TERMS OF THE GLOBE Per annum in advance Six months 'Brea months TERMS OF ADVERTISING 1 insertion. 2 do. 9 do. Clas square, (101ines,)or less.s 75 $1 25 $1 50 Two squares 1 60 2 00 3 00 Three squares, 2 25 3 00 4 50 S months. 6 months. 12 months. Jno sqwsre, or 1ea5,.......... $4. oo so oo go oo Two squares, 6 00 9 00 15 00 Three squores, 800 12 00..... 20 00 Four squares 10 00 15 00 25 00 Ralf a column, 15 00 20 00 30 00 One column 20 00 35 OIL.. ...... 60 00 Professional and Business Cards not exceedlog six lines One year, 25 od Administrators' and Executors' Notices, 0 2 50 Auditors' Notices 2 00 Betray-, or other short Notices 1 50 .IfrefTen linos of nonpareil make a square. About eight words coustitnie saline, so that any person can es -ally calculate a square In manuscript. Advertlathients not marked with the number of inser tions desired, will ho continued till forbid and charged ac cording to these terms. Our prices for the printing of Blanks, - Handbills, etc. aro also increased. . t4e 0151,Gbe. HUNTINGDON, PA. BE JUST AND•FEAR NOT Speak thou the truth. Let others fence And trim their words for pay ; In pleasant sunshine or pretence Let others bask their day. Guard thou the fact, though clouds of night Down on thy watch tower stoop ; 'Tho' thou shouldst see thine heart's delight, Borne from thee by their sweep. Face thou the wind. Though safer seem In shelter to abide. We were not made to sit and dream; The safe must first ho tried. Where God bath eat his thorn about, Cry not, Thy way is plain; Ilia path within for those without Se paved with toil and pain. 'One fragment of the blessed Word Into thy spirit burned, . Is better than the whole, half heard, And by thine interests turned. Show thou thy light. In conscience gleam Set not the bushel down ; The smallest mark may send its beam O'er hamlet, tower and town. Woe, woo to him on safety bent, Who creeps from age to youth, - Failing to grasp his life's intent, Because he fears the truth. Be true to every honest thought, And as thy thought, thy speech ; What thou bast not by suffering bought, Presume thou not to teach. - Hold on, hold on—thou haat the rock ;- The foes are on the sand ; The first world tempest's ruthless shock Scatters their shifting strand. While each wild guest the mist shall clear, We now see darkly through, And justified at last, appear The true, in Him that's true. ;For the Globe.] The Memory of our School-Days, There is something in student life which endears the recollection of it, and of all in anyway associated with it, to the heart of every one. It may be difficult to explain precisely in what this charm consists; but no one, I suspect, who was, in his youth, a member, for any considerable length of time, of one of our numerous litera ry institutions, will deny its existence or power. The memory of his school or college days comes back to him, at times, like the balmy breath of a May . morning, to melt the ice beginning to . form around his heart and the snow flakei that have begun to settle so si. .lently down upon his head, and to smooth the unsightly cracks and seams /narked upon his brow by the autumn frosts. The aroma may .be too deli cate and subtle for analysis; the feel ing it excites may—as what of our most pleasureable emotions are not? slightly tinged with sadness; yet he welcomes and fondly cherishes this breezy recollection of the past, as it comes to him, gently wafting on its wings the scenes of his youthful trials and triumphs, all the roughness of the picture carefully smoothed down by that rare old limpid memory, and the light and shadows so skillfully bright ened as to show all its beauties mel lowed into their original softness and delicacy. There come back to him the old ri valries and jealousies which look pecu liarly small now; his lofty aspirations and the gorgeous, youthful day-dreams of fat= success, honor and usefulness, And his noble resolutions as to his .course in life. Alas I how poorly real ized I how feebly kept! The follies indulged in with that zest and relish known only to the bounding blood and high animal spirits of youth; the fa ces and voices of old friends, which, oven now, cause a strange fluttering of the heart and quickening of the pul ses, never excited by latter friendships; the rambles 'over hills .and through 'valleys, whose contour, after so many years, is still strangely fresh in the memory; the happy hours spent in Angling for speckled trout in the clear stream, or in gazing dreamily into its crystals pools, soothed by the gentle lullaby of its musically murmuring waters, as they glided gently but ra pidly on, on, and away to the illimita ble ocean, even as the happy hours and fairy dreams of youth steal swiftly and almost imperceptibly away from us and are lost in the mighty ocean of the eternal past; the nut.gatherings and bunting excursions with some cherish ed friend, among the woods and hills, in the mellow autumn days, when an. lure decks herself in her most glorious robes for her bridal with death; the welcome sense of relief from restraint, and the rural lionizing of the vacation; and last, though not least, the moon light walks and ardent boy-sentiments, remembered now with a half smile a smohered sight,as his eye tails upon some once cherished but now half for gotten keep sake, given him perhaps . . • •. ; • - • . . _ . , .. . . . • • ....,--• • e.„,r 1 ,,, i ,,, : „, , w , ,‘ r - . ~,,.. ;,,,,e4 - 07.4;4 2 ./ e:/4/ ./;;;, .!- .. 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XXI. at that last sad parting, when he no longer a boy went forth among men speaking a language to which the classics furnished him but an imper fect key—the language of practical life,—and to essay a problem of which college mathematics had not taught him the solution, This tender senti ment forms no small part of the interi or life of the student, at his inexperi enced and susceptible 'ago, peculiarly situated as he is, and, in a groat meas ure, isolated from the excitements and variety of every day life, with sensi bilities, imagination and affectionate nature refined and quickened by cul ture, and a want of his nature thus.'' created, or enhanced, and left unsup plied. I have spoken of the pleasure with which most men recall the memory of their schooldays, and the delight with which they dwell upon the reminis cences of that period of their lives.— Almost all literary men have left some record of this sentiment, and some have given it great prominence in their writings. The vacations and occasional holi days, whether legitimate or stolen, are by no means the least pleasurable fea ture of student life; and I think I have been obliged to acknowledge the ac quaintance of certain roystering blades, albeit they wore the scholarly gown, whose moral perceptions were so ob tuse that the fact of a holiday belong. ing to - the latter class seemed to do tract not a whit from their enjoyment of it, but rather to enhance its pleas. urgia. The writer of these veracious chronicles has, indeed, heard members of her own beloved class, with whom she had "struggled side by side," and who had occupied the same hard ben ches with herself in the recitation room, term after term and year after year, through the chill twilight pen ance of morning prayers, and the pro, bably very wise and certainly very dull lessons of the learned Ones, dis tinctly intimate so far gone were they upon the downward road of moral turpitude, that one good ramble over hills and through woods was extempo rized excursions to localities of inter- , est or grand natural scenes, was worth half a dozen excursions - and holidays obtained by bending "the supple hin ges of the knee" to those in authority, and entered upon with all the ostenta tion of enjoyment and the mathemati cal computation of- how much might be "done" in the allotted time. And such is the edrrupting influence of evil associations that very few of their classmates raised . a voice in opposition. Shut up, as the student is, in a little community.of his own, and confined closely to pursuits not the less ardu ous, but rather the more exhausting to the vitality, because they require brain work instead of muscular effort for their prosecution, be - he never so true a son of science, there are times when he turns from his books in disgust, longing to throw aside the printed page and to mingle in the common every day life thronging all around him, and study the character of his fellow men in their various phases; or to go forth, under the blue sky and the genial sun, into the solitude of the hills to breast the storm even and take in health to his body and beauty and grandeur to his soul—to feel the great heart of nature beating against his own with responsive throb. It is the purpose of the writer in the sketches that shall follow, to present some of the pleasures of her own stu dent rambles in description of na. turn's curiosities, and localities of his toric interest and of the beautiful and grand in the beautiful scenery, inter spersed with sketches from life and scraps of that legendary lore in which ,every neighborhood is rich for "him who bath ears to hear," and which have been jotted down from the reci tals of the oldest inhabitants, or gath ered upon the spot from the lips of parties who were cognizant of the cir cumstances. Till "the fullness of time" of these things shall come, the writer conside rately loosens the hold upon the but ton of the reader, who has so patiently and good Immorally accompanied thus far, and makes a bow for this time. 1/4L. The number of national banks now in operation is fourteen hundred and ten, with a total capital of three hundred and fifty-six million two huns dred and thirty thousand nine hun dred and cightythree dollars. The thirty two authorized last week have a total capital of fifteen million two hundred and ninety.two thousand ono hundred and sovonty-fivo dollars. The Secretary of the Treasury has, with a view more effectually to proyont fraud on the internal revel] ; uo by distillers, ordered the appoint ment of an additional assessor in each district in which there grp distillers: HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1865. President Johnson and the Children, The Washington City Sunday School Union of 5,000 children and 700 teach ers, lately held their anniversary, and marched t 6 the President's mansion, where he stood in front of the outside railing,. and delivered them an address, a number of little girls being placed beside and all around him, with whom • ho seemed much pleased. The President said : This token of respect was offered to ono who knew well how to appreciate the condition of poor and obscure children. There should always be a just and proper respect and appreciation of true merit, whether it belongs to the Christian, the statesman, or the philanthropist. This was the foundation of his creed : that all things should be done with the approval of Him who controls the events and destinies of the world. No one over would be educated unless he educated himself. Whether you have superior advantages or not, you must educate yourselves. Parents, teachers and advantages given, aro simply the means placed in your hands from which you must mould and shape your own course through life. But never feel that you are superior to your more humble companions and comrades. In stead of trying to humble them , and make their'condition lower, yourpride should be to educate them to the stan dard you occupy. Sometimes one may come in rags and begrimmed with dirt; but beneath the rags . and the dirt a jewel may be found as bright as any yet discovered, and the humble indi vidual flay develop that which would prove as bright an ornament as the jewels of any crowned head. He would pull none down; but would ele vate all; level upwards,not level down wards. His notion bad always been that the great mass of the American people could be elevated. If all will be elevated, we fnay become the great est and most exalted nation on the earth. My little daughters and sons, said the speaker, give me your attention while I say, honestly and truly, that if I could inform you of something,, and put that into immediate effect, .which would tend to the elevation of you all, I would be prouder of it than to be President forty times. [Applause.] Here * is the executive mansion and yonder is the capitol of a great Nation, and you look to those who make and execute the laws as persons sublime and grand. But just think for a mo. mont. You aro the crop behind us. All those buildings, and all of this gov ernment, will ono day pass under your control and becoine your property, and you will have to put in force and control the principles of government, of religion and humanity. And lot all boys consider, every mother's son of them, that each one is born a candi date for the presidency. Why not then commence to educate yourselves for the presidency ? And ho would say to the little girls, that while they could not be presidents, they are born candidates for tho wives of presidents. While each little boy may feel that ho is a candidate for the presidency, each little girl may feel that she is a candi date for a president's wife, and each should commence at once to qualify himself and herself morally, intellectu ally and socially for such high posi— tions. With regard to religion, he said the time had coma when the first inquiry should be whether one is a good man or a good woman. If they are good it matters little to what sect or church they belong. There can bo no great ness without goodness; and all should remember with Popo, that "Honor and fame from no condition rise; Act well your part—there all the honor lies." 'When wo look at these, boys and girls, at the banners which they carry, at the flag, with stripes and stars upon them, which they bear aloft—when we look upon the bravo men and the gallant officers around us, and remem ber what they have been contending for, wo feel that we can best preserve this government if we rear up our peo ple properly, and make this, as we can, the most intelligent portion of God's habitable globe. The stars and stripes is not, an unmeaning symbol when we look back through the din of battle and see what it has cost to perpetuate this government; and should we not then use every effort to bring up prop erly these children, whose cause bas been sustained by strong arms on the field of battle ? .Victory has perched upon our standard, and the speaker said he trusted the children's little song of victory would be beard far up above; and that the angels. standing upon the battlements of heaven, would take up the tune and make the re sponse. Lou Then my little sons and little daugh ters, said the President, talking as a father to his children, lot mo say to you, educate yourselves; be industrious and persevering; store your minds with all that is good; put all things worthy of preservation in' your brain, and your intellects will expand and grow. And in conclusion, I say again; may your little song of' victory be hoard in heaven. God bless you. -PEitSEVERE.-- Tnoors FURNISIIED.—The Adjutant Generals in Convention to-day in Bos ton made reports showing the number of troops furnished by the following States: Maine, 66,669; Massachusetts, 153,- 706; Vermont, 34,490; New Hamps shire, 33,258 ; Connecticut, 54,468 ; Kansas, 21,948; Rhode Island, 25,355; Pennsylvania, 360,000; West Virginia, 29,012 ; Iowa; 72,358. The whole number of troops raised in New England, 366,945, thus exceeds the aggregate Of Pennsylvania 6,945. According to the United States census of 1860; the number of white males between the ages of 18 and 45 years in these States was as follows: Pennsylvania, 555,172; lowa, 139,- 3165 Connecticut, 94,411; Now Hari-Ip shire, 63,3105_ Rhode Island, 35,502; Massachusetts, 258,418; Maine 122,238; Vermont; 60,580; West Virginia, not ascertained; Kansas, 27,976. A comparison of these figures with those we give above will show that Pennsylvania has contributed troops in a larger ratio than any of the New England States, except Rhode Island. The nearest approach to us, with that exception, is Massachusetts, which has sent three fifths of her arms bearing population, while we have sent rather more than that. Rhode Island has raised men in about the same ratio as Pennsylvania. Kansas exceeds us all, but her population must have increas ed very largely since 1860, as other wise the figures shoiv that she has sent nearly her whole adult white male population into the field. The figures given above do not include the colored troops, of whom Pennsylvania furnished a largo number, while they do not include the Massachusetts ool ored troops, and probably those of Kansas. If we could add to our total all the colored troops raised in Pennsylvania by the United States officials, as well as all the white and black men raised here for Now York, Now Jersey, Del aware and Massachusetts regiments, our State would astonish every one by her aggregate. But, taking the figures as they stand, we think they ''may challenge the attention of all, as show iugthe immense strength and resources of this noble old commonwealth. "CHILDREN HATA. PRlCE"—Nearly everybody remembers McDonald Clarke, who was so well knoWn in New York a few years since as the "Mad Poet." During the last year of his life, Clarke was made free at the Astor House table, and often times this errant man of genius could be seen accepting its hospitalities, when other doors were closed upon his fallen fortunes. Every one know Clarke by sight; and ono day•whilo quietly ta king his dinner, two Southerners,seat ing themselves opposite, commenced a conversation intended for the ears of Clarke. One said : "Well I have been to- New York two months, and have seen all I wish to see, with ono exception." _ "Ah I" said the other, "what is that ?" "McDonald Clarke, the groat poet," responded No. 1, with great empha sis. Clarke,raising Lie eyes slowly from his plate, and seeing the attention of the table was on him, btood, and plac ing his hands over his heart, and bow ing with great gravity to the Souther." nors, said : • "I ani McDonald Clarke, the groat pout." The Southerner started in a mock surprise, gazed at him in silence for a few moments, and then, amidst an audible titter of the company, drew from his pocket a quarter dollar, and laying it before Clarke, still looking at him, without a smile. Clarke raised the quarter in silence and dignity, bestowing it in his pocket,drew thence a shilling, which he deposited before the Southerner, with those words : "Children, half price." The titter changed to a roar, and the Southerners wore missing instan ter. re-During the sixteen days ending Juno . 30th, 2,247 emigrants. passed Ft. Laramie bound west, with nearly 18,- 000 head of cattle. Nearly as largo a number passed during the fourteen , days ending June 140; and during the month of May, over 15,000 teams and 40,000 head of stock passed for the West. • wi a .As the conspiracy trial is over, it is expected that that of Jefferson Davis will soon commence- A Wash ington despatch says it is more .than probable ho will be tried by a military commission as the leader and investi gator of the conspiracy to murder the President, for it is Said there has been newly-discovered testimony against him in that direction. The Use -of Ice. In health no ono ought to drink ice water, for it has occasioned fatal infla mation of the stomach and bowels, and sometimes sudden death. The tempta tion to drink is very strong in summer; to use it. at all with any safety, the person should take but a single-swal low at a time, take the glass from lips for half a minute, and then another, and so on. It will be found that in this way it becomes disagreeable after a few meuthfulls. On the other hand, ice itself may be taken as freely as possible, not only without injury, but with advantage in dangerous forms of disease. If broken in the size of a pea or bean , and swallowed as freely as practicable, without much chewing or crushing between the teeth, it wii. of ten be efficient in checking various kinds of diarrhoea, and has cured vari% ous cases of Asiatic cholera. A kind of cushion of powdered ice, kept to the entire scalp, has . allayed violent inflamation on the brain, and arrested fearful convulsions induced by too much blood there. In croup, water, as cold as ice can make it, applied freely to the throat, neck and chest, with a sponge or cloth, very often affords an almost miracu lous relief, and if this be followed by drinking copiously of the same ice-cold element, the wetted parts wiped dry, and the child wrapped up well in the bed-clothes, it falls into a delightful and life-giving slumber. All inflamation, internal or external, aro probably subdued by the applica• tion of ice _or ice -water, because it is converted into steam, arid rapidly con- veys away the extra heat, and also di. minisbes the blood in the ,vessels of that part. A piece of ice laid on the wrist will often arrest violent bleeding at the nose. To drink any ice.eold liquid at any meals, retards digestion,chills the body and has boon known to induce the most dangerous internal congestions. Refrigerators, constructed to keep ice, aro as philosophical us they are healthful, for the ice does not come in contact with the water, or other -eon tents, yet keeps them all nearly ice cold. If ice is put.in milk, or butter, and these aro not used at the time, they lose their freshness and become sour and stale, for the essential nature of both is changed when once frozon and then thawed.--Hall's Journal of Beata. SOMMER PEuNnvo or GnArrs.---Tho California. Farmer gives, in a comm. .nication from J. J. Walker, of Los An geles, the following statement : "I will relate one instance of the of. feet of summer pruning. A few years ago I saw at one of our wino presses a lot of grapes, among which were - many clusters entirely white; others that were slightly colored,' and many that had berries of all the different shades of color from a greenish white to a dark purple. The grapes wore of more than average size, extremely tender, not unpleasant to taste, but deficient in acid, sugar and firmness. The pile looked like a family of mulattoes. As the winemaker could afford no expla. nation of this phenomenon, I inquired where the, grapes wore grown, and sought a solution of the mystery by an examination of the vineyard, and by inquiries of the owner. The vines were twelve years old, of the common variety, planted at the usual distance apart, and .had grown vigorously from the time of planting, and were of good, height from the ground. There bad been a heavy growth of canes on the vines that season, owing in part to the heavy rains of the winter previous, 1861-2, so as to interlock and cover the field. About the time the berries had attained their growth, and just as they were beginning to take color, the own er, in order to give the grapes a better opportunity to ripen and acquire sweet ness, went through the vineyard, clip ping off enough of the ends of the canes so as to open a space between rows to permit ventilation and allow the rays of the sun to reach the ground. The vines being in a, luxuriaot state, ha. mediately threw out numerous new branches from the clipped canes, with new, and fully developed, but rapidly growing loaves. The phenomenop was fully and satisthetorily explained. When the berries needed .thrifty and well developed leaves, to collect heat, light and other : elements from the air, and elaborate, the sap, so as to furnish color; sugar, etc., they had been . de prived of' them, arid the vines were al most exclugively engaged,, and the sap consumed in forming leaves." par Extensive . ,silver mines have been•. discovered at the foot of the Snowy :Range, fifty miles west of Den-. ver City, Colorado territory. There is groat excitement in consopence, TERMS, $2,00 a year in. Casualties of the War. Official estimates at the War Depart ment compute the number of deaths in the Union "armeis since the cOm mencement of the war, including the starving prisoners, at three hundred and twenty five thousand. There has doubtless been fully two hundred thousand Southern soldiers removed by disease and the casualties of the battle, so that not less than five hun dred and twenty-five thousand lives have been sacrificed in this unholy contest, begun and prolonged by the South in their vain effort to build up a new republic and strengthen the slave power: Our greatest losses during any ono campaign occurred at Gettysburg, when 23,267 Union soldiers were kill ed, wounded and taken prisoners. Hooker's campaign of 1863 in the Wil derness ranks next to Gettysburg as far as regards Union losses, they bay ing amounted to twenty thousand, though generally reported at only ten. Burnside lost 1,200 in the battle of Fredericksburg, McClellan 11,426 at Antietam, Porter 9,000 at Gaines' dills,, Rosecrans 12,085 at Murfrees boro and 16,851 at Chickamauga, and Sherman about 9,000 in the two days' battle around Atlanta. The official reports of Gen. Grant's losses from the time he crossed the Rapidan until receiving the surrender of Lee compute them at ninety thous and. In the various engagements fought by Gen. Greta-in the West he lost 13,573 men atPittsburg-Landirg, 9,875 in the severe contests around Vicksburg, and in the attack on Mis sionary Ridge about 7,000. Though our losses in many of the campaigns have been heavy, they yet fZil below those incurred in some of the European wars. due,, . This has been to a considerable extent, to the effieen cy of the medical department and the lavish amount of supplies, at least one. third. greater than those furnished to any European army. A report recent ly made to the Imperial Academy of Medicine, by Chenu, Physician of the. French army, estimates .the losses of that army in the Crimean war.as fol lows: killed on the field. of battle or missing, 10,240 ; lost in the Semilaute, 702; died of various diseases at Alma, 8,084; died of cold; apoplexy, ' fore Sebastopol, 4,342; -died the'bold , and general hospitals, 72,247; total, 95,615.. Thus, of 309,264 .men sent by to the Crimea, about one:third found a soldier's grave. The siege and reduction'ofJerusalem resulted, says Josepbus, in the loss•of 1,000,000 lives. 60,000 Persians were' placed hors de combat at the battle Of Arbela, and . 100,000 Carthegenians'in the engagement of Halermo. : 12,000 infantry and . 10,000 cavalry perished on the fatal field of Issue. - Spain loSt 2,000,000 lives during the persecntion of the Arabians, and 800,000_ .in expel ling the Jews. Frederick the Great inflicted • a loss •of 40,000 on theAus. trians in the conflicts of-Leuthen and Loignitz. The battle of. Terme, _and the, lesser engagements immediately following, cost the Prussian army over 80,000 men. At the battle iolLeipsic, the French suffered caeutilties. to the number of 60,000;and the Swedes and their allies 40,000 more. 50,000 French, and Russian soldiers lay dead and dy-- ingon the'field after the battle of Mori kown, and Napoleanagein lost 47,000 men at Waterloo, , and :the Duke of Wellington . 15,000 More.,—..N Y. Conk mercial Advertiser. • . • Soldiers' Monument. To the People of Illuatingdon Count ', A meeting was held at the Court House in Huntingdon, in pursuance of a general call, at which the undersign. ed were instructed, among other things, to urge the citizens of the sev eral boroughs and townships of the County, to meet in _HUNTINGDON, On Monday, the 14th day of August, '0; for the purpose of organizing an asso-' ciation to erect a monument - to those who fell, in defense of Rupubliean lib erty, during the late rebellion. It is proposed that the names -Of every citi zen of the county who foil; whether on the field of battle, or by the hand of disease, shall be inscribed upon the monument; all the details,. including design and location, to be determined, when a sufficient sum of money shall have beenraised by contributions. • It can scarcely be necessary that we should refer to the fitness of such a work; we are persuaded that . there no one among you who will not feel proud and glad to join in this Under taking--tbis work of gratitude to those whose devotion has. secured to us the form of Republican freedom—this last office of • grateful homage -to the sub.. lime,. heroism . and :patriotic tudo which have preserved for us the spirit of human liberty. • - We most earnestly urge upon you ; that you see to it, that every coupon- nity has a voice in the meeting. n the 14th of August,—let the delegation from each township and boroup be as THE GZ~OBF - 4 - 0 B ciFF.xgg, . MITE GLOBE -- "J013 ' the , xgost"coiplato eanntry, end' pn ee.se4 the moat ample. facilities for promptly px . .aelsitip . r - the. beet style, every variety ót-4011114111314 flOPh l IANP , ..; PROGKAAI3IES, • BLANKS, . . POPTVAR, CIRCULARS, • BALL TICKETS,- : LABELS &0., &C., NO. 4. CALL AND EXAMINE SPECIMENS Or trOiur, AT LEWIS' BOOK. srillorrEßT & MUSIC STORE large as possible. It.-will-be necessary . to appoint a local committee in: each municipal sub-division, ' to canvass thoroughly for. . contributions i your representatives at the meeting should be prepared tO.repOrt the names, et energetic and earnest Men and women, to take charge of this duty. All your. activity and ingenuity 'will be midi: ed to push the work successfully through. Every man - mid woman should take an active part—should de, vote his and her whole energy to the undertaking. ,It is necessary that You should organize in every township and borough—do so at once. Let uswork, work, WORK, until the last penny shall; have been secured; then, we shall en— joy the proud satisfaction .of 'rearing:. reririni. a monument which will bo ,creditable' alike to ourselves,. and : the purpose'for which it is intended; - but should .Is:et fail, having devoted lessi, attention: to the subject than its importancri: de.) mends, and it can only be from such-U._ cause, if we do fail,it will be a reproach, a burning reproach, upon usall.• :.n -,,, Everywhere, all over the landpave hearshorits of welconinto ;Oa, return: ing braves who -have exchanged that duties of the camp and the field for3he 7 joys of home and the arts:•of ;peace; i 1 while in the midst of our rejoicings for,: the victory, while our hearts are glad for the return of our sons and broth-7 ers, who come to qs, with "brows - bound with victoriouli wreaths," lamus remember those other, hearts,' filled:: with sadness, whose throbs/echo' , the sound of no homeward footsteps4—blit - the mournful cadence of the ,funeral march. While we ireet the-living, let us cherish the memory of the dead; lei us raise a shaft to commemorate the heroic virtues of the fallen, from which the widows and orphans which the war has made, can gather the consolation that their husbands and fathers have:, not died in vain, but have builds& for,: themselves a monument in the, hearts of men, not of perishable stone, which v; shall endure until the record of the glorious 'achievements of the last,four • years shall have faded from the page:; of history. , , ~ r • J. D. CAMPBELL, Chairman— ' 1 Capt. S. Wintrode, James Creo, ; , J. G. Miles, Esq., J. M.. Bailey, Esq.,, S. MoVitty, Esq., Perry Moore, „ • Rev. S. H. Reid, , Thomas P. Love,' Wm. M. Phillips,. Sand. Thompson, .' William Lewis, ' John Cummins., COURT AFFAIRS. ", rpRIAL TERM:, Commenchig second itooday, Augu341865. Roger C. McGill - vs Benjamin Cross, Samuel Beverly, . VII JOh1:1 S. i3everly( S. L. Glasgow for uee vs Mary' Giblidifey's'ex i . John Black & Co vs Catharine Tricker John II Stonebraker ve-D. Stewart eLnl Dr P Shoenherger vs Wilson' . Jacob Cres - swell vs F. H. Lane et al Eliza Young et . el .ve A.: Wise et al F James Scott .ve Brice X. Blair Mary DeArmitt' vs Nicholas Cresawell B, M. Jones & Co. •vs :James C. Clark: W. C. WAGONER, Prcit'y PROTHONOTARY'S OFFICE, , 1:-- Huntingdon, July 'l7. • GRAND JURORS. • Booher, John merchant, Alexandria. Hugh Cunningham, farmer, Porter': .Henry Cook, farmer, Carbon, - - Johri Eyer, jr., farmer, Warriorsmark. Daniel Foster, distiller,. Brady. Christian Foust:), farmer, Hopewell. Henry Garner, farmer, Juniata. • John C. Hicks, fakmer, Porter. Henry Holtzapple; miller, West.', , Ismo Heffner, farmer, — Suniata. - John Henderson, farmer, West. Edward B. Isett, farmer, Franklin.' Jesse McClain farmer, Carbon. , Newton Madden;&rifler, Springfield. G. Miller, R. T.; fanner, Henderson, Benjamin L. Neff; miller, West. t Samuel Peightal, farmer Walker. James Port, collector, Huntingdon- • George B. Porter, farmer, Franklin. James Posten, farmer, Case: James Peterson, farmer, Dublin.''' Wash. Reynolds, farmer, Franklia.•' George Swift, machinist, Clay. James Webb, farmer, Walker. David. Buck, farmer, Warriormark Daniel Book, farmer, Cromwell . ..; John Briggs, farmer, Tell William Buckley, fariner,.ShirleY: Samuel Barrifarmer, 'Jackson- Jacob S Covert, mason; Shirley John :D Carberry, farmer, Carbon Peter Dell, farmer, Cass . • - William SEntrekin, farmer, Hopewell John Enyeart; farmer, Cromwell Aaron W Evans, millwright, Cassviile Oliver Etnier, farmer, Cromwell James Entrekin, farmer, Hopewell Alex, G Ewing, teacher, Franklin Benjamin FOIIIO, merchant, Shirley David N Garner, soldier, Penn Samuel B Garner, gentleman; Penn Isaac Grove, farmer, Penn John Griffith, farmer, Tod Benjamin F Glasgow, farmer, Union James Math, watchman, Brady, - J . Harman, 'cabinet maker, Jackson Jacob Herncame, farmer, Shirley. George Heaton ' merchant, Carbon' John Hewitt, fa rmer, Porter • Henry S. Isenberg, farmer, •Carbon Thomas Kelley, farmer, Cromwell . - Jacob Knode, farmer, West John Kiner, farmer, Union ' Jacob Lane, farmer, Springfield • Abner. Lamp, • bricklayer, Huntingdon George McCrum, farmer, Barre° , Geo A Miller, merchant, Huntingdon Johirß MYten, farther, West* Samuel MeVitty, farmer; ClaY William B McMullen, farmer, Tell James McGill, farmer, Jackson David Neff, farmer, Porter John Palmer, boss miner, Carbon ], Jacob Prough sr„ laborer,'Penk Mahlon Stryker, farmer, West,- John Stniloy, farmer, Barree Samuel Silknitter, farmer, I Baireei , E Summers, confectioner, luntingde,k; David Shaeffer, farmer, 151** '; James Thompson, blacksthlth; Vebt John Weston, farmer, Warriormffrli JaCeet. 3 Ward fArßer. Milker ' BM BILL HEADS, TRAVERSE JURORS ME