committee should confine themselves to a full g port of facts and circumstances—leaving — it to the House to determine what , proceeding. should be taken in order to vindicate the dtg alty of that branch of the Legislature, thus assailed by an attempt to corrupt one of its members, CHAS. B. TREGO. THO. NICHOLSON. The retolutions attached to the report of the ajority, were adopted without debate. SUDDEN DEATII.—SUPPOSED SEDUCTION-- Ocoee Robbed.—The sudden death of Miss Sarah %V. Robinson, at Genesee, Livingston Co., after two or three dare illness, and with out the knowledge of her dangerous condition, has given rise to rumors of a most painful char acter. So far as the rumors fix upon any'per sea in that county the charge of sedliction.they are not credited at that place. An inquest was ordered at the Court House on Friday last"; at the hour of assembling, news came that the grave was empty.' I'lle body had .evidently been spirited away the night previous, after t he Coroner had ordered an inquest. This uGJed to the excitement, and rumors and con jectures flew about as to the cause and_ who could have been concerned in the transaction. The Coroner, after consulting several legal g entlemen, came to the conclusion to proceed with the investigation; Mcses Hunt was, ac cordingly, called and sworn and testified as follows :—.• I attended the funeral ; there was a large concourse ; I furnished the coffin and acted as undertaker ; I attended personally to the burial at the grave of Temple Hill; did - not seethe grave tilled entirely tip; a colored m an, named Daniel Hammel, tilled the grave ; knew the body was in the coffin when put in t he grave;: I have since that time examined the grave—to-day ; three persons, Nelson Hum phrey, Lewis flatly and James L. Wright, were with me ; the examination was made at the direction of the Coroner ; the body was gone ; found the grave open ; the rough box was in the grave; the lid by the aide of the .grave and the coffin gone; ean't tell what in 'etrument was used in opening the box ; I saw tracks front the grove to the North fence next to the woods ; can't 'tell how touch snow fell last evening; can't say whether the tracks were made before or after the last snow ; saw a good many tracks. partly filled with snow; the first heavy snow fell Saturday night last: I did not get over the fence ; the tracks led north to the road through the grove ; there was a sleigh track from the fence to the road ; was there between 9 and-19 'this niorning, enould think six inches or more snow fell last night; one of the men got down into the box." other witnesses were sworn. when the Coro ner discharged the jury. We learn that a full statement of the mattet, fro., one or both of the attending physicians, may he expected nest week ; and that the body was exhumed by the relatives, to prevent a post mortem ex amination.—Mbany .111aa. KErl.tieS EXTRAVAGANCE.—KepIer. who ul tiaciteky discovered many important truths. was. otoucti life, the dupe of vagaries founded on the supers ti tions of the age. in one of his early woks lie imagined the planets to be bilge, ani- MaL3 who swam round the sun, by means of certain fins acting upon the etherial fluid, as those of fishes do in the water, and agreeably to this notion, he imagined the comets to he mons unus and uncommon animals generated in the celestial spaces ; and - he exp!ained how this ex cited this animal faculty. LANGUID C RC UL ATI DN.—Repeated changes in the temperature. have a very bad effect upah the blood ; A sodden change from a full, generous, to a low, poor diet boll beequally injurious to the health as sudden changes 'of weather. Uwe would have health we must endea vor to prevent ; as far as in us lie, great extremes of all kinds. Every excess, of heat or cold, of eating or drinking, tends to produce impurity of the blood ; thus its circulation becomes languid; the very channels of hie are clogged ; and the first consequence is that the bowels become costive. IVe are in this condition ready to receive any diaewe with which we may come in contact ; and without any o:mtact with any one affected with sickneas, we shall have headache, heartburn, dizziness, a foul tongue, logs of appetite ; all th4esult of the state of costiveness. When the atmosphere becomes impure and oppressive to mankind, it requite the tempest to agitate it, to give it parity and life. Winn the bowels are postire they require the admin• kration of hrandreth's pills, which, by o.:citing , a coin• motion, or accelerated movement in that organ, will oc• canon all morbid coodadi‘ to be expelled, thereby pro• dacing purity to the blocki and health to the whole frame.-- , Sold by J. D. & E. D. NTONTASTE, Towanda ; G. A. Praxis's. Athens, only authorized Agents fur Bradford County. JAYNE'S AtTERATIVE, OR PRESERVATIVE. RRECNIATISM.—The Proprietor hem not prcscrib• al this prepsration.in a gretti many cases of Rheumatism, but in every case where it was used until the system became affected 'by the medicine, the disease was re. moved, GOUT.--A [limber cf cases of Gout have been cured by this Preparati:in. I n '