IP [From the Carbondale traneeript.l Elopement--Soductlon--Adultery: Quite an excitement prevailed in the rimier 'Ward of our city, on Thursday Morning, in con sequence of a married man, named William Silsbee, eloping with a young lady, aged 14, the daughter of a respectable mechanic of the First ward. The circumstances are of an agra iated character. On Wednesday afternoon this lothaEio, Silsbee, hired a horse and carriage from Mr. Durfee, packed up his trunk and took it with him, stating to his wife he would return in a day or two, droVe around a few of our streets—and by agreement took in a young fe- Male passenger, who was waiting for him, and *way they went, en routs for Illinois. To bards dark they arrived in Scranton, and so journed with mine host, Kressler, and regis tered their names as William Drown and lady, lifter Supper - they called for a room and retired ror the night. In the meantime, the father of the girl and the father of Silsbee's wifelearned of the sudden fleparture of the twain, and fearing that all 1 / 4 , as not right, started spout eight o'clock in Pursuit of the fugitives, and arriving in Scran ton discovered their whereabouts ; they then Procured a warrant from Justice Pier, fur ,the firrest of Silsbee, and proceeded to their room, *here by a little stratagem they got Silsbee to arise from his bed to open the door, and to their consternation and shame, in rushed the unwel come guests! and nothing but the just and righteous veneration of the majesty of the law to punish the faithless husband and foul sedu car, prevented them front inflicting summary vengeance on the villain. The guilty pair were brought back to this I City—the girl to the bosom of her afflicted pa rests, and the man Silsbee before Aid. l'ughe, I who decided that he had no jurisdiction, ns the offence charged was committed beyond the lint- its of the city. The prisoner was then taken before Lewis S. Watres, Esq.. at Blakely, and after a . fair and impartial bearing, was commit ted the county jail in default of bail. Con stable Wilson accompanied the "nice young I man," and lodged him in the jail at Wilkes• barre, to await his trial at the next Court of Quarter Sessions, there to ruminate over his I folly and vices, and the untold but •heartfelt pangs of a lovely and affectionate wife, and the disgrace that ho has heaped upon his family. (I.7lolloway's Oinftnent and Pills, the most Celebrated Remedies for the Cure of Sore Arms.— Samuel Wentwoith, Of Norway,-Maine, was for five years afflicted with sore arms, there were four different ulcers on them, and the trying na ture of his buisness, (a bootmaker) made him so much horse, that despite of his wishes, he was compelled to relinquish it ; he tried various remedies and they failed to benefit him : how ever, about thirteen weeks ago, at the recom mendation of friends, he had recourse to Hol loway's Ointment and Pills, which very soon made him better, and he called on Professor Holloway four weeks since to show him his arms. - which were quite well, and with scarcely the scars perceptible. stssm.An case of jockeying occurred the other day in Cincinnati. A gentleman who was moving through the city, was accosted by two men and offered 0 . 0 for a horse belonging to him, which he agreed to take. After a short time he was offered $O5 by another . per son, and he went to the first named purchasers and told them that he rued the bargain. They agreed to give up their claim for a consideration of $lO, which he gave them, counting on making $5 by the operation. When he went to the sec ond purchaser he said he would not' have the horse at any price. The man found that he had been sold, for the other men had,disappear• ed. The case is undergoing investigation. 071 3 1tOSPECTS ON TIM COMING Information from all quarters of the Union, in reference to the prospects of, the coming har vest; is of the most cheering description. One exchangb 'says, " the wheat in this region looks well and promises an abundant yield :" an other, that " our farmers are looking forward to a harvest scarcely inferior in quantity or quali ty to that of last year :" and so on from all parts of the country. Meantime they are in expectation, also, of abundant crops on the other side of the Atlantic. At all .events, the general tendency of prices in the Liverpool grain market continues to be downward.— Peace has come, and flour goes down. 11:7ICR 11+1 SURGICAL OPERATIONS.—The Uti ca Herald says, Dr. Walcott, of that city, acting under the suggestion of a French journal;' has resorted to ice as a means of destroying pain in surgical operations. A few days since, he removed a very lirge tumor from a man's leg. lie took a preparation of snow and com mon table salt, and applied it to the diseased part, which was almost immediately reduced to an insensible state. The removal of the tumor was accompanied by very little loss of blood, and tittle or no pain. The doctor's fingers were, however, slightly frozen in the operation. Dr. W. thinks that this method of producing in sensibility to pain is preferable to that of chloroform, inasmuch as it is not dangerous, and does not injure the blood. 07 - Lotiosvrrr.—There .were found. in the United States, in 1850, 2,555 pekons over 100 years of• age. This shows that about one per son in 9,000 will be likely to live to that ago. The French census of 1841, shows only 102 persons over 100 years old, though their popu littion was litrger by more than one third than the population of this country. Old ago is, therefore,-attained among us much more fre quently than in Franco. 11,"Gardeners should note it doWn, just now, at the opening'of the season; that a few plants of peppesugrass in a cucumber hill keep Off the yellow bugs. fig" The wheat crop at the west was never anon promising than at present. A Mechanical Curiosity. With a great deal of wonder, says the editor of the New Haven Patriot; we . the other day saw at the store of Mr. Cannon a couple of bcit- Iles, each of which would not hold Over a quart, and in one of which was a saw mill in operation and in the other a flour mill also in operation. Both mills were moved by a crank in the neck of each bottle. The bottles and machinery are in the possession of Mr. A. 11. Parkingham, who is now in the employ of Mr. Cannon. Mr. Parkingham says the machinery was built within their covering thirty-five years ago, by a person who was then a resident of New York, hdt now deceased. Be did it on a wager of $5,000, which he won in less than three years, the time allowed for the work. It has been suggested that the glass must have been blown over the machinery, but it is also said that it was impossible with such kind of bottles.— They aro filled full of machinery, which is braced and otherwise made strong. The neck of each bottle is filled with a plug which is keyed close to the neck. The mystery of get ting in the key, when there is hardly room to get in a tool as big as a shingle nail, is as great as any other mystery abotit the ingenious af fair. Clocks. The Romans were four. hundred and sixty years without knowing any other division of the day than morning, noon, and night. Pliny reports, on the credit of an ancient author, that the first instrument theßomans had to divide the hours was a sun dial. Scipio Nasica., in the year of Rome 595, first brought into use, and placed under cover a wa ter clock, which showed the hours equally by day and night.—To form an idea of these clocks we may conceive a pretty large basin filled with water, by which a little hole contrived in •the bottom, emptied itself into another. vessel of nearly the same capacity' in twelve hours, and where the water rising gradually, brought up perpendicularly a pi.t of cork, or the figure of a genius pointing to the hours which were marked one above the other on columnS of pilasters. This, with the Clepodra, which was also a species of water clocks, were the only means of marking time possessed by the Romans. t: -.. POPULATIO:sT OF ROME.—The General Vi eariate of Rome has just published an official census of the population of Rome for the year 1855. In all there are 177,461 inhabitants among whom there are 3G bishops, 1,226 sec ular priests, 2,218 monks and religious, 1,949 nuns, and 687 seminarists. At Rome, there fore, there are in all 5,081 priests monks, nuns or seminarists—that is to say, one to every thirty-five inhabitants. fl 'Great improvements have been made in the manufacture of paper within the last few years. In six hours alter passing into the manufacturer's hand, rags can be converted in to paper, being thoroughly dried by passing around iron cylinders heated by steam. There are 20 mills in Lee, With 75 engines. ,100, 000 pounds of rags are used annually, giving employment to 1000 operatives. From this amount of rags, are manufactured 780,000 reams of paper, worth about $1,300,000. Be ' sides this, there is an extensive stationery es otablishment in which 100,000 reams of ravel ' are manufactured. 71 - DIGGING TURIIt OWN GRAVES—SOOT INTO TM:M.—Those men belonging to the command of Col. Schlessinger, who were taken by the Costa Ricans and executed by them, were made to perform an unwelcome service just before their exit. having been condemned to death, and their fate announced, the victims were com pelled to dig their own graves, and then made . to kneel upon the margin of the trench dug, when they were shot dead—falling, readily into the pit their own hands had dug. It?' THE SIEGE 01 , SEBASTOPOL.—According to statistic returns published in the St. Peters burg newspapers, the besieged in Sebastopol dis chaiged from the 17th of October, 1854, to the Bth of September, 1855, projectiles to the num ber of 1,386,005, and weighing 1,405,240 pounds, (each equal to 40 pounds.) In addition to the above, 200,810 pounds of powder and 25,000,000 cartridges were consumed. . 1 1 , - "They dress cool out west. A young lady being asked if she should wear that bonnet to church, replied she should not wear anything else. !):7'lt is stated that the girls arc leaving * off the style of hooped dresses, because it keeps hush ids at a distance. Oh, shameful ! The Smallest Bank in the U. S. is the Bank of Cayuga Lake, at Painted Post, N. Y., with $lO,OOO capital. - 13 — There is a man in Vermont who feeds his geese on iron filings, and gathers steel pens from their wings. (17 - What is the difference between an auction and sea sickness ? One is the sale of effects, the other the effects of a sail. ft ...PHYSIC DISARMED 01 , ITS Tortnons:—Every person is interested in bearing that Dr. Clickenor, of Now York, has invented a medicine of the most cer tain nod powerful purgative qualities, which is yet so gentle that its operations on the system are entirely unfelt. Its action is. altogether unattended with griping or nausea, end still more to enhance its value it is coated with white sugar, so that it leaves no au- pleasant taste in the mouth. In fact its flavor is so unlike physic, and its action is so perfectly gentle, Ilk any person may swallow a dose without suspect ing that ho has taken physic at all, unless through its ultimate effect, which is powerful and positive, even en the most costive constitutions. •We need not com ment on those great advantages of Click t.‘g, '. Su gar-Coated Vegetable Purgative Pills, o,, , ther medicines, as they must bo obvious to all, . there are but few persons who do not require physic occa sionally, and fewer,still who have not a rooted aver sion to the nauseous and racking compounds which, before the appearance of those pills, were the only characters which physic over assumed. In less titan live years, Cliokener's Sugar Coated Vegetable •Pills Will supersede all other purgative medicines, for no person will consent to have his stomach turned, and his bowels racked with the old Whim:Mil prep arations, when be might have the desired object ac complished much mere thoroughly by a new one, whose effect is unaccompanied by the sligtost of fensive sensation. HIGH._REGISTER, MAY 21, 1 THE. L 117'SliOCKING CASE OF INSANITT.-A letter from Vienna, in the Ziet of Berlin, contains the following " An event has just taken place here which has been much talked of. A clerk in a mer chant's office, whilst working at his desk, felt a.sort of presentiment of coming danger, which led him suddenly to return home. He there fbund his Wife in bed; as she had beon confined of a son 'only tfireo clays Mime. She was dressed. Her eyes were haggard, and her looks animated by fever. She said to him, "it is well that you come, for I will now roast the goose, which will be ready at once." At the. same moment the clerk heard the cry of a child tied up, and lying in the frying pan. The mother taken suddenly with the milk fever, had mistaken her child for a goose, and was about to put it to death. The father happily arrived in time to prevent such a catastrophe. rrAcntrivrim—Charles Boughter, who had been ii - rt trial, at Lancaster, fur embezzling se veral hundred thousand dollars -of the funds of the Lancaster Saving Institution, while acting as treasurer of the institution, was acquitted' .last week of the charge of embezzlement He was sentenced to pay the costs of the trial, and allowed his freedom. The trial was a very exciting one. Boughtcr had been in prison for some time after the fraud was committed, bail being refused ; afterwards lie was liberated from prison on giving bail to the amount of 8100,000 for his appearance at Court for trial. If a man steals a loaf of bread he is sent to pri son for the offence ; but when a robbery of a million of dollars is committed by some genteel' rogue lie is permitted to go unpunished. R EMOVA I. OF A Tows. —The United States officials in Kansas have pulled down or caused to be removed all the houses in the town of Pawnee, on the ground that it was built on Indian land. One of the houses destroyed be longed to CM,. Reeder, and cost $lOOO. Lea venworth, also built on Indian-territory, is sup posed to stand. Its inhabitants are licit all free State men. leA I. PAIN E :CTIt ACTO FLA 1: , IATION and l'A IN are as inseparable as FIRE and II EAT. Inflammation produces pain, and pain produces inflammation. NVlterever there is unnatu ral heat, thiobbing or realness,,no matter whether it is caused by a fever, a hurt, a sure. poison. rheum atism. piles. scald. burn or sting, there is inflamma tion. A lamh•e , l hooks or a thousund sermons can not alter or change the conclusion. To relieve pain, an.l restore natutv, -inflammation must be subdued. Tat accomplish this. the efforts of the physicians are alway, , directed. l'housand4 of idly:deigns, and tens thousands of the first and 'mist sagacious persons who has e used 1/A LLEV'S EXTILAC •I•UIt. are eonvineed, and admit that! its control over inflammation is most woudcrl•ul nod immediate, in stantly allaying the neutt•ttlizing Poison, extract ing wambit :erretious and furring- nature to resumer lter, course, reuer.•ing and healing. N. , lotrn, scald, sore, or ailment is too severe to yield Is ila south ifig awl voring ittllnettee. Apply it immediately and the yore lots rotninviterd. The 11,;:initte enveloped in n steel l'lnte Engrav int.r, nit!' the names of C. V. CLICKF.N.FiIt A: CO. proprietors, and 1I I NII D; 1.1 utanufaeturet tit tri varlt box. Pries 25 cents per box. _ _ ;: - . , 7 , '•.\11 order, ,hould he addressed to C. V. (lid eller Co.. Ft Powetoy hreet, New York. A Vote.: From CA RLN POINT, Sorry Co., Vu. Ih fit ti S. /Mare :-1 was in Baltimore in April, I t\•out It paper I rree•ired or yours was in duced It. Illly 71 ilex of yl , lll . fills, ITI . 1)1111111C11110.11 us It sue vreign, eon. for the Epileptic Fite. At that time tote of my servants had been attilicted with fits about I welve tiara. \Viten reaching. home. 1 commenced with the pills necortling to directions. I do not thin!: she has 1121.1 0110 since. My wife, though, is ”tatetvliat intitteetl to believe site may have had one only. Enelosed you trill Mill live dollars. fot• It Lid, you trill please forward me Iwo Loxes. I suppose you eon forward them In- mail. Your compliance will oillige tile. Cam•= respet•l fully. M. I'. Smmott. De. llance's Epileptie 'Pills are also a sovereign crawly fur every modification of nervous diseases. nervous sufferer, whether tormented by the acute, physical agony a neuralgia, licihiloreux, or ordinary headache. lifilicte.l with vapie terrors. weakened by periodical tits. threatened with panilysis, borne down and dispirited by that terrible lassitude which pro ceeds from ahielc of nervous energy. or experiencing any other pain of disability arising from the unnatu ral condition of the wonderful ineehinery which con nects every member with the source t . if tiellSat ion, mo tion and thought—derives immediate . benefit from the use of these pills, which at lime calms, invigor ates,. and regntates the thattered nervous organiza tion. Sent. to !toy Part of the country by mail, free of Address St.:ro F. IlAsen, lOti .Baltimore Street, Doltheure, 3ld. Price, one box; $3; two, $5: twelve. $2l. WHISK Ens. BEA It n AND MUSTACIIMS.—FOreeiI to rrow in Nix weal by LAiroxrs CAPILARY COMPOUND. Witrranted not to stain or injure the skin. Price $1 per Puelinge. or 11 for $2 50. ;tent to any part or the country. by mail, on receipt of a retnittnnyo. Address BWBETSEI: ,S; CO., B o x l'o,t Mee, Baltimore, SPRING, : which ceases all nature to lour forth, also arouses the slumbering diseases which through the colds of Winter have lain dormant in the system of the !moan :from. As an tone° of pre ventive is better than n pound it cure," all who wish to ward off the attacks of Summer, would do well to avail themselves of the virtues of Carters Spanish Mixture, which possesses a power over the blood per fectly .unapproached by any medical discovery yet made. By - rendering the blood, the great seat of life, pure. and healthy, by its singular action 1111 the secre tions, opening the pores of the Skin, gently stimulat ing the Liver, and infusing life and vigor through out the system, it has won for itself a name which is only equalled by its really good effects. All discuses of the Blood, Scrofula, Rheumatism. Syphilis, the effects' of Mercury, or imprudence in life resulting in a shattered constitution, are permanently and speedi ly eared by Carter's Spanish Mixture. As a Spring and Fall medicine, it is :unquestionably the very best known.—Thousands who have derived such sin gular benefit from its use gladly testify to its•rcmark uble qualities. Try it in time. MARRIED On the 20th ult., by the Rev. Mr. Dubs, Mr. THOMAS SIEGFRIED, of North Whitehall, to Miss MARIATRY, of LOWhill. On the 27th tilt.. by the same, Mr. MONROE EVANS, to Miss CAROLINE Resit, both of Upper Macungie. On the 4th inst., by the same. Mr. REUBEN BITTING, of Washington, to Miss &minx LEIN BERGER, of North Whitehall:. At the same time, by the same, Mr. ANDREW HERMAN, to Mrs. ELIZABETH DELLER, both of Allentown. On the 11th inst., by the same, Mr. Hants LOItABII, of North Whitehall, to Miss SARAH ARNER, of UpperMaeungie. At the same time, by the same, Mr. Moms Ihas, of .Upper Macungie,-to Miss TrEallA R. GUTH, of South Whitehall. On the 13th inst., iii Bethlehem, by the Rev. Mr. Bigler, Mr. Holum§ Jorms, to Miss MAIM E. Eawar, both of that place. On the 11th inst., by the Rev. Mr. Yaeger, Mr. JAMES D. Wm, of Salisburg, to Miss DIANA JANE BEIDLER, of Rittersville. DIED. On the 15th inst., int H pper Saucon, CATHA BIN. widoeoldacob Erdman, Sr., (and moth er of lion. Jacob Erdman,) aged 82 years, ' 1 month and 20 days. LIOn Saturday last, in North Whitehall, of Yellow elflUlldiCO, JOIIN DEICUMAN, in the 80th . ear of his age. On the 20th ult., in South Whitehall, SoLA• ate Bisitr, aged 70 years. On the 2nd inst., in North Whitehall.. AL BERT CHARLES, infant SOH of Paul and Sarah Balliet, aged 2 years. OELU 110 ALLENTOWN MARKET. (CorieetCll weekly.by „Prez, Outh Co.) Flour. - 0 laurel, . $7 50 Potatoes,. . . . . Wheat, . . 150 tEem, • ('urn, 'At Sides, Rye, q 5 Shoulders. . . . Oct., • 15 f,ard, Ray 18 00 Butter. Salt, 60 Eggs, doz.,. . . NEW DAGUERREOTYPE GALLERY! SLEM M ER & WEISS HAVEjest opened nnew Daguerreotype Gallery at No. 10 West Hamilton street. one door east of the Odd Pollows'Thill, where they arc prepared to take pictures in the most perfect style of the art, being in possession of the best room. for the purpose in town, together with Cameras and other apparatus of the first quality and latest invention. We have spared no expense to qualify ourselves under the most cele brated artists, and are confident our pictures cannot be excelled anywhere. We invite the public in general to call and see us—examine our speeimenS—sit for their pictures—and judge for themselves. None but the best material is used, and every picture we make is warranted not to fade. and for boldness, beauty, tone, softness of light and shade, they will testify for themselves. Copies talnin from Daguerreotypes or portraits at the shortest notice. Invalids told deceas ed persons taken at their residence. Instructions given on reasonable terms. - Pictures taken in cloudy or rainy weather, as well as in clear. May 21. —3t C. M. ItCNIZ.) [CIIAMLES SAEGER RUNK & SAECER, BANK AND BROKERS, North Seventh Street, Allentonn, }n PROMMISSORY NOTES, Drafts, Bills of Ex change, Unearrent Money, Stocks and Real Es tate bought and sold, and collections 'node, at lowest rules. A .. . ,pio.-Now for sale, a number of desirable vacant lota at the corner or Eighth and Union streets. ..-7:4Y-The Law• busbies.* will be continued, as here tofore, by t!. M. Runk. Allentown, 3lny 21. Itcaa Ni. 4 a CAothingl ANO'CIIErt AItnIVAL OF UM ' c