TERNS OF THE GLOBE Per watavism In advance ?ix months • month. TERNS Or ADVERTISING. 1 insertion. • 2 do. 3 do. 3be square, (10 lines,)or lesB.s 75 $1 25 $1 50 Two squares 1 50 2 00 3 00 Throe equares, 2 25 3 00 4 50 3 months. 6 man the. 12 months. .$4 00 $6 00 $lO 00 .600 900 15 00 .800 12.00 20 00 .10 00 15 00 25 00 .15 00 20 00 30 00 .20 00 35 00.... ...... 60 00 Ins square, or less, I'vro squares, Three squares, Pour squares Rolla column, One column Professional and Business Cards not exceeding six lines Oa. year $5 00 Administrators' and Executors' Notices $2 50 Auditors' Notices, 2 00 Astray, or other short Notices 1 50 Slat-Ten lines of nonpareil make a miter°. About eight words constitute a line, so that any person can ea sily calculate a square in manuscript. Advertisements not marked witlt the number of inser tions desired, will be motioned till forbid and charged ac sording to these terms. Our prices for the printing of Blanks, Handbills, etc. are also increased. AGDA DE MAGNOLIA A toilet :delight, Superior to any cologne, used to bathe the face and person, to render the skin tkift and fresh, to allay Inflammation, to perfume clothing, for headache, &c. It is manufactured front the rich southern Magnolia, and is obtaining a patronage quite unpreceden ted. It is a favorite with actresses and opera singers. It is sold by all dealers, at $l,OO in large bottles, end by De rum Barnes & Co., New York, Wholesale Agents. Saratoga Spring Water, sold by all Druggists. S. T.---1860---X. Isorsons of sedentary habits troubled with weakness, lassitude, palpitation of the heart, lack of appetite, dis tress after eating, torpid fever, constipation, &c., deserve to safferiif they will not try the celebrated PLANTATION BITTERS, which are now recommended by tho highest oiedical authorities, mid are warranted to produce an Ter. mediate beneficial effect. They are exceedingly agreeable, perfectly pure, and must supersede all other tonics where a healthy, gentle stimulant is required. They purify, strengthen and invigorate. They create a healthy appetite. They are an antidote to change of water and diet. . - They strengthen the s.rtent and enliven the mind. They prey!lt miearnaPcard ilq?rmittent fevers. They purify the breath and acidity of the stomach. They care Dyspepsia and Constipation. They cure Liver Complaint and Nervous Headache. They make the weak strong, the languid brilliant, and are exhausted nature's great restorer. They are composed of the celebrated Calisaya Bark, wintergreen, maxifres, roots and herbs, all preserved In perfectly pure Bt. Croix rum. For particulars, sue circulate and testi monials around each bottle. _ Beware of impostor.. Examine every bottlo. See that it has our private U. S. stamp unmutilated over the cork with plantation scene, and our signature on a tine steel plate side label. tel., See that our bottle Is not refilled with spurious and deleterious stuff. harAny person pretending to sell Plantation Bitters by the gallon or in bulk, is an impostor. Auy person imitating this bottlo. or selling any other material therein, whether celled •-Plantation Bitters or not, Is a criminal under the U. 8. Low, and will be so prosecuted by us. Tho demand for Drake's Plantation Bitters, from ladles, clergymen, mer chants' is incredible. The simple trial of a bottle Is the evidence we present of their worth and superiority. They are sold by all respectable druggiets.grecers, physi cians, hotels, saloons, steamboats and country stores. P. H. DRAKE ik CO. Serrofvga Spring make, sold by all Druggist.. Aare you a bust child or a lama horse t Use tho Mex. ken Mustang Liniment. For cuts, sprains, burns. swellings and caked breasts, the Mexican Mustang Liniment is a certain cure. For rheumatism, neuralgia, stiff joints, stings and bites, there is nothing like the Mexican Mustang Liniment. For spavined horses, the poll evil, ringbono and sweetly, the Mexican Mustang Liniment never falls. For wind-galls, scratches, big-head and splint, the Mexican 31ustang Liniment is worth its weight in gold. Outs, bruises, sprains and swellings, are so common and certain to occur In every family, that a bottle of this Liniment is the best investment that can be made. " It is mere certain than the doctor—it same Limo in sending for the doctor—it Is cheaper than the doctor, and should never he dispensed with, "In lifting the kettle from the tire ' It tipped over and scalded my hands terribly. • • • The Mustang Lini ment extracted the pain, caused the sore to heal rapidly, nod left very little scar. WAS. POSTER, 420 Broad street, Ithilavia. tali of 11,40-roeit - , -- rr ---- wr, considered worthless, (spavin,) but since the use of t h e 31ustang Liniment. I have mid him for $l5O. Your Lin iment is doing wonders up here." Ali genetic., is wrapped In steel plate engravings, stgri cd, G. W Westbrook, Chemist, and also has the private U.S. stamp of Dooms Barnes .t Co., over the lop. Lockclasrly, and be not deceived by counterfeits. Bold by ell Druggists at 25, 50 cts, and $l,OO. Seal is Spring Water, sold by all Druggists. 'His a most delightful Hair Dressing. It eradicates scurf and dandruff. It keeps the hood cool and clean. It makes the hair rich, soft and glossy. It prevents the hair turning gray and falling off. It restores hair upon prematurely bald heads. This is Just what liyou's Hathairon will do. It is prat ty—it is cheap—durable. It is literally sold by the car load, and yet its almost incredible demand is daily incfea ping. until there is hardly a country store that does not heap it, or a family that does not use it. E. THOMAS LYON, Chemist, N. Y. Saratoga Spring lraier, sold by all Druggists. WM would not be beautiful? Who would not add to their beauty? What gives that marble purity and di:s tingss appearance we observe upon the stage and in the city belle? It to no longer a secret. They use Pagan's Magn alla Balm. Its continued use remover tan, freckles, pimples, and roughness, from the taco and hands, and leaves the complexion smooth,traneparent, blooming and ravishing- Unlike many cosmetics, It contains no mate rial injurious to the skin. Any Druggist will order it for you, if not on hand, at 60 cents per bottle. W. E. HAOAN, Troy, N. Y. Chemist. Demaa Barnes & 00., Wholesale Agents,N. Y Saratoga Spring Water, sold by all Uruggists iiciMstrtertiinirnitable link Coloring to not a dye. All Instantaneous dyes are composed of tuner caustic, and more or less destroy the vitality and beauty of the heir. .This is the original Hair Coloring, and bas been growing in favor over twenty years. It restores gray hair to its original color I y gradual absorption, in a most remarka ble manner. It is also a beautiful hair dressing. Sold in two sizes--450cents end sl—by all dealers. C. HEIMSTREET, Chemist, Saratoga Spring Water, sold by IlikDruggists. Motes Bantam OP Pnnr. JAMAICA Orsocrt—for Indiges tion, Nausea, Heartburn, Sick Headrche, Cholera Ifortma, Flatulency, Sc., where a warming stimulant is required. Its careful preparation and entire purity maks it a cheap and reliable article for culinary purposes. Sold every where, at 50 cents per bottle. Ask for "lirotee" Puro Ex tract. Take no other. Saratoga Spring Water, sold by nil Druggists julyll, 1866-eowly rgs.All the [thorn erttcloti for Cale by S. S. SMITH Huntingdon, Penna. 110,1000 TS AND SHOES, of 'every vn jjriety at CUNNINGHAM le OARMON,S, MONTHLY TIM] BOOKS, rat sale at LEWIS' ROOK AND STATIONERY STORE. COUNTRY DEALERS can gLlSHlTO an f c ri l i mein Iluntingilon iu trt K~lie Ries, as I have a IT holesalo store in P'lsiraile i r l 3,ir H. ROMAN. WIT LEWIS, Dealer In Tlooke, Stationery and Slualcallnetrn manta, linntingdon, fi ROUND ILUM AND SALINA I._A SALT at CUNNINCTIAM ff CA 12 Nair A LLRINDSOF CRACKERS .. .Ci_conatautly on band at CUNNINGHAM & CARMON'S. JHE BEST SHORE FISH for salo at z f Etvis k co's Family Grocery. • -1..1.%'...:--'': ..-. -,1 .....''-,', ',•','',,='• M ' '.„ 4 Z..,.,:&,,T.W-""'' ~•. . - q, fi e : . „ ,. ;N. ~ • , ~,7,„, -74.:•.2v1! ~...,. •-.. h., 5 ., , , .„. ~/ .... ::. i. : : . , .... „..._. ~. ~; ... • .:.- ~ , . ..2, . ~... - - (. _ .'.- -----:'---,-,-,•:t,-1,:-:l-n'.'k-1:t!*,„r,, -,:.`,e.-,.°,Z•---.. • .-- • 2 - ..v . •- , -‘:.§.. 4 : 'xe-,',.A.,0. • :r ~1 / 4 . - . ..Z -t 3 , . . . • 4 . 1 t l% . 4 .- .„ __ 4" " "•,-.1:...4...:....\.z, i „ .1, . \ .. -- 4. 0i .zik. 0 - .. . , 0 :. - - 4r. r,•' , ,',,.. „-. . L:A4, , t , - • 42 CO . 1 00 WILLIAM LEWIS, Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXII. [For the Globe.] MY IDEAL. REALM BY 11 ILDE I'm dreaming this cie, of ray 'ldeal Realm,' Mid a fair and beautiful land— Caressed by the waves of a golden sea, Girt round by a silver strand ; Radient pearls, and the sheen of stars Spangle the empyrean dome; And bright festoons of a earcanet Encircle my fairy-like home. Brilliant sapphires and red, Flash from the spacious hall ; And weird mosaical figures glow On the many-colored wall: And the gleam of diamond porticoes, . Blaze like myriad stars, Set in a gorgeous anadem Of gold and crimson bars. There are violet banks and mazy paths, That twine through Elysian bowers; And all is wreathed in clouds of perfume, Breathed from ambrosial flowers ; And all is calm and pure and good, Within that Temple so bright; No shadow ofsorrow—no pall of sin, E'er sombres the glorious light. Sometimes I am weary, so weary of earth Its toils, temptations and cares; Its raptures intense, and hours of remorse, Its errors, phantasms and snares Then I see the gleam of the tall minaret, That peers o'er the great White Throne; And my vision is dazzled by spirit-forms, .Who softly whisper—" Come I" And I haste to leave the sordid earth, To join the unsullied fold; To walk with the myriad sentinel Blazing in pearls and gold. There in my peerless "Alden Homo," I have loves that never wane; And I dream the happy hours away, Or worship my Ideal Fano. But when I awake to reality, And gone is my wild, sweet dream ; I know my Realm of Purity Is a vision of what "might hare been." A Carolina Witness. They have a curious specimon of human nature in North Carolina. Everybody remembers the celebrated "Cousin Sally Dillard case" and here is one recently reported, which is not far behind it. The writer gives it un der the head of "legal proceeding." Action for work and labor done in cutting a ditch on defendant'S land.— Plea: payment and sot-off, in bacon and cornmdal..., ---- rianltrtrs - Soft on the stand - L-Recol: lects the ditching perfectly, but seems to forgot all about the bacon. "You say your daddy did all this ditching 1 Do you know what he got for it ?" inquired the attorney for the defendant. "He got nothing for it, as I ever heard of, that's what he never got," answered the witness. Didn't your daddy got corn and ba con from defendantin pay for ditching? "Never hoard of his getting no corn nor bacon." "What did your daddy and family live on last Summer ?" "Vittles mostly." "What sort of victuals ? "Well, moat and bread, and some whiskey." "Where did he got that meat and bread ?" "Well, just from one and then from the other ?" "Didn't ho got some of it from do• fendan t." "Ho mought " • "I know that he mought, but did he ? that's the question." "Well ho mought, and thou again, you know ho mougtlan't." With considerable excitement, and in tones of thunder : "Answer the question, and no more of this trifling with your oath.—Did your daddy, or did ho not, get corn and bacon from the defendant. for ditching ?" "Well, now, ho mought ; it didn't occurred-zaotly, you know." lore his honor interferes, and with a stern judicial frown, addresses the witness thus : "Witness, you must answer the question, or the Court will be compel led to deal with you. Can't you say yes or no F" "I reckon." "Well, then, answer yes or no. Did or did not your daddy get corn and bacon from the defendant at tho time referred to 7" inquired the Court. Witness, now fully aroused, and conscious of his danger-- . "Well, Judge, I can't edzactly re member, you know, seeilf as how it's all dun been gone and eat up, but," planting himself firmly, as one deter mined to out with it, "to the best reck erleetshun, if my memory serves me right, he mought, and then again ho moughtn't." Tho plaintiff saved his bacon. Ver dict accordingly. DEATH FROM BITING FINGER NAILS. - -A little girl recently died in Bothlo• hem from eating portions of her finger nails which she had bitten off. A post mortem examination of her body re vealed the fact that the particles of nails she had swallowed wore sticking in the sides of her stomach, causing ulceration and death. Dozens of peo ple that we know of in this vicinity are constantly biting their nails. They may learn a lesson from the above. Vir A. California Editor, participa ting in a debate as to the best method of building a certain bridge, objected to a coffer dam making the pier. Ito said he early formed a prejudice ageiput the thing ; his uncle once had a cow ehokod with a turnip, and for a long time is was thought she would coffer dam head off. HUNTINGDON, PA„ WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 15, 1866. I THE NATIONAL CONVENTION. Letter from Judge B, R. Curtis, Hon. Q. 11.. Browning, Mishington : Dear Sir--1 thank you for sending me a copy. of the call for the national con vention, to be held in Philadelphia on tho 14th day of August next. In the present unhappy condition of our national affairs it seems to me fit and important that delegates. of the people should come together from all parts of our country to manifest, in en authentic and convincing way, the ad hesion of their constituents to the fun damental principles of our government, and to that policy and course of action which necessarily result from them. In my judgment tho propositions con tained in the call of the convention aro consistent with those principles and that policy. The nature of our government does not permit the United States to destroy a State, or acquire its territory by con quest. Neither does it permit the peo ple of a State to destroy the State, or lawfully affect, in any way, any ono of ite relations to the United States. One is as consistent with our Constitution as the other; while that Constitution remains operative each is impossible. But the government of the United States may, and must, in the discharge of constitutional duty, subdue by arms, any number of its rebellious citizens into quiet submission to its lawful au thority. And if the officers of a State, having the actual control of its govern ment, have disobeyed the requirement to swear to support the Constitution, and have abused the power of the State by making war on the United States, this presents the case of an usurping and unlawful government of a Stale, which the United States may rightfully destroy by force; for, undoubtedly, the provision of the Constitution that "the United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a republican form of government" must mean a republican form of government in harmony with the Constitution, and which is so or ganized as to be in this Union. But neither the power and duty of the government of the United States to subdue by arms rebellious people in the territorial limits of ono or more States, nor its power and duty to de stroy an usurping government de facto, can possibly authorize tho United States to destroy one of the States of the Union, or, what must amount to the same thing, to acquiro that abso lute right over its people and its torri tory which results from conquest in ternatives; ono is that in subduing re bellion the United States act rightfully within the limits of powers conferred by the Constitution ; the other is that they make war on a part of their own people because it is the will of those who control the government for the time being to do so, and for such ob jects as they may choose to attain. Tho last of these alternatives has not been asserted by either department of the government of tho United States at any time, and I doubt if any con siderable number of persons, can bo found to sanction it. But if the first alternative be adopt ed, it follows that the Constitution which authorized the war prescribed the objects which alone can rightfully be accomplished by it; and those ob jects are, not the destruction of ono or more States, but their preservation; not the destruction of government in a State, but the restoration of its govern ment to a republican form in harmony with the Constitution; not the acquisi tion of the territory of a State, and of that absolute control over the persons and property of its people which a for eign conqueror would possess, but their submission to the Constitution and laws of the United States. But it seems to me a greet and fundamental error to confound the case of the con quest of a foreign territory and people with the case of submission to a law ful and established constitutional gov ernment, enforced through the powers conferred on that government for that specific purpose. It is quite true that such a civil con test may have, and in our country has bad, the proportions of an actual war, and that humanity and public law unite in dictating the application of rules designed, to mitigate its evils and regulate the condition upon which it should be carried on. But those rules of public law which concern the rights and power of a con queror of foreign territory, eeduced by conquest to entire submission, have no relation to the active prosecution of war. Their operation begins when war has ended in submission. They are the laws of a state of peace, and not of a state of war. To suppose that the government of the United States can, in a state of peace, rightfully hold and exorcise ab solute and unlimited power over a part of its territory and people just so long as it may choose to do so appears to mo to bo unwarranted by any rules of public law, abhorrent to right reason, and inconsistent with the nature of our government. When war has ceased, when the au thority of the Constitution and laws of the United States has been restored and established, the United States aro in possession, not under a new title, as conquerors, but Wider their old title, as the lawful government of the coun try; and that title has been vindicated, not by the destruction of one or more States, but by their preservation; and this preservation can bo worked out practically only by the restoration of republican governments organized in harmony with the Constitution. The title of a conqueror is necessar ily inconsistent with a republican gov, ornmcnt, which can be formed only by the people themselves, to express and execute their WILL -PERSEVERE.- And if the preservation of the States within the Union was ono of the ob jects of the war, and they can be pro served only by having republican gov ernments organized in harmony with the Constitution,and such governments can bo organized only by the people of those States, then manifestly it is not only the right, but the constitutional duty, of the people of those States to organize Buch governments• ' and the government of the United States can have no rightful authority to prohibit their organization. But this right and duty of the people of the several States can only begin when war has ceased, and the authority- of the Constitution and laws of the United States has been restored and established ; and, from the nature of the case, the government of the United States must determine when that time has come. It is a question of great interest, certainly, but not, I think, of great difficulty, how and by whom the gov ernment of the United States should determine when that time has come. The question whether de facto gov ernments and hostile populations have boon completely subdued by arms, and the lawful authority of the United States restored and established, is a military and executive question. It does not require legislative action to ascertain the necessary facts; and,from the nature of the case, legislative action cannot change or materially affect them. As commander-in-chief of the army and navy, and as the chief exe cutive officer, whose constitutional duty it is to see that the laws aro faithfully executed, it is the official duty of the President to know whoth- , or a rebellion has been suppressed, and whether the authority of the Con stitution and laws of the United States has been completely restored and firmly established. The mere organization of a republi can government, in harmony with the Union, by the people of one of the ex isting States of the United States, re quires no enabling act of Congress, and I can find no authority in the Consti tution for any interference by Con gress to prohibit or regulate the organ ization of such government by the peo ple of an existing State in the Union. On the other hand, it is clearly neces sary that the President should act, so far, at least, as to remove out of the way military restrictions on the pow er of the people to assemble and do those acts which are necessary to re organize their government. This I think, ho was bound to do as soon as he became satisfied that the right time 'mu CULlttr. After much reflection, and with no such partiality for executive power as would be likely to lead me astray, I have formed the opinion that the southern States aro now as rightfully, and should ho as effectually, in the Union as they were before, the madness of their people attempted to carry them out of it; and in this opinion I believe a majority of the people of the_North ern States agree. The work the people aro awaiting to have done this convention may greatly help. If it will elevate itself above sectional passions. ignore all party schemes, despise the sordid and party scramble for offices, a❑d fairly repre sent the national instinct that the timo now is when complete union of all the States is a fact which it is a crime not to accomplish, its action cann i pt fail to be beneficial to our country. The passions generated i❑ a groat and divided people by long and bloody civil war aro deep and formidable. They aro not confined to ono section ; the victors as well as the vanquished are swayed by them. They connect themselves with the purest and tender est Sensibilities .'of our nature; with our love of country; with our love of those who have laid down their lives in the contest; with the sufferings which war, in multiplied farms, always brings to the homes of men, and still more to the homes of women, and which civil war, most of all, brings to the homes of all ; and these passions are tho sharp and ready tools of party spirit, of self interest, of PERVERSITY, and, most of all, of that fierce infatua tion which finds its best satisfaction in hatred, and its only enjoyment in re venge. No statesman who is acquainted with the nature of man and the neces sities of civil government can contem plate such passions without the deep est concern, or fail to do what ho fitly may to allay them. Hard enough the work will prove to be, at the best. But a scrupulous regard for tho rights of all and a magnanimous clemency aro twice blessed; and both elevate and soften the powerful, and they reach and subdue what laws and bayonets cannot control. I believe there is now a general con viction among the people that this great and difficult work is practicable. That it will long remain so, if the pres ent state of things continues, I have not the hardihood to trust. I look to this convention with hope that it will do much to help onward this instinc tive desire of the people of tho United States for union and harmony and peace; that it will assert, strongly and clearly, those principles which aro the foundations of our government; that it will exhibit the connection between their violation and the present dis tracted condition of our country; that it will rebuke the violence of party spirit, and especially of that spirit of hatred which is as inconsistent with the true love of our country as it is with the true love of our brethren; and that it will do much to convince the people of the United States that they must act soon, and in the wisest Nyny, or suffer evils which they and their posterity will long deplore. With great respect, I am your oho- Ojeut sorvii,nt. :;• 4 CuaTts. NEWS SUMMARY. Gas is being made out of pine wood, bones, animal and vegetable re fuse, in Detroit, Michigan. sElv-The high price of wheat in Eu rope has caused French agriculturists to direct their attention to its culture, and the official estimates show that this year 047,500 more acres of land were sown with wheat in France than was the case fifteen years ago: The Internal Revenue Commis sioner has published a letter relative to the tax of 10 per contain on State bank notes after the Ist day of August, deciding that the old notes may be re ceived only for return for redemption to the bank of issue, and not transmit ted for sale to make up balances, etc. -r,a-The city of Memphis, Tenn., is rapidly recovering from the effects of the war. It is stated that over 0605,- 000 aro at present invested in putting up first-class buildings, and that there are over five hundred minor houses in the course of construction. Business of all kinds is said also to be improving. Gen. Sheridan has been recently pleased by the repartee of a Texas pa per, which quoted. his jest that "if ho owned Texas and Tophet, ho would rent the former and live in the other place," and curtly added,."d—n tho man that wouldn't stand up for his own country." MrA French paper Says that in a commune near Avrandhes an owl has taken terrible vengeance for the loss of her young, which had been killed by a farmer's lad. For four days the owl was on the watch for the destroyer and on the fifth, upon the boy leaving the farmhouse, the injured bird, which had been perched upon a tree, pounced down upon him, and with one stroke of its claws tore out his left eye. ItZ-The order relative to tho ap pointment of discharged soldiers as clerks and messengers in preference to a civilians has been closely observed in the departments of the government. The positions heretofore Sited by near ly two hundred clerks in the Depart ment of the Interior are now occupied by an equal number of discharged sol dices, and the applications of any who have not served in either the army or navy will not recbive favorable notice. . 126 - s_A literary: gentleman in Wash ington, it is stated, has been seized by the disease known as the "pen-palsy.' This affection is attributed to the nse of a species - of French ink which con tains arsenic. The gentleman's hands fink4 - ifFi2 - AdlY,olat volving a total abstinence from litera ry labor. EZ-A. National Cemetery is now preparing at Culpeper, Va., on the farm of Mr.- Hill. It will embrace about six acres, situated on a rising ground a quarter of a mile from the Court House, and visible from the Or ange and Alexandria railroad for a distance of four miles. The remains of soldiers buried between the Rappa hannock river and Gordonsville are to be interred in this cemetery, including those who fell in the battle of Cedar Mountain. , tErA minor of San Mateo county, California, recently put a bull dog on the trail of a deer, which rushed to wards the coast and finally into the sea. The dog followed, and soon seiz ed the deer by the throat: A huge wave completely submerged both for awhile, and then threw them ashore in a half drowned condition.- The hunter cut the deer's throat, and was then forced to choke the dog before he would relinquish his grip. g i rl shrewd Chicago detective named Baker recently wont to Mat toon, Illinois, worked himself into the society of a lot of thieves; passed him self off as a burglar; was arrested by a previous understanding, and locked up with parties suspected of having rob bed a large dry g oods house in Mat toon. He succeeded in worming out of them a full confession of the trans action, and recovered 528,000 worth of goods, besides convicting the robbers at court. .At the destructive conflagration in Portland on the Fourth of July, there was stored in the sugar house ono thousand hogsheads of sugar, which, by the destruction of the works wore precipitated into tho cellar, cov ering it to the depth of a number of feet. That sugar has been burning slowly ever since, and may now bo seen blazing up all over the collar.— It was impossible to save any of it; mixed up as it was with the debris of the destroyed building. .13Q'In making application to tho Second Auditor for the additional bounty provided for certain heirs of deceased soldiers, (widows, minor chil dren, or parents,) the form of applica tion will he .tho same as heretofore usad as applying for arrears of pay and bounty, with the exceplion that the number of the previous settlements should always ho given, and it should be stated that the application is mado to recover the additional bounty provi ded by the 12th and 13th sections of an act of Congress (chapter 178,) ap proved July 28, 1860. Tho "conscience fund" of tho Treasury Department is being largely increased by, contributions from small Government plunderers. It is stated that there is in this fund over 860,000, all of which amount has been received since the termination of the rebellion, from conscience-stricken quartormas• tors, commissaries, and shoddy con, tractors. Lately $lO was received by the Treasurer of the United States from an anonymous correspondent, who is under the impression that it rightfully belongs to the Government. The largest contribution derived from this source was t... 1.500. TERMS, $2,00 a year in advance. SALT FOR CATTLE.--A correspondent of the American. Farmer says: Strange as it may seem, it has been contended by some agricultural presses that salt is of no benefit to tho animal economy. I havo seen a cow die from eating too much 'salt after she bad Nen a long time kept from it; this is at least pri• ma facia) evidence that regular Salting is necessary both for the needs of the animal and to prevent such accidents. The sea air being so impregnated with salt that cattle in the islands and near the coast will not eat it. But although chloride of sodium is found in all plants there is not enough of it to supply th'e animal that feeds on them; hence we often seo young cattle so hungry for salt,. that they lick the concentrated ashes of burned wood for the trace of salt it contains. As salt is given off from the animal system through the pores of the skin and the excretory organs, there can be no doubt but that it contains the animal health. The Royal Academy of Scie.in Paris have obtained abundant proofs io show the great advantage of salt, both as a manure for crops and to pro mote the health and digestion of farm stock. It is shown that salt contrib utes to the nourishniont of their food, and that no ill consequencea follow when they have constant access, to it. LET THE HORSES REST OCCASIONALLY. —We know a physician, in large prac tice, who is frequently compelled to drive hiis horses hard. He, formerly drove the two together, and used thorn singly, and- as far as possible on alter nate days. They are now; though working harder, invariably healthy and strong. He attributes this to the fact that if a hard drive strains any of the muscles, they haVe time to re gain their tone the next day. Were the horses driven every day, a slight sprain would produce a-little stiffness ; the parts would rub against each other; inflammation would set in, and tbo horses be lamed—perhaps incurably eo. Farm horses aro not so liable to injury in this respect ; as those driven fast over hard roads: But a day's rest oc• casionally will help them materially. At all events do not work • thorn on Sundays; or, if any are driven far to church, or for any pressing emergency make it a rule to adhere to it scrupu lously, to lot such horsoi rest Satur days or Mondays.. Man and .boast must rest ono day in seven or pay the penalty. Bettor work harder' and rest longor.—American . Agriculturist. WATER FOR FOWL9.-It is too much :itit - 4iffeeit'tMeiVEv4llVAirthirot in their reach, though it may have been there a week, nothing more is reqifired. This is a mistake. Water for fowls and chickens should be clean; the.ves eel containing it should be well rinsed out every morning; itis a good plan to put a little gravel at the bottom, and it should be changed twice a day. I am aware many will be disposed to think this unnecessary; but I will ask any ono who has the opportunity to try, whether, where' there is a stream of water running through a yard-, they can cause the poultry to forsake it by placing water nearer to their haunts; it will always be found thuy prefer go ing to the stream to drinking out of the pan or tub. There is little doubt many of the diseases of Poultry arise from the filthy water they are often obliged to drink, from ponds full of decayed vegetable matter, and tainted by fall of leaves in autumn and winter from overhanging trees.—Correspondence Spirit. CRYSTALIZING SORGO SUGAR.—.— lM mediately after the juice has been pressed out of the ripe Sorge cane, boil' as rapidly as possible, without heating the juice or syrup to exceed 225° or 230° Fahrenheit, is very essential in making sugar. To produce a greater heat may scorch the crystalizablo por, tion; and to evaporate with a slow heat induces fermentation of certain parts. The result of either extreme is syrup, but no sugar. The juice is syrup in the evaporating pan, when boiling, should not exceed ono inch in depth. A greater depth will retard quick eva poration. Skim thoroughly and fre quently. Evaporate the syrup to about 45° by the sacchorometer, or until it will stretch out to a long thread when rubbed between the fin ger and thumb. The syrup must im mediately run off into coolers, and keep in a warm room. It *ill crysta lize in a few days, if all conditions are right. . RArsmo Srocx.—A correspondent of tho Utica herald sends the follow ing sensible hint in regard to raising stock: "Every breeder of mules knows that a good horse colt cannot be ex pected from a ream that has borne mules. The common theory of this is that the blood of the mare hecornes footed by that of the fcetus, giving mu= lish characteristics to her subsequent progeny. Apply this to the cow, is it not likely that tho blood of the cow is permanently tainted. hen she is made to bear bad blooded calves ? • And can farmers expect ever to raiso good stock from cows to which, for the purpose of making them milkers, they have been in the habit of using any runt of a ball they could pick up 2" • WORK FOR WET DATR.—_l4OOlf. after your implements and tools. y i o not let them lie around, in out-nc7t e-way places, to get rusty, but have "a place for everything, and everything in its place." These are the dayS to attend to thorn, and when you are through, and have loblced over your cattle and El keep, take your paper in hand, and sec) if you cannot get some now ideas to work upon when the rain is over. —Americana Farmer. rE9,,Farmers, write qs aorgo 4ggis. THE 0 - 1,103 SOB . PRINTING OFFICE. T ""GLOBE JOB OFFICE", is moat coaMloie of any' in Cho country, and pos sesses the meet ample facilities for promptly executing In the best style, every variety of Job.Printinir r each HAND "BILLS, PEOGRAIIMES - BLANKS, POSTER'S, CARDS. . . • • -CIRCULARS,: • BALL TICKETS ' LABELS,• &C., ,td. o#l3. ANDEXAMINS WOES LEWIS! BOOK. BTATIOBBKY A BIOBIC STORPI NO 7 COURT AFFAIR a ROCLAMA.TION.-WIIEREAS a precept to me directed, dated at lithitingdorOluk let day of April, A. D. 1866,vmder the hanfla" and seal of the Hon. George Taylor, President of the Court of Common Pleas, Oyer. and Terminer, and general joil deity. try of the 24th Judicial District of Pennsylvania, cowpox sod of Iluntingdort j Blair and Cambila'counties; and . tint' llons.,Berti. F. Patton and Anthony J. Beaver, hie unbolt' ales, Judges of,tho county • of- Huntingdon, lusticeS ite• signed, appointed to hear, try and determine all andovery indictments made or :taken for or concerning all Crimes, which by the laws of tho State are mode capital, or felon ies of death, and other offences, crimes and misdemeanors which have been or shall hereafter be committed or perpo,* trated, for crimes aforesaid—l am commanded to make public proclaroation throughout my whole bailiwick, that a Court' of Oyor and Terminer, of Common Pleas 'and Quarter Sessions, will be held at .the Court House in the borough of Huntingdon, on the second Monday (and 13th day) of August next, and those who. will prosecute the mid prisoners, bo then and there to prosecute them as it shall be just, and that all Justices of the .Peace, Coroner and Constables within said county, be then end there fa their proper persons, at.lo o'clock a. no. of said day, :with their records, inquisitions, examin ation, and remembran ces, to do "those things which to their *lkea .respectively appertam. Dated a liutAtlngdon, the Nth day of .341 y. In.the Fear o f our Lord one thousand ,olght hundred and Arlzeptax„ and the 90th year of American Independence: JAS. F. BATHURST, asn'ff. . . riIItIAL LIST, L Auausi , Txtans, Corn. of Poona. ox relationol vs gobs a. VIM David N. Tussoy, Jano Ann Speer ye. William Bennett, Adolphus Patterson • ve /sane Ziminerman, John Dougherty vs Wm. S. Entreirin, Gas; Moses Robinson, for um ` - ve Win. Porter's adinero, George Stork va Dell k Orbisop. . - John Trees va• Stage, ' ?doses Mock • vs Q. bprgey aroon . Joseph Kenip • ' •s Same John M. Sim:woad vs Goo. W. Ovriln a, with:dot H, Bucher Swoops ye John R, Flanigan' — Barnes Meildni• for use va Jno. Hamilton, with - not, D. 31. Jones & Co. • vd James Ciark's admre. Rohet•C Gill on Jolin The county of Huntingdon •e A. S. Harricou et al W. C. WAGON= Prothonotary Jackson Beaver, farmer, Penn Wesley Crotsley, farmer, Cass Daniel Conrad, farmer, Franklin Francis Campbell, farmer, Shirley John R. Dean, farmer, Juniata Jacob Eastep, laborer, Union Jacob Goodman, mill-wright, Brady: Joel Joel Kauffman ' farmer, Brady , Robert King,tailor;luntingdon Simon Locke, blacksmith, Dublin John Love, J. P., Barree Edward Moßugh, manager, Carbon Perry Moore, farmer, Morris Jacob Miller, - Sarre° • Samuel Musser, farnaer, West RIO: Potter, pump maker, Huntingdon. Levi Putt, farmer, Hopewell ' John Stinson, farmer, Carbon - Peter Shaffer of John, farmer, Morris Jabob Taylor, farmer, Tod , Isaac Taylor ' farmer, Tod Jonathan Walls, farmer, West - David Whitsell, farmer, Oneida Josiah Curfman, farmer, Cass , TRAVMSE JIIFLORB—FIRST WEEK.. David Ashton, farmer, Springfield William Brewster, M. D.,,Huntingdon David Bowman, farmer, Shirley Joseph Bears, farmer,. Cromwell, Joseph Curfinan, farmer, Cass Robert Cummins, farmer, Jackson M. F. Campbell, farmer, Union Oliver Etnier, farmer, Shirley Levi Evans, J P., Coal mont David Foster ' distiller, Brady David Gates, farmer, Franklin James Gifford, farmer, Toll • Joshua Greenland, farmer,Huntingdon Samuel Grove, farmer, Brady Abraham Grubb, carpenter, Walker William Hughes, farmer, Oneida Hays Hamilton, manager,-Franklin Andrew. Heffner, miller, Walker • ' William Ilampson, mechanic, Shirley lloury Harris, farmer, Penn John Ingram, farmer, Franklin Samuel Kessinger f farmer, Penn Lowis Kuode, farmer, Poiker John M. Leach, millwright, Franklin. Adam Lightner, farmer, West Christian Miller, farmer, Cass. Jona. McWilliams, farmer,. Franklin John Morrow, farmer, Dublin William Neff, laborer, Porter Henry G. Neff, farmer, Porter Samuel :Noff, farmer, Porter - Jacob Noarhoof, farmer, Warriormark David Peterson, farmer, Dublin Henry Putt, farmer, Hope Well , - John Porter, gentleman, Alexandria Samuel Stoffey, farmer, Jackson James Stewart, farmer,. Jackson Michael Sprankle, farmer, Morris David Shoup, mason, Hopewell Goorge Stever, farmer, Cass Wilson Watson, plasterer, Walker Elijah Weston, farmer, Warriormark John Warfel, farmer, Henderson A. A. White, farmer, cirmidu Leo Wilson, farmer, Barre J. D. Doren, inn-keeper, Causal° SYMBOLIC MEANING OF Cordoss.—. White was the emblem of light, reli gious purity, innocence, faith, joy and life. In the Judge it indicates integ, rity; in the eck man ; hinnility; in wo, man, chastity. Red, the ruby, signifies fire, divine love, the Holy Spirit, heart of the Ore ative power, and royalty. White and, red roses express love and wisdom, as in the garland, with whiph the an cients crowned. St. Cecilia-. In anoth, er sense, red signifies blood, war, ha, trod and punishment. Red 444 141apic combined were thedelors of purgatory. Blue, or the sapphire expressed hea, von or the firmament, eruth ; constancy and fidelity. • Yellow, or gold, was the symbol of the sun, of the goodness of God,'of itation or marriage, faith or faithful : . ness. In the picture of the Apostles, St. Peter wears a yellow mantle over a blue tunic. Yellow also signifies constancy, jealousy, deceit; in thin sense it was given to Judas, who in generally habited in yellow. Green, the emerald, is the color of spring, particularly hope of immortal-. ity, and of victory, as the oolor of lin re! and palm. Violet, the amethyst, signified love and truth, or passion and suffering.—; 1- 41199 it is the color Oftorl worn, by % 11 9 martyrs. Black expressed the earth„darknoss, wiettednose,monrning, negation, death; and it was appropriate to the Prince of Darkness. In some old illuminated manuscript, Jesus, in, the temptation ; wore a Week robe. White and, black together signify' purity of life, and mourning or humiliation, El BILL HEADS,• GRAND JURORS