cy of the former, or irreparably destroyed the perfect kerseymere of the latter! From the turgid depths of that tremen dous puddle bath sprung up for him a misery of two or three hours. The pud dle path positively slaughtered, pro tem pore, the happiness of his existence. But, put him among many puddles, and the "little, fluttering, foolish thing," is about' as perfectly helpless as a fly in a basin of mock-turtle.--- Corsair. From the Lancaster Intelligencer of Ist inst. CASE OF KOHLER DECIDED. The reasons filed in arrest of judge ment in the case of the Commonwealth vs. Henry Kohler Musselman were argued on Tuesday add Wednesday last, with great ability by Messrs. Fordney, Attor ney General, and Jenkins for Common wealth, and Messrs. Montgomery & Ford for the prisoner. The Court met yester day, all the Judges present, and the opin ion of the Court was delivered by the President, Judge CHAMPNETS, upon all the reasons filed in arrest of judgement. The motion was overruled by the unani mous opinion of the Court, Judge Dale & Lightner fully concurring in the opinion delivered. - The President Judge, in pronouncing the sentence of the law, made the follow ing remarks to the prisoner: As a genera principle, the Oourt would not feel justified in adding to the weight of the conviction of a. criminal, any re marks or reproaches beyond the sentence imposed by law. But th'e circumstances connected with the commission of your crime are so extraordinary and atrocious, and the Court deem it so striking au ex ception, as to justify ,(he brief remarks they are about to make. The crime of deliberate murder fias been considered, in all ages, as the highest in the calender of criminal offences, and the individual who can so outrage, all the laws of God and man, has been deemed deserving of death, as the only expiation that could be offered for the life he has taken, and as an example to deter others from the commis sion of similar offences. The punishment ot death which the law inflicts, is no more than adequate to the oftence which you have committed. The annals ot crime hardly furnish a case, in which all the attendant circum stances. were marked with such a fero cious and blood thirsty spirit, as was ex hibited by you towards your unfortunate victim. You obtained his confidence at Pitts burg, became his companion and pretened friend; he compensated you for your ser• vices, and on you journey, at a moment when he was unsuspecting and defence less, you aimed a deadly blow at his head, and following it by a resort to the knife, which you plunged, in accomplishing your vile purpose, into every vital part of his body. And when an half an hour had elapsed from the first attack, and the un fortunate Zellerbach showed symptoms of returning animation, and raised himself to suplicate for mercy, true to your murde rous and bloody purpose you dispatched him, and sent him to the bar of that omni scient Being, who witnessed your crime, and, by his mysterious Providence, has brought to light all the circumstances con nected with this foul deed. And, when the murdered corpse was laying before you, at night--in the midst of a storm ; and waiting to catch the glimp ses of the moon; alongside of the unfor tunate Zellerbach ; you, cooly and delib erately, opened his Pocket Book, to ex• amine and ascertain the value of your plunder. Such an instance of moral de pravity, and destitution of all the feelings of human nature, can hardly be found amidst all the degradation and reckless ness disclosed in the history of our Crimi nal jurisprudence. Since the commission of this atrocious and bloody deed, you have exhibited in your conduct and declarations, the same utter destitution of every moral and reli gious obligation. Having involved your servant William in so much suspicion from the circumstance of his being your companion, as to subject him to arrest, im pnsonment and indictment, and you con science not permitting you a moment's peace, and having disclosed to him, all the circumstances of this foul murder, you then urged him to add to your crime, and jeopard his own soul, by committing the crime of Perjury, in testifying to your innocence! The cup of your iniquityis full to over flowing. Whether you have ever receiv ed either moral or religious instruction, it is not for the Court to inquire or know. But you ought to be informed that you can expect no mercy from any human tri bunal, no relief from the executive. But He, who left his throne on high, and gave his only begotten son for the salvation of sinners, is the fountain of mercy; and to him you must bow your knee and direct your supplications. The sentence of the law is therefore pronounced. That you be taken hence to the jail of the county of Lancaster from which you came and thence to the place of execution, and be there hanged by the neck until you are dead; the said punishment to be i nflic ed within the walls or yard of the jail of said county, in the manner directed by the Act of 10th April, A. D. 1834, enti tled "an act to abolish public executions." Doling the delivery of the above re. marks, the prisoner hardly moved a mus cle; betraying, by no outward sign, the most trifling interest in the judgment pronounced against him. A TRANCE OF A WEEK'S DURA TION. A young girl residing in a house back of Duman street, between Fourth and Fifth streets, Southwark, a member of the Methodist church kno.vn as the Academy in Fourth street, near Arch, on the even ing of Wednesday the 55th ult., arose from her bed under religious excitement, and began to pray. The religious exer cises, with the workings of her own im agination, produced such a state of excite ment in her mind as to throw her into a trance, in which condition she has remain ed since yesterday week, insensible to every object and event around her. Du ring that period she has partaken of no food, except such aliment as thin gruel, which her friends or attendants forced in to her mouth, between her clenched teeth. Such a long k period of unconsciousness and abstinence has had no apparent effect upon her health; she breathes regularly, her respiration is similar to that of - a per son in ddeep sleep, and her cheeks and lips have the glow and hue of health, the ruddy color of which, added to a face pos sessing regularity of feature, gives her an extremely interesting and beautiful ap pearance. The only motion that has been observed during this length of time, by those around her, is a movement of the head, which is turned occasionally from one side to the other, as she Ices upon her track, and a rapid rolling of the eye balls udder the closed lids. She has now been eight dayein this singular state, and seems novearer a restoration to a itate of constioesness than at he time of the first ttack7though yesterday one of her atten dants heaiti her whisper, indistinctly. something about her brother, whichihade them believe that the fit of unconscious ness was near its termination. §.lie has been visited by fifty or sixty physicians, though it is not known to what they as cribe her present condition, whether the effect of physical or mental causes. The "true believers," many of whom have vis ited her daily, ascribed it, of course to supernatural causes, and believe that her spirit is communing with the blessed in habitants of another world, and that she will be able to make some strange revela tions on her recovery a period - to which mmy of them look forward with feelings of anxious hope. Whatever may have been the cause which produced and con tinues this singular effect, there is one thingcertain, that the facts detailed by her friends, in regard to her present con dition, are strictly to be depended on. The name of the girl is Nancy Simpson. P. 8. Since the above was intype we learn .he has recovered her consciousness, the symptoms noticed by her friends on the last day of her fit having p terminated favorably. Vast numbers of persons of her own pursuasion have visited her, many under the expectation that she will make some interesting disclosures. It they should be disappointed it will not be from, the want of faith in her story. Philadelphia Ledger. From the United States Gazette, MOST SHOCKING HOMICIDE. The quiet of our orderly city is rarely disturbed by such an appalling tragedy as was acted yesterday, and we do not re ' member to have seen the members of this community more shocked at any event. Few if any of our city readers but will recollect the elegant ice-cream establish ment of Mr. Wood, opposite the State House. The house has recently been put in order at a very great expense, and is perhaps one of the most splendid of the kind in the United States. Mr. Wood was assisted in his business by his wife and a daughter about twenty years of age. Some two weeks since, Miss Wood was privately married to Mr. Peak, a bootma ker in }Hilt street, and as we gather from enquiries, on Thursday last she left her father's for her husband's house. No sooner had the knowledge of his daugh-' ter's clandestine marriage reached the ear' of Air. Wood, than he immediately clos ed his store, and refused to attend to bu s;ness. Mrs. Wood, however, on Friday or Sat urday, induced her daughter to return home, assuring her of her father's forgive ness, and of an early reconciliation with Mr. Peak. We did not learn that there was any cordiality in the reception of Mrs. Peak by her father, and the place remain ed closed. About ten o'clock yesterday morning, the report of a_pistol in one of the upper owns of Mr. Wood's house attracted the attention of persons in the street, and it was soon ascertained that Mrs. Peak (late Miss Wood) had been shot by her father. The body was found lying in the back room of the third story, the face covered with blood. An examination was imme diately held by Doctors James Rush and G. Emerson. which resulted in the dis covery that the ball had passed entirely through the head, entering immediately beneath the right eye and carrying with it a portion of the scull and brain. A few moments before the examination she expi red, not having spoken from the time she received the fatal injury. Mr. Wood was immediately conveyed to the adjoining room, apparently in a state of phrenzy, where he was detained by the instructions of the Deputy Attor ney General until the physicians should have concluded their examination and made report thereof. The idea that Mr Wood had swallowed poison, was at first entertained but this was soon dispelled. He avowed that he had committed the act and declared that he considered itjustifi-, able. Soon after the arrival of Mayor Roach, Mr. Wood was aroused from the apparent stupor into which he had fallen, and upon beino• ' questioned by the Mayor and Mr Barton he admitted that he dank three glasses of brandy about ten minutes before he perpetrated the horrid deed, and that he deliberately went into the room in which his daughter was sitting, placed the pistol close to her head, and fired. Such was the crowd of persons in the street, that it was considered proper to institute such examination as was neces sary in the house, instead of conveying the prisoner over to the Mayor's office. One of the servants, a colored man, named Jos. Sr;mour, testified that he heard the report of a , pistol, while engaged in the kitchen, that he immediately hasten ed up stairs, and found Mrs. Peak lying on the floor, her face covered with blood, a pair of pistols lying near her, and Mr. Wood standing a little distance from the deceased. The husband of the unfor tunate lady remained in the house of his lying wife for some time, in a state of 'great distress, but was finally persuaded by Mr. Barton to retire. Immediately after the examination of 'Seymour and of Doctors Rush and Emer son, Mr. Wood was committed to Moyas mensing prison. We write this article before the Coro ner holds is inquest upon the body. A deed has been done that shocks the feel. ings of the community to an unusual de gree, and the public voice calls measure of atice suited to the circumstances and guilt of the case. Public sentiment, how ever, in Philadelphia, quietly waits the devel4ement of all the testimony that goes to shdiv 'in what mind" the act was committed. No attempt is made to deny that the death of Mrs. Peak was caused by the hand Miler father. O z:7-The Coroner proceeded to hold his inquest. Verdict of the Jury ; That Sarah Ann Peak came to her death in consequence of being shot through the head with a pis tol ball, by the hands of her father, James Ykood. BIBLE IN THE U. STATES.—The first Bible printed in the continent of Amer ica was in native Indian—The New Tes tament in 1661, and the old in 1693, both by the Rev. John Eliot. Fhey were pub lished in Gambridge, Mass. The second was in German, a quarto edition, publish ed at Germantown, near Philadelphia, by Christopher Sowers in 1796. The first American edition of the Bible printed in English was printed by Kneeland and Green, at Boston, 1752, in small quarto, 700 or 800 copies. It was published by Bachman, a bookseller, but to avoid pros ecution by those who had a patent from the king, they reprinted the whole title page of the English copy, including the London - reprint. The next edition was by Robert Atkin, of Philadelphia, in 1781-2 A DUEL WITH SHEARS.—TWO tailors in New Orleans, last week, attempted to cut short each other's thread of life by fighting a duel with shears. One was dangerously wonnded in the abdomen--P Ledger A SERIES OF LAMENTABLE OCCURREN OES.—Whree children in Gibson cm, Ind. who had thrust their hands into a hen's nest to get the eggs, were bitten by a copperhead snake lying in it. Their screams attracted the mother, and while she was absent the youngest child fell in to a tub of water and was drowned. The three bitten also died in two hours after. SWALLOWING A Faaiu,—A farmer in ,Connecticut, who has occupied the same farm, on lease, for about thirty years past, was complaining that he had been able to lay up nothing from his thirty yoars' labor. A neighboring storekeeper offered to explain to him the reason, and proceeded as follows :—" During the last thirty years that you have been on that farm, I have been trading in this store ; and the distilled spirits I have sold you, with interest of the money, would have made you the owner of the farm you hire. —Jour. of Humanity. A Goon ONE.-"My dear, what shall we name our babe," said Mr. Smith to Mrs. Smith, the other day. " Why, huz, I've settled on Peter." . _ "Petjri Goad Lord, I never knew a man with the simple name of Peter who could earn his salt." ~ Well, then, we'll call him Salt Peter.' —Claremont Eagle. THE ANNUAL CRANDEItRY FAIR was held at Barnstable, (Mass.) on Tuesday, the 24th ult., but it appears that the pick ling did not yield well in consequence of some stealthy rogues having previously carried oir the best of the berries. The I,town committees, incensed that the regu lations should be thus set at naught, have collected evidence against eight of the poachers, and are going to make them sweat for their conduct, unless they agree to pay two dollars per bushel for all they have gathered. SOMETHING LIRE THE DEVIL--, me chanic in Russia has succeeded in makitr , la steam man. It is a colossal statue, t he feet of which are placed upon wheels on a rail road, and, as he goes thundering over the track, the steam comes puffing from his nostrils so as to give the appearance of Satan as pictured in revelation. . g. --- ,,•.*iiii - roc . . 4? ... • :-..464,..44 .„N ~ ,6-, _......,..,;•,,,..-.,..4„, ~. ~,„•:„,,,i.i.,-.:,v,,,, ~„.r ....:_ D... „(.... 41, THE JOURN IL. 'One country, one constitution, one destiny knuntingdon, Oct. 0. 1830 Democratic antimasonic CANDIDATES. FOR PRESIDENT. GEN. WM. H. HARRISON VICE PRESIDENT DANIEL WEBSTER. FLAG OF THE PEOPLE! 0* - A single term for thePresideeev, and the office administered for the whole PEO PLE. and notafor a'PARTY. rp A sound, uniform and convenient Na ti oat 1 CURRENCY, adapted to the wants of the. COUNTRY, instead of the SHIN PLAS ' ti t ts brought about by our present RULERS. Tf 3 ECONOMY, RETRENCHMENT. and RE FORM in the administration of public affairs, y 1 "Tired of Experiments and Experi menters, Republican gratitude will reward unobstrusive merit, by elevating the sub altern Of WAsuttgwrox and the desciple of JEFFERSON. and thus resuming the safe and beaten track of our Fathers,—L.- Gazette. Electorial Ticker. JOHN A. SHULZE, 7 Sen'to'l JOSEPH RIMER, Selectors Ist Disirict LEVIS PASSMORE, 2d do CADWALLADER EVANS. do CHARLES WATERS, 3d do JON. GILLINGHAM, 4th do AMOS ELLMAKER, • do JOHN K. ZELLIN, do DAVID POTTS, sth do ROBERT STINSON, 6th do WILLIAM S. HINDEU, 7th do J. JENKINS ROSS, , Bth do PETER FILBERT, 9th do JOSEPH H. SPAYD, 10th do JOHN HARPER, 11th do WILLIAM M'ELVAINE, 12th do JOHN DICKSON, 13th do JOHN M'KEEH AN, 14th do JOHN REED. 15th do NATHAN BEACH, • 16th do NER MIDDLESWARTH, 17th do GEORGE WALKER, 18th do BERNARD CONNEI LY, 19th do GEN. JOSEPH MARKLE, 20th do JUSTICE G.FORDYCE, 21st do JOSEPH HENDERSON, 22d do HARMAR DENNY, 23d do JOSEPH BUFFINGTON, 24th do JAMES MONTGOMERY, 25th do JOHN DICK. The Election Is over,—Let the victory rest upon whose standard it may . Outs is the task to pronounce "all's well". Whatever the people of our county or country, declare to be their will, it is our duty to acquiesce in. Next week we shall be enabled to give a correct account of their decision. ' It is the duty of every Democratic Amer ican to say amen. If by their own su pineness, they have suffered the spoiler to invade and sack their teritory. Ours shall not be the business to complain. If by negligence they have been victimised to the dagon of Loco Focoism,—Theirs is the suffering:as well, aye! more than ours! e have faithfully 'performed our duty— We have warned them of their danger. If then, they have slept on and taken their rest, until they were bound hand antlioot let them lay no complaints at our door. In Huntingdon County, the friends of good order have at all times, at least a majority of from four to six hundred. If they perform their duty, their cause is al ways safe. If they sit quietly down, an ever active and cunning foe may triumph. The present contest has been one of much importance, and if cunning has tri umphed over neglect, we could almost in ' the bitterness of heart exclaim, it is good enough for you. We have no fears, however, of the re sult; we have always been convinced of the patriotism of the Anti-Vanburen par ty. If, however, their patriotism is of that kind which lets the welfare of their country run to loss while they spend their hour or two in seeking the welfare of themselves; we should be ready to say, ' your patriotism is too much of the gum elastic sort; and stretches itself into the shape of seif-intrest. But no matter ! Ti►e election is over in this county, we feel confident that all is right,—ln the state, we are still in the dark. If the Loco Focos have succeeded in obtaining a majority in both houses; why we can only say they will do us they are a mind too; and the election of Canal Commissioners is still longer kept from the people. An old wash stand was knocked down in Brooklin, L. I. for $2,25.—0n exami nation after the purchase, the buyer found about $6OOO in a drawer. The Surrogate claims the money for the Estate, but the finder intends to test his claim. "Go it Boots.* For the Huntingdon Journal. Mn. BissznieT—Sir, you have, I pre sume, seen published in the .Advocate," of last week, what purports to be a cer tificate of a fellow by the name of Henry Garland, the tenor of which, is designed' to injure my character—it will be sufficient! to satisfy every good citizen of the falsi ty of that production, when they know who this man Henry is, and who the bas and cowardly scoundrels are., that would use him to spit their venom at me. Well, who :is Henry cayland 'I Why he is drunken crenturNthat has been staying about this place ( Raid Eagle Furnace ) for a number of years, and since I have. been here I had him employed in the dig-j nified capacity of ostler, and when he ex pected a fp or a levie he could smootl down a horse quite slick; ht possesses good deal of the low cunning, peculiar t • a toper, and can employ ',his time basil about nothing, to a nicety; and lie as plait. Title of Nobility. sibly as a thief. Well, Henry bein The annexed article from the U. E. drunk, and abused the young men in th - Gazette, shows what acts give a man aeffice, I ;interfered, and turned him off,— claim to a title of real greatness. In Poor Henry, for his own bad conduct, ha these our days, a man may sport a title of greatness, who has wronged his creditors .to relinquish the curry comb and brush greatness, and I suppose, to get relief, he went to Dr out of their hard earnings and yet he may O. G. Scott and told his complaint; th be greeted as among the honorable, he Doctor, as usual, would inform his patient may tell his creditors that in considera. that he was afflicted with a variety cf di tion of their giatitude for trusting him seases, and, that here was squire Dried twenty years, that they desire no pay,' pl esent, we will just step into the squire's. they have trusted him too long; and yet back room, and we will cobble up a pre-I this same man may be high in power ecription, all we will want Henry, my deal Such things are, and who would dare to friend, is your name, if you cannot writei say the truly noble and honest son of Er- you can make an k Mr. Pateriek; Mad' , in's green Isle, was as good a man as the den done so last year and he is as good present Governor of Pennsylvania. man as any of us; besides, we are all goof; TITLE OF NOBlLlTY.—Yesterday a democrats, and it will help the election gentleman called upon Isaac Roach,a mayor of this city, and informed himEtlsia't. lan d you will get your name in the papurs he had recently arrived from Ireland; that and probably an office— for the Govern() previous to his departure lie had been re-likes such whole-soul fellows as you; yet quested to take charge of a handsomewould make a first rate canal officer. mahogany box without fastening, and leave it and its contents wit the maor }Henry no doubt, was tickled with tht 'uf Philadelphia, to be retained by him un . and agreed to let them use his narrni til called for bythe_gentleman to whom Ito stab me. Poor Henry has ever sine ; ..Kensington" is with you still. Old Huntingdon has said to the Loco Focus, ".Ao you don't"—and they now must clear the track. The election is over, and the lies of Gco. R. Espy, the Auditor General have been printed and coined for nothing.— Their hordes of cosmopolites (supposed to be about 500 ) have travelled, after vo ting in the county. Their influential canal officers have been shorn of their locks, and their strength is like another man's. KrThe whole Democratic Anti-ma: sonic ticket has been elected. The turn out was very small, and owing to the great number of transported voters, we were near being caught napping—we rejoice, however, that, enough evinced their pat riotism to receive a majtrity of from 2 to SOO. it was addressc'd. The mayor having ta ken cognizance of the contents of the box received - it in charge.-- Ne had occasion, yesterday, to be in the mayor's room, and saw the box. It contatned a splendid massive silver water, 21 inches in diame ter, with highly ornamental decoration. lit the centre of the magnificent piece is the following inscription, beautifully en graved. ••Presented to Michael Allen, ;Esq., of Pittsburg, United States, formerly of Lit terkonny, Ireland, by his creditors, as a testimonial of their high opinion of his upright and honorable conduct in paying in lull the balance of their accounts, although previously discharged trom all legal obligations. Signed in behalf of the creditors at large. JOHN bI'CLERRY• Belfast, April, 1839. [U. S. Gas. Mttortat Szniuntitvg. Once more we have got back to the old place. Too much of our time and space has been required for politics to give cur usual variety, fur some weeks; and we must say, beg pardon reader! and try to make amends. The election in Maryland has gone to the d-I,—or what is the same thing gone for the Loco Focos. We take it for granted that they are to near the atmos phere of the federal city, to escape the miasm, of its corruptions, Poor Merry land is in a sad state. The Branch Bank of Tennessee, at Co -1 lumbia, was robbed of $30,000 on the 29.. d ult. Gen. Robt. Y. Rayne, a favorite and honored son of south Carolina, died at Ashland, N. C. on Tuesday 24th, ult. The Yellow fever, is still raging at the South. The lion. J. C. Alvord, member of Congress from Mass. died on Friday 27th ult. Wheat is selling in Zanesville, Ohio, for .70 cents. Col. Pluck died a few days since in the Philadelphia alms house. There has been an extensive fire in New York. The National Theatre and three Churches, were burnetl— besides several houses. Total loss estimated at $400,000. ./Wob Law.— In Arkansas, three indi-' viduals having been tried for murder, and! found "not guilty." Were seized by the "Dog keepers," and hung, they knowing) better than the law. Later developments, seem to say that the three persons were' perfectly innocent—but mob law has hung' them. Are not the people of our state, willing to encourage the administration of justice by the "indignant people" alias "dog keepers." wept bitterly for his folly, and from mYI heart I pity him; but, shall ever despisi the mean and dastardly wretches that would use a drunken creature, a dis. charged ostler to vilify me, by a malig nant and false publication. ROBERT CAMPBELL. TRUTH ELOQUETLY SPOKEN, We invite the attention of our readerfi to the following eloquent and graphic deft l cription of the Van Buren party, as IN find given in the address adopted by Otte Senatorial District Convention of Young Men, held at Consackie, N. Y., on th [4th ult. on which occasion upwards o twelve humired delegates to the Conven, tion appeared and took part in the pro ceedings., The following is a brief ex. Itract from the address: "It is to principles and measures of the gravest moment, fellow citizens, that we wish now to call your attention. We are arrayed against a party which arrogates to itself the title of 'democracy,' though it has for years supported and is constantly supporting and justify:ng measures of deadliest hostility to all that is implied by that term. Democracy is opposed to 09 concentration of power. The whole ten., or of our opponent's policy is to extend!, and strengthen the Executive arm. De mocracy demands a prudent and economi cal administration. They have lavishly and wantonly squandered the public mu- ; ney, spending thirty millions a year where twelve once sufficed. Democracy requi res on the part of public fuoctionaries, strict accountability and submission to the' power from which they received their trust —They, defeated arid condemned again and again by the people of New York, yet cling to the offices which they them. selves declared of right belonged to the 'victors!' Democracy declares that this will of the majority constitutionally ex pressed, shall be supreme.—They have insultingly proclaimed that the pleasure of the Executive shall be fulfilled, in defi ance of the opposition and 'lamentations' of the people. Democracy looks upon the man it delights to honor, as but the servant of the people, and requires him in his intercourse with them to be plain, unostentatious and unpretending— !lief support a 'Chief,' who treats lime fellow citizens as his subjects, and surrounding himself with a body guard and assuming the state of a monarch, moves among the people with all the trappings and pageant ry of a royal progress. Democracy is ins favor of a single presidential term of of fice—fearing justly the temptations that might otherwise induce that high func tionary to use his power and patronage to subserve his own ambition instead of the interests of the people. They, with that tenacity for office which has ever charac terised them, are ready even to violate the constitution and unite the purse with the sword in the hands of the Executive, in order to effect his re-election. Such, fellow citizens, have been the predotninant characteristics of the party against whom wt now invoke your aid to rescue our rights and liberties, and to re deem the spirit of our free institutions. Such, whatever their professions, are the , features that have marked their course.