the globe-like sun-fish ; from those of the dullest hue to the changeable dolphin ; from the spots of the leopard to the hues of the sunbeam; from the harmless minnow to the voracious shark. Some had heads like squir rels, others like cats and dogs ; one of small size .resembled a bull terrier. Some darted through the water like meteors, while others could scarcely be seen to move. enumerate and explain all the various kinds of fish I beheld while diving on those banks would, were I enough of a naturalist so to do, require more space than my limits will allow, for I am convinced that most of the kinds of fish which inhabit the tropical seas can he found there. The sun-fish, Sa fish, star-fish, white shark, ground shark, blue or shovel-nose shark, were often seen.— There were also fish which resembled plants, and remaining as fixed in their position as a shrub: The only power they possessed was to open and shut when in danger. S,)me of them resembled the rose in full bloom and were all hues. " There were the ribbon fish, from four to five inches to three feet in length. Their eyes are very large, and protrude like those of the frog. Another fish was spotted like the leopard, from three to ten feet in length. They build their houses like the beaver, in which they spawn, and the male or female watches the egg until it hatches. I saw many specimens of the green turtle, some five feet long, which I should think would weigh from 400 to 500 pounds."—Charlestou Evening News. AN ATTEMPT TO MARIE IT Ruic.—A letter from Lynchburg in the Richmond Dispatch says : " A gentleman who resides near Boyd ton, Mechlenburg county, Va., has aspired to a now science—that of controlling the clouds in order to cause it to rain at will. With the view of retaining this end Jie has built a `rain tower,' which novel structure is said to be thirty feet in diameter at the base, which size it retains to the height of forty feet. To this height it contains four flues, each seven feet in• diameter. The number of flues is then reducecd to two, which run up twenty feet higher, the top of the structure reaching an altitude of sixty feet. The whole concern was erected at a cost of about $l,OOO. The The modus operandi of causing rain to fall is as follows : The flues are filled with dry pine wood which is set on fire, and which is kept up until the desired effect is produced on the elements. His theory is, that the great heat produced in the air above the tower' will cause the clouds to concentrate over it, when plenty of rain will fall in that vicinity. The originator of this novel idea is said to be a firm believer in the practicability and utility of his invention, notwithstanding the fact that, after repeated trials, during which he consumed hundreds of cords of wood his tow er failed to produce the desired effect on the unpropitious heavens, he having been a great sufferer from drought during the entire spring and summer." APPLES.—The editor of the - Germantown Telegraph has been making a tour through Northern Pennsylvania, and in giving an ac count of his journey he says: " During the trip we saw on every side the apple trees were ladened with fruit. There was not an orchard, however neglected, but that contained more or less fruit. People everywhere told us that this would be the greatest apple season experienced in twenty years. Many trees were propped by numer ous poles. Cider presses were being rejuve nated, and the farmers were jubilant at the prospect of full bins and barrels, and plenty of " schnitz." This will be good news to the lovers of ap ples. There is a scarcity of peaches, but if apples are plentiful we can afford to dispense with the former. A JUVENILE MOTHER.—WhiIe the census taker was collecting his statistics in Scars mont, Maine, he found a girl thirteen years old, who was the mother of a child aged ton months. AUGUSTA, Sept. I.—An immense audience of ladies and gentlemen attended the meet ing this afternoon in the City Hall Park, to listen to the speech of Mr. Stephens. Mr. Stephens said that he appeared re luctantly before the people, but he could not refuse the invitation of his old constituents. The signs of the times portend evil. Every thing seems tending to a national disruption and general anarchy. Whether this tenden cy be arrested depends on the virtue, intelli gence, and patriotism of the people of all parts of the country in the present crisis of our history. He was for Douglas and John son, as the regular nominees. He said that whether Douglasreeeived two thirds of the electoral vote or not, according to the usages of the party, he received the vote of two-thirds of the Convention. The two-thirds rule was adopted upon a parlia mentary understanding, such as is provided by the Constittition to pass a law over the veto of the President, by two-thirds of those present voting in its favor. Any other con struction was impracticable. He said the construction enforced at Charleston and Bal timore, was an interpolation and a wrong, and whether Douglas got 212 votes as assort ed on the one side, or 154 votes as alleged on the other, he received more than two-thirds after the Seceders left. He said he supported the ticket because it was placed on the time-honored platform of nun-intervention, the only principle which can preserve the Union. He said that the objections urged against DJuglas by the Se ceders were, that he refused to say that it was the duty of Congress to do what they would not do thems-elves. Mr. Douglas re fused to say that it was the duty of Congress to pass laws to protect slavery in the Territo ries, and hence they oppose him, and refuse to vote for such laws themselves. Mr. Ste phens defended Mr. Douglas against the charge that he would not yield to the decision of the Supreme Court, and said that Douglas agreed with every principle decided in the Dred Scott case, but insisted that the point how far a Territorial Legislature might con stitutionally regulate slavery had not been decided, and no case involving the principles had been before the court. Mr. Douglas' position boing that there was a perfect equal ity between the citizens of all the States with the right of person acrd property, He said that Mr. Douglas believed that a Territorial Legislature might, by a system of laws, virtually exclude slavery. Mr. Stephens said that he differed from Mr. Douglas on this point, but said it was a mat ter of no vital or essential importance, be cause if a majority of the people of a Terri tory should be opposed to slavery it would not go there: He saw no injury to the South resulting from it. He believed that slavery will go to the extent of the population and capactty to expand, but beyond this on law of Congress, or of a Territorial Legislature, can extend it. lie dwelt upon the Union, and the impor tance of preserving it. It is the best Gov ernment in the world, and if it fails we shall never see its like again. He called on the patriots of all parties to unite and save it.— He said that the Union had enemies in the North and in the South, but he was not one of them. He said that he knew Mr. Brock inridge's ability and patriotism, and would have sustained him had he been nominated by the Democratic Convention, but would not in his present position, which divides the party and increases the chances of the lie publican candidate, so fearfully close before. He did not regard Mi. Breckinrid,ge as a Disunionist, but his running endangers the Union, notwithstanding he has no chance of an election before the people. A TURTLE OvEn SIXTY YEARS OLD.—A woman named Sarah MeKissou, residing near Indiana, discovered a land turtle or terrapin, near her house the other day, which may well take rank among the oldest inhabitants. As will be seen by the following names and date, inscribed on it, it is over sixty years of age, yet is as active to-day as ever, and looks as if it might live a hundred years : James Dixon, 1797 ; James McKisson, 1797 ; John McKis son, 1818 ; Thomas Cross, 1818 ; Robert Mc- Kisson, 1829 ; William McKisson, 1840. Mr. McKisson who marked it in 1829 is alive and well, and states that it was found but a few rods from where he left it. It had' the 10th of August, 1860, added to the other dates on its back and was turned Those again. RULES FOR TRANSFERRING ENGRAVINGS TO WRITE PAPER.—The London Builder gives the following rule fur transferring engravings to white paper : Place the engravings fur a few seconds over the vapor of iodine ; dip a slip of white paper in a weak solution of oil of vitriol ; when dry, lay a slip upon the engraving, and place them for a few minutes under the press. The en graving will thus be re-produced in all its delicacy and finish. The iodine has the prop erty of fixing the black part of the ink upon the engraving, and not the white. This im portant discovery is yet in its infancy. TO RESTORE SCORCHED LINEN.-If linen has been scorched by ironing, and the mark has not gone entirely through,so as to damage the texture, it may be removed by the follow ing process :—Take two onions, peel them, slice them, extract the juice by squeezing or pounding ; then cut up half an ounce of white soap and two ounces of Fuller's earth; mix with them the onion juice and half a pint of vinegar. Boil this composition well then spread it, when cool, over the scorched part or the linen, and let it dry on. After wards wash out the linen: WITHDRAWAL, or S.M.. HounoN.—General Houston has issued a brief letter addressed "To my friends in the United States," with drawin,r his name from the list of Presiden tial candidates. He declines to express any opinion in favor of either of the candidates opposed to Mr. Lincoln. Ho earnestly press es the union of all conservative and Union men upon one ticket. Editor and Proprietor. .. NO 19 Georgia Politics. SPEECH OP MR. STEPHENS Letter'frona Pike's Peak. [From the Blairsville Record.] We have been permitted to make the for lowing extracts from an interesting letter written by Mr. John P. Clarke, to his father; the Hon. James Clarke, of this place: MOUNTAIN CITY, Western Kansas, T August 4, 1860. f DE.I. FRIENDS This country abounds in quartz rock; which has more or less gold in it. The quartz yields from nothing to as high a $6OO per cord (128 cubic feet) owittg to the lead. A person can walk out blindfolded on the hills or in the gUlches, and commence dig ging and be will find gold either on the sur face or a few feet down, but not always in paying quantities. The gold-bearing quartz runs perpendicularly down from the surface, with a Width varying from 0 inches to 5 feet, enclosed on each side by a solid granite rock which cannot be worked but at an immense cost. There are some shafts sunk as low as 120 feet, and it is found the deeper they go the richer the quartz. There is little else can be done here with the gathering of gold, than having the proper machinery for crush ing the quartz, and fixtures which costs $1,50 per pound, and 15 cents an ounce for saving the gold, so that one not interested in a mill, has to stand back and take what he can get. One mill on Eureka gulch last week after a run of thirty hours, eleaned tip Some $l,BOO. This is only one instance of what is Consid-: eyed here as doing well ; I could nail e many similar cases, but the mills are not all doing; such a good business, as I know of several that are not making their board. The hillkt here are so fall of leads, that many suppose that they Would pay to crash the whole hill; from the foot to the top. The climate here is very changeable—one hour may be very hot and sultry, and the next hour cold and chilly. The snowy range is in view fromi here, being only ten or twelve miles distant. It seems strange to be in a place where the sun comes down so warm as to feel uncone: fortable, and snow distinctly in view. The rainy season commenced about four weeks ago, and has continued to rain more or less every day since, generally frcen noon td midnight, and from that time to noon again, always clear. This country, owing to the changeableness of the weather, is not very healthy, there is scarcely one that a person meets but what is complaining of their liver being effected, either resulting, in eostiveness or laxness, but very fear are bad enough to be confined to their beds. I suppose it is partially owing to their habits of living, and their exposure to the weather. There are thousands here in the mountains that arc living in tents and brush houses, or hovels; and every time it rains, their clothes, &e., gets a portion of it, and indeed, the best house here would not be considered in the States, as fit for a white _person to live in.— The timber here is pine, hemlock, and a species of quaking-asp, which does not groW larger than four or five inches in diameter.— All the wood is soft and light, and if a per son wishes a piece of hard wood for a par ticular purpose, they pay 15 cents per pound for it. Axe, pick and mattock handles, are from 75 cents to $l,OO each. A list of prices, of a few articles, will give you an idea of what it costs to live: Flour, $l6 per 100 ; bacon, 25 cents per pound ; coffee and sugar; 30 cents per pound ; dried apples, 25 cents per pound ; iron and nails, 25 , cents each ; hay, 10 cents per pound, of $2OO per ton.—' As for vegetables, such as onions, leittnce; radishes, cucumbers, turnips, &c., 25 cents a taste or smell. Beef from 10 to 12 cents butter, $l,OO per pound; houses rents for about $l,OO per day—not as good as the houses out at the mill place. A woman can make from $l4 to $lB per week, if she will work—while men are only getting $1,50 per day. The horse has got behind the cart here, owing to the scarcity of females. give you women the prices paid here for la bor, not intending that it shall induce you to pack up your duds, and start for the Rocky Mountains, for I (candidly) inform you that it is the hardest country to live in, ever yeti read about, let alone be seen. Prices for washing—linen pants, 25 cents; socks, 10 cents ; pocket handkerchiefs, 15 cents ; flan nel shirts, 15 cents; white shirts, 25 cents, &c., &c. But if a person does their own washing, it costs nothing but soap at 2 . 5 cents per pound, as we have nothing to pay as yet for water, nor sun and wind to dry them. Our house is 13 by 18 feet, built of unhew►i logs, with a smoky chimney in the one end, one story high, and covered with clap boards so close and tight, that we know when: it rains every time, and two window holes, and a door made of three rough boards. W 6 have " mother earth" for a floor, and bed steads made of pine pole, made fast to the wall. My bunk, which I sleep soundly on every night, has ten pounds of hay,- two comforts, one blanket, and my big overcoat, which answers for a pillow. You may laugh; but it is not every person here that enjoys so many comforts. Our eating is in keeping with our house and beds. IVe have a man for cook, who serves up breakfast, dinner and supper, on a boal, just as we eat out of the pot. Having no plates to put the proviz sion on, we eat off tin plates, and drink out of tin cups. Our meals are made out of bread, meat and coffee. For breakfast we have coffee, bread, and beef—for dinner, beef, bread and coffee,and for supper, bread,- coffee, and beef. -x The saving of gold is a mere matter of ex periment with the people as yet; it differs so entirely from the gold of California, that persons from there acknowledge that they know nothing more than anybody else. The best that is now in use, is copper-plata pol ished; and coated with quicksilver, for the water and dirt to pass over as it comes from the stompers. Copper-plate in the rough state,- is worth 57,00 per pound, and hard to get at that. It takes near 200 pounds to fit a mill out complete with copper-plate.-- 'Whether I will make anything or nothing, time will prove. In this country it is make or break, there is no standing still. We have no preaching here, but plenty of gambling "hells" and drinking shops; where everything in the shape of immorality is car ried on extensively. There are very few that pay attention to the Sabbath ; a great many mills never stop for that day, and li'"itz - ft (Toes stop pounding, the men are engaged in cleaning up, which is the same thing as run ning. Neither the Company which Robert or myself are engaged in, do any business' whatever on that day, nor do we, let others do as they may. If we cannot make enough in running six days, there would be little use in running the seventh. I suppose by the time this reaches yeti; politics will be raging. Give my best wishes to the Foster Club ; and hope for their sue: cess this fall. J. P. CLefrltte: