'AMERICAN VOLUNTEER. lOHS B. BWTTON, Eilltoi 6 Proprietor. .4. .CARLISLE, PA.. APRIL 16, 1857. Democratic State Ticket. Fob Governor, WILLIAM F. PACKER, Of Lycoming ftmnty. Fon Judge op the Scphehe Court, ELLIS LEWIS, Of Philadelphia City. For Cabal Commissioner, NtMROD STRICKLAND, Of Chester County. APPRENTICE WANTED. AN apprentice, to learn the printing busi ness, is wanted at this office. An intelli. gent, well-educated boy of 16 or 17 years of ago, will bo offered a fair bargain by making early application. would call the attention of our citi zens to the dilapidated condition of (ho Public Gravo-yard. It will noon be In a deplorable state if not attended to. March verified Iho old adage—came in liko a lion and wont out like & lamb. Bo far April has been a more fickle month than March. Is Count.—On Tuesday last, on motion of R.. M, Henderson, E;q., Wu. D. Haldert was admitted to practice law in the several courts of this county. Going West.— Quito a goodly number of our citizens have left this Spring to seek new homes In the West. We hope they may all realize the highest hopes (lint induce them to leave old homes for a wcaiy pilgrimage in a now quarter. “ Spring time of year is coming, Bitds nro blythe and gay, InsccUs are humming, And all tho world ” Ought to dress his wife and daughters in the neatest and most desirable manner circumstan cos mil permit. See tho advertisements ©four Carlisle merchants, in another column. Entertainment at Edi-cation Hall. —The lost entertainment of Mr. and Mrs. Ta-sneiiim,, «ill take place .it Education Hall, on Saturday evening. The onterlninmcnt will consist of Re citations, Readings from favorite ant hors, Songs, &c. Mrs. T. (formerly Miss Sue M’Murrat, ot Carlisle,) has gained an enviable reputation In her profession, and wo hope to see the old Hall crowded on Saturday evening. R3"Any of our fiiends who may wish to have their likenesses taken cheap, and in really beau tiful style, should give Messrs. Main ft Obuorne q call at their sky-light rooms, in Hanover St. Wo have soon several lino specimens of their pictures, taken on glass, Jr*«n and paper, mid consider them n little nearer perfection in the art than any we have ever seen. Mr. Tiffany's Lecture. The lecture do- Hvercci by Professor Tiffant, in iho Court jS- mails, but had not been received. This at- Uouso in (Ills borough, on Tuesday evening, traded I lie attention of Col. J. Holbrook, spe* was vrell attended. The subject of the eloquent j cinl agent of the Post Office Department, who lecturer wua •• Tho Newspaper.” After payiqg j made an examination of the receipt books in a compliment to the editors ol Carlisle, he pio- ■ the registry department of the New York post ccedod to empire the newspaper press of office, and found that the “missing" letters had America with those oi other countries, and most ]in fact been rtcieved ami receipted for They happy wm ht. hits and conclusion.. Ho .poke had been taken out by a young man regularly ii Or Iho ririSrfpWJloya' to receive registered and other leltore ana contended that the press was the great ,i, n ii,. a-, - .. , . ... „ , tt . lor the Inucs, the editors of which have since teacher of the yonng In America. He inferred .urn- . , , ~i a r , ~ , , , .. mode the following retraction of their charge; to the London Tima, the great “ fhundorer' _ , , , b ~e .u t i t i . I have satisfied ourselves he persona J i If ~ h 0 E " e i “ 1 an interesting ! ein,„i„„|,„n „ mt „, r „f money’ contained history of the wealth and enterprise of that m registered Icticrs has been due. to sonic ex mammoth establishment. TVo would like to , tfnt at all e» ruts, to (he unfaithfulness <*( agents speak more at length ol the intellectual tio.it i ln ol,r °' rn t'niploy- We desire, therefore, to tins locturr s.lbnlerl, bill nine ndl not permit >1 r , dl ' ?r . c 1 llc ' n r ll,c rcs.Mry depart met nf , , the nly post office from whatever suspicion our present. At a (mure tune wo may refer to the f„ nncr statements on this subject may havcitv flame subject, und advance some of our own volved. ▼lewa, Thu subject Is an interesting ouo both We may add, also, that we arc satisfied that for the lecturer and (ho journalist. merchants and business men generally arc far 100 careless in regard to the class of persons who arc sent to the post office for their letters ' Ills very common to intrust this important and responsible duly to those employees who are in the most inferior positions, and who arc the most inadequately paid for their services A direct temptation to dishonesty is thus thrown in their way We are satisfied that the matter deserves more attention than it ic ccivcs.” Feast op the Passover.— Thursday of fast week was the first day of tills ancient Jewish festival—a festival which has been observed at each recurring anniversary lor an unbroken period of several thousand years. It lasts fur several days. During tins festival n<> marriages can bo solemnized, nor other food eaten than tbo “ mazot the unleavened bread of the Scriptures. In the preparation of this broad great care is cxcicisod. The flour must be the very Quest, tlie water of tho purest qualify, and in kneading tho dough, the hand is not Buffered fo como in contact nilh If. For (his purpose n machine has been invented which works the dough, tolls it out betnuen uooden i oilers, and Anally cuts M into propci sizes. It is baked in thin, round cakes, looking much liko certain aorts of crackers, and very Insipid in flavor. iCT” Tho trial of Mrs. Cunningham and Jno. J. Eckel has been set down for tho (first Mon* dayj-llhof May next. A panel of five hun dred jurors was ordered by tho court of oyer sod terminer. (£y*Oov. Pollock has appointed James Arm strong, Esq., of Lycoming county, supreme judge, in the place of Judge Black. resigned. Decimal CuiuiE.vcr.— The Canadian Parlia ment has reduced the pounds, shillings and pence currency lo dollars and cents, for the fa cilitation of trade between Canada and tiic United Stales. By-and by all the commercial countries will have the same currency b*cd upon decimal fractions. There is nothing the world is so open to as the practical suggestions of common sense Rate of Interest in Illinois. —At the re cent session of the Legislature of Illinois, a law was passed fixing the legal rale of interest in that State at eight per cent. ; but in any con tract, written or verbal, len per cent, may bo collected, and any person who receives or sti pulates to receive over ten per cent., shall for feit the whole interest. Democratic State Committee.—The mem bers of the Democratic Stale Committee arc re qpcstcd to meet at the Merchants’ Hotel, Phil adelphia, on Monday, April 20th, at 7 o’clock P. M. Select School.—i'ho following is the return of select scholars for (ho quarter ending April Ist, 1867 i School Wo. 11—Jefferson IVnggonor, Brico J. Slorrol, Wm. IV. Slmpley. No. 12— Agues Graham, Anna Alexander, Grace* Loomis. No. IS—Mary Landis, Mary A. Bonder, S. Cornolia , Sniond. No. M—John F. McMath, John C. 1 (£/* There is now living in Murray co.. Ga.. S /, "T* - , 0 - 17 - s “ rall ?")'• O" Iho waters of Holly Creek, a revolutionary dcr, iiachol Snuhr, Sarah Furher. No. JH—' . , , , , , „ >/v 3 Amo* Zloglor, Howard M. Norris, Smith Me- ■ velcran ,v!, ° ,m 3 QUnined the ngc of 130 years. Donald. , His name is John l/amcs. D. Eckels, i y , 3. S Ovuti... a . , OT7* 01c Bull, tlic great Norwegian violinist, nS"wT7 r T T"‘ is " 0B ’ eMn e eonccrt " i" Phil«dL-1p1.i.. crops of Indian corn'are ntM “f, f ° Ur {’r c l lilrol . or y l» lonving llio country, lo lake up c produced annually. his ahudo permanently in his native land. SALE OF THE MAIN LINE. The sale qf the Main Line of our public im provements bos been a question before the Leg* islature for seTcrnl sessions. At present there are several bills reported having in view this object We have, on all former occasions, op posed the sale, because we believed the Main Line, as well as all other portions of our public improvements, would eventually pay. We felt, too, & natural Pennsylvania pride, and believed it would lower the character of our State to part with her public works. But, wc ore tired paying taxes to keep up these works long er, and, os wc believe this to be the sentiment of nine-tenths of tho people of Cumberland county, wc soy emphatically, sell the Main Line os soon os possible—tho sooner the better. We know not whether it be bad management or not, but certain it is, as at present conduct ed, the works are not yielding a revenue that will justify the State in retaining them. Wc hope they may be sold at a fair price, and in a woy honorable for the State. The following remarks of, the Pennsylvanian on this subject meet our views: “It is an undeniable fact that the propo fiition to sell this Main Line is gaining strength daily. For thirty years the people have paid their taxes, and seen them swallowed up by this insatiable foe of the treasury, and now they are ready to relinquish the improve ment as one that has boon patiently tried and found sadly wanting. Tho object of our fa thers in constructing this line was good, but its day of usefulness is gone by, and it would be folly for the Commonwealth to hold on to it when its revenues are yearly growing less, ami its expenses yearly increasing. Of course Ido not allude to the Columbia Railroad, but to the mnddy ditch which common use has dignified [with the name of Canal. A bill for its sale 1 will probaly pass, and it is (0 be hoped that 1 tins hill will be so framed as to do justice to all parties. The Legislature should not be govern ed by prejudice cither against the Main Line or in favor of any panics that may desire to pur chase it. Lost Letters —lt is, and we suppose a!* ways will be the habit of a certain class of newspaper editors to make attacks upon the Post-office Department. When they have no thing else to talk alxiut and find it difficult to get news to fill their journals, they supply the want by writing an article of a column in j length against the Post-office Department and its officers. These attacks, nine times out of ten, are as malicious as they arc dishonest. A few weeks since, the editor of one of the Phila delphia Magazines made the sweeping charge that there was not a town in Pennsylvania con taining a population of 500 from the Post-office of which he had not lost one, two or three reg istered loiters containing money. Wo knew this to be a wilful and deliberate falsehood—a i he from top to bottom—for, from the Carlisle Post office no registered letter has ever been | lost, nor indeed any other letter so far as we have knowledge The editor of the New York Daily Times, recently complained that a largo number of registered letters, containing money, had been sent to its publishers through the U. Common Schools —A bill has been intro duced in the House of Representatives, at Har risburg, to enable the Governor lo appoint n Slate Superintendent of Common Schools, and to relieve the ,Secretary of the Commonwealth of a duly which he is now compelled lo commit lo other hands. The appointment of an officer whoso business will bo sobly to manage and superintend the school system of the State, will do much to increase its efficiency. The Nfbhaska A pi'iiintmexts.—Wo learn from Washington that theio were over one bun dled applicants tor tt»« six land offices In Ne braska. Mr- Chapman, the delegate from the Territory, recommended the appointment of 1 residents only, and ho secured three, tho out | side piossme alone preventing the ocrompllsh j men! ot his wishes. The following nro said to j have been appointed : 1 For the Dakotah District—John C. Tusk, Register; John N. II Patrick, Receiver. South Platte District—lsaac L. Gibbs, Regis ter; Edward Desluui. Receivoi Nahama District—George H. Nixon, of Ton nesseo, Register; Andiew Hopkins, of Ponnsy 1- vnnia, Receiver. The Kansas Ai nnivTnrNrs. President Du. clianan has made the follou ing appointments for Kansas ; John W. WhilfloKl, of Kansas, register of the land office, anil Daniel Woodson, of Kansas, ro. coiver of public moneys for tho Delaware land ) heavy snow drifts. The horses are said to be apparently uninjured, and am doing well.” Resistance to L\w i^Oinn.-IThe 1 The Ohio Leg islaturo talks «/ resisting the laua of (lie United States; and a Jfint conniption on (ho Dmi Scott I decision of Uw V. S, Supremo Court have ro por ted bo mo forr/hJo rcsolufiuiis affirming (hn( thnt decision “ must not and shnlf not bo con sumroated in Ohtb.” and saying « tternly to the South and tholr Northern abettors, but in all kindness, that UwiU take more than one deci sion, fulminated by a Jesuitical Catholic Judge, to conquer n free Protestant people.’* O mighty cantt only to bo equalled by the lolly eloquence of this rebellious committee when they say— “ Endeavor to enforce that decision In our State, and from the blue waters of Lake Erie on the North to the beaulilul Oldo on Iho South; from tho hills o( Pennsylvanian on (he East to the plains of Indiana on (ho West, but one voice will be heard echoing and re-echoing tho war cry of the revolution —* Give us liberty or give us death.'” There is a kind of awfitlness in this threat Hint ont-Chdovors Ohoever. Here after Thermopylae and Spartan devotion will ho obsolete ideas. IL7*" In Boston, Inst year, there were 225 deaths by ' lolencc —59 of them wore from drowning. 9 persons were killed on railroads. 29 were burned. 2 pofeoned. and 20 tumbled out of windows, Ac. A Great City. —The consolidation of New lork with Brooklyn, L. 1., and the (owns m King’s county, which must eventually lake place, will make it one of the largest cities in the world. C9* Maggie Myers, a child live years of ago, was left alone at her parent’s residence, in Troy, N. Y. on Tuesday week. She played with some matches, set the house and her clothes on lire, and was burned to death. (£7 From (iirard cillogo there have been bound out 155 orphans, of which no less than 21 have become printers. Artesian M eli.s.—Nino artesian wells have been sunk for various establishments in New York, at an expense of $50,000, which furnish 1,430 gallons of water tfer minute. The price of the same quantity o( “ Croton," annually, would be &70.000. it is *ald. OMt is slated that’durillg the year 1866, one grain and produce (lirn at Chicago, used in their business $12,600,000, their checks on a single hank amounting to *8,000,000. The amount of gnpu which passed through their hands was 5,260,000 bushels. Uncle Sam's Funds.— The United Stales Treasurer reports the wliolo amount in the several depositories, subject to draft on the 23d of March, as *21,722,821. Funeral op Mn. Penrose. —The funeral of tile lion. Oiiaiu.es B. j)enuosb, attended hy the memberspf the Lcghitaturo, took place from his Into Square, Phila delphia, on tho lotligipjl. lie was interred at Laurel Hill. iy s| A Third Candidate, is likely to ho a third candidate in thiS field for governor of tho Commonwealth. Tjio dissatisfaction at the nomination of Mr. Wilmot appears to bo deep rooted and extensitfp, and the question In openly agitated amongst those who hove no dis position to be sold and trjmaferrcd to the black republican party, wholScr a third candidate shall bo brought upon tl|> course. EX-OOTWDR JOHN BIGLER. Tho Elmira Daily Advert iter, an opposition paper, thus speaks of tho appointment of Ex- Governor John Bigler, of California, as Minis ter to Chili: If Mr. Buchanan 3s ns happy in all his appoint ments, as in tho above selection, he will give bat little room for fault-finding, politics aside. Prom a long personal acquaintance with Ex- Gov. Bigler, wo can bear our testimony to his worth ns a man—the only fault wo ever could seriously bring against him, was his unflinching adherence to the Democrocy, whether right or wrong. He was born and raised a Democrat, and to-day ia about forly-llvc years of ago, but the man cannot be found who can say that Hon. John Bigler ever wavered in his attachment to Democracy, or (ailed to vote for a ticket of that parly on election day. In 1844, wo think it was, ho became one of the editors and proprietors of the Pittsburgh Daily Post, which ho conducted with marked ability- Early in tbo spring of 1810, ho purchased a good sized wagon and a pair of stout oxen, and putting info it such household goods and provi sions ns ho deemed necessary, together with himself, wife and throe or four children, started overland for California, where, after enduring many hardships, ho arrived In safety early in tho fall of (ho same year. Ho went Into the mining country, and was successful in Ids opera tions. Upon tho adoption of tho State Consti tution, and tho admission of California into tho Union in 1850, ho received the Democratic no mination for Governor, and was triumphantly elected. At tho termination of his term of of fice, ho was re nominated for Governor, and was again elected by a handsome majority. During tho past year, ho has been devoting Ids time and talents to tho interests of Mr. Bu chanan, to whom ho is attached by a long per aonnl acquaintance ; and tho President, In con sideration of his services, has given him (he mission to Chill. Ex-Gov. Bigler, like his brother, Senator Bigler ofPennsylvnnla, acquir ed his early education in a printing office. Indian Atrocities in lowa.—A Idler re ceived here from a responsible source, dated Fort Dodge, lowa, March 23, says that a set tlement of twenty families at the head waters of the Dcs Moines river, had been attacked by Indiana, and that it was supposed that all were murdered. Only two houses wore visited by the persons bringing the news, in which four teen dead bodies were found. Some had been shot and others inhumanly clubbed lo death.— It is presumed that tho whole number of per sons composing the settlement were killed, or that they arc now in captivity. A meeting of citizens was called on the 22d ult.. and a com pany of fifty to one hundred men had organiz ed to march to take vengeance on the Indians, and rescue any person that might be found with them. Tho telegraph last night confirms the above. The massacre took place on Spirit Lake.—The Indian agent. Flandiam. staned with a com pa ny of troops from Foil Ridgly on the 17th ult. Fifteen settlers arc reported missing. The St. Paul Pioneer of the 2Cth confirms the report that a massacre occurred on the 9th, Spirit Lake is in Emmett county, lowa, on the Minnesota boundary. I The 1 Emiiodimkvt. ” —Our neighbor of the Herald, in speaking of David Wilmot. the candidate of the Black Rcpublians for Gover- nor, says If Henry Clay was the '•embodiment” of Whig principles, in (ho glorious days of yore, so may Hand \\ ilmol tie now os truly termed (he very • life, soul ami embodiment” of He publiramsm. Thus we see the Republicans claim VTilmot ns exclusively their candidate. The poor, mis erable. despised Know-Nothings arc to bo whipped into his support, but Wilmot nor his political friends will have anything to do with tho night-ow Is. They arc too weak lo be lon ger regarded even by lJic Republicans. Poor •‘Sam. ” IC7“ 1 lie New ork correspondent of the Naltoual hilclhgencer says, a company of capi talists, styling themselves the "American Emi grant Aid and Homestead Company,” arc ap plicants to our Legislature for a charter to en able them to carry out important projects which they have in view. The scheme of the company is to purchase large tracts of wild lands in the West and so improve them as to render them peculiarly attractive to settlers, who will be in vited to purchase in alternate sections on very favorable terms, Ihe company looking to the I ultimate sale of their reserved sections fora profitable return upon their investments. An organized system of emigration is also contem plated as one of the features of the enterprise.? No Mohr Banks. —There appears to be a division in the Lcgislatuio on the Bank ques lion:--one portion favoring the free banking project, the other adhering to the old system, and now urging the passage of local banks.— The free banking bill was defeated on the third mst.. by a decidrd vote. The friends of the local banks finding a spirit of retaliation rife, procured n reconsideration and recommitment. The probability is, that between the two the bank mania will fail for this session. 70.000 Lives Lost. -It is estimated that in the bombardment of Canton, by the English fleet, which began the 28th of October Inst, seventy thousand lives—of men, women and children of nil ages—have been sacrificed, and properly to the amount of over ten millions, destroyed. With all this loss of life and prop erty, there is no succumbing on the part of the Celestials, who manifest a stubborn bitterness of feeling toward anything that has the appear ance of reconciliation. [IV- Hoover's Ink, made in Philadelphia, is a great comfort to editors, and we suspect even greater to compositors, seeing that its tluidity leaves no excuse for had or charred wriling thc great foes of type-setters. It is really quite a pleasure to write with such mk, especially with a good sleet pen. for which mamiy ,t la prepni-wl.-Acia Fort American. "o cheerfully add our testimony to that of the Editor of the American, in favor of floo- Varl f"*' 11 " ?" L lllat c “" bc desired.—iVem I ork Lourier min B/iqutfr Hooeer'a Phlad'l fia Ink. is a beautiful ar lie o, well calculated for metal mens, ns it does nm corrode them.-B,other Joknalhnn, Ntw Suicide op a New York Ci.erb.— Alfred Halsey, a clerk in the carpet store of Brown & Co„ Cpurtlandt street, New York, committed suicide hy taking strychnine at tho Girard House, in Philadelphia, on Wednesday night last. Tho causes which led to tho suicide are wrapped in mystery, hut it would-scem to have been premeditated, as ho came on to that city without luggage, and with only n little over three dollars in his pocket—not enough to pay his bill mid lake him homo ogain. Ho was a native of Virginia. His father is a wholesale clothes dealer In Petersburg, in that Slate. ID'Col. David Mitchell, (ho Now Superin. tendent of the Columbia Railroad, commenced his duties on Hie Ist Inst. life of on Engineer* The lilo of a railroad engineer is graphically depicted in tho following extract /tom tho Schenectady Star: But tho engineer—ho who guides tho train by guiding the iron horee, and almost holds tho lives of passengers in his hands—his la a life of mingled pain and pleasure. In a little eoveu-by oino apartment, with square holes on each aide for windows, open behind, and with machinery to look through ahead, you iind him. Ho is the Pathfinder}” ho leads the way in all times of danger, checks tho iron horse, or causes it to speed ahead with the Velocity of the wind, at will. Uavo you over stood by tho track, of tr dark night, and watched the coming and passing of a train 1 Away off in the darkness you dis cover a light, and you hear a noise, and tJT6~ earth trembles beneath your feet. Tho light comes nearer; you can compare it to nothing but the devil himself, with its terrible whistle; the sparks you imagine corno from Beelzebub’s nostrils—tho Arc underneath, that shines close to (ho ground, causing you to believe tho devil walks on live coals. It comes close to you ; you back away and shudder; you look up, and al most on tho devil’s hack rides tho engineer; perhaps the “ machine ” shrieks, and yon ima gine the engineer is applying spur to tho devil’s sides. A daring fellow, (hat engineer—you can’t help saying so, and you wonder wherein lies the pleasure of being an engineer. But so he goes, day after day, night after night. Moon light openings he sweeps over tho country, through cities and villages, through fairy scenes and forest clearings. He looks through the square holes at ids side and enjoys tho moon light, but ho cannot stop to enjoy the boauty'of the scenery. Cold, rainy, muddy, dark night, it is tho same. Perhaps tho tracks arc under mined or overflowed with water; perhaps some scoundrels have placed obstructions in the way, or trees been overturned across the track ; and, in either case, it is almost Instant death—to him, nt least, but he stops not. Right on is the word with him, nmi on ho goes, regardless of danger, weather, and everything, save the well-doing of his duty. Think of him, ye who shudder through fear In the cushioned scats of the cars, and get warm from the flro that is kindled for your benefit. Clrowtii or tiik West. — As a specimen of the rapid growth of the great West, and parti cularly some of its juvenile cities, we giro the following facts, taken from the Wisconsin Patriot, adding, however, that Madison now contains a population between 10,00(1 and 12,- 000, rising up to such plethoric dimensions from about 1,200 in 1H.10: Madison, the capitol of Wisconsin, is one of the great cities of the West, aith unrivalled beauty of location and scenery to gratify men o( taste ami leisure. Its unsurpassed railroad and other husinesn facilities, otfer strong induce ments to capitalists, manufacturers, merchants ami mechanics. The city is now creeling a spacious City Hull, four fhst class school houses, and other public buildings. The State Legislature at its last session, made large nppropi ialions for the enlargement of the Stale House, the erection of a State Lunatic Asylum, and to complete the State University Buildings on the magnificent plan heretofore adopted. Congress has made an appropriation for the erection of a United States Court House and Post Office; and made the latter a distributing u flier. Four separate railroads will ho completed to this place the coinii g year, and will ur< c‘ expen »ivo buildings for their convenience and busi- In addition to all these, thorp arc now being erected churches, store®, pr'vato residences, fee., most ol which arc built of the beautiful cream colored stone from the Madison quarries. These improvements will give employment to hundreds of mcchanics-aml laborers, at a point where they will find a healthy location for a homo, educational, and oilier advantages unsur passed. Not a competing city to limit Its growth for forty miles In nny direction, and In the centre of the most fertile county In the Union, which' is being rapidly developed. (The Kallocii Trial.— The jury cmpanncled fo fry that reverend -stump orator nml disunion. Ist, Mr. Kalloch, of Beaton, for adultery, were discharged on Wednesday morning, being nn nblo fo agree. Tfio Iriol created great sensa lion. A correspondent of tlie New York Tri bune, says : ‘•Apart from the direct testimony to the adul terous intercourse, the strongest point against Mr. Kalloch is, that after his lecture was over, Ire went back to tiro hotel In Eust Cambridge, and spout an hour in the bedroom xvllb Mr. Stein’s wife. Ho assorts that lie did so became he was exhausted by the fatigue of lecturing and needed rest. But the Uev. Mr. Holland, o| E„ s t Cambridge, testilies that Mr. Kalloch did not appear at all taligued utter that lecture, at.d that he excused hlmsdl from going to .Mr. Holland's house on the pleiUhat he was anxious to get homo ns soon as possible. Aftci lhat.io gel into Ins carnage and ride to a hotel, anil slay there an hour with another man’s wife when he was but twenty minutes* ride Irom Ins own house in Boston, is certainly a very suspicious circum stance.” A Hanoi,vr. i.v Nonrn Cauoi.i.va respondent of llio Petersburg Express, writing from (lold.sborough, N. C., says; Three negroes—two likely young men and nn old woman, the mother of twenty children were hung at Greenville, Pitt County, yester day, for murder. From early morn till noon every avenue lending into town was crowded with persons, representing all- ages, sexes, classes and conditions of the population in the county around' about. About nine o clock in the morning a steamboat arrived front l Wash ington with some live hundred passengers. The crowd was estimated at live thousand per sons. of which at least one thousand were fe males. Distressing Suicide.—Wc Icurn from ihc Lancaster Examiner that Mr. John Witmer, a highly respected, widely known and wealthy citizen of Rnpho township, committed suicide on Tuesday evening of last week, by hanging himself In a corn-crib attached to hla barn.— Some lime since, Mr. Witmer purchased ol Sheriffs sole. Ilcrtzlcr’s mill property for $l5- 500, and although a man of largo means, would have been necessitated to borrow the larger part of the purchase money. Owing to persons who had money to invest having already mode their arrangements, ho found some difficulty in procuring the necessary amount, and was con scqucntly very much troubled about it. Even tually, however, ho was promised the amount hy a Mr. Ilcrshey, but the latter, in conse quence of himself being disappointed, informed Mr. Witner, on the raornlngoftho day he com* milted tho act, that ho was unnblo to accom modate him. This informolion, acting on an already highly excited state of his mind, caus ed a temporary insanity, during which ho ter minated his existence. The statements published in regard to Mr. Wltmcr’a pecuniary embarassments having led him to commit the act are without foundation. As b«foro remarked, ho was wealthy, and has left on unencumbered estate valued at over $40,000 No Gol—Tho Daily News publishes tho card ofj. Alexander Simpson, ono of tho Delegates from that oily lo tho Stato Convention which nominated Mr. Wilraot. Mr. Simpson declares Ids determination not to support the nominee, lie is an American, and in favor of an Ameri can policy, and is not alone in his determine, lion lo oppose Wilmot (C7* Jcsso Sharp, Esq., has been reappointed Collector, at Wilmington, Dri. Mow Kicking Out, The National Defender , published atNorrir. town, Pa., one of the ablest Know-Nothing bij pers in tho State, comes out strorig'and decided against the Black Republican Abolition ticket- It says: ABOLITIONISM & FOBEIGNISM TBIDMPIIASft Tho motley collection of black spirits end white, which endeavored to dignify itstlf hr im title of” Union Convention,” b'ofoplelcd its l ! bors n short time ago, by the nomination of tha following ticket: Governor—David Wilmot. Canal Commissioner—William Milfoard Of course, Americans who have any regard for themselves or their party, arc not to support such a ticket. It needs no «nru« went to prove that they would bo stultlfA** themselves if they entertained the idea for* moment. Mr. Wihnot, the candidote for emor, is a free-trade, Loco-foco Aiiolitioniat* the compel I tor of Giddlngff in. his sectional an imosities and hates—the supporter of Van Bu. ren in 1848, and the deadly enemy to protec tion to American intcrcsls while in Congress in 1840. We believe he was the only member of Congress from Pennsylvania, in that year, who voted to strike down (he industrial Interests of his own State and sustain the pampered mono polies of England, in return fur which old tar ill loving Whigs arc now called upon to vote for him ! He is Anti-American In all bis feel ings and sympathies—approves of the recent action in the U. S. Senate, placing nlians on a par with native citizens in' making a sovereign Siatc—endorses the action of Q. A. Grow, the Abolition Congressmen from Ills district, in vo ting steadily against the American party in Congress, and descends from the Bench to as. sist in giving him 700 majority in return for his abject submission to foreign influence. A« a Locufoco candidate he would have some claims to democratic suppoit for ho is an advocate of fjee-trade and a low truckler to foreign - influ. cnce: but ns a Whig or American the nomina tion of such a man is a broad and ridiculous farce. Wc shall oppose it firmly and steadily, and wc have the proud satisfaction of knowing that there ore several tbousahd voters tn Old Montgomery whoso suffrages neither Wilmol or Packer can by any possibility hope to re ceive. As for the remaining nominees,.they' are quite as objectionable. The selection of Mthrnrd shows a determination to insult the •Straight-out’ American element by the nomi nation of a man who slabbed Millard Filmoro Inst fall in the house of his friends. The con vention undoubtedly anticipated that such a choice would be taken ns on insult,'and they therefore made Ihe nomination as unanimous as possible. Boilt candidates for tho Supremo Bench arc Black Republicans. Supplement to (lie Poor law. The following imporlnnt supplement to the (lencrol Poor Low of the Commcnwcallh, has passed both branches of the Legislature, and is probably by this time a law ; A Supplement to “An act relating to the sup. port and Employment of the Poor," approv ed the thirteenth day of June, Anno Domini, one thousand eight hundred and thirly.tix. Suction 1. lie it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, in General Assembly met. and it is hereby enacted by the authorVy of the same: That tho Courts of Quarter Sessions m iho several counties of this Commonwealth, shall have power to hear, determine and mate orders and decrees, in all cases arising under the twenty ciglh >cc ion of tho Act oflhirleenth June, one thousand eight hundred and thirty six. either upon thc'pclition of the Overseers of the Poor or of any other person or persons hav ing an interest in tho support of said poor per son or persons, nnd cither with or without aw order of relief'having been first obtained. Suction 2. That if any man shall separata' himself.from bin wife without njMionablecaustf • or shnif child nr,rMt||pi. i» .11 ji lawful (or any magistrate ol the several coun ties and districts of this Commonwealth, upon complaint made by the wife, the child or drift’ dren or any one in their behalf, to issue his warrant to any constable of the proper county or district, authorizing him to take the bo djoC any such man, and bring him istralo. at any lime to bo specified in said war rant : Provided. That said complaint be veri fied by oath, and set forth that said wife, child, or children arc left without means sufficient for their support, and are likely to become a charge, upon the district. Section 3. That it shall be lawful for snelv magistrate, on the return of such warrant’, npnn hearing, if he be satisfied of the desertion aforesaid and the sufficiency of the complaint, to require security from such man fur his ap pearance at the next Court of Quarter Session*; there to abide the order of said Court: and for nnnl of such security, to commit him to the’ jail of the proper county of district. ‘ Section 4. That the warrant and,complaint aforesaid, together with the recognizance, shall’ be returned to the next Court of Quarter Scs sions, as is provided in criminal cases : when it s mil be lawful for the said Court, upon hearing the parlies by petition presented for that pill'- pose, to determine the case upon its merits, and’ if satisfied of the desertion, and sufficiency of the complaint, to make an order for the par mcnl of such sum or sums of money as they may think reasonable, payable nts uch times as they may deem proper, or to make micb'Ollßt 1 decrees ns they may think- reasonable, and to commit him to tlicjnil of tbu*propcr count/ or district, there fo remain until ho comply iritli i he orders or decrees of said Court, give securi ty for the performance thereof, or bo discharg ed by due course of law. A for- Tub Tragedy at Louisville.—Tho tele graph'has already mentioned that Thos. Tra vers had been arrested at Louisville, Kentucky, charged with tho murder of his wife, Mary Travers, on Thursday night of last week. Tho Courier stales that Travers bad been intoxica ted for several days, and that tho neighbors heard him when he como homo about 12 o’clk. at night. It then proceeds : They heard no unusual noise in the room during tho night, mid in the morning their cu riosity was first aroused by tho unusual ilill* ness that prevailed in tho room. As thod»J wore away suspicion was aroused, and about noon a hole was punched through the piriitlon wall, and tho man and wife appear** 60 •* sleep on tho bed. They were called, and the man replied, saying that his wife had gonOout to attend to some sewing. This was known to be false, and information was conveyed to tno Eolicc of the suspicion that some foul play had eon enacted, as the unforlnnolc woman previously told her neighbors that her husband bad threatened her life. Tho door was burs open by the officers, when a horrid sight wa» revealed. The unfortunate woman was found dead in her bed, a mass of core. Tho man, all covered wuh blood, bad Mcrr lying quietly beside his murdered wife, opP ,r * . cnlly sleeping until disturbed by flie Like an infuriated beast ho aroused hlnw from his lair, and sclaing iw-ozor that Jay W£ side hla bed made a desperate effort to cut i own throat. Ho was seized, and, though sir g* .■ gling desperately, wus overcome and his bun tied. lie at once admitted that he had oo • milled the murder, and that ho had done it rrtfaons best known to himself. He sold to ho had killed her about 4 o’clock inthe w® ing, The body was yet warnu though h* o " , extinct. Tho bed and bed' clothes were cop pletely saturated'with blood. On on ot&xo tionit appeared that she had rccclvcd twos one in the right breast, severing tho lungs. - tho other on tho left side, glancing to tho s" dor hlndo. Tho wound on tho right side mortal. .. fln j Travers is an awning maker by Inw*®' had'bcciv married but 8 monlhsto Ins 'f ’ She was a young woman, not oyer 24 y®j* ’ ago, and said to bo very prepossessing * n » pearnneo.