in Oregon, both persistently endeavor to create and maintain mischief; but the great portion of our population are loyal to the core, and in every chord of their hearts. They are offer ing through me—more to their own Senators every day from California, and indeed from Oregon—to add to the legions of this country, by the hundred and the thousand. They are willing to come thousands of miles with their arms on their shoulders, at their own expense, to share with the best offering of their hearts blood,in - the great struggle of constitutional ..liberty. I tell the Senator that his • predictions, sometimes for the South, sometimes for the middle States, some times for the Northeast, and then wandering away in airy visions out to the far Pacific, about the dread of our ',people, as fur loss of blood and treas ere, provoking them to disloyalty, are 'alse in sentiment, false in fact, and else in loyalty. The Senator from Kentucky is mistaken in them all. f;'ive hundred million dollars! What _ben ? Great Britain gave more than two thousand million in the great bat tle for constitutional liberty, which she ledat one time almostsingle-handed against the world. Five hundred thous ' and men I What then? We have them; they are ours; they are the children of the country. They belong to the whole country ; they are our sons, our kinsmen; and there are many of us who will give them all Di) befbre we will abate one word of our just demand, or retreat one inch from the line which divides right, front wrong. Sir, it is not a question of men or money in that sense. All the money, all the men, are, in our judgment, ,well bestowed in such a cause. When we give them we know their value. Knowing their value well, we give them with more pride find the more joy. Sir, how can we retreat? Sir, how can we make peace? Who shall treat? What commissioners ? Who would go? Upon what terms? Where is to be your boundary line? ' Where the end of the principles we shall have to give up? What will become of constitutional government? What will become of public liberty? What ofpast glories? What of future hopes? Shall we sink into the insignificance of the ['rave—a degraded,defeated,emascu late.'d people, frightened by the-results of one battle, and scared at the visions raised by the imagination of the Sena tor from Kentucky upon this floor? No,sir; a thousand times, no, sir ! We rally—if indeed our words be necessary—we will rally the people, the loyal people of the whole country.. They will pour forth their treasure, their money, their men, without stint, without measure. The most peacea ble man in this body may stamp his foot upon this Senate Chamber floor as of old a warrior and a Senator did, and from that single tramp there will sprinK forth armed legions. Shall,one battle determine the fate of empire, or or a dozen? The loss of one thousand men or twenty thousand, or $lOO,OOO, ON or $500,000,000? In a years' peace, or ten years, at most, of peaceful pro -tress, we elm restore them all. There will he some gravesreeking with blood, watered by the tears of affection. There will be some privation; there somewhat more need for labor to procure the necessaries of life. When that is said, all is said. If we have the country, the Union, the Constitu tion, free Government— with these there will return all the blessings of well ordered civilization; the path of the country will be a career of great ness and of glory such as. in the olden time. our fathers saw in the dim visions of years yet to come, and such as would - hare been ours now, to-day, if' it had not been for the treason for which the Senator too often seeks to apologize. Virginian Union Refugee [From the Phila. Bulletin or the le lb.) WC received a visit to-day from a very intelligent, moderate Union man, named Charles Sutton, who has es caped with his wife and eight children from near Fairfax C. 11., with the loss of nearly all his property. His quiet ly told story gave ono a strong im pression of the miseries induced by the rebellion, and gave ono a deeper feeling of hatred towards the ambitious conspirators who have plunged the into such distress and agony.— Mr. Sutton came from the North into _Virginia, about twenty years since, and allhis children are natives of the Old Dominion. His farm was located near Fairfax, and at the election sonic ten weeks ago, he voted " Union."— Before the • Federal advance to Fairfax, Mr. S. deemed it prudent to leave his limn for Washington. When the reb els appeared in that region, they seized about $6OO worth 'of Mr. S's property. sonic of Which they promised to pay for, while the rest they took without pay. When the - Bull Bun affair took place, his family joined in the Federal .retreat, his wile and children driving to Georgetown in an ox wagon. When . they left the house they left it open, with all the furnittire, provisions, &e., -there. They broke ' dOwn the few fences, so that what live stock the rebels had left Might wander off and --Tet food and 'lentil. Among other f 4 ,;,:fatidorind property was 800 bushels „ 0 1 wheat, quantities of bay, butter, &e. j .7•11g safely in Washington, Mr. S. bis family North to a more Congenial locality. 4 1.''.. - The ease of Mr. Sutton is' only one out of,at (cast an hundred in Fairfax • county. The rebellion has broken up ~..7e- h erished associations, severed kin, Bred ties And wrecked the hopes of in numerable lives. , Some few aged union men determined to stay in Fairfifx county after the Bull Run battle; one of them, aged seventy-five, had been Arrested by the rebels, and Mr. Sutton thought that others would suffer the same indignity. In general, however, the Union men remain firm in their principles throughout 'Virginia and -Muryland, and are willing to sacrifice all their property for the loyal cause. The simple dignity with which Mr. Sutton 'told his story, was very im 'pressive, and we are glad to find that .4-3nion men of his firmness- still exist in' the most violent rebel regions. DIED, At IVheellng. VA., on liabhittli. the 4th host., Mrs. it.tSRI, Ecorr. formerly a resident of this iihme nod ti yearn. Jo this borough on Entidny liftrintion. the 111 L inst., Mr..9Trar.N.9 A MCA, in the 4tei year of hilt BOOTS and SHOES, the largest and cbrappa, wortment iv to, n, ut • ~ D P. (MINS. On A High Horse The grandest note of triumph which has been borne to us from the South since the Bull Run affair, is an article in a recent number of the Richmond Whig. It is entitled " The Ruling Race," and opens after this fashion: " We are too close and too much influenced by the great esellt6 which are passing, to in dulge much in philosophizing. But the rout and di:persion, at the great pitched battle near Manassas, bring HIM hold relief the great fact, that the Yankees are humbugs, and that the white people of the slaveh ddi g States are the true musters—the real I ulci b of this continent." Bather queer this, when we remem ber that Jeff Davis in his first message, when appalled by the grand Northern uprising, whined oat that file South only asked to be let alone." Jeffer son evidently did not consider the slaveholders the ruling race then, at any rate. But the Whig goes on grandiloquently to describe the North ern preparations for the Bull Run battle. It says that the North had seized upon " all the common property of the partnershrp," and Under the direction of the mo=t vaunted military character of the age—not of their k 2 reati.n, though—fur they have ne%cr pro duced a genius capable of anything beyond arranging a hotel,er working a steam engine, or ail or:wig some base mechanical contt•iv ances—they expended millions of money and drilled armies of 300,000, and equipped them in a style unheard of in the annals of war." Our military authorities will be sur prised to learn that we had 300,000 men engaged at Bull Run, and it ought still more to surprise us to read that fling at " base mechanical" contrivan ces; fbr everybody knows that the Southerners are indebted to renegade Yankees for all their rifled cannon, their small arms, their ammunition and for the keeping open..-of their rail roads, inasmuch as no Southerner has skill enough to do such work. But read on turd he more surprised, if' not overwhelmed : " The f.et is, the Yankees are very little better than the Chinese. They lay the same stress nu the jingle of their dollars, that the Celestials do ott the noise of their gongs.— Ori7inally endowed with no single amiable trait, they have cultivated the arm of miiney getting and cheating, until gam has Leconte the.r Uod, and they imag,ine it to be omnipo tent. Whir money in their pockets, won from a generous and chivalrous race—as multitudinous Ile Norway rats, they are swollen with conceit, and fancied that they were fit for empire. And yet they do not possess one gentlemanly attribute, nor a singe talent that qualified Omni for war.— Of the very first elements, they are destitute. They don't men know how to tide a horse— a talent only to be acquired in youth and gentle avocations. And as to arms, ninety nine out of a hundred never shot a gun, and we have it on very good authority that Old Scott rest all patience in attempting to teach them how to Mad a gun. The vile old wretch! Ile reaps u just reward for his treason and his talents misapplied." Isn't that paragraph refreshing ? How it RIMS up the qualities and pow ers of the people who have built, all the railroads and telegraph lines in the country; who have created and sustained all the free schools which exist on the continent; who have kept the mail service of the Government from breaking down under the weight of Southern pauperism ; who have printed nearly every book and maga zine the South ever read; who have rthr'l ittl (Jutherners to live oft the tiol7- eminent ; who annexed Texas to oblige them, and who whipped Mexico for the same amiable purpooe. But we consider it too seriously. Take the remainder of the article at one dose.— Here it is "The break down of the Yankees, their utter unfitness fin• empbe, forces dominion upon us of the Smith. We are compelled to take the sceptre, and it is our duty to pre pate ourselves to Wield it with dignity and effect. We must adapt ourselves to our des tinies. We must elevate our race, every man of it—breed ;hem up to arms, to command— t r empire. Tie art mditary should consti tute a leading part of every white mates ed. I n wham. The right of voting should be a high privilege to be enjoyed by those only who are worthy to esereise it. In a word, the whole white population of the South should be brought into a high toned aristocracy, duly impressed with a sense of its superiority to Yankee trickery ; and of its own functio n s, and its obliotion to freedom and -cisiliza tion." For massive, solid, "whole-souled" conceit and impudence, this closing paragraph surpasses anything we have ever had the happiness to read. It throws the Muscogee Herald's remarks about "hard-fisted mechanics and moon struck theorists" into a shade as deep as an East India jungle. It is "grand, gloomy and peculiar" in the density of its arrogance. The author, one fan cies, could sit in the shadow of his own turkey-cock pride as under a big cot ton umbrella. Death would be afraid to strike.at such a "monarch of all he surveyed," and the elements should obey his high behest. A free ticket to immortality, or a passage across-the Styx, only on condition of a "special" ferry-boat, should be the right of that fellow, by our halidome IDS future is Made; le need never write another line, for this one article guarantees him a fain of Titanesque proportions ! UNCOMFORTABLY NEAP. A COINCI DENCE.—dn the later battle at Bull Run, a soldier arOupd whom the cannon shot were flying particularly thick, on see ing one strike and bury itselfin a bank near him, sprang ,to the hole it had scooped out, remarkinz, "Shoot away, you can't bit twice in le same place." ,A.t the instant, another shot struck at a few feet distant, almost covering .the fellow with sand and gravel. Emer gipg .from what had so nearly become his grave, he continued' he yet unfin ished sentence, "but you can come so peaky near it that the first hole is un comfortable."" Our Army Correspondence. WASHINGTON. D. C., Aug.i :9 DEAR GLOBE :—This morning the White House first made its appeatanee to Lis, and we migliC say We have seen the foot of the Elephant. We arrived in Bitltiniore this morn, ing about 1 o'clock, got off the cars and marched through the streets of Baltimore until we came; te the Wash ington depot, and remained there un til about 2 o'clock in the . morning.— We then took the cars for the Capitol, where we arrived after a weary march at the hour of ten P. M. We took up'our residence in a largo building prepared on purpose lbr the soldiers. It appears to be a cool and healthy place. At an end of the build ing the water comes in plentifully from the water works, and there are huge troughs for the soldiers to wash them selves and their clothes in, and me thinks I would like to live here for a while, but from all accounts I think our chance is slim. I was told that we would march to Geoff ; getown to morrow morning, two miles distant, and camp there. This city is full of soldiers and a more quieter place I never seen; all appear to be of one mind and " Union" is their cry. Our regiment is healthy and all seem to be in a good humor. Whether its Georgetown we go to or not I do not know as it does not matter much where a soldier goes, if he goes on the ears and gets enough to eat, which of the latter we get a plenty. I will close tbr this time promising to write after we get to Georgetown, and would. say may that Eagle soon flap her wings again o'er our beloved country and may the people cry Union forever. Yours, &e., CUBA. CHEGARAY INSTITUTE. 1527 am! 1329 &gala: STRUM, PHILADELPHIA. This Institute conducted for ton years past, in this city, by MADAME Cairo MAY and bet niecell IDAME li ii CRYILLY, upon the same pi int Mies 416 the one in Now York, estah• lished tht re in the year 1814, will re-open on Monday, Feld. loth. with its usual ample and complete prat whin for the education of Young Ladies, undm the direction of Madame ti tiers illy. On Wars, and all requisite Min mu tton, can he °Manned on application to the principal. LECTURE! MONG SHAW LOO, Of Maiilmain. (Bill limb.) will lecture on Thursday evening, August 18th, 181.1, in the BAPTIST CHURCH, of Hun. tin T., en The Manners, Customs, Religion, &c., of His Native Country. He still be dr essed in his NATIVE COSTUME, which is a real Cm testy, owl exhibit a Hall, used in one of their ravel ire games. and also IA nom Leaf, on which their is ri- ling is done. CAUDARNA , The lost God of this benighted People, so ill be exhibited, nod his stoudorful life given. The next God. so Idol, iv to COlllO ill 70011 ems. will be described. Tire mode of licathen Pi caching by the Pi iests Lull Lu shown. At the close or the Leeture Im Is ill deliver a short speech in his nation Language, and sing iu live Milo cut Oriental Dialects. MONO SHAW LOU, is the cast Student coining from that dark Heathen land to this country to 1,0 educated for the Ministry among his own People. Ile rain., liele in D. comber, 1837. Po not 6111 to come end hear him! Ile dues not expect to travel ,this way again. It EP Clt 10.1,ES :—.T. 11 Loomis, LLD., Prof. Curtis, 11,. .1. B. Shanefdt. Doors open at S% o'clock. Admittance Ifcts. Children 10 cents. Huntingdon, August 13.1861. ELECTION, OCTOBER 8, 1861 ASSOCIATE JUDGE. To the Trotels of Huntingdon county: The undersigned respectfully offers himself as candid:l[o for the ales of Associate Judge. " MATTHEW CHOWNOVEIt, Huntingdon, July 10, 1801. COUNTY TREASURER. To the Voters of Ifuntingdon county: I respectfully offer myself as n candidate for the race of County Tteumrer. G. ASUMAN MILLER. Huntingdon, July 16, 1561. COUNTY TREASURER To the independent 'Voters of Hunting don County : I offer myself to the independent voters of the county. as an unconditional Union candidate for Treasurer. If elected, I pledge myself to discharge the duties of the of. Ice honestly and faithfully% I appeal to no party, but to the p,ple for support. WM. WILLIAMS. Huntingdon, July 3G, 1.§61. COUNTY TREASURER, To the Voters of ITuntingdon County I announce ni)self n Union Candidate for the office o Count) Tleasurer, and solicit the support of the voters o the county. NICHOLAS C. DECKER. Huntingdon, July ZO, ISOI. COUNTY TREASURER Fri.LoW VITIZENS :—At the tequest of my numerous friends I offer nty.etf for your stilts;o4es as an Independent Candiu„w nu the office of Coll II ty Tt uaiaror. and if elected I pledge tat self to discharge the duties of the office u ith (Welk., and innpartlahty. ==EME IEACIIER'S EXAMINATIONS. in Orion, and teachers throughout the County are heieby notified that the public examinations for the nes rnt - )ear will he held by the mulerkigned in the herald di-alias. it. , indicated in the renaming table: Franklin township. Aug 224 at Mechanicsville. top., Aug. Md. at hpi ace greek. Porto and Alexandria taps., Aug. 24th, at Alexandi la. The examinations wilt commence at n o'clock. To .cln ers nod din cretins aro requested to he as punctual as posli tile. lt . MeDIVIrf, Co. Supt. Hunt ingdon. July al, 1851. SCUM. BOOKS, FOR SALE AT LEWIS' ROOK, STATIONERY & MUSIC STOICS; HUNTINGDON, PA OSGOOD'S Spell , r. let, .2d. ad. 4th and Ith Readers. 3PG UFFEY'S Speller and Ilea& s, (old and new editions.) SANDER'S do do do SWAN'S do do do CoIIWS do do do AVeldt's Normal Render, No. 1. Einerion's (leaders. Town's Speller and Definer, (old and new editions.) Schulties Companion. Smith's. (hilltop's, In on n's and Tower's GI ammars. Fitch's Physical Geogt aptly. Wei ren's Ph) steel Geography. Monteith and slcNally's Geographies & Atlases Webstves and Worceftter's U,etiupnt les. Qoackcnhoti Fit et Lessons in Composition. Qom kettbu's Composition and lthrtot ie. 1.11 rented 'a. Stoddard's, Ernmerson's, Sn nit's,Colburn . 2 and Itn}'s Arithmetic. Peterson's Familiar Science. Greenleaf's and Stoddard's Keys to Arillinietics. Gicenteaf's and Davies' Algebiad. Dr, eldest's Key to Algebra. Parka's s lucemle Philosophy. Pinker's Fist Lessons in Salami Philcmpliy. Pallier's Philosophy. Uplianiii Mental Philosophy. 1% Ilia, d's Maury of the United States. " Goodrich's " Pavan. Dunkin rind Serihnet's Penmanship, in cies en numbers. Academical, Controllers' and other Copy Books. Elements of Map thawing, ‘l it li plan for sketching maps by ti i.angolation and implored mothndr of projection. Bavirn Ebonen tail Geometry and' i fgonometry. Davies' Legends e n Gnomott l. Fulton & Eastunin's Book-keeping. Dark Keeping by Single Entry, by Ifimainril &Payson gook Keeping by Single and Double Entry, bl lim n na lord .4 l'ayhou Othet books of 11 he added and fornMaed to order full Mork of School St.tionety nl‘Na3s on hand Iluntihgdon. Pa. T VEICUSELBAUM, OPTICIAN . AND OCULIST tl • FROM PHILADELPHIA, Itespeetfully Informs the eitire. of HUNTINGDON and that he has opened a DOOM at the Danklin noose, 4N here ho offers tor sole - . SPECTACLES, 7IF t.ytdtv VARILTY, 0100 AND QUALITY A new invention of Fpectaelee, for dodant or do, reading; 0 1111 gold. silver, steel. and tortolle.shell trainee, and a new and improved 00101101011 0 of perlforid and parabola ground flint lllasse, of His own manufacture. • • He would pirticularly call the attention of the public, to his fipecthelea for NEAR .SIGHTED PERSONS. and for pet tom who have been operated upon for the cataract of th e e, and to hie now kind of Glasses and Conservers of th i n sight, made of the best flint and azure Glasses.— Good Glama may be known by their shape, exact centre, sharp find highly polished surface. The qualities aro to ha found In his Glasses. limTThan•jotanl The very best 1311A7,11..h1AN PEBBLE and MOUNTAIN eIIYSTAL.so hots eisally proved to be far superior to any other Glass. Also, Micaoscoms, let AND QUIZz/NO GUMS of every size and finality; TPLEECODFD, 111 imarnso AND OPERA OIAD3P.S. with different powers. together m ith every cutlets of articles In the Optical line. nut mentioned. OrnciL, and other Instruments and Glasses, care fully repahoi at short notice. Ile can sinus select Glasses to snit the vision of the person, as ho sees them, open the first trial. cello grill sought in this place during Almost Court, FIRST W EEK. and these in want of the above articles, 11111 please glue him a call. /151/ . . Ile Will. if required, go to any respectable house 'where hi, service , . may lie ossoted. $y The very bust. EYZWATEIL and tho be. , t Hunting Glasses al vtiya lot Ellie. [July, 23, 1161.1 BooTs&snoEs! ANEW STOCK. LADIES AND'GENTLEMEN. UST RECEIVED LEVI WESTBROOK'S STORE All In want of Boole and Shoos, for old or young, aro tennvAcrl to call and examine my stock. L. WESTBROOK, Fluntmeon, May 3. 1681 NEW GOODS ! NEW GOODS!! THE PUBLIC ABE INVITED TO CALL EXAMINE OUR GOODS April 10, 1861 D. P. GWIN HAS JUST OPENED A SPLENDID STOCK OF NEW GOODS FOR SPRING AND AS'IIMAIER. CALL AND EXAMINE THEM A pril 10, 1001. NEW GOODS ! NEW GOODS!! G. ASIIMAN MILLER. Has just received a new Ftoel: of ()ROOM:IES, DRY-CIOODS Call and examine rn) new stack. (7. ASIDIAN MILLEI MEM WINDOW CURTAIN PAPERS, SPLENDID ASSORTMENT Window Curtain Papers, 1861. 1861. CLOTHING. . ROMAN. N W CLOT II I N G Font SPRING AND SU..IIIIIER, JUST RECEIVED AT IL ROMAN'S CHEAP CLOTHING STOI2E. For gentlemen's Clothing of the brat motel tot, and made in the best workmanlike manner, call at H. ROMAN'S. opposite the Fr ;within House in 3lnthet Fgunre, Hunting don. [Aul it 2, 18(11.] =I ENVELOPES Wholesale and Retail. 50:000 9 BEST QUALITY BUT, ORANGE, YELLOW, AND FANcY ENVELOPES, Just received and for sale at LEWIS' BOOK STORE. NEW CIGAR AND TOBACCO STORE. J. A. HANIOAR, A practical tobacconist, bas opened a new• TOBACCO STORR AND CIGAR 3IANUFACTORY. on Allegheny St., ono door nest of the Broad Top Rail: oil (Mee, where he has on hand a huge assert tinent of prime Cigars and Ta bu., which he wilt sell either w holo , tale or retail. Store keepers. shopkeepers, and all °filets who deal in the need shonlil call. His Niece are low. Call and tea. Huntingdon, Nov. 7, IS6O, GOODS! SELLING OFF FOR CASH !! As '• the nimble penny is better than the slow sixpence," and sewn pt ofits in cash, ate better than ce-Ting eyesore book accounts, JAMES A. BROWN is now iletet mined to sell ult the large and splendid stint of Ilatilnare, Paints. Se . which he has just brought front the east, at such lon' prices, as n ill induce ever) boil) to cloud in for a share of the bargains. Ills stouk incheles a complete variety of BUI NO.IIARDWARE, MEW AIMS' TOOLS, . CUTLERY, OILS, PAINTS, YAItNISHES, GLASS, CARRIAGE TMIMMINOS, STEEL. IRON, CHAIN PUMPS, LEAD PIPE, MOROCCO, LINING SKINS, COAL OIL LAMPS And COAL OIL. kr.. &0., PATENT MICA LAMP CHIMNEYS, Together with a toll iosortinent of e‘ery thing pertaining to his line of bovine.. ordei 8 receive pi oinpt attention Huntingdon, Arn it 10, 1901 UNION ENVELOPES AND PAPER LEWIS' BOOK STORE. EXCHANGE HOTEL, HUNTINGDON, PA., JOAN S, MILLER, Proprietor 110ntingtbn, Apr,ll 10, IF6I. CALL at D. P. GAVIN'S if you want I.llionable 000114. _ 'S- 1 0. 1 .:. --•-- -7 'v ,, iiilloo c 1.5 ". , 1 ? '-)•-•'' OVP ' ... , ' .. ,4. ..,,4 v i. ;,: THE 0 8, - -p, - - ,, ,,i,, , ri.-. ,(‘'. : . ,,.., - ;-; - . 4 - 4-4r,; : . - ,..A4. - ' l -- . - • ~. I '".. -7 . - --- - •' - ; ) ---- ,1 1-----' ----,- - - ' " THE "GLOBE ;MB OFFICE" is ;no most complete of any in the conntry, and pos.- SLtses the most simple facilities for piontptly executing to the but style every ‘nrioty of Job Printing, such as HAND BILLS, PROGRA3I.)IES, 'BLANKS. POSTERS, CARDS, • CIRCULARS, BALL TICKETS. • • BILL HEADS, LABELS, &C., , &C., &C CALL AND EXAMINE lIPECINIENB 07 WOOD, AT LEWIS' BOOK, STATIONERY A MUSIC) STORE BLANK BOOKS, Or ViltlOrS BIM, for rds at LE TT'LS ' BOOK ..I.YO STA TIOYERI" sro : FISHER & SON ENE JUST OPEXED s , SPLENDID STOCK X.E GOODS. CM FISHER & SON Bows 4. SLIMS, A LARGE STOCK UM JUST RECEIVED LEWIS' BOOK STORE BARGAINS IN HARDWARE lIOLLOW-WARE, SADDLERY, FOIL SALE AT NEAP. PENNSYLVANIA 71 111.110 tD DEPOT PROFESSIONAL & BUSINESS CAROB MEGAITAN (St CO., Miner.; and Bealcrs in Broad Top Coal. B. L. Megahan, General Agent, McConuellstoun, Huntingdon county. Pa. TA AVID BLAIR, i ner and S'Alppol of Illoatl Top Coal. Office 'Hon tingdon Pa. ri MILLIfI A. , \Jr. Dealer in Groceries, Confectionaries, Sc.. DH. JOHN MeCULLOCII, oilers his professional errs toe to the citizens of Huntingdon rind vicinity. °nice on 11111 sliest, one dem oast of heed's Drug Stole. Aug. SS, TS. MILLER, Q • Proprit for of tl Exollanly. Hotel Q S. SMITH, Dealer in Drugs, Medi eiriet, Perfumery, Dye Stuffs. Oils. 3r. Conlyctiono Ilunting.lun. Pa. WTM. LEWIS, Doaler In !looks, Stationery and Must.) Instru ments. Huntingdon, Pa. T M. CUNNINGHAM 13110. Founders, Huntingdon. Pa UP • IrMMES A. BROWN, 01 Dealer in DartNitre, Cutlery, Paints, Oils, &c., Mint ingdon, Pa. I -I ROMAN, Dealer in Ready Made Clothing, ITats And Cop% Boots situ Shoes, &c. - lENJ. JACOBS, ju Dealer in thy Goodg, Ready Made Clothing, Grocer ice,loonsu are, dc. itc. • GUTMAN & CO., Dealers in Ready made Clothing. Huntingdon, Pa. Dealer in Dry Goods, Groceries, Hardware, Queens stare. lints and Cups, Boots mut Shots, &c. FISHER & SON, Dealers in Dry Goods, Grain, Lc., ilanting.ton, Pa. T EVI 'WESTBROOK, J Dealer in Gentlemen's, Ladies' and Micces' Boots, Shoes. OaHers, Morocco Luther, etc. TOSEPH TIM GEE, Watchmaker end dealer in Watches, Clocks, nod Jew elry, de. WM.. WILLIA3IS, rinin and ch Intmental )Lubin 71amilitcturer. JOIIN F. RANEY, County Surveyor, Huntingdon, In. Office on Hill sheet, one dv..an east of the liontmgdon btu Ya J. lleer.nr.Ncr.s—l,. T. {Paton, Philadelphia; J. P. Gooloc.ixt. Philadelphia; Chad. Mickley, Rough anti Ready Furnace, lion. Jonathan WlVllhaniv. n 1 11 AIM LANGrDON, Miner and Doaler in Mood 'Top Coal, llopen ell, Bedford coun ty, Pn. [Nov.3, VI 1-I_A MINIERMAN & CO.,Miners and Deal -014 in Blood Top Coal, Brood 'fop, Itoniingdon to , Penna. [NOV. a, IV.il. COUNTRY DEALERS can buy CI.MIIIN4I horn me in Huntingdon at WHOLESALE as cheap as they eon in the cities, 001 bare a wholesale store in Philadelphia. Huntingdon, Apr 4.1858. H. HUMAN. DY GOODS !—A fine assortment on ' R hand for the accommodation of customers : at I3ENJ. JACOBS' "Cheap Corner," 31:aka Sqoare. (nctS3 ) QTONE-WARE at S. S. Smith's Gro cery, 20 per cent. cheaper than any oilier place in jli. N1:1'l', M. D., _AI 0 PHYSICLI N AXD S la? G E 011: OFFICt; Mil sheet. opposite Dr. Lucien, offers his profes biontil Sri Vices to Incl Clti6ellB of Iltifitinwl. nod %noisily April 13, 1539, JOHN SCOTT. SAJIIILL T. BROIIN, J. 11. 0. CORBIN J. 11. PARTNERSHIP.- 11. 0. Cocoas has, from this date, become a mom ber of tho firm of SCOTT c BROWN, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, HUNTINGDON, In %%bleb name the business will still be conducted Ilustmgdon, Jan. 2, 1860. VIOLINS, G LIIT