FM THE HUNTINGDON GLOBE, A DEMOCRATIC FAMILY JOURNAL, DEVOTED TO LOCAL AND GENERAL NEWS, &C. TIII-41 . : GLOB eireulation—ae largest in the, county, giENVFMDCYI',I, Wednesday, September 29, 1858 DEMOCRATIC NOMINATIONS. FOR JUDGE OF SUPREALE COURT, W. 111.. A. ponTEB., of Philadelphia. FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER, VirESTLEY FROST, of Fayette Co. '(p 411 CONGRESS, CYRUS L. PERSHING-, of Cambria co 6)0 A eI;W =4l CHPIOIII laedia 1/211 ASSEMBLY, DANIEL HOUTZ„ of Alexandria COIINTY COMFISSIONEIt, JAMES HENDERSON, of Cassville DIRECTOR OF THE POOR, ,3:011N NIERLY, of 'Springfield. CORONER, ' THOMAS P::LOVE, of Huntingdon AUDITOR, WILLIAM SPECK, of Juniata EXTRA PREMIUMS t will be observed that the County Society—for very good reasons we suppose—have omitted in their list, pre miums for the best specimens of printing. Printing is an art—the art of arts—in the improvement of which, busi ness men at least, take some interest. We take as much pleasure, and pride, in executing a job of work as it should be, as.other men do in their calling, and wo can see no good reason why a printer should not contest for an honor. We, therefore, propose the following premiums : For the best and greatest variety of Fancy Card printing $0 00 For the best and greatest variety of Plain Card printing 5 00 For the best and greatest variety of Blank printing, 500 _For the best and greatest variety of Handbill and Circular printing For the best and greatest variety of Printing " " Job Office in the county The contest to be confined to the printers of the county and no part of any Card, Blank, Bill, Circular, &c., to be executed out of the county. All customer work, only, and Blanks regularly kept on hand for sale, to be entered for the premiums. Each Office contesting for the premiums, to place in the hands of a Committee like sums as above, the whole to be given to the Office receiving the awards. The Committee to be appointed by the Offices entering for the premiums—one by each Office, and the Committee to appoint one. The Committee to visit and examine work at the Offices entering, on the second day of the County Fair. See advertisement of Dr. Sanford's Liver Invigorator in another column. To Tax-Collectors For the convenience of Collectors, we have just printed„ and will keep constantly on hand for sale, blank receipts for State and County, School, Borough, Township, or other taxes. Zect. All who are not assessed, should at tend to it immediately. After the 2d of Oc tober, it will be too late. gar An Encampment comes off at Holli daysburg this week—a considerable crowd is expected to be there. GRAPES.—We have received from Mr. JACK 'SON WILITE a plate of fine grapes, for which he has our thanks. The State Fair commenced at Pitts burg on yesterday. The Pittsburg papers say it will equal if not surpass any State ex hibition ever given. 12(far CYRUS L. PERSHING, Esq., our candi date for Congress, addressed a Democratic gathering, at llollidaysburg, on Monday eve ning last. He is expected here, next week, when the people may have an opportunity to hear him upon the questions at issue. THE TICKETS. The tickets fur the election will be printed and ready for distribution towards the close of the week. Our friends throughout the county, coming to town, or having an oppor tunity to send, should procure a supply in time to have them well distributed. The Huntingdon Band, and Military, in attendance at the Bellefonte Encampment, last week, have returned home, and report favorably of the hospitality of the Centre folks generally. The crowd was enormous— and more noise and confusion than was ever before seen or heard, in that region of coun try, by the oldest inhabitant. THE TICKET AGALN COMPLETE.—After Con sulting with several of the County Commit tee, we have taken the responsibility of pla cing upon the ticket fpr Auditor, to 811 the vacancy occasioned by the resignation of John Hirst, the name of WILLIAm. SPECK, of Juni ata township. The name is placed there without the knowledge or consent of Mr. SPECK ; but we know Mr. SPECK to be too faithful in the harness to kick at trifles. lie is a• farmer, a young man of energy, and well qualified to discharge the duties of the - office, and we hope he may be honored with an election. Too late, Bill, to decline. County Commissioner and Director of the Poor. For these offices,—the most important to the tax-payers of the county,—the Demo cratic delegates in County Convention, were peculiarly fortunate in selecting JAMES TIEN _DERSON, of Cass township, and Joux MYERLY, of Springfield township. There need nothing be said in their favor to secure for them a heavy vote in their own and adjoining town ships, where they are well and favorably known. Few men can be placed upon a ticket with the same home strength as is claimed for our candidates, by their neigh bors, and if the voters of the other townships of the county will look to their own interests in the selection of men to fill the offices named, Messrs. HENDERSON and MYERLY will be elected by_ a very decided majority. Tax payers, you now have an opportunity of pla cing in two of the most important offices in the county, just . such men as should always be there. Will you elect them? Their elec _tiOnor defea,t is with you. The County Pair On Wednesday of neat week, the sixth day of October, the fourth annual exhibition' of the Huntingdon County Agricultural Society, will be commenced at this borough. The' display will embrace all kinds of doinesticatbd• animals, and articles from every department of industry. The lover of fast horses, the admirer of the works of art, the farmer, the gardener, the mechanic—all,—may find there something to please their particular tastes. The committee of arrangement have made proper preparation for the reception of arti cles intended for exhibition, and will endea vor, as we are assured, to do all in their power to assist exhibitors. in obtaining secure and conspicuotis places for - the animals and other matters intended for competition or public .inspection. • The committee have prepared two courses for the training of horses, where the lovers of the nee can have full,enjoyment. Grants of the issue of excursion tickets, upon the Pennsylvania Railroad, from all the stations between Harrisburg and Johnstown, and from all the - stations on the Broad•'Top Railroad, having been Made, opportunity will be afforded, at a low rate, to persons residing along and near the lines of these railroads to visit Huntingdon and the Pair. The weather, as best as we can at present judge, will be-favorable; Should such be the case, considering that our farming community will have leisure, that the excursions offer a cheap means of travel, and that some of our neigh boring counties _will not have fairs this year, we may safely predict a very large attend ance of exhibitors and visitors. Few persons consider the importance of the existence of such a Society, or properly estimate the advantages to be derived from its annual exhibitions. These yearly shows draw together the people from every locality in the country, even the most remote, and from many of the neighboring counties.— Thus a never-equalled opportunity -is given to persons to see and coinmunicate with friends, who, by reason of their distant or retired residence, are seldom met. They af ford an occasion to see together the products of the skill and industry of citizens of every township—and to note the progress made by persons in every department of science, art and manufactures. Beside the advantage of seeing articles brought for the observation of the public, these annual exhibitions, which are the occasion of mass-meetings of the peo ple, work a good social effect. Our people form acquaintances from distant localities of the connty,—see their own and their neigh bors' productions contrasted, and have their prejudices for, or against, certain districts and their inhabitants, removed by actual con tact, and thus are bound together in a tie of mutual interest, all who claim to be citizens of the old county of Huntingdon. If, for this purpose alone, the annual meetings of this Society should be continued. In addi tion to the good social effect it works, several hundred dollars are each year distributed by the Society to exhibitors of articles of real merit. These premiums incite to competi tion, not on account of the money, but by reason of the desire to bear off the palm of superiority. The public mind is ready to admit that much good can flow from these exhibitions. Then they should be - maintained and con tinued. Like the power in our government, the inclination so to do, rests with, and must come from, the people. Not one, two, or a dozen individuals are or should be interested, but every one who desires the advancement of our citizens, should make an active, living manifestation of his desire, by participating in the - exhibition and in the annual elective meeting of the Society. Effort in this mat ter, is just as essential to its existence as it is in any enterprise, and those persons who are willing to put themselves to a little in convenience and trouble, to bring their arti cles to the exhibition, deserve credit, and we held their example up to their neighbors as being worthy of their imitation. In conclusion, we would say to every per son in Huntingdon county, and in the neigh boring counties, bring to the Fair every arti . - die of your own design, manufacture, or rais ing, that approximates elegance, and whether you succeed in obtaining the premium offered or not, you will show to the people what you can produce. • You cannot ALL get premiums, for if that were the case, they would loose their greatest value, that is, being marks, as near as impartial judges can indicate, of The best articles on exhibition. Then we say, bring your articles in great abundance, and show to the thousands that will assemble, what OLD HUNTINGDON can produce. 5 00 5 00 25 00 it e-• It is amusing, to see how anxious a few of the Republicans of this place—the pure, untainted with Americanism, witlr the original black stripe, down their backs,—are, for the success of their candidates, Messrs. BLAIR. and WIGTON. , It is a good rule, to judge men by the company they keep,- and even the short-sighted editor of the Journal sees, in the anxious political friends of these candidate's, men, who have not supported regular 'nominees for the last three or four years. If the rank Republicanism of Messrs. Br..tra and WIGTON, causes the nostrils of the editor of the Journal, to turn up, how will the Americans be able to swallow the dose ? NEW Goons.—Many of our merchants are now busily engaged unpacking their new goods, and others will receive their supplies before the close of the week. Consult our advertising columns next week for particu lars. Mr. Pershing's Position [From the Ebensburg Mountaineer.] • The -Opposition - papers in this district,--are in_ -very • great suspense, as 7:to the 'Course -which Mr. Pershing is likely. to pUrsue • on thekanias and Tariff questions. ' pon these • questions, Mr. Pershing was exceedingly tinct and explicit in his speeech delivered in the meeting here, last week. On the Kansas question, he. . - - "UPON THIS QUESTION, I HAVE NO OPINIONS TO CONCEAL. SHOULD I BE ELECTED TO A SEAT IN THE NA TIONAL CONGRESS, I WILL VOTE:FOR TIIE ADMISSION OF KANSAS, THE SOMENT SHE PRESENTS A LEGAL CONSTITUTION, WHIM' HAS BEEN SUBMITTED TO THE . PEOPLE AND RATIFIED BY THEM. I WILL DO SO, LET TIIE CONSEQUENCES 'BE WHAT THEY .ICIAY ; AND I DO NOT FEAR TIIE CONSEQUENCES." Here is a clear, explicit declaration of his opinion upon this question—no equivocating and no dodging. If our Opposition friends still have tears to shed over bleeding Kansas, they need not waste any on Mr. Pershing, as he has no evil designs upon her. On the Tariff, he dwelt for a long time— arguing forcibly and correctly, that it is un wise and impolitic to make this a party mea sure—showing clearly that it never has been done successfully and never can be, because the interests of different sections of the coun try must clash, and that every section will necessarily adopt the means best calculated to advance its interests. He showed how im pertinent it was for the present Opposition party, to assume the peculiar championship of the Tariff, when,- in 1857, a Republican Congress reduced the rates to a lower figure, than had been done by the Tariff of 1846, and when, in 1857, they nominated fr% Gov ernor,- David Wilmot—the only meniter of the Pennsylvania delegation in Congress, who proved untrue to her interests, and voted for the Tariff of 1846, and, when in 1858, they have nominated for Supreme Judge, Hon. John M. Reed, who, in a public letter, endorsed the course pursued by lion. George M. Dallas, in giving the casting vote for the Tariff of 184 G. He closed, by unequivocally pledging himself to support a Tariff, which will discriminate in favor of Pennsylvania interest. If we mistake not, this speech will knock all the thunder out of our adversaries, and meet with the endorsement of the people of the district, on the second Tuesday of Octo- IBM Rebellion in Lancaster County The Lancaster Examiner, the organ of the more conservative portion of the Opposition in Lancaster county, a paper that hay led more than one successful campaign akalust • Thaddeus Stevens, refuses to endorse his nomination, and is evidently preparing to op pose his election. The editor alleges that the delegates were carried by fraud, and adds: "That four or five hundred Democrats, minors, and otherwise improper persons, who voted at the delegate elections, did, in effect, settle the ticket which was formed at the late County Convention, is an assertion which admits of mathematical demonstration. It is for each and every voter, in view of these facts, to say fur himself, how long these prac tises are to be acquiesced in, and to what ex tent he chooses to be bound by them." • In view of these facts, the Examiner thinks the nominations of the Convention have no binding force beyond the merits of the nomi nees themselves; and alter alleging that gov ernment attention to the industrial pursuits of the county, is fast becoming a question of bread and butter, this significant passage oc curs. The italics are our own, but there is no mistaking at whom they are directed: "The voters will now be untrammelled by party consideration in the choice of a person to represent them in the national councils.— They can support the man they deem best fitted in all requisites which go to make a desirable representative, or most likely secure that friendly regard front the representatives of other States, which is necessary to obtain legislation that will revive the drooping pros perity of Pennsylvania." Further on, the editor uses language still more explicit, where he says: "Our Democratic friends of the city have already given us one ticket. Ou this day two weeks the Democrats of the whole coun ty will_ meet for the purpose of forming a second ticket. Common rumor foreshadows the selection by them of a gentlethan from the country, as. a candidate for Congress, whose well settled political views aree - thoge to which the popular heart of the old Guard has in former years enthusiastically respond ed. After the nominees are all in the field, it will be for each voter to weigh fairly and calmly the merits and demerits of them all. to consider the probable influence for good or evil of their election upon the moral and ma terial welfare of the county, and then to cast his ballot as an enlightened conscience shall dictate." We are not without hopes that the people of Lancaster county will rise up, and with one accord spurn Thaddeus Stevens, when we see the leading organ of the Opposition treat his nomination with such evident dis gust.—Harrisburg Herald. To TAKE INK OUT OF LlNEN.—Editors and clerks will learn with pleasure, that to take a piece of tallow, melt-it, and dip the spotted part of the linen into the melted...tallow, the linen may be washed, and the spot will dis appear without injuring the linen. We invite attention to the advertise ment of sale of real estate, by McCoy & CAMPBELL. .(45F- See advertisement of Prof. Wood's Hair Restorative in..n.nother column. John Penn Jones' Attack on the Ameri- cans---the Man in Spasms'. [From tho•Altoona Tribuned: • MESSRS. EDITORS :—lt appears, orthe last, Hollidaysburg Register, that the mere .pre sentation of the proceedings orthe American -Congressional Co nference , to Jplin,Penn had a serious effect upon - him and threw him into spasms. The idea that John Brotherline - *ould not desert his friends, and go with him in using up the-American party, seemed to me more than poor Jones could bear. He denounces John as all sorts of a bad man for not follow ing in his lead. We hope he may well enjoy whatever,hemay . gain by his present course. Jones knows he is driven into it by a certain Republican, and he is weak enough to think hc - can chive - others. - In this he- is greatly mistaken. _ He attacks the proceedings in a manner al together becoming a new convert in politics. His entire article ,attacking the American evinces -all the feelings of a heart fatally bent upon mischief to the. American party. He states that, no American conventions has been held in any of the counties to au thorize the holding of. an American Confer ence to nominate a candidate for Congress.— The truth. is the little fellow turns around so often in politics that he 'does not really know where he was a month ago. He is weak enough to think the Americans ought to turn with him as often as he turns. The facts are ;fin• American Convention - was held in this place on the 20th day of May last, and ap pointed three citizens of this bounty to attend an American Congressional Conference, as conferees. Jones would now desire to,wipe out the existence of that• Convention, by modest ly asserting that it leas never held. It is true _that the Conferees did not attend such a Con ferenCe; but does that ignore the fact that the Covention - was held. Certainly, not. The _Conference was held, and there being no au thority to compel the attendance of the delin quent Conferees, others were substituted by the Conference in their places. This is what john penn jones esq., editor of the Hollidays burg Register, Associate Judge of the several Courts of Blair county, Treasurer of the Poor Fund of said county, and general recipient of all the favors of the party, and Dictator and Commander-in-Chief throughout his . whole Bailiwick, denounces as ",A HIGH HANDED OUTRAGE' UPON him, AND A VILE GREAT." But who are the men thus reviled by JOHN PENN JONES! John B. Simons, Esq., than whom a more honest man does not live,— James A. McCahan, Esq., son of John Mc- Callan, Esq., deceased, who twenty-two years ago, took Jones off a canal boat and loaned him money to buy part of the very press with which he is now reviling the son. As to Mr. Brotherline, we will forbear for the present. If the base ingratitude of Jones towards him does not trouble his conscience, I can not by anything I can say, reach such a conscience. James Gardner, Dr. MePherran, Landon Reeve, George F. McCabe, and the other gen tlemen composing the Conference are all worthy, honorable men, of good standing, whom Jones cannot succeed in branding suc cessfully as.cheats. They are all far above his reach arri ^llfar better r"en thnn b. is. But why does Jones attack these gentle men? Does he think by demolishing them he will finish the American party, and have built up completely, on its ruins, the Repub lican party. In this we think he will be slightly mistaken. The American sentiment will still be hovering about to annoy. More in No. Q . AN AMERICAN. Hollidaysburg, Sebt. 20, 1858. Terrible Tragedy---A Mother Murders Her Four Children and then Commits Suicide A terrible tragedy took place near Grove City ; a village, 9 miles from Columbus, Ohio, on Wednesday, the particulars of which, we take from the Columbus Statesman : A woman, by the name of Christiana Schilling, residing with her husband, about half a mile from Grove City, yesterday morn ing, about one o'clock, during the absence of her husband,. murdered her four children— three girls and a boy—by throwing them into a well, 35 feet ,deep, and afterwards jumping in herself. It appears that Freder ick Schilling, the husband, was attending a wedding party, near Grove City, when the deed was committed, and that the wife, Christiana Schilling, conveyed the children from their beds to the well, a distance of 100 yards, while they were asleep, and then pitched them into it, and afterwards flung herself in. Neighbors passing the house, which is a ,miserable log cabin, standing about a quarter of a mile from the main road, say that they heard the mother and her chil dren singing a hymn gbout 10 o'clock at night. The husband and father, it seems, did not return from the wedding party until day light, and before that time, a lady neighbor, having occasion to draw water from the well, had discovered the bodies of Mrs. Schilling and her lour children, floating on the sur face. She immediately gave the alarm, and several gentlemen came to the spot, and raised the mother and her four children from the well. The family consists of a boy named Valentine, 10 years of age ; Christi ana, a girl, 12 years • _Caroline, 5 years, and Augusta, 3 years of age. Mrs. Schilling was about 36 years of age, and. was, to all appearances, an intelligent, healthy, and handsome woman. When our reporter visi ted the house, the dead bodies of the five un fortunate beings, were laid upon two beds, in the only sleeping apartment in the cabin, and a more melancholy spectacle, it has never been our misfortune to behold. The children all looked healthy, robust and beau tiful; and, with the exception of a slight scar on the forehead of the boy, no marks of vio lence were visible. A crowd of both sexes were in the room, all' awe-stricken by the horrible catastrophe. No evidence elicited by the jury of in quest, goes . to show that any other person than the mother, could have committed the deed. It is generally believed, that she was laboring under a fit of insanity, as it was stated, that she had, about a year ago, at tempted to commit suicide, during a fit of phrensy, to which she Was subject. Too TRUE.—The Recorder of Chicago, Il linois, in charging the grand jury, recently, said :—"During the past five years that I have held this Court, it has been my un pleasant duty to try, and sentence to the State prison, several hundred persons; and I am sorry to say, that while it is an easy mat ter to find jurors', who aro ready and willing to punish poor offenders, without position or friends, it is with great difficulty that jurors can be found, who appreciate the fact, that one bad man of position and wealth, can do more harm than one hundred poor men can, who aro in thd huilible walks of life." Terrible .Adventure---A Man Seated on the Valve of a Balloon Carried into the Clouds. [From the Detroit Tribune, Sept. 18.] .We •have learned full partichlard of tila Ballwin ascension at Adrian on Thursday, its subsequent descent, and its second ascension and a.linaway with the wronant while beyond his Control. It is a brief narrative, but of thrilling interest. A man lost in the sky I There can scarcely be a more terrible thought. It makes the flesh •creep and sends a shudder through every nerve. The first ascension 'took place about 9 o'- clock in the morning. It was on the occa sion of a large Sunday school celebration at Adrian. The Balloon was, a .very large.and well constructed one, being about the height of *a' two story building, when inflated and ready to .cut loose from its fastenings.— Messrs.' Bannister and Thurston took seats in the car, attached to the balloon, and ascended safely and •steadily.. After remaining about forty minutes in the air, sailing toward Tole do all the time, they alighted in the woods near the town of Riga, Lenawee county, near Knight's Station, on the Southern Road, dis tant about eighteen miles west of Toledo.— Several men came to the 'assistance of the ad venturers, and they proceeded to prepare the balloon for packing to be taken back to Ad rian. In doing this the monster balloon was turn ed over and partially upside down to disen tangle the netting and to reach the valve.— To do this Mr. Ira Thurston, one of the atro pants, took off'his coat, and got astride of the valve-block. He then suggested that the car be detached from the balloon while he should hold it down with his weight. This proved a fearful calculation, for no sooner was the slill inflated body relieved of the- weight of the car, than it shot into the air with the sud denness of a rocket, taking Mr4hurston along with it, seated upon the valve of the balloon, and holding on to the collapsed silk of the air-ship in that portion of its bulk. In this perfectly helpless condition the ill fated man sped straight into the sky in the full sight of his companions, even more help less than himself. So far as is known, there was no means for him to secure his descent, whether safe or otherwise. The part of the balloon filled with gas was twelve feet above him, so that there - was rio chance -for him to cut it and escape. lie could only cling to his precarious hold, and go withersoever the currents of air should take him. Without regulation and control of any kind the balloon continued to mount upwards, sail ing off in the direction of this city and Lake Erie. The fatal ascension took place about 11 o'clock, and at a few minutes past noon it was seen in the town of Blissfield, Lenawee county, apparently full three miles high, and about the size of a star .in appearance. It W'as still going up and on. At a quarter past three o'clock it was last dimly visible going in the direction of Malden, as ascertained by compass bearings taken by parties observ ing it. What is his exact fate, baffles conjecture ; that it is horrible, almost beyond precedent, there can he no doubt. There is not one chance in a million for a successful escape. Wheth er the unfortunate man was carried up so high as to become benumbed and senseless, death ensuing, or 'whether he fell off at length from his 'tremendous attitude, to have his breath sucked from him in his fearful descent and to be sunk in the lake oaL, dashed into a shapeless mass upon the earth, it is doubtful if any save God will ever know. The mind stands appalled in contemplating this fearful disaster and blindly gropes in mazes of won der at where his place of sepulchre shall be. Mr. Thurston was an experienced balloon ist, having built several ; and this being his thirty-seventh ascension. Seprnm I>ER 23:—We change our heading to day ! Lost is a fearful word to say of one who but now was in our midst in the high tide of life, strong, bold, full of hope, with troops of friends about him. " Lost ! It sounds like the wailing of the wind in the tops of the pines !" All hope of ever finding poor Thurston alive is blotted out, and we can only bemoan him as lost. Mr. Banister, his companion, returned this afternoon, and can only bring the worst tid ings. The balloon he identified, and sent the silk of which it was composed to this city last night. He himself remained to search for bis friend. To-day he comes back des pairingly. He states that the balloon valve on which Thurston sat is torn out from the silk of the balloon three-quarters of the way around, indicating unerringly that the weight of the unfortunate man was to great for the strength of the sides, and that the silk gave way, when , he must have dropped off. His only remaining chance would be to cling to the smooth material of which the balloon was made, and he could not have sustained him self in that manner. When this occurred we can only conjecture, but that it must have been within an hour after he started seems highly probable. The balloon was seen for nearly two hours with a glass, but it must be remembered that this great body, full sixty feet high, was only the size of a man's hand, when thus visible and would be utterly im possible to;',see the ill-fated man if he had not dropped off. Mr. Bannister feels quite posi tive that he must have fallen before.reaching Canada at all. The stories that are so' plentiful that a man was seen in the balloon as it came down near Baptiste Creek, he wholly discredits, as we have from• the - .first. He has investigated these rumors pretty thoroughly, and puts no faith in them whatever. Six gentlemen came up from Adrian to-day to go down to search for the body of Thurs ton, but at 3 o'clock P. M. they were not de cided what course to pursue. They inclined to the belief that his body, if not in the lake, would be found between. Knight's Station, where he started, and Monroe. The only hope now left is that the body may be found, and-the hand of affection be permitted-to lay it in its final resting place. We earnestly trust this may be—the poor. and only boon left for aching and sorely-smitten hearts to crave. • • 13Er General Winfield Scott, who is now stopping at West Point, met with a severe accident week before last, which may con fine him to his bed for-some . time. lie was about attending a dinner party given by Col. Delafield, when,. on going , down the stairs, his foot slipped , and he fell to the bottom.-- Owing to the bullet in his shoulder and the sword wound in his arm, he was unable to arrest his flight, and the fall-wrissevere. To a person of his advanced years and large frame this is a most serious affair. The Gen eral was taken to his bed, cupped and leeched, and though he feels better, he is still suffer ing intense pain. This accident to the old General will be generally regretted through out the country. Children Carried off .by a Balloon, and Supposed to be Lost. • [From the St. Louis Republican, Sept. 21.] Our correspondent at. the Illinois Fair, at Centralia, acquaints us with the following thrilling odeurrence :—Mr. G. W. Brooks, of this city, an aeronaut of considerable dis tinction; was adVertised-to make an ascen sion from a spot contiguous to the. Fair ground, on Friday evening, after the closing exercises of the Fair. Instead; however, of going up hiinself, he - yielded to the solicita tions of a young man who has been travel ling arOund with him, learning the theory and practice of ballooning, and who be g ged that; as the evening was so fine,' he - miglt'be allowed to test the value of his knowledge, by a little experience. The young man, whose name has escaped the recollection• of our informant, made the ascensiork.in a-beau tiful style,, in ,the presence of thousandS of admiring and wondering people. The at mosphere,was so quiet, that he rose almost vertically to a great height, and then, when it was supposed he would descend, the 'bal loon passed into 'a_cprrent.of -air, which bore it away to the sotitteast, and finally carried it out of sight. It Was' said that Mr. Brooks was much annoyed at his pupil, for refusing to descend before striking the current of air which bore.him away from the scene of the ascension. Ife did not return until Saturday morning, about daybreak, and then commu nicated an account of his most thrilling ex periences. The current of air, which bore him off to the south-east, carried him a dis tance of about twenty miles, before he thought of descending. By means of his grappling irons, the descent was made with safety and ease, and he found himself alighted near a farm-house, the inmates of which, regarded him with the greatest wonder and gratifica tion. The balloon was made fast to a fence, and after a. short conversation with the farmer and his wife, they were persuaded to make an ascension of a few hundred feet, one at a time. The balloon, relieved of " all extra weight, rose readily, and was easily pulled down again by means of the anchor rope.— The farmer and his wife were highly pleased with their trips, and . while expressing their gratification, two of their children, one five and the other three years of age, who had been looking on with astonishment, scram bled into the car, and cried out, "Lot me go up—let me go up I" The aeronaut proceeded at once to gratify them, but from some carelessness or accident, as.he was letting them up, the rope slipped from his hands, and the balloon mounted up wards with the velocity of a rocket. The frantic agony of the parents and the conster nation of the aeronaut, may be imagined.— In a minute or two, the balloon had passed entirely of sight, and was lost in the blue depths of the sky. Nothing could be done but to hasten back to Mr. Brooks, at Centra lia, and ask for advice. Our informant learns that Mr. Brooks ex pressed his opinion, that the balloon would remain in the air about an hour before com mencing to descend, and while at its greatest altitude, the children would probably freeze to flPath, xvoless, in their fright, they had precipitated themselves from the car. Mr. Brooks, early on Saturday morning, set out in the direction the balloon had taken, in hopes to recover it, and find some trace of the lost children. We have, up . to the pre sent time, heard nothing of his success. LATER. THE CHILDREN FOUND.--We now learn, that on Saturday morning, at daybreak, a farmer near New Carthage, forty-three miles from Mr. Harvey's place, discovered the bal loon suspended in. the air, attached by the grappling-rope to a tree in his yard. He im mediately hauled the balloon down, and found the youngest child asleep, in the bot tom of the basket, and the eldest, carefully watching over her little brother. They had been wafted about by different currents of air, throughout the night, and had come to a halt but a little while before they were re lieved. The story the girl told, was, that, as the balloon ascended, she cried piteously to her father, to pull it down. She said she passed over a town, where she saw a great many people, to whom she likewise appealed at the top of her voice. This place was Centralia. The ballon was seen to pass over there, but the people little imagined it carried two per sons in such danger: Her little brother cried with cold, and the heroic little girl took off her apron, covered him, and got him to sleep. In handling the ropes, she happened to pull one, which had the effect of bringing the balloon down, and, although not under standing the philosophy of the movement, she was quite content to keep the valve open, so long as by so doing, she found she ap proached the earth. The youthful aerial voyagers were in the balloon about thirteen hours and a quarter. It may easily be imagined, that among the neighbors, where they landed, they were ob jects of much curiosity and interest. The girl's presence of mind and loving considera tion for her brother, may well be remember ed, while the incident itself, was of such a remarkable character, that we opine it will not soon be forgotten in that section. The boy and girl • were conveyed home as soon as practicable, and, it is needless to say, were received with outstretched arms. FEARFUL ACCIDENT-A HOT SC dragging a dead body three weeks .—Early in August, Jno. Rawle, a lad of sixteen years, living in Vul can°, Amader county, California, who had vainly been endeavoring to obtain his father's consent to go to Fraser river, disappeared, taking with him a valuable horse belonging to the family. It was supposed he had start ed for Fraser river, and so little anxiety was felt in regard to him. On the 25 of August his body was found in the Buttie Ditch, a few miles east of Jackson, attached by a "lariat," to a half dead horse. From ap pearances, the boy, on the night after leaving home, lay down to sleep, with the horse tied to his person, to prevent his escape, The animal, becoming unmanageable through fright during the night, had run off and dragged his master by the rope until the boy's life was extinct. Afterwards the horse - had continued to graze around, dragging the body along for three weeks. • Finally the corpse bad been dragged into a ditch, where it be came entangled beyond the horse's strength to extricate it. In his efforts to pull lobse, the horse bad cut his neck to the t bone with the rope. The boy's remains were horribly mutilated. Most of his limbs were broken and the flesh rubbed bare from the bone. WORTII A TRIAL.—An exchange says that children laboring under a whooping cough, obtain considerable relief, by breathing the exhalations from lime which has been used in gas works.