I== Ebe 05tc(be. El HIINTINGD Wednesday morning, April 3, 1867, W IS , Enrrons iIUGH L IN DSA Y, I know of no 711061 g in which a loyal citi oen may so well dfonoostsoes Lis dem/ion t o Ins country as by .vzWaininy the Flay the Constitution and the Union, under all ciceunt stances, and UNDER EVERY ADMINISTRATION REGARDLESS OF PARTY FOLITICS, AGAINST ALI ASSAILAXTS, AT 11031 E AND ALRO,U)." A. Poucit..ks To the Patrons of the "Globe." Our patrons will notice-by reference to heads of first and second pages hereafter, that Mr. Huoii LINDSAY will be associated with us in the publishing as well as the editorial department of the "Globe." Having served under us as an apprentice, foreman, and associ ate editor, Mr. LINDSAY is no stranger in the office, and any businees entrust ed to his care will he properly attended to. We have published the Globe twenty one years, and we feel that it is our duty at our ago to impose upon a worthy young man a part of the care and responsibilities necessary to con duct successfully a public, independent, loyal journal. The political character of the Globe will at all times speak for itself. ff wo fail to please politicians and mere party Mon, it will be because we may not, be able to think as they do, or will not agree to hide the ras calities or short comings of politicians and party organizations. Ho is only a freeman who will speak his honest convictions and oppose corruption and other wrongs inflicted upon parties and thdpeople. We hope to deserve and receive the support of an honost and independent people. All parties have suffered most from a hasty willingness on the part of the party press to endorse the action of leaders. Had the Democrat ic press made public their honest sen timent when the South rebelled, party leaders would have changed their course, and the old organization would to-day be respected. If the Republi can press continue to endorse or wink at the propositions of the extreme Radicals, the day will soon come when the party will also be in the minority in most of the States in the Union. Legislators Picking the Pockets of the Taxpayers. The members of the House of Rep resentatives of this State, on Friday last, voted themselves a salary of thirteen hundred and fifty dollars for the present session of an hundred days. When the members were before the people for nomination and election, they agreed to accept the honor at the salary of ono thousand dollars, the amount agreed upon by a previou s legislature. Because the members have the power to raise their own wages, it does not follow that the act is any more honest than picking the pockets of the tax-payers without their consent. We hope the Governor will veto the bill if it should pass the Senate. A contract with the people should stand. President Johnson is said to be a candidate for the United States Son. ate, after his term ai3 Chief Executive expires. If ho over should get back to that position we have no doubt his pertinacity would enable him to be heard. Accepting that position, how ever, should not give cause to the belief that ho was trying to live his eventful life over again, and that ho would turn up, after many revolu tions, as a magistrate or constable in some insignificant town in Tennessee. We rather believe his oft repeated ex pression, that the height of his ambi tion has been reached, and we have doubts of the rumor that he wants the Senatorship. ,The following dispatch dated N. Y., March 27, was sent to the Senate by Thomas C. Durant, Vice President of the Union Pacific Railroad : Work has been suspended on the Union Pacific Railroad west of Omaha. The extreme cold weather and snow prevents the laying of the track, but we were never doing more in accumu lating material and getting it to the end of the track. We have now on hand the iron and ties for one hundred and fifty miles, and I will pledge my- self to complete two miles a day for the first one hundred working days after the frost is out of the ground. Any investigation can only result to our credit, for we have built more road in a given time than was ever done before,and propose accomplishing more this year. We are not asking any leg islation. vs-a_ln addition to the throngs of prominent office-seekers now in Wash ington, there are hundreds of the less pretentious class, including unmarried women, widows, and ex-soldiers, from all parts of the country. These impor tune for place in the Treasury and other Departments, and also in the public printing office. As there are no vacancies, and as the force at the lat t .r establishment is being reduced for the lack of work, many of these stran gers being without friends, are reduced to the necessity of soliciting private charity that they may return to their homes. ADJOURNED.—Both Houses of Con gress adjourned on Saturday last until the first Wednesday of July Before adjournment Senator Sumner gave notice that on that day he would call up the bill for univerAa! suffrage throughout the United States. The President has called an extra session of thd Senate. MEER The New License Law. The new License Law which we published last week has very little in it, which will commend itself to the temperance men of the Stale, or at least to those who desire to see the evils of intemperance abolished to a greater extent. The first section is the same ill FilbAaliCO as the original law; so it leaves it optional with the tem perance men to take advantage of it or not, just: as before. The trouble still exists to ascertain which houses are ne cessary for the accommodation of the public and entertainment of strangers and travelers, and which are not. The new tavern-keeper alleges, with rea son, that, lie has as much right to sell liquor as his predecessor, providing ho has the requisite number of beds, etc; and if temperance men should remon strate against him, lie would offer this plea; and, as has been the case in our own Court, lie would have hisiicense --STEPHEN Temperance men dread to 'encoun ter the odium of the tavern keeper, when they remonstrate against him in particular, and do not against the oth ers. For this reason the advocates of temperance have refused to remon strate in this and other localities, and the number of tavern keepers Las in creased rather than diminished. Wo think this difficulty could be obviated by limiting the number of licensed ho tels in any place to the proportion of inhabitants or itinerant travel: One thing is certain—so long as hotels ex ist in a place, just so long will thoy ap ply for a license to sell liquor, no mat ter how many there may be, or no matter how many may be added. This will be the ease so long as the number is unlimited as it is at present, or un til a prohibitory law is passed. The second section of the law, which applies to eating houses, is a little bet tor than it was before. The change consists in having the keepers of the same to make application for license in like manner as keepers of hotels, with the exception that it is not re quired that they should have the beds and bed-rooms; also that County Trea surers do not grant their license. The same regulation in regard to limitation of the number, which we made above, would apply to them. It is equally certain that if ono man gots a license, another will want one also. But if the number in the town is restricted by legislative enactment, then applicants can have no reason to expect a grant ing of their license; and thus the com munity would be saved from an accu mulation of these houses. Some may allege that there will be very little good accomplished by this system which we propose. It is true that it would do little in lessening the chances for men to get liquor, who will have it if they ran, but it would prevent others from following the business who otherwise would ; and would, as we have said, prevent an ac cumulation of the same in the locality. It is the number of bar rooms in a place which bring it into disrepute, and by the number is judged its ability to sus tain them. Each additional bar-room s an additional temptation, and so Ong as the law admits of an increase, ust so long will the snares be angmcn ed, and also the evils of intemperance. The Lindel hotel, in St. Louis, the largest building of its kind on this continent, if not In the world, was to tally destroyed by fire on the night of the 30th. The fire broke out in ono of the west front rooms in the fifth story. There were about four hundred guests in the hotel, who lost most of their personal effects. The total loss by the disaster will scarcely be less than $1,000,000. It is not known how the fire originated. Fifteen hundred freedmen have ap )lied to the American Colonization So ciety to be sent to Africa, within eight months, of whom six hundred have embarked. This would indicate that the freedmen aro tired of this free coon try. The President sent to the Senate in Executive Session, on'" Saturday, a treaty with Russia, by which that power surrenders to the United States sovereignty ovcr all Russian America and the adjacent islands.. It especial ly includes the strip - of four hundred miles long which extends down the coast, thus nearly excluding British America from the ocean. The price to be paid for this territory is about $7,000,000. As it is necessary that the treaty will have to be ratified by the Senate, the President called an extra session of that body on Monday the first of April. D---"An Italian in Mobile was put in Ids coffin while in a trance, as he was sup Posed to be dead. Upon arriving at the graveyard the friends of the de ceased found that the coffin had been partially broken open, apparently by force exercised within. They at once held a consultation, which resulted in the opening of the coffin, when the ap parently dead man was found to pre sent the most unmistakable signs of life. Although there was evidently life, there was no consciousness. The whole strength of the almost buried man had been thoroughly exhausted by Lis efforts to make his condition known to his friends, and his conscious. ness deserted him simultaneously with 'die burst* of the lid by his frantic exerLi‘.,lls (.0 :IVL; hinv;ell, fur he was certainly dead when the physician who waS sent for arrived on the "round. Latest News, Pen and Scissors. A Portland schoolmaster complains that the boys hide bottles of liquor under their seats and get helplessly drunk in school. There nro five hundred and seventy-four• newspapers published in Paris—nearly twice as ninny as all Pennsylvania. A murderer in the Cincinnati jail gives no• [ice that he does net wish to see visitors un less visitors bring cigars with them. A beautiful tunnel was discovered not long since under• a rive• in the interior of Peru, the work f the old Inca Indians, and a last ing proof of their• chilization. It costs .:C1 to bring a ton of merchandise from Liverpool to this country, rind £3,581 to bring a ton of letters. The latter aro not correspondingly cheap. The cup of patience is carved with angelic hands, set round with diamonds from the mines of Eden, arid filled at the eternal fount of goodness. It is said that a person who is fond of fruit rarely becomes' a hard drinker. Would that the hard drinkers could love the substance rather than the shadow before they fall. A man in Ohio walked on ice twelve miles, obtained a marriage license, went back by the sauce "conveyance" the same day and was married in tho evening. Good for him. During lest year• there were two hundred and sixty-five bears killed in the State of Maine. In Penobscot county alone there were one hundred one nine killed. A religious fancy party WIN thelast nov elty in New "York. All present assumed Scriptural characters or those of pious celeb- rides, and the exercises opened with prayer. After this, what next? It is better to love a person you cannot marry, than to marry a person you cannot love. This is a short text to a long sermon which human experience will continue to preach until the last syllable of recorded time. An exchange says, the word "philopcna," so common at social parties, signifies "friend ship's forfeit." It is a Greek and Latin corn. pound, and literally interpreted, signifies, "I love the penalty," A countryman on his first sight of a loco motive declared that be thought it was a devil ou wheels. "Faith and yer worse than me self," said an Irish bystander, "for the first time that I saw the ereathur, I thought it was a steamboat hunting fur water." Late advices from Idaho territory repre sent tho mining interests in a flourishing condition. Interesting geological discoveries are being made in the Owyhee country. It is expected the developments will create •a sensation in the scientific 'world. An old and Nimalthy widower in ludianap• ells, whose estate would cut up remarkably fat, has terribly lacerated the feelings of his heirs by marrying his housekeeper. Such things will happen sometimes, notwithstand ing the freaks of the fortunate. They catch monkeys in Brazil with little boats filled with pitch. The monkeys seeing these boats alone in the forest, approach in concert and pitch in. It will net be long be fore they will be sharp enough not to he caught on that kind of a scale. A young man in Brooklyn was lately most unmercifully cowhided by two young women for sbmdering them. They went to his place of business, a foundry, and there administer ed the castigation. Who says women have not found a way to make right . their wrongs? A young man in Burlington, lowa, rushed into the office of the local paper a night or two since and asked if the local column was full —"because a man insulted him down town, and if the column was full he could delay punishing him until the next issue." It is said that nature, when she makes a beautiful head, is often se absorbed with ad miration ()Cher own ;cork that she forgets the brains. We don't believe it. It is only when beautiful beads think of 'beautiful heads" that the brain is neglected, The Prison Agent at Philadelphia states that of the 19,468 commitments, last year, 14,361 were on account of offences traceable directly or indirectly to the use of intoxicat ing liquors, Will those who indulge think of this startling fact? Daniel had better go to Erie to find a Lion's Den, A lioness belonging to a circus there, recently honored the locality by pordueing a fitter of five lions. It is to be hoped that, when the circus moves, the innocent kittens will not be left lying around loose. Old Mrs. Smith says it's a slime to afflict corporal punishment on gals ns they do in the Boston schools, when a good whipping by the master would answer every project. Mrs. S. thinks that to have these military men to afflict chastisement is iaducive to immortali ty. She's right if she is wrong. Colonel Moseby, the once notorious guer illa leader, is now contentedly engaged at Richmond, Virginia, in the manufacture of corncob pipes, which he offers for sale to the tobacco smokers of that region. It is• emi nently fitting that the career of such a flashy warrior should end in smoke. The telegraph along the Norwegian coast has been outplayed recently for the purpose of giving the fishermen notice of theitppear ance and position of the shoals of herring which are hand on that shore, and also com municating other useful information where by the fishing is more completely and effi ciently carried on. A chap at Davenport has been fined five dollars and costs, sixteen dollars and forty live cents, for a kiss, to winch the kissee had objected. Such little incidents are of fre, quent occurrence here, yet we hear of no in dictments, showing that ladies generally are more sensible. "Take and give" is the more enjoyable and less expensive game, after all. The Tipton (Iowa) Advertiser chronicles the birth of a curiously-deformed child in that county. It has no part t.f a countenance save a mouth, in which double rows of teeth are making their appearance. Above the mouth its face and head elope toward the crown, leaving no trace of nose, eyes, or fore head. It has six toes on one foot. Other wise it is like other children. At lust ac counts it was Still A correspondent of the Cincinnati Gazette gives an account of a fatal accident which oc curred in Dayton a few days ago, the result of tight hieing. A young lady much given to the practice, canoed a hook to be placed in the wall of her room, to which she was in the habit of fastening her corset strings so as to be able to draw them tighter. The other day she threw herself too heavily on the strings, atol broke a blood vesstil, from which she died in a few hours. Ladies, l!olyare. El=l2=2 Accident on the Erie Railroad. The express train of the Erio rail way which started from Buffalo at twenty minutes past two o'clock yes terday afternoon, and was due here at seven o'clock this morning, met with a serious accident at two o'clock this morning near Vast 'Hope, on the Deloware division of the rmtd, about a hundred miles from Now York. Trackmen,were, previous to the time of the accident, endeavoring to replace a broken rail ; and when the train was expected a flagman was sent out to stop it. The engineer, named George El wood, and the fireman were both on the lookout, but the night was dark, and they did not see the signal. The result was, that the engine, which, according to the statement of one of the persons employed on the train, was running at the rate of from thirty-five to forty miles an how•, went at full speed upon the bare ties, break ing the trucks and causing tbrriblo in— jury to the train. There were nine cars in all. Three express freight ears fbllowed the ten der ; then a baggage car, a postal car, a smoking car, and three passenger cars, of which two were sleeping cars. Six of these ears—the express, bag gage, postal and smoking cars—were all more or less broken up, but none of the persons on them were killed. Some were considerably braised. The engineer, nr. : Elwood, lost his life and the fireman was scalded, but will recover. The fact that the passengers escaped with se little injury is considered very remarkable. A new train was made up at Deposit, and the passengers, &c, brought to this city at noon. The Cattle Epidemic in New Jersey. The farmers and owners of cattle in New Jersey have recently been seri ously alarmed at the simultan MINS ap pearance in various parts of the State of a new disease among their horses and mules. The disease has, in a few cases which have up to the present, time occurred, invariably proved fatal, and although the symptoms are not in all instances identical, they are suffi ciently alike in their general character to warrant the belief that they are the beginning of an epidemic, which may possibly create as much loss among the cattle of this section of the country as the well known ninderpest has already caused in Europe. It is admitted by all the past year, and more especially the extraordinary winter which is now closing, has been extremely unfavora ble to the health of either man or beast, and there is a reasonable basis for the fear that the unusual physical conditions under which we have been placed, may have produced effects which, although they have hitherto re mained dormant, may shortly become only too clearly apparent. For sonic time complaints have been made in nearly every county in the State of New Jersey, to the, effect that an unu sual amount of sickness was prevailin: , among horses; and, in fact, livO stocrc. generally. One of the most dangerous and fatal diseases which attack horses —lung fever—has lately been extreme ly destructive, while every other mal ady with which they are at any time visited has existed with more or less intensity. A number of deaths have, however, occurred in which the precise nature of the disc. - Ise is unknown ; though many of the symptoms are sim• liar to those which in human beings characterize typhoid fever. AGRICULTURAL.—The Monthly Re port of the Agricultural Department tbr February contains tables showing the average yield por acre of eerals in the respective States last year.—ln wheat the highest average was in Nebraska, at 26 bushels. In Pennsyl vania the average was only 11 bushels. Of all the Middle and Eastern States Vermont was highest, going up to 20 bushels. Kansas was highest in Rye, yielding 26 bushels. Pennsylvanian stood at 13 bushels. Vermont led the Eastern and Middle• States, standing at 18 bushels. In Barley Nebraska was ahead, yielding 35 bushels. Penn sylvania stood at 20. Verinod, went to twenty nine; ahead of all the Eas tern and Middle States. In mists, Ne braska was fbremost, standing at 47. Vermont steed next, at 30. Pennsyl vania, 33. In corn, New Jersey was highest, at 43. Pennsylvania stood at 31. Illinois at 31. Those 100 bush els to the acre, that used to be brag ged about did not appear. In Buck wheat, Vermont was highest, at 30. Pennsylvania was at 21. In Potatoes, Florida led, showing an average of 187 bushels. Maine averaged . 155, Ver mont 148, Pennsylvania 99, while Col orado went to 175, and Utah to 163. Incereals, the average yield in this country is one hundred por cont., less than in England, and fifty per cent., less than in France. EDITORS.--lienjamin Franklin has the credit of saying that "the best edi tor is scissors; ,, by which he probably meant that the editor who recognizes the fact of there being in the world many good writers beside himself, and avails himself of the good things they have written, will make the most in teresting and acceptable newspaper. Men who know most about making newspapers do not estimate au editor's labors by the number of columns he writes, but by the general complete ness and finish of his paper . as a whole. The following paragraph, written by an Englishman of largo experience, contains the gist of the whole matter: A good editor, or competent news paper conductor, is like a general or a poet—born, not made. .Exercise and experience give facility, but the quail tiemion is inmate, or it is needy mani fested. On the ].tendon daily papers all the great historians, novelists,poets, essayists and writers of travels have been tried, and nearly every one has failed. A good editor seldom writes much for his paper; he roads, judges, selects, dictates, alters and combines; and, after doing all well, he has but little time for composition. To write for a paper is one thing—to edit a pa per is another. Ei- - n The President has nominated Con, Rosseau as Brigadier General in the regular army, vice Robecraus, re- i o ned The C4reat To mutu—Hrtupay 9 ,-; Superior. tow packao,i of :P.3ed for , ale at Lewis' Book Store. Price 25 cents. When Does the Day Begin ? The .S'efentific American says :—As we travel eastward the day begins ear lier ; near the equatpr starlight appears an hour earlier fin• each thousand miles going east. When it is sunrise in New York, the people of Europe have had sunlight for many hours, and the Cali• fornians arc still in their beds dream ing. Evidently the day has a dist be• ginning, and at the hastward. But how far and where? What aro the people who first see the light of Hon day morning? It is the sun which brings the day; where does Ile, first bring Monday ? If we could travel with him we 'night, find out. Let us suppose the case. We will take an early start; at sunrise' on Sunday , morning, with the sun just at the point of peeping over, the horizon behind us, we travel westward. As we go, the people give us a Sunday greeting; we bring Sunday with us to Pittsburg, St. Louis, Salt hake,. San Francisco. At San Francisco our faithful chronome. ter informs us that we have been on the tramp about five hours. But we started 011 Sur.day morning and it is Sunday morning still. We go on, still on Sunday morning. Will this Sunday morning ever end ? The quiet Pacific knows very little. of Sunday or any other• day, and our question setu•cely receives an echo for reply. When \vo gdt to Yokohama in japan, or Shang hai in China, we search for sumo Yen kee,',Nrido awake in the early morning, and we are told for the first time that Monday has come. Everywhere now we bring Monday, and in twenty-four by the chronometer after starting, we are in New York again, and find the merchants taking down their shutters, and the Monday Newspapers telling I us what has happened during our ab sence. A Feminine Phenomenon, The New York Evening Gazette says: A trustworthy gentleman gives us an account of an extraordinary ill ness of a young woman, a Hiss Winsor, in Providence, Rhode Island.—Miss W. had been confined to her bed for several mouths, and had not partaken of sufficient nourishment to keep her alive if she had not been in a normal condition. Yet her Ilteulties have be come strangely acute, and she seems to be endowed with a species of second sight. When the physician, Dr. Ira Barrow, calls on her, she can tell the nuMber of visits ho has made, the number of the hodses of his patients, and describe accurately their com plaints. The clock having been removed from her chamber, she was enabled to determine at any hour the .exact time of clay or nights, and she would describe the color, size and marks of the doctor's horse, and the hue and the texture of the lining of his car riage. She composed a poem which she called the "Sea Serpent," ono halt of each lino in Latin and the rest in English, which was pronounced by the professors of Brown Univority pure Latin, although she had never the least instruction in the language. She also draws finely without having taken lessons, and does other extraor dinary things not to be accounted for by any atilt; known laws of tempera ment, medicine. or science. While asleep, her right arm is constantly in motion, though it is perfectly powerless when she is awake. A number of the physicians and sevens of Providence are deeply interested in the case of Miss Winsor, and are endeavoring to solve the mystery of her seeming su pernatural powers. following admirable anec dote is from Breslan, and is of recent date. Not long since an elderly man with bare head stood in an eating house, surrounded by a crowd of. peo ple. The landlord held the triall;t3 hat and cane in his bawls, am] an impu dent waiter stood between the guest and the door. The confusion of the old man was indescribable. Ito scorned to he fir the first time in his life in such a scrape—said nothing, looked down on the ground, and with diffi culty restrained his tears, while all around mocked and jeered him. Just then a poorly-dressed Jew, with a long white board, entered, and inquired what it all meant, and with an expres sion of almost feminine curiosity. He was told that the man had eaten and drunk, and now that he must pay he searched his pockets in vain for money. "Well," exclaimed the Jew, "I see the old man fbr the first time, but I'll bo bound he did not come here to And landlord, suppose lie had no mon ey to forget, couldn't you for onso give a poor man something to eat, for God's sake? How touch does he owe, anyhow ?" The debt was eight silver groschen, and the Jew, paying this, Look the poor old wan by the hand and led him to the door. Those pres ent did not seem to enjoy the reproof which their brutality had received, and ono insolent fellow cried out: "Hey! Jew, what have you done I—this is the Sabbath, and you have touched mon ey I" [This is forbidden to the Israel ites.] -You are right.;" answered the Jew. "J ust. now I Cergot that I was a Jee',just as you forgot that you were Christians. But you may re s t easy on iny account; I understand my com mandment which says, . "Honor the Sabbath day :tint keep it holy." Just get sumo schoolmaster to explain it to you, and if he is a reasonable man he will agree is` ih mo. "Good deeds have no Sabbath." sad with these words the good man left the room. instance of almost, sup erhu man endurance and perseverance oc curred in San Mateo county, Califor nia, a short time, since. A woodchop per was caught by a red-wood tree, three feet in diameter, which fell across both legs. A fierce storm was pro guessing, and through the live-long night the sufferer madly shrieked for assistance, only to be answered by the mocking winds that howled through the surrounding ihrest. The next morning the sufferer perceived his axe within reach, and hope sprang up in his heart. Lying prostrate on his back, lie commenced the weary task of chop ping the tree in twain. At each blow of the axe the huge tree bottled upon his limbs, crushing them almost to a jolly, but still he persevered, and after two days of rthremitted toil his task was accomplished. 31angled and crushed as ho was, ho crawled to a dis tant cabin. Medical aid was called and both legs were amputated. Incredible as it seems, the man i;3 likely to recover. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS cIEALED PROPOSALS will ho ro k-3COINCEi by the Truetees of the Huntingdon Presbyte rian Church fur the erection of title galleries G. the church. Builders and architects are requested to exam ine the building and hand their proposals to the under signed on or before the Gth day of April next. G. TV.GARRETTSON, Ifuntin,gdon, April 3.16 Secretary. QUARTERLY REPORT of the covdi eon of tho FIRST NATIONAL. RANK of Hun tingdon, of the Slate or Pennsylvania, on tho morning of the first Monday of April, 1567: RESOURCES. Loang MO Discount:l $105,731 63 !Wilting 110uAo. 7,059 00 Furniture and Fixtures4s7 31 • Current expenEel 2,260 01 Duo from Banks and 11:tulotra 31,071 10 IL S Bondi, dt,i,,,,,ite1l with IL S. Treftsuror to s..curo Circulating Nolo - 150,000 00 U. S. Bonds (11111 sasurities on Land 00,500 00 Cush OR /11111 d, in etre notes of uthor Nat'l banks 7,725 00 do do du is Stat., banks 74 00 Specie • 1,580 09 (Ahoy lawful money .... 53,-42 79 Total lte2ourc.. LI ABILITIES, Capital block paid in ............ Surplus fund Circulating not,areCri from Compt's... 135.000 Lcan amount on hand 1,415133.585 00 Individual Ilepuiits 207,711 53 Lnu to Banks and Bankers 500 53 Diqennot and Exchanges 5,421 40 litterert 2,011 81 Total I.labilitiel. State Of Pennsylvania, County of If a llt ingdou, 1, George %V . Ilarrettson. Cashier of the First National Book of liaatiogdon, Pa., do nolonwly fitrear that tho Mow° kt,ttotnent la trio to the Lest of knowledgo and (Signed.] (11'.0. CARR EI"PSON, Cashier. Fworn to and subacriloal 6efofenio,thi4 Ist day of Apr A. 11., 1867. LEignetl.l rtalat. 5)00005. . , i .., , 0 ------- -_-- - - - -: ,, ; --7--- ---; -- ' -- ;: --7 7- ---- ~---'-"J''' -_-;;-------- riz , t t. :'- 'c',A, % - Ks 'l:—.,:;-'-'-,,---..--....-----, li)' 4,...--J,,,,.0 \ \ ,Nvi„:;'0 .1 .3 7 ,7 , .... , ,i, '''\ \' l , '; s,, WI) 'aij' 4lo / 4 / 4 '4,1 ~, N ~ ,,pibyill/70/ 4 P ~ ~, / , / /:4 ; fy,o/;',;, ' '', / 1 ,. , ;,//,/, -). %,ft , ,,: - ,ydg :".4,',4, - V , 1 , ~ y, ~ -,, 5 ; , ' • . ~,,,,.. ~• 0.:. 1 z -,-... , • . .‘ :',?, -.,_, , /, 1 , '-',- ':- --:;,, : :' - ' l- ' 2 ,•j 1 . 2 .151 - , .',„/,'; ,„.' --1 - ` 1, ,,.2 - .;;I, ‘(7.` - , 7 1, 1:. - ''''z ' ,- - : 41l 9---4- -IS ‘ ---7 , / i ;., -. "-"- ',,,l"="a-l-il -7,. "t'r,.:_;4'l,t ~4 .- , -J ___: - q\f_ ii ______l l ;: 1- -- -- -- L - 7i . ,----_-.; _ - - -3 - t 5, EfitIST:NiEzWATTS:t TAKE pleasure in announcing to th 1 citizens of llnntingticn county and vicinity that th have just returned from the Enst with a LARGE STOCK OF GOODS, Which they here pat opened out at their nen• Wire, ONE DOOR EAST OE THE WASHINGTON MOTET Their ztrcl.: consitta of PRY COOPS, NOTIONS, HATS AN Ii C APS, BOOTS AND S I I.OE, R 0 OT•lit E , FLOU R AND FEED, TOBACCO, SEGA RS, CANNED PRUD S, HARDWARE, EDA - WARE, QUE ENS WA RE, OIL CLOTHS, OILS, PA TINTS, DRUGS, ( RPETS, CARPET CHAP, FISh, SALT, CHEESE, TRUNKS, HAMS, SHOULDERS, SIDES, Sx. &a. 111,y hare a large taxi: Of L:iDIES' DRESS GOODS, Co,isting; of SILKS, SOFIAIRS, ALPACA.", POPLINS, I,USTIIES, GING HAMS, MEILINOS, PLAIDS, DI LAIN ES, ,Le., ,te., AIN°, A large as eurtrnent of DRESS TRIMMINGS, EMBROIDE RY, HOSIERY, GLOVES, BUTTONS, &c. A FULL LINE OF WHITE GOODS 'We will 'sell WHOLESALE tont RETAIL. All goods delivered to resideneol in town and depots, f•ee of charge. Clive- us a trial before purchasing elsewhere. I= Huntingdon. April 3,1567 L t DMINISTRATOR'S [Estate of Daniel Foreman, deed.] Leiters of Achttinistiation upon the . octet. of Daniel Foreman, Irate of Carbon townihip. Huntingdon county, dQc'd, haring been granted to the undersigned, all 'woo., having claims against the estate are requested to present them to the motorsignod. Ind all - persons indebted will make immediate payment. - SA..)1!lo FORENIAN, Meb27-6t , Adminbitrator. Sornethiqg New "?" GLAZIER & BRO. TTAYE jusl opened up on the corner wAsniNGTON and SMITH struts, n 11019 and COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF DRY GOODS, • DRESS GOODS, GROCERIES, • QUEENSWABE, HATS. SHOES, ETC., ETC. Tie citizens of Huntingdon and vicinity are hereby tendered a standing invitation to .11 and OXIIIII4IO nor sto':k. Our aim will ever be, that complete satisfaction, bosh no regard: goods and prices, be given to every pur chaser. CiI.AZIEB A 11110. Huntingdon, Morel: 1367. -. 0 RIDGE TO BE REPAIRED. .11 The Comm sioners will repair the Bridge at Mont gomery's follow, above Mill Creek. They will receive 1'11)1)os:its for 'firestone work at their Oleo in .Hunting don. on TUESDAY, the 3d day of APRIL, 1567. The following work is to be done: Piers to be repaired and extended eight feet at the bottom on the upper side and batter three inehes to the toot; to - be of the came thickness as the old piers; stones to be dressed and built With cement in.the same manner a: the bridge OA 3101111 t Union. To lie comptotod by tire tot day of July, 1807. By order of tiro Commissiouers. ineh6 HENRY W. MlLLtdtt, Clerk. EVERYBODY MUST LIVE! CALL AT LEWIS' FAMILY GROCERY. The beet of everything will be constantly kept on band and sold at the lowest prices possible. Quick sales and mall profits. FISH. FISH. Best MACK' EIZIM rind HERRING cur sale retail a Lucia MOLASSES AND SYRUPS! Levering's - 11,4 rm.] other syrups, New Orleatis, Porto Fivo and Fu ;;sO. 11.11S.SS,S, for 'ldt.? qt .14,:iN Family ~_ =mss PIC:O3EI.: A VALUABLE TRACT OP LAND /.1.. about a mile distant frotn Huntingdon borough. and connecting by a short lane with the public road leading front saidiberough up Stone Creelt,containing over S 9 ACRES, about 40 thereof bring cleared ; having there on erected a good too story frame' WELLING HOUSE and stable. For further particulars inquire of Huntingdon, Feb 2711 JNO. 11. GLAZIER Brass Musical Instruments FOR SALE. 1 Silver E flat Cornet, 2 Brass E flat Cornets, 2 E Oat Altos, 3 B flat Tenors, 1 Baritone, 2 Eflat BMUS, 1 Bass Drum. The above outfit for a Band trill be sold at very low rates, and these desiring to purchase should avail them selves of this opportunity. • Apply to E. W. THOMAS, Iluntingdon,janlo-tf Teacher of Cornet Bands. .OVERNMENT PROPERTYAT PRIVATE SALE 6PITKLN&CO. $.,06,D30 DO l;.0000 00 6,707 63 5,000 new and second-hand TEAM-11-AA:VE.9S 10,000 111111)1,ES and COLLAnS. 3,000 SADDLES, all atyles—s2,so to S. 300 Poor Horse Government WAGONS. 2,000 WAGON COVERS, all sizes, new and worn 3,000 BLANKETS and-11013SE COVERS. Alto, a large stocf, of . 0111 e, Lines, ipm, Bog— gy and Ambulance Harness. Portable Forges, Chains,. Swinglet tees. Lead lbws, etc., etc. Whoa team barmss, little worn, all oak tanned leath er and serviceable, cleaned and oiled $5 per horse or mule, including bridle. Lead do., $4. Wagon bridles $l, col lars, $1 to $2; extra hair lined artillery case do., $2,50 to 3 Double Reins, 1,75 to $2,25. Lend Lines, $1 llfalters, 6to $l2 per doz.. 011icets' new Saddles, $18; with pla ted bit Bridle, $2l; good as new, $l2, with bridle, $l4:, valisuSaddles for boys, $6. Wagon Covers, made to fit one Wagon, heavy linen, 3: to $6; superior cotton duck, 6to $O. 12 oz. duck, 9to $l2 1,000 hospital touts, now and good as now, 12 oz. duck„ 11 feet square, 30 to $4O. . • officers' A tont, 7 feet square, from 5 to $O. 10,000 BAGS, from 12 oz. Duck, first quality, 2 bushel', $9; 2y. bus. $10; a bus., $ll, per dozen; second quality, $7,50, - $0,60 and $0,50. . • ' OU 4ri.y- Small orders seat by Express. C. 0. D. PITKIN tcr CO., No. 337 &IN NIL VRONT St., PM GALVA, Pa. No. 5, Park Place, NEW YORK, No, 453, NINTH Street, WASHINGTON, D. t. Price•list sent on application. melil3,2m O EIERIFF"S SALES.—By virtue of writs of Yenditioui Exponas. to mu directed, will expose to public sale or outcry, at the Court House, ha the borough of Huntingdon, ON MONDAY, STU DAY of APRIL, A.D.1867, at 2 o'clock, P. 21., the following . described property to wit - About, fire acres of land situate.in: Jackson township, Huntingdon county, ra., borioded am the north by Randall gickett; east by Ellis Musser south by Thomas Watson; and west by John Duff; with, framo dwelling house, blacksmith shop, and old saw milt thereon. Seized. taken in execution, and to• ho sold as. he property of Samuel Yocum. Also—All the right, title and inter-. est of def. - aid:int in a boat or parcel of land situate in. Cass and Tod townships, Huntingdon county, Ixnuided and described as follows, yin: On the north by lands of James Miller, east by lands ofJames Hamilton, south by lands of Philip Curfinan west by Mies McLain, contain ing four hundred and /love sores and allowance, about. twenty acres of which beleared, having a email plank house and stable thereon erected. Seised, taken in exe. cation, nod to be sold as tho property of Wni. N. Said). NOTICE TO PURCOASE . g.—Bidders at Sherifrs Sales - will take notice that Immediately up.ol the property being knocked down, fifty per cent. of all bids under $lOO. and twenty-five per cent. of all bids over that sun, must be paid to the Sheriff, or the property will be set up again and sold to other bidders who will comply with the above terms. If court continues two weeks deed acknowledged on Wednesday of 'second week. Ono week's court, property knocked down on Mondaynnd deed acknowledged on the following eaturday. • • • " " • .SnEßlL'efl °MCA. 1 Huntingdon, Mch. 18,1807. IZT_TZZaJOITNI.Q-3201=0101" ''' --<4..-. - ':' 4 M'jkll , , • dolioiil4' l . t ?\, l a 1 k, tn . kilimPil,v . i . ' '') i N 11,1!'r(7;1q: 1 11. 1, 111:rif „ '‘) ,y ." ...) ',, ( 1 : Zql _ ‘t;Y - - -, , - -- ---- - - • '..,:, • „;., ei I: • , 0 ....NI --- --,-`,' ''' MARBLE YARD J. M. GREEN & F. G. BEAVER Having entered into partnership, inform tho public that they are prepared to execute all styles of Plain and ornamental Marble Work Such es MONUMENTS.IIPABSTONES, also Building Work, or a, low prices as any stop in the emotty. Orders Se emo tlktonce promptly attended W. Short oat MIFFLIN. etruet,t, tna doors east - of the Lt- Sterna church . m 410,180 READ HD BE POSTED ! TO THE .21 7 EWL Y 1121RBIED =I New Finiture, TIIE undersigned would respectfully k announce that Lo mannfacturc3 and keeps constantl:s on hand r la.:g:nod splendid assortment of DINING AND BREAKFAST TABLES., BUREAUS, BEDSTEADS, WASH AND CANDLE STANDS, Windsor and cane seat chairs. cupboards, gilt and rose. wood moulding for mirror and picture frames, and a vari ety of articles not mentioned, at prices that cannot fail to ho satisfactory. Ito is also agent for the well known Dailey A Decamp patent spring Bed Bottom. The public,ore invited to call and examine his stock before pnrchasing elsewhere. Work and sales room on Hill street, near Smith, one door west of Xcuter's store. Huntingdon, Aug. 1,1865 IMPORTANT TO BUILDERS. T, BURCHINELL & CO'S NEW PLANING HILL 1317 .NTIN ON, PA. f_TAVING erected a First Class MILL, We are now prepared to furnish all kinds of BUILDING- MATERIALS Of DRY LUMBER, at moderate prices, WHITE AND YELLOW PINE FLOORING, - WEATIIEI: BOARDING; DOOR AND WINDOW FRAMES, - DOORS AND SASLI, ALL KINDS OF BLONDS AND SHUTTERS, BRACKETS AND SCROLLS, sawed to order, WOOD MOULDINGS of every description, - TURNING, NEWEL POSTS, 11ALUSTERS,..pt,r . Doing. situated on the line of the Yenusylyofilit Railroad and Canal, it is couveniwit for itfit shipping' juy part of thd :tate.....' The senior portlier being n prhctical Architect and Builder will furnish Plans, SpeciflcatiOns and Detail Drawings for all kinds of Buildings. 4 , A—Orders for work solicited and promptly filled, Huntingdon, March E-But $3O RE . WARD ! J. HARRY TYPER DROWNED. The above Rdward trill be paid for the recovery of the body of J. Harry Typer, who was accidentally drowned in the Ray:down Branch at Hopewell, Bedford County, on the ISth of February last. Any iota 1114./011 of the finding of the body can be left with the under,iginal, •or Lloyd .h 00., at Hopewell, Mr. Eiehiltnt ger at Saxton, J. 'P. Shirley at Cove Station, or Globe 011ie-, Huntingdon. tu_lt is hoped the pod people along the Branch will aid in rteovering the . . Hopewell, March 6,1867 ALEXANDRIA BREWERY. THOMAS N. COLDER. Tho undersigned haying now entered into the e Alexandria Brewery, the public aro informed r that he will be prepared at all times to till Rte -. orders on the shortest notice. THOS. N. COLDER. A litsandria, 0ct.:13. 1.866-tf. CIICMSE" ECONONIX IS MONEY SAVED! The subscriber is permanently Totals in Huntingdon, is t pro , pared o tt , !ittt: t el o n , 7,.or „, r'ep e ir In the " r"turd All articles intrusted to him will be returned to thu 1,141,nre of the oWner as count as repaired. Umbrellas and parasols for Tapair can he left at Lewis' link store. may2,l.Btilitf • W3l: FENTIMAN: FLOUR ! FLOUR ! The 11 , ..3t Flour, by the barrel or smaller quantity kr lo at LIM 17:1111i iy GI,CCry I= , I = WILLIAM. TYPER