ri TE tMS OF THE OLOBE Per am:milt advance !1X months three TERMS OF ADVERTISING 1 time. 2de 3do 1 month ...$ 76 $1 25 11 50 $175 .. 1 2 25 2 75...... 3 25 .. 2 25 325 400 475 One inch, or lees Two inches ...... . Three inches,... 8 months. 6 months. 1 Year On, aid', or less $4 00 $6 00 $lO 00 Two Inches, 6 23 9 00 16 00 Three inches 8 60 12 00 20 00 Your inches, 10 75 16 00 25 00 Quarter column, 13 00 18 00 30 00 Ralf column, ' 20 00 30 90 45 00 One column, 30 00 45 00— .. . . .80 00 Preformlona and Business Cards not exceeding six line', Oes year, 05 00 Administrators' and Executors' Notices, 6 times, $2 60 Auditors' Notices, 4 limos 2 00 Patsy, or other abort Notices 1 50 . . Advertisements; not rnarkedlteith,tbe n u mber of sneer ens desired; will becontinned tilt forbid and charged ac• arding to these terms. Local or Special Notices,lo tents a line for .Ingle in• sertion. By the year at e reduc.d rate. -Qarpricep for the in:toting of 11looks, Ilsodlolle, etc. ate reasonaVy!pwi Nitsinos earYs. JiDR. A. B: BRUMBAUGEE,, " ,Ilaving pormatiently located at ItantiajdOti t °dare e profeseionai services to the community. — 4, Ottlce, the same as that lately occupied, by Dr. Loden i ' en WU street . apla,liitio • _. DR. JOHN' McOULLOCH, offers his professional services to the eitizsns of Huntingdon 411110, vicinity. Wee on Hill street, ono deoreast of Reed's Drug Store. Aug. 28, 'Ufa. VOLI ..ALLISON MILLER, ay. Wigan% DEWTIST, ITU removed to the Brisk Row opposite the Court House. April /3,109. J. GREENE, rte- E• DLINTLIT. ..... ...Antice removed to Leisteee New Building, KW street, Huntingdon. 1411r31.1567. MORRISON ROUSE, HUNTINGDON, PENN'A., JOUN,S. MILLER , Proprietor. APR ar:tita• -A --.?..w..40.141§7q;c, &IN,SURANCE.AGENT, 11UNTINODON, PA Odic*** Smith .treat. di A. POLLOCKi zed VEYOR&REAL ESTATE AGENI; lIIJSTING DON, PA WI attend to Surveying in all its branches, and Is RI buy and snit Real Wats inane part of the Ilutual crates. Rend for circular. steulS-tt IP W. AtYTOIsi, ' 1 • ATTORNEY AT LAW, lIUSTINGDO: , I, 1A ,Nuir tonic. with J. BYSTELL 52/.lf,tar, Zsq T SYL VAN US BLAIR,. • • ATTORNEY AT LAW, • 11UNTINGDON, PA, Odle* est Hill street, three deuravrezt or Swith , - 76'49 MUSSER & FLEMING, ATTORNEYS-AT-LA lIIIISIINGDOiI, PA 45111edeveond Moor or Lei3ter's buildJng, on 11111 I*o* *o other Oman promptiy'COMCLOd. u1;103,9 GEENCY FOR. COLLECTING ,43,:01.1.11/4.1.1N. cL.U3I4, VA T /SAM PAY AN Li AR wh9 may havrarly,c/ahas azaiOst tho Gore, antral or bounty, hook ray null l'ioulooa,can . bui.o their Llultia3 prulu)ClJ co/lwteaJr) artpjyang either in pereuu ur to - yea. to "' Iv. U. WOODS A rrli.h.S.LY A Y' LJ 11; lIIINTINU.N, VA i iiililkli% 'ALLEN LO VELL, 1-1 A TTORNEY AT LAW, IIUNTOODON, PA __Spacial Attention given to Collections of all kinds; to tits tett...meat of hetutos, ke4 amt dl other, legal bum /tees priiiiecuted nith hdelit3 and dispatch. Teem perrecr ' -; 14.111111. r. snowy, . Fr lie - n et - ad of Ilin3 firm has been ch ang. , ed I rum led-Ittri Y Intl" Is, to SCOTT, BROWN & BAILEY, staiir srkiclt name they will hereto: 'sr conduct lbw practice as ATTOIGYLTS ,AT LAW, - ItUNTINGDON, PA. anu all claims elsoldists and auldlors' hair. against the 130Verilmiellt, will be prnuiptly prosecuted. ' May 17, 180.-tf. P. EL Lytle & Milton S. Lytle, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, ItHeiTINGDON, PA., Have rained a partnership under the name nud firm P. ri. & M. S. LYTLE, And bare moored to the office on the mouth alde of Bill street, fourth door west of smith. They will attend promptly to all kilt& of legal immi nent intnneted to their care. apidt. JOSEPH ABT, - . MANLIPACTURER OF AND DEALER IN WILLOW AND SLEIGH BASKETS, • (gall mixes and descriptions, "ALEXANDRIA, HUNTINGDON CO., PA. . _43111110 9, 1b69-tt - _ _ LOSSES PROMPTLY PAID HUNTINGDON INSURANCE AGENCY. • I G. B. ARMITAGrE, HUNTINGDON, Represent the :nest reliable Companies In the Country. Rates as low as is Consistent with reliable indemnity. aep 2, '6B. .pitalßepresented over $14,000, KS! BLANKS BLANKS! DUNSTABLE'S SALES, ATTACIPT EXECUTION ATTACHMENTS, EXECUTIONS, SUMMONS, DEEDS, SUBPOENAS, MORTGAGES, SCHOOL ORDERS, JUDGMENT NOTES, LEASES FOR HOUSES, NATURALIZATION B Kb st.‘o o 4llolT BONDS, JUDGMENT BONDS, %WARRANTS, FEE BILLS, :.NOTES, with a waiver of the $3OO Law. .JUDGMENT NOTES, with a waiver of the $3OO Law. ARTICLES OP AGREEMENT, with Teachers. _ - MARRIAGE CERTIFICATES, for Justices of tend Ministers of the Gospel. COMPLAINT, WARRANT, and COMMITMENT, in can of Asaault and Battery, and Affray. ECIERE FACIAS, to recover amount of Judgment. COLLECTORS' RECEIPTS, for State, County, School, ,Borough and Township Tares. 4/Tinted on enperior paper, and for sae at the °Moe o %the HUNTINGDON GLOBE. BLANKS, of every description, printed to order, neatly ,at shoiginiiice, and on good Paper. A. D. LtAlf, N. 11, WOODS, = The Union Bank of Huntingdon (Late John Bare & C 0.,) HUNTINGDON, PA paid up, •CAPITAL, Solicit accounts from Banks, Bankers and others. [liberal Interest allowed on time Deposits. All kinds f Securities, bought and sold for the usual commission.— Collections wade on all points. Drafts on all parts of Europe supplied at the usual rates. Persons depositiog tlold and Silver will resolve the a same return with interest. The portlier!' are indirid welly liable to the extent of their whole property for all Deposita. The unfinished business of the late firm of John Dare & .Co. wili oe completed by The Dolon Bank of llontingdon 0. 0. NORTH, Cashier. WINDOW CURTAIN PAPERS A LARGE STOCK AND SPLENDID ASSORTMENT Window Curtain Papers, JUST RECEIVED AT ;LEWIS' BOOK STOI'iE• $2 00 1 OD Ti)r WM. LEWIS, HUGH LINDSAY, Publishers. VOL. XXV. HOW TO CURE CONSUMPTION. - TIIN PHILOSOPHY OP DD. SCIIEN '8 GREAT MEDICINES.—WiII people never learn to know that a diseased liver rind stomach necessarily dieeaee the entire syetem t The plainest principles of common sees° teach this and yet there are hundreds who ridicule the Id, a, and continue in the course which almost inevitably brings them prematurely to the grave. Living as the mejority of the people do, at complete variauce with tho law* of nature, it must bo apparent to till that ' sooner or later, nature will revenge herself. Hence we find that poroone who Indulge to excess in the use of very rich or Indineetible food or Intoxicating drinks, invariably pay a heavy penalty In the end. The stomach becomes die- ordered and reruns to act: the liver I ails to perform its function., dd spepsla and its attendant evils follow, and still the suffering individuals persist In clinging to the thoroughly exploded idea of the poet. Dr. SCHENK'S medicines are recommended to all ...It. They bring aura and certain relief wherever they are used as directed, and all that is necessary to establish thoir reputation with every ailing nine or woman in the landis a fair and impartial trial of them. Let those who are skeptical on thie point, and who have permitted interested persons to prejudice them tinniest these now celebrated remedies for consumption, discard their prejudices, and be governed by the principles of reason and common mem. ,df the system is disordered depend upon it, In nine cases out of ten the seat of the disorder will tea found in the stomach and liver. To cleanse and invigorate the stomach and to atimulate the liver to healthy action, use SCHENCK'S MANDRAKE PILLS.--The daily increae- Dig demand for these pills in the best evidence of their value. Thousands upon thousands ot bone/ era sold daily. Why 1 Simply because they art promptly and efficiently Invalids who may not ,find it convenient to call ou Dr. SCHENCK In person are informed that full and com plete dirtetlens for use accompany each package of the MANDRAKE PILLS, PULMONIC SYRUP AND SEA WEED TONIC.-These medicines will cure consumption unless the lunge are so far gone that the patient is entire ly beyond the reach of medical relief. It may be /eked by those who are not familiar with the virtues of these great romedieo,“llow do Dr. fichenek's medicines effect their wonderful cures of consumption 1" The answer is a simple one. They begin their work of restoration by bringing the stomach, liver and bowels intern active healthy condition. It is toed that Mires this formidable delouse. SOHN:WE:B DIANDRAKE PILLS act on the liver and stomach, promoting healthy secretion, and removing the bile and Mime which hare resulted from the inactive or torpid condition e.f those e • gene, and of the system generally. This eluggleh state of the body, anti the coneequentaccueutilation of the un healthy aubetunces named prevent the peeper digestion of food, and.as a natural come hence creates disease, which results in prostratton and finally In death. SCHENCK'S PULMONIO SYRUP and SEAWEED TON. ' IC, when taken regularly, mingle with the food, and the digestive Organs, make good and rich blood. and as a nat ural consequence, give flesh and strength to the patient. Let the faculty say shat it may, this is the only true cure for consnmptlou. Experience has proved beyond the shadow of n doubt, and thousands are to-day alive and well who a few years since were regarded as hope lees cases, but who were Indueefi to try Dr. SCHENCK'S remedies, and were restored to .permanent health by their use. CEIMEI CM= One of the first elepi the physician should take with a consumptive paiimit ie to in tigorrte the system. Now how is this to be done t Certainly not by giving medi cines that exhaust and enervate—medicines that Impair Instead °Minicoy., the functions of the digestive organs Doctor SCIILNCK'S medicines cleanse the stomach and bonele of all substances which are calculated to irritate or weaken them. They meate an appotite—promote healthful agitation—make good bicrod, and, aa a comet <femme, they invigorate and strengthen the maitre aye. tem and mote especially those parts which are dummied If this cannot be done, then the cuss taunt be regarded as. A hopeless one. If the physician finds it Impossible to male a patient feel hungry, if the deceased person cannot partake of good noutialling food and properly digest it, it is impossible that ho Call gain iu flesh and strength; and it is equally impossibly to bring /Ipationt to this suns /Lien as Jung us the liter is burdeinxi with diseased bile, and the *tannish laden with unhealthy slime. Almost the first rtv,uest mad* to the physician by a Colkslallii.tird patient Is that he 'rill prescribe modicums that will allay the cough, night eweate and shill., x hich are the sure attendants on consumption. But this should not be done, ae the cough le only uu effort of native to relieve itsen, and the night owcats and chilli, are canted by the dieeneed hangs. The rentedica ordinarily prescrib ed do more harm Man good. The) impair the functions of the atom ich, impede healtny digestion, and aggravate rather than cure the duces°. lEEE= . . There in, after all, nothing lake facts whitit to euhstan date a poeition, end it 1. upon facts that Dr. Schenek's relies. Nearly all a lie hare token his medicines in sc. :anteing m ash Ids duet:nous have out only been cured of consumption, but. from Cl,. tact that these medicines net with wonderful poi er upon ths dlgmtivs mom, patients thus cured speedily goad flesh. Cleansing the system ut all impurities, they lay the foundatioil fur a solid, sub. utanhal structure. Restoring these organs to health, they create an appetite. The food is properly assimila ted ;the quantity of blood jaunt only increased, but is made race and earwig Rodin the face clench a condition of .ho system nil disease must bo banielied. "huh directions accompany each of .the medieines,"no that it in nut absolutely necessary that patients should see Dr. StillrinK perunsitily, unless they desire to have their lungs examined. Not this purpose he is at his of. lieu, No oh Zierth Sixth St., corner lit Commerce, Phila., every Saturday, hunt 9 A. 31. until 1 P. 31. Advice is given %about charge, but fora tuorough ex a ininetien with the Itospirtnueter the charge is SZI. Price lit the Polonium by nap anti Scouted Tunic each, $1 ho per bottle ' or 57 II it bud dozen. Mandrake Pills :Ln cents a box. her sale by all druggists. Ap.l2lY. = i' 6 GOOD BOOKS FOR ALL." ••BOOKS WHICH ARE BOOKS." Hero is a list of such Wm ke es should bo found In fa. ery Librurs-.-within thu reach of every reader—Works to entertain, instruct and Improve the mind. Copies '0 ill be tent by return post, on receipt of price. New Physiognomy; or, Signs of Character, . as manuesttet through Temperament and External Forms, and especially an the -Human Face Divine."— With more than One Thousand Illustrations. By S. It au-s- Price in one 12mo volume, 700 pages, baud &finely bound, $5 Man, in Genesis and in Geology; or, the Bi blical account of Man's Creation, tented by 5-dentine "theories ut his Origin and antiquity, By Joeeph P. Thompson, DU., LL.D. One vol., limo. $l. Wedlock; or, the Right Relations of the Sex es. Disclosing the Laws of Conjugal selection, and • 11110% ing who may and who may nut Marry. For both swam By Sit ti ells , $1 50 How to Read Character. A new Illustrated handbook of Phrenology and Physiognomy, for stu dents uod examiners. with a Chart fur recording the sizes ut the ditlerent organs of the brain, in the deline ation of Character, with epworda of 170 engravings.— I Mao-lin, $1 25 Education; Its elementary Principles found ed on the nature of man. ItyJ G Sporehelm, 111 D. WII h an Appendix, containing the Temperameute and brief aunlyeis of the Faculties. Illustrated. $l. 60 Family Physician. A ready Prescriber and Hygienic Adviser. ;With roferenca to the Nature, Causes, Prevention, and Treatment of Diseases, Acci dente, nod casualties of every kind. With a Woo-tars and copious Index. By Joel Obese, 111 . 11,- Muslin, $4 ,and and Diet. With Observations on the Dietical regimen, suited for disordered states of the di gestive organs, and an account of the Dietaries of some of the principal liletropolitan and other estaldieh menu for paupers, lunatics, criminals, children, the nick, Ac. By Jonathan Pereira, 6.1 D., Fli d., and LS. Edited by Charles A Lee„s.l. D. $175 Hand-Book for Hontd Improvement; compri sing, -Hew to Write," • How to Talk," "How to Bo have," and ••flow to Do Business," in oue vat. $2 25 Constitution of Man. Considered in relation to external object.. By George Comb. The only ou thunted American edition. With twenty engravings and a portrait of the author. MUtllll3, 51 75 Moral Philosophy. By George Cornice. Or the duties of man considered In Lin Individual, Domes tic and Social capacities. Reprinted from the Edin burgh ed., with the author's latest corrections. $1 75 Mental Science. Lectures on, according to the Philosophy of Phrenology. Delivered before the . Anthropological Society. By Key. G S Weaver. $1 50 Management of Infancy. Physiological and Moral liouttuent. By Andrew Combo, DID, A Book for Mothers. Muslin, $l5O Benny. An Illustrated Poem. By Annie Chambers Ketchum. Published In the elegant 1141 e of Enoch Arden. A beautiful present. sl6o drop's Fables. The People's Pictorial Edi tion. Beautifully Illustrated with nearly slaty engra vines. Cloth, gilt, beveled boards. Only $1 Fopc's Essay on Ilan. With Notes. Beau tautly Illustrated. Cloth, gilt, boreled boards, $l. Natural Lairs of Han. A Philosophical Catechism. Dy .1O npurzheim, id D. Muslin, 75 Ms. Fruit Culture for the Million. A lland•book. Being a (Nide to the cultivation and mansgoment of SI Mt trees. Descriptions of the best varieties: $1 Inclose the amount in a registered letter, or in a P. 0. Order, for one or for all the above, and address 9, R. IYELLn, Publisher, 389 Broadway, New Yore.. Agents %Van led. Idth3o =MO DAVID DADBIL7 $50,000 PAPER 1 PAPERII PAPER 111 Tracing Paper, Impression Paper, Drawing Paper, p f .-0 Paper, Tissue raper, S ilkerfor Paper for Flowery, Potad Paper, " I rlslol Board, Flat Cap Paper, Foolscap Potter, Letter Paper, Corumarclal Note Paper, Ladlea' Gilt Edged Letter Anti &Ye Paper, Ladies' Plain and Pancy Lute Po par, White and Colored Card Paper, In Packs an 4 Phoetr, or solo at LEWIS' Book, Stationery and Mimic Pt4ro. COUNTRY DEALERS c an 1t . , 7. 2 HMO from me In Huntin nk i n on tAe t 9 tIv..SALE .. , 11r i a n p i t.; 1 1[ 471.. 1 as I have a ! rbotesgpe • M. ROMAN. HUNTINGDON, PA., TUESDAY„I UNE 21, 1&70. [For the Globe.] Our Duty and Destiny as a Nation. BY H. C. B. SECOND PAPER I= Then there is intemperance, an evil of such magnitude as to threaten the very existence of our civil institutions, and if something can not bo done to arrest its progress, our progress as a nation must and will be arrested. Now the question is frequently asked, how shall we avert the pending danger with'wbich our loved institutions are threatened by such gigantic evils ? If the majority of 'our people were all prompted by tho pure spirit of the Gospel, not only tho great evils wo have enumerated, but all others, would melt away, under 'its genial light and heat. Ilia stall is not the fact; nor does history leave a record of any na tion of whom it might be said the ma jority Were good, and though we hope to be, we can not yet claim for a ma jority that disinterested goodness which would secure 'a faultless admin istration of our civil institutions. But fallen and depraved though we are, there is no ground for despair, when we• see that the God of Providence has, in all ages, governed the human family outside his church by principles of our nature, such as self love, self-es teem, ambition,avarice ' cowardice, &c.; and it often happens that a corrupt in dividual is not as bad a citizen when governed by two bad principles in an tagonism as when moved by ono of them. Thus the God of Providence as well as of grace always acts upon man agreeably to the laws of mind, by the presentation of motives adapted to the end in view; and were it not so, the human family, in their unrestrained Maddess and • folly, would rush into, eniversal destruction, and leave, our planet, to revolve in space a depopule ted desert. But when the avaricious man coudtathe costs of criminal courts, prison's and penitentiaries, which re sults from strong drink, he may from motives of self interest join in the sup pression of the, traffic. When the cow ard looks upon intemperance as an on only to his peace, and in view, of his own weakness, may join in removing the insidious temptation out of his way. The ambitious man .will join handsavith that respectable part of the community, who aro earnestly laboring for the suppression of drunkenness in the land. But - the christian is bound from motives of a higher order to labor earnestly for not only the suppression of drunkenness but for that of all crime, and thus from divers motives,' men may be brought to harmOnious action. The grand difficulty is to concen trate action prompted by such count less motives and bring them to bear against threatened danger from any quarter. We deem this difficult though it may appear quite possible. When any evil rises to great magnitude and threatens the self-interest of all, all, or a majority, aided by motives of bene volence, may so far unite as to crush out that particular evil. Thus slavery was planted upon otir southern coast by foreign enemies to humanity and to our peace, and not until the evil had grown to alarming magnitude and had become so insatiable and exorbi• tent in its demands as to rouse our na tion from its lethargy, and prompted from divers motives, with a united power seldom equaled, the cruel insti tution was crushed out forever, and our national' disgrace was washed away by the blood of hundreds of thousands of the truest patriots that over faced death for the extension of human lib erty. But our success would have been impossible had not old party lines been merged in that powerful current of patriotism which seldom fails to con quer false antagonism. • And now, if we would save our be loved country from disgrace and ruin, we must again lay aside those old par ty names, too often employed to de ceive the unwary, select the most dan gerous evil, present all lawful motives to the diversifild faculties and princi plea of human nature, concentrate all our powers in untiring efforts, and that evil must, under the smiles of Provi dence, fall before such irresistible pow er, and every other moral evil must grow weaker before such a healthy in fluence; and each of our great national enemies shall be rooted out one after another, - and our inestimable rights and privileges shall be secured, and handed down, pure and uncorrupted, to the latest generation, a beaCon light to benighted nations, regardless of the dying groans of tyrants. , Whilst it is our duty to declare ceaseless war against all insidious and open enemies of our race and our coun try, the question may be asked : Against which of them shall we con centrate onr united force, in order to crush it out forever, and remove it out of our way, in order that we strike down other evils in succeseion,and free OUT land, the last hope of the world, from the cruel bondage with which it is threatened ? Now, was it our prov ince to answer this momentous ques tion, we would direct all your forces against Intemperance, because it is at open war upon us; it is already per meating society ip all its ramifications with its insidious poison ; it is oven now carrying thousands annually down to untimely graves, and demands the immediate attention of patriots, phil anthropists and christians. Your cor respondent has been in this battle-field for over half a century; for many years after he had declared open war against this monster of iniquity he was left to battle alone for the principle of entire abstinence. Subsequently, as sociated with a few choice spirits, he has f9pght for the suppression ofdrun kennese pill his weapons of warfare aro all either kreken or nearly worn out, -PERSEVERE.- and he must soon leave tho field and the good cause in stronger hands, un der tbe'direction of a wise and benev olent Providence. And on'leaving the field, he 'would not weary you with the appalling statistics which truth would justify. You know froin high official authority that in a single year [lB6B] more money was spent,in the, United States fur strong drink than would pay half of our National debt. You know that in but a few pest years more hu man life was destroyed by strong drink than by the late cruel war. You know that more widows and orphans have been made such by intemperance than by war, famine and pestilence alto gether. And you all know who have attended to the records of criminal courts; prisons and penitentiaries; that Millions of your hard-darned money have been spent in defense of the peace of society against the appalling effects of drunkenness; nod doubtless many of you have trembled in 'the hearing of the threats and profane, imprecations of the poor maniacs, made such by strong drink, as well as that corrupt self-interest by which a' few aro prompted to poison the morals of our community for sake of gain. Wo Must present such a united front as will se cure success, or all is forever lost, and we are doomed to listen to the death knell of our loved institutions, and weep over the last hope of poor, trod den down humanity. There stands, unmolested, distilleries by perjury and fraud cheating our go vernment annually out of hundreds of thousands of dollars, darkening the very heavens with their smoke, spread ing over the land thick clouds of moral darkness, daring the thunders,of Di vise justice to shiver to fragments our glorious institutions, and roll us back into anarchy, with all its horrors.— They are still sending forth ten thous and streams of liquid death, poisoning the heart's blood of the nation, and spreadine• b over the land a moral virus, which threatens the very bases of our free institutions. Shall we fold our arms in apathetic sluggishness in pre sence of such portentous danger, now threatening our children and our grand-children? Yonder yon see our gin palaces and dens of moral putrescense, scattered thickly over town and country, in the enjoyment of undisturbed legal rights to kill and destroy an indefinite num ber of their fellow-citizens annually, if, like young Spartan thieves, they can do it without detection. You may hare seen those sinks et iniquity dis gorging themselves of their motley contents, in order that they may have a free fight upon our streets, whore more • like dogs than rational beings,. you may eco them parting, ono with a brokon arm, another with an eye gouged out, another with his nose bit ten off, most of them maimed and bleeding, and yonder n poor, old nuiti staggering home, his tongue vibrating only because it was accustomed to vi brate in idiotic accents; and there goes another, flying in all the horrors of mania potu, screaming and flying as he believes from serpents, hobgoblins and demons, to drive a trembling wife and children from their humble dwell ingplace to take refuge for the night under the broad canopy of heaven. "'Tie here they learn The rood that leads from competence and peace To Indigence and rapfuo ; till at last • Society, grown weary of the Itutd, Shakes her encumbered lap and casts them cut." But if you desire a condensed view of the baleful results of our cruel li cense system, follow that poor,deluded criminal into court, hear the witness and his final sentence, and ask your selves if you are innocent of one of the cruelest murders upon criminal record The court is called, the prisoner is brought,and the in, a jury is called, trial commenced. The prisoner, a tall, fine looking man, except those min gled feelings of guilt and despair be trayed by his countenance. First witness, 14,. A—, the land lord, (an appropriate title,)—a large, portly and pompous man, with heavy gold chain and a number of large rings of the same metal upon his fingers— sworn and examined. flow long have you known the prisoner at the bar r About fifteen years. Ile was when I first know bim a very sober and re spectable man; he owned a good farm; the farm is now mine. The prisoner is very pour and a confirmed drunk ard. For several years he was seldom at my house; his visits became more frequent, and lately ho would lie out whole nights. I sold liquor to him as long as be had money; it is not six months since ho drank the last of his farm; ho still came frequently and would got drunk somehow with his former companions. The last time he was there his wife came for him and entreated him to go home; she said their children were crying for some thing to eat and there was not at bite of anything for them; he cursed her and her "brats;" she wept bitterly and cried for God to have mercy upon them. lie staggered to the stove, seized the poker, struck her upon the head, broke her skull, and she fell dead upon the floor. Two of those jurors and two of those witnesses signed my certificate for tavern license; 1 sell liquor by law, as authorized by your honors. Second witness, the landlord's son examined. I am eighteen years old; I attend bar for my father; I never sell liquor to drunkards after their mo ney is spent, nor after they are dead drunk; no, I never sell liquor to mi nors who have no means to pay for it; I never sell on Sunday to any persons who would expose us; I was never so Ungallant as to refuse liquor to females who could pay for it. 0 yes, 1 sold more liquor to the prisoner than to any other person because he had mo ney plenty. Well, the way he got mo• ney was this; to make it convenient, my father would lend him a hundred (!:i.: . '....',.qtirliv NE dollars at a time and take his note from time to time, and in thiS way we got his farm. I saw the prisoner strike his wife with the poker, I saw her fad ., dead upon the floor. They bad six children; they are all now in the poor house. Third witness, with his-arm in a sling, examined. 0 yes, I knOw the prisoner, well enough; I guess you would know.liim too,,if he had broken your arm. Yes, I seen him kill his wife, that I did, and be struck her mighty ,hurd. p yes, ho and me often drunk together till it was late; ho was a right jolly follow when ho got uride'r way. Yes, I did, sign Mr.. A's certifi cate for tavorn license and I would do so again ; two of, thorn jurors did ,soj too; you know all who sign such pa.; pens are recognized by;this court :al respectable citizens. Yes, Mr. A. give us not only ono drink for signing, but as much us wo could hold till midnight, and I never had a finer jollification in all my ,life. Yes, I guess them two jurors were there as full of fun as any of us, and one of them judges, too, as jolly a fellow as over you saw. NO, we did not get so very drunk, but we felt good. Fourth witness, with but ono eye, and ono par, limping upon one leg, clothed in rags, under an old slouched bat, examined. Yes, I saw tho priso ner kill his wife • 1 told him to knock her down, for she had no business to come blurting after him into a decent bar-room to spoil all our fuu and tell ing him his children wore starving. = You have no business to ask how I lost my eye and my ear,; they were my own property and 1 had a right to do what I pleased with them., lam not bound to tell you what became of my fine property; if I chose to spend it in a short and merry life what is that to you. You have no business to ask how many drinks I took to day; I will drink just as much as I please, and I never will, like temperance fools, sign away my right to drink when 1 please. Yes, I did sign Mr. A's certi ficate for license and I will do itagain;. ho is a real clever fellow, and he gave us as fine a jollification for doing so as ever you saw: No, Bill did not knock me clown, but I knocked C. under the table, where ho lay snoring like a hog till morning. Fifth witness came staggering into court, slip shod, clothed in the habili ments of. wretchedness, smeared with blood, and holding by a post, ho said : I guess I come from Mr. A's tavern this morning. I guess I took a little of the o-be joyful just to cl-clear my i i-dens so as I in-might tell you in good lan:languago, how as the prix-prisoner killed his too-fool of a wi-wife. The Court—Sheriff take that, wit ness to jail. Witness—The de-devil you Tho testimony closed. The klourt eliii'rged the jury strongly uguiust the prkotter. The jury after retiring short time brought in a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree. The prisoner was commanded to stand up and giro reasons, if ho had any, why sentence of death should not be pronounced against him. He rose. The fountain of tears was dried up, his breast heaved as if too contracted for the swelling of a break ing heart, and said, he had no reasons to give, for though convicted by the testimony of witnesses of the most itn• pure lips, I am guilty of the cruel mur der of one of the most lovely wives. I drew her out of an affectionate moth er's bosom, and from under the protec tion of an indulgent father. She was fairer and More lovely in fact than 'Ve nus in fable. I vowed in the presence of God at the hymonial altar, that 1 would cherish and protect her in sick ness and in health till separated by death. Ours was a sweet homo, ren dered still more sweet and joyful by those dear pledges of conjugal affec tion, with which our board was sur rounded, who cheered us with music more sweet than that of all the birds of the forest. Thus our nights and days were spent for years in lovely ac• cord, until, whilst going right on my way, I was lured into that don of de mons incarnate, by that cruel monster, the landlord, (perverted epithet,) who has born testimony against me. His insidious snare was so artfully laid and his machinery so seductive that I fell, step by step, and at every step losing part of my power of resistance, till all was gone, and until he had by fraud and falsehood filched from me the last dollar, beggared my family, maddened my brain, and prepared me for the consummation of crime—the murder of pocir Sarah. Her head an over flowing fountain of tears, her tender hand upon my shoulder, and the last prayer to God for her cruel husband upon her lips, when, alas, prompted by surrounding demons, I struck the fatal blow. And now,o wretched man that I am, would to ed I had died for thee, 0 dearest of women, and for those dear children orphanized,. and brought to poverty and disgrace by my cruelty I Alas, where am I? I see the red hot thunderbolt of insulted 'Justice ready to be hurled upon me. I see the flashing frowns of an' , Avenging God! "0 that the mountains and the rocks would fall on me and hide me from the face of Him that sitteth on the throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb:" If you employ all the rhetoric of the school, with all their eastern imagery in description of hell, it would fall far short of the internal flames now burn ing out my very heart. Alas that I had ever been born, for I am forever undone. I can give no reasons why the death sentence should not he prp, nounced against me; bull can give good reasons why I should not be sus pended alone between heaven and earth, as if a miscreant unworthy of either. ' And what shall I say to the dense TERMS; $2,00 a year in advance and moHoy; crowd with, which this court-room is filled to witness my deep degradation;? The majority of you haye by your votes elected as guardi-, ans of the peace and safety of the com munity a set of men wholavo not yot' learned, the first lessons of moral duty.' ' Some, of you who have lent your, aidi in dragging too down,from the dignity; ,of manhood to the lowest,otep of.hu• man degradation and sorrow, can, coldly raise your impudent:and brazen ; faces, the index of obdurate hearts, to' witness my - fall. ; Remember, you are' hurrying down tho,steep declivity over) _which you _precipitated my fall„ and that my! late will soon bo yours if you continue in your present course.,' But! I: see others who loyed me whilst I sus-. tained the dignity, of manhood, who' earnestly entreated me, to turn from' my folly, and wept ovor;my obdurate; Madness, and have hearts yet to, weep over my final fall. You are the salt of ! the earth,for which our institutions are; yet preserved. • • .• ! There is your jury, some of whom prayed your honors to grant yon bloated landlord license to kill by his, hellish profession Ma fellow mortals, with impunity ; others of them came out of last night's debauch to convict me, and' should I go to hell alone?— There are your associate judges, one of whom disgraced our legislative ball by bio speech and by his vote against the passage of a law to•set bounds to the liquor seller's right of human de, struotion; and the other did by his ex ample precipitato, my rapid fall—and should Igo to hell alone,? There is your Prothonotary, whose glowing faco is an index of the burning flame within, a fit subject for spontaneotis combustion, now snoring away the funics of last sight's debauch • • he.too facilitated my lall, and,should I go to hell alone ? Thero is your Shoriff into whose hands you are about to commit me, and will soon be ordered to launch me into an awful eternity; ho has pur chased more votes with whiskey than any man in the county. He can drink deeper in the cup of dissipation, sit la ter, and sing more 'vulgar, bacchana Ilan songs than any of his boon com panions. Ho too • almost forced me down the rugged declivity, and ought I, to go to bell alone? , , Your honor once moved high-in in •telleetual circles, but nevermanifested a single aspiration for morality. You have catered to the lowest of the fallen of our race, for whose approbation you refused to inquire after the charactor of rho twolmoitizena who prayed your honors to grant a,liconso to that bloa ted and sordid landlord to kill me and others; nay, more, you know that the majority of those who signed his cer tificate,-were not only not good and respectable ,citizens, but the very scum of society; that they had fallen below: the level of humanity, and that in sol itude you would neither have trusted your horse nor your head in their hand. You aro fast sinking to their level in crime ;tho ermine which you have long disgraced• will soon fall from your shoulder, you will soon stand for trial before that upper oourt, too pure to be corrupted and too wise to be deceived, of whom it cannot be said,.ns might be said of you, and was said to a judge not more corrupt than you, "If it wore possible tocolleot all the innocent blood that you have shed (or caused to. be shed) in one great reservoir, your ho nor could swim init." But-remember if' you respect not, you will be irrevo-- cably, doomed to witness the work of your own hands, where the waves of, dark damnation raver rolls. Now, pro , nounco that sentence, for lace I must' go to hell alone. Sentence of death was then, pro nounced. Exhausted nature could en- 1 dure no more; the prisoner sank to the floor and was carried for the laet• time to jail, thence soon to be-taken to the scaffold. [yo , DE CONTINUED.] The Wrong Man Poultioed. The following,story, which we do not remember to have seen in print, may be old, but it, is received as true : At a famous and fashionable water ing-place, a gentleman one night was suddenly seized in bed with an excru ciating pain in the stomach, which nei ther brandy, No. 6, nor any other, remedy could remove. His wife, after trying a number of,things in ,vain,and having exhausted all her stock of rem edies,left her husband's bedside for the purpose of getting a 'warm application. Guided 'oir he • return by a light which she saw shining in a chamber, and which she supposed was the one just left, she softly entered, and was not a little surprised to find her patient ap, parontly in a deep slumber. However,' thinking he might still be suffering,sho gently raised the bed-clothes, &c., and laid the scalding poultice upon a stom ach—but not the stomach of her has and which no sooner touched the body of the person, than.ho, greatly a-, larmed, and writhing under the tor ture of the burning application, shout ed t "Hallo I hallo ! what in the name of heaven and ()tall' are you about there ?'' then,witb one spring from his bed, ho made for the door, and,rushint down stairs, deelared,in a frenzy of ex citement. that some one had poured a shovel of hot coals upon him. The woman, overcome with excitement and alarm, gave a frantic scream, which brought her husband hurriedly in from the next room to her rescue. The husband was so much excited,and also so much amused with the singular mistake and-the ridiculous position of his better half, that ho forgot all his pains ; but early next morning be, his wits and trunks loft for parts un: known, 'As poulticed gentleman still retains the hodkornhief — a UM linen fabric, with the lady's . name on it, which he considers of rare value. THE GLOBE JOB PRINTING OFFICE. ""GLOBE JOB OFFICE" themeet complete of any fa - the country, and pow lessee the meat ample facllltlea for pfomptly executing lo tho bed style, very yerlety of Job Frlatinigi anal ins HAND BILLS, _ - . CIRCULARS, BILL BEADS, Pp,STERS, JARDS, NO. 49, CALL AND NEAMINI SPININUINS Or ITONIt, LEWIS' 1300 E STATIONERY, & MUSIC STORE. [For the 'globe.) Should Woinen Vote? The majority ofthe female portion of 'the inhabitants of these • United States do not desire the •right' of stif frage... Woman is physically incont potent, to perform the dutiee•of,a voter. If woman wore to.attempt to lierforin the duties incumbent 'upon man' it would destroy all thrit'pleasing-modes ty; deliaacy, and refinement.• whiek:lin woman is ao agreeable to the,,Aight„„pl the sterner sex, and which places_her in 'so great a degree abrive man iri,th,ip respect, If we 'confer iipoti ' right to cast her vote ;and,:thus 'pdt her upon a political footingwitit:_man in this one respect,-we must place her upon' an equal . footing in every.; other respect.. If we give her the right to Note she then has the right to nominate and if she possesses the right to nomi nate she can nominate any voter" for office ; and . ' havingTheprivilege of rent..inating Any Voter for , Office; she Lean nominate:a woman for, office„ and not only for ono office, but for ,any, office in the gift of the people, be it, for School Director or for President—road supervisor or Governor. If they be come rams they would be subject to the conscription draft in times of war. Just imagine you see the Indies On a march, armed with "Spencers" add knapsacks filled with several;„days rations., °trapped upon : their, pretty shoulders. IyOnid they not look splendid=-for athhile, and then 'where would they get their looking-glasses wherewith to view their pretty faces and arrange, their disordered water ; falls., Verily, they would have to nee Nareissus' glaSe. Would 'not their Grecian bends look gaysnpon a' retria t? .No,—woritan'tcpeace is at home among her household gods. • Lot not our so called spirit of reform deprive us of that most ~delightfal of all our earthly pleasuree ot,sentlitive, charming, modest. and refined woman'. litipre, is ticertaircroughness char actor about man'which - Would gradual ly'and'ineensibly steal Over :that 'of woman in attempt.to,perform the'.ldup ties of a ;rnan,t and, whigh crime her.. It woultldestroy all that native' modesty ,Whicti . most 'Woman possess in'stich an ominents'dogree.—L. God neVer intended woman to all the place of man any more than he inten ded her to be a, man, .piee he, would have made her a man "tow wuns''and not left man to finish his'work. Woman has her own peculiarspheris in life, and in that she is all •poiverftil and transconda;nt, but as soon- as Astio leaves that sphere she loses thatwhlch makes her appear tiO beatit'ifiti' in the eyes of the world—her..woroatilychar actor. •... • Why,—woman has enough 'of life's labors to perforni;'now, itt'borne, then should we load. open' her !Shen!. dors other and heavier burdons—for with her vote would come labore;in numerable. Instead of the right, of suffrage being a blessing upon *anion it would be an absblute curab—instead of being a pleasure—instead' Of adding ono joy .to her .bappiness,, it „would detract from it—it would ;be a positiye evil. If woman were to take that in terest in 'politics, which stni Ivo - WA : had - she a vote,. where WoUld.she find' time to scrub, to Wash, to setr,to darn, and to do the 1,000 other little things which only the deft fingers' of !tomatf:know properly bow to do?. It might•suitAs few in the higher. classes of society, Some of the_ Codfish Aristocracy, in this one'respect, but it Would: i iiot 'suit the' majority'of the ladies of our '" if it would make them hap Pier; Wit would add one particle of happiness .to their life, if it would ease their life of one of the many little burdens, which all of them have to bear, I say, if it would do this, I . would eV 'LET TUEM voTE. As I remarked before the great mass of the ladies in, our, country do not wish, to vote. . It is only a low fanatics upon the hackneyed subject of woman's rights, who are agitating this question of wo man's suffrage in order to - give thetri selves prominence. in the news of„the day and in the history 'of the nation, and to make for themselves a repute. tion, and some of them are ,gaining notoriety, but rather an unenviable one I am afraid. No—the number of strong-minded women is too large already, and it would.be fearfully increased bad the ladies the right of suffrage. "Let us have peace"—upon this subject at least N. 8.-Please consider "the. subject exhausted. - Qum. "Taxes very singular," said a young lady to a gentleman who had just kiss ed her. "Oh ! well, my dear Miss," was the yeply, "I will soon make it plural." And the villain did. • STUBBS said to one of his debtors: "Isn't it about time you paid me that little bill ?" "My dear sir;" was.the consoling' reply, "it is not a qtiestion of time, it is a question of money." JONES never knew a more vengeful individual than Brown, who, in the exuberance of his rage at some ono who offended him, saidr"l'll have re venge! I'll give little boy a tin trumpet." • THAT chap who WAS "lonely since his mother died" is all right now; bin father having married a widow with fifteen children. The old ladyi.tnd the children manage to make it lively enough for him. • "Sammy run to the store and get some sugar." "Excuse me,' ma; Im somewhat indisposed this morning; Send father, and tell him to bring a paper of tobacco along." A dandy inquired at a fruit stand, "Aro these apples fit for hogs to,eatr "Try 'ent.a l ndoe," said the woman: How did Adam got ont of the gar, den of Erden 7 Iton wag otakef; out. ti BALL TICKETS, PROGRAMMES, • LABELS,,&p.„ &A, 49
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