Crftrat. \^ \ ALTOONA, PA. 'THtfRSDiY, OCTOBER 27, 1859. partial are unknown to ua,f tlxree or aix ■untU. 'W6cfb advertisements aroaccompanlod with tho Mnnay. tirhnlTi~r one, Ardor ton dollar*, wd wUI/gire tho the fall benefit ofcash rate*. ; m.M, PETTESOILL & CO., • i .Advertising Agents, 119 Natoan street, NewYWrk r and lO Jtsto atraet, Boston, are the Agents fojvtho Altoona TrihimCy andthe moet Influential and largqstcireulatijig Newspaperp in tho tJnUcd Stalee and thc Canadaa. They are authorized to contract for uaat our lowtk rata. Thanksgiving in Pennsylvania. rEyxarh vahia, s&: la tb« hame asd *t the aothomty or f _ \ IHB COMJUWWKAiTU or PBSaBTLVASU ISEAIiJ WIUAAM F. FACKEK, >w . Governor tf Hit said OmmomocaUh. FftOCLAMATION. ftiux# CrttzESi :—TUc tleaslnga voochaaied uy a fernd Providence Uiroaeli tlio put year, touadoiirgrateful recognition and again call tor the sacrifice of Tliauksgiving and praise. Under the protection of a Government that acCuree toall oqual rightsritre have punned, unmolested, the various avocations of life, with more than usual pros perity. The earth, under the labors of thse hosband maa, hu yielded her increase, and our harns and storc houtof sire crowded with the frnits of the harvest. » c liavo nototriybeen'preserved from the ravages of the pes tilence, hdt the put has been.a year distinguished for health lu bur largo dttea and throughout all our rural du* tricU. Gar country .has been preserved in peace. Our homes have been the abodes of tranquility,’ and blessings inaaitteubio have clustered around our domestic hearths. Onr various jchools and seuitiarics of learning are dimv fine throughout our couinjumtya higher intelligence, and imparting to our youth nobler aspirations. The .Instita tiuus of our holy religion are well sustained; and under Its pore and genial influence,the spirit of .unity and love, the-earnest of yet better days, inmost happily develops. To God, the Great and the good, we arc indebted lor ail, and tO'-Uinl l lob praise he tendered! With these soutinieuts, arid Itmccordaoee With the Known wiaheeof’mjinyofiny fellow-citizens, 1, Willlaji F. Packer, fijvornor oftlnf Common ifcalth of Pennsylvania, do here by appoint THURSDAY, th>. 2itt day of NOVEMBER as a day of general Thanksgiving afld praise to Al mighty God,and recommend to all our people to lay aside uti that day, their customary worldly husiuessr-rasscmble in their respective places of worship, and unite in praising Uod fiir4lis, excellent greatness Joward us-rbesecchlng uis cracknvi. gooclQCss, OlrtU.nudjcr my Uanil aud .the great seal of the State, at Hbirlsburgs.ihlß fourtecntli day of October, A* D. IS3U; iihdof ttiuCoromonWcalth the eighty-fuiirtli. By the fiovertaor'; \ WU.F. PACK Ell. W*. Ui llttilEE, See. Co tmnou wealth. notice by the last number of the Tyrone Star, that oaf jovial military friend, Capt. Bell, has resigned his posi tion therein, and transferred the establish ment into the care and keeping of our little legal friend, M. 11. Jolly, who will no doubt print ,a jolly little paper, at least, ho ihas the ability to do so. We wish -the gallhirt Captain success in whatever busi ness he may engage hereafter, hoping he paay find something more lucrative than newspaper publishing generally. And hare’s our t®. in friendship, Mat, hbping that your undertaking may prove all you anticipate, STfirtlEfcOTA. —We have returns from thirty-two counties, which show a majority for Gov. Ramsey, of nearly foux thousand, apd a Republican gain over the last Gu bernatorial election of over three thousand. jf”" • The remaining counties .to hear from will probably increase Ramsey's majority.— The Senate stands twenty-two Republicans .to fourteen Democrats, and the majority oti joint ballot will be about forty. ' Min nesota elects a United States Senator next winter, in the place of. Gen. ;Shields, and •. it is said the choice of iheiegislature will tail upon Gov. Ramsey. B&. We notice a number of the Oppo sition papers ’of the' State recommending Hob. Andrew 'Gregg, of Centre county, as a suitable man to fill ,the Speaker’s chair in the Senate next winter. No man in the ranks of ihe Oppbsition deserve better at the hands of his party than Col. Gregg, ancMm iscertainly well qualified to fill the office; We beUeye he received the unanimous vote of his party for retir ing Spmiher last .spring, "knd the Senate will have a faithful and impartial officer should he receive a like support this winter. Godeift Lady’s Booh for November is a rich production, abounding in all that oouldlteoinate or please the ladies. Every lady-subscriber to the Book of theicountry expects largely of Godey, and he never diMppoints them. On the .cqntrfuy he ptoses them £&r better than they could please themselves, -cand tjhey admit the feet. Pride $3 per annum, the price of a new-bonnet, vrhich the book Will tell you how,tomake yourself, together with other nice things yoU youjd never have thought of. . .. gives us ; jdeastare .torecord the triumphant election of Coli A/K/M’Clture; (ottr tot instructor ip the " tive ”) as Senator from the Franuin, Fulton District. During the O^pMgri—and' in fact before it opened— , fouly slandered,- and the 'mostAfteQhous efforts were used to defeat him ; bat all to no effect.' The Coh will be aa|sftor to, and taty the ladies, Into ijhose hands it as any other Magazine published. It is prized by fall. Price only's-2.00 per annum. , Ladies flame Magaziue, VTe are pleased to observe, & rapidly gaining on its older ’cotereporaries, both in point of attraction and number of readers.— The fact is a work edited by T. S. Arthur and Virginia JF. Townsend .could not do otherwise than prosper. Price £2,00 per annum. There is no one thing in proportion to its im portance that is more undervalued than Life. Insurance. The following example of an emi nent man is worthy of imitation. It is announced that the late Hon. Rufus Choate had an Insurance on his life, to the amotmt of twenty-five thousand dollars. This is a new-proof of the sagacity and foresight of that.eminent man, and a fresh illustration of the excellence of .the life insurance system. — His estate may be ample for the support of his family in independence,but to guard against contingencies imd misfortunes, be "had secured for thenr a fund sufficient for their support even if his estate should have turned out insol vent. Life insurance is an investment made for fhe future benefit of those who may be de pendent on us: an investment that cannot be affected by misfortunes and embarrassments, but remains to secure to those nearest and dearest to us. No man with a family should neglect t& have his life insured for their benefit. It adds greatly to one’s comfort to know that he has secured something for his wife and children in case of death.— Commercial Bulletin, ' In our advertising columns will be found the card iof the American Life Insurance and Trust' Company of Philadelphia, the following notice of which, in connection with one of a similar kind in New York, we coppy from the Boston True IWfncss. The The New York Life Insurance Company's Agency in this city has, continued for nearly ten years ; find has its local, board of directers, re sident among us. . The Semi-Annual statement of this company to Ist of July, shows a solid capital of 81,667,618 63, its earnings for the half year being $236,559 61 audits losses, paid during same time, $114,600. The American Life Insurance and Trust Com pany of Yhiladelpliid has an equally fair record; possessing probably as large if not larger cap • ital, in proportion to its risks, than any other similar institution in nor country. Its affairs are also most carefully conducted and, as is well known in this city, its losses ai;|e promptly paid. It also has its local board, composed of gentlemen whose names give ample guaranty of its excellence. TVo hope to see an increased attention to this important subject generally ; and we cannot conceive how a congregation can do a more acceptable serf ice to a pastor and his family, than by a policy on hiS life, assuring them of a provision after his decease. Indeed in benefittlng their .pastor, they will benefit themselves, by the very relief from depressing care which they thus afford. He will be more free to .serve them with all his powers. Hurrah for the “ mersfiecn.” KgL. Still in progress—the Protracted meet ing in the Methodist Chuch. J. Edgar Thompson has been elected President of the Pacific Rairoad Company. B3T" Pysician’s faults are covered with earth, and rich men’s with money. Changed— the Dell Star, of Tyrone, to a Jolly Star.- fiS5“ The biggest “ squirt” in the country is expected-in town on Saturday nest. fig^Opened—a booh and periodical store in the room formerly occupied by the “Peoples’ Shoe Store,” across the way. , Dogs are said to “ speak with their tails.’ 1 ~ Would it be proper, then, to call a short tailed dog a slump orator? JUSf* Somedody says that, “ if-young ladies now-a-days did not become women at thirteen, some men,would hnv£ better wives.” Amusing—some of the chances after runaway hats and flying papers; during, the wirdjr Weather last week. People should keep love-letters out of their hats on wiudy days. {@* Gen. A. L. Eoumfort, Supt Eastern Di visionPfenn’a fi.B., baa been lying dangerous ly ill for some weeks past, it his residence in Harrisburg. Mr. La Mountain’s balloon, the Atlantic, which was abandoned by him in the Canada woods has been secured ' and returned to Wat tertown, somewhat tore, but serviceable. The particulars of the rescuU are not giyenf * : B®. gomerery pious young women in Syra cuae'htrve established an association which they .style, “She Yonung Woman's Anti-Young- Man-Woiting-aWhe Church-Boors with .Ulte rior-Objects' £Tociety.’ r Nothing like a good title. . . VST *» Ob, -dear blubbered an' Urchin who had ligm suffering, from .the application. of a Merit. /‘ Obi my 1 they &U me that'forty rods make afuriong but 1 can tell a bigger story 'than that. Let ’em gfet such a plaguy liokin, as Pre-bad and they’U find outthatonerod makes an aoher.’ r • fgf* An Infidel, who bad been attempting fo prove that men hare no souls, asked a lady, wiot ah rif of triumph. What she tljoittht ofhis .phttoadsy.'‘‘il appears to me/’ rim wplicd,- - life Insurance. REN AND SCISSORS. OfflclalVol-e of ') TB *« EDlr * ; Upright. Cochbax. . Ksw.l, W itt* light upoja the origin Adariv ■ -v :2839 2,523 • 2st* of.lhe sad tragedy enaitedat Hur i ’' r£a B^r a i ; , ijS 1,753 v=■ IS&ri IJ4B |«ttche^ v ind of newspapetbepor- -’ *.-Lt -t HS the -addlticinal linger. I .; S«S rial 1 8,733 New Xork (7oirtoi«mni. Adva’iuere^j^ Bn*fc«, "i >' V' '&ai? W** 1 ' •■•"'s® Mlweiy denude • ■* - ; ® :i*li chirocter ind <{rr ieogPfipMcal- f’lift.- W complekidß. g®:--t' VM* .hadi W Clearfield, " ’ , " : ■” 1,122 id»e Sorth from other! quarters so Clinton. - i .iIoQO IJB6 .. . X 5»...... i soonas hamade*-demonstmtionvvritteotber 5 m*mr- rT IO9 J’?s 1 1™ Kes remarks of somewhat similar import. It is also a/»u Sfla v 2,932 reported' that letters and a check for §lOOO from Dauphin, J Delaware, ' 1? «g which may be true, (though not yet in evidence frte’ ‘ ibis 2,325 1,U4 2,299 beyond an irresponsiblereport.) without at all Fayette, ; j; %824 §076 2,817 2,651 implicating Mr. Smith in the present act of S or “i;- I ! ~M- «JJ ,JS 3.550 treasonable wickedness. There is no doubt that ; - i Ul 7i6 3l 85i 715 Gerrit Smith was in correspondence with Brown Greenes .1,396 785 1,588 ‘ .wo while the latter was in Kansas, and be has never Ifunjngdoni i ;1,774 ' 2,2 M 1,778 made any he had contributed money*. I . ’ll ls7l 'MO l!<)70 even to the purchasing of rifles for the party Juniata, '1(309 1,223 1,009 }’7%t with whom Brown was there connected. It is Lancaster, | ; [ 3,433 7,603 3,443 by no means improbable, therefore, that docu- Wmnon^ ’ : j.oso 2,451 1,283 '§46l ments in Sir. Smith’s bandwriting were found Lehigh, ’ !; 8*856 3,613 3,842 3,622 } a Brown’s possession. The reporter had only is,! fm 2$U §ooS to omit the date of suchdocuments-to suppress M’Keon, ?687 600 585 603 a part of the truth—to make the impression Mercer/ -f | §225 2,770 2,222 2,755 up o n the public mind that Mr. Smith was in ; ijij®® *£l?. ML present complicity with demented Brown in bis Monroe, : , 1,777 409 1,i&4 • *3O r , r j Montgomery, i 6,056 4,536 6,026, 4,572 horrible scheme. Wo have little doubt that it Montour, j ; 1,154 co 2 1J42 618 will ultimately appear that the dates of all those .NortllSdandr ll’sg 1,602 lie? TbS documents were contemporaneous with the dis- Perry, ;, 2,052 2,070 2,051 .. 2.0C9 j turbances in Kansas, and that they have no Philadelphia,. - £C£66 20 ’ i hearing whatever, upon the prernet melanoholly Potter, 'I / 502 918 517 593 j affair of Harper’s Ferry. At the same time we Schuylkill, j . i 4,879 4.469 4,966 | know of no political party that can be justly Snydar, 737 1,286 709 1,322 held responsible for the peculiar idiosyncracies = s ’& h % *•& of the Hon. Gerrit Suxitli. Assuredly there has Susquehanna, 2Dt»i 2,807 2,092 2,805 long been an established mutual repudiation be lloga 1,042 1,940 1,031 l, y 62 tween him and the republicans,,and with no Vonongo, 2,022 j.sso 1,84 c ! pretence of justice can they be hold resposible -Warren,’ *’ 757 1.139 * 759 1,129 | for anything be may say or do in connection Washington, 3,390 3,745 3,396 3,749 ; tffib slavery or against the Union or Conslilu- W.estmurelaiid, Ifi sJS 1152 B.7SS tLo ,“-. On this question of the complicity of any Wyoming, .945 751 912 758 political party with Brown, the statement of Vork, : 6,203 4,983 6,265 ' 4.941 j the man himself, when supposed to be dying,' is entitled to as much consideration and credit as anything from the lips of such a man can be.— It is thus reported by a gentleuilan connected with the Baltimore Press: Reporter —“ When did you first conceive this move . u^^of43, TOtal, The following table was published incorrectly last week* consequently we re-publisli it with corrections which are oificial. Philadelphia,.....; Delaware, Chester,..; '..i Montgomery, Bucks, Northampton, Lehigh and Carbon, Monroe and Pike Wayne,.... .... Luzerne,.; Susquehanna,.... Bradford.. Wyoming, Sullivan, Columbia and Montour, Lycoming audCliuton, Centre, Mifflin,... Union, Snyder, and Juniata, Northumberland, Schuylkill, Dauphin........... Lebanon,’. '.i Berks,.... Lancaster, ■. York, .......: Cumberland and. Perry, i Adams,... ! Franklin;and Fulton, Bedford 4nd Somerset,... Huntingdon 81air,.... Cambria, Indiana Armstrong and Westmoreland, Fayette,,, ~.i Greene,.. i Washington, ! Allegheny, i Beaver and Lawrence, Bn tier,..; i.. Mercer and Venango Clarion aind Forest, Jefferson, Clearfield, Elk & M’Kcan, Crawford and Warren, Erie, Potter and Tioga,... Tub Victoria Bridge at Montreal: —The Victoria. Bridge, across the St. Lawrence, at Montreal, was commenced in 1854, and it is ex pected that it will be completed in the course of the next month. The cost willbe between seven an;d eight millions of dollars. The num ber of men employed upon it now is 3000, with 6 steamboats, >72 barges, and also several smal ler craft, 142 horses, and 4 locomotives. The amount Of wagis daily is $5OOO. The bridge'ds 9084 feet, or nearly one mile and three quarters in length. "There ire three million cubic feet of masonry, ten thousand tons of iron in the tubes, two million rivets, and one hundred and sixty eight acres rf;pivinting. There are twenty-five openings of 243 feet, except the centre one, which is’33o fc£t. There is a rise of forty fee.t to the mile [to the centre of the bridge. The centre' pier is'24 feet in width, and the others 15 feet.! Each of the piers and abutments is furnished with; a cut-water, which will act as an ice-breaker when it breaks up in the spring. The centre pier is 60 feet high, and the abut ment 3B feef Some of the' blocka of stone weigh sflventesen tons, but the average weight is about elpven tons. Each iron tube covers two and ,af each alternate opening, or at every feet, a space of eight inches is left the tubes for'expansion by heat,! the ends resting onexphrision rollers, which move on plated beds. Each tube weighs about 822 tons. This stupendous structure will make the Grand [Trunk Railroad ah unbroken line from Portland to Sarnia. When are they the Prettiest. — “ A wife looks prettier, if she did but know it, in her neat; morning j dress of calico, than in any in congruous pile; of finery, which she dignifies with this - title .Jqf* full dress. • Many an unmar ried femajp ißiist wins the heart of her future husband insome simple, unpretending attire; if consulted abotaC which she would pronounce too cheap azaept for ordinary wear, but which by its suitability to her figure, face and currihge; r ißeaiizes her yd\ith wonderfully. If the sex' would study taste in dress more, and care terror dostlihess/they would hffre no rea son to it.” ; A foolish and silly iflan is not worth; manying, and a sensible man will surely jqdge !y jp exact ratio, to the plainness; and simplicity of your dress. CAtJswHf; To^MoTirEßs.—Last a young and inexperienced mother in a. neighboring township, wqnt to be.d and fell aslpop holding her. ln'' her aijras. i When she awoke, someiifflfe’dnrinfe the night, she was horrified tn find that her babe was dead 1 ’lt ishofanlnh usntd occurrenpo for mothers to awke with, dead babes in .their whom, they unconsciously smother dnrlqgfle ep. The practice of children sleeping ,w|th their mothers is altogether repre hensible. ;If depth by asphyxia is not always .the result* thol faet that the ohild is thus de priced of pure air must necessarily cptxtdjfisa had shorten- its Uf o.-~~Jhf-rtiiurff TtUgrapfr.. 1ty,&44 131,430 103,970 132,232 House of Representatives. •• T0ta1...... , Brovin —“ While iu Kansas. After uiy prop erty was destroyed, one of my sons killed, and my happiness destroyed by the slave party of Kansas, I determined to be revenged. I also was moved in this matter by a hope to benefit the negroes.” Reporter —“ Where did you get all your rifles and pikes which are here ? Who furnished .you with them ?” Dem. Op. (3 11 Broun —*• My own money. I did not receive aid from any man. If 1 had succeeded in run ning off slaves this time, I could have t'aise 1 twenty times ns many men as I have now, for a similar expedition. But I have failed.' I did nut intend u> stay here so long, but they (the citizens) deceived me by proposingcoraproinises which they hud no intention of carrying out. 1 am not iu any man’s employ.” Another dying conspirator thus explained how Brown came to be in possession of arms, and his statement was confirmed by an exactly similar one made by another conspirator to another re porter, not within hearing of Copie and his in terrogator;— Ed. Copie states that he is from lowa. He made the acquaintance of Brown last Winter in lowa, where Brown told him of scheme, and asked-him to join the expedition. ■ Copie states as follows:—•• Wo were to be well paid for our time and trouble. We never made a direct bar gain as to how much we were lo receive. Old man Brown was not to pay us, but I don’t know who wias. The rifles were furnished by the Massachusetts Aid Society They were first sent but the excitement having died away, they were of no use, and Brown got the rifles for this expedition. They were sent from Kansas to Chambersburg, Franklin county; they were then hauled from there to Brown’s house by a man that lives in Greencastle. I don’t know who made the pikes or picks. I have said all the prayers I have to say and am ready lo die. ” 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 These avowals entirely dispose of the ques- ; tiou of the complicity of any political party. — ’ Some of the Southern press are already attemp ting to make political capital out of this trage dy; and are falsely condemning not the Repub lican party only, but the whole people of the North for the infamous proceeding of the infat uated maniac, whose mind was doubtless thrown off its balance by the cruelties practised upon him and his by the Missouri border ruffians.— We would respectfully suggest to our cotempo raries of that class, and to our brethren of the Southern States generally, that such a course is both unjust and Impolitic in the highest degree. While we have no desire to annoy ouj- fellow ! citizens cf the South by undue moralizing upon the lesson taught by the events at Harper's Ferry, we would remind them that by such an unjust qourse to their brethren of the North as that of implicating them by wholesale in the proceedings of mad Brown and bis fifteen or twenty fanatical associates, thoy ; will only pro voke retorts and counter maledictions which will tend-more to'the disadvantage of the South than of the North. The intensity and universality of the alarm caused by this incendiary movement of a handful of fanatics, and ihefeucly resort of the alarmed South to-the protective force which the Union holds at. its service, are suggestive of reflections that would prove unpleasant to the , South/ without the addition of unjust accusa tions and fierce denunciations. Rather let our Southern brethren learn a lesson of another and a better kind from this unfortunate and lamen table occurrence. Seeing it thus demonstrated that the Union is essential to thje well being of the Sooth as well as* the North-tbit, tbe South needs the protecting arm of the federal govern ment, an 4 feels that its strength is there in any emergency—and that the North cheerfully rec ognizes the duty of that federal government thus to throw the segis of its protection over the South and Southern institutions—that, in fact we all "need the Union, and turb to it in the lime of our need—let us cease allimutual railing and false accusation, and unite heartily in the Webaterian sentiment, “ the Union, now and forever, one and inseparable.” I 1 \0 . llahd Case,— A cotemporary ciscribes, ip Hi pwathean style, a man who— j —ybok the ague badly, | And it sipck him* shook him Sorely; Shook bis boots off and his toe-nails j Shook bis teeth ont and bis hair off; Shook his coat all into tatters, t And bis Shift all info ribbons; j Skinless, eoatless, "hairless, toothless, Minua boots and minus toe-nails. Still it shook him; shook him till it Made him yellow, .gaunt Pud bony; Shook bim till ft reached bis death: bod; Shook liim till itshuffledfor him Off hrs nibrtal then It ' , Having pjado him cold as could Lo, Shook the earth still down upquhim, And he lies ’peaih his gravestone, Ever shaking, shaking, shaking; 111I 11 , , aeW:isji W jnNej? York, 'fresh from the chisel of irirom Powers, of * Florence,’ 4 exocnlcd-fall length; stalaehfthe clothed iWg4- m wiick Washington x xj*- **l, Xcvt Publlcalioi|». N«w Boor, and one that b destined toterankcdaa the lM»t)iw)tc.o(thoßeft«o.. Kov atcd uvxu , UieFrench, ', : i' _ ird with the most distinguished [personages of the present day, end gives desci iptionS of the jnannerdjf perfonning nHmy of hi« teest curious tricks and transformations. I f Written by Bound in one volume, 12mo i,j Cloth, Ho pages. Price $l,OO. ' From the- Editor's Pre/c et. A man may not only •' take his own life,” by writing- hie Autobiography, withojat committing fdo one .voliime, 12m0., cloth, and illustrated with fine engravings.— Price $l,OO. * Copies of either of the above books with a handsome Gift worth from 60 cents to §lOO will be sent to any person in the United States upon receipt o'f $l.OO, and 21 cents to pay postage, by addressing the Publisher, who is desirous - of calling your attention to his honorable method of transacting business, viz : With Bach Book that is bought at his Esta blishment, a Present is given aicuy, icorth from Fifty Cents to One Hundred Dollars.' The Presents arc of good quality and the best manufacture, and comprise a large assortment of Watches, Jewelry, Silver Plated* Ware, Silk Dress Patterns, etc., etc., etc., top numerous to mention. Send for a complete Classified! Catalogue'; of books, which will be mailed to you free of ex pense, and one trial will assure you that the best place in the country to buy books' is at the large establishment of ' ] \ , GEORGE |G. EVANS, publishers, and Originator of fhe Gift Book Business, No, 439 Cljcbnut St, Philadelphia. New and Prosperous Settlement.—Uam mouton on the Camden and' Atlantic Railroad, is a flourishing village settled 4)lefl y Ne w Englanders, who wish to cscapb i their frosty climate, and by persons from thei;West,'Who are engaged in the. grape culture. [Ohe year ago the settlement commenced, andfstnee then bos a population of fifteen hundred* * They have built about three hundred houses, opened four stores, several hotels, one steaxnf saw and plan ing mill, and one water power saw and planing mill, with schools, churches, and [brick yards.— They have set out since, forty yjpyards, and in short, established a settlement, Which from the respectability of the settlers, is |lestineil to be come one' of the most importantj-and influential places in the State of New Jersey. Grape growers are of the opinion that tins strip ofland between the Little and the Greliti Egg Harbor, rivers is the best for the vine, jpvring to both soil and climate, of any that lia| been found in the country. From the extent they are enter ing into the business, a supply of pure find' un-: adulterated wines may soon be;jeipeoted. They' who have raised chops at tlammqnton represent that the soil is very [ it is not sun prising that the placo should indrcosc so rapid-, ly, whefl it is considered thef advantages it presents over the West in bealih/olimate and markets., Crops aro secure fyopa! frosts, that blighting enemy th at robs thja [farmer of the North of so much of his Tal>jar| ind profit.— P hila. Inquirer. \| j / SI>KCDLATISO IS LOTTERIES--All mca.flK. prone to baezard; some try ore wiiy and some another. To those who try 1< we would say that Woop, Eddy & Co„ Minagcts ot the Deleworp State Lotteries will Imw fi mammoth sohemc ’ oir Saturday, f)ciob :r|'27th, Capital Prize, sloQ,jo<)o ; ■ Second, Ci j>|ta|, §6O;bOD Third, §20,(100, &c., &j. \V( o|>, leddV & Co. are so well and favorably known to be men qf integrity and projnpjneis,; |hMl| is' unnecessary for us to say anything : ow&iji y but we will say thttt %nr address is] sqpu, finny & Co., Wilnihigton Del., and thd ot Whole Kckets in this piammoth ficheiSf ‘id $2O, half, sl6, ahd qharter3 ,■ ■' '.-rf XWi.t »%>:»■ y 8C&. The Sonbury dudfirie- BsilreSd is now competed: tq' fklujhhtffl, Whrrpn Mahij,.:§im caw daily to that point ; : ]' AsoTKKn Falles MistWßiL-.Th«'4e* < ».7 j bell is, «s*.; The Rev. M. il *l° tried a agd at Bloomington by the i diana Confidence, »jad expettolLjh* a , of . 7 sixty three|in six®**, for * of WMness^Sw|4t- a B.seqgnow pSy to rt*ul, from ,heT froEftithopaflsofclm-icStdiSnitvi ~n‘ as f^ittly^^BidcntllftteKßloondnJ Fof) many, | e r«Sß3®fisSsaeK , self with the outside world, and his Wfod cal ling- was often forgotten.amid the revelry an 1 corruption of politics; at a later stage b«. '* conquered -by a passion for women. The fauh was his own; he had for many years walked * hear the edge of the pit of ruin that in an J 0 lucky moment be was carried down the nrcci pice* Turks. Pxbsoxs Killed is. a L. jor ofthomral militia, sixty Qe . Havana, Cuba, recently fought a dtel' with swords, and killed his a young uaa The second then took up the quarrel, aitj u'. too was killed by * thrust of the miijorVswQnh [ a cousin of the principal next stepped forward’ arid was also killed; lastly, a friend of all the others bound to avenge their deaths, but upon receiving a rather severe wound, declared i himself satisfied. The victorious duejlists, iu I full uniform, went to Havana and presented j himself to the Captain General, who, without | depriving him of his sword, pointed outTrofo, l for him to occupy, and place a “ guard of honor” at the door. It is believed he will be [ acquitted Try the military court before which he iisto bo tried. . ■- Bloody Escauement.—A bloody .engagement between whites and Indians, took place recent ly, on the Arkansas river, near Fort Smith - - There Were seventeen Indians on one side, and five Americans,*two unarmed; on tjh'eother, At s the end, eleven Indians were'lriUtd, and Pool an American, was shot with an arrow, which ho had to cut out; and after performing incredible feats, he was finally billed in a third attach— Sawyers and Bsudlcy, ot the same parly, shared the same fate, and out five bufoue es caped. , BQk- A meeting of 40 old soldiers of the war oMSId convened at Grcensburgb, on the 13th inst., for the purpose of petitioning- Oagrcss for a monied pension for the balance of their lives. Previous to the mcetinf, they were drilled by an old captain, in front of one of the hotels of the town, and it is said they Went through the manoeuvers in truly creditable manner. They were all between, the ages of 77 and G 2.; A rich vein of g=is has been discovered at Mansfield, Ohio. Soon after being opened, it caught fire, and Las burned- brilliantly ever smeo GREAT OPENING OR : ' SPRUNG AND SUMMER Cl3* C£> £S> 5i3 * : T B. IIILKMAN HAS JEST RK i f / a iT.ivotl and-n| "Up.| at tun old stand, ou Virginia ,t„ [ a large anil nttraciivo .t3#rtrtlueatursiii»unaLk g.-Cil,, i-jo, pricing all the novcKictr iu BEREUES. DIXSLS, ' . cmyrzEs, - IS UVV.'t ciyoffs us. E.WROIVERIES, LAKES, ffOSIERV Us t itacA, Gage and AprteU ' tr~^- Tn». grafted lathe root. AH tree* war r»ntco. • ... Altooua. July 14, ’»D-3ra K- I - - Medicated fue chest pbo- TkjrOK, A SAKE SHIELD ASAISSX featfiU tooeeoa Uroncliltw, Coughs, Colda, tioaeoftho tng», which arUe from th o cipoicd 6taw chetti a (o fashion and the continual chftOg__ .* Ctt#iate. tor tale at the I>rug Stow of WSS"; f|s&E WHITE LBJAD -;ASP WJ* a grocaj: «il «t ;., 11-tf.] f-r ■ .,y* , ■ **► u - fcV*ifi£v . • ' Storm bj.the f pee lafjWhitg,we ol t<»r Win lirqj baok nnd< «n||btg^ifnpqso . on ,*focd to give nl &aa*knoo and v printer. W owe us, but wc 1 ' Won't foci offend mtwh time to them* w e hope t always open to fotch string on tfclmnt. While the tefoptation edpy th* fallow' applicable to ours Wlthapcilompora im penetrate to oliUled, and that S&U&W? Will la, lyfdpqjvlng that ‘printer shall at ot ’ “ Hem comcs \ ' ■ Stnarme of mi Pay toe printer Let him wan f*AtAt,AcCIDE\ h'Wleti named Her trade, who has bet jeaf orljßore, wt ohd train, i of P. Dempsey’s I that hi aarrived: \ iogs wete rim ovc cut cm severely crushed. gVjrfdr'at the inque ealeddh. the uftci previous to the he. up. %ctqCthc t up ant time! tap£4Md tbat be <*pptjtidt before tl ■ 'Mf enginocj that he did not dii until he trahttilhi) to obeek the’ train. Ooe of the Ihht he bad seen during i “hready h stand up. lire, tbit aa oct, tl chromized 5 Qdba Kbws von "tics, we have some something you Lav to fQ,. the 1 "-hegiiwe/fttath you ths it gives u; cations to bo the tidjpgs frau ti irftose who by l . prcDatipn so often printer. Bu . out a string o you, j good news. W ni* Scott;' the fas *«• j«*it returned J winter goods, n there k • >aba I .winWWnt o that Log, I : *cceiy in I anJ ft I foll ° win S r I liound Kou- I ?#*•**••*. “P 1 I i lia I ■4 flnie r ipNy* «p Aiieg I CavoJine. d< I D°fe n U Hou* I of the Eng I Btrcet . West I toou I JBsSPf I ***** wSp***- I of the Ce MvCUtJI- iXiv- Wk *&eco Cotnea wit .* Whitening ct printer Send your mi Ilerdoomcs nin ' 'tw! remembe In cold winter, : 110 want* easl • : „ ;*