:1W 40MH&iU 9 J - r 2Msman's lountal. S. B. ROW, Emhi'Ud Proprietor. CLEARFIELD, PA JFJiE 21, 1857. , State Normal School.- An aet was passed at the last session of the Legislature "to pro vide for the training of teachers for the Com mon Schools of the State.". According to the provisions cf the law, the State is to be divi- ded into twelve Normal School districts. Any number of citizens, exceeding thirteen, may establish a school for training, teachers in a district which shall be entitled to the benefit of the act; but no district shall have more than one such institution that can receive any aid or support from the provisions of this law The pecuniary affairs of the fcchools are to be managed by a Board of Trustees, elected by the contributors or stockholders of the insti tution. When rightly organized, the Trustees may receive any, gift or endowment, and may tzse the same for the benefit of the school- The Trustees are to submit an annual report In June to the Superintendent of Common Schools. The act provides that do school shall be fully organized until it has suitable build ings, an area of no less than ten acres of jrronnd for gymnastic and healthful exercise, library, philosophical apparatus, botanical gar dens, six professors, and a model school for giving teachers in training an opportunity to exercise their taients in the education of at least one hundred children, taken from the neighboring country. It will be seen from this, that these Normal institutions will wors In two ways for the enlightenment of our popu lation wit, by training efficient teacbers,and also educating children in the model schools. E3"A telegraphic dispatch was received at "Washington, from Emory D. Potter, accepting one of the vacant judgeships of Utah. lie is an ex-member of Congress from Ohio. The other was offered to Mr, Eccles of Indiana who probably will accept it. It is uncertain wheth er Judge Stiles, who is now here, will return to the territory. A well founded report as signs Thomas II. Dunn, of Mississippi as mar shal! of Utah. Col. Curnmings will aga:n be tendered the Governorship ; bis acceptance is considered certain. The California overland Mail question after undergoing thorough consideration in the Cabinet has been referred to the Post Master General who is not yet prepared to pronounce a- decision ; however, the impression prevails tliat the Southern route will be selected com mencing at Memphis and continuing by way of Fort Smith, Donna Anna and Fort Yuraa. Little DoRRrr. We have been favored with a complete copy of this highly interesting work, which has been published in snccessive nnmbers for a Ions; time. T. B. Peterson, of Philadelphia, "having received the advance sheets from the author, by a lte steamer, has published this work in a neat edition, uniform with the volumes of Dicken's works issue.! by that publisher. Little Dornt is a story winch will iuterest the public this last being eqnal in graphic power and skillful delineation of character to any of his previous work3. Price of the complete woak, Fifty cents. Address, T. B. Peterson, Philadelphia. POLICY 15 UTAH. Some recent accounts from Washington have stated" that the policy of the riew Governor of Utah is to be the issuing of a proclamation that such persons residing, in the Territory, male or female, as wish to leave and go else where, shall be protected in doing so, aDd shall lw assisted in getting away. If it be true, as the recent correspondence from Utah so posi tively asserts, that a considerable part of the Mormons, including a large portion of the women, are held in subjection by Erigham Young and his elders, by a system of pure ter ror, ana tnat it is as naru, to getaway irviu Utah, as it was during the time of Walker's, predominancy for American citizens, especial ly those who had "enlisted into his "service, to get away from Nicaragua, certainly it is high time for our Government to interfere. -They did not interfere in the case of Nicaragua, but that is no reason why they should not inter fore in the case of Utah.- The case of Nicar agua stood upon peculiar grounds. The last Administration, to say nothing of the present one, was a filibustering Administrition. Walker, if not acting by authority from Wash ington, was, at least, acting ia conform ity to Cabinet principles and ideas ; and it is a set tled maxim of all fanaticism, more especially of fillibustering fanaticism, that the end justi fies the means. Utah stands upon na such ground Utah is annexed already ; and though Walker was allowed to go on, not ordy re straining American citizens, but robbing and shooting such of them as attempted to escape out ofhis clutches, that is no reason why Brig ham Young should be allowed to emulate his example. If Brigham wants to do that, if he wants to shoot, hang, rob and imprison, with impunity, let him establish a fillibuster settle ment either in the Mexican territory at the south or the British territory at the north. Then he may reasonable expect, not only to be allowed to -proceed to any extremities he chooses against such unfortunate An.ericans as, having been -deluded by false repesenta- ons within his grasp, shall attempt to escape from it, bnt, in case he is likelv to fail and fall nto the hands of the Mexican or British au Sorities, that the Government w:ll serd a mil itary force to hover on the border to aid in his escape, and even to intervene in his favor by solicitations to the other party to alio- him to escape, with hints, perhaps, of something else n case of refusal. So long as Brigham Young is merely Governor of Utah, he has no reason to expect that our Government will at' all con nive at his running the same rig wi'h Walker in Nicaragua. Neither need Erigham attempt to reassure himself by calling to mind the case cf Kansas, and the privileges of rolbery and murder and false imprisonment allowed there by Gov. Shannon, acting Governor Woodson, Ju'lge Cato and Lecompte, "SheritE' Jones aud other distinguished functionaries of the Territorv. Neither need he count at all on the high official positions lately cor ferred by President Buchanan upon Murphy, Emory, and other leading Border Buffians. Thnt. tfv was a fillibu.tri"3 operation j these persons were also filibusters, and stand on the same ground that Walker occupied in Nicaragua Stealing Kansas from the Northern States was in the eyes of the last Administration, and is in the eyes of the present one, an enterprise no less laudable and useful than stealing Nicar agr.a for the purpose of making a Slave State of it. Indeed, more so, since the blow at Lib- ertv attempted in Kansas is adoulle one, no only adding one to the Slave States, but also taking one from the Free States. When there ia an obiect to serve, Mr. Buchanan can wink XATTSAS. The Free State Convention met at Topcka, and the committee on business made the fol lowing report, which was adopted : Resolved, 1. That the people of Kansas now as ever, disewn as invalid and of no force or eflect, the authority of the territorial govern ment as embodied in the enactments of the so called legislature of Kansas. 2. That it is made incumbent on the peo ple of Kansas, by the highest considerations of justice and expediency to look forward now as ever, to their admission into the Union tin ker the constitution which they haye( already formed, as the only method of adjusting ex isting difficulties, to which they will assent. SrThat the people of Kansas will pursue with unfaltering steadiness of purpose, the ap plication now pending before the congress of the United States, for their admission into the Union under their own constitution, and ;witfy their government, resting their hopes for the success thereof upon the profound confidence they feel, that a measnre so eminently, just, and so accordant to the principles of past legis lation in our country, will eventually be con ceded and sanctioned to them by tbe represen tatives of the American people. ; 4. That the constitution framed and adopt ed at Topeka, had its origin in a public neces sity, was the offspring of the popular will, And experience .'has proved the wisdom of those who framed it, and it is the duty of the legis lative officers elected under it, to complete the state organization, and keep its niachi nary in readiness for use so soon as we are ad mitted into the Union : or th the peoplo shall require. . The committee reported the following, which was also adopted: " Wueeeas, By unfair legislation by the Le- compton "legislative assembly," and the man ner of registration under the act providing for the call of a convention to form a consti tution has excluded a large majority of the vo ters of Kausas from the participation in the election of delegates to the said convention: therefore Resolved, That this convention respectfully and eamestlv recommend to the free state A DESTRUCTIVE WHIRLWIND. Variocs rumors were afloat at Utica,N. Y-, on the evening of the- I3th inst. that the long threatened comet had "struck" in the neigh borhood of that city. A correspondent writing to the Tribune says he endeavored to trace them to their source ; and the result was, a well-authenticated statement that a phenome non of a very singular character had been vis ible in the heavens, or, rather, in the atmos phere between the heavens and the eirtb seemingly suspended from above ; that this body was a tunnel shaped, black, moving body, of a nebulous character! that it had taken its rise, or made its first appearance, at a point over the northern outskirts of the city. Thence it moved easterly, accompanied by a buzzing, rumbling noise, and gradually elongating its figure as it went, approaching the earth nearer and nearer, jntil finally, it struck the ground near the dwelling of a Mr. Root, in Deerfield, tearing down a fence or two, and passing on, gradually settling lower and lower. At last, having reached a point some five miles ia a north-easterly direction from this city, near the dwelling of Mr. Nathan Budlong in Schuy ler, it made a descent tipon his barn, ripped it np, and scattered it to winds. Then passing on, tearing np trees, fences and out-houses in its terrible course, it finally struck the dwel ling of Mr. John Warren. The building was lifted from its stone foundation, carried a dis tance of some fifteen feet through the air, and dashed in splinters upon tho ground, leaving a clean plat of grass between t'e place where it had stood and the pile of rubbish. In the necessities of ! house were a family of six parents and children. Mr. Warren, seeing the terrible ob ject rushing down upon him, tearing up trees and fences in its onward course, and buzzing like a thousand hornets' nests combined, called -upon his wife and children instantly to accompany him to the cellar,- and, suiting the action to the word, seized two of the children and leaned down the stairway. The wile es sayed to follow, but her footsteps were tardy ; she was a moment an instant too late ; the . , 4 1 ..M .... engine oi uesirucuon ioie mc uuuum uy, carrying herself and child, together with a lit tle son who wrts behind her, with it. The bus party of Kansas, that the election for dele- band had but time to sec her ascend with the gates, in pursuance of the law enacted by the building that tore away from above him, and Lecompton bogus legislature, be disregarded then he .stood exposed to the day, in bis open and permitted to pass without and participa- cfiiar. lie went to view the ruin of his home; tiontherein by the free state party in Kansas, it was complete. litre lay the dead and nude Reiolced, That since tho issues of the past body of his wife, the destroying power having have been sufficient to develop the political I stripped her clothing from her person ; there principles of every inau in Kansas. Therefore I lay his son, covered with blood, and senseless ; we regard any man who sympathizes with our I and, just beyond, his dwelling lay one such oppressors to the extent that he consents to mass of destruction as probably never was be liurnmp 'a HplrTto tn tln Tfi-nmnton eonven- I held before. It Passed On. swinging UZItV a tion, or a candidate to the same, is unworthy bout like a monster "elephants trunk," crush the fellowship or confidence of the free state men. and should be regarded with suspicion everywhere. : The American Party Who Compose it! The Philadelphia Daily Sun, of Thursday, June ISth, savs : "The news from Boston yes- can Convention in Massachusetts. The body numbered over 300, and it appears, from the report of the proceedings, that they endorsed Mr. N. P. Banks for Governor. Out of over 300 members, selected from the American par ty in the various divisions of the State, 219, out of 229 votes cast.were given to Mr. Banks, and he was afterwards nominated unanimously. Tf Americans iu Massachusetts can endorse Mr. Banks, it is very strange that Pennsylva nia Americans cannot endorse Mr. Wilmot. We pronounce Mr. Wilmot an American of the ing all in its way. Next, Mr. Budlongs barn was thrown into the air, riddled to pieces, and hurled in all directions, as the agent of des truction swunz on. For hundreds of feet to the south, east and west of the barn, the field was literally strewn with the broken beams ticijLo contents of tho linm mnr. manure, corn-coos anil hay, was scattered ovc the entire field. I was permitted to enter the resideuce of Mr. Budlong, where the corpse of Mrs. Warren had been laid out, and view it It wis clothed in its grave garments, and a handkerchief concealed certain ghastly bruises on tlie neck, though tho blow which caused death is evident in a wound upon the abdomen Kifleelions sal and suggestive thronged my nina as I looked on the corpse of that mother. ind thought on the fate that had stricken her )n death, while the infant in her anus was ct :erly unharmed, and the boy behind her not so eriously wounded as to causo instant death Lai-cable Project.- We see it stated that Philadelphia, so world renowned for her char itable institutions, is about to add another to the number. .A movement is now being made to establish an Asylum for the superanuated printers of that city, a class of men, who, per haps, more than any other, deserve the sym pathy and kind consideration of the public. We trust this project will received the support of every genuine philanthropist, and that an institntion will be erected creditable to the city in which it is to be located, as well as to those for whose benefit it is intended. true stamp, and no American mat is noi ime as nam us ,,. . ' ' tureel with l.ocolocoism can ori le.use m.u bnt reflectloM are not 5n , , i Ai.-i V.i.liiiir' iA it oanc r Tl 1 V f 1 1 :i I I 1 . 1 I .1 -,.1 ...,w( I - snm. xut a jjufcimin o - that tiiey are opposeu 10 ie lurmur cau-hsiwu coun.- 0 q the interest oi ine &i;ie-uncia, i 0r slavery. This sentiment oi mo American grounds for expecting that his outrages will be ty hag becn publisUed and endorsed by its overlooked, or that measures win noi oe iah.eu cns;ble head, the "City Committee of Su perintendence," and even by the "Daily Uh maclite" itself, and yet, upon the distinctive priciples of Kepublicanism, Mr. Wilmot does not 20 one whit further. In this single scnti- 7" The Erie Consiilulion says that the city and county of Eric will undoubtedly have to pay the interest on their bonds issued to the variocs railroads connecting with that city, and that the taxation to meet that responsibil ity will fall heavily upon the people. It is a fortunate thing that the peoplo w ill have an opportunity to adopt, this fall, an amendment to the Constitution prohibiting, q futorc, all such subscriptions; and it is much to be regretted that such a provision waa not incorporated in that instrument long go --; - j . : - :I T. P(MTr.E.-The Post Master General lias recently decided that bona fid subscribers to weekly neswspapers can receive the same lree of postage if they reside in the county in which the paper is printed and pub--hshed. tveniftke olfict to which the. paper is tent i without the couniy, provided it is the of fice at which they Tegularly receive their mail ' matter. This will be an item of interest to newspapcrsubscribers living nearcounty lines to protect and relieve the sufferers by them Nevertheless, we very much doubt whether the President will have the courage to adopt the very reasonable and proper course indica ted for him by the Washington letter-writers. Unfortunately. Utah is by no means the only portion of the Union in which nearly every household is at once a soraglio and a prison, and in which a large portion of the people are keiit from runnicz away by terror of the con sequences should they happen to be caught Mr. Buchanan, we fear, will hardly have the Courage to set an example of intervention on the part of the Federal Government, however loudly the state of things in Utah may demand it which might hereafter be inconveniently applied to other no less suffering portions of the Union. In fact, it would be easy for Brig i . i ii ham, and he is altogether too surewa a reiiow to overlook it to put Mr. Buchanan, his new Governor, proclamation and all, in a very awkward predicament. Let the Mormon Elders only induce their extra women and the rank and file generally of the Church, male as well as female, to enter into wr tten indentures of service- and thereby would not only a per fectly lawful authority be acquired to hold them in Utah, but should any of them succeed . . . . 3 J in getting away, they might be pursueu, ue swego, destroying property of :very description in its course, when it made nother attempt on life ; a Mr. Furniss, and eamstcr, who were engaged in loading staves t a saw-mill, hearing a strange noise, turned round looking upwards, saw a barn shovel fly- ng through the air, and the next moment a rec was dashed across the wason. knockins mem is couiaiueo. a,. cr ,he teamster down on the staves and throwins David Wilmot. We say all, for there is not a rr. Furnjsg to the groun1 Thc ,atter m firmer State rights man m the Union than Mr. I , ,It th(. tMmif, . Wilmot, nor one who would do more to secure I . , ,f(M. ... -f the peace an permanence of the Union. It is Iq to property ofGiIbert & penfic',j. Mr. GiU very singular that men can profess American- I t ciT ,h jevastat;on. and vp ism, and yet, by opposing the very principles ;nJ M lbil flinr thronffh ,he ... they proclaim, mislead others, and bring d.s- lh d j , - Kittuot Bask. -It is stated that a snffi cient amonnt fifty thousand dollars has been subsciibed to the capital etocfc of tho Kittan- ing bank to secure" its charter, the principal of - which "a as taken by J. E." Brown, Esq., a gen tleman cf extensive means, and of well known capacity as a financier and business man. The bonk will go into operation between this and The first of August. grace and defeat to the cause they deceitfully I pretend to support. They cannot do it. 1 here is too much intelligence in the people of I enn sylvania. They . cannot be deceived in. this matter, and there is convincing evidenc that ether influences and motives govern the "side door" Ishmaehtish movement, that looks e ventually to the success of Mr. Packer. All that is necessary to defeat this movement, is to expose hypocrisy and double dealing, and enlighten the honest, thinking people in re- imrA in the-, character of Air. limou i nis we intend to do." mily to come out as soon as possible, "for e Comet hai struck, and their time upon earth as short'." Not satisfied yet the whirlwind bxt attacked two barns belon'rin in Afr. - enry Kowe, and utterly destroyed both. kyond the barns of Mr. Roue, the course of is whirlwind is marked distinctly to the Os go River, by upturned trees, here and there rough orchards and wood lots, but after get ig about one mile east of Mr. Rowe's resi nce, its principal fury seems to have been ent aud its traces disappear entirely on rea'ch g the river. Such is a brief but truthful ac- provisions of the Fugitive Slave Lav. The very troops about to be sent to Utah, instead of being employed to aid in setting the cap tives free, might, under the j-rovisions of the Fugitive Slave Law, be called upon to aid in catching tho runaways. E -Three of the mutineers of the brig, Gen. )unt of a whirlwind which we do not believe Pierce, convicted of manslaughter in killing'er had its equal on this globe for fury and I the C'ptain and cook of that vessel while or odigions power. KF" Jackson, convicted of the murder-of oman Morris in Lake county, Illinois, last ..... ii, was executea this niornme. the 19th. - man.led,arrested and carried back under the the voyage to the coast of Africa, were cacl. sentenced to imprisonment for six years anfi to pay a fine of $2,000, equivalent to impris onmentror me, as vue pruuc r-roe frcm the city of Cfaica-o. He th. fine." Smith, convicted for the murder of ,.... , J . . the captain, has been sentenced to be execu ted in August next. "' " ' ' niesseu me murder some davs since. It is timated that 25,000 persons were present ; e crowd pressing broke the platform, but no Ep-The Douglas men in Chicago seem tio was injured. Tho military were out in Laegest Chaix is the Woau. It is te- be mortified with the result of their recen ieved that the largest cabl- in the world is j persecution of Mayor Wcntwoith, by charglni that now about to be used in the operation of him with stealing mail bags. It was shown o raisin" the Russian ships sunk at Sebastopol. the trial, that if the reception of canvas bag - i i . i :t. 1 n;;nr T-,nK!i n i"w-!imiTit : f mm th.' npnnrt It is two nnnareayarusrons; cacn nun wl-ijjus i tuui""c .. . . . : . " je(j . 1 n -w? nnnnHs ami a Tl lint 1m hpn ment. without returning them, was stealing. . separately tested by a strain of five hundred tons.-? It was manufactured at the Reading Force, in onr own State. The value of the material to be furnished by the Russian gov ernment, to be used in the riising.of this fleet will be a million time occupied will, it'is thought, be about two years then Douglas had stolen a great many morj thar Mayor Wentworth. rce.. The execution passed off quietly. C"On Thursday morning, some of the rvants of the City Hotel, Bostoq, found a range animal in the meat cellar, which thev It was about the size of a large cat, th web fe-;t, long tail, and a face similar to monkey's. It wa finally ascertained to be mongoose, an animal found in' Africa; but A Giieeji Rose !On3 of these extraordinary j,e wnere he was, remains a puzzle. rv natural curiosities may, uc recu ai inui - , ... . . , ... n 1 . burn's seed store in uroauway, j,ew i oi k 3 Flocr has -aMVliaTf Of dollars, and the rs STS lilf " ' in-iwrforniing the; contract pne uniform green color- ; The parent stalkIV: Hams 13 cents, shoulders 11 a 11 1 said to have gome from Japan. Rye Soar ?o,75. a downward i tendency in tho and i PENNSYLVANIA ITEJIS. Cpxtre Cocxtt. One day week before last. during a thunder storm, two mules beljnging to the Centre Furnace Company, were suiea by lightning. The team had been sent out to the uirrens, some four miles distant irom me furnace, for a load of coal, and when n the way back, the storm came on the driver sought shelter from the rain under the wagon, which was most providential, for scarcely had he gone under the wagon ere the mule on which he had been 6itting was struck to the ground. Thc magnetic fluild then ran along the filth chain, to the lead mule, and killed it instantly. The other four mules, and the dri ver, escaped, though they were badly stunned. The driver has entirely recovered lrom the paralptic effects of the stroke The Oys ter Saloon of J. G. Ritter, in Bellefonte, was entered several nights since, and the money drawer robbed of its conteuts. An ale barrel was also tapped and several gallons of the bev erage carried off. 'The saloon was entered by breaking open the back ttoor. . - . . .nr.iu- ny.ol Beaver Mills, was seriously injureu oy being thrown froai a sulky. neWiSataitng from the residence of J. I. Thompson, at Mar tha Furnace, and his horse takiug fright ran down towards the plank road, and threw Mr. Chany into the race, breaking bis couar oone, and injuring him other ways. .... The Belle fonte Whig says : William and Lewis snear- man wee arrested last week tne iormer m Jnniata county, and the other at Tyrone and brought to this place, charged with enticing a young girl away from home. Alter a hearing, they entered bail in the sum of S100 each for their appearance at the August Court. Tbe girl disappeared about the first of April and has not sijnce. been neara oi. tier aioiuer is the prose" 'dn the case. WAsMi?I1CorsTT. Thc house of Sam uel Wasers. Pike Run, was entered last weet and seventy-five dollars taken. Mr. Wagers discovered the thief retreating, collared htm and threw him to the floor. The-thief sur rendered his booty, and a light being ir.tro dneed. ho was discovered to be the son ot a respectable farmer in that neighborhood. . . . A gentleman named Glassock, who recently died in Missouri, made a will manumitting six slaves and setting aside three thousand dollars of his esiateto be invested in the purchase of a farm in Washington county, Pa., costing twentv-five hundred dollars, tl:e residue, five hundred dollars, to lie expended in the pur chase of stock. The negroes-have arrived in Washington. .... A child of Jonathan Mf.r- tin died last week, from the enects oi swal lowing a piece of glass or Queensware. Clintos Cocxtv. A lad about 14 years old, slipped into a building, in Lock Haven, re cently, and took from a pantaloons pocket a portmonie containing 52.75. The owner s is pecting the hoy, decoyed him to the Sheriff's residence, where he threated to lock him up, if he did not fork over. lie promptly cav;d, and 'forked' over the money Another entered a shop on Water street, in day-light, and took $1.50 from a drawer. He attempted to pass a quarter the same day, which proved to be counterfeit, at the shop where he had taken the money, which led to his detection. Such young scamps should be promptly pun ished.". . . . An ordinance was passed by the Town Council of Lock Haven, prohibiting per sons from driving at a laster pace than 3-10. Fast town, that. JerrEtsos CorxTr. One day last week the body o! a child alout - three years old, was found drowned in Mabon's mill-race, in the south end of Clarion borough There is a prospect of abundant fruit and grain crops in this count-, the present season Dur ing the high waters last week, a poition of tbe Knox township, was carried away. Loss about S-300 During the past week quite a num ber of persons have been arrested, and fined or imprised, for intemperance and profanity, in this county. .... Considerable damage was done, in Several sections r.f the county, dur ing the late freshet. A number of families removed from their dwellings, through fear that they would be swept away. I.vriAX.v CorxTr. On Saturday, the 13th inst., thc lightning struck a chestnut tree in front of the dwelling house of Mr. John Fer guson, of White township, passed down the tree and killed two cows and three hogs which were congregated about its roots. The effects of the shock were also felt by Mr. Ferj uson and other members of the family who wt re in the house at the time lln t! l"th ini the Borough of Indiana was visited with a vi olent fall of rain mixed with a small sprink ling of hail. Bat little hail fell. Some them however, were equal in size to a full grown walnut The bridge and part of the Mill dam at Diamond Mills was swept away, tv the floods, last week. . Blair Cocxtt. The large Steani Saw Mill of the Messrs. White, at Somnan,on the Alle gheny Portage Railroad,was destroyed by fire, on the 17th, involving a loss of some $r,.000. The fire is supposed to have originated from sparks from a Locomotive. .... . During the th-nnder storm on Saturday evening, tlw 13th inst., the lightning struck the chimney of the residence of Mr. John Miller, of Iloliidavs burg, passing down the entire depth, knocking out a few brick, but thorouglyvcleansing it of soot about two bushels. No other damage done. Fbaxklin Coi xty. On lCth inst., at Green castle, the tavern of John Reilly and the gro cery of Henry Appenzellor, were both burgla riously entered, and the money drawers, with: their contents, carried oil from each. The loss in both cases is small. ...... Ahorse of Mr. Flemming, near that place, was stolen on the same night Mr. Allen of New York, in jumping from a buggy, the horse of which had run off, was considerably injured, near Chambersburg. , Bccks Couxtt. The dead body of a man. 45 years of age, was found near Falsinglon last week. ' An empty laudanum vial, from Simes' drug store, Philadelphia, was found near him. A small stick was stuck in the ground, th3 up per part was split, into which was let -i small piece of paper; upon this, on one side was written with a lead pencil, "Death," and upon the reverse, 'I have committed suicide. I have consumption of the lungs. John Latham of New York." Lehigh Couxtt. The German Lutheran Synod met at Allcntown last week. About 1 00 were in attendance. .... Te store f J. Benninger. near Slatington, was entered late ly, and S75, stolen. . . . Tho books of the Bank of Catasareque were opened on Monday a-week, and 4S0 shares taken the first day.' " Fatette. On Friday, the Uniontown coach was rtpset, bruising tbe passengers ; injuring a lady of that place so severelr. that .h compelled to return home The los hr the burning of the Union Furnas :, -i . $5,000, . . . ; The wheat cron. in thU .,-- Moxtoce Cocktt. Robert: mi. r r if. gill, of Danville, was injured on the 13th, by the accidental discharge of a gun in his own hands. The charge . did not penetrate the skull, but swept away the scalp from a portion of the frontal bone. . . . , Excitemext ij Neitraska. Tho claim jumping troubles continue in Nebraska Terri tory, and the settlers arc resorting to desper ate measures against the oflendors. From an extract of a letter pnblislcd in the Davenport Gazette, we learn that on the 20th u't., thy had a very exciting time at Florenc?, N. T., some half drzen men having been irrcsted, tried and condemned to be hung by the set tlers. The writer says : "The prisoners were brought up tied togeth er, tried Dy tne ciuo asociauon, ami con demned. Death was the penalty. Ropes vera procured, audi thought lor somo time-they were suie to. be huTig according to sentence ; and I think, had it not been for an old gray headed father pleading for his son and son-in- law and the tears of their wives and sisters, they would have been bung. A number of speeches were made in favor of death, but the final result was, that three were set free oir condition they would do right and be honest in future, confessing their fanlt and releasing their right of claim. The other four were sent across the river, accompanied by about one hundred and fifty men, with a resolution thai if they ever set foot again on Nebraska soil thev would be hang. ' Gbievixg foe Lost Pearls.- It would be hard to tell whether most joy or sorrow ht been caused at Notch Brook, N. J., by the discovery of the peatls. Dozens are bemoan ing fortunes that, in days past, they carelessly fiung away. One matron nnavailingly sighs over some "little white things' that she once gave her boys for marbles. A schoolmaster lugubrious remembers that he had chopped eight or ten thousand dollars' worth, with hi penknite, "to see what was inside." Another genius rammed a joarl bullet down his rifle and shot away his fortnne. An ohl la-Jy who chuckled six months over her "good bargain with the pedlar," now discovers that she paid him in pearls, about seven thousand dollars for a calico dress. It is needless to say she hasn't laughed since. The nnfortunate man who had the $25,000 one cooked for his break fast, has taken fo bed in utter despair, and re fuses to be comforted. J2xchanei Paper. Peabls, Silver, asd Copper. Patcrson, N. J., and vacinity, apparently is destined to be one of the noted spots in the country. Al ready it has become celebrated for the dis covery of pearls, and now, the Guardian says, a vein of copper and silver lias been struck in Garret Mountain. A shaft about 53 fet hsa been sunk, and a bed of copper ore, 10 feet below the surface, and 24 feet thick, has becn struck, and Mr. Chadwick has submmitted it to a melting company in Harlem, New York, who have offered him $2DC0 a ton for thc No. 1 quality. Some distance below the copper, a vein of silver ore has been struck. The thickness of this at the place at the shaft bas becn sunk is between two and three fet. How far it extends is unknown. A family, iu York, Pa., has uffrrcd ranch" from eating "apple butter," and last week a boy died. A York paper says that tho mother and one or two children are still pros trated and in a critical condition from the ef fects produced by this copperas apple butter, which was boiled in a copper kettle and left in it nntil cold. They are reduced to a skeleton like appearance, moan from pain frequently, and will hardly survive. . Democratic papers in Main, mutter in dignation at the bestowal of flices ly Mr Buchanan on "Straight Whigs." One of the malcontent presses has becn pacified with a long Navy advertisement for 'beans," bat those who get none of that fodder continn more irate than ever. CT7"Wrongthe date en our outside. It should be the 24th instead of the 25th June. TTew Advertisements. 4 FEW ORAIX CRADLES, of superior m.k, U. of which the scythes are also warranted, and it not good to be returned, can b had cheap at MERRELL A CARTER'S. 4 TTEXTIOX ! REGULARS. You are ordered -f. to meet for para.le on SatRnlav. July 4th at 10 o clock. A. M. Each member will provide himself with ten rounds of bUbk cartridge. By order of the Captain, G. W. RHEEM j Jne2t ; First Sergeant FOR SALE IX XEW MILLPORT FOUR lots, each 50 br 110 feet. One ha a Inrto two story frrae dweliin- houae mpon it. Thev 'VI c ;?,',1.che"P niion ey terms. Apply to wr. at ciearnela. june24-'5t-tf J B. M EXALLY. UJr- The testimony in. the Bardell estate case closed at New York, yesterday, the 10tb. The question relative to a commissioner to take testimony in California,' remains undis- l'u'J oi. - eHEKIFF'S SVI.E.Ry ,.-. writ tTx ; - 'neJ euC of te Court of Common ?hf n ,earfifiJ CLUntv' "nd to me directed" there will be sold at the Conit House, in the Eor oujth of Clearfield, on Monday tae 20th Ut of July next at 10 o'clock, A. M.,"the f ollowing des criber real estate, to wit : A terrain tract or piece of land, situate ia Gosh en township, Clearfield county, containing 106 acres, more or less, adjoining lands of John Snlf rirfjre, Ellis Livergood. Robert Grafcara and others, wun a log houe and lo siable, and a small lot cleared thereon. Seized, taken into eiecution, and to be sold as the property of 5am oel Sped v . V J R- REED. Sheriff. ' Clearfield. Jnn. 24. 1357. SALES! SALES!! SALES !!! SALE2J !!!t (ECT XOT SHERIFF'S SALES.) -AT THE "SHORT SHOE SHOP." FRAXK SHORT informs his friends in jreneral, and all man and woman kind ia particular, that ne nas on hand a fine assortment of Gents Gait ers. Ladies and Children1 Gaiters. .. Al. Eng lisn H alkmg .shoes of his own manufacture, of trench Patent Calf, Frpnch Calf without the Pat ent, - nd all other kinds r fine and eoaro work constantly on hand, and tho materia! I mak anything m his line from a rock" np to a Utt. strap Root. Also, Finding Tf all kinds, (kit ex cepted.) Eoan and Pink. lir.injs. Toread-iSl!v Pegs. Ilccl-balla. Bristles and Moroccos: Boot Mo rocco. i.aaies dressed and urvlressed Morocco French Morocco, Kid and Bindings of aU liadil Come one f Coma all f -r . :? : Give Shorty a Call! , Sj "... and if you don't like the goods, don't soil tWem TERMS.; One half CASfl when you purcha and the other hlf at the sain tima. . t' jue2i-'o7-3m. , . . . , ER AX CIS SHORT. P. S. All old customers indebted to me. are ra auesd to come forward and itl t,;-" T and sa-e costs, as I am called n pen to settle tfe 0,Hr "f by y credited, Immedi ately. . If said customers have not t. . TiU they can give their notes. - This i Wsitive- nu. ly the last notic FR A NT t rrt f . . . . - - .ill. t