Criknt. ALTOONA, PA. fBUBSDAY, JULY 1, 1888, parties are unknown to rule for - mrhio VMtUre payment inad?aDce»ofa«oar»nt*©from tbMMVIjj Nwowu It ii tbereToro Osclees (dt ul itfch to tend I rn i U\\i to p&y at tboend of three or fit* 'Mlttli idTtfriiiei&vzftD afo accompanied witli the wtkifiher 01&, flVe or tea dollars, we will giro the •tortaMr the tt£tt fceCcfH of cosh rates. No Next Week.—No paper will he issued from this office next week. Beaton why, we wish to enjoy the pleat* ifcMt of the coining holiday, and desire sat those connected with ns should do tbemne. . fisHT&e Philadelphia papers, of Mon day, bring us intelligence of the death of Mfo of Philadelphia’s distinguished men— Hon. Bobert T. Conrad and Hon. Job B. Both died suddenly. see by the foreign news that trouble is apprehended between Fiance tod England. London Times inti mates that the French powers are prepar ing for an invasion of England. , Secretary of the Treasury in rites sealed proposals for slo,oooiooo stock dT the United. States, to be issued under |ot of the 14th of J ttne. It will beteimhunable in fifteen yearn ftom the fiiatnof January, 1859, and hear: interest at the rate of live per cent, per ranumn, piayablesemi-annnally. VamL ihe New York Sun says that, “ at areoeht meeting of 'stockholders in the i JlSw lYotk and Erie Railroad, a report. Was '■made by which it appears that the Company has lost ground to tiie tunc.of $400,064 during the last mx months.— Other items swell the drfofeiuy, in fill ing .to meet id: obligations,. to half a mUUoh.” . . Accident has nosed to tlw memmy of Franklin anappropriate monument.— The grave of the Philosopher is in a Philadelphia grave-yard, which is sur roundedhy a high wall, thegates through tthiofr kept looked.- Just over the grave npr the wires of Ihm tetegraph fines, thkii giving to the dead, for a immnmeht, thfr lightning whan living he tamed: l^jwnrarr June nomber of this valuable publi cation is before .ns. Thfc work is re-pub lished in .this cqntttiy Scott & Co., ofNow - Yorit,: and Jr finpnbhod at the lof price of $B,OO per year. , sTith the July number commences a new volume, hence this is a* good, time for those who deare anrealiy good substantial periodical to subemdbe/ 1 A^r® BB 88 slx>ve. ia n Bwbedations. —Reports ftpy Dacota territory states thottheTonk-. ton Indians, three thousand in number, were Mmmittitg depreciations along the- Minnesota rivcir. The cause is said to be that annuities how due, hare not been paid by the Government.— They, therefore, intend to recover their lands and drive the whites away. They hffre already destroyed a number of towns and plundered an emigrant train. The settlors are concentrating at Minnesota Fails, preparatory to defensive operations. •QU A gentleman in this place, a few days since, received a letter from a friend in'Utikh, at Fort Briefer, May 17th, in which he States that they have very < pleasant weather with the exception of a mew storm occasionally, which last for two or three days. He states also that sonond Horhxons have left Utah with the’ intention of coming to the States, and tho northern settlements are abjaidnnrd and the people concentrating in the south. They are hauling off all ihegopds they posssibly can and are cash iering the balance. • Even the new “Tab-- emaole” is leveled to the ground, the cut stone all buried and everything disposed in some way. How the affair will end he says no one attempts to conjecture. He odOSiders Brigham and the leaders of the church regular Yankees, who are playing a 1 very good trick upon the Johnny Bulls, Welch and Scotch, whir compose the laboring class of the community. He mates that Dr. Forry, Superintendent of Indian Affairs, has succeeded'in effecting a treaty of peace between the Snakes and Atls tribes, and that they have promised ■ wremain neutral in the present difficulty between- the G>overnmcnt and the Mor mon*. He says that their last mail from the States came through in forty-seven days. "Fast traveling, that. An Exciting Trial at W. Arleana The trial of George W. Harby—an old and respectable citizen ofNcwOrieans, and a veteran teacher in the public schools for over a quarter of a century—for the killing of Charles H. C. Stone, (a native of Virginia,) a young man of previously irreproachable character, and a junior member of one of the largest and moat re spectable mercantile houses in that city, took place on the 18th ult. The lulling grew out of the charge that Stone had se duced the daughter of. Harby, and then refused to marry her.- The trial seems to have created intense excitement, and the court room was thronged with an anxious multitude. The defence admitted the kil ling, but contended that, under the cir cumstances, it was justifiable. Miss Caroline M. Harby, the daughter, who had been seduced, was among the witnesses on the trial. The Orescent uys} ■ She was neatly dressed, disclosing a graceful, rather small figure, and Was close ly veiled. After receiving the oath she took her seat in the elevated chair, still veiled. Mr. Moise told her politely that it would be necessary for her to raise her viei). She raised^.her■ heavy brown veil which hid herfime, leaving a black ; lace vjeil sti|l hanging. Her face, however, could be plainly seen.. She was verypale, hut very resolute looking, jin reply to the questions of Mr. Durant she gave her an swers in ia dear and firm voice,and in lan guage which proved her to have received the education of a My. Upon being.asked by Mr. Durant, in a manner asdecorous as the case would al low, if Stone had net seduced, and if he was not the lather cf her child, her firm ness deserted her. She bowed over the arm ,of- the chair and uried and sobbed bitterly. Herfafcheralao gave way, and the feeling spread among the spectators, jurors and everybody. We never saw so touch silent weaping in any crowded as sembly as there was on this occasion, whilst the father and daughter sobbed to gether. The scene lasted several min fites. | The main points of her testimony are embraced in the remarksof Mr. JDurant. Sheswore positively to the seduction, and Stone’s promise to many her, and his subsequent refusal to comply with, his promise. j The prosecution having introduced two witnesses who swore that they had had K’nal intercourse with Miss Harby, and he had asked Stone for money, she jnas recalled to the stand. She mounted the steps firmly, and lasted of seating herself,Btood op, raised her right hand, mid, in a clear, brad voice, which fell with electric force upon the breathless assem blage, said: . | K Before Almighty d, and by all my hereafter, I do solemnly swear, that what these men have sworn about me is her foot.) If ten thousand lives depended on it f it it ffU/qlte ! I don’t see how any man could come here and talk that way about me be fore my father, and— ’ L Here she feel into the chair, and gave way .to a hysterical fit of weeping andsob hing. The court was foirly stunned by ; jher. vehemence, and the dramatic force of jthe scene. Upon recovering herself, Miss iHarby stated that itwasfalse that she had ever apked Joseph Stone for money. lie had professed great sorrow for her dis tresses, and hhd offered the money to her, |and insisted on her taking it. She had .written him notes to .eome and see her, ibutahehad never asked fom for money. She never had criminal intercourse with janyonehnt Oharies Stone. ‘ | The case pas sufoakted to the jury withbdt argument, mid in a few minutes .returned a verdict of - u not guilty.” The jrcsnlt produced a scene seldom witnessed jin snob a place. Cheer after cheer re i sounded through the building, and the ■indignant remonstrances of the -judges, laud the vigorous exertions of the deputy i sheriffs failed to quiet the enthusiasm,— -The demonstrations were renewed outside the court room until Mr. Harby succeed ed in getting away from his friends and | driving off in a carriage with his daughter. Oub National Best. —On the •!Ist of July next,' says the Washington Star, the debt of the United States will amount to about $65,000,000, including the loan of $20,000,000 recently authorized by Con gress. Taking into consideration the present state of the Treasury, and the probable extent of receipts during the ensuing year, it is improbable that any payments will: be made until after the fiscal year, ending July, 1859. In the meantime, however, the peaceful termina tion of the Mormon imbroglio, and the probable amicable adjustment of the diffi culties with England, will save the coun try a very large expenditure, the necessity of which we apprehended up till nearly the close of the session of Congress. Decrease ui Population.-— lt is mentioned as one of the incidents of the disastrous result of last year’s commercial revulsion, that the New York city directory, joist issued contains 4,000 names less than it contained in 1857 This falling off indicates a much greater loss for only the heads of families and persons en gaged in business as permanent residents are included in the count. It is the first year it is said, since the last war with England, that a similar result has been shown. A Peoposixioh to Cool the Cochituate.— We learn, says the Boston Pott, that a petition is to be presented to the city government that a ton or two of ice bo put into the Beacon' Hill re servoir every morning, in order that the people may be accommodated with ice water without farther expense. On the Fourth of July it is proposed' to throw i n a small cargo of lemo» an da kw hogsheads- of ram and sugar. TSfcATO SCBSOBft g§F»Beeadvertiiement of Boom for Bent, Is uother oolamn. lt is stated that ten thousand dollars are spent daily in New Fork for strawberries. tSf“ A portion of the troops originally des tined for Utah will be sent to Arizonia. IPg- James Powers was executed in Wash ington City, on Friday, 26th ult., for murder. Casper Mant:,Esq., late Sheriff of Fred erick county, Md., died last Wednesday. . Henry Frisby died at Wheeling, Tues day from drinking ice-w*ter while overheated. Flout made from new wheat, ground at Augusta, Ga., sold ha New York last week at oigfat doUars a barrel. g®» That agreeable llttle fiah, the sardine, Wnrod ln laiymmutiti#*, in Raotlmd, ofqnratsaadlitriebetringl.WhatnextT JQT The London Chronhde says the Mormon agents in England have stopped emigrating from Europe during tike pending fiedtiM. glgg. The Episoopal Convention of Sonth Car oKna has Toted its bishop six months holiday and 91,200 to take it with. g®~ Jean Baptiste Desfanges and Anna Belise were executed on Friday last, at Montreal, for the morderof Catherine Provost. _' g®“ It is said' that Chiu. Dickens, who has separated from his wife, allows her $2,000 per annum. g®* The Brooklyn City Directory for the present year contains 60,000 names, against 88, 000 last year. . MST A young man without money, among la dies is like the moon on a cloudy night—he can’t shine, ' respectable citizen and father of a family was lately arrested at Brussels, Belgium, for biting off a woman’s tongue. IQu A steam machine for manufacturing ice has been made by a London firm. The cost of the lee will be ten shillings a ton. £9“ New wheat from Georgia ins received in New York last week, and sold for $ 1 46 per busheL ’ BA>One hundred and fifty officers serving in India have tendered their resignation to Gen eral Sr Colin Campbell. $9" The practice of eating horse-flesh has of late years increased considerably in the north of Germany and Denmark. §9* A man has been recently discharged from the Connecticut State Prison, after an in carceration of 26 years, who has never seen a railroad. ; tSf* James McGee was executed on. Friday last, at Boston, for the murder of the deputy warden, Mr. Walker, in the Prison, eighteen months since.: IfljL. Tbe ; Texas papers contain glowing ac counts of the grain crops. The prospect was that there would be the largest yield of con ever known. $9" The Montour Iron Company’s property, at Danville, was sold at Sheriff’s sale last thors day, for slo3—subject to the' mortgages, which are estimated $«00;000. tSf* ‘ ‘ Excelsior, ’ ’ Dan Bice’s celebrated trick horse is dead. *The home fractured a Hmb in tolling from the stairs which he had ascended, inthe ring. 99* Some beautiful photographs of the meon hare lately been taken in Europe, through a large teleaeope, and on them the mountains, bills, and valleys of our satellite are pettoetiy portrayed; *»-Itis ourrentlyreported thatßuasol & Waddell, the Government contractors for trans porting the stores to Utah, have been offered half a million dollars bonus for their contract of this year* ; ; . 99* It ii rain to stick yourfinger in the water, and piling |t ont, look fur a hole; and equally rain to suppose that, however large a space you occupy, the world will miss yon when you die. 90U The national convention of teaebeta, profesaoraof Colleges, superintendent! of pub lic schools, end other friends of education, la to be held In Cincinnati, commencing on toe 11th of Augpsgtogt. ' . Cfdifirnia papers state that there Is good news ijcom all parts of the State in rela tion to. the prospects of the coming harvest, and srery aasorance of one of the greatest crops ever harvested in that State. BQuAn Ingenious novelty has jnst been brought ont on the North: Pennsylvania Bail* road, in the shape of a station indicator, which informs the passengers of the name, of the sta tion or place which the train may be approach ing. ’ '-T. 99* After a straggle of twenty-five 1 years, Ericsson hasleacceeded in bringing Ids hotair engine into practical use. Even the Scientific American, after denouncing It as for years, has at length been cosspeßed to ad mit its success. '"T';-’-."V " fift. The N. Y. Timet of the X9th states that the N. Y. Central has new reduced tore, on through passengers, to $2,40 from Buffalo to New York, which is considerably less than one cent per mile. The-London Daily Newt publishes an important letter from General Jacob, shoving that the attempt to hold India by the bodily power of English soldiers, without the aid of h native army, is utterly impossible. Middletown Journal (Pa.) says: Our enterprising friends, Messrs. McCrery Sc, Brother, are now sawing a bill of timber for Russia, to be used for building Goverment ships. Over 150,000 feet of timber has already been sawed in Middletown for that purpose. The London Court Journal rays there is now little dpubt, from the state of negotiations between her Majesty and Kine Leopold, of Bel gium, on the subject of a family alliance, that the affair will speedily be communicated to both bouses of Parliament. The largest auction sales of lands ever made in this; or perhaps in any other country, commences in Michigan bn the 2pti of July lh*y iqr?. denominated ''swamp fond*’? but three-fourths of them an probably egmd to the avenge la dm State. Thay wiß be sold in panda of from forty to aauthou-f sand or more acres, at priooa ganging from firo to fifty oetita per acre. New York IVibm* Insists tfastfhe population of that city Is now 900,000 souls ; that Brookly contains between 800,000 and 400,000, and 'that the other suburbs ambrac* sufficient to raise the whole metropolitan popu lation to 1,600,000 ; thoa making New York the second ei(y of the civilised world. The General Assembly of Presbyterians, recently In session in Chicago, has decided by a vote of 160 to 62 that divorces osinnot hagna|- ted unless adnltry be dearly shown, and that soy one marrying any person divorced for any other cause is himself guilty of adultry in a moral view fifths case. f® I 'Pretty good Prices.—A gentleman whlo lately came through from Salt Lake City, states that at Fort Bridger salt was selling at $2.60 per per pound;.bacon ss.per pound; flour $lOO per seek, and not over eighty-six pounds inasaek; tobacco $1.50 for “a good chew whiskey $25 per gallon, , ? 8®“ Water works at Cleveland, recently con structed will supply that city with watar by means of a reservoir 750 feet above the level of Lake Erie, into which the water Is drawn from the latter by two immense engines, costing $160,000, and capable of forcing 818 gallons at a stroke, making ten strokes a minute. B9u Hon. John J. Crittenden arrived at Cin cinnati on Saturday, and had a handsome recep tion. He was escorted to the Spencer House, where he was welcomed by the Hon. Thomas Corwin. Mr. Crittenden made an eloquent re sponse. He proceeded to Covington, Ky., the same evening, where he had another enthusias tic reception. 19" The printing of the thirty-third and thirty-fourth Congresses have cost the govern ment over $6,000,000. This sum would hate constructed fifteen or twenty first class steam sloops-of-war, or built three ‘hundred miles of railroad td the Pacific; yet the amount has been principally squandered in useless picture books. 19" The Emperor Nicholas of Russia, said the Americans were destined to become the armorers of the world!” The improvements in every class of arms which were submitted!to him by our ready and enterprising inventor*, •daring the Crimean war, elicited the admiration of military men, and led to very luge orders on our American mechanics. 19" There is a little stream which empties into the Shasta valley, California, about 20 miles west of the great butte, which possesses the singular property of inernsting everything which falls into its waters with a complete edat of atone. Flowers, leaves, grass, pine bnds, and things of that sort will become completely enameled in the coarse of a few weeks or so, retaining in the process their natural form. Wflt- At Milford, Mass., a boy. at work in one of the shoe shops in that place, recently found in an old mail bog which the proprietor of the shop had purchased to work into shoes, a letter which had been mailed at an office in Ten nessee, and directed to another place in the same State, and which contained four fifty dollar bills, a twenty, a ten, a five and a three; in all, $238. This firm has purchased several thousand, of these worn-out mail bags, and several other let ters have been found in them. Hard Turns is Kansas. —The Kansas Herald of Freedom gives a discouraging view of the times in Kansas. It says: “ Wo pity the man who is compelled to ra|sc money now; in Kansas. We were told by a money lender the other day, that be was receiv ing from ten to twenty per cent, per month for the use of money, and thirty per cent per month for discount notes. The lowest rates, on g<>od security, fox'the use of money seem to range be tween three and five per cent, per month;— Beninese in all our Kansas towns is nearly sbs pended. Men with twenty or twenty-five thou sand-dollars cannot sell property at any price to realize even a few hundred dollars. Beal es tate can be bought at ruinous rates, persons feeling compelled to sell to realize ready money, perhaps to save their credit. Hardly any branch of business is sustaining itself.” ! Firemen's Biot in Philadelphia— June 291 At midnight an alarm of fire occurred, and as theffremeh' were about leaving the ground, five or six pistol ehotis were fired by some onbin the crowd, and three men were seriously wounded. Samuel Carr, a director of Shiificr Bose, who was shot, in the forehead, died in a short time iifterwards. William Z. Bruster, a resident of Camden, while looking on, was shot In the back;’ he succeeded in reaching Second Chestnut greets, when he fell and was removed to the Hospital.': The Montgomery Hose Com pany are charged with tits outrage. Last even ing, ,as the last boat from Gloucester was ap proaching this oity, alight occurred. During the disturbance a young man named B. Neall, a saUmaker. Was stabbed twice in the breaei— The unfortunate young man died in a few iqin ntes. The murderer leaped overboard, and be ing picked np by a boat, escaped to shore. ! A Morbtxr MoRTAR.—A 'monster mortar has been tried at Woolrioh, Boland, successfully with 20 poundsof powder, thoogh itefullcbwge is 800 pounds. The shell is oneytydin diotoe ter/and Uncharged as it wos in the It tore up stones, and plied the earth as Mgh as a small boose, and filled the air within a radius of2oo yards with earth andatones, and roots of trees. The mobster is compounded iff wrough t and cast iron, in separate pieces, tightly lump ed together. At the fifth round the middle ting gave way partially, bad thus interrupted the practice; but it was successfully shown that it could throw a shell weighing a ton and aWf . WS9“ They have fohnd another snake in Cler mont county, 0. This time it was not cabght in a mill pond, but in the heart of a free.lhe Batavia sun vouches for it: ' - ! >: Mr. Richey, living on Bull Skill, cut down a Mulberry tree, and split it, and in thefaeartof it found a black snake. The jrood was sodnd where the snake waa lying, not room enough for it to turn round. From the growth of the timber it is supposed ’ that it bad boon there some fifteen years. The snake was six feel in length, blind, and had ho use of itself except its head. * r Sever Year FMH>D».--The western waters, a.l?™^ 111 ® Journal, were very high in 86 and 37. Seven years after in ’44, and in seven years again, in ’6l, and then in ’5B we hate a gnats flood. The superstition s can now exercise their talents upon the magical number mm We are told that the Indians of the West held such a tradition also of a seven year flood- * A ten hwtMns-i wrstdh ns—'iAis a?Ss tality. She hud left him for his cruel treatment, 1 anditnstitatedasuit for divorce «hd alimony «pin«t him. He watched her one day as she went with soother lady to pick strawberries, ««d followed her,— demanding that the suit should be withdrawn. He then threatened to km her, and drew a revolver, when the woman fa» company tied.- Horror-stricken, she promised to live With him. He replied by telling her that She was lying, and immediately fired at her— the ball grarifig her temple. She instantly sprang to him and begged for mercy. He refu sed. She than appealed to him to pray for her murderer. This boon was granted,' and a brief flm« spent in prayer for ber husband, children and herself. Arnold then grasped her with one arm. Inexorable to all her supplications for mercy, fired at her three times, each ball taking effect in the head. The face was most fright fOllyffisfighred by the wound, and powder from theplstoL Not content with this, the Incar nate fiend mutilated her perron' with a knife, and than piling brush upon left.the some.— Meanwhile, the woman who fled told the story, and Arnold was pursued end arrested at his mother’s house in the set of writing his will. Hokxibuc Cass or Uaninss is a Hoxsk. — On Sunday evening, Mr. Btimtyifieut to drive his horses into the stable, when one, that had hitherto been vary gentle, refused to eater the stable. After routing her about 1 until he was perfectly exhausted, he concluded to leave her in the yard. About midnight the neighbor* ;Wfra alarmed by an awful bellowing and and coming to the yard where the mare Was confined, found that she had attacked a calf in:to* yard, and had literally stamped it Jnfo the; ground. She had also bitten one or two cows, taxing as much as a pound of flesh ont of one. ' The men now succeeded in driving her into timetable, when she commenced tearing the flesh ftfim her own fore-leg, and stripped it completely off to the pastern-joint, if hen the owner, having procured a gun, put an end to the creature's misery.— Keokuk Pott, June 16. Stautuho Wosdkbs or THK TzLEOAAPH Should the Atlantic Telegraph be euooeufully completed, Europe, Aria, Africa, and America, will be brought into electric communication with each other, and a remarkable program will have been made towards the civilized unity of the hu man race. From there is tele graphic communication with New Orleans, dis tant 8,710 miles following the bourseof the wire, and, when the Atlantic cable is laid, di rect comm mutation can be obtained with Con stantinople, thus uniting the four continents. — It is calculated that a message leaving the Tur kish capital at two o’clock say loh Monday af ternoon, will reach New Orleant at six o’clock the same evening. The first message from (Don stantinople, direct, left on evening. May 2, at 11.45, and arrived in London at f 1.47 in the evening of the dame day* London time, beating the son nearly three boots. . . \ Sikqclab Phesojizkon.— A correspondent of the Jackson (Mich.) Patriot, writing from Tom kins, In that State, says that,, on the morning of the 24th of May, after a heavy rain the night previous, the ground was strewn with small fish; they were found one mDe beyond Busy’s gate, and extending half a mihj along the plank road. There were two kinds, mnst either have work, become a charge upon the counfry, or starve The Maybr and; others promised to do their best to devise some meth od fur their relief. It is said that only a day or two previous a' farmer applied tor laborers in Davenport, and offered fifty cents a day and b(?ard, and some of those starring men refused to accept the offer. I®, They have hot weather ra Australia.— The Sumpter (S. C.) Watchman, publishes the following extract from a. private letter dated Adelaide, February 18, 1858 : ; “J ean assure you we have btounearly roast ed alive; we have had ten dtys' and nights of the hottest weather' remembered: for several years past The heat at noonjin the shade was 136; deg. to 146 deg., iaoeordibg to situation, and during the night it was never less than 94 deg. to 106 deg., in doors. , The hut wind never ceased Mowing, and the inUniherahle deaths from eei«p do toleii have beto' appalling in the extreme. ■ ■■ ; :5 1 Singular Mistake.—A man named Swayno, who was sentenced to the Couuccticnt State prison for 10 years, tor aggravated assault, of which be has Served some two or three years, lately petitioned the Legislature; for a pardon. This'lhe Bena|atnre refused.; :<*be resolution rejecting thepfayerof the petitioner, wont to the Governor; yho approved it, but In the office of toe Secretary of State, a ribgnlar error oc curred* 1 JC certified copy of the resolution was made out by the clerk,’ relenting Svayne, and he/wa* discharged on Monday last. Whether this mistake can be corrected, and the man sent back to the State prison, is, to the opinion of the New Haven papers, •> question. 99" 0n the 20th nit, as Mir. John Camp and &m|ly, consisting of himself, wife and in fant, an|ilA daughter about 17 or 18 years old, were op their return home to Chamborabnrg, Pa., .fro to • Bunker meeting, the daughter was in stantly killed by lightning. The family was in a toe horse wapon, the young lady occupying a bind seat, and it is said her clothes were liter ally torp into shreds. Strange as it may seem, the other occupants of the wagon escaped with outsustaining any severe injury, although sc- Vttely stunned. The horse : attached to the Vtagon W&s prostrated by the shock, but after wards recovered. JXSu A young lady in Cincinnati, Miss Fanny lull, has recovered damages of $3,500 against one Vandergrilf, and other parties, for false im prisonment. She was confined for six months •n the Lunatic Asylum, thro’ the instrumental ity of the officers of the church to wIL-h she belonged, but was proved to be sane, and was then discharged. The suit has been tried three times. The first jury gave her n verdict of $lO,OOO. A new trial was had, and the jury failed to agree. The third time she was again successful, and this ends the case. Frauds os the Post-Office Since Monday morning last, over forty suspicious packages purporting each to bo “one newspaper,” have been overhauled by the clerks at our post-office hera, and found to contain contraband matter Collar patterns, Indian moccasins, baby dresses, gloves, daguerreotypes, letters' *nd every con ceivable thing which could be wrapped up in a paper so as to avoid letter postage. The post age assessed on these parcels amounted to about fifty dollars.— St. Paul Jfinuetvthn. A Fionas rawS****" Amaoutiw. —Holding ofooe N in an* not very digoifled, if this pH*|» b* ttlat respondeooe of the N. 7. fr&raoa it u tm M it is graphic: * ) “ I have sees the Governor of the walking gravely np the road - toward lus tentj, I carrying a piece of store fuel under each ana; I I have seen the Chief Justice cutting the turf for a chimney, and punching _ the oxen which were drawing logs to build his cabin; the Sec retary of State splitting wood, and the United States Attorney and Marshal plastering the walls of their hot with mad. Yesterday I saw one United States Commissioner, 'stripped to the buff, and riding on horseback, piloting a wagon through a ford across the South Platte, which ho had discovered by wading, while the other Commissioner, haring accomplished the passage, sat upon a corn sack on tho opposite bank, men ding r. rent in his pantaloons. These pictures may convince you that the civil officers, at least, in connection with the Utah expedition, are not sinecures." Th* Cruise or the Arctic.— The little old Arctic, says the Albany Evening Journal, hat > turned out as we expected it would. She was sent to the Gulf, it will be remembered, to “ blow the British fleet out of water," (with two guns and a howitzer.) The first day out, she made three miles an hour. The third out, she soiled so heavily that a corporal’s guard of ma rines had to hold the howitzer to keep it from pitching overboard. On the seventh day, she broke her engine. On the eighth, she sprung leak. On the ninth, set all hands at the pomps. Succeeded in stopping the leak, she crept on at banal boat speed—two and a half miles an honr. Sbe did not see the British fleet —di, while the Masons were I celebrating 8t John’s Day. About 700 persous I bad entered a Urge ball, where dinner was be- I ing-prepared, when about half of the floor gars I way, precipitating about 300 to the floor be- | neatb. At the same instant the floor above % came doyyn, with a quantity of cutlery, fanning | mills, lumber, &0., burying the muss of people b inhume. Fortunately no one was killed, but | from 40 to 60 were wounded, about 20 seriously. I XHB LIVE R IN VIGOR ATOH! $ PREPARED BY I>K. t'ANVOKB, | IMPOUNDED ENTIRELY FROM GUMS, | la one of the best Purgative aud Liver ilodicince now be- | fore die pubdc, nut acts a« a (Xitkatlic, eerier, milder,and | more iflectuai than any other medicine knoan. it L net 1 only a CWA artic, but a Liter remedy, acting first on the | Liver to eject its morbid matter, then on the stomach snJ | botreia to carry off that matter, thus accomplishing two | purposes effectually, without any of the painful feelings a experienced in the operations of most (xdJutriia. It | strengthens the system at the same time that It purges it; % and when taken daily In moderate doses, utU alrvugthca ‘i and bulid It up with unusual rapidity. g Tho Liter is one of thcj 'principal regulators of tbs human body; and when the powers of the ejstemJ ttomaeh la almost entirely: action of the lirer for the functions; when the stom-i arc at fault, and the wholej queues of ono organ—the! its duty. For the diseases { proprietors has made it his than twenty years, to find counteract- the many do liahlu. Tu prorc that this rcine son tronliled with Liver forms, has but to try a bot tain. These Gums remote all. the system, supplying in of bile, invigorating the digest well, nntimwo rm; health to the whole machi-j of the disease—effecting aj Biuoos Attacks are enr-! mt»m by tho occa-J VI6OBATOR. I tine dose after eating bi mach and prevent tho food 1 Only one dose taken be-j Nightmare. | Only one doao taken at; els gently, and cures Cos-' Ono dose taken after each | 43“ One doeo of two tea- 1 here Sic* Headache. j One bottle taken for ft> the cause of the disease, Only One dose Immediate- One dose often repeated Morbus, and a preventive 43* Only ono bottle is system the effects of modi- 0“ One bottle taken for lowness or unnatural color Ono doso taken a short vigor to the appetite, and One dose often repeated itswopst forms, while Snm-! yi'M alinast to the first One or two dews cures in children: there is no remedy in tlic world, as It .t few bottles cures Dropsy Wo take pleasure in ro as a preventive for Fever all Fevers of a Bilious type, and thousands are willing virtues. All who use it aro giriog their its CiTor. m >l3l. Mix Water In the month with the Inrigorator,; | awallow both together. i- ¥ THE LIVEE INVIGORATOB , I IS A SCIENTmC MEDICAL DISCOVERT, and i» dw. * working cures, almoat too great to belierc. It core* « ” by magic, ercn thejirti dou ffieiMj/ bewJU, and acldom c**" ■ - than ooe bottle is raptured to cure any Und of Ltrcr £ < rtaiat, from the worst Jfrm:dt|ELoon, giving tone and | nenr, removing: the came | y* ! radical cure. I i ed, AM>, WHAT » MTTM, j ; ricnil use of the Una iJ- g i (sufficient to relieve tbesto- I [from lie log and touring. c‘ |b~!fcro retiring, preTents R ■ (--I | night, loosens the the how- lb ~ ITrTEarss. g ipe I meal will cure Dyspepsia- g L will always t»- || d i k! male oba traction remorrt >| iand make* a perfect care |ly relieves Cholic, white si la a «ur» cure tor Chou** v-i of Cholxha. :3 needed to throw out of tk» 'cine after a long idcknc**- tM > Jacnbich removes *ll y ■ from the skin. js tim>; before c»U»g gO'* pi ; makes the food digest **]'• p [ rare# Chronic Warrktea l;‘ Imcr and Bowel complain* ! I dote. ' ; ”, attacks .caused .by Vt*** . Burvr, safer, or speed*-' neixr/tiiU. by earning the abeorbe** 7 leommendins the medicin" ’ ' and Ague, Chill Fever, «nd It operate® with eertaW; to testier to its wondciW testimony & too A gbanp < m ANN jjONDAY, from the arrangon we that M< jjy tor the citizens jl'llhar trouble nor hj tit* Committee < plele a programme v {g uttnetiveness, by lie, country. Ever leeal add to the pic «h» shall participat oOftasif" has been Brass Band, by the la the country, has course manic on tha The following is tho tion, addressed to. tin tee of Arrangements: Dx. C. J. HmsTt tbat in to be given 01 taadod Ibr the public isrsnir v * our Natio T itl««aa of Altoona; anTnvitoUon to the Brass Band, I therei infbrming you that w Utica nnd.offer our the sauariop above m Yours Respect . We would suggest who have not yet put In the Band, thi Budbtely. The men appropriated to tho meats, and we think t itonsly, so much labo thn members on that i •t the bends of our c that without the Bam be incomplete, there ported. Tho Military displ: in Ureal of the ocoasii bearing wbi< nation. We cannot s any oompanles from « two goed oMe at horn hm eaough to make a the. prettiest part Sgtatt Will be the tt i» while, adorned with «Mk,. to which w aadsont of arms of th represents. : Wdickmen at enow en one of which will be i felted in the countryj . Urn display of Fir wgtbe magnificent, if Mtonat to be expend material. The following procc wiu convey a better is to bej nsroßT or further Particular* rrl< the coming For Tari otto rcasoui rsngemcnts reviewed recooshlcred the select finally decided upon ce tion. in a Grove of Mi Peter Miller’*, about a [of town. The shade is good, easy of access by a will bf a good supply grottnd. The Committee deair tbft oft the part of all ;*«»• for dinner, whic I into baskets,, tubs, & and drink—-except wat Wed vith the name of places hereafter namci .bft placed on wagons c bis cate, to the ground eta tion will have entire visipßaand place of ca Two lee Cream and one for Spruce Beer an pnately wit anted on the aodatios of those who ories. A procession will be |M., in front of the Mat I Proceed to the Grove, t Bnus Baud,” the “ A 1 “ Logan Bifio Bangers The place fixed upoi Ward, to deposite thei Itaent of the United Bn for those of the Not [basement of the Presb jirotn the .country can p at either of the placet ground, if more oonvon I A beautiful display I ®*pccled on the upper 8J P. M. The Committee beg I liens that the magnifier j , og and delightful seen I proportionate to their [have moved at all in tli jbly. And especially is |6f tho canvassers for Irance they have evin ■there arc nmuy of our l n °t registered among t I % the number of si it appears that there i l ? nen voters in our Bo IsWe any thing towards jigvro us bhlh as a fre |‘ r * ■«* disposed to g n < | lT dual, aa well our