guntinghn *anal. „f• 'OA 7 - 7 - Als0:1411 • ."4NN,Vi ~~\~. WM. BREWSTER, Editor and Proprietor. Wednesday Morning, Harsh 30, 1859 A CORRECT PORTRAIT, Col. Fotorxx continues to pitch into the late Convention of office-holders, and says the people were indifferent to it because "of a double feeling of contempt for its managers, and a full foreknowledge of Its' policy. Nobody expected decent, much less Democratic action. The great body of the delegates did not come to reiterate principles, but to evil wages. They did not vote the wishes If the people, but thanks to their masters. They had most ly be-n elected es office-holders, or by officer holders; and, although they might have averted defeat from a great party by orrxte unexpected concession to truth, they dared not to perform an act of Intgoani mity, which, while it would have won for them the applause of a surprised and grat ified people, would have lost theta their places, and the smiles of an administra tion which now stands a reeking infamy before the nation." This is what may his called a clear statement—emphatic and true. We congratulate the unterrified De mocracy upon the "harmony" which ex. ists in their ranks ! The Kilkenny cat fight was no circumstance to the "war of the factions." They will devour each oth er, tatla and all! .._........-.- Union Counly.—Mr. L, H. Nice, a We notice that Fisher & 11cN1ur• ---- student of the Lewisburg University, wri awin, sing under dote of Friday list, says: me, James A. Brown, David P. Samuel S. Smith. M. Gutman. and 11. Ro. There has been the most terrific torna man have each received their Spring do here this evening, I ever witnessed, which has tarn oil the west wing of the Stock of Netv Goods, and are selling on C the most favorable terms—all who desire College building, and otherwise damaged it. A large pine tree lies down at the Bargains should give them a call. And 1 door, torn up root, and the massive roof doe's forget to remember that those who I lies in ruins at the foot of the building. do advertise, invariably sell the best and cheapest goods. That's so ? We distinctly heard it coming, and when • it struck the building with a tremendous STATUARY.—In passing along the pave- crash like a million cannons discharged at meat we observed in one of the store win• I once, nna shook the building to its base. dows a p:Tioe of statuary, which attracted I (or one expected to see the walls cave our attention so much that we were indu- in upon us. The students of the fourth ced to inquire who was the originator, and story had a 'very narrow escape, In one was !tolerated that it was designed and I room a pile of bricks came through the cut by James Green, a young man of this ceiling to within a food or so of an occupant. place who has just emerged from his ap- , -------.....------ prenticeship a few days ago. It is really The Skeleton of a Giant, eight feat a creditable piece of mechanism, and if this high, has been exhumed from the farm of is n specimen of Isis apprenticeship, what j Mr Ca loin near Monongahela City, Pa. may we expect of him in his after life, I The Pittsburg Cronicle soya:— "From .........- the positin ote hones th - aunder ga"The Presbytery of Huntingdon I t . . f he stone, o a supposed the e Ladi k es u were will hold its next stated meeting in the I buried in a sitting position, the skull bones I Presbyterian church of Huntingdon, on ' and those of the trunk being all in a heap 1 the Second 'Tuesday (the 12th) of April , while those of the legs were scattered a at 11 o'clocic A. M. I long towards the foot of ihe vault. At , FINAL ADJOERNMENT.—The joint resol- : the foot, also, of many of these graves were 1 ution atlted by the Senate, fixing the I found various articles of ornaments of ex- 14th of A pril as the day for final adjcurn- I quiche workmanship, denoting a greater j ' meat, was concurred in by the House. I skill than usually belongs to the Indians, together with crockery and warlike tipple- Borne wafer will be let in the Ca" Al j ' meats . Tie graves in the vicinity num on next Friday. - ber several hundred, and they go to show ' Tuz ANNEXATION or CANADA.—A gen. that tl.e field was at one time an extensive tlernan named Kisco has issued a circular burying ground," in Upper Canada, recommending the Par. i Indian Remains Found.—The skeleton Einem, on the occurrence of cerain cop.! tingencies, to pass resolutions, and, in fact and pipe of an Indian were found on the :oth March, by the students of Burlington to fake measures for the severance of the (N. J. }College, buried in the river bank, two provinces from the British dominions,' which had been greatly washed away by ADC the immediitte annexation of Canada West to the Unit.ll States, . the late freshet. The skeleton is suppo. - ---..............___________ sed to belong to the Delewnre Indians, From the Lycoming Gazelle. An unparalleled proportion of the par Inns nearly pure has been discovered in who having stolen a quantity of money ticiputs were federal officeholders and Texas, about twenty miles west of Mc- : from Captain Kid, and being pursued, he their relations ninny of whom obtained Kinney, near the line of Denton and Coil- j was murdered and buried near the place seats in the convention by inducing (to use in. It apparently exists in great abun-1 where Burlington College now stands. an inoffensive term) the regular delegates dance, I.irge quantities may be picked tit 'h give place to them as "sub ties." a Distant Hint.—The Baltimore grand from the ground without the trouble of ex- The acts of the convention show for what Jury, in a formal presentation, have ex. purpose those officials sought the position. I coming, A piece weighing from thirty Lecomptonism overshadowed everything I to forty founds has been exhibited in Mc- I pressed the opinion that the murders and and to.uphold that iniquty and its adhe- Kinney, and subjected to a few expesii other acts of violence so frequently perpe. rents was the sole aim and work of the meats. It admits of a fine polish, is soft I crated in that vicinity, may he attributed convention. To bestow upon it and them 'to the quality as well es the uantit T of and malleable, is readily welded with nth- i q the most fulsome praise, upon the one e ha—l, and to heap upon those who had er iron, and it .s supposed will yield about I liquor drank by th 4 ofFenders. the manliness to dissent from it the foul. 90 per cent of pu-e metal, A RESIDENT or the Pun Handle writes eat abuse, upon the other, was the great l a letter to the Pinburg Post, culling the object of the managers of the gathering. EMPHATIC.—The Cincinnati Times 'The voice of the Democracy of Pennsylva- I remarks oh the National Administration: attention of Pennsylvania to the marvel nits was stifled from the very outset, and J ' , The administration ship is not sinking ,1 lons richness el the coal veins in that tin the principles and welfare of the p art y i but sunk; the last spar of Democracy has itory. He says:— openly scouted throughout- A total lack 1 "As fur as k nown, there are nine veins of everything assimilating to fairness chinr- I been cut away, and every timber is rotten acterized the actions of the presiding offt- or shattered; all the most expe ' . through this region, six et bitumous, and rheeCed wari. j eer from the first to the last, so that honest ners have wisely deserted it, and the crazy' three Cif .1!!"eel coal, The first vein, bi• sentiments could find no chance for ex- hulk is hurled ' into an infamy so profound tumous, is subterrmean, lying alnird: mane preesion. Even common decency was , atnn andn s o hundred and fifty feet below the creek a d amn atio n deep that the hand of not observed, in the - 'cry madness which Ibottoms—it ia eiht feet thick. The sec ruled the hour.—Never before was the political resurrection will never reach it." g Democratic party so grossly outraged by-- . end vein attains the thickness of only a any assemblage. Some of the very best l ' few inches, and is consequently unworthy n and purest of its lenders—me who have OUR NEIGHBORS . of remark. The third is a four foot vein of spent their whole lives in promoting itsl bitunnuous coal, immediately on which Lebanon Coutity.—The late election in welfare, were maligned , traduced, belied — insulted ' in every way. The tool proceo• the borough of Lebanon resulted in the 'rests the fourth—a vein of cannel coal. va dingshf that convention will never appear success of the Opposition ticket.—Mr. tying I , cen five to ten feet in thickness. in print. No pen can describe them. John A. Albert, of East Hanover, made n These veins are situated a few yards above The participants would not dare to pub-j 1 very narrow escape f r om drowning, are w the ereks, and consequently are very lish them if they could. accessible." I (lays ago. He was driving in a buggy, JACKSON'S HOTEL. and and when at Lauderinilch's ford on the I The other veins are also accessible.— It ie with pleasure that we announce to When the Pittsburg and Steubenville rail. Swatura, above Palmyra, the water was I our readers, that this well-known house I road is completed, there will be direct i so high that it ran in the road by the creek, has been taken by our friend, Col. John and Mr. Albert got fats the stream beyond I communication with these coal fields. We the depths of the horse. The horse was S. Miller, of the "Franklin." Col. Miller cercetainly should seize on th t Pan Has. very justly enjoys an envtablt reputation , drowned, and Mr. A. escaped by cling. die ! es a ' throughout this part, of the country, i - - -- - -- lint to the branches of a tree, and getting ' model landlord. May his star continue to ' - . Ito land therefrom, ascend. "DEMOCRATIC THUNDEIV, Under this caption the Harrisburg Pa triot and Union gives extracts from vari ous BUCHANAN organs, sustaining the tic• tion of the late packed convention of office holders and "expectants. We, too, have some "Democratic thunber" on hand which we intend our neighbor shall hear shortly. For the present .ve content ourselves with the following musket shots from:two of our exchanges : promising to follow it up with a regular "broadside" from some of the ablest Democratic 'ournals in the interior; and BUCHANAN and his minions may ex pect to hear a spechnen of Democratic thunder that will make them shake in their shoes:— From the Huntingdon Globe. We expected better thing; from the as sembled wisdom of the Democracy of the State.— Instead of harmonizing the party, the majority of the convention thought proper to strike at Gov. Packer. because he dared to differ with the President on his Kansas policy. If the nominees of the Convention are not to receive the votes of the political friends of Governor Packer, it is easy to guess by what an overwhelming majority they will be de leafed. Eron Saturdaylight,just as we were about to be enclosed it the arms of Mor• phius, we were greeted by the Excelsior Band of Continental Vocalists at our door. who gave us some of their bewitching me. iodies. A repition will be thankfully re ceived. Chrietain Couto will, on the first and part of the root of the house of David of April, open a house of entertainment in Henderson, Esq., and part of the roof of JOHN M. BOTTS, in a speech before the the house well known as the "McConnell R. Dougherty's shop, were blown:off and a I Virgin'a Opposition State Convention, de- House," in the borough of Huntingdon.' number of fruit trees torn out of root, A dared that the Democracy has causer. Mr. Couto is so well and favorably known colored man was the only person injured. "every calamity, every ill that has battle throughout the County as to need no spa• , The storm extended over but a narrow len the count:) , during the last thirty years tic recommendation. He will expect to strip, the citizens in opposite ends of the with the exception, perhaps, of the email• receive a liberal share of public patronegs. , iwn knowing nothing of it. pox, the cholera and the yellow facer," Sheriff's Sales. I Carnbria County. —We take from the The following property will be sold by Mountaineer, the following notice: the Sheriff, on the 11th day of April, e Firm—The barn of Peter Wible of 10 o'clock, A. M,: Carrot township, was burned to the ground Four lots of ground in Newburg, 'rod on Frit:) , night last, together with a large township : property of Amos Clark. cpuintity of hay, outs, and rye, which woe Three lots of ground in Porter township, stored in it. The fire originated in a property of Daniel Shively. smoke house whicl, was convenient, and Lots No. 17 and 23 in the village of was only discovered in time to save Graysport; property of George H. Steiner. the live stock. Mr. IVible's loss is about Lot No. 04 in the borough of Hunting- . fifteen hundred dollars, and as is usual in don; property of Peter C. Swoops. cases of fires in the country, no insurance. Five lots of ground in the borough of Somerset County.—The season thus Birmingham ; property of A. P. Owens. far has been very propituous for our ma Eleven acres in Barren tp ; property of ple sugar manufactures. More sugar has. Moses Robison. le the present season, et this dote, than One hundred acres in Shirley tp. ; pro- In ' any previous one. We hear of several perry of James Leonard. Two tracts of land in Henderson Iry farmers who have already made more than rt.; four thousand pounds. There is no means property of Samuel Sankey, IVilliam San• of exactly ascertaining the urnotiet of thin key and Margaret Sankey. A lot of ground in Marklesburg; proper article annually produced in Somerset ty of Anthony Beaver. county, but we think five hundred thou !sand pounds would fall below the mark— property, of Henry L. Harvey. A lot of ground in Franklin township I I more than is manufactured in any other I A tract of land in Barren township . pro. I county in the Union perry of David Crownover. Indiana County•—On 'Friday last, Saltzbitrg, in this county, and its vicinity, was visited by a most terrific storm of wind. Bcme five or six stables in the town and the barn of Mr. Robert Ray, on the hill near town, were blown down besides a number of out•butldmgs. The chimney top Free Banking Law. Mr. WlLLisTosr, from the Select Corn =nee of the Houso reported a bill estab. listing a free Banking,system, and it was placed at the head of the public calendar by a vote of two thirds. 'Phis is certainly a fair indication that the bill will pass the House. We sincerely trust that such may be the case, and that there will bo a reform to the Banking system. Jealousy and Murder.—At Madison, Ind., on the 17th March, Stephen Lanais. can shot a young mats named Hollis, dead with a pistol, for dancing with s young lady to whom he had been paying attention The young lady had refused to dance , with Laticiscas, on accoant of the itnpro.. prieties in his conduct, whereupon he de • claired that no other one else should dance with her. Hollis paid no heed to this, and was therefore subsequent murdered at his hotel by the offended lover. Mob Law at Grecusbut g—Thre iluu ties Turn howsr-Inteme Excite- !He'll. The unusually quiet borough of Greens. burg was the scene of a most exit...on:Ma ry affair lust night. It appears that a col ored nun, named .13.-n Ware, was susrc. red of boing more intimate with a white woman than the law allows, and the feel. ing of the people being decidedly anti. amalgamation, they resolved to deal aum_ marily with him, and punish the fellow a /a Judge Lynch. Fit II of this determi nation, and, perhaps, of whiskey, but this makes no differeneerits Greensburg wills key "ain't hard to take," and "never hurts nobody," a party resolved last ni,ht to clean "lien" out. Meeting at a certain point they started for his house, but recut. lecting on the way, that Gilbert Sterling, another man of color, had been accused cf a like offence, they re; aired to his house first, and, will out reliers hoick's: it. ley. elled it to the ground. W'are's tenement was next pulled down, and, subsequently, a fine two story house belonging to D. kb ercrombte, also colored, was reduced to a heap of ruins. The number engaged in this high lutile!! outrage, is estimated be. tweet thirty end forty. Many of them were men of standing and respectability, and it surprises us that their nft.nert should be coupled with such a transaction. The men may have trasgressed. They may have violated the laws of God and the land, but surely thorn-was another way of punishing them than that adopted. The late might have inflicted on individuals or society, and to it rather than to a self con stituted band of "Regulators," their pun ishrwmt should have been left. ENCROACHMENTS OF SLAVERY. Seventy years _lgo the Detnocra.s drew a line around the States, and said to the Slave Trader, "thus far you may go, but no farther." This was the Jeflersoniati Proviso.• 'Filmy years ago they rubbed out part of the line, and said to hiin, "You may go into the lands fouth, but not into the lands North." This was the Missouri 'Compromise. Five years ago they rub bed out the rest of the line. and said to him, "We leave it to the Settlers to decide whether you shall come in or not.' I'bis was the Nebradca Bill. Now they turn humbly to him, hat in hand, and say, "Go where you please; the land is all yours, the National Flag sht:ll protect you, and the National Troops shoot down whoever resists you." This is the Dred Scott de. cision —Harrisburg graph. Buchuna it and the Presidency--N hat. ever Mr. Buchanan's friends may have contemplated in the past, it is now perfect ly understood that he is to be presented as a candidate for the succession. They seem to consider that thc expression of the liar. risburg Convention, though directed niuin• ly by his own subordinates, will be taken as a token of Northern sentiment which cannot be overlooked when the South shall be in search of an available nominee,— This is a very pleasant delusion, and by no means costly. Slate Elections.—Three inoro State elections are.to talce place this Spring The Connecticut election comes on the 4th of April, the Rhode Is'and eleotion on the 6th of April, and the Virginia election on the 26th of May. Governors and Congress t.? are le be chosen in each of these States, J! Chicago Jury,—lt is stated that the father of young Burch, acquitted of mur der in Chicago, a day or two since, gave the Jury whn cleared him a champagne supper on the evening after the verdict was renderea • Eleven of the jurors attended, one only having the decency to slay away. De VALLS GALVANILL, OIL aete on the eye. tern by imparting to the diseased part a nor ural current of electricity, by which the rester. atim of all the natural functions are produced immediately, and a cure Is et once obtained. This is the great secret which no other medi tine in the world has got, mid hence the great success this medicine has in curing diseases. _ - .4nsswer to qustion in last Jou,•oal, 1.25 A room with eight corneal bad a cat in each corner, seven cots before each cat, and a cat on every cat's tail. What was the total number of cats ? 3 g;tlarriett. On Feb. 9. by Rev. A. B. Still, Mr. Da. iel Btiner to Mien Amelia Gill, both of Mit% flin county, Pa. On the 24th inst., by the same, Mr. A. L. Corbin ts Mots Maggie D. Yocum, both of Huntingdon county, Pa. On the 1701 Met, by Rev. G. W. Shelf- fer, Mr. WI,LIAM BRZWATER to 11150 MARY STUART. both cf this village.—Herold. DIED.—On Tuesday, Feb: 15th of typhoid fever, Mr. Jefferson Decker, ip the 59th year of hie age. GOIIET AFFAIRS.--April Term, 1859. GIISND Jeanne. Joseph Cunningham. farmer, Cass. James Chamberlain. inn keeper. Waresk. Wm. Dauphenbaugh, shoemaker, Brady. Gen. Eby, farmer, Shirley. James W. Galbraith, farmer, Shirley. Samuel Gregory, farmer, West. David Hicks, blacksmith, Cromwell. Win. S. Hildebrand, earpenter, Huntingdon. MAI' 13. Hissong, !totter, Cassvillv. Adam Keith, farmer, Todd. George Lamp, farmer, Porter. John Minnick, former, Dahlia. Win. Miller. farmer, Henderson. Rudolph Neff, farmer, West. George Rudy, farmer, Jackson. Martin Shank, farmer, Warriormark. Washington Stewart, farmer, Franklin. Jacob Sharp, mechanic, Brady. Thomas Strickler, plasterer, Huutingdon. George Walker. carpenter, Alexandria. Adam War fel, blacksmith, Brady. John Whittnkv:, sr., gent:, Huntingdon. Daeicl I'. Goode, f ar m e r, Porter. Juba Anion, farmer, Harm. Tons ense Juntins—Finsr Wasig. John Bilker, mason, Shirley. Pete, M. Bare. clerk, Union. Char!, DOWeIiON, Shirley. Israel Baker. farmer, Tod. Hiram Brown, farmer, Springfield. James Condom, laborer Brady, Thomas Cuv.iliovest, farmer, Barren. haat: Cadman, Mriner, Tod. ,loch Carver, farmer, Barree. Ileury Cour. !ts. Huntingdon. Isaac Donaldson, laborer, Hopewell. James Duff. mason. Jackson. James Eutriken, Bruner, Hopewell Alssander Ewing, teacher, Franklin Perry 0. Etehinsou, shoemaker, Cromwell. A. W. Evans, inerehan., Benjamin Fink, Farmer, Cass. Samuel Freidley, farmer, Henderson. Jacob S. Gehertt, potter, Cr,sville. Caleb Greenland, farmer, Cass. Cohn Clayton fur mer, Union. William Glass, carpenter, Jackson. Joint Hight, farmer, Brady. Moses Hamer, farmer, Walker. Rat. Henderson, farmer, Warriorstnork. William [lure, farmer, Dublin. John Hagey, fanner, Tell. John S. Henderson, labored, Shirley. Daniel Isenberg, farmer, Shirley. John Kesselring, farmer, Springfield. John Morrison, farmer, Shirley. panics McCartney, farmer, Henderson. Chas. G. McLain:lllin, bib smith, Shirley. Robert Moore, farmer, Dublin, William Miller, farmer, West, Henry Myers, blacksmith, Shirleysburg, Richard Newman, manufacturer, Franklin, David Parsons, farmer, Tell, Thomas F. Stewart, tanner, West, John Shaffer, farmer, Morris, David It. Stonebraker, fanner, Jack,on, John Shaver. farmer, Shirley, George B. Weaver, farmer, Ilnpewell, John Weight, farmer, Franklin, Caleb Wakefield, farmer, Brrily, Jolni Westbrook, shoemaker, It nutingdon, Wm. P. Taylor, carpenter, Clay. TRAVERSE Jultotis—Secotts Jacob Barnet, lamer, Cass, Daniel Beck, blacksmith, Morris, J. S• Berkstresser, merchant, Carbon. William Couch, farmer. Barree, Valimine Crouse, inn keeper, Brady, Nicholas Cresswell, gentlemen, Alexan'a Helry S. Dell, farmer, Cromwell, John Duff, thriller, Jackson, Levi Evans, J. P., Carbon, E. L. Everhart, bass, Huntingdon, Alsatian' :Fultz, carpenter, Brady, Isaac Gorsuch, blacksmith, Cromwell, Robert Green, tlmser, Oneida, James G win, gentleman, Huntingdon, David Uci.:ve, merchant, Huntingdon, John Hirst, farmer, Barree, Richard D. Heck, farmer, Cromwel!, David Householder, laborer, Walker, Solomon Isenberg, farmer, Franklin, John Ingram, farmer, Franklin, Henry Jamison, grocer, Brady. John Roodo, thriller, Henderson John Kiser, litrmer, Franklin. John Love, limner, Barree, A. J. McCoy, stiller, Franklin, Isaac Martin, farmer, Porter, John Montgomery, mechanic, John Morrow, farmer, Dublin. James Magee, thriller, Dublin, Willimn Oaks, former, Barree, Thos. t. Orbison, merchant, Cromwell, John Shoop, jr.,farmer, Union, Valenti. Smittle, farmer, Tell' Levi Smith. litrmer, Union, George Wakefield, thrum. Shirley, Milton Woodcock, grocer, Carbon. T RIAL LIST—FIRST WEEK. And. ew Patrick jr vs Eby Cunningham t Herr John 'Savage vs Smith & Davis Om Curry vs Joua McWilliams Jacob Crnsswell vs K Hare Powell Leonard Weaver vs Hunt & B T B B & C Co John Garner vs John Savage Clement's heirs vs John McCandless et al James Wall vs Jona Wall Glasgow & Bare vs Caleb Brown Sant'l Caldwell's ades'r vs B X Blair John B Weaver vs Jacob Russell Peter Etnier vs Juba Shope. SECOND WMF•B. 8010,. Bra & Co vs A P Wilson John P. Brook, vs. John Savage Jacob Russel vs. John T. Shirley. Margaret Hamilton vs. James Etriken. Valentine Crouse vs. U. W. Speer. Pleating Holiday vs. Hunt & B T It It& Co. Evil. Rose vs. Wm. McNite. Kirkpatrick & Son vs. Wm. Hays. Joe. Kinsel's adms. vs. Christian Price. Bell, Garrettson & Co. vs. Isaac Sharror. David Rupert vs. Frederick Sclutnidcr. Jas. Saxton for use vs. Nicholas Shank. Wm. Weaver vs. Entriken & Drhere. D. flouts assignee vs. J. Y. Bay. Samuel Doran vs Jas. Paulson. Tames, Jones & Co. vs. Jae. Entriken gar. Lishee of Jno. Dougherty. A. McMullin vs. Win. bleMullin. Same vs. James Mildly. PENN MUTUAL Life I mum nce Company. _ - A dividend of TWFSTY•FIVE per cent. on all the cash premiums of 1858, and Six per cent. on all scrip issued by the Company, hne been. declared. Tho undersigned is ready to pay Cash and deliver scrip to all entitled to them. R. ALLISON MILLER, Auss . r. Mar.30,'59..3t.* JACKSON'S HOTEL, Huntingdon, Pa. J. S. MILLER, PROPRIETOR. Respectfully informs his friends and the travel'ing public generally, that he IN has leaned the "Jackson House," fur sev• tt eral years occupied by Wm. it. Zeigler, abd that he will be pleased to receive the calla of all who may favor him with their patronage. His table will he furnished with tho bent the market can afford, and every attention will be given to null.. those with him feel at borne. Huntingdon. March 30, 1059. DR. J R. HUYETT DOEVEZE ALEXANDRIA, HUNT. CO., PA. April 1, lege.—ly. PHILADELPHIA MARKETS 111.ta. 22 1859 FLOUR—Superfine. per barrel, 86 37tF66 50 " Extra " " 6 62(816.87 family 6 7 25t0 7,50 Rye Flour and Corn Meal -1 60®1 62 1 7541 80 95 Wheat—red, per bush.l, 0 White " Rye Corn Oats Ctorerseed $3 7346 00 per 64 pounds Timothy seed, $2,00 to 230 Flux. per buAt 1 sl 75 What the Press Say . I •CostAn's" Exteaminntors are ijaluable remedies Mr clearing houses drill sorts of ver. min. With all confi :Ince we recommend them. —N. Y. bail!, Stale .Coswes"lonsdics for all domestic pests, such as Rats. Roaches, Bed-Bugs, Ants, Fleas, .le. are invaluable ; we can speak from actual knowledge of their merits. DRUCGISTS and DEALERS 8110111 ii scud :heir orders earls, if they would secure a trade in them .—New York Jour nal. shall write something about your Extermi ni t 411, cs I can do so with propriety. They are selling rapidly hero and destroying all vermin. —Ed. ..Manner," Fayette, Mo. "Death to all Vermin." As ti um approaches, ANTS and ROACHES, • From their holes come out, and Mice and RAVI, In spite of Cats, Gaily skip about. Bau•Buus Eta • You, in the night, As on the bed you slumber, While Issacvs crawl Theo' chamber and hall, In squads without number. IT IS TRULY WONDERFUL WITH what Certainty, Rats, Wachs, Mice,',Holed, G round Mice, Beti•Bugs, Ants, Moths, Mus cle hoes, Fleas, Insects on Animals, in short every ipecia of vermin, are utterly destroyed and exterminated by 'Costar's' Rat, Roach, &o Exterminator. 'Costar's' Bed-Bug Exterminator, 'Costar's' Electric Powder for Insects. Str , plicil direct, by mail, to any addless in the United States, as follows: Ult receipt of . $l,OO, a box of the RAT, Roacu. die. Ext.; On receipt of $.2,00, a box each of the RAT, RoActr, he. Ext. , and ELecittic Pownxit , (sent postage will) sufficient to destroy the ver• min don any Itetnines. Sold by Drmists and Dealers ererywbere, ''COSTAIt'S"TIIINCIPAL Arson, 420. BitOiD. . • •• I'. W—Circulars' terms. &c., sent Ly mail on application. Cr Wholesale Agents for Pennsylvania : COSTAR'S BRANCH DEPOT, Northast cornor Firth and Arch Street, An .1 Wholes.,!c Dealers generally. GLEASON'S LINE OF BATTLE SHIP This splendid new weekly is increasing very rapidly in its circulati,i, every body is deligh• ted with it. The pupa is furl:lse:3d to clubs at the following remaikable . low rates : 2 Subscribers one year, • • • • $3.00 4 6.01 10 I " " • • . • 1 0.0 0 20 „ . . • • 20.00 and ohe gratis in getting up a club of 20. Single Subscription being $ 2.00 per annum." Those wishing to subscribe, or rural clubd, will have sample copies sent free by addressing F. Gleason, Boston Miss. Gleason's new Enterprise, is highly spoken of by the press. We give a few of the many favorable notices we have seen. Mr. Gleason has the experience, the miter• prise, the tact, and the ctotal, requisite to sus• ruin a good and successful paper.--N. Y Cum. Adv. t LEASON'S WE:cum.—This is the best pie. torial and literary paper published in the Uni ted States, and no family should be without it.—Locrl ll'apaca, We'd. GLEASON'S WEELLY is full of eierything to Cass the eye and the mind. The new illus. Crated weekly causes a great excitement in newspaperdum :7 Rtgisict, Irapaca, Wis. GLEASON S « • LElii.Y LINE•OT•BATTLE it before us. We to nut hesitate to pronounce it the best literary and pictorial journal pub• fished in Ilse Union.—Republican Watchman, Monticello, GLFA SON'S L 1 NE-or BATTLE) SIIIIL—This new weekly is, without clues - don, the largest and handsomest literary skeet in the Pawn. It is freighted with a precious cargo of sketch. es, tales poetry, biography, editorials, wit and tut.—herald; Gleason's kew Weekly Linso"Battle Ship. F. Gleason, Esq., prince of editors and pub. Ushers, is again in the field. flit weldearned popularity is a sufficient guarantee for the sue. cess of his new enterprise.-IlclVonfc, Democrat. Gleason's -Veto Paper is what might have been expected from the experience and skill of the gallant commodore a.el editor, elegant in its typography, illustrations and reading matter. Ifaerythin that good taste and ex perience could den, appears to have been brought into requi.ition.—Ledger. Gleason', Line•of Rattle Skip, by the illus. trinity Gleason, is illustrated with excellent en. gravings, nrd contains the choicest reading matter. A neater paper has never been is• sued from the press. Gleason is a Napoleon in the field now again occupied by him.—/Lts. ton Atlas and Bee. GleasonB Linc-of Battle Ship.—The largest edition ever printed of the first numb2r of a paper, either in America or Europe, was that of the "Line of• Battle Ship,' by Commodore Gleason. One huudeed thousand copies were issued and sold. This is truly wonderful!, and shows what tact, talent, and a union of beauty and art can do, when controlled by a master spirit.—Ss day News. Mar. 23'd 1859.—1 t /02 ' 5OOO AGENTS WANTED—To sell 4 new inventions. Agents have made over $25,000 on one,—better than all other similar agencies. Send four stamps and get tiO pages particulars, gratis. E PEI It AI II SRO IV , Lowell, Mass. Mar.23,'59,61u.* {` 1000 AGENTS WANTED.—For pa rtieu lard send stamp. C. P. WHITTEN, Mar. 23. '59. sm* Lowell, Mass. (Estate of Christena Climer, dee.) ADMINISTRATORS NOTICE. Letters Administration on the Estate of Chris tens Clitner, late of Penn Township, dee'd., have been issued to the subscriber, residing in same Township. All persons basing claims a gainst said Estate will present them for settle- ment, and those indebted will make payment to JOUN HOUSEHOLDER. Adminiutrator. March, 22d. 18b9-6t. A ntiphlogistic Salt. This celebrated medicine is for cab at the Journal Office . For all inliatnu atory diseans it is a certain care. Get a bee and try It, re ego are shirtvi. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. THIS DAY PUBLISHED I THIS DAY PUBLISHED I ---- The first number of THE COSMOGRAPH I THE CORMOGRAPH I THE COSMOOHAPH I TII E COSMOGRAPH I A PHILOSOPHICAL MONTHLY, A PHILOSOPHICAL MONTHLY. A PHILOSOPHICAL MONTHLY, A PIIILOSOPIIICAL MONTHLY, F. Clinton Barrington, Editor and Proprietor. F.-Clinton Barrington, Editor and Proprietor. F. Clinton Barrington, Editor and Proprietor. Containing t 1. The Evidences of Deism : In which the au thor describes his passage through the hollow depths of Atheism, Materialism, &c., and glees his reasons for returning to the Deity for the so lution of the terrible problems presented The Fable of the Redeemer: 5. The Fields of Moot A review ortlis poli tical world, indicating the corning struggle of liberty anti eornmon sense against tyranny and icAi.ra r 6. The Fables of the Exodus : In which liii questioned whether Muses ever existed, and whether the Jews, as a natio% were ever captive in Egypt. 7. The Minnows& : An Epic. By Frank Clinton Barrington. Book I. The Encampment of the Nomtiles , 2. The Temple of the Priests) 9. The Palace of the Kings ;4. The Republic at' the People; 5. The World of the Spirits ; 6. The Universe of the Gods. The Mother 9f the Nat;oni; In which It to argued that there existed in the heart of Asia, 6,000 years ego, a great and intelligent people, to which the inure modern nations, such as tits Jews, Egyptians, Citaldesas, &c., owed their knowledge of the arts and sciences they held in eutnuton with each other. 9. An Exposition of Biblical Translation: Show ing, by quotations from many versions, that the Bible is not the same in any two languages— the English raying one thing, and the Freud, quite another. to. Proof that "Solomon's Song" is a fragment of a Hebrew drama, and that the Book of Job is merely the translation of an Arabian ro maace. 12. Ms bifida' few Plain Statements,. designed to show that a merely negative skapti. clan is the worst curse which can befall any mortal._ 13. The Age of Spirits: A Review of Spiritual Manifestations, which like a two-edger sword, cute both ways, both believers sod doubters. 15. The Building of the Continehts: A Record of the World Mr Six Hundred Million Years— showing that the world was formerly water, and that all continents and islands were built up by the natural produce of this clement, and after the manner in which we sec the work still going forward among the Coral Isles of the Pacific, A!!1/ LIGLITY including a paper by Baron Humboldt, *intro/ of "Cosmos," on the modon of the Solar Sya tem around the Central Sun , "Notes" of Prof, A ,;asbiz on "La Bare Burnable," and "Cosmo graphic Universelle" of Lecoutrier y "Geologi cal Researches iu the United State. and Cana— da.," by Charles It. S., &c. l'ili:qs $2 per annum, iu adauuce. Single number, 25 cents. tiulirriburi remitting $1 will recelvit onx Monthly six and the apocryphal New Tettinuent, or any other dollar 'took they may order. • Subscribers remitting $2 will receive one Monthly a year, the aforesaid Testament, and the lost book.' of blutal and dasher, or any $9 work:desired. Bank notes cnrreut where mailed reeelved at par. Address BARRINGTON & CO., Publishers, 11ar.16,'59.-31. No. 335 Broadway, N. r. SELECT SCHOOL Markiesburg, Huntingdon Co. Pa WILL OPEN for the reception of male and female pupils on TUEdI/AT, APRIL 19, 18119 and continue twenty-two weeks. The School will have the advantage of a fall set of Pelmn's Outline Maps, together with various approved mathematical Nod philosophi cal apparatus. Particular attention will he given to those who ore desirous of becoming TRACUERII. Lec tures on the "Art of 'reaching," &c., will be delivered by the County Superintendent and other educators. TERMS:—Prom $4,50 to so ; oo—one•hxlf rxyxWe in advenoe, the reinuintiot at the imiddle of the session: MARK.I.Eoncoo is pleasantly situated on the nut Broad Top Railroad, eleven miles a,mtli m . Huntingdon, is a quiet and or. dent> , community, and a healthy neighborhood. For further information apple to A. B. BRUM BAUGH, Principal, JANES CREEK, Huntingdon Co., Pa. References Albert Owen, Co. Supt., Huntingdon. A. W. Benedict A: Wm. Colon. •• Mr. Henry McKibben, Alexandria, Mr. Milton 11. Sangree, McConnellatown, J. H. Wintrode, M. D., Marklceberg. Mar.16;59.-3t.. JOHN A. MP. ABBEY & NEFF. No. 3118 N. TIIIRD ST., (3 doors above Vine.) PHILADELPHIA. TIRE OLD HARDWARE STAND, EBT.te Ll9ll F.D TWENTY-POOR TEARS. Ell - 111Y DESCRIPTION OE BUILDING Mechanical, Farming and Household Hard ware, is now in store, and will be offered at the lowest market prices, to Cash and prompt Six months buyers. Nails at Manufacturers prices for CilSll. Orders from new customers will receive strict and accurate attention and all oods sent from this house will be as represented. WCountry merchants, on their next visit to our city to make their Spring purchases are car dirtily invited to call and examine our Stock and Prices before Purchasing. Mar,9:59,3m. 40 auaangottn. THE subseitiber has commenced the GUM SJUTHUG business at l'ine Grove, Cert. tre county, where he it. prepared to manufacture and repair Guts and Pistols of every descrip. tion, with 'wetness and dispatch. He will also attend to repairing CLOCKS. Prices to suit the times. Do c. 22,1858.—tf. JOHN H. JACOBS. N EVI WATCH & JEWELRY STORS. J. N. DETUIER, WATCHMAKER & JEWELLER, Respectfully informs the citizens of Hunting. don, vicinity, and the surrounding coun try, that ho hoe commenced business in 9: the room adjoining M. Straus' Store, in • btAItKET SQUARE, HUNTINGDON, and. - hopes to receive a shore of public patronage. WATCHES and CLOCKS repaired in the best workmanlike manner. Ills stock of WATCHES and JEWELRY as of the beet, all of which he will dispose of as reasonable prices. . . The public generally are roqueeted to give him a call uud examine his stock. Diar.9,'s9. - %2VANT3EIrIi WHEAT AND CORN wanted at this office. Those having either sae dispose of the s.aie by oellini cock,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers