TERNS OF THE GLOBE. Per annum in advance Six months Throe mouths A failure to notify a discontinuance at the expiration of the term subscribed for will be considered a now engage mvnt. TERMS OF ADVERTISING. 1 inaa•rtiou. 2 do. 3 do. ilour lines or less f, 25 $ 3734 $5O one square, (12 1ine5,)..........50.........75 1 00 Two squares, 1 00 1 50 2 00 Three squares, 1 50. ..... 225 300 Over three week and less than three months : 25 cents per square for each insertion. Six lines or less, One square, Two squares, Three squares, Four squares,. Half a column, 12 0(1 16 00...... ....24 00 One column, 20 00 "0 00.... ..... .50 00 Professional and Business Cards not exceeding four lines one year, $3 a Administrators' and Executors' Notices, $1 75 Advertisements not marked with the number of inser tions desired, will be continued till forbid and charged ac cording to these terms. DON'T FORGET, WALLACE & CLEMENT, Have just received another stock of new goods, such as DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, QUEENSWARE, in the store room at the south-east corner of the Diamond in the borough of Huntingdon, lately occupied as a Jew elry Store. - Their - - - T Stock has been carefully selected, and will be sold low for cash or country produce. FLOUR. FISIL lIAMS, SIDES, SHOULDERS, SALT, LARD. and provisions generally, kept constantly on hand on reasonable terms. Huntingdon, Sept. 24, 1860. r . . 4 k. Bii 0 .-- & - N •-•ar.7. ' ' .'- .4, • . 4 , P. % r . \ A . 0 D E ALER IN . 14 ‘ t rZliff.: E iv" cult).. IP y o, , _p ri.untin g .„, „ 0 Oka PENN . % A on 0. t . 4 , \ ) ,1-i„ V_ ki 6 ;.--0,,,/,6. . I ."., -, ..,,,,e••• SELLING OFF FOR CASH !! BARGAINS IN HARDWARE As " the nimble penny is hotter than the slow sixpence," and small pro/its in cash. are better than rexiny eye-sore boot• accounts. JAMES A. BROWN is now determined to silt off the large and splondid stock of Hardware, Paints. &c.. which he has just brought from the east, at such lou prices, as a ill induce ever% body to crowd in for a share of the bargains. His stock inclu les a complete variety of BUJ LDI MECI I A SICS' TOOLS. CUT LER Y. 01 LS. PAINTS, TARNISIIES, GLASS, CARRIAGE VII MMINGS, STEEL. IRON. CHAIN PUMPS. LEAD PIPE, MOROCCO. LINING SKINS, COAL OIL LAMPS anti COIL OIL, &c.. Sc., Together with a full assortment of tvery - thing pertaining Welds line of business. ley 117 orders receive prompt attentiou.-Ti JAS. A. BROWN ilmltingtlon. Sept. St. ISQO 9'ooo CUSTOMERS WANTED ! NEW GOODS BENJ. JACOBS Has received a - fine as , :oriment of DRY GOODS for the Spring and Summer season, comprising a very extensive a.surttnent of LADIES DRESS GOODS, DRY GOODS in general. BEADY-MADE CLOTIFING. For Men and Boys GROCERIES, HATS & CAPS. 'BOOTS AND SHOES. &c. &c. The public generally are requested to call and examine my goods—and his prices. • As I ani determined to sell my Goods, all who call may expect bargains. Country Produce taken in Exchange for Goods. B ENJ . .1 A C013;3, of the, Cheap Owner. Huntingdon, Sept. 21, IS6O. GA. & E. A. LANDELL, O No. 110 North Wharves, Philadelphia, MANUFACTURE AND HAVE FOR SALE CANDLES, Spermaceti, Patent Sperm, Hydraulic. Adamantine, Hotel, Car and Tallow Candles. OILS, Pure Sperm. Lard Bleached Whale. Sea Elephant. Strained Whale, Tanners', Currivrs', Pala, °Mlle, and Red SOAPS, White, Yellow, Brown, Chemical Olive, Fancy, and other Soaps. Aug. 15, 1860.-om. PT% )-ri 0 . 1 . 4 CI 821 U , re 4 " . :7 1 C i r) E 4 = rei tv c, cp = = TTAINES BROS.' OVERSTRUNG _l_l GRANT) ACTION PIANO FORTES, Celebrated for superior quality of ToNnand elegance and beauty of finish. These Pianos have always taken the FIRST PREMIUM when placed in competition with oth er makers. CHALLENGE ALL COMPETITION. A splendid as sortment of LOUIS XIV and plainer styles al ways on hand. Also Second-hand Pianos and PRINCE'S In- PRO WED MELODEONS from $45 to $350. .tt , Every Instrument warranted. OEO. L. WALKER'S Piano and Melodeon Depot, S. T•.. Cor. ith & Arch Sts., Philadelphia. July 25, 1800.-6 m, COME TO THE NEW STORE FOR CHEAP BARGAINS. NEW GROCERY C. LONG Informs the citizens of Huntingdon and vi cinity, that he has opened a new Grocery and Confection ery Store in the basement, under Gutman & Co.'s Clothing Store, in the Diamond, and would most respectfully re quest a share of public patronage. His stock consists of all kinds of the BEST GROCERIES, CONFECTIONERIES, &c., &c. Fish can be had nt wholesale or retail. ICE CIIMAM will be furnished regularly to parties and individuals. at his room. Huntingdon, Sept. 24, 1860. IF you want Carpets and Oil Cloths, call at D. P. GWIN'S, where you will find the largestau sortment,in town. Abeautiful lot of Shaker Bonnets for sale cheap : at D. P. GWIN'S. 3 months. 6 months. 12 months. ...V 50 , ::,3 00 1,5 00 Ei 00 3 00. S 00 10 00 45 00 7 00 10 00-.- ..... 15 00 9 00 13 00 •'0 00 THE NEW STORE 110L1),)W-VI; Al: E, SA,DI I I, Ell Y, FOR FALL and WINTER 7 r ~. «g) ((b)) vl AND CONFECTIONERY $1 50 7 00 WILLIAM LEWIS, VOL XVI. (1,9 °pular Wong. DIXEY' S LAND. Away down south in de fields oh cotton Cinnamon seed and sandy bottoms, Look away, look away, Look away, look away. Den 'way down south in de fields ob cotton, Vinegar shoes and paper stockings, Look away, look away, Look away, look away. Den I wish I was in Dixey's land, Oh-oh, oh-oh, In Dixey's land I'll take my stand, And live and die in Dixey's land. Away, away, away, Away down south in Dixey. Pork and cabbage in de pot, It goes in cold and comes out hot, Look away, look away, Look away, look away. - Vinegar put right on red beet. It makes dem always fit to eat. Look away, look away, Look away, look away. Den I wish I was in Dixey's land, Oh-oh, oh-oh, In Dixey's land I'll take my stand, And live and die in Dixey's land, Away, away, away, Away down south in Dixey. Old massy and I am bery glad, lie's lost de one be thought he had, Look away, look away, Look away, look away. If he comes back, which I know 11'11 do, Ma , ba make him dance till he is blue, Look away, look away, Look away, look away. Don I wi,ll I was in Dixey's land, Oh-oh, oh-oh, In Dixey's laid I'll take my stand, And live and die in Dixey's land, A way, away, away, Away down south in Dixey. A nigger up in a great big tree, Looking right straight down at me, Look away, look away, Look away, look away. up wid a stick and hit him in de eye And made dis little monkey cry, Look away, look away, Look away, look away. A nigger in a bushel measure, tickl'd to death by swallowin' ts feather, Look away, look away, Look away, look away, Do doctor tried to fotch bins to, But he found out it warts % no go, Look away, look away, Look away, look away. Den I wish I was in Dixey's land, Oh-oh, oh-oh, Iu Dixey's land ril take my stand, And live and die in Dixey's land, An aw ‘y, away, Away down south in Dixey. Union Demonstration in Washington. Serenade to Judge Douglas on Saturday eve ning December ist. SPEECH OF JUDGE DOUGLAS After several patriotic airs by the band, Judge Douglas appeared on the steps of his residence, and was greeted with the most ve hement bursts of applause. In behalf of the people, John F. Ennis, Esq., of Washington, addressed him as fol. lows : During the recent campaign, sir, a large number of the Democrats of this city, who believed in the principles enunciated by the Convention which nominated you at Balti more, formed themselves into a political or ganization called the Douglas and Johnson Democratic Association. They have come here to-night to offer you a sincere and cor dial welcome upon your return to this city, and to express to you their high admiration of the noble and manly struggle which you have made in defence of those principles upon which, they believe with you, rest the exis tence and perpetuity of our institutions.— [Cheers.] But, sir, this welcome is not con fined alone to your political friends. You are surrounded by your personal friends, neighbors, and acquaintances, who have re sided with you in this city for years, and who take a pride in recognizing you almost as -an adopted citizen of Washington. The records of Congress attest your claims upon our grat itude. [Cheers.] Your voice, which has ever been heard in favor of our glorious Union, has never been silent when the Union's capi tal wanted the aid of a friend and advocate upon the floors of Congress. [" Good," and cheers.] For this you have the grateful thanks of every citizen in this District. I need not say to you that it is a source of extreme pleasure to us all to find you renewed rather than im paired in health by your arduous labors in the recent campaign. [Cheers.] I but speak the unanimous sentiment of all who hear me when I utter the prayer that your life may be long spared to your country. [Cheers.]— In the days of its prosperity its destinies have often been guided by the wisdom of your counsels, and now, in the hour of its gloom and adversity, we look trustingly to you for your powerful aid in delivering us from the dangers and difficulties which surround us. [Loud cheers.] May your life and strength be spared for this additional effort. ["Amen," and cheers.] Den I wi,h I was in Dixey's 01x-oh, In Dixey's land I'll take my stand, And live and die in Dixey's land, Away, away, away, Away down south in Dixcy. ilatititat J • ' ? Ail. . . • In reply, Judge Douglas said : Mr. Ennis, I tender to you, and through you to those you represent, my sincere thanks for this expression of your respect. To be thus welcomed on my arrival by so large a number of the citizens of Washington, on such a cold and dreary night as this, is a compliment of which any man might well be proud. It is true that I have lived among you during the sessions of Congress for sev enteen years, and have exchanged with you and received from you acts of kindness which remain fresh in my heart, and will always be cherished with pleasure. [Cheers.] To be thus received by those who know me best, and who have been personal witnesses of the mode in which I have heretofore discharged my public duties, I fully appreciate, and it inspires me with renewed energy to fulfil those of the future. [Cheers.] It is true, as you have said, that from the time the eanvass opened I was actively en gaged in the vindication of those great con stitutional principles upon which I believe this Union depends, and I was able to avow my sentiments in the same terms in the North and in the South, in the East and in the West —from Bangor, Maine, to Jefferson City, in Missouri, and from the lakes to the Gulf of Mexico. [Cheers.] So long as we live under a Constitution which is the supreme law of all the States, it ought to be administered in such a manner as to impart equal rights, equal justice, and equal protection to the cit izens of all the States. [" That's right," and cheers.] I hold that the integrity and perpe tuity of this Republic depend upon maintain ing on the slavery question, that great prin ciple of non-intervention which says to every people, regulate your own domestic affairs in your own way, subject only to the Constitu tion of the United States. [" Good," and cheers.] This vexed question of slavery ex isted when our fathers framed the Constitu tion, as well as now ; and if we only carry out the principle upon which they made the Government, we can preserve the Union, and transmit it to our latest posterity. [" God bless you," and cheers.] The Federal Gov ernment must never interfere with the ques tion of slavery anywhere except to perform its constitutional obligation by returning fu gitives when they escape from their masters. [" Good," and cheers.] That obligation to return fugitive slaves is incorporated in the Constitution, and is binding upon the con science and the patriotism of every good citi zen. [" That's it," and loud applause.] If the doctrine of non-interference by the Fed eral Government had been fairly carried out, and the fugitive slave law been honestly obeyed, in my opinion, this Republic would not now be in peril. [" You're right," and cheers.] I have still hope, and will cling to that hope with the tenacity of life, that the pat riotism of the people will yet save this coun try from the dangers which environ it.— [Loud cheers.] I read in the cars the other day, on my way to this city, the patriotic and eloquent speech of the gallant Stephens, of Georgia, [- Hurrah for Douglas and Stephens," and long-continued applause,] and that speech inspired me with the hope that there was still virtue enough left to save the Union. [Cheers.] I endorse heartily the propositions which he submits as a basis of adjustment. " Good,'4 and cheers.] The Georgia platform, upon 'which he plants himself, provides—first, that as a fundamental principle of justice and con stitutional law, no new State shall be exclu ded because she has slavery in her Constitu tion ; second, that the Wilmot proviso shall not be applied to any of the Territories of the United States...; and third, that Congress shall never interfere with the slave trade between the States ; fourth, that Congress shall pass no laws in the District of Columbia which shall endanger the peace and safety of the . slaveholding States ; and fifth, that Con gress shall never pass any law repealing or impairing the efficiency of the fugitive-slave law. [" Good," and cheers.] These five propositions embraced all that Georgia asked, all that the Southern States demanded, in the great contest of ISSO-'5l. I think they were just then, and I believe that the patriotism of this country, North and South, will rally upon them now. [Cheers.] Mr. Stephens adds a sixth proposition, to the effect that all State legislation which throws obstructions in the way of the faithful execution of the fugitive-slave law, shall be removed. I think those laws ought to be re pealed, and furthermore that they never should have been placed upon the statute-books of any State of this Union. [Cheers.] The Con stitution declares that fugitive slaves shall be delivered up. The Supreme Court has deci ded that the Federal Government possesses the power, and it is its duty, to surrender them up, and also that the exclusive power of legislation upon that subject is in Congress, and not in the States. If that proposition be true—and so the court has adjudged—it ne cessarily 'follows, as an invariable rule of con stitutional law, that a duty imposed carries with it the means of its faithful execution.— [Great applause.] - Hence I hold that it is the duty of Con gress instantly to remove all obstructions which may be thrown in the way of the en forcement of the Constitution and the laws, whether those obstructions be imposed by State legislation or in any other manner what soever. [Cheers.] Let us, then, rally round the Constitution as our forefathers made it, perform all our duties under it, protect every right guarantied by it, and preserve the Union forever for our posterity. [Cheers.] Sir, you have alluded to my bearing during the late political contest. I can only say that I did no act and uttered no word during the whole of that canvass that my judgment and my conscience do not fully approve.— [" Good," and great applause.] The contest is over, and let all the asperities, ill:feeling, and strife engendered by it be buried with it. Let the past be referred to only as furnishing lessons of wisdom for the future, and let all Union men, all Constitution-loving men, unite as a band of brothers to save the country first, and quarrel afterwards as to who shall govern it. [Cheers.] HUNTINGDON, PA., DECEMBER 12, 1860. SPEECII OF JUDGE DOUGLAS -PERSEVERE.- It is true that the election has terminated in a manner unsatisfactory to the Union men of this country. No man regrets the result more than I do—not from considerations per sonal to myself, but so affecting the peace and safety of the country. [" That's so," and cheers.] But the question arises wheth er it is the part of patriots to destroy the best Government the sun of Heaven ever shone upon, merely because a man has been elec ted, and a party has been triumphant, whose principles are obnoxious to us. I declare that the election of any man by the Ameri can people, according to the Constitution of our country, furnishes no cause, no excuse, for dissolving this Union. [" Good," and cheers.] Mr. Lincoln having been thus elec ted, must be inaugurated in obedience to the Constitution. [" Good," and cheers.] So long as he observes his oath of office, by see ing the laws faithfully executed, he should be supported in all constitutional measures by all patriotic men, and if he disregards his oath, violates the Constitution, makes war upon any section, or upon the rights of any man, he should then be held to the strictest accountability provided in the Constitution. What harm can this Republican President do, even if be be so disposed ? He is in a minority in both Houses of Congress, he is in a minority of the people of the United States, [" That's so," and cheers,] and h 3 has no power except that conferred by the Constitu tion and the laws. If he does not strictly perform his duty we will impeach him.— [Cheers.] What harm then, I repeat, can he do? He can do no act except distribute the patronage of the Government, and in the ex ercise of that power he is restrained by the Senate, which can confirm or reject all of his principal appointments. [Cheers.] Then, fellow-citizens, I beseech you, without refer ence to former party divisions, to lay aside all political asperities, all personal prejudices, to indulge in no criminations, or re-consider ations but to unite With me, and all Union loving men, in a common effort to save the country from the disasters which threatenit. [" We will," and cheers.] My friends, the night is too cold to detain you longer. [" Go on !"] I again renew to you my thanks for this compliment you have paid me. It is refreshing and grateful to my feelings, when I return here, to my winter residence, as a Representative from a State, to be recieved by the citizens of Washington and strangers thus assembled. It is an en couragement for the great responsibilities that now await us. lam prepared on Mon day morning to resume my seat in the Sen ate without a grievance, without a complaint, without any passion to interfere with the im -partial discharge of my duties to the country. [Cheers.] I trust that the solemnity of the occasion, the responsibility that rests upon every public man, the deep anxiety felt by the American people, will inspire us all to act solely with a reference to maintaining this Republic as our fathers made it, the home of freemen,and the hope of the oppressed through out the world for all time to come. I thank you, gentlemen. [Tremendous applause.] UNION SENTIMENT IN BOSTON John Brown Meeting Broken Up The meeting to commemorate the execu tion of John Brown was called to order by James Redpath, this morning, at the Tem ple. The place of meeting was immediately af ter taken possession of by a body of Union men, who chose Richard Sullivan Fay, as chairman. The meeting as newly organized, passed resolutions denouncing John Brown, justify ing his execution, and lauding the State of Virginia. • Fred Douglass, Bedpath, Frank Sanborn, and other well-known Abolitionists, vainly endeavored to be heard. Much confusion existed ; the police were called in, the hall cleared, and the Temple closed by order of the Mayor. The programme for celebrating the death of John Brown included forenoon, afternoon, and evening sessions in the Tremont Temple, to which the public were invited. The at tendance was thin at the opening, and mostly composed of negroes, but soon the body of the hall began to fill up. J. Stella Martin (colored) announced a committee upon organization, of which Mr. Redpath was one. Noise and disturbance followed the occu pation of the platform. A call for a committee of one hundred to preserve order was received with hisses. Three cheers were given for Gov. Packer, of Pennsylvania, and his letter to the com mittee was called for. Mr. Sanborn appealed to the audience to keep order, and was replied to with hisses and groans, interspersed with cheers for the Constitution. The Chief of Police was present with a force, but effected only a temporary lull of the storm. Stella Martin commenced a speech, which was broken with•the noise, in which he laid all the_ blame for the existing political trou bles upon the conservatism of the cities, and State and Wall streets. The committee came in with an orgaiza tion, of which P. B. Sanborn, of Concord,was President. Richard S. Fay was then nominated for the same office from the floor, and received a large majority of the voices. Mr. Fay step ped upon the platform, amidst the Brown men, and made a short address, in which he inculcated respect for the laws by all men as the best remedy for grievances. Fred Douglass who was on the platform, called the proceeding of Mr. Fay the coolest act he had ever known of. Mr. Fay was sustained, and read a series of resolutions, which were received with ap plause, and adopted by a large majority. Fred Douglass then rose again, and was exceedingly severe in his condemnation of the proceedings. He made an allusion to Daniel Webster, and three cheers were given for Webster, and repeated. He was continually interrupted with cries that he had exceeded BOSTON', Dec. 3, 1860 Editor and Proprietor his time. AU was coninsion, and Mr. Fay retired from the chair. Fred Douglass called on his friends to ro main. Rev. Dr. Eddy commenced a speech in dis approbation of the doings, hut was stopped by a fight, which took place upon the plat form. The stage was immediately covered by the police. The Chief of Police repeatedly called on those present to leave the hall, as the meeting was dissolved. During a brief calm, J. Murray Howe was chosen chairman in place of Mr. Fay, by the Union men, when the fighting was re-com menced on the platform, in which Fred Dou glass and his friends were roughly handled. Cheers were then given for Virginia, and the Union and the Constitution, after which, in obedience to the orders of the Mayor, the police cleared the Hall, and locked the doors. The following are the resolutions which were adopted WnErtEAv, It is fitting, upon the occasion of the anniversary of the execution of John Brown, for his piratical and bloody attempt to create an insurrection among the slaves of the State of Virginia, for the people of this Commonwealth to assemble and express their horror of the man and of the principles %Ilicit led to the foray; therefore it is Resolved, That no virtuous and law-abiding citizen of this Commonwealth our.),t to coun tenance, sympathize, or hold comtnunion with any man who believes that John Brown and his aiders and abettors in that nefarious en terprise were right in any sense of the word. Second., That the present perilous juncture in our political affairs, in which our existence as a nation is imperilled, require of every cit izen who loves his country to come forward and express his sense of the value of the Union—alike important to the free labor of the North, the slave labor of the South, and to the interests of the commerce manufac tures, and agriculture of the world. Third, That we tender to our brethren in Virginia our warmest thanks for the conser vative spirit they have manifested, notwith standing the unprovoked and lawless attack upon them by John Brown and his associates, acting, if not with the connivance, at least with the sympathy of a few fanatics from the Northern States; and that we hope they will continue to aid in opposing the fanaticism which is even now attempting to subvert the Constitution and the Union. Als Fourth, That the people of this city have submitted too long in allowing irresponsible persons and political demagogues of every description to hold public meetings to disturb the public peace, and misrepresent us abroad; that they have become a nuisance, which, in self-defence, we are determinti'd shall hence forward be summarily abated. BOSTON, Dec. 3.—The summary dissolution of the John Brown meeting in Tremont Tem ple, to-day, is received with general satisfac tion. The Abolitionists were largely outwitted throughout by an assemblage embracing many leading business men of this city. After the chairman had pronounced the meeting dissolved, Fred Douglass, Sanborn, and a few others manifested some resistance to the police, and were ejected from the plat form and hall. During the uproar, Rev. Stella Martin (col ored) announced that a meeting would be held in his church in the evening. In response to the announcement the Bap tist church (colored) in Joy street, was filled at an early hour. The edifice is small, and a large proportion of the audience was black, Here Wendell Phillips, John Brown, Jr., Fred Douglass, and other leading John Brown sympathizers, ventilated their opinions freely with but little interruption. A woman named Chapman appeared to preside over the deliberations. Several policemen were stationed in the church. On the outside there was an im mense crowd, and a strong force of police.— The disturbance was confined to noisy dem onstrations, though the crowd seemed very anxious to get hold of fled path. The meeting broke up at about 10 o'clock, and the audience dispersed quietly. Some of the leading spirits were hooted at while passing through the outside crowd, but no violence was committed. Frank B. Sanborn was acting president of the meeting, In anticipation of a possible riot, the sec ond battalion of infantry was held in readi ness at their armory by order of the Mayor. The police force, however, was sufficient, and the day and evening passed off simply with a good-natured and quiet patriotic ex citement, Clippings from Our Exchanges. DISTRESSING CAS UA LTY.—We regret to state that Hon. A. S. Wilson, President Judge of this district, met with an accident on Mon day morning by which he had one of his legs broken. After arising he went into the yard attached to his residence, and the pavement being slippy, he lost his footing and fell, breaking the thigh bone of his right leg en tirely off. The broken limb was set by Dr. Van Valzah, and we are pleased to learn the Judge is getting along as comfortably as can be expected under the circurnstances.—l,eut. istown Democrat. :29th. WE RETURN TO WOODEN SuoEs.—The Shoe and Leather Reporter says : " The plan of using shingles iu the bottoms of shoes origi nated about thirteen years ago, the first lut being out in New HaMpshiro; the use of pa per and straw board began about the same time. To give some idea of the extent of this branch of this business during the past year, five or six acres of heavy pine timber have been used for wood filling, nearly all by the manufacturers of Natick, Mass., and the ad joining towns, in the soles of brogans. rarTwenty-fire thousand one hundred and fifty-six copies of the bible were sold in Con stantinople in the year 1859, being more than double the sales of the preceding year. One hundred years ago, there was not a single white man in Ohio, Kentucky,lndiana and Illinois territories. Then, what is now the most flourishing part of America, was as little known as the country around the mountains of the moon. It was not ner til 1799 that the " Hunter of Kentuck," the gallant and adventurous Boone, left his home in North Carolina, to become the first set tler of Kentucky. The first pioneer of Ohio, did not settle until twenty years after this time. A hundred years ago Canada belonged to France, and the whole population of the United States did not exceed a million and a half of people. A hundred years ago, the great Frederick of Prussia was performing those exploits which have made him-immor tal in military annals, and with his little monarchy was sustaining a single handed contest with Russia, Austria and France— the three great powers of Europe combined. A hundred years ago, Napoleon was not born, and Washington was a young and modest Virginia colonel; and the great events in the history of the two worlds, in which these great but dissimilar men took leading parts, were then scarcely foreshadowed. A hundred years ago, the United States were the most loyal part of the British Em pire; and on the political horizon no speck indicated the struggle which, within a score of years thereafter, established the great Re public of the world. A hundred years ago, there were but four newspapers in America —steam engines had not been imagined and railroads and telegraphs had not entered into the remotest conception of man. 'When we come to look back at it through the vista of history, we find that to the century which has passed, has been allotted more important events, in their bearing upon the happiness of the world, than almost any other which has elapsed since the creation. NO. 25. Read the following description of Mississ ippi and her people, given by some emigrant who has moved to that State, and writes to his friends. Here it is : " This is a glorious country ! It has longer rivers and more of them, and they are mud dier and deeper, and run faster, and make more noise, and rise higher, fall lower, and do more damage than anybody else's rivers.— It has more lakes, and . they are bigger, and deeper, and clearer, than those of any other country. Our rail cars are bigger, and run faster, and pitch off the track oftener, and kill more people, than all other rail cars, in this and every other country. Our steamboats carry bigger loads, are longer and broader, and burst their boilers oftener, and the cap tains swear harder, than steamboat captains in any other country. Our men are bigger, and longer, and thick er, can fight harder and faster, and drink more mean whiskey, and chew more bad to bacco, and spit more, and spit further, and not be killed, than in any other country.— Our ladies are richer, prettier, dress finer, spend more money, break more hearts, wear bigger hoops, shorter dresses, and kick up the devil generally to a greater extent than all other ladies in all other countries. Our negroes are blacker, work harder, have thicker skulls, smell louder, and need thrash ing oftener, than any niggers in any other State, Our children squall louder, grow fas ter, get too extensive for their pantaloons quicker than any other children in any other country." DEATH FROM SUCKING A PEN. -Mr. Francis Bellringer, who for some time has been an assistant in the establishment of Mr. Han nington, Brighton, had an unfortunate habit of sucking the pen, with which he had been writing, and this, it is almost certain, was the cause of his life being so suddenly and, unexpectedly brought to a close. A few days since, while using the toothbrush, he inflicted a slight wouud on his lower lip.— On Saturday morning, the 15th ult., sym toms of erysipelas manifested themselves, He died on - Friday afternoon, his fatal main.. dy having been induced by the poisonous ink which he sucked from the pen penetrating the slight abrasion on his lip.—English Jour nal. TERRIBLE TRAGEDY.—The Fort Wayne (Ind.,) Times says that a most terrible and fatal accident, with consequences still more terrible, occurred iu Adams counts the other day. The story is at once the briefest and most awful we bare read of in many years, A woman about to churn butter, threw some boiling water in the churn, into which one of the children had, unnoticed by the mother, placed an infant, and it was instantly scalded to death. In her frenzy the mother seized a chair and inflicted a death blow upe.: the lit tle girl. After realizing what she had done she threw herself into the well and was drowned, DlPTDERlA.—Steubenville, Ohio, and vicin ity have suffered terribly from the ravages of diptheria. The Herald says: " The disease had attacked both old and young, but has prevailed most generally among children, among whom it has been most fatal. The number of deaths from the diptheria in this city from the Ist of January, 1860, up to the present time, among children alone, is not far short of two hundred. The deaths among adults have been, probably, one fourth of that number. Many families have been made desolate from the virulence of this WHAT SILILL WE DO FOR COFFEE?- • .-It ap. pairs from statistics recently published that the consumption of cone is increasing much more rapidly than the production. Last year the total consumption of Europe and the United States alone was 330,000 tons, while the production of all countries was but 312,- 000 tons. The probable consumption of the present year is estimated at 337,000 tons, and the probable production at 274,000; and of next year the former at 318,000 tons, and the latter at 345,000 tons. VEROCIOUS STORY OF A VEROCIOUS SHARK...-. A shark, caught near Port Jackson, Florida, carried the following curious miscellany in his capacious stomach: Half a ham, several logs of mutton, hindquarters of a pig, head and forelegs of a bull-dog, a joint of stove pipe, a pair of old boots, head and forelegs of a heifer, with a rope round hoz , neck, a quantity of horseflesh. a piece of sacking, and a ship's scraper. No wonder that twelve gallons of oil were obtained from his liver I I•;a7' At the St. Louis theatre, the other night, Mrs. Florence had sung and danced in sailor's costume, holding the Star Spangled banner which she tossed to Mr. Florence at the other side of the stage. He took it,spread, it out carefully, counted its thirty-three stars aloud, and exclaimed with deop, feeling, " Thank God they are all there !" The house rose as one man, and The enthusiasm lasted several minutes, One aundred Years Aga A Great and Glorious Country