of the latter, and cut short about four in ches of the former, with the keen edge, sword of persuasion. My dear youni damsels, it is said that the angels of hea ven only, whisper, in their walks mid the al, . lent paths of Paradise, and why ilun't you' take a pattern after them, in whose late• ness you were created, and whose attri butes you possess, with the exception ofi that restless and never to•be•tirest otti• member—the tongue? It is a sin, a shame and pity, that so many of our ladies both old and young, are adicted to such ex• cessive talkativeness— that they are so inclined to gad about, telling things which ought not to be told, And leaving untold those things which ought to be There is tio doubt in my mina bat a strong cup of tea contains a vest quantity of the ammalculm of scandal ; and those who drink the deepest from it are the most given to gossiping. Old maids, for in stance, will drink bohea, of sufficieut sub stance to float a pin, and they can breed mote misquitoes about town in a single clay, than the swamps of l o ouisiana can in a month. Perhaps my friends, you may say there is no use in my preaching thus, for if a woman's tongue is made longer by nature, site can be guilty of no fault, but only subjected to a misfortune. I, don't mean to blame her for what she can't help—an occasional overflow of loquaci.. ty ; but I want to give her a good dose of admonition with respect to what she talks, and how she talks. She must recollect that words are as slippery as live eels and when they have once carelessly es• caped, they may east their slime on the white frock of reputation, ere they can be overtaken and captured. Slander that has been gathered by degrees, like a slow thunder cloud, bursts up at ie climax of its blackness, and unwonted sunshine im mediately succeeds, yet still it casts a gloomy shade for a time over life's happy hours, and threatens destruction, though it may accomplish but little, My dear hearers—although men's ton gues are shorter, in proportion, than those of women, and are slower in their move• meets, yet I believe they are capable, of doing much harm, and are often vulgarly,' sinfully and - vainly employed. They are levers in the mouths of many, that assist them in putting out oaths as big a bushel basket, and as horrible as they are bulky. Some men's tongues are constantly coat ed with the thick scum ofvice—others are only stained with tobacco juice and treachery—while a few there are kept perfectly clean by the pure and adultet. ated saliva of truth and virtue. 0, my dear friends, one and all I pray you keep a tight rein on that furious charger, the tongue lest it break loose in the wild-! erness of unrestraint and dash your vehi cles of happiness down the precipice of perdition, pitching hope's golden treasures into the dark ocean of de-pair. And oh, ye mothers look into the mouths of your prattling babes, and see wether any symp toms of tongue-ail are beginning to be developed. Watch over them steadily, and teach them to lisp the word of truth and sincerity ; for they may be called into eternity in their swadillings, and may cause a black mark to be set against your names in the book of life. Yes, the very cradles in which they are now sleeping may turn out to be coffins on rockers, soon to be overspread with the white man tel of death. My hearers—having shown you about half the length of my tongue, the whole of woman's and the tip of man's in getters al, I have not!Ong more to say; excepting that we shall all soon be obliged to hold our tongues in the silent sepulchre, be yond which we may indulge in some de lightful cogitations --but not talking. So mote it be TnE NEW CABINET,yIie Madisonian of Saturday states that much speculation has existed upon the subject of the aps pointment of the lion. John C. Spencer, to the post of Secretary of NVar, in place of Judge McLean, declined, and adds that the President has selected for that important pOst the lion. John C. Spencer,, of New York, and that Mr. Spencer has accepted the office. The Cabinet of President Tyler is now reorganized and completed, and is equal in every point of view, if not superior, to the Cabinet of any Administration since the Presidency of Washington. As recomposed, it stands thus; Secretary of State, Daniel Webster, of Massachusetts. Secretary of the Treasury, Walter Fen ward of Pennsylvania. Secretary of War, John C. Spencer, of New York. Secretary of the Navy, Abel P. Upshur, of Virginia. _ Attorney General, Hugh S. Legare, 01 South Carolina. Postmaster General, Charles A. Wick life, of Kentucky. FATAL ACCIuENT.--On Saturday, as Master John Dayton Halms, son of Capt. John Holms, of Harlem, New York, was riding on horseback, near the railroad, at that place, the horse suddenly took fright, and throwing his rider, started off at full speed. The foot of the unfortunate boy hanging in the stirrup, he was dragged for about a quarter of a mile along the road, his head striking the ground repeatedly with great violence. The horse was stop ped by a colored man, and Master o Holins extricated, but he lived but a few mo- ments after being carried away. From the Philadelphia S. Chronicle. From the Philadelphia Inquirna From the U. S. Gazette. Proclamation. a stone basement story, and a small sta. ble thereon erected, and numbered 1 in • THE REOHNT RAIL ROAD ACOUSET ... Suicide ot Daniel C. Payne. • McLeod. the plan of the northern liberties of said 'fhe Romani Democrat of Thursdin even- We learn from the New York papers ing states that six more of the wounded, VAW ted dated at Huntingdon, the 13th tam ough• that Mr. Daniel C. Payne, th e late lover ey the recent Rail Road accident, have i this is McLeod has been acquitted, and en WHEREAS by a precept to me direc iy of August, A. D. one thousand eight Seized, taken under execution, and to ,if Mary C. Rogers, was found on Friday died, and that where remain in avu dun-(charge front in Canada. Under ~ . Icharge front Judge Gridley, the jury re• , tindred and forty-one, under the hands be sold as the property of Levan Culli- lafternoon, "near the place where the bmly genius butte. The accident, it is now turned with a verdict of "riot guilty " odi seals of toe Hon. G. Vk . Woodward ‘„ . .HLSO, a rt' that ill-fated lady was found. From stated, occurred in consequence of the!" e rejoice at this, because we did not 'resident . 9f the Court of Commtp Pleas, ` A . Inc of ground situate in the new kuow in these times what might be sale >yer and 1 erminer, and general jail deny the evidence adduced before the Cur. nun receipt, by the conductor of the down- ry of the 4th judicial district id Pennsyl- town plot of the borough of Hollidayss Leou boner's jury summoned by Justice Merrit ward train of cars, of au order clangine or done. We had no idea that Mc , composed of the counties ot Mifflin, burg, fronting sixty feet on the north side • of Secaucus; it is said there was no (limb, the time ot starting, it having beer hate- ' could be proved guilty, because, though luntingdon, Centre, Clearfield, anti Jana- of Mulberry street, and extending back at that Payne had committed suicide. It is ed to another person by mistake. he may have twenty times declared that,„ ~, , and the lion. Joseph Adams, and right angles to said street 180 feet to Strii . wherry alley, and numbered 174 in lie was present at, and participated in, John Kerr his associate Judges of the also stated there were important papers 'Elie Boston Atlas says : might countyof Hentin don justices assigned, au the said new town plot, having an unfin- found in his pockets which it is thought 'lt is repotted that Mr. Warm died the destruction of the Caroline, and . g , may shed some light on the perpetrator yesterday morning. He was firmet•ly 1 -tit . t brick thereon is a IA•o s ory • house erec- ; ',Hi_ ken, and presentments mader even have sworn to it, we knew very well pointed to hear, try, and determine g all and that, after the little eclat of such a g of the murder of the lady to whom Payne conductor of the steamboat train to Nor- or ta for or concerning all crimes, w hich tett- was betrothed—also that four persons are wich—subsequently clerk of the steam- by the laws of the State are made capital or Seized, taken under execution, and to fication had passed off, lie could assert, swear, and prove to the contrary. line c .i, f elonies of death and all other offences, he sold as the property of Hugh Kelly. implicated in the murder of the girl." boat Worcester. The N. Y. Courier remarks, that onßy last evening's cars from Springfield, land, too, ' has been blustering for some crimes and misdemeanors, which have been ALSO, A.' "Mr. Alfred Crommelin's examination be; we are informed that a Mr. Breyer, of time in great ignorance of the relations of or shall be committed or perpetrated within of land inA h' fore the inquest, he stated that Payne Westfield, and a child of Mrs. Blood. our national and state courts, and, i as the said county, or .41 persons which are or A tractsituate Antes towns ip shall hereafter be committed or be per p, l'untingiloti county, bounded on the North ' , sides usual, with disregard to all kind: . a was a dissipated man, and that he hail g ood, yesterday morning.:l- ' ts ' traced for crimes aforesaid-1 ~m Comm nest, and South by land of Edward Bell, cautioned Mary against marrying him. " t'lie three persims killed, there are fifteen ded to make oe the North East by land of David Ren aud we did not know when she might um- 1, 'let on hearing of Mary being missing, that have limbs broken, and are otlerwise Pubic Proclamation, e iv, and on the south East by the Forge dertake to visit some of our seaports wit he called at het mother's and found Payne seriously injured, and it was the opinion Throughout m wle t• ar tolA. R. Craine and Christain E. a hostile fleet, and make us "resolve" that .1:. aine, containing seventy acres more or there, win' immediately left the house, of the physicians that three of these would our country ought to be defended. isi One bailiwick, that a Court et Over aid T. and that on his (Crornmelia) expressing not survive long. Mr. Denby, of Rich- cause of war has ceased with the d• nis• miner, of moon at P t l e as c a i zd a tii i i::; , t c er ii, S tl • 4 , , -. about fifty of which are cleared, and sal of McLeod. Whether the other !ate- 'sinus, will b his surprise at Payne 's sudden departure, mono, Va., was very badly injured. Rev. gh of Hurititr . gdon, cm the ste;.;id IVI, r, good state of cultivation having thereon ahe mother said he had gone to endeavor I. N. Clark, of this city, log house two stories high, weather was mow , abonds on die line can place us in a rand- " lay and Bth day dif November to discover what had become of Mary. those very much injured.' . 1 " tar predicament, we know nut — we know those who will prosecute the said p • nsoners, hoarded and painted white, with a kid!). We find that we also remarked at that that they would like to do it. The New be then and there to prosecute them as it err thereto attached, arid a frame barn. time on the singular fact. that Payne had From the Correspondent of the N. Y. Sun. York Courier arid Enquirer thus remarks ' shall be just, and that all Justices of the Al so a small apple orchard thereon. not been to see tire body of the girl to GREATS I'ORM AT U FICA. upor. the event: Peace, Coroner, and Constables within the ALSO, t vellum he was affianced, or taken any . said county be then and there in their pro- This city and its vicinity were ydstere We congratulate the country upon the per persons, at 10 o'clock A. M. ot said day, One a ntl of ground situate in the town P ains even to y i her remains a decent • • • withtheirrecords, inquisitions, examinations clay (Friday) visited by the most severe • acquittal of McLeod, not because we con- of idg in Antes township con burial."and remembrances, to do those things which ta i, • - • ' b • and extraordinary hail storm I ever wit- cider the case of that individual of conse• ling about one fourth of an acre, ring The inquest in the case of Payne, the (pence as it regard's him as an individual, their offices respectively appertain. o f situate on the North East side of the tressed, or that has occurred here at . any lover of Mary Rogers, returned a verdictt d b• d tl► • t " ire within . , the recollection of primitive August. in the year of our Lord one inane ,an nutn et e im y six in of "Death with congestion of the brain"— though it is in to look upon it Dated at Huntingdon, thelath day P even in that light with any degree of ley setters of the city. Indications of a se- ity, thousand eight hundred and forty-one, the pof said Town, having a two story brought about by exposure and irregularis and the 65th year of American Indepen log House, weather boarded and painted vere shower began to exhibit themselves whatever may be his personal cheese ty of living, incident to anerration of mind. ter, but because it puts at rest one of the dente. white and a kitchen and a well of good from time east between 2 and S P. N. , JOSEPH SHANNON, Sleff. The New York Express says that among water thereon, whichpremises have been in the space of half an hour the entire lior an:l ' principal grounds of difficulty between the papers found on his person were the used as a tavern stand. izon clianged its complexion, from ' brit- L. don, Oct. 18th, 1841. S two great countries, each ot which has Sheriff's Office, Huntieg- 1 following lines, written in pencil: run eat reasons in remaining a the st 1 • ' • ALSO, liant sunshine to the darkness of the with one another. We rejoice in ---- peace . One other lot of ground situate in the "To the Pl orld:—Hcre I am on the blackest thunder cloud. After a prelim-• th a, too, because it frustrates the projects *poi; foil forgive niP fur my misfortunes inary flesh of lightening or two, "the win- ProclP'mal ion. said town of Oavidsburg, bounded wester. of such creatures as M'Kenzie. and (if in my mispent time." lows of heavertopened,' and then descend ly by the said lot numbered ihirty six :possible) the still more contemptible vag, WHERE AS by Precept to me direc above deecribed beingnumbered thirty ed such a fall of hail as was indeed serious It is to be regretted also that in achli• abondisin of Sutherland and his assoct- ted by the Judges of Common Iwo in the plan ot said Town, lying below riot upon. Not a stone fell that was rtes' tion to the loss Payne hind sustained bywho have had no other means of Pleasof the countyof • • as large as a hickory nut, and but. ~ ~;, „. , • . ..., . II untingdoa heti and adjoing the last shove described lot the death of Miss - Rogers, he was also sus-from the disgust which their 1 w exceeded the size. Tine almostper. escaping ing test the 20th day of August A D. of to•ound on the biertherlw side of the peeled by some as the murderer, and was .e .. i cowardily conduct on the frontier has in- 1841, 1 ant comniantled to make Publ • wain street in SARI town containing one f t n ' •t fth 'was the great- u ammt y o eir size great taken to the Police and interrogatedspired, but the fiendish prospect of em- Proclamation throughout ray whole bell- f ,uriti of an acre, havin largef • g a tame anti eat wonder about the storm ;yet the tre. touching his last interviews with her,broiling two great nations in war. All wick that a court if C Pleasit i ommon Y i at bl e thereon erected'. :ALSO. mendousness of the fall was almost (debt the occupation of his time on the Sabbath d is• el th • • ' . they have to o now to min en• own be held at the court house, in rite borotrge one tither lot of ground situate in the fur. There was but little wind e(th of herdleath. All this he satisfactorily ac-business, and go to work at some honest of Huntingdon, in the county of Hunt a 'd Town of Davidsburg adjoining a lot f•t t I not unprotected e time, cot una e y, oran counted' for ; and was by the police magis-empluynient. ingdlon, on the third Monday and 15th .1 or Charles Cornmesser, on the Easterly left• glass would have been in the trates exonerated from ail suspicion. Pa" 0f...,.. November, A. D. 1841, for the trial of . de, and lot numbered thirty two in said eiretern windows of a sin house in the Still he was suspected by some in word's . • five ale/*, the fall R o le AND issues in said court ID perhaps minutes EI• II AND THE isALLOWS.— iese twin T 1 •which remain inn - town, on the Westerlyside,h • eying an audible to his ear, which suspicion drove cit y . determined befor e the said whenlle • between, bated, the wind chopped round the north, exterininaturs of hunian.existence, have . Judges a y containing one fourth of an the dagger still deeper into his soul, and and where all l weirs, Witnesses and siii- arie enclosed with a fence, and numbered I he hail lay on the ground to tee again Fridayr at Portsmouth, Virgi aided in the overthrow of his tottering an i - t mind' in his melancholy death. It is t 1 two or three *heed present lv, net. Do tlep h o .. last (hut' ne ro that at ,g tore in the trial of all said issues are re- 2b in the plan of said town. timed to attend. ALSO, . strange, however, that those who saw him however, the storm resumed its fury, and tempted to MU ' • der Mrs. Litiebest and q -- - Date,, at Huntingdon the 201, day et One other lot of ground in said town of a wanderer about the woods and walks of t he north pelted us quite as fiercely as the Mrs. Cooper, was hung upon a gallows sup, A. ,-,,, ... . Aug, A. te. one •nousand eight lea,. itivelsburg on the southerly sidle of the Hoboken, hatless, haggard, and w in,„„, east had, and for thrice the length of time erected in the r, ar of the town. We d an,l lortv-mie, and the 65thi MHO street in s • aid town, bounded on the money, food or lodging, should not have • • Norf . lk 11•Tald, that the d . year —leaving on the ground three or four in- learn from the r‘-' . .., endeavored to relieve and rescue him from kmencan inde entienee. ches of hail. In the course of some twen- culprit, while in jail, made a free and furl • i p sou,. west by land of C. E. Craine, and JOSEPH SHANNON, Sit, rl, on i lie easterly aisle by land of Frederick death, rather than lo gaze with idle curl- ty minutes, however, the hail gave way to confession to the benevolent clergymen rain, which continued falling se hour or of Portsmouth who visited him while inn- • Shet iff 's office 11 • unting ? R, imy containing one fourth of an acre, osity upon his bewildered movements, anddon, Oct. 1801 1891. i enclosed by a fence and numbered thirty the ebbing§ of life a burl hen to its posses- more, melting and sweeping away the re- der sentence. He told that on the time seven in the plan of said town--Also a mains of the icy visitation. A vast quan: ...et' the crime, sole But such is the world, inhuman and • true land situate in Antes township lily, however, still retnains on the ground, _.e gone home to work, unf e elina-, when misery mosses its path Sheriff ' s Sales. atorWaid on the waters of I. duvet Ron, with a prospect of more rain. ...g gut a dram or two, he felt dif -Peace'to the ashes of Payne, anal may Joseph Holland, Benja his death, and his beloved Miss Reeves, II derently . disposed, and kept 'knocking NI I. virtue of ....i.l•v wr i ts I L ee o,.i a jeinine lands ot v • . __ F . 0 in n R. ' . 71 orlon and others containing four about' in Church street; and while ~ carry a pang to the bosoms of the murder- THE USE OF LEARNING. I _._ • eendiredi and thirty three acres more or lets, and compel them to confess their I so, litter rig about one acre cleared there. guilt. ore, with a sawmill, a one and a half story frame house anti stable thereon erected. Seized, taken under execution, and to be -old as the property of Christain E. raine. ALSO, t tract of land situate in Antes town• -. ,j, aforesaid, adjoining lands of Ed. wa ~ Bell, Samuel Royer, John lienclay, 1., ii, -tomb ne Co. and others, and the te ei of Davidsburg, containing sixty a I -s ne the same more or less, of which twenty acres are cleared, having e :. ted thereon a four fire forge in good .. ,r, a saw-mill, two dwelling houses .d• of a half story high, and a black al', shop. Also one other lot of ire ,1 st , uate on the south side of the in a -trd et in the said town of Devia te , adjoining a lot of John Frigart on westerly side, James llunter on the ,terly side having thereon erected a e -tory log house, a kitchen, a frame bid., a ware house, and a spring house, erre other out buildings, with a well of ri et water thereon, containing one fourth Sri acre and numbered ten in the plan i ,aid town. Also one other of ground trate in the said town of of Davidsburg. •-n the southerly side of the main street. iljoining a lot of Abraham Shoup on the we-terly sidle and adjoining on the East eriy erile lot numbered thirty in said town. 'raving a dine and a half story log house, eeh a stone chimney, thereon erected, -lid numbered twenty pia in the. plan of the seal town. Also one dither lot of „round situate in the southerly . side of tbe main street in the town of Davidlsburg a nu esaid, adjoining lot numbered twenty six urn the Westerly side and lot numbere•l erirty four, 4111 the Easterly sidle, having a one and a half story house, thereon -.reeled, being numbered thirty in the plan of said town. Also one other lot of _round situate on the southerly side of the main street in the town of Davidsburg, aforesaid, adjoining lot number thie iv inn the NVesterly side, and land of John Ileticlay on the Easterly aide having a one i ed a half story lot house thereon erected, and numbered thirty four in the Plan of said town. Also one other lot of e mend situate on the Northerly . side of main street iii Davidsburg, adjoining a let of John Trout on the Easterly side, and a cross street on the west enclosed with 11 pest und rail fence, and numbered three in the plan of said town. seized, taken under execution, and 1 4, he sold as the property of Abraham R i Crane. dt Christen' E. Craine. Correspondence of the Tribune. 'ERRIBLE RAILROAD ACCIDENT Springfield, Mass., Oct. 6, 1841. GENTLEMEN :-A terrible accident oc carrel: yesterday on our Western Rail road, of which the following are the im portant particulars. The regular place of meeting for the up train, hence to Hudson at noun, and the down train from Hudson hither in the morning, is at Westfield, and the orders given are, if the up train reaches West field first, it is to wait 15 or 20 minutes, and then proceed cautiously to Chester; if the down train reaches Chester past its usual time, it is to wait there till the oth er comes up. The up conductor, Moore, says that he waited past the time at West field, and then proceeded, and as he was in a hurry to reach Hudson for the steam boat, probably, was incautious. Conduc tor Warren, of the down train, was some thirty minutes behind the time, and vio lated duty in leaving Chester. The collision was tremendous, both en gines and tenders badly injured, and the , cars of each train shivered all to splinters. i Foolishly, I might say crimminally, the baggage cars were in the rear of each train , (merely for convenience sake.) Had the baggage been where it ought, in front of the passengers, probably nu one would have been seriously hurt. The ladies' saloon of the down train DOW, Jr, was next the teniterand the shock was such 'that it was completely annihilated, and the tender driven in within three or four feet of its farthest extremity. But what is more wonderful, or rathet providential, none were killed. Conductor Moore, of the up train, was on the engine and jump. ed off scathless. Conductor Warren, of the down train, had jest stepped upon the platform, when he was caught and driven through the casing, and so injured that he will probably die. A Mr. Brewer, of Westfield, probably mortally injured. Very many others had limb, broken. One poor woman is said to have had both legs and both arms broken. Out of more than one hundred passengers probably more than half were injured, and more than a third seriously so. The loss of property is rudely guessed to be some $25,000 of 111,10,000. Nothwithstanding the force there was no recoil, and no starting of either train from the track. Our village is in a great state of excitement, and many feel exasperated at what they consider an inexcusable and unpardonable negligence, to say no more. The Newark (New Jersey) Daily Ad vertiser contains a letter from a grand mother, upon female education, having) especial reference to her grand-daughter. We copy the closing paragraph: ..You should encourage your daughter to talk over with you what she reads; and as you are very capable of distinguishing, take care that she does not mistake pert fully fur wit and humour, or rhyme for petry, which are the common errors of young people, and have a train of ill con equences. The second caution to be gi ven her, (and which is most absolutely ne cessary) is to conceal whatever learning she attains, with as much solicitude as she would hide crookedness or lameness; the parade of it can only serve to draw on her the envy, and consequently the must in veterate hatred of all he and she fouls, which will certainly be at least three parts in all of her acquaintance. The use of knowledge in our sex, beside the amuse. ment of solitude, Is to moderate the pas sions, and learn to be contented with a hall expense, which are the certain e tect of a . studious life; and it may be pre ferable even to that fame which men have engrossed to themselves, and will not sutler us to share." The conclwling portion of the above quotation is admirable. We wish it could be made a "rule of action in families.— The writer of such a letter, if she is for• tunete enough to cause her precepts to be curried into practice, deserves the int mor tality ol Grandmother Lois, mentioned in the scriptrue.--U. S. Gazette. From the Baltimore American of yesterday. DIRLADFUL A ccincarr.—On Saturday I afternoon last, five lads, between the ages of twelve and fifteen years, were playing about a sand bank a short dis tance from the city on the Bel Air road, whetithe bank gave way and buried three of them under it, from which they were not extricated until they were dead. It appears that the three went into the pit and endeavored to throw down the bank by loosening the earth with sticks. Ihe two who were on top saw the earth giving way, and warned their companions of their danger, but before they could retire the earth fell on them. Assistance was immediately procured, and the bodies taken out after a lapse of about forty minutes, but all exertions to restore life were unavailing. One of the diseased lads was a son of Mr. Janice FI , ming an-' I other the son of Mr. Charles Grimes, and , the third a son of Mr. W. F. Bukee, all residing in or near North Gay street. ning of the day lie committed the crime, he intended to have gone home to work, but having gut a dram or two, he felt dif ferently disposed, and kept 'knocking about' in Church street; and while in a grocery in which he was taking some more brandy, he saw the two woman. Mrs LamLert and Mrs. Cooper making pur chases, and they had a great deal more money than what they laid out. The 'l iquor he drank he supposed, put it into his head to follow them out of town and rob them of their money when they got, into their cart and set oft' to go home, he found himself following them until they reached the place where he committed the assault. He said the devil seemed to prompt him to do what he did, and alter he had struck down the women he went and hid him• stilt in the woods, but he was troubled in his mind, and felt so much "ashamed" (his own expression) that he came out in to the road again intending to give lum ina up, when four men came up to him, and he let them take hint. he said he had partly made up his mind to resist them, but seeing them armed, he thought it best to submit. This conlession he repeated under the I All - eglietty street, and extending h .. i. ga llows, to the immense crowo which sur right angles to said street, 180 b•, , rounded hits, prefacing it with the lolluw- I Strawberry alley, the , atue b.•iuir nu ing warning—`•You see tne here, and I ' beret! in the said town pl. Ii • i• will tell you what brought Inc here, it vas two story brick lion,. and a ~ :MI ruin! " And he concluded his simple building thereon erected. statement of the particulars of his crime, Seized, taken tinder exe,•i i ti o h, by admonishing the colored people to take be sold as the property of John \I all warning from his example, to avoid the deceased foul fiend alcohol, and all violation of the laws ..., , aship, _intit., lit, of John Waggoner deed., lands of 11,,,. Mum:lEn TRIAL.—We have received don county, adjoining lands of the the report of a murder trial recently clo sed at Salem, N.J., in which a man on . Jackson dec'd., lands of Joint's A. Sal' on six acres, be the saute more or less, ;thou tiled William Cain was convicted of our- and others, containing one hundred an dering a girl named Caroline Hull, two story log house and a log barn tiler, the night of the first of January last, and sixty acres more or less cl..ai ed, Navin. burying the body in a wood. As ,he ev idence was circumstantial, the prisoner so erected. was sentenced to fGurteen years solitary Seized, taken under execution, and I confinement in the State Penitentiary.— be sold as the popery of John Mc \lam Since the close of the trial, Cain has pub- gal. lished what is called a confession, but he ALNO, denies that he ever killed the girl. He 0 All that (*rime tailor shop, one and a was, it seems, a very intemperate man, half story 111 1, ;ironic tin lot No. 146 n and on the night the girl was murdered the new town plot of the borough of Hot lie accompanied her stone distance, but so litlitysburg, being tot-lye feet on Junin . beastly intoxicated was he at the time street, and extending back twcniy t. e that he could not give any account of f ro n t said s t reet• either himself or the unfortunate girl.— Seized, taken utpler execution, and !o 'flits is another warning to all inebriates. be sold as the property ofJoltii 11. Hughes. —Messenger. A LSO, All the right, title and interest of the defendant in a lot of grouml situate in ill, northern liberties of Hollidaysburg. Iron ring sixty feet on the east side of Juniata street, and extending bark at right ingles to said street, 170 feet to Shull alley, ad joining a lot of C. Garber on the north west, having a two story frame house with LEISURE Houss.—ln what way can your leisure hours be filled up so as to be of greater account, than in profitable rea dingl the study of useful books for those (rang amusements which insiduously lead the unwary into the paths of profliga cy and vice! Sheriff's Sales. v virtue of smolt.y writs of Leant, Faczas and Vedditloni 1.1 , pow , issued out of the Court of Common Plea of Huntingdon county, a n d to me three ted, will be exposed to pohlie sale at the Court House in the Borough of looting don, on Monday, the Bth day of Novem her next, the following property. yet: All that certain frame building one stn. ry and a half high, Preen-id and sttuatrd a lot of ground in the town of liayspor in said county, on the north siiti• th, turnpike road leading front Plidadeli.i to Pittsburg, and hooti-!eil in, the el , lot of Gutter di ta the we s t . lot of Jacob Foust, and on the north Ii land of John McCahan, and being sixt feet in front, at.d - hundred - fet back, and known in general plan of sai town of Gaysport as lot No. 91. Seized, tak• a under expiation, awl be sold as the property of Philip Sr, • ALSO, A certain lot of ground situate it. old town plot of the bte,o,th of Holl•d burg, tronting 60 feet out the south si ALSO, The undivided hall part of a tr." ; land situate in Barre. ,wnsli' JOSEPH SHANNON, Sheri", Sherift's Office, Hunting. den, Oct. 18th, t 641.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers