THE HUNTINGDON GLOBE, A DEMOCRATIC FAMILY JOURNAL, DEVOTED TO LOCAL AND GENERAL NEWS,, &C. The Utah News from Camp Scott. [Froth the St. Louis Itapublican of March 15th.] Very unexpectedly, Mr. John Hartnett, Secretary of the Territory of Utah, arrived in this, city Saturday night, from the Camp Scott. .I.fe left that post on the 26th of Jan uaryr-:-. bringing us news from the army two or three weeks latter than our direct ad vices. At the time he left the entire comma.n,d was in very comfortable condition, enjoying excelent health, and, considering all things, getting along "pleasantly. Only four deaths had. occurred since the arrival of the com mand, and but one - officer, Lieut., Smith, United States infantry, was sick. They had plenty to eat, and by a judicious supply of different kinds of food, the scurvy was alto gether avoided. All intercourse between the Mormons of Salt Lake - Valley and the troops at Camp Scott ceased. after the first of January. It was, however, well established that the Mor mons were actively employed in fortifying the most important passes leading to salt Lake city, and that they intended to offer re sistance to the advance of the army upon their city. It is admitted that the cannons, fortfied and in the posession of determied men, offer very great, if not insurmountable obstacles, to the march of the troops: and it was seriously discussed in camp whether the march upon Salt Lake city should not be made by another route, a hundred miles lon ger in distance, but presenting fewer obstruc tions, and those of no serious magnitude.— This, it was supposed, would be done as soon as reinforcements, supplies, and particularly animals, could. be obtained. Col. Johnston cal culated upon receiving this aid by the latter part of May, or first of June. Ile had order ed the troops at Forts Laramie and Kearney to join him at the earliest possible period this spring, and they will move, it is under stood, as soon as forage sufficient for the an imals can be obtained. It is satisfactory to know that the reports which represented that the Indians of that country were in the interest of, and would takes sides with, the Mormons, are incorrect. A large party of the tTtahs—two • hundered in number of the principal men—had been in Camp Scott, were well recieved by the Superintendent, who distributed presents to them, and assurances of peaceful intentions towards the Americans were given. Such was the general tenor of the information ob tained from the traders among them. The Cheyennes on the route also professed a de sire to be at peace with our people, acknowl edging they had been whipped by them.— The Indians were not, however, so peaeea lap inclined toward each other, and as large numbers of the Cheyennes, Pawnees, and sioux were in close proximity to each other, near O'Fallon's Bluff, a fight was expected. The coldest weather experienced at Camp Scott put the mercury 14 degrees below zero at sunrise, but the days were usually warm and dry, and as the camp is favorably loca ted in a valley, and wood was plenty, there was not a great deal of suffering from this cause. At no time had the snow been more than five or six inches deep there. A theatre, under canvas, was one of the most popular sources of amusement for the troops, and. it was well attended. In his progress from Camp Scott, Mr. Hart nett's party found scarcely any snow until they got to the South Pass. On the south side of that Pass, the snow was from one and a half to three and a half feet deep for thirty miles. The crust of the snow was sufficient to bear the weight of the men, but the pack mules suffered terribly, breaking through the crust, and frequently stumbling and falling down. From that point to Fort Laramie there was no snow, but the weather was exceeding ly cold. On the second day out from Lara mie, a general thaw commenced, and the road was muddy — and full of water until they had reached Fort Kearney. There the weather was warm and the road better. Grass may be expected at an earlier period than usual. The Territorial Government was in rather a passive state at Camp Scott, waiting the movements which would take the officers to the seat of Government at Great Salt Lake City. Col. Johnson was very popular with his command, comprising, with the volun teers, some two thousand three hundred men, and the most friendly relations existed be tween him and the civil division of the camp. Notwithstanding the culpable delay of Congress in providing means and money for the troops which have been ordered to the assistance of Col. Johnston, and which, it is admitted, should have been done, the Ad ministration has not been unmindful of its duty in this emergency. In three or four weeks, at least 3,000 troops will lie en route from Fort Leavenworth, and every effort will be made to reach Camp Scott in the time indicated by Col. Johnston. But wo be to Congress, if, from their neglect, that succor should fail, and this gallant army be cut off. It is known to be in the contempla tion of the Mormons to attack Camp Scott, if a favorable opportunity is given them, before reinforcements arrive. Romantic Gipsy Story A Story is afloat that some gossip has been occasioned in Cumberland county,' Pennsyl vania, by the following circumstances : Mr. George Fry, of Shippensburg, mar ried a Gipsy girl, belonging to a band who were haunting the neighborhood about three years ago. The gipsy girl's father was so enraged at this, that he kidnaped her, and sent her to parts unknovrn. Mr. Fry mourned her loss two years, and then married again. But, says the Shippensburg Hews, last week Mr. Fry's first wife, his gipsy wife, in com pany with " George Fry the second," arrived in this place in search of him I By the as sistance of officer Shade, she was enabled to find him. It appears, by the way, that 11 , 1 r. Fry's sec ond wife was a " widow ;" that her husband went to California some years ago, and, soon after bis arrival there, it was rumored that he was murdered. A few weeks later a let ter was received from him by her, we have been informed, in which he states that he will return in the next steamer, &c. TEE WARM" BATII.—The Medical Journal : The warm bath is a grand remedy, and will cure the most virulent of diseases. A per son who may be in fear of having received infection of any kind—as, for itstance, hav ing visited a fever patient—should speedily plunge into a warm bath, suffer perspiration to ensue, and then rub dry, dress securely to cruard arrainst . Cold, and finish off with a cup of strong tea by the fire. If the system has imbibed any infectious matter, it will cer tainly he removed by this process, if it •be restored before the infection has time to spread over the system." Remarkable Angelic Visitations in Han cock County, Ohio. [From the Kenton (Ohio) Republican, March 12.] According to the most accurate and relia ble information we can get, Orange town ship, in the southwestern corner of Hancock county, has recently been made the favored locality of one of those remarkable visita tions which the people have learned to re gard as very "few and far between"—an an gel visit. We briefly give the particulars, as we received them, front a source that all will concede is entirely reliable and entitled to , Confidence: Some time in August last, a bright, intelligent little girl, aged five years, daughter of Mr. Charles, who resides in the locality described, while near the well in the yard, about noon of the day, seemed to dis cern something high up in the air, and de scending towards her. The attention of the child was so much drawn to the object, that her gaze became riveted upon it, , and. as it drew nearer, she was observed to make fre quent attempts to reach it with her hands, and form a closer acquaintance -with the strange visitant. When the mother of the child was called to the scene, the little girl informed her that she was in the presence of an angel ; that she had. talked with it ; that it had made communications to her ; and furthermore, gave a description of it, accord ing in every particular with the generally received impression of the appearance of these messengers from above. To satisfy herself that there could be no delusion in the matter, the mother entered into conversa tion with the stranger, and after being satis fied. with the reality of the interview—and after having seen and talked with the- angel face to face—and after receiving information from it of the precise time when her own death would occur—she retired from the spot, taking her little girl with. her, and the angel waving its bright wings, returned heavenward. When the mother and child were alone, they talked freely of what they had seen and heard, and the mother's sadness was made deeper by the artless story of the child, who said that " the angel told her she would die just two months from the time she first saw it, at precisely twelve o'clock and twenty-five minutes; that she would be three days in dying ; that her death would be unlike that of others ; that her friends would suppose her to be in a trance ; that her eyes would not be closed ; that her funer al sermon would be preached in three weeks after in the new school house of the neigh borhood, by a man whom, with his horse and buggy, she described, and that her friends would have difficulty in procuring the house for the occasion." The mother kept the sad secret to herself, and waited for the appointed time, hoping that all might yet go well with her and hers, and not caring to be reckoned as one who would attempt to revive the defunct doctrine of spiritualism. But with the time came the terrible blow. Three days before the time predicted for her death, the little girl fell upon the floor, from whence she was taken to bed, and at the hour and minute foretold, on the third day breathed her last. Her eyes remained open after death, and could not be cloSed.— 'Friends, supposing her to be entranced, made vain efforts to restore her to life. A few days after her burial, Rev. 11. P. Darst was passing that way, a friend of Mrs. Charles required him to tarry awhile and preach the little girl's funeral sermon. The reverend-gentleman excused himself on the ground of having prior engagements, but promised to do so in a short time. His per son and- equipments corresponded in the most minute particulars with the prophetic description, and when he did return to re ' deem his promise, the workmen who had built the new schoolhouse, having a lien upon it, refused to let it be opened for the funeral service ; but subsequently they gave up the key, and the sermon was preached at the exact time predicted. The bereaved mother intended that the knowledge of these prophecies and their ful filments should go out of time with her, but recently, the secrecy bearing more crushing ly upon her, she determined to reveal the whole Matter, and in accordance with this determination, one day last week she sent for John Latimore, Esq., and Samuel Wood, one of our county commissioners, and to them gave the particulars, the most promi nent of which we have given. The gentle men named are among the oldest, most re spectable, and influential citizens of our county, their well-known character for integ rity is sufficient guaranty that they would not favor a wrong action, or in any way as sist in giving publicity to a story, as to the truth of which they had a reasonable doubt. These gentlemen, we understand, have taken down the facts, as Mrs. Charles related them, for the purpose of giving them to the public, in pamphlet form. They both bear testimo ny to the good character and standing of the lady who makes the revelation, and would regard anything coming from her as entitled to credit. Bank Robbers---How they treat them. in England. A recent arrival from Europe brings intelli gence that the directors of the the Royal Brit ish Bank have been tried, convicted and sen tenced to imprisonment for misdemeaner in the management of the affairs of that institu tion. These men were regarded as respecta ble citizens, moving in good society. They may be presumed to have had numerous friends, and we may suppose that potent in fluences were brought to bear to screen them from justice. But the laws are impartially administered in England. No man, however lofty his position, can expect to escape with impunity, if he is guilty of fraud or outrage. We commend this example of British justice to those who are continually asserting the superiority of our own legal administration. In this country, the directors would probably have escaped without even a trial. Far from being condemned to a prison cell, they would continue to be received in the "best society." The security of the community depends up on the certainty of justice, and in this re spect, England, with all her arristocratic distinctions, enjoys a decided advantage over the United States, with its "political equali ty." The truth of these remarks, however unsavory they may be to our republican nos trils, were only too truly verified in this com munity, by the escape of certain gentlemen who plundered without stint and who moved in the "best society." Had they lived and committed these depredations in England they would have met quite annother fate.— Lancaster Express. NEW WAY TO COLLECT DEBTS.—The Steu benville Herald publisher employs a man with the " small pox" to collect his debts.— The subscribers and job customers are all paying up without being "called upon," and the Herald man is getting wealthy weary fast. The Great Northwest—What the Census of 2860 will Show. The United States census, which according to law will be taken in 1860, will show the "Great Northwest' a Republic in itself. In extent it far surpasses the Southern and East ern States combined, and the figureswill show that in the increase of its population and wealth, it has left the other sections of the Union clear in the back ground. Among the States so designated will num ber then the following : Ohio, Wisconsin, Indiana, lowa, Illinois, Minnesota, Michigan, Kansas, Nebraska. These States and Territories are now rep resented in Congress - by - twelve Senators, fif ty-six Representatives, and three Delegates. Under the census of 1860, with the present ratio of representation, they will be entitled to eighteen Senators, and from eighty to nine ty Representatives, far more than enough to hold the balance of power in both branches of Congress, between the ,North and South. Instead of fiddling second to these older sec tions of the Union, and being set aside when ever the honors and emoluments of Govern ment are distributed, the world in future will know there is a West. It only wants concert of action, combination, if need be, like our brethren of the South, to have our proper in fluence in public affairs, The valley of the Mississippi and the basin of the Great Lakes must inevitably be the political as well as the centre of this great nation—such is manifest destiny. The trade of these inland seas now equals our whole foreign traffic—a fact which, lately announced in Congress by one - of our Western Representatives, was despatched by telegraph to the Associated Press, startling the whole country. It is time this Western world threw off its swaddling-clothes and be gan to set up business for itself. t It has been in the hands of gnardians long enough. It is of ago as we in the West count years. and its manhood should now be asserted. We are dependent on nobody for anything. We raise all we want to eat and wear, and have pro ductive resources enough to bread and clothe the world besides. We have a commerce of our own, both foreign and domestic. We have the largest prairies, longest railroads, and the richest lands on the globe. We have all the elemnts of individual happiness and national greatness that any people can desire, and we only need the determination to con sult our common interest and combine our political power to constitute ourselves the cen tre and soul of this rising Republic. Shall we do it? Shall we now break off our vas salage to other and older parts of this Union, and take our position as the integral but In dependent part of the nation, or shall we con tinue on as a mere appendage to the Govern ment? What say our brethren of the press on this subject? Let us hear from you, gen tlemen. We know there are minds among you that do their own thinking. Let us see if we cannot combine and wake up a spirit in the West that will do its own acting.—Cleve land Plainclealer. Posthumous Benevolence. John McDonough, who died a few years ago in New Orleans, left an enormous for tune, which he had amassed through a long life of miserly toil. He allowed himself no indulgence, had no society, no friends no plea sure, intellectual or animal. He was not a scholar, nor a man of taste, and he never even allowed himself the happiness of doing a gen erous action. He never sought the zeptrta tion, while living, of being benevolent or charitable. To the day of his death he de voted himself to accumulating money and in creasing his possessions. Ile left lands and property equal in extent and value to many an European principality, and he died totally unlamented. His will showed that his ob ject in accumulating was to build up a name for benevolence after death. He could not carry his fortunes with him, and he bequeathed the greater part of it to the city of Baltimore, where he was born, and the city of New Or leans, where he resided. The wonderful van ity of appearing to be a great man after he was in the grave, made him deny himself all rational happiness in life. The instances are very rare in which large estates, left for benevolent or charitable pur poses, have been administered so as to fulfil the testator's wishes. A will of that kind can rarely be faithfully executed. A great amount of the property is always wasted in litigation, and trustees always take a wide license in the management of their trust. This McDon ough estate, which was believed to be worth many millions, has been depleted and reduced by litigation, and, at length, after some years have elapsed since the decease of Mr. Mc- Donough, the Supreme Court of Louisiana have substantially declared the will a nullity. The estate will be distributed among a num ber of private hands. The cities of New Or leans and Baltimore will obtain considerable property, which may become very valuable: but it will not amount to anything like what was expected, and the grand plans of the tes tator, which formed the plan of his miserly life, will never he carried. out. If there are, among our readers, any who may be contemplating plans similar to those of McDonough, and hoarding money in life, with a view to bequeathing it, in trust for be nevolent or other purposes, to corporations, we trust they will. take warning by his case. No man can have his wishes carried out by deputy so well as by himself, and the risks of their failure are far greater, if they are left to be executed after death. However care fully framed the laws may be, there are al ways loop-holes, through which administra tors and trustees, who may be disposed to vi olate a will, can escape. Again, all extraor dinary bequests, out of the line of regular inheritance, must run the gauntlet of severe litigation, and courts always incline natural ly to construe wills most liberally in favor of lawful heirs. There is very little sincere re spect for a dead man's wishes, especially if the man had been niggardly and selfish in his lifetime. It is a grea deal better to dispose of a fortune while living, to see that it is not wasted or perverted. For any failure in at taining the object proposed, the owner him self is then alone responsible. The instan ces, like McDonough's, of the waste of the vast estates left for special public objects, are so numerous, that it is astonishing to hear of any one proposing to bequeath his property in a similar manner.—Evening Bulletin. Regular Habits of Industry Industry is but of little value unless it be regular. No good is gained by working by fits and starts. To avoid the formation of habits of irregularity, endeavor to go upon a fixed determinate plan, in reference both to your periods of study and reflection. To a perseverance in tho plan you have laid down for yourself, add the virtue of punctuality. One half of the people you meet with, have no accurate idea on this important 'natter.— They make life a play, and what is truly ri diculous, many of them perform their parts very badly. Instead of being punctual. they care not show they keep their engagements, and thus punctual men get ahead of them.— Many complain that they are prevented from being punctual by the.multiplicity of their engagements. But this, in most instances, is a delusion ; all men may be punctual to the extent which is necessary to gairx , them reputation for regularity, if they choose. The most trifling actions that affect a man,s credit are to be regarded. The sound of your hammer at five in the morning, says Dr. Eranklin, or at nine at night, heard by a creditor, makes him easy six months longer; but if he sees you at a billard table, or hears your voice at a tavern, when you should be at work, he sends for his money the next day. From the Pittsburg Union, March 19 DISASTROUS FIRE.—The Fort Pitt Machine Shops and Foundry Destroyed.—Loss, over slBo,ooo.—About 3 o'clock, Thursday morn ing, fire was discovered in the Fort Pitt Works, owned by Messrs. Knapp, Wade & Co., and located in the Fifth Ward, upon the bank of the Allegheny river, immediately above the Water Works. The 'works occu pied an entire square, about 250 feet in length by 100 feet in width—and were bound ed by O'Hara, Walnut and Etna streets, and the Allegheny river. The fire was first seen issuing from the second story of the Engine and Finishing shop on O'Hara street, and the watchman on the premises giving the alarm immedi ately, a number of engines were soon on the ground and playing on the burning building. The firemen worked with a will, and strained every nerve to subdue the flames, but the dry material with which the upper story of the building was filled, coupled with the fact that a high wind prevailed at the time, ren dered their efforts useless, and the. destroy ing element swept on, nor was it checked in its wild career until the entire works were reduced to a heap of ruins. The flames extended from the Engine and Finishing shop to the other buildings, con suming in turn the Boiler and Smith shop, the Foundry, the Cannon Boring mill, the office, sheds, &c. The main buildings were all large and substantial, and stored with very valuable machinery. Five steam en gines were destroyed, and an immense quan tity of the choicest and most valuable pat terns. The lower part of the office, which was partly fire-proof, and in which the books and papers of the firm were kept, escaped with comparatively little damage. One of the doors gave way or warped before the in tense heat to which it was subjected, and a few papers lying on a desk near it, were burned ; but the books, &c., of the office, re ceived no injury whatever. In the second story of the office an immense number of drawings, many of them gotten up at a great expense, were stored away. They are a to tal loss. The loss cannot, of course, be ascertained with any degree of correctness—but the fol lowing estimate, in round numbers, will ap proximate the entire loss : Patterns, Machines, Tools, &c., $lOO,OOO Engine and Machine shop, 42,000 Boiler and Smith shops, 15,000 Cannon Boring mill, 15,000 Foundry, 12,000 Total, To meet this the firm have an insurance on the property of $37,500, which is divided thus: Western, 6,900; Citizens, $6,900; Franklin, Philadelphia, $6,900 ; Delaware Mutual, $6,900; Home, New York, $6,900, and Reliance, $3,000. Total, $37,500. The works were one of the most complete and extensive in the western country, and were founded in 1814. The articles there manufactured are celebrated all over the Union. In the manufacture of cannon the establishment could not be excelled, their guns being superior to those made at West Point. The foundry had a capacity of 9000 tons annually, while the entire works gave employment to 250 men, whose weekly earn ings, in the aggregate, amounted to over $lOOO. The Appropriation Bill The following is the appropriation bill re ported in the House of Representatives of this State : - Interest on State Debt, Governor's salary, 4,000 Secretary of the Commonwealth, 1,700 Auditor General, 2,000 Deputy Sec'y. of Commonwealth, 1,400 Surveyor General, 1,400 Attorney General, 3,000 Adjutant General, 300 Superintendent Corn. Schools, . 1,400 State Treasurer, 1,700 Clerk hire and contingent expen ses of various departments, 41,002 Expenses of the Legislature, 125,000 Balance legislative expenses of '57, 4,193 Distributing Laws, 700 Public printing and binding, 30,000 Water & Gas for public buildings, 2,600 Common Schools, 280,000 Pensions and gratuities, 15,000 Judges of the Supreme Court, 18,700 Salaries of the Judges of the Dis trict and Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia, 16,800 Judges of the District Court and Court of Common Pleas of Al legheny county, 7,500 President Judges of Courts of Common Pleas, except Philad., 52,700 Salaries and mileage of Associate Judges, 25,000 Guarantied interest, 18,517 Ordinary repairs on canals, 101,800 Collectors, lock-keepers, &c., 43,200 Canal Commissioners, 6,920 Salary of State Engineer, 3,100 Repairs and damages on public works, estimated, 50,000 Enlargement Delaware Division, 50,000 Western Penitentiary, 15,150 Eastern Penitentiary, (salaries not included) 1,000 House of Refuge, Philadelphia, 32,500 House of Refuge, Pittsburg, 25,000 Western Pennsylvania Hospital, 7,000 Penn'a. Institution for the Blind, 22,000 Institution for Deaf and Dumb, 20,000 School for idiotic and feeble-mind- ed children, 20,000 State Lunatic Hospital, 20,000 Superintendent public printing, 800 State Librarian, 800 For Books in Library, &c., 1,480 Legislative Record, say, 3,000 Improvements Public Grounds, &c., 9,598 Miscellaneous, not stated in detail, 6,000 Total amount, $3,094,040 The Humbug of Disunion The Richmond Enquirer of the 11th, in a sensible article on the subject, thus speaks of the rumored movements of certain fire eating members of Congress looking towards a dissolution of the Union : Whispers are circulated to the effect that something of concealed importance is now in process of concoction among members of Congress, which threatens a speedy outburst of sectional dissension. Let us not not be deceived. Members of Congress are not pos sessed of an exclusive privilege either to read the signsto of the times, orcontrol the tendency events. They may do much to obstruct, and more to assist, certain popular movements. But there are some things in our political world which are far beyond their reach. - It requires the warmth of sov ereignty itself to hatch disunion, and not one sovereign voice has ever yet pronounced in favor of dissolution:* Newspaper corres pondents may discover mares' nests—honor able members may shrug their shoulders and wear mysterious faces—violent dema gogues may raise a loud cry of false alarm— air this and more may become a matter of daily recurrence, and yet the Union will re main safe in the hands of its proper guardi ans, the people of the States. The treasure of the Union and the treasure of State Rights are both intrusted to their keeping. There is no danger of their being lulled into a false security. When they are called upon to pre pare for the worst—to face disunion itself for the sake of State Rights—their answer will be, "We are already prepared." - * * There is no present danger of disunion, sim ply because there is no proximate cause of disunion. Conservative Democrats need only prepare to defeat an attempt against .their party organization. This is the only danger which can possibly result from all the in trigues and clamors which affect to assume the form of a movement for a dissolution of the Union. , NEW-YORK AS IT Is.—A New York corres pondent, who is a very intelligent man and permanent citizen of that city, writes . to a Philadelphia paper as follows : " I suspect there_is no city in the Union— I am confident there is none abroad—where the majority of the ruling authorities are so invariably from the dregs of the people, as they are in this wretchedly misgoverned city. It is almost impossible to secure a seat here, in either Board of the Common Council un less you keep a tavern, a faro table, a livery stable, a model artist saloon, a policy office, or the haunt of some clique of shoulder-hit ters, panel-thieves, and blacklegs. Either of these respectable callings will entitle you to become an alderman or councilman, when you are at liberty to get drunk, to fight in the streets, to get up disturbances in the bagnois of our city, and to disgrace your constituents generally with perfect impunity. The more infamously you may conduct yourself en such occasions, the more characteristic will it be come of your public position." The Methocflst Episcopal Church The returns of all the Conferences and Mis sions of the Methodist Episcopal Church in the United Siates, forty-seven in number, have been officially received by the abthori ties of that numerous and influential reli gious denomination, and the result furnishes the following statistics ; Number of travelling or itinerating preach ers, 5,365 ; in 1835 there were 4,898 ; in 1854, 4,814; increase over the previous year, 467. Number of supernumerary or retired prea chers, 711 ; in 1855, 690; in 1854, 609 ; in crease over the previous year, 21. Total number of preachers, 6.134. Number of local preachers, 6,718 ; in 1855 there were 6,590 ; in 1845, 6,149 ; increase over the previous year, 126. Number of members, 700,968; mumber in 1855, 692,265 ; number in 1854, 679,252; in crease over the previous year, 6,062. Number of probationers, 110,155 ; in 1855, 107,176; in 1854, 104,074; decrease within the past year, 5,156. Total membership, 800,327 ; in 1855, 799,- 431; in 1854, 787,358—increase- over the previous year, 20,192. Including benevolent contributions, amount contributed for gener al missionary purposes, $226,697; for the Sunday School Union, $14,852; for the Tract Society $27,348. SIKOOO $2,000,000 On Wednesday, the 10th inst., in the neigh borhood of Edward Furnace, Shirley town ship, Edward Custis, aged abont 30 years, and his sou James,- aged about 15 years, were so horribly mangled by the premature explosion of a blast, as to cause their death soon after. The unfortunate sufferers were in the act of mining,—excavating a drift un der ground,—and in blasting a rock, through whic they were penetrating, the powder by some means ignited, while the elder Custis was operating with the needle, literally shat tering his hand and a portion of his arm by the explosion, and otherwise injuring him so as to cause his death on the following day.— The boy, who was, at the time of the explo sion, close to his father, had his head and face horribly mangled : ho lingered until Friday morning, when death terminated his suffering. The father, after the explosion, walked to his residence, a distance of half a mile,.and reported the occurrence. Mr. 0. Etnier repaired to the scene, and found the boy lying on the ground at the place of the accident, in a horribly mangled condition.— He, with much effort, carried him to a neigh boring house. There were none else at work at the time of the accident. The deceased leaves a wife and three children.—Shirleys burg Herald. • PREMIUMS AWARDED THE GLOBE JOB OFFICE AT TUE LATE FAIR FOR gig I-3C M 31M 'Fr GARD, BLANK & HANDBILL 94144 V 3411 BUSINESS 11rOTICEAS'. Blank agreements with Teachers, and Orders on District School Treasurers, neatly printed, and for sale at the "Dion" Job Office. Wholesale or retail, call at 11. ItouWs Clothing Store, opposite Miller's hotel, Iluntingdon, Pa., where the very best assortment of goods for mon and boys' wear may be found at low prices. Generally are invited to call at the New Drug Store of limn- McMaytorti. Every article usually to be found in the best establishments of the kind, can be had, fresh and pure, at their Store, in Market Square, Huntingdon. See advertisement in another column. Patel Accident To School Directors. For Ready-lilatle Clothing, The Public RIAL LIST; APRIL TERM, 1858. FIRST WEEK. olas Shaver (who bath survived William Shaver,) Penna. R. R. Co. - John Flemming vs B. X.. Blair et al Thomas Clark's heirs vs Brison Clark Hunt. & B. T. R. R. Co. vs Able Putt Samuel B. MeFenters vs' Alex. Beers et al' '. Sterling Sr. Alexander vs Branca, Stitt & Co. John M. Wafters vs David Yrtrner Harrison & Couch vs C. Y. M;Pro. Co. David Caldwell, adm'tor vs Mich. I. Martin ' A. H. Bumbaugh for use vs 'C. V. M. P. CO. Wm. McNite vs James Clark adm'tor. John Daugherty vs Geo. W; Speer A. Vandevauders heirs vs John rd6Comb SECOND WEEK. vs Williamyoster vs John Savage vs Same vs Wm. Smith & H. Davis vs Washington Gayer vs Henry Fodder vs John McCandess et al Margaret Foster I. P. Brock Same John Savage ceo. W. Wagoner Samuel D. Myton Clements' heirs .john Savag,e vs James Entriken William Cummings adnitor vs A. Walker Richard Ramsey vs Alex. Richardson Christopher Ozborn vs P. F. Hessler et al James Wall vs Jona. Wall Philip Spahn Christopher Ozboru Bidlemnn & Hayward John Brewster Jno. W. Price Jas. Maguire March 17, 1858 LIST OF GRAND JURORS for a Court of Quarter Sessions to be held at Huntingdon, in and for the county of Huntingdon, the second Monday and 12th day of April, A. D., 1558. John Anderson, farmer, Juniata. Lewis Burgans, blacksmith, Huntingdon. John Black, carpenter. Huntingdon. Daniel Beck, blacksmith, Barree. Philip Bolebaugh, farmer, Porter. William Clymans, farmer, Dublin. John Covert, mason, Springfield. George Dare, clerk, Franklin. John Garner, jr., farmer, Penn. Abraham Varnish, farmer, Morris. George Hallman, blacksmith, West. Benjamin Hartman, flamer, West. John Ffirst, farmer, •Barree. Jonathan Hardy, farmer, Henderson. Adam Lightner, farmer, West. Abraham McCoy, brick-maker, Huntingdon. David Miller, gentleman, West. Benjamin Megahan, merchant, Walker. Stiilliam Pymm, blacksmith, Cassville. James Stone, farmer, Union. David S. Tussey, farmer. Porter, Lee T. Wilson, farmer, Barree. William White, farmer, Juniata. J. W. Yocum, farmer, Juniata. TRAVERSE JURORS—FIRST WEEK. John Apsgar, farmer, Union. Edward Bergh!, mason, A.lorris. William Buckley, farmer, Shirley. Gilbert Chancy, J. P., Barree, Solomon Chilcott, farmer, Tod. Nicholas Cresswell, gentleman, Alexandria. Andrew Croteley, farmer, Penn. Thomas Duff, merchant, Jackson. William Davis, merchant, Penn. Henry Davis, blacksmith, West. John Ely, merchant, Shirley. James Ellis, grocer, Penn. John Meaner, farmer, Henderson. Nathan Greenland, farmer, Union. John Grifford, jr., farmer, Shirley. Augustus K, Green, firmer, Clay. Frederick Harman, farmer, Cromwell. Jonathan 'fowler, farmer, Cass. James Henderson, merchant, Cassville. • Samuel Hannah, teacher, Warriorsmark. Samuel Hamer, laborer, Alexandria. George Jackson, farmer, Jackson. William Jackson, farmer, Jackson. Joseph G. Kemp, farmer, Oneida. William McWilliams, farmer, Franklin. Isaac McClain, farmer, Tod. Samuel J. Marks, carpenter, Franklin. Elliot McKinstney, farmer, Shirley. Peter Myers, tailor, Shirley. John 0. Murray, carpenter, Huntingdon. Samuel McClain, farmer, Cass. James Miller, saddler, Jackson. Henry F. Newingham gentleman, Huntingdon. John B. Ozburu, teacher, Jackson, Alexander Port, J. P., Huntingdon. Samuel Pheasant, farmer, Cass. Samuel Rolston, 3. P., Warriorsmark. Abraham Ramsey, laborer, Springfield. Samuel IL Shoemaker, sportsman, Huntingdon William B. Smith, farmer, Jackson. A. Jaksoon Stewart, farmer, Franklin. David Stoner, farmer, Clay. Nicholas Rainer, farmer, Shirley. John B. Thompson, farmer, Franklin. Ephraim Thompson, farmer, Porter. Jonathan Wilson, farmer, West. James Wilson, farmer, Henderson. William Wagoner, mason, Clay. TRAVERSE JURORS—SECOND WEEK. John B. Briggs, farmer, Tell. John Bumbaugh, sr., gentleman, Huntingdon Richard Colegate, blacksmith, Shirley. John C. Cummings, farmer, Jackson. James Carman, teacher,Huntingdon. Nicholag Crum, miller, Tod. John Dougherty, farmer. Shirley. Perry 0. Etchison, shoemaker, Cromwell. William Ewing. farmer, Barree. Isaac Grove, farmer, Perry. Israel Grafius, Eeq., firmer, Alexandria. Christian Harnish, farmer, Porter. James K. Hampson, inkeeper, Brady. Thomas Irwin, farmer, Union. William Johnston, tanner, Shirleysburg. Joshua Johns, farmer, Springfield. Samuel B. McFeeters,farmer, Tell. Jackson McElroy, firmer, Jackson. John B. Moreland, teacher, Clay. Robert McNeal, farmer, Shirley. John Morrison, farmer, Shirley. John McComb, farmer, Union. James S. Oaks, farmer, Jackson. John Owens, J. P., Warriorsmark. George Price, flumer, Clay. John Ilhodes, farmer, Henderson. George Russell, Esq., farmer, Hopewell. Benjamin Rinker, farmer, Cromwell. Peter Swoope, gentleman, Huntingdon. John Smith, of Geo., farmer, Barron, ' George Sprankcr, farmer, Porter. John L. Travis, farmer, Franklin. Miller Wallace, carpenter, Brady_ George Wagoner, carpenter, Dublin. George Walters, machinist, Morris. Elias B. Wilson, J. P., Cassville. Huntingdon, March 17, 1858. pROCLAMATION.--WHEREAS, by a precept to me directed, dated at Huntingdon, the 21bt day of January : A. D. 185 S, under the hands and seals of the Hon. George Taylor, President of the Court of Common Pleas, Oyer and Terminer, and general jail deliv ery of the 24th Judicial District of Pennsylvania, compo sed of Huntingdon, Blair and Cambria counties; and the Hons. Benjamin F. Patton and John Brewster, his associ ates, Judges of the county of Huntingdon, justices as signed, appointed to hear, try and determine all and every indictments made or taken for or concerning all crimes, which by the laws of the State are made capital, or felon ies of death, and other offences, crimes and misdemeanors, which have been or shall hereafter be committed or perpe trated, for crimes aforesaid—l am commanded to make public proclamation throughout my whole bailiwick,. hat a Court of Oyer and Terminer, of Common Pleas and Quarter Sessions will be held at the Court House in the borough of Huntingdon, on the second Monday (and 12th day) of April, next, and those who will prosecute the said prisoners, be then and there to prosecute them as it shall be just, and that all Justices of the Peace, Coroner and Constables within said county, be then and there in their proper persons, at 10 o'clock, a. m. of said day, with their records, inquisitions, examinations and remembran ces, to do those things which to their offices respectively appertain. Dated at Huntingdon the 15th day of March, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and fifty-eight, and the 82d year of American Independence. I)ROCLAMATION.--WHEREAS, by a precept to me directed by the Judges of the Com mon Pleas of the county of Huntingdon, bearing test the 21st day of January, 1858, I- am commanded to make Public Proclamation throughout my whole bailiwick, that a Court of Common Pleas will be held at the Court House in the borough of Huntingdon, on the 3rd Monday (and 10th day) of April, A. D., 1858, for the trial of all is sues in said Court which remain undetermined before the said Judges, when and where all jurors, witnesses, and suitors, in the trials of all issues are required. Dated at Huntingdon the 15th March, in the year of our Lord 1858, and the 82d year of American Independence. GRAM'S MILLER, Sheriff. SIIERIFF'S OFFICE, Huntingdon, March 17,1857. OT I C E.—All persons indebted on .1:11 Books (or otherwise) of It. C. Walker, will take no tice, that said accounts are left in the hands of Geor g e ,B. Youn g , Es q ., Alexandria, who is authorized to receive and receipt for all monies paid durin g my absence. D. lIOUTZ, Jan. 6, 1858. Assignee for Creditors of 11. C. Walker • '• L. 47;;, CHANGE OF TIME.—On and after THURSDAY, 10th inst., the Passenger Train on the Huntingdon and Broad Top Road will leave Huntingdon at 8.00 A. M. and 4.00 P. M., and arrive 1.10 P. M. and 7.38 P. N. J. J. LAWRENCE, Acting Superintendent Huntingdon, December 0, 1857. vs Moses Heilner vs P. F. Kessler vs James Entriken vs James Entriken vs Long & Rickets vs A. S. Harrison D. CALDWELL, Prot'y. GRAFFIIS MILLER, Sheri":