albe toinpiter. ~-;` • 9RNW; nic. iiir lii, ii gg*: S. L. RUSSItt;t and Hon. Wit EVlRTA;;;i_please accept our thanks for val. mat;ressiiinal docoments. loten.--111r..LAWanNen I)iirrx otters ibr salelsin valuahle Sore Stand and Farm, in Movetioy-Aowrisiiip. See advertisement. Eihibition by ,Idr. .A VSTIN'S School, tonk : phm, nt,iltlefZunattgby"a" I! on Tuesday evening . 10. The - attendance of Indies and / gentlernen wati - verylarge . , exhibition mahly creditable to both Teacher and S:hoints. I The t•Philhartnon ics Band"furnished the music ; and thereby greatly a ntributed to the interest ' - of the occasion:: • The ""Sn'ain Birds' under the Tutor. ship of Trot £j. PoTTEßiumui Fill npp':nr in a Floral Festival, &c., at the Court=house, on New-Year's - tight.- A rare treat may be expected. and - we advisalli, to go. tr7.“Putnineilkion thiy" ranks among the veryt*stlittHrary . pc Roll in'tlie — country. This position it has-v4ni by actual, merit. and not through theThiarditsg means so often resort , tci . puff "windy-" productiOus into.popu larlavnr# - The Prospectus ot . the "Monthly" fort the coming year. will be found in our ad vertising'columnS, from which plan, terms, ad dress, may be' learned. "g7- 4 The 'attention of our_ readers is invited to the" advertisement of the 'Cosmololitatt Art and. - Literary, 'Association, in. another eblutnn. The inducements for subscribing to, this Asso elation are such as are rarely presents COLD WEATOBIL —ln-tbis place. on Tuesday morning last, Abe:thermometer' indicated 1° below, zero. At Albany 14 0 ; below zero; at lioaton above - , Portland 1° below„, Calais 5° below, Eastport-5° below, Bangor 17° below, and Philadelphia . 5° above.- . -Death- of -Dr. lnellvttia: . _ - Dr. WII I LiA3t 'of *l3Ui oldest physicians and most estimable atria residence in ibis place on Saturday last. a t!hysician—seitizen—and a Christian; he • z.iglfinsthincemniunity, and the intelli ;44t,, , • • - • • Aeoli. will be received_ with feel .• „ „ ' ngs of the.deepent borrow .by all who knew him.• His remains were followed to their final resting place.•••••the Presbyterian grave yard 7 eiryesterday t by, a ,large, number of relatives and friends. `.Peace to his ashes 7 honor to his mettVA , ..,"•-•-lifii•kr 'Press of Tuesday. 'l, int FIRS-AEMS.--An accident ," singular in AS results, occurred at the Inn of Nr, Wm. Scorr, in Green Wood; near Fayette- Mlle,in Franklin .connty t on the, 9tninst. A Ifiegro named WILLIAM RoNE, was accidently _shot by's pistol in the hands 'of a son of Mr. or." "The'weapon was loaded with nothing excepting a witd,/composed, of. fragnients of a ' silk" handkerchief, and the wound inflicted was ofthe length of six inches; and across the•region of abdottien; .It Was of such a character as that the bowels of the unfortunate man protru ded: 'ltoxe died in great agony, after having - survived a little more than a day. In connection with this affair we mainien tion, that a negro family residing at a place called Chicken -Town, near the Mountain, who had gone on. Monday to attend the fune ral of this man, and had sent the younger thitilren to the house of a neighbor to prevent danger from- fire, returned, to find their habi• tatien in ashes.+.Transeript. FAThi, Aritn&r.—On . Saturday: the 9th inst., a childt-of Mr, PETER Ksserstt, residing in. the, neighborhood of Mt. Alto, in Franklin .county, fell upon a knife which it held in itr. hand. The blade of the instrument Penetrated the throat; Severing the windpipe, and produc ing death in about two hours.. .DEA:nt rnom DnowNlNG.—On Wednesday of *Week before last, Mr. John P. RielTd, of the firm of Rickard 8: Davis, at FunkstoWn, whilst skating on the Antietam, near that place, broke thiough the ice and was drowned. No assist slice was at hand, as he had gone alone. ;.ATTACKED BY A plait.—Several days since, %Mr. Boyd. in an excursion in the mountains, rear Buena Vista Springs, was attacked by a beavand gneezed in an awful manner, but it its supposed he will recover, not having any bones broken. Mr. Boyd says he inflicted a .severe'gash on his bearship, but whether fatal sun not be cannot ,tetl. The bear captured by ::31r. Poe% 'on the 9th, is 'summed to he the tnitteTto -the one'sioutatd by Boyd. • •-• WRot.it JouN Floor, of Wrightsville, slaughtered a hog, on Friday months old, which weighed when "ileireedt)s3.l pounds. This shows an increase .of more than 11 I Gs. each -day of its lite. t7W'e learn that Mr: W . A. S. CAMPBELL, of Pittsburgh, will be a candidate for tilt! Demo tratic tromiitation I r Ontat -Commissioner, at the nett election. Mr. CAMPBELL was a in on& Meat - candidate for the name station in 1 '4 , ) ,and has many friends throoghoilt. the S We know. him to be a steadfast and rt Democrat, and an hottest and intellivnt man. he mime Getsetal George Nay, of - York, will be presented to Governor VuUock, as a candidate for Alto tan t Gearral. • sq,. cif' York, at prevent attached to the Nntexican Legation at London, 4311:; twenthtsignated by Gervront• Uigier. among vniwrs, to represent this &Ate nt the Univerbwl en* eq, gations; in l'Atis, in May next- ij~P ` ill acorns kin cootie?" An article ith Chis caption wilt be ((mud on our Plural I,oge. Also one , on the 'subject of —Sowing - Lorost Seed," and another describing o **big 'Potato," from Dili ia. tr) -- 14. is understood that a spirktql corms . ondeme. isgoiagem between Engiarml, France ituti the United States, about die .+.4l4lwich ~. , . • . . Christmas.. ' . i . • Interesting to Old Soldiers: - _._! FIRE AT PIIII:ADELPITIA HOUSE' OF 21EPUGH.-- I : I:l'A-' few da,ys ego, Mr. ADAMS, aU. S. . _ , i ntro d 4ce d , About 10 o'clock on Friday week, a fire. Senator from Misssissippi, moved' to extend - ~,.. Th 4 o w, tano..4,,rev,tiv [ 4,- ‘ , l,klerris. Christ- 'Mr. , Baohluvio, of this State- baa broke out in one of the work shops -of the ne* the period of Naturalization to 21 yeari. Mr. inasi*.c-.:16 turniftg •np once mere upon the • 'in,'to the United , States Senate, a bill granting , ) House of Refuge, beyond Fairmount, and be- i• ADAMS was' quite- conscious that for such a *heel of 'rink. I For- centuries flits this day ,Bo u nty Land to,old Soldiers. The'first section , fore it could be subdued, entirely destroyed the t motion' the public would look for some suf. ..", .. *ti oelehrited . , with ; 1 featiitiei - and , re•- - proildes -"that-each of the surilritig-,:cointhia• - roof, and caused-a portion-of- the :walls-t a to-fall. -- ficjent-reason-:--and-what, good_reader,. 4 lo y ou , ; 0 -Th i_ e building was , 250 feet..long, a nd contained ' think .he -asserted first ? -Why, that certain ,30iei.tigs• :: 'The Gerix'innsof 4aticer Land," - and smiled offiteri and non-commissioned oil:leers, a large quantity or materia l s , suc h as cane seat ! Naturalized' Germans in Chicago had hung the stout yeomanry of Old England. ages before' musicians Ind privates, whether of regulars, 'chairs, slates, whale bones for tiMbrelleS, &e., (the effigy of Judge'Douar:As. to mark their dis our star traeajts orbit in the nritional firma- r volunteers, rangers or militia, who were regu- , belonging to various persons who were having pleasure of his advocacy of the Nebraska - bill ! 1 meat,: , filled with -.choice gifts•the ..Christinpa---larly...wast.ereA in, th e _ ! e ) rvioo • of .She roito tree" and pledged life-long fidelity in the deep , States : and every officer, commissioned and • 7 work performed in the institution. , : From theft ?nutrient, said the learned and logical r - The building is insured, as was also most of . Senator, I determined to advocate an extension 1 the cOntents.: The loss is estimated at about ;of the Naturalization laws ! Why so, Mr. merry • non-commissioned, seaman, ordinary "Wassail cup," while on every 'chapel seaman, I .530.000. It is supposed that one of the-boys.; Senator ? -Not to punish the rnen who did that hells pealed forth a Joyous chime of welcome marine, clerk and landstnan in - the navy, ex- I set fire to the canes, as it was impossible for i-act ? The extension of the law could not af , 'tile premises to havecaught by accident, being • feet them. Certainly n ot, replies the ir Serator, cept those who have received prize money in to the anniversary of the morn that gave birth ; heated by steam generated three hunched feet : but that act proven . if it proved anything in to the Redeemer of o u r race. We sometimes I any of the wars in which this country has been distant. It is said that one of the boys sue- ;point, that foreigners are not capable of being engaged since seventeen hundred and ninety, ' ceeded in escaping during the confusion inch- i good citizens ; that the cannot understand or wish with our friend of the Carlisle DcmocraCt) ! that we lied lived in those •• good old days ofi 0 1--• I - and each of the survivors of the militia or vol- I dent to the fire. 1 -appreciate our institutions. Let us examine 'the Sernitand to make it plaint.: , we yore - for we Tear-that--theobservince-o•-teis.-711 nteers; - or-State-troopfrof - any - Statc—or-Terri— A 'lltac.F — . TO — ;714: **CITY OP GLASGOW.'- ' time-honored festal day will be neglect( d in the tory called into military service and regularly recent number of the Belfast (Ireland) North 'l , pell-mell pursuit of .notoriety and emolument I mustered therein, and whose services have been ! City of Glasgow:" the lost steamship ern Whig contains the following in reference to :• - which characterizes the age, as have most of paid by the. United States subsequent to the A corresponeent of rhe Mail, at Camplileton, the ancienteustoms that were wont to strength- 'eighteenth day of June, eighteen hundred and States that onSaturday last,herd bop __ whileit . . . !-,, .• ..,_ •,.. . • 1 , •, • .:: • •.L..., ..,, ;. • •.• ,- .., .. •, , the lower, as well as in the wore refined and wealthier classes. ,. We would fain see this i'day,ohscrved, while we ive at east—as tritic for The.connection which it preserves between our time the long ages of the past, as for -its origins rpose. Reader, we wish-. you, a happy, happy Christmas; and may each one of your life in crease the measure - of your happiness, until you shall be a guest at a nobler festivat, than earth affords. Comfortable. ..Many of the whig journals of our State `are now heartily exulting over the election of My ron U. Clark as our next Governor. 'tVe could , share in their exultation if we (lid not see be -1 fore tts,a clouded and portentous future. The skieS have an angry look. and no man can say vita shalllie_t_be aspects of the morrow. Al.; , ready we .observe many of those who have heretofore basked in the sunshine of Whig pros perity, and shared bountifully in the luteVieSt of its better fortunes, now edging. oft* for the {'camp of, the know nothings, to see what Chance 1 i of provender might present itself in that gnar -1 ter. ' We expect this tendency to' diffuse itself until about everything of the late Whig party whiCh is essentially time serving and venal shall havegone fully over to. the new array; whose prospect - for futurc flesh pots is deemed soilattering."—N ! Y. Tribune. When has it been otherwise with nine-tenths of those who composed the late -whig party ? Was there ever an ism hatched up by the rest less and discontented of that party, that was not immediately adopted as a plank in their platform, and blindly endorsed by. the masses as well as the leaders ? In the contest of 1852 the whig party was defeated beyond even the hope of a re-organization on its- ancient faith, and the expectations Of realizing the spoils of office through theelection ofGeneral SCOTT hav ing been blasted, they naturally turned their attention to an organization which promised them, at least, a chance to retrieve their for tunes. At this we do not Wonder., The lead ers of the whig party were guided less by prin ciples than spoils.—Dem. Union. LEGISLATIVE Dit.toENcs.-:—The standing rules ()UAW House of Representatives, the National jtitelligencer says, enjoin it as a duty on the committee of ways and means to report the several appropriation bills witiiin thirty days after the opening of an annual session of Con. gross. At the present session, however, - the committee have Signalized their diligence by maturing and reporting these voluminous bills within the first ten days of the Session. NVlta t is more, the House has already passed three of them. • DM:STIR - MI VE FIRE iv BROA mvAT. A de structive Eire occurred in New York, on Broad way, between Grand and Howard streets, early on Tuesday morning last, the loss by which is estimated at SI ,000,000: - It originated in a building in which a Ball was about breaking up, and spread with astonishing rapidity. One fireman was killed -by-being-buried under the falling walls, and several others injured.- TUE NEW PENNL=A new cent - piece has been coined at the Philadelphia Mint. It is smaller and neater in appearance than the old one, but has the same devices. Congress has not yet passed a law for their issue, but will probably do so shortly. A few have been given out as specimens. Tug Foitt.onN IturE.--The editor of the Courier and Eugnirer who has recently return ed from Europe, says that the 93d Highlanders, the regiment which received and repulsed the e„),tkrge of Russian cavalry with such admirable - CTidness on the 25th of October, has volunteer ed to lead the storming party when the breaches are opened at Sebastopol. Probably not one of the gallant fellows will live to know whether the attack is, successful or not. o:7t. B. Wu.wats, Esq., will soon pub lish, in Boston, Mass., a Gentle Man's Maga zine, entitled the .‘Bachelor's Button," at $2 a year. The publisher says, that ‘•bachelors wilt find in this magazine an uncompromising advocate, while it will render proper homage to_ those women who have sufficient good sense to know their places, and to perform their le gitimate duties." jj- Hon. Henry A. Wise, the democratic nominee for Governor of Virginia, will com- ago, for the sutn of $3,000. Purchaser Mr. thence the canvass at Norfolk on the 3d of Jan- I George Bange. uaiy, and after that day, and until the 10th of ; We understand that the fine Mill Property, February, will address meetings in fifteen couti- I and 26 acres bf land, belonging to Mr. Wu.- ties. He will speak at Petersburg on the 9th I, -LIAM S. JESKIZ•IS, (formerly Kitzuiiller's) situ er Jowl ry. r, t Alexandria on the 3d of Februa- I ate in Adams county, was sold at public sale, rv. and at Fredericksburg on the 7th. on the 10th inst.. for the sum of $B,OlO. Pur i chaser Mr. John Duttera.—Hanorer Spec. A AMIER GUANO ISLAND.—The New York l'ost announces the discovery of another guano island with at least a !million of tons on it, the locality of which is yet a secret. Measures are ihiw taking for the organization of a company to tiring the 'guano to market. We hope it wilt make the article a little cheaper and more accessible to the Atnerican farmer. r?Our little readers will been the qui vire for "'old Itiiss," and we advise them to have large stockings ready in the chimney for the jolly lid ri - There . ,appear-to be an open rupture be tween the Witigs And the linow-Nothings in :New York. They can't bear prosperity! or warrant from the - Department of the Interior, for one hundred and slat acres. of land; or, where any of those who have so Served shall have received a certificate or warrant, he shill be entitled to a certificate or warrant for such quantity of, land as will make, in the whole, with what he . may have -heretofore received, one hundred and sixty acres to each person having:served as aforesaid."- - The second section provides "that in case of the death of any person who, if living, would be entitled to a certificate or warrant as afore raid under this act, leaving a widow, or if no widow, a minor child or children, such widow, or, if no widow, such minor child or children, shall be entitled to receive a certificate or war rant for the sanie quantity of land that such easerl perso, lxLenti_d_ed to under the provisions-of this act if now living: - Providect; -- Thara — subsequent - marriage - shall not impair the right of any such widow to such wat rant if she be a widow at the time of making her application and at the date of such warrant." The fourth : "that in no case shall any such certificate or warrant be issued for any service less than twenty-eight days, or where the per son shall actually have been engaged in bat tle, nor unless the party claiming such certifi cate or warrant shall establish his right there tO by record evidence of said service or by tw9 credible witnesses." The fifth and last: "that said certificates or warrants may be assigned, transferred, and lo cated by the warrantees or their Heirs at. law, according to the provisions of existing laws regulating the assignment,. transfer( and loca tion of bounty•land warrants:" —By the way, a Convention of the Soldiers of the War of 1812 is to assemble at the seat of the National Governinent,on the Bth of Janua ry next, (the anniversary of the battle of New Orleans,) for the purpose of impressing upon Congress the propriety and necessity of more adequately remunerating the services of those who have periled their lives in defence of their Country. That the .occasion will be highly interesting and - the demonstriffidn imposing, we have no doubt—and that they rosy succeed in their object is the ardent prayer of many an honest patriot. The assemblage, it is cal culated, will be very large. Will not Adams county' be represented ? Let us hop so—. The Patent Office. Mercury, the Washington city correspondent of the Baltimore Sun, says : “In the agricultu ral bureau of the Patent Office business is quite active in preparing the valuable varieties of seeds recently received from Europe, for dis tribution. There also may -be seen samples of very superior Lee corn, raised by Mr. D. P. Inskeep, of Ottumev a, Java, on old ground that never was manured —the average of which, on five acres, was 13G bushels.. It was ship ped to Mr. Inskeep, a distance of 1,100 miles last spring. The Hon. Mr. Lindsley, of Ohio, alSo presents ten varieties of apples, fine speci mens. The waxen (or Belmont) kind is pecul iarly beautiful. From Thurmond's nursery, Atalanta, Georgia, there is an apple, red in color, perfectly good, a seedling known as the Shockley —a winter apple in a far southern climate. "It is estimated by one of our most distin guished agriculturists that one third of the products of our soil is destroyed by the depre dations of insects, and the annual loss to our planters is over a million of dollars. Commis sioner Mason, some months since, took this subject in hand, and obtained the valuable services of Mr. Glover to travel and trace out all the facts in regard to this great yearly loss, of which I shall write more about in a subse quent letter. -.The arrangement of the models in the gal lery of the new wing of the Patent Office is also progressing anal very attractive. ' There are displayed no less than sixty-four for sew ing machines." SALES OF PitOPERTY.—Tho large two story brick house situate in Carlisle street, in the Borough of Hanover, belonging to Mr. ileNar DOTTARAR, was sold at private sale, a few days -.- They have a Thespian Society at riano ver. "Venice Preserved" is advertised by the ..players." _ ~ 1 r.N. —.;l - Wirn 1 ante(_ e'rge -Al- r — - 1 lam= was wea -e , , • : etua.l4-y-b . - - Letthas just been tried at Buffalo, for marrying i rowers bv - earnest arimmentS 'pO I when he saw that one of the Englishmen - had ILLEGAL VOTING.—Geo. Ott has been con- married %roman. He teas convicted and tined $l5O, which is decidedly cheip. if he was victed in Now York of attenipting to vote ilia- eral to say that bosuspected there was a lins guilty, and rather dear if innocent of the charge gaily. and sentenced by the Recorder to six s i an spy a n , t h em . . • ragainst him. - { months' imprisonment in the penitentiary, and , 0 . grown suspicious, and had sent - otf to the gen ___—,-- ___ The first Shad of the season was caught ----------- ;fined two hundred dollars. , Sour: GOOD EVERrwiltinta. --Bayard Taylor, L . i ,,„, is . wife and daughter A i l atvr Caocr.m's FAsm.r. = The Hickman in the river at Savannah, Georgia, on Saturday, ! the traveller, says that he prefers Mexico for I -AB—. *" TITE L°C.K.. "'"" -°rr, alias " n g e L . (Ky.) Argus 'says that the Gabriel, with two eompaniinhovere committed o f and sold to an hotel proprietor of Mason for the the beauty of its scenery. Germany for its so to the station house in Milan, on Sunday- ;tins, Davy Crockett, passed through Hickman handsome sum of $55. ciety. l California specially for its climate, and: • • ____ __________ 1 the United States for its government. 0 evening. for disturbing the ralee. : last week, on their way to Texas, to get pos the distinguished patriot and eccentric ge- G:'lt turns ouc that the Whigs have bat 1 -- - - - - -• - ' - The Democrats of Ohio hold a State Con- • session of a portion of the land donated by the one member in the Massachusetts .14ouse of 1,..7 7- The operatives in one of the cotton mills ' rention at Columbus, on 'the Sth of J a nu ar y, - State o f Teias to the heirs of those who fell at at Lancaster, Pa., aft, oux strike a.-ainst an to nominate candidates fur Cioveruor Auditor, the battle of the Alamo, -during the struggle c t A Representatives. - - , in.;itabe of the Lours of labor. _ - J... 0. - • for iii. 7 o.lm.:udeu,..e. 0,.. association to suppress houses of ill fame is being formed at York. The evil has become enormous. It always was a bad place, that York. •• / Z • : • .. I • n 6 . • : • I' • _ , I , r.• On, ' lOse erns : • . • . ' picked up a portion. of the bow of a vessel, 1 zens, generally, are unfit to be citizens; and which bears every mark of having belonged to i none hereafter arriving, should be entitled to to--ill , -fated---lias-on it. in-large--i-vote for-2-1-yearsT{if-at-al-h-) . The-more-numer gilded characters, not much.defaced—"City of ; ous class of Naturalized Irish. who did not Glasgow," and,ln the corner, "Let Glasgow . burn the effigy of, but generally supported flourish." This memento. which is probably Jud ge DOUGLAS, and those agreed with the all that will ever be seen of the noble vessel, learned Senator, are also unfit. to be citizens, vraS taken -to the office of Mr. Watson, from and hereafter none of.them• shoUld vote for 21 whence it Was forwarded to the builders, years—and so of all other Naturalized citi- Messrs. Toodi!c McGregor, Glasgow, for identi- - zens, whether they supported or opposed Judge fication. I DOUGLAS! , From such premises, there is a conclusion for you! It is a Know-Nothing conclusion, and as a fair specimen of such logic, especially as it has been uttered by a .Senator, it deserves to be analysed. Does the learned Senator mean that to burn an effigy of an obnoxious political opponent, is per ae evidence of unfitness to be citizens of this country ? Then how many native born citizens arc unfit to vote ? How many of them, countenanced also by their wealthy employers, hung Vice President DAL LAS in-eiligy;for-his-msting-veterawainst-the tariff of 1842 ? How many native born citi zens-of New Jersey,, would_ be disfranchised, because of bis support. of the Camden Railroad Company. they hung Commodore STooKros in effigy ? How many Native Americans, at a time of violent political excitement, lampooned, libeled. and hung, and burned in effigy,TlioniAs JEFFERSON ? Were the Germ us' of Chicago worse than the Americans • 76 ? They hung' officers in Effigy,carrie i iin ' On a bier to Oliver house, 'which they supposed was de signed for a stamp office, - and then demolished it to the foundation ; afttr wink they burned the effigies !—.Pennsylvanian. . DEATH OF A DISTINGUISHED LADY. —Mrs. An na Bayard, of Delaware, died in Philadelphia on the 10th inst, in the 77th year of her age. Her father, Richard Basset,was the first Uni ted States Senator elected by the State of Dela ware. Her husband, James A. Bayard. repre sented Delaware in both Houses of Congress; in 1801 he was -appointed Minister to France; in 1814 he was one of the commissioners who negotiated the treaty of Ghent, and in 1815 was appointed Minister to Russia. He died MM i.t e same year. 'i art ;val. , a son o t.e deceased Mrs. Bayard, was formerly Charge to and-Jas. A.—Bayard, another son, is at present a U. S. Senator from-DelaWare. A MAGNIPICENT SCREME.—The St. Louis Daily Intelligeneer tells us-that a scheme is in agitation there to open a direct - trade between St. Louis, China, India, &c., across the cOnti pont, by means of a semi-weekly overland stage• and transportation line between some point on the -Missouri river and the Pacific ocean. Such a line, it is said'. could be main tained for a year on a capital of 8500,000, with all the conveniences that may be had on any stage route in the Union. • RESULT o P Vicroms.—A late letter from London says: Over .COG.OOO have been collect ed in an/ of the wives and childrenof the - dead and wounded soldiers. Trade suffers di eadful ly. The West End shops are literally desert ed. Half of the aristocracy are in mourning for the deatb of kinsmen in the Crimea. and all fancy sales are ended. The usual quantity of amusements (halls, &c.,) . .is curtailed for the same cause. Every third person is in mourn ing.. ANECDOTE OF TIM CZAR. —Nicholas, it seems, in spite of the anxiety incident to his present position, maintains his old habit of walking the streets of St. Petersburg unattended. Ile was lately informed that a tradesman in a large war of business had insulted a Frenchman without provocation; and he immediately sent fir him. When asked why he had insulted the man, he replied. •because I hate his nation." "Ts. that your only Motive ?" "Yes sir." "Then you shall have an opportunity to grat ify your hatred. I shall send you to join my army in the Crimea." .thiother Switaille.--The Glendon Iron Dill Company, near Boston.hns failed. and the Su-. perintendent. 4evoort, has left for parts un known, having defrauded the Company to the tune of - , ;250.000 ! Messrs. Cutler, Brodhead & Clapp, Exchange Brokers in Boston, have also failed, with •full pockets" no.doubt. • ..9nd Yet -ivother !—The Treasurer of Holmes count•, Ohio, has absconded with $38,000 of the • public funds. Ilis name is John M. Shrock, and it is supposed he has sailed for Australia. GOOD ADVICE.—The 'Albany (N. Y.) Knick erbocker says: The best cure forhard times is economy. A shilling's worth of white' beans will do as Much feeding as fifty cents' worth of potatoes; while six-cents' worth of Indian meal will make as much bread as fourteen cents' worth of flour. Besides this, it is_twice as wholesome. Almost every family in town could cut doWn their expenses one-half if they only chose to do so. GENEROUS DoNATtoxs.—Judge Helfenstein, of Shamokin, Northumberland county, Pa., proposes to dedicate, forever, a valuable and productive coal estate, in the Shamokin Coal Basin. for the benefit of the destitute poor of New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Lan caster. Carlisle, &c. And also the laying of a corner-stone of a Free College at Shamokin, to be endowed with the proceeds of another coal estate : and likewise the dedication of a coal estate for the benefit of African Coloniza tion. The corner-stone of the college was laid on Friday last by Gov. Bigler. Important Decistion. PHIT.ADELPHIA, Dec. 21.—Justice Black, of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, to-day gave a decision in several cases froin Allegheny -county, where an alderman had fined tavern keepers $St) for selling liquor on the Sabbath. The defendants claimed the right of trial by jury, denying the jurisdiction of the alderman. The decision affirmed the judgment of the magistrate, holding that such cases were not suits at common law, but criminal proceedings under a special act. All the other judges agreed with this decision except Judge Lewis, who contended against the whole . principle of summary conviction as an invasion. of the right of trial by jury. Death y . a State Senator. PIIILADMPIIIA, Dec. 21.—H0n., Levi Fonlk rod, Dem., a member of the State Senate, from the Fourth District of Philadelphia, died this morning at his residence in Frankford, aged about 33 years. EXTRAVAGANCR.—As an indication of extrav agance which has prevailed in the country for some time, an importing house in New York has written a letter stating that the amount of duties paid for French artificial flowers for the first quarter of the current fiscal year was al most double the amount of duties paid on rail road iron. will state it for himthus—Premises—any body of men who burn the effigy of another (say a Senator) because he advocates a political meas sure which_ !ley disapprove, are untit to be citizens-me hundreds of Germans did this in Chicago, .Iherefure, (now-mark the Senator's THE KNOW-NOTHING CANDIDATE FOR TEE PRESIDENCY.—The Indiana Chrouiele contains a list of names. which it says was before the late Know-Nothing coniention in Cincinnati, as suitable candidates for the Presidency ofthe United States. Rives and Botts, of Virginia; Stockton, of New Jersy ; Houston, of Tetas ; Fillmore and Ullmann, of New York ; Davis, of Kentucky ; and Broome, 'of Pennsylvania, it is said, were not deemed available ; while George Law, of New York ; Clayton, of Dela- Ware : Rayner, of North Carolina, and Adams of Mississippi, were though to stand the best chance at present ;' one of the two, latter at all events, to be the candidate for the vice presi dency. TROUBLE FEARED IN THE M. E. CMTRaf.— Another breach is _expected in the Methodist Church: Rev. Dr. Bond, editor of the_New York Christian Advocate, in noticing . the op position to the appropriations of missionary nioney to the preachers laboring in their slave holding conferences, says : ''We have seen strange things in the lapse of three score years and ten, but this caps the climax of the marvellous and though we are no prophet, nor the son of a prophet, we ven ture to predict that mischief is now brewing in our church—agitations,, convulsions mid disruptions, such as we have never wimessed before." • "SAD FATALITY.—We learn that two young men, aged 19 and 21, sons of Mr. Sutherland, living at .the North Beach, in Colchester, werv! drowned on Saturday, 2d inst. While trying to - save a flock of geese, which they feared would,, be frozen in the ice, they broke through the ice,' it is supposed, and wereonable to extricate themselves. The family' becoming alarmed at their absence, went with some neighbors to search for ' (lay mor' teen feet water. linglon A TE that a Jackson day, Nov tweet] MI Mr. Smi and ends who wail Shackleford drew a pistol and shot him—some say several times—wounding hilt severely, if not dangerously. At this ,stage, some other person, who. it seems, is unknown, fired at Shackleford. the ball entering and killing him instantly. It is not supposed that Taylor will recover. ID — The New :York banks show themselves $1,000400 stronger in gold than a week ngo. The Savings' Banks have absorbed of the $l,- 300,000, over drawn from the Government Bank, only $260,000. The Bowery Savings Bank only ,lost $27,000 on Saturday, from which it is evident that the run is nearly over. —These are indications that the pressure has done its worst. ADVERTISEMENT EXTRADEDINARY.—The fol lowing curious advertisement appears in a Western paper ; "Whereas, at particular times I may impor tune my friends, to let me have liquor', which is hurtful to me, and detrimental to society,— this is. therefore, to forbid any persons selling me liquor, or letting me have any on any ac count or pretence ; for if they do 1 will positive ly prosecute them, notwithstanding any prom ise I may make to the contrary at the time they let me have it." GOVERNOR OF Nion,AsKA.--Mark W. hard, of the Territory of Nebraska, has been appoint ed Governor of said Territory, in the place of Francis Burt, deceased. : 7P. T. Barnum is said to be worth $BOO,- 000. Q:7 - Gen. Whitfield, the Delegate from Kap as, has taken his seat in Congress. TUE USURY Laws.—The Richmond Enquirer, he leading Democratic paper of Virginia, sup - s - • ' l' S I • .•.; oS 1 4 .1 A The Battle of Inkermann. Desperate diffair—Sn Enenunter with the Ra s . sians at Me Paint of Me Bayonet; . The correspondent of the London 'Times, writing from the field of, battle on the sth, says : "And now commenced the bloodiest struggle ever witnessed since war cursed the earth. ft bas been doubted by military historians if any enemy could stand our charge with the bayo nets but here the bayonet WAS often the only;- weapon employed in conflicts.of the most oh-- stinate and deadly character. We have been 1)1=o - he to believe that no foe could ever with stand the British soldier wielding his favorite weapon, and that at Maida alone did the ene my ever cross bayonets witle; but, at the battle ofi m nkerann, not only Wichlrge vain—not only were desperate encounters be tween masses of inn maintained with the hay , net-alone-- --.b-at we were obliged to resist bay onet to bayonet with the Russian infantry again and again as they charged us with in ci edible fury and determination.. The battle of Inkermann admits of no descrip tion. It was a eeries of dreadful deeds of dar of sang=u•nar hand-to-hand-filbtainf---: pe rate assaults—in glens and valleys, in brusl, wood glades and remote dells, bidden from all human eyes, and_from - which the-coixperers,- Russian or British, issued only toengage fresh foes, till our old supremacy, so rudely assailed, was - triumphantly asserted, and the-battalions of the Czar gale way before our steady cour age and the chivalrous tire of France. No one, however placed, could hare witnessed even a small portion of the doings-of this - eventfurday; - for the vapors, kg, and drizzling mist, obscured the ground where the; struggle took place to such an extent as to rendettit impossible to see what was going on at the distance of a. few yards. Besides this, the irregular nature of the ground, the rapid fall of the hill towards kermann, where the deadliest fight took place, - would have prevented one under the most fa- ' vorable circumstances, seein g more than a very insignificant and detailed piece of the terrible work below. It, was six o'clock when all the head-quarter camp was_ roused by roll after roll of musketry on the right, and by sharp re port of field guns. Lord Raglan was informed that the enemy were advancinr, in force, and soon after seven o'clock he rode toward the scene of action, followed by his staff, and ao-. companied by Sir John Burgoyne, Brigadier General Strangways, R. A. and several aids de camp. As they appr 4,71 the volume of sound, the steady, unced. bonder of gun, and rifle, and musket, told that the engagement was de its height. The Atha! of the-Itussians, thrown with great precision, burst so - thickly among the troops that the noise resembled the contin uous discharge of cannon, and the massive frag ments inflicted death on every side. One of the first things the Russians did, when a break. in the fog enabled them to see the compel the second division, was to open fire one the tents with round shot and large shell, and tent after tent was blown down, torn to pieces or sent into the air, while the men engaged in camp duties, and the unhappy horses tethered up in• the lines, were killed or mutilated. In darkness, gloom and rain they bad to lead our lines through thick scrubby bushes and thorny brakes, which broke our ranks and ir ritated, the men, while every pace was marked by a corpse or a man wounded from an enemy whose position was only indicated by the rat ,tle of musketry and the rush of ball and „shell. Sir George Cathcart, seeing his men disor dered by the fire of a large column of Russian infantry which was outflanking them; while portions of the various regiments comprising his division were maintaining an unequal strug gle with an overwhelming force, rode dowry , into the ravine in which they were engaged, to rally them. Ile perceived at the same time that the Russians had actually gained posses sion of a portion of the hill in rear of flank of his division, but still , his stoat heart never failed him for a moment. Ile rode at their head encouraging them, and when a cry' arose that the amunition was _failing, he said coolly, `.Have you not got your bayonets?" • As he led on his men it was observed that another body of men had gain td the top of the .bilr behind them on the right, but it wits ha possible to tell whether they ;were friends or foes. A deadly volley was poured in our scat "red regiments. Sir George cheered them 'old led.them back up the hill, but a flight of bullets passed where he rode, and ho fell from his horse close to the Russian columns. The . men had to tight their way through a host of enemies, and lost fearfully. They were sur rounded and bayoneted on both sides, and won their desperate way up.the hill, with diminished ranks, and the loss of near 500 men.—Sir George Cathcart's body was afterwards re covered with a bullet wound in the lead; and three bayonet wounds in the body. At twelve o'clock the battle of Inkerm - ann seemed to have been won, but the day, which had cleared up for,an hour previously so as to enable us to see the enemy and meet him, again became obscured. Rain and kg set in,. and as we could not pursue the Russians, who. were retiring under the shelter of their artille ry, we had formed in front of our lines and. were holding the battle field so stoutly contest ed, when the enemy, taking advantage of our quietude, again advanced, while their guns pushed forward and opened a tremendous fire upon us. • General Canrobert, who never quitted Lord Raglan for much of the early part of the day, at once, directed the French to advance and outflank the enemy. General Canrobert was slightly wounded..—., His immediate attendants suffered severely,— The renewed assault was so admirably re pulsed that the Russians sullenlyretired, still protected by their crushing artillery. The Russians, abotit ten, made a sortie on the .French lines, and traversed two parallels before they could be resisted. They were driven back at last with great loss, and as they retired they blew up some mines inside the Flagstaff Fort. evidently afraid that the French tt would enter pell-mell after them. At one o'- clock the Russians were again retiring. At forty minutes past one Dickson's two guns smashed their artillery, and they limbered up, leaving five tumbrels and one gun-carriage on the field." Ca — The-Russian spies at Sebastopol seem to_ be much too sharp for John 41u11. A British sentinel at Balak lava, being , astonished to per ceive a horse with a sack of corn on his back, deliberately walking pa* him in the moonlight, attempted to seize him, when the sack of corn speedily became metamorphosed into a Cossack trooper, who put spurs to his steed, and van i,hed before the sentinel recovered his speech. At another part of Balaklava, on the 3d, a Rus sian spy, attired as a French officer, boldly en tered the British I i nes , sauntered about, chatted with the officers, learned from them - where their