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BARNHART. 4 Terms of Publication TERMS .—sl,6oets if paid within throe months $2,00 if dlayed six months, and $2,50 if not paid within the year, These terms will be rigidly ad 2ored to •,DVERTIBEMENTS and 'liminess Notiees insert ed at the usual rates and every description of JOB PRINTING EXECUTED In the neatest inannor, at the lowest pions, and with the utmost dospolch !loving pdrchasod a largo collodion of type, we are pre pared to satisfy the orders of our frionde usiness pirctiorp. ►S. J. UOCICUAriI, SURVEYOR AND CONVEY % , ICER MrI,II,O4TM I , M Al LINTER JAMK4 A BI.A,1:11 PEA MASTER dr BEA VER Al TORN AT LAW, WILLIARI 11. 1111. Al ATTORN EY AT LAW 111. 1.1.1,11 ,1 TY., PA Olnee 111 Ole A renile, reeonol Door JAM NO H. muirmirt, ATTORNEY AT LAW, id 11.1., 011 tllO Dil/111011d, 0110 door 0..01 of the I. J. CRAM*, I'oENEY AT LAW AND REAL F.,:TATI . MJ EN r r.rtniira.n, i I nut]. ,rt JA if 1111AIKEE% II HALE, ATTORNEY Al' LAW, riti.l.KroNTE, I . k `lna lailb the Hon J amen 1' 11 alc N 11458-11 A hi II ROT V P Es, I'INTOO It AP flti d 11A41I'Vlilt HOTY P dully gseeptSundsym4'ruin e A 1.1 to r YJ A BA Ili 11 A KT, In his splendid Saloon, in the Arcade Building Penn' a . _ DR. JANES E. InIUTCHISON, YMYSICIAN Ai SURGEON, Or Wui J MoKlin, respectfully to i A 10, professional tier% lees, tI the 411132011t1 of 111'1 LIVS MILL'S slid vicinity 0(5,0 ut thu itaw Ilousc J. a Inirirf , PRACTICAL SURVEYOR OAR I ' , CA :tilt rtd to surveying farms, road., Se. All pidiga I e,es addrenstel 1.0 Bwileburg P , n4ll re 0 prole let attention Feb 10.50 6,1 =I LIMA lk WILSON: ATTORNEY'S AT LAW ofri, n on Allegany street, ill the buibitng for ov,uio,d by Iltrtnt., McAllottar, Halo h Co !•1.14 .Igunt. 10 .5 Dear u HOW ATTORIIEY AT LAW II K.l LK} 01 . 41 IC, 1.1 di a. lead to all yrofunsitinal bum nees eatru.ied iu hie care Particular atteution paid to colic, tl.me ke (Aro 'a the Ao,orrcadu, :wooed 11 with Sul ra II Blair 'augury 13-'594 IRA C erirrciacci„ ATTORNEY AT LAW, asuitairoart Plin , A 11 , ill coutinue the practice of hin profeealon In h.r office loirotufore ic'cupied by him SDI will at :rut TA/11114y and faithfully to all buaineta him lie.- 21. INSB —ly S. D. WIMILAATE, 0 RESIDENT DENTIST office and residence on the North East Corner the Diamond. near the Court 1101110 tar.'R 111 be found at bra office except two weeks o each month, commencing on the first Monday of tie month,whon he will be away tilling professional vier GEORGE W. SWARTZ, ia,v A ~A, , , , ,, . .mAKER& JEW ELER, acm.aronre, PENN A Rooms one dour Eact of E C Humes, et Urn 11,,re on Allegheny street °leeks, Watehee and Jewolry neatly repaired and warranted Aug 12 '5B If DR. O. L. POTTER, PHYSICIAN k SUE/EON BILLLitroeITA, lEbrna CO , PA, fliffre on High Sirett cold office) Will attend to ridesa I ciallS as heretofore, and ire+peetfully iffers his sersices le hts filen& and the pa bill) (lot 24-'515-tf DB. J. B. MITCHELL, PIII:SICIAN h SURGEON, 111:1.1.61 , 0NITE, CICITItK. 0 , PA w attend tojirofessinnal ealla . horotoforo, and oxpectruily offurt base moos to his friends and Ito public. Offiou next dour to his resident, on pring sirryti - Oat 28 514 if *Pin Hot, ATTuItNEY AT LAW PEXN'A 111 attend promptly to all legal beehive:l Intruated him Special attention will ho given to the '•' ,ih trna' C,iurl Practice and &evening Hie office vial the lion Jennie T Hale, whore ho can ' aye be consulted In the Bushell and (Jarman • .4uageitv J ILSTOVEK, ITTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AV LAW lIRLLZYWITIS, proves practice his profession lii the several Courts etre County, All business Intrusted to him ii ou faithfully.attendud to Particular attention ' to colleotions; and all monies promptly re- Can be consulted in the German as well the English language. lime an High et , formerly occupied by nage ..I.,side and I). C Boal, Esti N. P. GIREICN, DRUGGIST. BILLISPONTI, P• WROLOP•LIII AND RINIJI DlaLua IN . ,ugs, Medicines, Perfumery, Paints, Oils, Var ,ihea, Dye-Stuffs, Toilet Soaps Brushes, flair and Brushes, Panay and Toilet Articles, Tremolo Ind Shoulder Braces Barden Beath! .lastomers wtll end my stook complete and fresh, and all sold at moderato prioes I:l o ^Parmers ■nd Physicians om the country ovited to is:airline my stock. BANKING HOUSE , OF ‘VM. F. REYNOLDS & CO BELLEFONTE, CRETE E CO., PA. 11.11 or exchange and Notes diStmonted Col i4 salute and proceeds promptly remitted.— t e-t paid on special deposits Exchange In the s , t, , rt. cities constantly on hand for sale. Dopes reee.vea A l ,B lth, 1859 . _ ARTISTS MATERIALS MATERIALS for painting in White Col ors, Oil COIOI in compressible tubes, Vor: for ticaeiaa Oil Paintings, Silver Buil, Chad hcct and Silver bronco, Camel Sable Hair Paper, India Ink. superior English Pre: r fired Canvass, an ,nan he hod nl thp Drug Store I P. GRE EN. Bel ofo I 5-'3lrlnte,A pril ~`~.rr. Stittk tatty,. - - Re -llnicm of Friends in Heaven. Ivo aro girt about with shadow; Nothing hero it sure , Sunshine, o'er the greonest mendow„ Paining elnutll olivoure, Fairest night and foulest morrow , Joy is nrolude oft t4urrow Falsehood dwells in fairevt feature, LIPs ore glo,sed with art , Truth c,fl' woureth roughest satin re \Vim ena rend the horn That wo see is only seeming , That wu do, tro are but dreaming Wu and death are strangely nuugleJ , Illovsotes hide iho gt are hoot each ea u Van,' he ningled, They suet. likeness hale , LIR/ 11/ Death is ever gi mug, Dying seetnent trin,t When the wind'iA critich•st blowing, ' Plague is 1/I us 61'tlh W I cost Stager ha , o wt knowing of the lore of Death , I hat groat lon, the deepest hidden, Cotneth to us oft unhidden , l'ut, are lights of he.is ell blending With th o Leath is evermore ling To the gates of Birth , Faith can peer beneath the curtain , Tho uneertsiti it [mule certain Incident in the Life of a Locomotive En gineer In 'chiming from Philadelphia about the middle. of August, 1558, the cars were very crowded, and my companion to the same ;eat with me, 1 found out ti) be a Locoino motive Engineer, and in the (emi%e of our conversation he made the '.mark, he hoped he had inn his last Ulf, upon a Lo'coinotlve Ilpon makneg bold to 1114 reasons, he gave me follow I'll.; td my, and since then 1, have found it r be strictly tine: " Five years slave I was funning up on the N It It Nly run wan from ll -- to It -- It wan , tlw laglitoin 6 ; I , :x:kess Tram, and it was what ii, 16.1111 U denotes, for it was 1.": t avi ry last run, and if Ido say it, the old Tornado could go I have seen her throw hen si' feet di i3et s sun as to be almost invisible to rho -3e Inel lit me here remark, it Is 'OIIIIOM A] that Railroad engin& rs are a hail houndsit of - Tnen , their s are hard. tine, but I do churn to have ac line a fin lung, and a heart that can sympathle with the unloruenate army man that breat)es Iteit to my story. I= About hall a mile from the village to there is a m"' little cottage but a fe,w feet from the tra, I, At that tune a 1 young maned couple 11%eil there They had one child, a little boy about 4 year' old, as bright, blue eyed, eui lj 'headed little chap as you ever saw I had tit*en a peat deal of interest in the lade fellow, and had thrown candy and orani . es to hen from the tram, and I fras sure to bee him peeping through the fence when my train passed. (hie fine sunny at ernoon we were be hind time and running fist iVe did not stop at B - and I was making Op one hour b4foro reaching . Wo came up at a tremendous speed, and when sweeping around the cern , , my eye following the track not over two bandied feet ahead sat the lit tle fellow-playing with a kitten, which he held in his lap At the sound of our ap proach he louSed anti laughed, clapping his little hands in high glee at the allrighted :tato) as it ran from the track Quicker than lightnin4 that blasts the tall pine upon the mountain top, I whistled ii breaks" and reversed my enAlne, but I kne* it was impossible to stop. Nobly did phi t old en gine try to bilve limn. The awful straining and writhing of its trod di 'eel s told but toff plainly of the tenille velomty we had at tained. I was out of the cabli window-a 0 down 'on ikeeowcalcher in a Hash. The little fellotv stood still. I motioned him oft' and shouted, Ina little blue eyes opened wide with astonishment, and a inetry laukh was upon His lips. I held my breath as we rushed upon him, made desperate attempt to save him, but missed, and as Ins little body passed under I heard the cry of " Mother !" and the forward truck crushed him to atoms. Oh, hod ! that moment ! I may live, sir, to be an old man, but the agony of that mo ment can never be erased from my memory. Tho oars stopped some rods from the spot, and I ran back as soon as 'possible. ills mother saw the train stop and a fearful foreboding flashed upon her at °now. She came rushing frantically to the spot where we stood. Never shall I forget the look she gave me as she beheld her first-born &shape less mass. I would have given my whole existence to have avoided ihat - moment ! I have seen death in all its forms upon the railroads. I have seen men, women and children mangled and killed—l have seen all this, but that little innocent boy, as ho look ed up at me—it unnerved me and from that day I made a solemn vow never to run a lo comotive any more. The young mother is now in the Utica Lunatic Asylum. From the hour the boy was killed reason had loft its throne. Ile stopped and wiped the tears from his eyes, and said, " You may think it weak in me to shed Leers, but r cannot help it." Rlistellancous. BELLEFONTE, CENTRE COUNTY, PENYA., THURSDAY, JUNE 2, 1859, No," I replied, •' but think it noble ; and. sir, would to clod every man had a heart as large as your's." I have often thought since, how few are those who give one passing thought, to the mail of strung nerve and stout arm, who guides them through darkness and storms with the speed of the wind safely to their journey's end. They do not for a moment turn theirattention to the iron monster that is dragging them farward with fearful ve locity to meet friends or relations or home and all its loved 'ones. 'I hey do not realize that the Mali 100 gvides the fiery monster holds all their precious lives at his command and that the least negligence upon his part %%mild (sumo sorrow anti mourning in a thousand bonwa that are now waiting the return of the absent loved ones." Fatal Duel at Mobile A duel Wll4 lo'nght at, Mobile, Ala , May 17th, between W J. Vick, only son of Cal•, net 11. Vick, of Isariuena county, Mississip= pi, and James Stith, of Vicksburg, in which Mr: Vick was killed. A letter to thd New Orleans Picayune, from Mobile, says : As announced to you already, by tele graph, No 3 ming gentlemen, Mr. 54th and Mr. V wk, came over to th , F; city to day, from New Orleans, to settle au ads rof honor," the result of which was the death of the latter. 7 heir original destination was Christian, but eirenunstanues brought than here. They were attended by two seconds and a surgeon each The meeting took place at II o clock, A. M., at the old rave course (Bascombe.) The weapons were common Mississippi rifles ; distance forty paces. They fought on the inside of the course - sonic. eighty yards Irmo 'the enclosure and under the open sun Coolness and calmness marked each antag onist, as he walked to his ieisilion, and, in dc,ed until the tragical (It nounceMent. Vick won the choice of position ; Mr. Stith won the " word." All preittuniaties being arranged, and the weapons placed in the hands of the belliger elan, the usual command was given. Each gentleman, anawerod audibly, •• Beady At the vtonl " Fire''' Mr. V,yk bought his wt flans down and dim, hargtd it At oily." Mr. Sloth fired, and his ant.igonist fell in stantaneously dead' The ball t"ok illect immediately under the left chee, and, rang sng opt ard. passed into the brain, where tt lodged he unfortunate victim ft II sof felted hanself out, and was luta before hie: bk.i.unds !cached him, Wheat a change' robust, mat ly form, vtgoions and healthy a st cowl, and it lios a [deciding Yorptte ' Time s lemur foe you '' Envy Envy is a mean passion It neither con sults 11116011 our wads initi! the judgment is ezereised. It uses all the appliances thrt can be brought to bear upon its subject - - lake the ,:ormorailt, it eats out the substance of everything uuts.ile of itself and then turns and prays upon its own vitality , and strange to say, that in feeding upon itself, it grows and strengthens and becomes Moie capable of performing its destructive work. The envious person can never be happy, The thing IS InipOMMIWO. AA well expect the cor morant to be out of pain and experier3e pleasure With its sharp beak on its own heart, and drawing forth the fluid by which its hie is kostained If the silly bird that drinks its own blood can lie at rest and Sat isfied then may an envious man pronounce himself contented. But while the wound is open and bleeding, the proces.s of destruc tion must be going on ; and the result is inevitable. When the last drop is drawn forth, the work rs finished. Envy destroys itself with the destruction of it; possessor. But the worst of all is that while envy is doing its work of destruction ,ii the heart that, entertains it, none of the parties are at all hurt or disquieted. The vile passion can only _prey upon itfielf. It can do gu \ ,harin outside of the poor mistaken bosom that af fords it a harbor. TUE LATI9 FIUUT IN KENTUCKY. —Our tele graphic despatches a few days since undo mention of the fact of stAght between Mes srs T. T Darrard and B. F ;Ace, opposing candidates for Congress in the SU% District of Kentucky By the Richmond, Kentucky, Messenger, we have the particulars of tho affray : We learn that ti difficulty occurred in Boonville on 'holiday last, between T. T. Garrard the regular Democratic nominee for Congress, and B. F. Rice, the Didepetident }democratic candidate. It seems that Gar bard, in a speedh, reflected severely upon Rice, and, his course in becoming a candl dat9, and Rico in his reply, retorted bitterly, givingydr. Garrard as good as he sent. Gar rard replied, stating that Rico's remarks "were as fain asil-L-1." Rico called him a "d•cl liar," whereupon Garrard Grow a pie. 'tot and tired at Rice without touching him. A Mr. Gibson, son-in-law ; of Mr. Garrard, immoliately drew a pistol and fired three or four. times, two balls taking effect upon Rice, badly wounding him, and a third upon a man by the name orSmith, who is thought to he mortally wounied, the ball having pas, sed through his neck. Rift's wounds are very severe but aro not considered danger ous. The affair is unfortunate, and where it •will end we cannot say. A. ~m1..4....e.71,tm.a44t,',,APritie1, A 'Case of Jealousy and Proposed Nur- A case of foolish jealousy, coupled with A proposition to commit the dark crime of murder, recently tramosored in our neigh; boring village of Crestline. Weliadlintemh ed to give the names of the parties to this transaction, but at the earnest solicitation of one interested, We have emir-Jetted to n th hold proper names Some two years Igo, a man and his wife, with :her little family, front an Eastern State, settled M Crestline. For the present we shall call the gentleman Mr. A --. Ile was, and is pasmonately attached to his wife ; but his domestic hap piness has been sadly marred by the fre quent Calls of a lawyer from 3lansfleld, who paid, as he thought, too many attentions to his wife. The husband brooded in silence j over the supposed inconstancy of his bosom companion. lie never intimated his cusp- C 101 1 .4 to her, or any one else, until the tho't of despatching his haw' rival took posses sion of his brain. taut the query was how he could accomplish this and escape detec tion. At last, as be supposed% he hit upon a plan. Ile went to a brakeman on the P. F. IV. & U. It. It , with when was on terms of great intimacy, and to lom com mumeatett his sunpic,ons, had proposed to give him one hundred and tweet-rise dollars in money, a g old watch, and a suit of. fine clothes, as a consideration for kAling the Mansfield lawyer ; or, as ho expressed it, to make "buzzard's victuals" of him The money and watch were dellvered ; the brakesman entered into the contract, appa rently- nn good faith, but went the next day and informed the lawyer of 6hl that had hap- pened Matters rested for a few days One evening, as the husband was approaching the home, he beheld the lawyer hating the house, and on entering saw hr, eife hur riedly shut a bureau drawer. On her at, nenee fre'e±arr!ned the drawet : nnamne his surprise in discovering a largo quantity of gold coin, which lie supposed had purchased wtfe's chastity. Ile was almost frantie, I but said nothing, still hoping to hear of the Ilawyer's early decease as per arrangement i with the brakesman. On the ny t meriting I the lawyer and braktwman, by an under standing null the wife, who was. • , pohud ' hi the whole atfalr, called at thn house The it ire received them in her quiet, lady-like way ; the haaband treated them walk great ..biticsa and 'ltidlNerenre• and began to re• 7ard the Lrakesman %Oh suspicions of infl• da My to Mu tril,t. The wife quietly a ent to the bureau, took therelom the bag of I gold, anal turning to her husband, said —Here 14 "8,7 II which u y attorney has, 1 1 after a great amount of labor, collected ac my legacy from the administration of my mule, whom you did rot I now, end .who I deal in New Jersey some (lea en years His kindly °like, for win, Ii he has retained a ieaaonable fee, has effecteal you 'a ith Jeal ousy. I hope this may leach you never to impute crimes to others, unless you have better evidence than mere r,topicion of their guilt." The breaksinadtten ;nose and handed over the watch, saying . "This is the price set upon the lawyer's bead, but after an in vestigation, I concluded he del not need kill ing, and I herewith return it to you, hoping yon will become a wiser and better man." The reader may imagnice the effect produ ced upon 116k:doe* husband by being si multaneously convinced of his a fife's fidelity and possessed of 68,7-II in gold.-I'raufmai County For um. Deplorable Condition of the Pike e Peak Emigrants The regular correspondent nl the , St. Lou is Democrat, writing from Demer City, on the 9th inbt , recounts the most deplorable condition of &Weirs on the Plains Many of the emigrants are dy;lig from starvation, while the others are subsisting on prickly pears and wild onions found a long the road. TheSiate lgent repntte pick ing up a 111111 ' 1, netted tilde, who was reduc ed to a skolotten frtintiltaivation. On recov ering, lie gate a most lamentable account of his adlentures. lie started in company with two of his brothers for the mines one of them died on the road, and the remaining two were so far bordering on a state of star vation that they eat his body Another died, and in turn was nearly ile• toured by'the miry Ifore. Arnim named Gibbs had reached the mines' in a starting condition, and expressed the opinion thin his party, nide In number, had till perished. Many graves wore seen along the rotte. Much property has been destroyed and abandoned on the road. Tho writer of the letter before referred to, says the ntquber of departures front the mimes-is about equal to the arritals. About live hundred of thu returning emi grants reached St. Joseph on Saturday, all of *limn confirm the pretuous accounts of the sulfuring and pritations on the Plaids. Kissing a Vretty girl dovtu &Mal a young gentleman asked her "What makes you so sweet 1" "tTh," she replied' in utter inntMenee "my father is a suguar planter." Five hundred Alormona arrived . In flow York last week, from Europe, ea route tor Salt Lake city. From Itio Now York ObqerNer How to make Liquor• • ll= A dealer in strong drink, once residing in Albany, assured me that when he parchased imported liquors, IA New Yoris, on ship. board, he felt no security in receiving the un poi led articic unless he watched it , number of pip, of,importad brandy, pur• chased of the' l'i'nportei while on the do'ck, were removed the billowing night, the ca , ,ks emptiell and fictitious brandy substituted, gm casks replaced in then old position before 1110I'llyng, and t h e whole sold at auction the tiext day, as Mire imported brandy. .1 deni er once said to nee "If you purchase toy stock of wine at cost (which he tallied at $5,10 1 ) T will give up the trade ' I replied, " T will purchase every tillon you will war rtint pure " Alter some hesitation, he an swered, " t have not one." I= Medical men, advanced in life, have as sured me thal the etTv,j, of using intoxicating liquors now, is much more fatal to health and life than thirty years since. Then. liquors were comparatively pure. The &kinds,' in them wt.!) usually the only ingretlieni that the constitution had to cool rid with, and then an habitual danker if he Its ed so' long, did not become a known drunkard under twenty years but now it fit quently occurs that the same mnoLut of habitual dunking produces and intemperance in three years. - Tlu , change, these medical gentlemen at tribute to the t presence of other poisons than the poison oralchohol ui the intoxqating It qnors used by the peeple in such quantities. I could till a volume Vith farts going to show that as to tunic, it ne:.t to impossible to f, nd any in a . country, dre'-1 mean pure, fermented, unenforced wine , and II bulieve the same in regard to distilled spirits I are used in the manufacture of most if not all Intids, for the reason that with drugs, coin. Mon whiskey can he turned into ruin, bran dt or gin. I have been assured that arsenic is used in whiskey to restore the bead, after having been diluted with water Po with beer, w hen poisolums . drug , , are cheal.er than malt, to increase the Int Oneating power, nod money if: to be winde Thus is often (lone of which 1 hate proof positive.'atao that the most htlhy water ha, been, and is used in malting. =1 A large druggist in New Viii k to made Ito ,erryt of the fact that lie hold tong of poi-omm4 drags to breWerq, opened Ledzer to a blend of mine, and gave Mu) the tort, et names who prurchabed Ilion in I.tr4e lineman s Their h arlo t would have been forthcoming, hail certain pits edings lilt ruluet tt tutu the Stinaie of thin St.tie by bees, er, with regard to he use of drug, u,o(1 In strong IR tt heen itII rcd to go on I= Ihe late Rev. Ilunt 01 Wyoming, l'enn wrote me 11Inle I lectured in Phattileyna, I became a. quainted add' a man who was engaged extensively in making wines, brandy, Xc. 'Through my influence he abandoned the horrid train.. Ile in formed me, that. in order to produce the Ti ut ty flavor" for which Madura was so much admired, he put a bag of cockroaches into the liquor And let it remain there until the cockroaches were diAolved I have been in formed by aevcral that this is no lIIICOMMOII practice. lf any wine drinkers doubts rt, he can settle the question by an experiment - Cockraches ale plenty and many much rimes nauseous and poisonous are kiniwn to be employed by the makers and vendus of in toxicating drinks. I would give you the name of the person who gave the recipe fm using c.ockroaches, but he gave it 111 con fidence and is now occupying a mud' more moral and useful station than that of poison: mg his custonien,." I=l I have trot known until lately of the use of that deadly poison strychnine, In the mauu• lacture of whisky. This is described as possessing a greter amount of destructive energy than any other poison except Prussic acid. The object of using it is to obtain the greatest amount of intoxicaiing liquor out of the least quantity of grain. IVliether this liquor kills men, hogs or flAies, makes no difierente with the distiller, provided lie can accumulate a fortune by its sale. I quote from an article recently published in the Tribune. The use of strychnine in the manufacture of whisky, is henceforth to be punished as a felony let:lino. By means of this drug, used in con&:etion with tobac• co, sharp distillers were tusking five gallons bf whisky ftom one bushel of grain, whereas the quantity obtained by the formar old pro cess was but half so much." In searching the housii of Bishop John son, charged with murder, at Salt Lake, Utah, tho United States officials were not able to discoter the bishop, but found there in his TEN wives. Four of these wives aro sisters, and the bishop's own nieces, and hj has, besides these, two sisters out of ono fawily, and also a mother and ,her daughter. This is polygamy with& vengeance: CURB FOR SNORING.—An inventive Yan kee has produced an apparatus which he claims is a cure for snoring. It fastens upon the moulli a gutta percha tube, leading to the tympanum of the ear. Whenever & snorer snores, he himself' receives the first impression, !Inds how disagreeable it is, and, of course, rbforma. Double Execution The execution of Christian Jacobi and David S Evans, eimiicted of , mnrarring their wives, toalc in the ad yard, at Pittsburg, on I , riday last. r'ilia the unfor tunates appealed to be de'eplipenitentki and expressed themselves trilling to (lie, ha clog made their peace,with Cu being, led to the scaffold Jaceln refus'ed to say any thing to the people prtNent. but Evans made the following speech 1/0 1;r-vrtpAtEN I stand before y o u for the last time A few more minutes and I shall be in the prewmj,l" my Mak : and Jud ge Since the II of May. 1858, I halo been deeply in the cc tiers of afunetion : but While thus encompns,eil I hate hail the I,iiiil Jest', Christ to scr,lcua me A ilea. c oirlll3lllllll ww, then taken front MO, for 1111,1111 I would %%111111gly her e 411,1 d o rm uay life. 01 het frtlitTil I have been concieted Lbut before I,ed, my Maker, I decline my minieenc,, EEO 1C ho did the awful decal I kwon 110 t. I dm innocent, but hope my death may be a amens of good to some here. I onoa prom ised to make •ststement to the public be fore toy execntiot but at it has refused to holier what has been already offered: I have decided to refrain le here referred to sonic statements r. Inch tame given in evi d ense on his trial I I wie, agomg to Jt dare these statements false tint I leiv - e the wit - nesses to their (Md. I did not •'e Riddle that morning : and did not discover the Ling of the money until some tune ain't I en tertain nu enmity to the witnesset a:ainst me . and I leave them to a higher Being could gut down on my knees and pray tor all of them and I allWe rely hope to meet them all where sin and sorrow shall be no more. But I am not a left•handisl man, and the "NcitncSses knew it was fal..t. In yonder cell I have bowed bvfore my , i oil. I have prayed for them and me I have wade a writien statement, n loch is to the hands of a friend, with Itlarty to publish it if ho and others think best. It contaius noire tlort I can tell. Before I leave the world, I want to declare my trust to toy Savior and Redeemer, toy belief that he has forgiven my 8111 H, and that lie will clothe mu with the robes of purity and bliss. Let your hearts intercede in my behalf. that n hen toy body drops, my soul may tly aloft to an tr. eilasting habitation I.lfter confer! mg with los sphatual advisers Ito proceeded. 1— I:mole/nen, if I know anything of toy on n heart, I love the Lord Jesus. I know that (or his sake my sins have been forgiven. have a home beyond this vale of tears—a home in the heavens. I know that my Re• deemer [teeth, and I believe that when the drop shall fall, the Lord Jesus will receive 1110 'o n. home above. I feel haiTy ui sneer pacing paling that I shall soon Join them on Fog', - my beloved companion and ualipring. hurt! to dwell with lb in and toy Lord Jesus. I have nothing more to sny except that I am going home, and expect to enjoy a blesst‘l nonort slay . The Beginning of the World The following is an extract from a ser mon of Spurgeon, the English preacher, arid is a specimen of the eloquence which with in a year or two, has made his name famil iar in both hemispheres : '•ean any man tell me when the begin• ning was f Years ago, we thought the be ginning of this woild wao when 4ilam ,nine upon it but we have discovered that thou sands of years before that, (Let was for [Ding 10Iptotic matter to make it lit fur roan, :tiol putting a racy of creatures upon it, that they might die and leave traces of his liaintieV.(rk and marvelous skill, before he tc•fed Pis hand on man But this was not the beginning, for Revelation points us to a pciiiiil long me this world was fashioned, to the days when the morning stars were begotten—when. like drops of dew from the fingers if moni iug, stars and cons tellations fell thndily from the hand of (led ; by his eat lips, he launched forth ponderous orbs : when, w ith his own hand, lie suit comets, like thunder bolts,' wandering through the sky, to find one day their proper sphere. We go back to those days when worlds were made and sys tems were fashielened and We have not ap preached tho beginning yet._ I Until *e go back to the time when all the universe slept in the tnind of God, as yet unborn—until we enter the eternity where Clod, the Creator. &tells alone, everything sleeping in his mighty gigantic thought— we have not guessed the beginning. We may go back, back, habk—riges upon not. Wu May go back, if We may dse d word, Whole eternities, and yet neter arrive at the beginning„ Gun wing may be tired, our im agination die away. Could it uutatrip the lighttling's flashes in majesty, power and rapidity; it would soon weary itself ere it could get to the beginning.. But Clod, from the beginning, chose his people, when un natigatcd, either was yet unfanned by the wing of a single angel, when space wits shoreless, or unborn, when universal silence refined, and not a whisper shocked the sol emnity of silence, when - there was no being, no motion, naught but God hituself alone In his eternity ; when, without the sting dflii angel, without the isktepdance of a Cheru bim, long ete the living creatures were horn, or the wheels of the chariot of Jehovah were fashioned": even - then, .fin the beginning was the Word," and in the beginning God's people vcerol--in the beginning He chose them all Abreternal life. ' , $1 601111ADVAN CZ / VUI.UMI 4-,-NUMBER 23. A Great Man (ico,rge Lippard, Ir. his work called Liao .trene, thiN smith; of President Jack son : Ile nag a Lain ' Well I remember the day I waited upon loin. Ile sat there In aim clia.r I cmt se h im now. I'Ve told him of the public ilpdrt SA -the mann nodal ton Cie sin ouded ea...des to crape. which were carried at the head of '21),t11,0 men wt. I slip, mlenee Square. Ile heard all We hegr,ed lurr to leave the depos di n hen' tin y e, to uphold the gt caL bank at Philadelphia. Still he did not say a t at one of our number. more lieu) tutu the leNt, Ittlintakd that if the bank nns ern..hed att Is 'hot it ;,10. follow. Th.tt the .1.1 itian call see him he shout vl :it a vt ice of ti.undet , as hit elunclo..l uul ult.. rnr, , 1 high 41101 lus ‘N 111111 route unit bayon.l ts in your lutnoi uk,lciul 11 it r pct.! t •ons -slll - tl.e IVlnte I:oune with y.or legion , : -- lam ready fur you 1 .. With the people it nay l'aek,iwhetn 3'Q) gold can neither *** nor buy, I %rill timr:og you Itromul the Capi tol—earli one of yod on a gibbet as high as 11.1tonn's " • When I think .at. tot auditor cl that one luau standing Untie at 11 ashmeton. bat tling itgani,t all the Ito a er-, of bank and pan ic cointoned lietrayetl by those in whom he trusted -at,ailed all that th- snake of malt cc t ould ht or the fiend of falsehood tom I 111. en I tliml of that cot man placing Ins back ago,n:d tit: lock r...t1 folding its arms for the blow, ttin,le lie uttered his vow, ' 1 will not swerie one pith Nom the course I have talten," -I must confess that the ce,ad. of I _time - nay the proudest dcyi: of Ottri%lell i. t r Napoleon-, annet furnish an 11 e; ante (11 111/1 111 e that or .1f Ore w Jack -vt hen he placed life and .0111 and fame on the Lazard of ame for the people's wel 'Fare Prarivilorr Sentt Oct. The Two Names -A Centro': The name of Washington is unrretsally ldo% ol and !everted We love hum for the ititritilic excellence of 11113 chat cu ter. and fur being the ingtrurdent in the hand, of I;od of Rectiring to iis the blessing of civil and reli gion, 10)erty. Well Sloes he dew ve the af fection of every American tcngue. r would not tind. r- :due uiles.on the resrect and est eenr"due loin for the services which ho retrlered to hi, country in those "tunes that tried :IR souls." But I cannot help wondering 'at the mdif fererre manifested Fy_us as individuals for !another name as deserving of our leve and ! grit tude as that of Washington. One se curcd to iv; fr:edoin born British tyramil and opp.t'S,l4ili the other sufkred and bbd I amid died to redeem iof froMi a bondage more !intolerable than that of any earthly poten tate Why do many love the ono and dr .%),lse the othl‘r f Washington was good and Lind and true. He sacrificed a crown and kingdom for the aclfan of mankind, and bequeathed to us the richest earthly boon, —Freedom to worship God." But Juana Christ has done more than this. He left filo glorious mansions of Ins Father's love, and Caine down to earth to retie'm as from the poucr of sin and death, and makes us joint hens xnh him to an inheritance —incorrup tible, ondelßcd, and that fadeth not away," eternal in the heavens To ,o•comphbh dins, he bore the scull of a wicked, gat nsaying 'Amid, and slithered the death of the eras" Elopemoutz l'ht• clip from the T)rtme Star and Ilarri4burg P.otiot and ['moo, explain them, Ives HMI each other STRAN , F. 11111 On W. duesday night !ant, a }...mg lady of thin plat., ( h,•se name we suppreris on amitint of her former respec• tak Oily, and that of her parent:. parked up her • duds and ti inkeis," dingitishi d herself with a Veil, green spectacles, , and took a passage on the train for limit ingdon, with /mat the kn..irt..dge of her parents! The next day, her father followed her brought her back. Iler conduct has allitcteal her pa rents very much, and it is to be hoped mho 11118 learned a lesson v. hieb she will not soon forget. It hen been intimated that a certain individual who nan formerly a resident of th•s place for a short time, but who now livel in Huntingdon, had hatter "make himself scarce," lest his earthly conger Might Dud deftly be cut short Et.toemisr4.--Otir police officers reeeiVed a telegraphic despatch yesterday, from Mr. Cruthor, a hotel keeper in Tyrone City,' re questrng thorn to arrant his daughter, whO had eloped with a married man by the name of 1). S. Africa. The officers were proMptly at the depot, and awaited the arrival of the train. but One of the birds had been caged, and the other had flOwn. Tno conductor, Mr. Weitzel, tO!d tnetn that the would bO happy , bride, had been taken at ifuritirigdon, and escorted back to Tfrone, b, her anwiouti parent. The African gentlemen thinking that discretion Weis the better part of Valor; sloped for parts unknown, and thus evaded the eagle eyes orOnilicolice. Such il .. th6 history of the hlopement.. On Saturday, Judge 'Rhompeon sentenmd Alderthan Allen, COliYiatid of ' conspiring to defraud Jacob Kartstotter, to nine' mohttt► imprisonment in the county prison. Brace• land, for the same offence, was senitedced tb imprisonment for a year. Mien a