TEEMS OF THE GLOBE. Per anntint in' alliance —_ $i 60 91a mord?, "*" - ~ 75 . /I ..e, 50 Th"e t'nthP " rt "jqi . ti t the aspirator' of A failure to nc 1 y a ;nuance a . the term subwribed for s will be considered a new engage neut. . . TERMS OF ADVERTISING. 1 Insertion. 2 do. 3 do. tour lines or less, $ 24 $37 $ 42 Die square, (12 lines) 60 76 1 00 two squares, 1 00 ..... .... 1 60 2 00 three squares, 1 60 2 25 3 00 Orer three week and less than three months, 25 tents Ter square for each ineortion. ilx lines or less 3 months. 6 months. 12 months. 00 00 00 One square $1 $3 $8 3 00 5 00 7 00 two squares, 6 00 8 00 10 00 three squares, 7 00 10 00 15 00 Pour squares, 8 00 13 00 20 00 Uslf a column, 12 00 16 00.. .... ....24 00 One column, 20 00 30 00.... .... ..50 00 Professional and Business Cards not exceeding four lines, One year .$3 00 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. TREASURY DEPARTMENT, IDFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY, Washington, July 22, '63 WHEREAS, By satisfactory evi deuce presented to the undereigned, it has been made to appear that the First National Bank of Hunting don, in the County of Huntingdon, and State of reensyl vanla, has been duly organized under and according to the requirement, of the act of Congress, entitled "An act to provide a national currency necured by a pledge of Uni ted States stocks, and to provide for the circulation and redemption thereof. approved February 25, 1863, and hoe complied with all the provieions of said act required to be complied alth before commencing the bush:leen of Banking: Now, therefore, I, Ilugh McCulloch, Comp troller of the currency. do hereby certify that the said First National Bank of Huntingdon, County of Hunting don, and State of Penneyleanln, la authorized to corn tnence the business of Banking under the act aforesaid. In Testimony whereof, I hereunto net my hand and seal of °Mee this twenty-eecond day of July, 1863. lIUGIT MeCULLOCII, feat of the Comp- Comptroller of the troller of the Cu r Ivory. UNIVERSAL CLOTHES WRIMERI CC= No. 1. Large Family Wringer, $lO,OO No. 2. Medium " ,t 7,00 No. 2} " " " * 6,00 No. 3. Small " (4 5,00 No. S. Large Hotel, ~ 14,00 No. 18. liedium.Laundry fto ran 118,00 No. 22. Larye " VrTuTd.f 30,00 Nos. 21. and 3 have no Cogs. All oth ers are warranted. *No. 2 is the size generally used in private families. ORANGE JUDD, of tho "American Ag riculturist," says of tho UNIVERSAL CLOTHES WRINGER ais child can readily wi log out a tubfull of clothes in a few minuted. It Is in reality a Crornes Eaton! A TIME SAVER! and a STENOTEC PACER I The saving of gar ments will alone pay a large per centime on its cost. We think the machine much more than •pays for itself eve ry year" in the easing of garments! There are several kinds, nearly alike in general construction, but we con rider it Important That the Wringer be fitted with Cogs, otherwise a miss of garments may clog the rollers, and the rollers upon the crank-shaft slip and tear the clothes, or the rubber break loose from the shaft. Our own is one of the Bret make, and it IS OA 0000 AS O.EW after nearly rota TEARS'OOXSTANT GAM Every Wringer with Cog Wheels le War r anted in every particular. NO Wringer can be Durable without Cog o Wheels. A good ' CAN PASSER wanted in evepx town: tier - On receipt of the price from pla ces where no one is selling, wo will send the Wringer free of expense. For particulars and circulars ad. dress R. C. BROWNING, 347 Broadway, N. Y. _ Aug. 12, 'G3 WIIEELER & WILSON'S 0 SEWINC MACHINE a td g R. A. 0. KERR, ~-' g -‘,l )-4 ALTOONA, PA., 5 AGENT OW FOR BLAIR AND HUNTINGDON COUNTIES. Ch V 4 S,NDSrIIAI llarlaallAt THESE MACHINES ARE ADMIT ted to be the beet ever offered to the public, and their superiority is satisfactorily established by the fact that in the last eight years, OVER 1,400 MORE, of these machines have been sold than of any other man nfacturod, and more -medals have been awarded the pro• prietors by different Pairs and Institutes than to any oth ers. The Machines are warranted to do all that Is claimed for them. They are now in use In several fiunilies in Al toona, and in every care they give entire satisfaction. The Agent refers those desiring information as to the superiority of the Machines, to A. W. Benedict, Joseph Watson, B. H. Turner and E. B. Beltleman. The Machines can be seen and examined at the atore of the Agent, at Altoona. Price of No. 1 Machine, silver plated, glass foot and new style Ilemmer—s6s. No. 2, ornamental bronze, glass foot and new style Hemmer—VS. No. 9, plain, with old style hammer—sl:. (Oct. 21,1802-Iy. MEN WANTED FOki THE INVALID CORPS Only those faithful aoldiers who, from wounds or the hardships of war, are no longer fa for active field duty, will be received in this Corps of Honor. Enlistments will be for three years, unless sooner discharged. Pay and allowance same as for officers and men of the United States Infantry; except that no premium or bounties for enlistment will be allowed. This will not invalidate any pensions or bounties which may be due for previous 'ser vices. For the convenience of service, the men will be selected for three grades of duty. Those who are most efficient and able-bodied. and capable of performing guard duty, etc., will be armed with muskets, and assigned to compa nies of the First Battalion. Those of the next degree of efficiency, including theme who have lost a hand or an arm; and the least effective, Including those who have lest a foot or leg, to the companies of the Second or Third Battalions; they will ho armed with swords. The duties will be to act chiefly as provost guards and garrisons !brollies; guards for hospitals and other public buildings; and as clerks, orderlies, AC. If found necessa ry, they may be cosigned to forts, Ac. Acting Assistant Provost Marshals General are author ized to appoint officers of the Regular Service, or of the Invalid Corps, to administer the oath of enlistment to those men who have completely fulfilled the prescribdd conditions ofadmiesion to the Invalid Corps, viz: 1. That the applicant is unfit for sonde° in the field. 2. That he is fit for the duties, or some of them, !calm ted above. '• • • & That, trim now in the \lerrica, he was honorably discharged. 4. That be is meritorious and deserring. For enlistment or further Information, apply to the Board cf Enrollment for the district In which tho appli cant is a resident By order otJAMEB B. FEY, Provost Morelia' General J. D. CAMPBELL, Captain and Provost Mantua. Huntingdon, July 8, 1863. S. I. F. D• E. STATON ISLAND FANCY DYEING ESTABLISH- rwn BARRETT, NEPHEWS & CO.,Pro prietors. • SID OFFICES, No. 47 NORTH EIGHTH St., PIIILALEIe FRIA, son 5 & 7 JOIN St., NEW YORK. Our meccas in DYEING & CLEANSING GARMENTS of Velvet, Cloth, Silk, _Merino, De lictine, &c., &c., and SHAWLS of almost ev ery description, fp iso well known that ws may desire to remind our friends and the public generally, that the aea son for getting ready their Fall Goode le now at band Iter Goods received and returned by Express. BARRETT, NEPHEWS & CO., duvet 19,1569.—am. fl)r WILLIAM LEWIS, Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XIX. Cy telloht. HUNTINGDON, PA. The Late Election. The majority for Governor Curtin* . is somewhat over fifteen thousand.— This is not a - great deal in a poll of over five hundred thousand; but when all the circumstances aro considered, it shows a great triumph. The Na tional Union party in this State, in cludingthe State Administration, have been for the last two or three years devoting themselves to the war and the support of the Federal Administra tion. The bogus Democratic politi cians, however, have been devoting th i pmselves to preparations for this election. For three years, their great aim has been to carry Pennsylvania in October, 1863. To effect this, they have labored to make the National ad ministration and the war unpopular.— They discouraged enlistments among their friends, but not complained of en listments among loyal men. They have made political capital out of the draft and all the other measures adop ted for carrying on the war. Vallan digham's case was used with effect among the more ignorant portion of their• adherents; and every one of the stern measures adopted by the Presi dent to resist the rebellion and its supporters in the loyal States, was used to make votes for the bogus Democra tic candidates. Military reputations were employed, and in some eases to tally sacrificed to make Woodward votes. These and countless other ex pedients were used to carry Pennsyl vania; and all the time, the loyal peo ple of the State were using their time and labor in the support of the Ad ministration and the encouragement of the war against the rebels. That the National Union party should have succeeded at all, under such circum stances, is surprising ; that the election should have been carried by fifteen thousand majority, while forty or fifty thousand loyal voters are in the army Mid unable to vote, is matter for won dor and rejoicing. The rosfilt is glori ous for the present, but mu(l3 more so for the future. If Pennsylvania had been carried by the bogus Democracy this year, the State Administration would have been turned against the President, and the power of the State would also have been used in prepara tions for the Presidential election of next year•, so as to secure the choice of a man of the Woodward and Val landightnn stamp. This was ono grand object the copperhead leaders had in making such extraordinary ef forts to carry the State. They have been defeated, and the administrations of Governor Curtin and President Lincoln have had the best proof that the people of Pennsylvania are detor mined to stand by them, and to give them all the aid they need for the pro secution of the war against the rebels. New Proofs of Vallandigham's Treason. The following letter, according to the Cincinnati papers, was recently captured in Tennessee, among the bag gage of a rebel officer : DEAR COLONEL : Your kind note and invitation of yesterday was this morn ing handed me by your brother-in-law, who will band you this in return. It would give me much pleasure to visit you and your command before leaving the Confederacy, but it is now impos sible for me to do so, as I have made arrangements to start this A. M. with the earliest train to Wilmington. You surmise correctly when you say that you believe me to be the friend of the South in her struggle for freedom. '3ly feelings have been publicly expres sed in my own country, in that quota tion from Lord Chatham—"My lords, you cannot conquer America.". There is not a drop of Puritan blood in my veins. I hate, despise, and defy the tyrannical Government which has sent me among you, for my opinion's sake, and shall never give it my support in its crusade upon your institutions.— But you aro mistaken when you say there are but few such in the United States, North. Thousands are there who would speak out wore it not for the military despotism that strangles them. Although the contest has been, and will continuo to be, a bloody ono, you have but to persevere, and the victory will surely bo yours• You must strike home! The defensive policy length ens the contest. The shortest road to peace is the boldest ono. You can have your own terms by gaining the battle on your enemy's soil. Accept my kind regard for your per sonal welfare, and sincere thanks for your kind wishes in my behalf, and hoping and praying for the ultimate success of the cause in which you aro fighting, believe me, as over, your friend, C. L. VALLANDIOHAM. Col. D. D. Inshall, Bth Ala. Vols. —And this is the man the bogus Democrats of this State have defended and applauded. And this is the man the editors of the Monitor would have voted for had they been in Ohio. HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1868 Thanksgiving Proclamation. WASHINCITON, Oct. 3.—By the Pres ident of the United States of America. A PROCLAMATION. The year that is drawing to its close has been filled with the blessings of fruitful fields and healtl(ul skies. To these bounties, which are so constant ly enjoyed that we are prone to for got the source from which they come, others have been added which are of so extraordinary a nature that they cannot fail to penetrate and soften even the heart which is habitually in sensible to the ever watchful provi dence of Almighty God. In the midst of a civil war of unequalled magni tude and severity, which has some times to invite and provoke the ag gressions of foreign States, peace has been preserved with all nations, order has been maintained, laws have been respected and obeyed, and harmony has prevailed everywhere excet in While thattheatre of military conflict. that theatre has been greatly contract ed by theadvaneing armies and navies of tho Union The needful diversions of wealth and strength, from the fields of peaceful industry, to the national defence, have not arrested the plow, the shuttle, or the ship. The axe has enlarged the borders of our settlements, and the mines, as well of iron and coal as the precious metals, have yielded even more abundantly than hereto fore. The population has steadily in creased, notwithstanding the waste that has boon made in the camp, the siege and the battlefield, and the coun try, rejoicing in the conscientiousness of augmented strength and vigor, is permitted to expect a continuance of years, with a large increase of freedom no human counsel bath designed. Not withstanding the mortal hand had worked on these great things, they are gracious gifts of the Most High God, who, while dealing with us in an ger for our sins, bath nevertheless re remembered mercy. It has seemed to me fit and proper that they should bo solemnly, reverently and gratefully acknowledged as with one heart and voice by the whole American people. I do, therefore, invite my fellow eiti "zoos in all parts of the United States, and also those who are at sea and those who are sojourning in fbreign lands, to set apart and observe the last Thursday in November next as a day of thanksgiving and prayer to our be nificent Father who (loth re4ide in the heavens, and I recommend them that, while offering up they ascriptions just ly duo to him for suet. singular deliv erances and blessings,- -ther-oo—atso with humble penitence for our nation al perverseness and disobedience com mend to his tender care all those who have become widows and orphans or suffering in the civil strife in which we are unavoidably engaged, and fervent ly implore the interposition of the Al mighty hand to preserve the health of the nation and to restore it, as soon as it may be consistent with the di vine purposes, to the full enjoyment of peace, harmony, tranquility and Union. In testimony wherof I have here unto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed. Done at the City of Washington, this third day of October, in the year of our Lord 1863, and of the independence of the United States the eighty oightli. ` A. LINCOLN. Wm. H. SEWARD, Sec'y of State, "Man rules but God overrules." "Cod moves In a mysterious way, Ms wonders to perform." When the present rebellion broke out, a large portion of ' the people of the United States were opposed to in termeddling with slavery in the States where it existed ; but the necessities of war have driven them to the con viction that slavery, beimg the cause of the war, must be abolished, "wiped out," to insure a permanent peace. Mr. LINCOLN started off with the in tention of saving the country and sla very both—the necessities of war have compelled him to give his Proclama tion of Emancipation to save the eon n try. Missouri, Maryland, Tennessee and other border States started out, like kuights•orrant, to fight for Slavery— they are now earnestly engaged in the cause of emancipation. Virginia, too, started out with shield and banner to do valiantly for slavery and rebellion—she is now divided in to nearly equal parts, one of which is warmly for the Union and emancipa tion, the other a desolate waste. JEFF. DAVIS, the chief conspirator, and founder of a confederation, whose corner stone was slavery, has become an Abolitionist, and issued his procla mation, giving freedom to five hun dred thousand nogroes and fifty acres of land to each, on condition they will help him fight the North ! "Help, nigger, or I sink !" cries this Cmsar, as loudly as did tho old Roman. Thus God has made the wrath of man to fulfil His mighty designs, 'and the groat Confederate champion of slavery to become an instaumont of ab olition in His hands. Truly, we may again say, "God moves in a mysterious way, Ills wonders to perform." TILE POPULATION OF TILE EARTIL-A professor of the University of Berlin has recently published the results cf his researches as to the earth, accord ing to which Europe contains 272,000, 000, Asia 720,000,000, Africa 89,000,- 000, America 20,000,000, and Polyne sia 2,000,000—a grand total of 1,282,- 000,000 of inhabitants. As in places where deaths are accurately register ed, the annual mortality is at least 1 in forty, the number of deaths must be about 82,000,000 every year, which gives 87,761 per day, 3,653 pa i r hour, and 61 per minute ; so that every sec ond witnesses the extinction of the human life. -PERSEVERE.- A Remarkable Article on "Peace." WA MIN° TON, 'Tuesday, Oct. 20. The Richmond Enquirer, of the 16th instant, contains the following editori al, entitled "Peace," which must pro foundly interest alike the friends and enemies of the country : Save on our own terms, we can ac cept no peace whatever, and must fight till doomsday rather than yield an iota of them, and our terms aro : Recognition by the enemy of the in- dependence of the Confederate States. Withdrawal of tho. Yankee forces from every foot of Confederate ground including Kentucky 'and Missouri. Withdrawal of the yankee soldiers from Maryland, until that State shall decide by a free vote whether she shall remain in the old Union, or ask ad mission into the Confederacy. Consent on the part of the Federal Government to give up to the Confed eracy-its proportion of the navy as it stood at the time of secession, or to pay for the Caine. Yielding up of all pretensions on the part of the Federal Government to that portion of the old Territories which lies west of the Confederate States. An equitable settlement, on the ba- Vis of our absolute independence and equal rights, of all accounts attic pub lic debt and public lands, and the ad vantages accruing front foreign trea ties : These provisions, we apprehend, comprise the minimum of what we must require before we lay down our arms; that is to say, the North must yield all—we nothing. The whole pretension of that country to prevent by force the separation of the States must be abandoned, which will be e quivalent to an avowal that our one tides were wrong front the first, and of course, as they waged a causeless and wicked war upon us, they ought in strict justice to be required, accor ding to usage in such cases, to reim burse to us the whole of our expenses and losses in the course of that war. Whether this lank proviso is to be in sisted upon or not, certain we are that we cannot have any peace at all until we shall be in a position not only to demand and exact, but also to enforce and collect, treasure for our own reim bursement out of the wealthy cities in the enemy's country. In other words unless we can destroy or scatter their armies, and break up their Govern ment, We eau linvo no'scc...Tand if we cati do that, then we ought not only to extort i'rom them our own full terms -ant - ninplo — lialiOwledgement of their wrong, butt also a h„ndsome indemni ty for the trouble and expense caused to us by their crime. NOW, we are not yet in position to dictate those terms to our enemies, with Rosecran's army still in the heart of our country. and Meade still on the Virginia soil ;Int though it is too soon to propose skit conditions to them, yet it is important that wo should keep them plainly before our own eyes as the only admissible basis of any con ceivable peace. This well fixed in the Confederate mind, there will be no more fearful looking for news from Europe, as if that blessed peace were to come to us over the sea, and not to ho conquered. on our own ground. There will be no more crapitig_foilaintc of recognition - nal - filling of the belly ,with the east wind; no more distrac tion or diversion front the single me mentions business of bracing up every nerve and sinew of the country for battle. It is especially now, at the moment when great and perhaps decisive bat tles are impending at two or three points, that we think it most essential to insist upon the grand and entire magnificence of the stake and cause. Once more we say, it is all or noth ing. This Confederacy or the Yan kee nation, one or other, goes down, down to perdition. That is to say, one or the other must forfeit, its na tional existence, and lie at the mercy of its mortal enemy. We all know by this time the fate in store for us, if we succumb. The other party has no Smaller stake. As surely as we completely ruin their armies—and without that is no peace nor truce at all—so surely shall we make them pay our war debt, though \V 0 wring it out of their hearts. And they know it well, and, therefore they cannot make peace except through their utter exhaustion and absolute inability to strike another blow. The stake they have to forfeit, then if they lose this dreadful game, is as vital as ours. So is the stake to be won, if they win anything. It is no less than the entire possession of our whole country, with us in it, and ev erything that is ours, from Ohio to the Rio Grande, to have and to hold, to them and their heirs forever. But, on the other hand, what we mean to win is utter separation from them for all time. We do not want to govern their country, but, after levy ing upon it what seemeth good to us ' by way of indemnity, we leave it to commence its political life again from the beginning, hoping that the lesson may have made them sadder and wi ser Yankees. Wo shut them out forever, with all their unclean and scoundrelly ways, intending to lead our lives hero in our oft Confederate way, within our own well guarded bounds, and without, as St. John says, are dogs. And let no Confederate leeblo-knees and tremulous backbone say to us, this complete triumph is impossible; say that we must be content with some kind of compromise, and give and take on the contrary, we nia.4 gain all or lose all, and that the Confederates will indeed win the giant game, we take to be as certain as any future event in this uncertain world-. v;111/e' . . Meade's army and Rosecrans' once scattered Lincoln' can get no more ar mies. 'rho draft turns out manifestly fruitless. Both the German and Irish element are for peace. The Yankees have to bear the brunt of the war themselves, but in the meantime their inevitable bankruptcy is advancing like an armed man- Hungry ruin has them in the wind. It cannot he long before the Cabinet at Washington will have indeed, to consider seriously pro posals for peace, under auspices and circumstances very different from the present. For the present the war rolls and thunders on, and may God defend the right. Gov, Curtin on the Result, Croy. Curtin, with his estimable lady visited his home in Bellefonte, Centre county, Saturday the 24tli. Although he came quietly and unheralded, he was received by an immense crowd of his old friends and neighbors, and es corted to the Court House, where he was welcomed with the warmest en thusiasm. As ho entered the Court Room, the immense audience of ladies and gentlemen rose to their feet, the ladies waving their handkerchiefs, the gentlemen shouting, and the band playing an inspiring air. The Gover nor was welcomed in an appropriate address by 11. N. McAlllister, Esq., to which he responded at length. In the course of his remarks the Governor said: "Three years ago he aspired to be come Governor in order to satisfy a manly ambition. Ho felt, throe years ago, that there was to be honor won in reaching the eminence of Chief Magis trate of a poWerful Commonwealth: The honor has been won and worn: It brought anxious days and sleephiss nights. It imposed laborious duties, and demanded unceasing vigilance. Ifence, so far as the honor of wielding Executive power is concerned, ho was fully satisfied ; and had his fellow-citi zens decreed otherwise, he would have sought the repose and comforts of his old home, without a single regret for lost power, and with every satisfaction for regained privacy and tranquil plea sure. But the people had decided that he should be a candidate, and there fore he had entered the contest with a zeal which would be satisfied with no thing but success. le was anxious to triumph because he knew that success would enable him to be of service to the .NatieteiMoKt,Tninent. no labor ed for victory hot!tinsahe fervently be lieved that the success of the—prom pie which Ito represented, involved the certain success of the efforts of the Federal Government to crush rebel lion. Gov. Curtin referred to what Pennsylvania had contributed of men and money to sustain the President, and then declared in the most emphat ic terms that so fitr as his authority would permit him to do so, all the power of the State in men and money should be poured out to defend and sustain the National Government." Got-. Curtin referred to the situation in its present aspect, remarking, he sincerely believed that ail which was wanted now effectually to crush rqbel lion, was vigorous measures on the part of the Government and active -0,..-pp