Mm. AJLTOONA, pa. THURSDAY, NOV. 25, 1858. tSilßilw parties are unknown to us, our rule for adrer tUing la to require payment in advance, ora guarantee from . kaWA persona. It la therefore ueeless for all such to (end W advertisements offering to pay at the end of throe or six months. ' Where advertisements are accompanied with the money, whether one, five or ten dollars, we will giro the •dreitiaer the fhll benefit of cash rates. -■■W* Readers desiring a good Philadel phia daily paper are referred to the adver tisement of the Evening Bulletin. Being an awning paper, it gives the news of the day 16 hoars in advance of morning ri vals. N*w Monthly.— About the IstofDe .Member, Oaksmith & Co., 112 Walnut , ntredj, NewYork,will iasuethe first num . .her of anew, monthly, under*(he title of 4ke ‘‘ Gteat’ It still hereafter take the place of Emerson’s and Putman’s Monthly, price €3 per year, or.£s cts. per,number. Centennial Celebration —From the complete arrangements published, we presume that this is a gala day in Pitts burg, the greatest day, perhaps, ever wit nessed in that city. Among the names of the Vico Presidents we notice, J. Y. 'Mathias, Esq., and Hon. S. S. Blair, of .this county. *■ *’ s ■' v JQU The Supreme Court has filed an* . opinion 4n favor of'the plaintiff in the nose of the . Sunbury and Erie Bail Koad Company vs. Cooper, deciding that the act Assembly for.the sole gf ,the canals is constitutional, and that a, decree will be : entered accordingly .at the next Nisi Pa ws Court, subject to an appeal in the Court . lu Banc. Ladies’ Home Magazine.— This neat little monthly for December is on our ta ble. It contains a beautiful steel engra ving and a colored fashion plate, besides numerous patterns and' embroidery work. The fact that this Magazine is under the oars jof T, 8. Arthur and Virginia F. Townsend, is a sure guarantee of its ex cgllence. Published by T. 8. Arthur & Co., Philadelphia, at 92 per annum. . t&»Two prisoners escaped from the Huntingdon jail on Friday night 4aat, by - aneaus -'nfcn *fiiteo *k«y with—which they unlocked. their cell door and afterwards burning a hole through the ceiling thro’ wbipb they ascended to .the attic, thence :by n.trap door they gained the roofVfrom which they descended to the wall of the yard and made good their escape. One of them had been sentenced to three years in the Penitentiary, and the other was awaiting sentence. A reward of $lOO is offered for their arrest. -Their/names are . JiitzfonJ ohd > Atlantic Monthly.— The September number of Uiis best of all American Month- ILas.is before ns, in which the " Autocrat gives* Breakfast to the Public,” which ' mbit he relished by all who partake of it, «md the “ Jolly Manner,” and “ Bulls Wd will serve for a supper. There is always something new and rare/ about this Magazine, which creates a longing for it before it arrives, and no matter how jbijgh the hopes of its constant Readers may .jnfti, they are always satisfied.. are pleased to know that Mis. Harriet Beech : er Btowe will be a constant contributor to tiuswork hereafter. Price $8 per annum. Phillips, Sampson & Co., Boston. Th» American MONXHLT.—Tius is ofa new candidate for public &. vor,in (be magazine line, which is to be published in New York, at the low price of |2,00 per annum, for single copy, or two copies one year for #3. Into it will .be merged the late Graham's Magazine, of Philadelphia, which is now suspended.— Each number will contain a splendid steel figraving, and once in every three months afi elaborately colored steel engraving of the same quality. The new Magazine will be under the editorship of that able wri ter, Chas. G. Leland, and the Easy-Talk : 4% old magazine will be found in the new. Mfmxy White, publisher, No. 7, Beekman St. New York. • A Singular Vote.—At the election inMassachusetts, the town of South Bao -1 Vorti/votqJ as follow? for Goremor : •• 444 BeacbVDem, . - • : -yyJ 444 . Am, Jaoow Co*viCT*n.--Ohmtia» Jaoobi, whom we noticed last week u being c|n triaMbr the murderofbis wife, was, on, Saturday lust, convictedbf murder in tbe first degree. !fhe jury was out buli twen ty minutes after the deliveiy of the charge of the Court. The unfortunate man re ceived the terrible news with . careless ness and the utmost composure, as though he cared not for the result. On his; way back to the prison,'tears were observed in his eyes, and he exclaimed to the jailor «by g■■ d, convict a man for doing nothing.” This is the second man convicted, at the present Court of Oyer and Terminer, of Allegheny eonnty> for the murder of his wife. In poth cases, motions for new triak have been made. The second trial of James M. Kelly, for the murder of an old man Weisaman, will be taken up on Monday next What a calender of orime the records of the present term presents. The Next 11. S. Senate. —The Uni ted States Senate —which convenes in December, 1850, and ends on the 4th of March, 1861~will be constituted politi cally as follows Northern 9 I Southern Opp., 2 Southern “ 28 I Northern do 25 PEUANDBOIBSOES. gST* Congrt® meets on the 6tU of December. , JflT 111—;tbe editor of the Tyrone Star. t&T Do—Trough of the Standard. No pa per this week. jggpr Scarce—“ Local Items,” and our time to manufacture ’em. 1 BQv A Savage Procceding-r-An Indian run ning away. gffif On a “swell” last week—otieof Job’s “ comforters,” outhe Seniors band. {s, On a “bust” this week— “ comfor ter,” much to the patients relief. SSF The- Superintendent’s office is receiving a fresh coat of paint. Convenient for onr citizens—the new orrongement in the running of passenger trains. - When a great man stoops, or trips, the supill men aroundilum suddenly become greater. The prominent feature, after all, of the Atlantic cable is its note-being an cyua-llne, - The mother who saw a baby prettier than her own has been sent to a lunatic estab lishment Stations are fast springing up on the gieit overland California route, and the accom modations are rapidly increasing. BQt. Numerous—the number of hunters who visited the “kettle” on Thanksgiving day. It was no doubt a “ pretty koUle of fish.” 9&m DeHoiqos—hot buckwheat cakes, good honeyand other "fixings!;” these cold morn ings. tSS* Speaking of cheap things—-it costs bat a trifle to get a wife, bat dosen’t she sometimes prove "a little dear?” The gaptista.qf England are adapting the'institutions of class meetings, .and their leading men ore in favor of it. gggrvWeare pleased to learn from the HoUi daysborg papers that Hon. S. 8. Blair has en tirely recovered from his late illness. £9* A man in Philadelphia was recently fined sixteen dollars for swearing and five dol lars for getting drank. " •g®* We admire the ladles because .of their beauty, respect them because of their virtues, adore fbhm .because of intelligence, loro them becapse we can't http it. A Frenchman repeatedly hearing the weird press; used to -Imply persuasion, one ev ening when in company exclaimed: "j say squeeze that lady to ting.” \ ; Crowded—the Ladies Bazaar with visi tors on eve, and our office with job .work all the time—People know where to get their money book! 'l'- fleefqr, of the "Logan House,” HoUidaysburg, gave a complimentary dinner to Van Tries’ Cornet Band on Thanksgiving. ■ The Cqrporal knows bow to get up a good dinner. 9£9u A Pennsylvania Prize fighter.—3gr. /George Washington Reifsnydcr, of Pottaville, has,; it is said, accepted Tom flyer’s challenge to tight any man in the world for $10,000.. ■ MBu. All s Matter of Taste.-—A woman -will tolerate tobacco .smoke in a man she likes—and yet, curiously enough, bow she dislikes it in a man she dislikes! A witness in an assault and battery case, at Hartford Conn., in describing a wound cat the head of one of the parties said it was “ about as large.as a three cornered stone.’* t&ST “ The only liberty cap,” says a clever and witty author, is a nightcap. In it men visit, one-third of their lives, the of sleep, the only land where they aie always free and equal.” One of the best looking girls in a certain seminary is a red-headed girl, from Vermont. Out of compliment to her hair, they call her the “ torch of lore.” Bather more poetic com plimentary, we think. gSg* We rather guess that but few printers were in a mood this year to return thanks—hav ing nothing on hand whereof to be thankful, un less it be a pocket-full of——unpaid printing bills. That’s our case. BQU Julia Smith, a professional thief, was arrested in Cincinnati, a day or two since, and, under her hoops, were found carefully stowed 8 towels, 2 tablecloths, 1 looking-glass, 8 tum blers, 1 pair of pants, and a great bottle of Ma deira. • • i Death from a Chestnut ShelL—A little daughter of a Idr. West, who resides near Copp er’s Furnace, in tide State, while eating chart- AAA 87 —Hyeatordaj.jgota pieoe to»V: Whieh earned death in a Aort Tba doe-. tar vu Bent for.but before hereached the house the child vu debd. Sha waa about eighteen mputkaioild. Cairo should be taken when such litfleones arc given anything of thaikind to eat.—ESartoa Express. 'KUThesnrestand best way to be pteduo* live of good is fo pay your little debts due ti» mechanic and laboring man. They need what is theirdue and jto put off their appeals by friv olous excuses causes more misery than is dream ed of. M ’ The Pestilence.—The whole number of deaths from yellow fever in New Orleans, dur ing the past season, foots up within six otfive thousand. In Mobile, the total thus tie is 56 a large increase, compared with the previous fever seasons of |1847 and 1858. fgk- Mud.—lt is said that.the mud is so deep in Leavenworth city, IL T., that hogs can’t vaUovioithout\^ping x, d^an n under— and, that a steamboat that landed some goods on the bank, was'compelled to leave the dark to watch them, on account of tile impossibility of draying. jgST A Cincinnati paper has come to the con clusion that “ if a score of the cowardly wretches, who go about tdvn beating unfortunate women, werC respectably killed, it would be well for the community in general, and retributive justice in particular;’* “Respectably killed” ip a good phrase. ;! Grant Thombum attributed bia cheer ful eld age to we fact that he never eats enough, and thousands of his countrymen are wearing out their bodies, not so much by the excess of business or the i multiplicity of cares, as by the overwork they crowd upon them by digesting surplus and unnecessary food. .' i * B@> There is a class of persona who only make friends to use . them. If they can get nothing out of ,a man, they do not want bis friendship. SuOh people treat their friends like cigars—they hang on to them, gist aU the good from them, then throw them away and spit af ter them. 27 IS. Sheridkn, being on a parliamentary committee, oneiday entered the room as all the members were seated for business. Perceiving no empty seah' he bo wed, and looking round the table with a droll expression of countenance said, “ Will only gentleman move that I may take the chair.? 9S&* A bright and beautiful bird is Hope; it will come to us mid the darkness and sings the sweetest song when our spirits are saddest; and when the lone soul is weary, and longs to pass away, it warbles its sunniest notes, and tightens again the slender fibres of our hearts that grief has been tearing away, The City of Jeddo, the Capitol of Japan. —The city of Jeddo is said to he, without ex ception,. the largest city in the world. It con tains 1,500,000 dwellings, and the unparalled number of 6,000,000 of people. Some of the streets are nineteen Jabanesorla in length, Which is equal to 82 Engliah milpa 86T* A great shaving match against time was recently performed in England, near Leeds.— A “Professor Carrodos,” attended by three latherars and five stroppers, engaged to shave seventy men hi sixty minutes; and succeeded in performing the task four minutes within the specified time. Among the patents granted last week we notice the-following: O. Hickok, of Har risburg, Pa., for cutting wooden screws, and for improved die for catting wooden screws; B. V. Jones, of Johnstown, Pa., for improved sau sage machine; John Nagle, of Altoona, Pa., foi improvement ip presses for embossing and figu ring velvet, etc. I®* Letter' boxes here been placed in some bf. the Philadelphia passenger railway-care, and on the latter reaching their tenninos, the contents of the boxes are deposited by the con ductor in the post-office. It is found to be so great a convenience to snberbans, that all the numerous am -mSf probably be supplied in the aaine vay. yv 1 .one nays of the newspapers:— Salutary as physolan, edifying asthe par son, refreshing as the morning .daw* frdgront as the flowers, and punctual as the milk-man, drops in npon the yaeant or weary maw, mom* ing or evening, thp newspaper. A greht inatif tntion! Eighty product of the toil of reporters, correspondents andoompositors !> iST On the 29th instant, willcom nMncC running between Philadelphia 'and Chi dago, fite Pittsburgh, Port Wayne andChieago havffig been completed. This road bdng under the same management as the Penn n°w imye (fie longest route of mdhterrapW railway in the eight hundred and twenty-four miles. : hir A-gentleman in the habit of entertain* ing, very often, a circle of friends, observed that one of them was in (he habit of something before grace was asked; and, deter mining to cure him upon a sortition of the of fense, he said: “For what wO are abont to re* oe&Te,-and for what James Taylor has already reeMyed, the Lord make os truly ttankftil.”— The effect may be imagined. / JS6T I love to look upon ayonngman, There is a hidden potency concealed vrithinhisbreast, which charms and pains me. The daughter of a clergyman happening to find the above sentence at the close of a piece of her father’s manuscript, as he had left it in his study,'sat down and added— ■ “Them’s my sentiments, exactly, papa—all put the pains.” 8®- The Cincinnati Gazette tells of a gentle man of that city, formerly connected with the Turf, who recently made a visit to England, and while there attended a number of races, betting' freely in a small way, generally coming out Winner. Finally, just before leaving, he went to the Cffisarawilz Eaces, with a balance in his favor up to that date of some 14,000 on his op erations, and finding the odds ten to one against Ten Broeok’s Prioress, he contended to risk his pile op her. -She came ont about nz ineha be- Had sho won, he xoold have pocketed sj40 t ooo. v : For Vie Altoona Tribunt. ELECIIUCITT; BY BATTERY NO. 3. This adject has lately been pfdstoled to your readers, both positively and negatively, In regard to its very reoent discovery as a rcmedi al agent, especially in deafoeeai and tiie minds of many persons have been considerably cxor clsed as to the truth of the. matter, which mod plainly proves that but very little is known, out-side of the Medical , profession. In reference to”the curative powers of Electricity. Even Editors, who arc supposed to, “know every thing.” have manifested a want of information on this subject; for 1 fold that City papers have Very generally Copied the account of “A Curious Case of Deafness Cured.” Thus the whole Country has been Electrified, and ’ere- long some cute Yankee will take out a patent-right for an Elec trical aparams peculiarly .adapted to the pur pose, and will canvass the entire Union, perhaps the world, to furnish person’s whose hearing is imputed, with an Electrical-Pocket-Battery; and. the result will be that every person who is suffering from deafness, no matter what may be the cause or nature of the diseases of their hearing organs, will have a battery in their pocket and its poles sticking in their ears, with a hope of having their powers of audition re stored, and will continue to wear the machine for some considerable time, at. least until the Yon key gets quite out of their hearing. After all have been supplied with such an aparatus there will of couneHbe no further use for Asylums for the deaf. • The foregoing only illustrates bow easy.a matter it is to impose upon the suffering and afflicted, any thing that promises to ettre ; and should be a warning to Physicians how they -publish the results of their “ experimentsfor it is very probable that not one out of every hundred persons.who are deaf, or partially so, would be benefitted in the least by the ap plication of Electricity toother Auditory nerves; whilst ten out of that number might really be made worse. It is well known by all intelli gent pbysioians that there are certain morbid conditions of the organ of hearing, accompanied by deafneas, in which the electrical current can not prove otherwise than injurious. Perhaps it is not now known when'Electrici ty was first employed as a remedy in disease, but if we may believe the writers at the pres ent day, it was formerly much more extensively used than it now is. The truth is that it, like a thousand and one other theraputio agents, at one time was employed in the treatment of al most every disease, and like them has Adieu in to almost entire disuse; it having accomplished but little that was expected of it. Scientific men have conceded that its chief benefit to mankind is in its application to Tele graphic communication. That Electricity does possess some curative powers, I will not pretend to dispute, but it should be resorted to with the utmost caution, and only when advised by an experienced phy sician ; for truly there are certain and peculiar condition's of the human system to which it-is injurious. For the satisfaction of those who are unac quainted with the medical history of Electricity, and especially those who had no knowledge of its use as a remedy in disease prior to the pub lication of “ A Curious Case of Deafness Cored” I will here add that according to the “ Beports of the Boyal Society, of Medicine” of France, “Electricity was employed in the treatment of nervous and spasmodic diseases as early as the year 1776.” And in vol. V, 2d Edition of the “ Medical Observations hnd pub lished in London, 1779 is an account of the ef fects of Electricity in Amaurosis (a disease of the eye) by Dr. Hey., In Pereira’s Materia Mediea, vol. 1, page 102; we find .the following paragraph: ‘‘ In nervous deafness arising from a torpid condition of the Auditory nerve, Electricity has been frequent* ly employed; and though occasionally patients report themselves benefited by it, in most cases it foils to give relief, and in some inHfatncna has agravated (he malady,” and then adds that Hard, in his work on Diseases of the Ear (published in Paris in 1828) speaks unfavorably of its effects. Ereamer ,in his “ Nature and Treatment of Piseases of the Ear,” says: “In looking at the results of all aocumolsted experience, with the utmost honesty, there cannot be one moment’s hesitation in declaring that Electrici ty and Magnetism are utterly useless in disease of the ear, that they even seriously endanger the auditory nerve by exciting to on involved degree its iritabiiUy, the ih&Utide result of which is that it is positively debilitated.” I might add much other evidence, quite as jre liable, to prove that Electricity was employed— evon in cases of deafhess—prior to the year .1869, .and that too, Witt Ipt very little success; and also that it Is positively a dangerous remedy when indiscreetly employed. Sat this me thinks is sufficient to Shew that we should be scrupulously cautious in publishing to the worid the beneficial effects of stioh an agent, fit a par ticular ease, which may induce many otters to wnploy it to their ultimate injury. Bobbiblb Scenes— -Tax French nr CAaroß. —-Four Frenchmen landed from one of the Cat mift’s boats for the purpose of purchasing pro visions. When near South Gate, and in the new city, they were hemmed in by braves Three cut their way through; the fourth was captured, and his head and hands'cut off in dl moat less time than it takes to write this. The French naval commander on the river landed a parity of men, marched to the street where the murder was committed, measured off one bun • £ P aces >. and at one end placed a detachment with directions to. shoot every man that tried to escape. A similar party barred the other end Ihen came the revenge. Every adult male in the houses lining the hundred paces were seized, shot, his threat cut, and then left to swelter in the sun, as a warning to the neighborhood. Astounding Development.— Mr. S. S Jones, late president of the lowa Central Air Line raiL road, in a letter to a director resigning his office states that the cost to the company of getting the lowa lapfi grant through Congress during the session of 1854 was seven hundred thousand dollars. Thopriginal “pecuniaryoompliments” were bestowed m the shape of lands of, which Extraordinary Feat offja loco- motive. A most remarkable incident oocurredat the depot of the Little Ilium Ballroad. on last Thursday morning ington, belonging it the Marietta; wdt Cmcta nnti road. haastarted dowuthetrack some half or three quarters of* mile, fot the purpose of bringing the empipc&rs to prepara tory to maki&g ug_a train,theengino being under the control of a man employed about the yard. About faalfa mile Item the depot, the man in charge discovered an engine of the Lit tle Miami n»d backing dovm to the depot for the purpose of taking out the morbingtmn for | Cleveland. Fearing a collision, the person in charge of the Marietta engine, reversed, and jumped from the machine. A inmate idler, the two engines came together, when; the impetus given to the Marietta engine, together with the force of the reversed* power, started it towards the depot with the velocity ofS irooket. The down grade gave it additional; headway, and it bounded alongtlw tiack-lpe.atiepd incarnate. - Upon the track in the depot; the morning train, consisting of some four or jftve ears bad been mads up, and about one cho|^dr^dfpassen gers had already taken their seats. On cape the engine with .the speed, of £ destructive whirlwind, directly upon the trank leading to the train, until withurabout font or five rods of the depot, the fortunate accidental change of a switch drove it upim the other track. Almost before the persone bp could realise that an engine had'entered one end of depot, the iron steed bad bounded through the entire length, demolished an eigh teen inch brick vail, timbers and ail, at the rear —leaped across two road tracks—One about ten feet below the other—withoatjouohiag either, and imbedded itself in a huge pile: of coal in the yard of J. Coehnower. The distance leaped, from the wall of the depot to the lamp of tho i engine, could not have been less tt|an teventy-five feet. All this distance, through the demolished wall of the depot, it dragged the loaded with wood, without breaking the couplings. - But for the fortunate change iju the switch, which threw the engine upon the qpposite track to that on which the Cleveland tnpn was stand ing, the loss of life must have beeit terrible. Tub Labors or Sbhatob DouqUab.— A west ern correspondent sends a detailed. statistical account of the labors of Senator Douglas in the recent canvass of Dlinpis, from which it appears that they were almost equal to the labors of Hercules. It seeris that he has addressed bis constituents in 67 f counties. He |me| Mr. Lin coln in debate once in each Congressional Dis trict ; made 59 set speeches of frobi two to three hours in length; 17 speeches of iftom twenty minutes to forty-five minutes iu length, in ro-. spouse to the compliment of serenades: and 87' speeches of about equal length, in reply to ad dresses of welcome. Of these 12Q speeches, all but two were made-In the opes air, and seven speeches were mode or continued daring heavy runs. To do this, Mr. Douglas 'crossed, from end to end, every railroad line inthe State, ex cepting three, besides. making long journeys by horse conveyance and steamboats; the road travelled amounting to 5,227 nni|BB. : By boats he made almost the entire western side of the State, and all that portion of the-Illinois River which is navigable by steamboats.—JY. Y. Tunes. ' Child Bussed to Dbatb I—A most distres sing occurrence took place at Conemangh Sta tion about four o’clock bn Wednesday evening. A little girl of three years, daughter of Mr Henry Eemry, was playing about the stove, when, at a moment when its mother was tem porarily absent, its clothes took fire, as is sup posed, from a lighted shaving. In a moment the child was enveloped in flames, and before its cries could reach the mother they had burn ed and charred in a horrible nianher its body, arms and face, and even its eyes and the inside of its month. The mother, assisted by a neigh bor, pat out the fire as quickly as]the meops at their,command would permit, but in so doing bnrned their own hands and jarms, considerably. Drs. Bramwell and Yeagley were immediately summoned to the bedside of the little sufferer, but all their efforts to save Its life were' friutfeB& It died daring the night, after -suffering the most excruciating agony! It is acheart-sicken cmc.—Johnstown SViiune.. \-t- The Code of Hoson.—Hon. J. C. McKib(hsn, M. C., recently, before leaving san Francisco for New York, challenged George Pehn Johns ton, who fought with William I. ..Ferguson a duel in which the latter was morthlly wounded. Johnston was editor of the JVationdl, and in .its columns used disparaging terms concerning MoEibben. Johnston has been arrested, and is nowin prison awaiting his trial. McKihben and his friend went to the prison-and Insisted upon seeing Johnston, in order ty deliver him the challenge. - The honorable gentleman , was with great difficulty, it is stud, ffiade to under Stand that to send a challenge to s genttcpnii under such circumstances whs hoi exactly Com patible with the code of honor.- : r ; ; »■ An amusing and pMnfuLiqeideni recent ly took place in Cincinnati, l&p gentlemen afflicted vrith St. Titos dance met, and each supposing the otherfobomockihg the otter, a fight ensued of the most' dangerous character. Finally a mutual acquaintahoel ffonnd them struggling in tte gutter and succeeded in sep arating-them and making .known- their mutual mistake. The poor" fellows could not at,first boHeve their eon* at the expense! of tteir eyes, but were finally convinced of their folly and their enor, and shook bands, white they jerked their mutual as profusely ns they “W their demmdatioas a few moments before. Masobbtib thbUmitbd Stages.—lt appears «om satisfies derived from the latest informa tion contained in tto proceedings of the various Mosome Grand Lodges of the United States. “ «»e United States 4.302 lodges with 183,888 members, the number of Ma fj® 8 * 18 , probably much greater than tM® table shows, ds there are many to be found everywhere who are not affiliated with any lodge. The law of the fraternity is said to be *| once a Mason always a Mason.” In Mary with M 25 members; in the District of Columbia, 11 lodges, and 4 Cl 4 members; and in Pennsylvania, 156 lodges,’ and 11,428 members. The Ups and Downs or Live.—There can be seep daily on one of the New York city cars, as conductor, the son of a gentleman who formerly resided in or near Boston, and who was brought up in all the luxury that wealth could command His home was elegant. Horses and carriages waited his pleasure— servants attended his call But one of those reverses came that come so frequently. Life was changed; and the indulg ed son and tenderly-carcd-for child had to go out and meet the rude wind and cool looks of the world ; and he cams his bread as conductor on ono of the city cars, at the daily pay of one dollar and fifty cents. ®- VAKE , Stobt.— The Sandusky Register nub vm*°\r l tter a corres P°n(lent in Fenton t Whlt ; a Btatos that : a 'man named Beach, 21 years of age, has had a living unnW in his stomach during the naat neas 8 W j‘ cll c . auscd him great pain and nncari ness, and at times threw him into spasms Li SSpUa^ft d Tf k and ( l uiesce °‘. food cwTlni i Beach to try the starving pro .« 8? ?&{s^^*M*** 19* The Uttle Tillage of Warsaw, fat of Mississippi, is a bird place. Twelve affrays have occurred there lately. Th e ocotook place between one Dorsey, andE. L. Magruder, a carpenter, ultimo . An exchange says, from the fact Dorsey, in the morning, at breakfast, QhjJrJ a that he “ was eating breakfast hora ;’i ing, bat would eat auppur in , this create s '. 1 and that Margrader, on the road to 3 some one to make his coffin, as ho didn't wj S to live that day out, it is evideut that there*? 3 an old grudge between them. They subset? la ly met and settled it with knifo and plstcJ 1 Dorsey caught his enemy as he tried to M away, after shooting several times, and pul\ out a bowie knife, about eight ia plunged it into Magruder’s bock, just belW ■ shoulder-blade, to the hilt, which, fro® force of the blow, broke off. Magrudtt and Dorsey, who had received 'several w a bullets, walked over to his house, replying wl shot plant through,” to the question uheiwll was hurt He survived about fifteen mi n^W A Tbrulixo Bcks*.— An exhibition o( ,1 bleanx waa given the other evening in pdlitan Hall Chicago. A colored light in Wn ing set some of the scenery oa tire. ThecSl go Prat says —“ Those on the floor atBm?i tiered the flame a part of the »|| but those at the front end of the gallery J;! true idea of the ease, and one shouted, Hall is on fire, make for th* door!* To datl the frensied alarm that seised the entire i»nce offull twenty-five hundred people, rZI be impossible. Every seat on the main and on. the galleries was full, and the fiai were thronged, and the whole number to make fo* the entrance left accesnble. one for a roomept or tiro seemod lo possestw > power or thedisporiUon tointeiposc any stayv : the terror, or to dictate calmness, bat iht* j rang with shouts,, groans, screams and erkij One young lady waa seized with violent bnal ioa. Tire fire was fortunately subdued rrlthetl difficulty and losv I Mcbdkji Win. Out.—A few years ain«,|a citizen of Alabama; whose name Is suppm*3ffl by.thapapers, committed acruel murder, k|9 on trial for tire crime h« escaped, owing to link being .needed in the evidence. Poi; || opinion wassgnlnst bim, anil he aeon after ht || and took : residence In Attala com? r l Miaa.,< It is recently related of him that, haying experienced the inost terrible agony (• s| many months, he procured a barrel of whidn 1 and excluded himself from the eooiety of where, solitary, and alone, ho plunged into l deepest and most thorough state of intoxicate v i| drinking, it is sold, a quart of the “ fire *«*•£« at oho draught, la this gloomy nnd miscraiijpfl "condition'he lingered through the lapse vUr M or three months, and Anally died, in the mail intense mental agony, calling upon the dera tp take away- from his the tittaii who had sd long haunted his memory, ami onixed him in his dreams. |9 A young man named 11. B. Ball, of Cy| press, Miss., was ordered by his father to le»| home, under the penalty of being cowhide! J The father attempted to fulfil his threat, whsl the yoqbg man’s mother interceded in hub] half, and was struck upon the bead settaj times by the father, \ which the Son seeing, h| resolved to die by seif-dCblritctioh, rather tWi live and see bis mother and himself impoMj 1 upon. He then took his gun,- receded ahi steps from the bouse, pulled of his shoes, ul| looked at his watch, giving himself half an hi' for repentance. On the explmtiop of the hi] hour, he blew his brains by pulHng tai trigger with his toe. The young man's oatim ly fate is deeply mourned by hm-aarivug friends. " Saxb or Pwzs GAXTXS.-rrB.-P> J»i»Jmgtoß,ik| successful cattle exhibitor at the incest Unikij States Fair inßiohmond,has sold ihveral ofh stock. -He-writca as fbfioffs the Gmntal (Vs.) Eta:;' ’ ' > . I 44 1 have sold * Bciplo’ to lfr. Hansbargw, d Rockingham County, at $5OO, and * Lad; Baa; to Bri Bowen, of Fredricksburgi nt $5OO. nij one freer Kentucky fat cattle toMr. Linsej. V] Richmond, for $5OO, and one fit Kentucky caj for $205 80. JMy -white steer I sold talk] Price for $220, and due yoke oxen at s2oft-| One ox, three years old, tit Se gross, amoiaW to $3OO, and a fat heifer at $2OO. ‘Triaufki bull calf, sold for $2OO, _ . 1 The lUixapAp Barg Rqbbess Auesi»-|H A roV days ago the 'boss : pointer In the r»ilrai shops at- Ft Wayne, named Rivers, was u»-aj ted charged'with heing concerned in the robte; 3 of tho Bailroad ! safe, at that place, of a amount of money, as has been heretofore u S| nogneed by telegraph. Twelve thousand •larg of the money was'recovered. He alsoit | plicated a German named Chrest who being if /I rested, delivered up $5,000 of the stolen mowy || The valuable papers, tickets, &.. that bad b« 3 stolen, were found iu a corner of a fence, ins 1 'field in which the prisoners bad hid the momi J Both burglars are now in jail at Ft. Wayne, .-a Mobb Lvdias BaiTlib.— The U. S. have, had another encounter with toe Naif Indians, imwhich ten Indians were killed, : |S ral wonndedj Snd eighty horses and sixty!' || hundred sheep were captured. Two of the! •-•a 8. troops who are missing, have probably t* 'H killed, and one was wounded. Kit Carson, & | a blind of Utah Indians, recently passed thins} 1 Santa Pe on his way to fight the Nnvajoes,!) | are lit war with the UUbs. A party of McUT | Indians attacked an emigrant train while itb | crossing the Colorado, and killed three c* v | two worn cn and four- children, and wouii sixteen of the emigrants. J A Fifteen mile foot race took the Franklin trotting Pork, North Chelsa|l Mass , on Friday, the 12th. There were contestants for the $5OO prize, two of were Indians. The Reading champion gar* |T ;|| the contest on the first mile, and Grffia oss -.M fifth. There was then a sharp contest betvfC -| the two Indians. Baring the latter part of S"M fifteenth Smith began to lag, when passed him, and made the fifteen miles in cS hour, twenty-nine minutes and fifty sccosdi -j Monument to the late Judge Coswv committee of gentlemen, friends of tie M Judge Conrad, are making arrangements toll* r J a. monument erected over his grave, in Hill Cemetery It is to be done by voluntary tributioua, and is estimated .to cost sls,W*i|i The gentlemen having the matter in cMga seem to be sanguine of accomplisbing dertaking. m Died os hkr Ksbks,— Mrs. Catherine wife of Mr. Daniel Jones, of Glenmorei Md., died very suddenly, recently p 54. Bhe arose in her usual health, and starting for Sabbath School retired to i« Fi| vate room for her morning devotions, sing iD f'‘r;| “ Jesus lorer of my soul, '4S Let me to thy booom fly.” iS And there upon her bended knees ah# at once to pray and live. i Wild People.— ln Lancaster La., a a man, but hairy as a bear, has been quently by the people. It |s very I strong. It was once seen in *.cowp«o» the cows, and when, discovered it started “ | about to fight, then- turned and fied," b oo ®*3| like a doer- It walks upright and»» * u I to bo * w|ld man. 9 ~ Ipuona local The Fun. —The Liu! & Plaok’a Hall, which ing eve, was one of t kind ever hold in this ] %ns viaited by almost « hnd many from a distal exhibited was dispoi rapid manner in which ' wp, evinced the desire 1 g a e articles at a small ■jrin, they had the conso I i»«ll. Many persons < [ tabling money, but the f by the argument that [ means ” On this ques [ decide; it belongs to tl [ flee it to say, it netted | tJtf purpose intended tl cured by other means, ytirk of the very best q may enumerate a fine gold watches, a numbe eralbeautiful quilt pat dresses, and smaller a enomcrato." Everyth! manner which insured tribution of the prises, charge of this part of the confidence of all. observed by visitors du Fair was open. Wo amount of money rcalis I fully up to the expeotati i Cuanqh or Time.—< Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne m be completed, and the c [uing through from Phil The road being under tb E tho Pennsylvania rond, i of uninterrupted railway eight hundred and ttvt freight between Philadol [bs about four dollars p (New York, and six dol [freight from Boston to t by the Northern Centra at Harrisburg with the has all the advantages of railroad to Chicago. In this route, twenty miles is Philadelphia. This c: [voltes a change in the pytvauia Central Rail I above mentioned, tho £ will arrive at this Statu [leave at 7,10, passengers [change has been made [Westward. The Fast Li p,50 P. M., and leaves a lag supper. The same tr p,26 A. M., and leaves at pis been made In the Brain. Thasbsoiviko DaV.— intty generally observee he shops and stores wc respectable congregation ►diet Church at 11 A. i Jms of Rev. j. Steck, v tble to the Rev. gentler ungers turned out atte M to the woods on the lest Altoona, on a ta aedal was won by Har; f spending such days dill so pie. While the ptou |onse of God and pari jud praise of the Giver o bet gifts, others look up lay— a day specially i bating, &c. Many who PS on any other ’ occasio; bund wending their w pns on their shoulders; |toro than they would ha d at homo, unless it be jslr of worn out legs. I Ivenilcs, and the cry, 44 j> day J” is proclaimed phigs out his or her alec Bastby Tuncp About.- beks quite a number of dieved of the contents toe quiet gentleman, w peiy, that they wore n Mil they came to set the |se last year, nothing bu jkes, pies, preserved fruil [owing pretty concluaiv [fives ore too lazy to c Ist they have no place [tie strange that none of [ught in the act of apj ie’s goods. VTo think [ould induce our citizci |out their door and win p a little attention to n F after nightfall. • tnE,—On Wednesday •y at this place, under lunon School Board, w > it is supposed, origin ye pipe. Our citizens Ployed, labored hard | they were all unava tufortable new frame b P the loss cannot soo [Uek. wa B Principal of P* how soon he will ag t hope a house piest practicable pwioc Moss Walks— Our cr r*' Jones, Esc Mmpmementa of whi, pmendable manner. 1 Pollent crossings have 1 in front of our ol P* « crosses Virginia [J 4 .tb?. .walks .badly i • aacjy o season yeai Walks it felt, and tl 7e ibe hearty thankee