TERMS OF THE OLOEE.,i• Per annum in advance EMI= Three; months TERMS OF ADVERTISING 1 time. 2do 3do 1 month .4 75 $1 25 $1 50 pt 75 ... 1 60 2 25 2 75 3 25 ... 225 325 - 400 475 3 months. 6 months. 1 Year One Inch, or less $4 00 $6 00 $lO 00 Too inches, 625 9 . 00 • 15 00 Three inches 8 60 12 00 20 00 Your inches 10 76 16 00 25 00 Quarter column, ' 13 00.. 18 00 30 00 llalf column, .20 00 30 00 45 00 Ono column 30 00 Professional and Business Cards not exceeding six lines, '0 ile year, t 5 00 Administrators' and Executors' Notices, 6 times, $2 50 Auditors' Notices, 4 times 2 00 1 50 Balmy, or other abort Notices Advertisements not marked with the number of loser sans desired, will be continued till fJrbid and charged ac ...ding to these terms. Local or Special Notices, 10 cents a lino for single In. i ssettion By the Scar at in reduc,.l rate. Our prices for the printing of Blanks, Handbills, etc. nice reasonably low. One jrlrll, or less Two inches Three Inc rofissional - g 6usincs Cubs. Tllt. A. B: IJr Haring permanently located at Huntingdon, otters preftssional services to the cominunity. Once, the same as that lately occupied by Dr. Loden on IEII street. nplo,lvo6 TiJOHNMeCULIACII, offers his profeesionnt eervices to the citizens of Huntingdon and vicinity. Office ou Hill street, one door east of Reed's Long Store. • Aug. 25, '35. R ALLISON MILLER, - DEYTIST, Tins removed to the Brick 800 oppoeito the Court Boum April 13, 1859. ' FJ. GREENE, f DENTIST. 'Olio removed to Wahl's New XIII street, Ilnutloholoo, July 31,1567. P. W. JOHNSTON, SUPTEFOR & 1.1 SPA AGEAV.7; HUNTINGDON, PA •Office on Smith street . A. POLLOCK, VEYOR REAL ESTATE AGENT, lIUNTINODON, PA Will attend to Surveying in all its branches, and will buy and sell Itral listuta in any put uftba United L.tittes. Send foi circular. dec2n-tf w.'.M.Y TON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, HUNTINGDON, PA .$y- ( like xilh J. SEWELL STEWSET, • . _ _ _ SYLV ANUS BLAIR, MY • ATTORWEY AT LA Tr, lIUNTINODON, PA, Office on UPI street, dace doora vent of Smith. y:POg . HALL MUSSER. 5. L. riEmIAG. MUSSER & FLEMING, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,, HUNTINGDON, PA. °Dire recond floor of Lekterbi building, on Hill erect. Voodoos and 6>thet Chan. promptly colbctpd. to,t GEENCY FOR. COLLECTING :01,61EItS' CLAIMS, BOUNTY, BACK L'AY AND AUSS. All nho may have any claims against the Government fir Uouuty, Pack Pay end l'ensione,can have their claims ,promptly collected by apply ag either in person or by let ter to • W. 11. WOODS, ATTORNEY AT LA II DUN TINGDUN, :R01,12,1643 =I @MEM Ilhe name of this firm has been chang ed trent SCOTS & littuW,N, to SCOTT, BROWN & BAILEY, milder %Welt name they tt 11l iterroftet conduct their jaractice as • ATTORNEYS AT LAW, HuNnivaDox, PA. PENSIONS, and all claims of 4uldiets and soldiers' hells %against the lluvertiment, rill be promptly prosecuted. May 17, Ibto7-11. PLO COLLECTION _ v CF K. OF • K. ALLEN LOVELL, HUNTINGDON, PA. ,OFFICE—To the room lately occupied by It. M. °Peer. jau.l.lbb7 P. X. Lytle & Milton S. Lytle, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, HUNTINGDON, PA., Lars loomed n partner-hip under the name and Drm or P. M. & M. S. LYTLE, And Imre removed to the office on the Eolith side of Bill rim t, fourth door test of eolith. They tlll attend promptly to all kinds of legal boot .TICEB ...Amsted to their care. np7-tf. JOSEPH. AB'r, MANUFACTURER OF AND DEALER IN 'WILLOW AND SLEIGII BASKETS, Of all sixes and descriptions, ALEXANDRIA, HUNTINGDON CO., PA. Jnne 9, 1469-if LOSSES PROMPTLY PAID HUNTINGDON INSURANCE AGENCY. G. B. ARMITAGE, RUNTING/JON, PA. Represent the mnst reliable Companies in the Country. Rates as low as is sonsisteut with rollable indemnity. sep 2, '6B. pital Represented over $14,000,0 OIL CLOTH WINDOW SHADES GILT GOLD SHADES, • MUSLIN SHADES, BAILEY'S FIXTURES, TAPE, CORD AND TASSALS LL ASEOIMIENT AT LEWIS' BOOK STORE DRI '77:•••.• .„; &TT - 7; • - ;" -- M r :Z . ' - , 20. X. im-R7woomam, Puccessor to R. M. GREENE,' . DEALER IN STEINWAY & SON'S PIANOS, And other makes, 3IASON, & 'HAMLIN CABINET ORGANS, llfeirdeons, Guitars, Violins, Flies, FloW, Accordeens, ot.c.. de. • eV-Pianos, Organl, and Melodeons Warranted fur five 'Tarn. Circniars sent on application. Address E. J. GREENS. llontingdon, Pa., jau27,69 24 floor Leister's New Building. NEW LEATHEt HOUSE. THE FIIM OF LEAS & McVITTY, here leased the large fire story Leather nous from James NauHy. 432, NORTH THIRD STREET, PIIILADELPUTA, And intend doing a Hide and Leather Commission Mud. ECM Their sons D. P. LEAS, and T.E.McTITTY, aro there, and authorized to entry on the Liminess for them—ns obey are 3ottug men of geed moral detractor, and fine b r oinese qualifications. They solicit the patronage of their brother Tanners in the county and elsewhere They still 111 continue to keep n good nssortmont of Spanish and Slaughter Solo Leather on hands, nt their Tannery, neap Thrrr Springs, Huntingdon County. Pa. inar3a.,r,EASt...)lcT/TrY. .$2 00 1 00 ~ 1 I ~ e' $ --... tu: '7)::_. - -rt - i.,. 5.t.z5,,,- WX. LEWIS, HUGH LINDSAY, Publishers. VOL. XXV, ONE GLASS MORE Stay, mortal, stay ! nor heedless thus Thy sure destruction seal ; IVithin that cup there lurks a curse, Which all who drink shall feel. Disease and death. forever nigh, Stand ready at the door, And eager wait to hear the cry Of "Oise me one glass more." Go view the prisoners' gloomy coils ; There sin and misery scan ; Gaze, gaze upon these earthly hells, In drink their woes began. Of yonder children, bathed in tears, Ask, why is mother poor? They'll whisper in thy startled ears, 'Twas father's "Oue glass more." Stay, mortal, stay ! repent; return, Reflect upon thy fate; The poisonous draught forever spurn ; Spurn, spurn it. ere too late: Oh, fly the horrid grog-shop, then Norlinger at the door, Lest thou, perchance, should'st sip again The treacherous "One glass more." Trust not to thy deceitful heart; The Saviour's grace implore ; Through Him from every ain depart, And touch that glass no more. EMU THE AGE [The following essay, composed by miss Linnie Sangrec, of McConnell& town, this county, was read at the Teacher's Institute, on Thursday eve ning, Dec. 23d, 1869.] 1.10.6 m How the people ci•y it down ; yet the people make the age. There is something wrong. Where? What? Woman's Rights! Now don't shrug your shoulders impatiently, at the prospect of a tedious lecture; that is not my subject, and I don't propose to say much 'about it; but it belongs to the age. %%ere are two ultraists iu opposition to this question. One - who knows very little, the *other who is supposed to know a great deal. The former would have the world at a standstill ; the old time customs and prejudices cling to them like a sort. of incubus. The believe the days when the girls wore linsey-woolsey dresses, and sat behind the spinning -wheels; who had no ambition, beyond marry ing ono of the sturdy youths—no mat ter whether his education consisted only of Dill worth's Spelling-Book and English Reader—they believe that to have been the golden age; the era of peace and contentment. They tire terrified, sink into positive nothing, in contemplating the onward march of those pioneer women. They read lit tle and give no reason for their anti pathy, save, "It is not as it used to ho"! Again, there are those—so-call ed great men, those learned men ; men who are the first to proposa a "toast to fair women," men who are loudest in their praise of the angel woman ; but who are silent, when it comes to the practical use of dollars and cents—that is, rewarding her financially, the same us man for .the same service: Men who are clamorous in their appeals to keep the tender feet of woman from off the highway of public life; but who forget that in the by-ways, the desert- IA corners, aro women to be found, whom these men with all their theory could not well call the angel woman, and yet they aro women, just such as it possible for any woman to becOme, weighed down by change, and a series of disastrous circumstances. Woman, who, had their education not been so superficial, who,had they been trained to he active wo4ers, instead of mere adorning appendages, would never have fallen to such depths. These men are prolific of reasons who Wo man's Eights should not be tolerated. "Woman is apotheosized, she is a star, a flower, a thing of beauty, and men lift their weary eyes, and bless God that the vision is real and can be ' theirs. But take them from this emi nence, allow them to tread the jagged and jutted path that men do, and the glory of the Ideal woman, is palled in the grey mist of the sordid." This sort of reasoning sounds very beauti ful; a budget of magnificent noth-, ings. These men are the last to re cognize the fact, that the only way to rescue the helpless, desolate; poverty stricken woman from the thousand perils that beset her, or to prevent her froni becoming an of of pity—is to educate her mentally, morally and physically, to think, reason and act for herself; should she be thrown on her own resources, I am afraid too, that these men make their high trib ute to woman a cloak to hide their real feelings. I may err in this; I trust I do. Yet I cannot help wondering whether there be not Death all, a little selfishness ? They have held the field of intellect so long, they doubt wheth• er they can grant more than a corner to their sisters. They have so long thought woman a dear, little plastic creature, they cannot bear the idea of stepping off the light of supremacy.— They are willing she should stand on the border-line of the world of Profes sion and Literature, but not on the arena, not as peers, not as aspirants, not as workers with'them; they have their apprehensions too, that the princely domination of man's intellect may lose s some of its exceeding bright ness. There are enough of household loving woman ; there will always be enough. If there aro energetic, en terprising, self-dependent girls who do not see fit to lose their individuality, who don't think marriage the "ono thing needful," why, lot them alone; they are girls who defy misfortune.— Again, there are few women having happy homes, or anticipating a happy wedded life—who are extremists in this question. But after all, it's the the novelty of the thing Those who denounce it may be more hitter still in their denouncements; the moderate woman. may oppose it to the last, but she will move on with the movement, and if the day is won, what woman =3 will withhold her vote ? "This is an age of inconstancy; no honor, no truth," etc. Now, I don't exactly credit this; I believe the age acquiring, just that philanthropic perfection it. should. That is, loving a great mato' greate deal. I believe in this ; don't believe in the love that holds itself in solitude, when the first object dies, or is lost. There are jewels all over the eartA, if taken to us, would brighten our lives. I have my dis tinctions. There is a difference in temperaments.. .1 am only excusing those whom the world brands as in constant ; beings who cannot exist without sonic one 'to love and caress; who in the absence of one loved object, find :another; whose hearts o'erflow with genuine affection ; who feel like taking all humanity in their great arms, and whom I believe to be truer, more loyal, to every one they profess to love, than those grim, reticent, storieal models of propriety, aro to their one; who love once, an ideal— but marry the actual, and live without love at all. I have sympathy, but no patience with broken hearted people,—that is, who are dead as far as love and happiness are concerned. It was never intended that man or woman should die of unrequited love. The world is full of loving hearts, ready to respond. There 18 beauty and sunshine enough to flood every life with happiness. For every good, every joy, every love taken from us, some other good, and joy and love is given us in return; surer, deep er, more abiding, if we would only think so. What if our ideals do fail, our idols fall, our dreams fade What if' the ashes of the old do lie before us ? Can we not have higher ideals, rear more sym metrical fabries,d reit m sweet er, more exquisite dreams? There are flowers all around, if.we would but part the weeds; there' are stars ever above us, if we would but look through the mist. "This is a fast age ; that is, there are more avenues to ein. Granted; but there are also more paths to goodness. The distinction between right and wrong is so broad that if we siu, we we sip deliberately. Tho road to er ror is visible in so many different trays that we must be blindly perverse, not to see it. True, there is a valley of sin unseen, where thousands daily, hourly, throng; and the voyage to those purple-stained fields is deeper, darker, more terrible in its blaekness, because made it, the light of knowl edge; because sophistry must be em ployed to combat the convictions of truth; because the- angel flashes the flat ing maid of light all around us. Sin perhaps is not more universal, but more glaring Yet is not this consci• ousness of the reign of sin, this recog nition of error,—a single gleam front the better future ? is it not a veil, through which with our imperfect vision, we see the coming period, per fected by the changes and evolutions of progress ? Then there is Fashion, ever on the rack of censure. "The styles aro ri diculous." Just as though,tho dress of the present age were not that of a century ago, reproduced in a more or less moderate mode. Yet our great,- groat grand-fathers and mothers, were all sensible people. The human must. have change. Monotony in anything becomes insipid. I notice that those who are loudest in denouncing the .fashions are generally careless in their habits, careless of their person, and who have little taste for the deli cate and beautitbl. I notice too, that those wise men—who pay much at tention to the head, little to the ward robe; who are eternally deploring the shallowness of woman as displayed in her love of dress, who condemn it to the world as profoundly weak,& super ficial—if they see a woman they love, clothed in ordinary, with little taste, little regard to outward adornment, the ideal woman fades, :and with it generally, the ardor and enthusiasm of their love; like a beautiful work of art—they may weep over the cost, but adore the effect. Women love beautiful things, and men, spite of their much taking, love them too.— What the world calls frivolities, after all, fall over our lives, like ripples of sunshine, causing much of its bright ness. There are a host of other things, con damned as belonging to the age. But it is not the actions in themselves:that should'be censured it is discrimina tion and moderation we need. Is it not the fault of home education ? Are not the parents in part responsible for the errors of the present day ? Arc there not young men and women who should be children still Again, sonic who will ever remain children as far as. actual discipline is concerned 7-- Knowledge is a great thing, a glorious thing; knowledge of the right kind, is everything. But there is too much ad7ico given to the world, not enough of example at home. Are children taught to discriminate between the highest sense of right and wrong? Is the high way of life shown to them as it is,—jagged, jutted and tortuous, with patches of sunlight, hero and there a paradise? Are they taught to believe that neither their will, strength and honor, nor the love and care of their parents, can save them from the evils, the perils, the temptations that lie all along the path of existence'? Naught but a trust in the Infinite. That there is no tower ofsalety, save the Omnip otent? Aro they taught to reverence the holy, the good, and -true ? Are they taught to bate sin in all its forms that can alone bring real sorrow ? To love the light, which though crossed by black lines, can alone lead to true happiness ? To parents see that their children have proper books and amusements? That the imagination has not impure food? That they are not given to a series of peccadillos, lIUNTINGDON, PA., WBDNESDAY, JANUARY 1870;;- -PERSEVERE.- that, so often form the borderland to the farstrotehing plain of indiscrimin ate vice and sin ? Parents so often in observing the speedy ruin of their children, deplore the necessity that sent them from home so early in life, when, if they but knew it, the corner•-• stone to their career was laid at home, the heart prepared by 'silent, unseen sin, for the subsequent depravity Hence, the 'powerful: reasons that home influence should be of the pres ent, character. -Teachers are some what responsible for the-morals of the ago. I have often thought, a• teacher should devoteil half an . Warr at least, every day, in preparing the hearts, as' -well as the heads Ora() pupils for. fu ture usefulness. Tho'words and coun eel of a teacher,, him/Iy, earnestly, prayerfully given, are never forgotten. They will be, at least to those who have bad no Lome culture—a star to wards which impelled by an irresisti ble 'power, they over turn, • There is danger too, in misguided Ambition., It is riot a rare thing now u-days. Every school bey has his am bition, and it is not...an ignoble ono ; every youth has his aspirations, and they are not medioeral. This is well, this belongs to a progressive age. But there is.danger in wrong-directed am bition, ambition that renders the heart callous and selfish, that has fbr its ax is—self ; that leads man to say, am ready to help a brother, so long as it takes nothing from the purple of my robe." Ambition that leads to false opinions; that causes the - greatest minds to adopt theories as visionary as dreams, to build their-eternal fu ture on fabrics as unstable as temples of sand; to seek mystery that ends in night; that leads them to term a God and religion of their own, that will not conflict with the earth—earthy. Am bition that in spite of sense and know ledge, ever holds the bat-wing 'of er ror before them. Ambition that leads them into a host of jams, and ologies. anything, anyway to happiness and Heaven but the truest, surest and shortest way—the Gospel. There is another evil, Practicalism, that has seized the minds of individu als like gory night-mare. ,'As a great, black current, it sweeps all in its on ward flow ; none rise above it. We have ideals enough, but all in our day dreams. We have poetry - enough, but always written and sung about; al ways in the unreal. The world might be a succession of paradises; we.inight see life, and in ruin-bow lima; but ever looking through the brown mist of the practical, even the beautiful be comes frightful in its reality. . Again I say, there is something wrong, but that wrong is not in the energy, the enterprise, the changes, the events, 010 progress that charac terize the age. It is not that the times do not suit the people, but that the heads and hearts of the people, aro not trained to suit the times. A PEABODY ROMANCE The fact that the late George Pea body died, as he had lived, unmarried, has given rise to innumerable specula tions and anecdotes concerning the cause of his remaining singio. It is generally believed that at onetime he was on the point of marrying Miss Burdett Coutts, an alliance that, in a financial point of view, would have been ri very natural one. But hers is not the only name with which that of the millionaire philanthropist has been associated, and now we have still ano ther suggested. For the following ro. mantic story a Providence paper is ro sponsible : Moro than thirty fears ago, iu the far-famed school of the prince of teach ors, John "Kingsbury, was ono of the fairest of all the fair daughters of Pro vidence, celebrated far and nigh, as that city has ever been for its lovely girls. Her school educMion finished, she went with friends to Europe, not, however, before having given her youthful affections to a young man whom she had met in a Sister city.— But before marriage had consummated their happiness adversity came upon him, and he.found himself in no situa tion to marry. He was not willing she should waste her youth and glori ous beauty in wailing through long years for the day to come when he could call her his own, so ho released her from her vows, add they parted, she going, as I said before, to Europe, There she met George Peabody, then, comparatively speaking, a young man, but one who was'alretrdy making his mark, and whose wealth was begin ning to pour in on every side. He saw her and was struck (as who that ever saw Tier was not '.) with her grace, her winning ways, her exceeding love. liness, and, after a while, he pimposed. Her heart stilll clung to her loved OHO scrods the wide Atlantic, but after some time ehe yielded, perhaps to the wishes of her.friends, perhaps to the promptings of worldly ambition, who can tell ? Who can fathom the heart of a young and beautiful maiden ? She became the young and affianced wife orMr. Peabody. - After a little inter val she came back to this country, and soon after her arrival, met her first love, and after events justify me in saying, her "only love." At sight of him, all herformer affection came back, if, indeed, it had ever left her, and Mr. Peabody, with hie wealth and brilliant prospects ' faded away, and she clung with fond affection to her American lover, and was willing to share a mod erate income with the chosen of her heart. All. was told to Mr. Peabody, and be, with that manliness that char acterized his every action, gave her up, - and in due time she was married and sett,fed in a city not more than three hundred miles from Providence, What she suffered in corning to a final conclusion wars known to but few. Her fair cheeks lost their roundness, and • .. -., - • • - ~1 . ~ : ; • : : t;' , - :•• - „ • l r . •••••••,.•••• -, i . " 7 • ' ~ •;., .?:•,'• • ' ?• - " I ! :.' ~I , 411\ .... ....... ............ ~.. ... ~,,..„..:, .,,,• ..„.,,,.......„..._._ : _ ,3r ...,,,, , ,,,, •,. „_,..,...„.,: ..c....„ ..... ,....„„ ,,,, ,: :•.,_...., . / . ;,....,,•,.., , v p .,....,,,,,..?..„. • a grow wan and pale, her lovely eyes had a mournful wistfulness that touch.' ed every heart. Some blamed her, oth ers praised her. Those who were am bitious of worldly honors pronounced' her "mad," "foolish," to. throw over a man like George Peabody, whoa& ever increasing wealth would bestoW every luxury upon her, and place her in 'a position in . London • that would make her lot an on vied'ono, to marry a man whomght never 'have more than a limited \tienme to live upon. Others, and shall I say the nobler part ?•josti- fled her in :thinking that lovey trde love, was more to be desired 'than Wealth or earthly fame. The painful conflict was at length ended.' •Her true womanhood vindicated itself, and she wavered no more. I well remem ber, when in London; twenty eight years ago, hearing all this.talked over in a chosen circle by American friends, and also at a brilliaiNt dinner party given by General Cass, in Versailles, it was thoroughlyAiscussed in all its length and breadth. - Whether, in his visit to this country, Mr. Peabody ever met his once affianced' bride, I can not say; neither do I know whether, when she heard of his more princely wealth, her' heart• ever gave a sigh at the thought, "all this might have been mine," After several years of wedded bliss, death took her husband from her side, when the glorious loveliness of her youth had ripened into the full luxuriance of perfect matronhood. ANOTHER MINING HORROR HAZLETON, Dec. 18 —A terrible mi ning accident occurred this morning at 5 o'clock, at the village of. Stockton, near this place. At the hour named the community was startled from slumber by a loud noise, caused by the caving in of slope No. 1, of Linderman & Sheer's coal mine. Upon parties huPying to the scene it was discover ed that two double dwelling houses, Nos. 3,4, 5 and G had been. carried down with the enormous masses of earth that filled the shaft and tunnel. Stockton is it small village, situated on the Bazelton branch of the Lehigh Valley Railroad, - two miles distant front _Hazeßon. It contains many neatly built houses and other build ings, the company's stores and the ho tel being the principal structures The company employs about twelve hun dred miners, who make this their home:' Thd milk; . rittis - parallel 'with the railroad track through the middle of the village. About fifty feet above the place of this morning's accident the mine caved in same years ago; but no danger of its happening again - haS since been 'apprehended. About ten years ago a small hole we's made by the full ing of the earth directly in front of the two ill-fated houses. The residents of houses Nos. 3 and 4, Mr. Philip Wetheran,his family and boarders, and the family of Mr. Wm. Monist, and boarders, were saved from a terrible' death by tt singular circum stance. A dog belonging to Mr. Mor rist awoke the family by its persistent howling and barking. One of the men rose for the purpose of ascertaining whtit ailed the animal, when he dis covered that the house was sinking.— lie immediately gave the alarm, and the two families had barely time toes cape. Miss Mary Wetleran;running in the wrong direction, fell into the ttbysu, but was subsequently rescued by some courageous young men., She is somewhat bruised and prostrated from excitement, but will recover. All of the residents of houses Nos. 5 and U lie hopelessly buried in the ruins. They comprise Mr. Schwenek, his wife, a son of nineteen years, a daughter of eighteen years, a son Of eight years and an infant. ,This comprised one family. The other consisted of Mr. Isaac Ranch, his mother, wife and in fant. This makes a total of ten per sons. It is reported that some men were in the mine at the time of the accident, and if so all are undoubtedly dead. But the report is very doubtful and cannot be traced to any reliable authority. So far it has been found impossible to reach the dead bodies of the victims. The cave is seventy five, feet wide and sixty feet deep,, and as the stoves in the houses set fire to the wood work the entire cavity is now a burning and smoking mass. The Pi oneer No. 1, fire engine of Hazelton ,was soon on the ground, and made ev ery exertion to extinguish the fire, in the hope that some of the persons in the cave might ho saved. There was not, however, the faintest probability of any being alive ono hour after the accident took place, as all were buried by the fallen earth with frightful effect Trains are running from E.azelton every hour to the scone of the disaster, and will continue to do so until all the bodies are recovered, which will be some time yet, as it is still clangorous to cuter on the work of rescue because of the earth still continuing to fall in and thus enlarge the cavity continually The excitement is very great and is increasing. Families in the vicinity aro moving out of their houses, fearing that theirs will full in next. It is the general opinion other houses will fall in. There is also danger of the mines taking fire. Messrs. Linderman and Silver arrived at the scene of the dis aster this afternoon. They are spar ing no pains to secure the bodies as speedily as possible. 11AZELTON, Dec. 21.—Last night the bodies of Mr. Eaton, Mr. Baker, Mrs. Swink and her daughter were recov ordU and brought from the mine. The head of Mrs. Swink was crushed ,and burned to a crisp. Iler body and the remains of the other victims were Ike rally crushed to a jelly. It is sup posed Mr. Swink and }pis two sons had started to leave the house when the alarm was felt, and were caught be tween the first and second floors when the house wont down. NM trims; $2,00 year in advance. WHAT BARGARS CumAligham&Camon'i,' Corner Of Railroad' andrdontgoniery Ste WE ,would call special attention to the daily arrival of 0110 ICE AND BEAUTIFUL GOODS, which ore offered at Tenapting Prices, Consisting of Ileitutlful.Zllks of all shades, all n'Oo Poplins, Alpacas, ileptnycs, Armura, Chintzoo, a,caost beautiful lino of 11110 Cambric -1, Barred Husllns, .Nabs- moult., Gingham, and ehambrays ALSO, a full lino or Domestic Goods, such es HEM BLEACHED MUSLIMS, Fiue Brown Mualin; 40 Inches wide, Bleached Muslin horn y to 21,i lards, wide, Kentucky Jean., Farmera Causlinerc,'&c„ do. Our dock of SHOES excels au) thin of lba ktod this aide of Philadelphia ALSO, n largo and well aalected Mock lIATS euit. CE=1!!!!!1!!!! CARPETS. We make a specially of this article, nil have ou lmed a very fine nsFortment of DESIRABLE PATTERNS, xbich will be hold lower than CAN be sold by any other honso outsido of Plnlaftlphin. Wu luau also on baud a Inrge stock of An MD SALT uhich we ure . aolling 'very tow. In order to be convinced that ours Is the place to buy, call and examine our'goods and price/ We take pleasure In showing our goods, oven if you do' not nigh to bny. no on will please call and get coated CUNNIBGNAM&CARMON,- Oct. 28, 1808-tr. SPANISH HAIR DRESSER FOR PROMOTING nun GROITTG, BIAGTIFT/NG Ins Slain, Mid tendering it dark and glossy. No oilier compound possesses the peculiar, properties which so exactly null the various conditione of the human hair. no use Of tilt oil us It hair dresser hoe been universal in every see• lion al the cuttutry,in the lipinish Alain for OOULUTIMI.— AG melioration - hi art-could give that elegant luxuriance and abundance of hair Which hale no often beau the ad• tuirallou of travelers lu npain. 'slum oil le highly and delitatuly perfumed, forming an article unrivaled in ox. cellenee and upon whlCh the Spanish people for ninny 3 Oulu have set its haul of °adoring approval. Mexicali Wild Floworahavo Lotioß }or reutering dandruff and SCUri from the head, rthiten Mg and perfuming the akin. This article to entirely chi luuut Irvin au) thing of the kind ever elfered Ito this noun try and is wart:tilted tree Lout all pollutions substances lhts valuable lotion rigs used by the Emperor Maxima ion, tind Empress Carlotta of Mexico, and univosally used by MC/aI:KID for three httutirLd yearn. Asua wash fur the head—lt Is cooling, cleansing and refreshing.— When thus used it at once relieves headache. WILD FLOWERS FOR THE TEETH. All these who era in favor of white teeth and a - pleasant and perlumod breath, ebould at once use MCUtlire'll 1 1 114 tlOYtulif for the Teeth. Ail these preparations are put up fu the must elegant and ornamental crooner. we 11101(01W exception in Saying that they are an ornament to a lady's toilet table, and none complete without thew. Warranted eatishictory or money refunded. Duelers will bear this la wind. aold by all rospectable Drug gusto In the United Staled and Canadus. Address orders to • _ _ • RICHARD McGIIIREI, Depot and 3lnnufactury, 263 North Second Street, Philadelphia For Foto at Lento. Book Store, 14untingdon., CARPETS. NEW STORE IN UUNTINGDON. JAMES A. BROWN leas just opened CARPET STORE ou tko second floor. of his brick building, wboro buyers will /mil ono of Inc hugest and but neaortmonle or I3RUSSELS, INGRAIN, DUTCH WOOL,. ' COTTON,' BAG, LIST, I'I•,NITIAN and SCOTCH HEMP Also, COCOA and CANTON MAT- TiNGS, and FLOOR OIL CLOTHS, Ryer offered in central Pennsylvania. It Is well known that a muchatst cobs deals eutirely in eat /ins of goods buying largely born manufacturer', Is enabled to give his customers advantages In prices and rawortruent (In that boo& goods) that are not to be found In stores professing to du dl kinds of business. I shell tarn therefore to make It the interest of nil Ia Want of the ;thole goods, to buy at the regular. Carpet and Oil Cloth Store. IsE_Dealers con buy of mo by the roll at wholesale prices. apl3'69 MEI =MEMO I NO 25 Mill AT HIINTMDON; PA. VCGUIRE'S - -o McGUIRE'S -0— McG U I RE' 8 TAMES A BROWN. TO SUBSCRIBERS ' - Those Sub'se - ribing for three, six or I.w,e3vo;:mbn the iwiththe , undarstitiiding that the - paper be discontinued' iiniesS subscription is t re_ne W ad, rdeciying a pa po marked 4ith 1/.4Vefiiro_th`e_name will understand that• the tine for wbidh they::subscribed is np.,'„lrf - they wish the -;paper- continued - they will renew •their ; stibScriptinti: through the mail or otherwise. tf, . Alm, All kinds, of ,plaln,j fancy / and ornamental Job Printing „neatly, i and expeditiously executed at the ',Cl . r l oisst office.. Terms moderate. . - ORqSI,NSI.:" : - Ifkn,d;Ogi SELIEG OFF AT GUST Aro now disposing of,Mlojr entire stock of ,goo4e Dlfl GOODS, GROQERIES, , QUEENS\ Xt , BOOT,S . :AND . HATS AND CAPS, ETC ETC:,11176; Will save monoy by calling on se we are determined.to close' out our' entice stock without reserve RESIEMEER THE PEACE; ',` Smith's new building, Hill Street, Hunt• ingdon, Pa West 4untingdor.ffouriOry. JAMES SIMPSON IFAcirats3 PLOWS, THRESHING MACHINES, FAR3II3I3 I LS, ,SL,ED,AND 5011..60, WAGON BOXES;,IRON-KETTLES, oCa,ga;tixaggis For Furtoteos, Forges, Grist and cow .11111 e, Tscnsosskes nod Brickyards, le AND JOB WORE IN GENERAL. ARCHITECTURAL & ORNAMENTAL- DEARTMENTi Iron Porticos arid ;Verandahs, Balconies ' Columns and Drop/Ornament for sromlen porticos and 'verandahs, ~,Window Lintels and Sills, • • - Cast Oruamonts for wooden HMOs,. , . Collar Ilinduw:Guards all sine,- '• • • • • Chimney Tops and Flues, ..Rash Weights, Carpet Strips, Registers. Maims, Coal (Dates,. „ • Vault Castings-for cord rind synod 'cellars, Arimrs, Treo•boxes, Lump-posts. Hitching-posh!, • Iron Railing fin porticos,leraudalmi nalcouleVilowerr beds, Yard and Cemetery Fences, etc.. - . . Purticul., attcrynntpaid to foicitlgt C•mdcry Lat. JAMES SLOPS•Ri, Huntingdon; I'*. HUNTINGDON FOUNDRY. EASTON BLAKE. M. MAIUON 510 , 1E1E. BLAKE ez . MeNEIL,. (Succoeisors to .!..)1; 4 CUNNlNfillitill kSON O ] Iron and Brass Fourtders, Address aL23,68 lIIUNTINCiDON, PA IRON, And .I3ItASS CASTINGS made' lu n first dose Foundry. We have always on hoed ,411 • kinds of Plow nod Stove unstingern.Weeh . ... Ket ties.Cellar-wiudoe a, Orsini, Coat hole Castings for pmerneute, Window' weights ojoil sites end %%eights, Pipejoiute, bled eua zw io, to wn, Wagon, boxes, Dineltine Castings, for steam nod water, grist, saw. Man apt plaster mills of all descriptions. ' HEATERS AND IRON FENCES, of the moot Improved style, even door, and Inman, door and in fact ever 3 thing mode In thin line. - We have a larger stock of, pa tterun, and can furnish Cu. tinge at ehort notice, nod cheaper than they can 'be hod In the country. Having a good drill, tee are prepared' to do drilling and Ailing up of all Muds. ' , Office lu Mentors' Non But/ding, Mil street, Hunting. don, Pe. Melt. 17, 1809. :Lo. :MA MIIKS UNION STEAM BAKERY QM Candy Manufactory, HIINVINGDON, /pro undersigned have, fitted alit,. 11 tlrattlasa steam BAKKItY at the Caetillau Gardeu on Church ',treed, and are prepared to furnlalt all kinds BREAD, ROLLS, BISCUITS, PIES, Plain 'and Fancy CAKES, SLc. , ,;' In , N l vn:::inn :V=ltng a n",:r=t;r`d g ;aieri to OUR CANDY MANUFACTORY. We manufacture all kinds of Fauoy and Common Con fectlonerfes. equal to any that come. from the city,' and are prepared to fill large or small orders on short notice and at MEV Pltlfle:d. alao keep on band a large and constant aupply at FRUITS,AND NUTS, which they will furnish at reasonable rates, The proprietors flatter themselves that it needs but a trial to convince the moat sceptical, and please the moat fastidious. We tespeatfully solicit a libersiThare of public patroe nage. and shell endeavor to merit its continuance. 81,1,1869 81:151511fitS Sr. }MILEY. HEAD QUARTERS FOR NEW GOODS. D,P. CWIN INFORMS THE PUBLIC THAT HE HAS JUST OPENED - , STOCI , cI of NEW 000D8 THAT CAN'T.BE BEAT CHEAPNESS AND QUALITY, QOME AND SEE.. - D. P. (MIN, hunting lon , Oct. 4, 1569. U. S. REVENUE STAMPS FOR SALE AT LEIVIS BOOK STORE. HUNTINGDON, PENNA. WANTED, 10,000 hoehole of Wheat, rile, Oats, and Oorn i at the Ilan iingdon Stems Mill. JOSEPH. IV. CAMON, Iluntingdon, Nor. 17, lgg tf LAP and Joint Shingles for sale by mc1124-it IMAT d; CO. , ME : =EI ootl2 BLAKE L 31oNMS. LUNG REELEY