The State Printer. " OrINION" OF Tilt: ATVOKNEY GENERAL, 3 torn, y Gencral's Offre,? M.iy dth, 1843.5 Charles M'Clure, Eery, Secretary of the Common wealils-- Dear Sir.--1 hail the honor to receive yours of the 20th ultimo, in slue tfine, submitting for tny considera tion the quietism, whether the electing of 1. (3. M'Kieley as State Printer, to do Me English Piloting, ma the 16th day of April was such a valid election, under the Act of the 2.4 th M last entitled Au Act to create permanently the Office of State Primer," as will justily the aisprovul of his bond by the Governor, pt.ipaeatory to his entering upon the duties of his office? As the answer of this question involves the legality of a solemn act, performed by the joint concurrence of the tnenabets of the two !louses of the Legisl store, I have given it a most careful examination, and have arrived at a conclueion upon what appear, to toy own mind, to be the most clear and sold legit grounds. The first section of the Act providing for the election of State Printers prescribes in general let ins that there shall hereafter tie elected its the manlier now provided by law fur the election of State Treasurer, two State Printers," &c, &c. No time is fixed in this section fur such election, nor is any authority given to the two !louses to fix the time. This section simply pre• scribes the manner or mode or form in which the State Printers arc to be elected, to wit, us the State Treasurer is elected by law. And how is this ? In the fol. lowing "manner :'' each house of the Leg islature shall choose one teller and fur nish a minute of the choice to the other. At the hour of twelve, on some slay to be designated, the Senate and Rouse of Rep resentative shall meet in cons ention in the Chamber oldie !louse of Representatives; the Speaker of the Senate, or in his ab sence the Speaker of the House of Repre benteti, e shell preside, and when the con. ventiue is organized, the members shall proceed to elect vita ro-e, and the bal lacings are to be conducted, and the result announced, in the mode prescribed. Tnis is obviouely all that is meant or provided fur in the first section. We have not yet a word said in relation to the time in which the election is to take place. The man ner it is true is prescribed, but if no time be fixed, there can be no election. The Legislature was not so negligent of this duty as to leave this glarini , e defect in the law. Turn to the thirteenth section, which is drawn in these plain tutus— .' The first election of State Printers shall take place on the third day alter the pas rage of this Act, unless that day be Sun day, in which .case it shall take place on the Monday following, and they shall be elected on the first Monday in March in every third year thereafter, and their term of same shall commence o'n the first day of July next succeeding the election." llere then we have the time clearly and unequivocally prescribed. No one can mistake it. The first election is to take place on the llsied day after the passage of the law unless that day be Sunday, and in such a case the election is to take place on the Monday following. No authority is given to the two !louses to adjourn from slay to day. The law passed by the two Houses and sanctioned by the * Executive has designated tile day. The two Houses only, either iu or out of Convention, can out change the law by their bare resolu lion. It they could, the Executive is an-1 nihilated, end the constitution rendered the mere sport and mockery fur the ma jority lit them. Against such legislative encroachments there could be neither safety or protection. But the absurdity of such a pretence is too OHM to require argument fur its expo sure. The whole question here is, wheth er the provision in the first section, that the Stale Printer shall tie elected in the manner" the State Treasurer is elected, qualifies the day designated in the 13th section, so as to authorize the two !louses in Convention to adjourn from day to day and elect on the 15th day of April instead of the 2 i di of March, the third day alter the passage of the law. I think it does not ; for the first section has sole refer since to the anode cf organizing the Con vention and conducting its operations, and • not to the day on widen it is to meet, dud' to which its power is limited and con- • fined. Nothing is clearer film that when the law has designated a day on which an act is to be done, without authority to perform it on another day, it is void if done on an other day than that prescribed. Such I conceive to be the case in this instance. The fact amounts to nothing that the State Treasurer, if not elected on the day designated, may be elected on such other day as the convention adjourns to. The law especially provides for this contigen cy ; but in the election of State Printer it does not. It looks to no other day than the one named, and doubtless it is a wise and salutary provision. Surely it is no more impracticable for the Legislature to elect a state Printer in one day than it is for the people of Pennsylvania to elect a Governer and Members of the Legislature rm one day. the Members of the Lep islature know it is their duty to elect on a particular day, they will unquestionably Perform it. but let them understand they may adjourn front time to time, as whim,. caprice or management happens to dictate. nod there is a field open for combination, intrigue and bargaining, which may tend to produce the most disastrous results to the pu'ilic interest. 1 say nothiug of what lets in fact or in allegation, characterized the present election; 1 am speaking in the abstract of the bound, wholesome policy I illitiVat i it Ili11:1;a• is a principle of construction not to b.• overlooked; it is one of the fundamental 'Mons of statuary construction in doubt• ful CASCS, if this be t-o, to advcanee right tud repress wrong. It cannot be too rig , idly applied. In this view of the case, the election of Mr. McKinly was invalid, and the Gover-` nor ought nut to approve of his bond.— Fortunately, little, if any inconvenience can result Iron) this construction of law, for no public printing to any considerable am in ut will be required to be done before the meeting of the next Legislature, and it will rest with that body to correct the interpretation of the law which 1 have giv en, it it be deemed wrong. I feel much 1 less reluctance in expressing the opinion I have formed on this subject, while there is an appeal open to the representatives of ' the people, elected with this question fresh before them, fur all parties who may be dissatisfied, than I would if it were to bet final and conclusive upon their right. 11 do not of course expect to convince those! I whose interests may be deeply tamed by 1 this opinion, but entertaining not the slightest doubt as to the entire soundness of every position maintained, 1 commit it i with confidence to the judgment of the eittighnnted and impartial, regarding with Iperfect indifference whatever course oth ers May see fit to pursue. Yours &c., Very respectfully, OVID F. JOHNSON. arrestor the Suspected Trea sury Able Thieves. The Baltimore Sun of Monday, (22nd inst.) has a lull account of the arrest of the three men, Breedlove, Jewell and Bennis,! in that city, on suspicion of Navin,stolen at New Orleans about one hundred thou sand dollars of Treasury notes, alleged to have been cancelled, a brief notice of which, we have already published. A bench warrant, it appears, issued by the Hon. Theodore A. McCaleb, U. S. Judge at New Orleans, accomp4nied by the affi• davits of Thomas Gibbs Morgan, Charles Lee Carpenter, and J. Decourman, of that city, was received at the Treasury Depart ment. This warrant charges three indi viduals, John M. Breedlove, (a nephew of the late Collector at New Orleans,) Jo seph W. Jewell, and Sawyer 'tennis, with having, on or about the 26th day of July, 1842, stolen a large amount of ino. ney, in Treasury noses of the United States, to wit: the sum of ninety thousand dollars, (90,000) or thereabouts and fur ther charged them with altering, uttering, and publishing said amount of Treasury notes. This warrant was put in the hands of a magistrate at IVashington, and the persons were arrested, the first at a house of ill-tame. On examination of the per sons of the prisoners in the jail, nothing of importance was found except $lOO in' notes, in Breetllove's pocket. The exam. :nation of Breetllove's trunk at the hotel, brought to light $5O in bank 'totes, 5 ea gles, 8 half-eagles, 29 sovereigns, $lOOO in American gold, o:.e large gold stud. breast-pin, one gold watch chain and key, and a splendid assortment of wearing' apparel. Jewell's trunk contained noth• t og worthy of notice, and the examination, of ltennis trunk was deferred. The prisoners had scarcely reached the prison, when Copt. H. S. Harper, Deputy U. S. Marshall for New Orleans, accoin. panied by a police officer, reached the city with a United States warrant, to obtain the, prisoners, and convey them back to New Orleans. The Sun's correspnntlent of the says : " From the Deputy Marshall, 1 !earn that Breedlove was, for six or seven years, a cletk in the Custom Douse at New Orleans, and was highly esteemed by a large circle of acquiintances. Upon the back of every note the word cancel. led,' was written; this was obliterated by some chemical process, in such a mantle r as to leave a faint yellow stain thereon. d. lie further states, that abundant evi dence can be adduced there, to prove that Breedlove and his associates succeeded in passing off some 815,000 of these notes in •New Orleans, and that the amount circu lated cannot be correctly ascertained for a long time, if ever. 's lie says the guilt of Jewell, in circu lating the notes, call also be fully estab lished. lie is the same man who killed a watchman in New York, sonic six or seven years ago, by ripping him open. There appears to be doubts as to the amount of evidence against Rein's, who, I learn, was not in New Orleans at the time of the robbery. " But little further has transpired in the case of Mr. Bowden, the clerk charged with rubbing the treasury of a number of Treasury notes. Mrs. Augustus A. Dor. hey, of Baltimore, and Mr. Broome of 11'ashington, were examined yesterday, and afterwards Mr. D. WAS held to bail for his appearance at court to answer the charge. Suspicion has not pointed out any other clerk as being connected with' him. There was a rumor that James E. flirvey was an accomplice, but in this there is no truth." The Governor of Maryland has refused, for the present, to comply with the requi• Nihon of the Governor of Ohio for Adam Horn. Ile will first undergo a trial in Maryland for the murder of his wife, Ma- Hilda Horn, and in case of a failure to convict him there of the crime laid to hie charge, lie will be delivered up to the authorities of Ohio, fur a trial there on a charge of having murdered his first wife.' The West India Mail steamer Trent, recently arrived at Ilmana from Vera with ZJ4:^,O'ci in qieeir., THE HUNTINGDON JOURNAL, Huntingdon, May 31, 1543. "One country, one constitution, one destiny.' V. B. PALMER, F.sq. (No. 104 S. 3rd St. Philadelphia) is authorized to act as Agent for this paper, to procure subscriptions and advertisements. Democratic Stale Conven- tion. Whereas, the General Assembly of .Pennsylvania, at its lute session, enacted a law by %thief, the Freemen of the State are required, at the general election in October• next, to elect, by h . popular vote, a Board of Canal Commissioners: And whereas, it is important that the demo• cratic Harrison party should preserve II fill and complete organization of all its forces by the presentation of hon?st, kith ful and competent candidates, distinguish •l for their integrity, in favor of a prudent and economical management of the public works, and opposed to the wastful expen ditures and flagrant abuses of the pres ent administration, to the free and inde pendent voters of the State, for their sup port :--The undersigned State Commit tee, therefore, call upon the members of said party, in the different counties to elect at such times and places as they may think proper, in conformity with the usages of the party, Ddegates Irma each Senatorial and Representative District, pursuant to the pi ovisions of the Senatori al and Representative Apportionment Act, passed at the recent session of the Legislature, and equal to the number of Senators and Representatives from such county or district, to meet in General Convention, at Harrisburg. on WED• NESDAI', THE 6th DAY OF SEP. MAWR, NEXT, at 12 o'clock, M., to nominate suitable candidates for CA NAL COMMISSIONERS, to be sup-, ported by the Harrison Democratic party of the State, at the ensuing general elec tion. GEORGE FORD, Lancaster, HENRY MONTGOMERY, Harrisburg . WILLIAM M. WA 1. - S, Erie, WM. F. HUGHES, Philadelphia co., JOHN G. MILES, Huntingdon, JOHN TAGGART, Northumberland, HARMER DENNY, Pittsburg, JOHN S. RIL:HARDS, Reading, JACOB WOMANLY'', Easton. May 17, 1843. New Type-41n Improtement. Having purchased new iyv for our paper, (of a smaller size than 'V hose now used,) we hope to present next week's number in a new dress. Hereafter we will be able to furnish more matter in the same space, by which our readers will find themselves benefited. We have gone to a very considerable expense to improve and beautify the Jour nal; and we intend to be out shortly with a new prospectus. Of course we hope to meet with liberality enough on the part ofl i our fellow citizens to compensate us—in new subscribers —for our outlay. Our el.' forts shall be to publish a newspaper wor thy of our county ; and we trust to meet with that encouragement which is essen tially requisite to the undertaking. As soon as we meet with encouragement enough to warrant us in doing so, we in tend to enlarge the paper. We have also provided ourself with a new fount of jot) type, and are prepared to do job work in good style, and on short notice. The Crops. In our recent journey from this place to the lower end of our county, and through the counties of Franklin, Cumberland, York, Lancaster &c., we observed that the crops, generally, give promise of an abundant harvest. In sonic parts of Cum berland and Franklin, however, the win ter grain looks as if it antlered from the severity of the winter, the snow hay ° in. greatly drifted and left sonic fields bare. Fruit of every description, from the apple down to the hackle-berry, will be 'abundant, if permitted to escape injury until ripe. Our exchange papers from different parts of the country furnish us the pleas ing intelligence that the labors of the hus bandman will be rewarded by a plentiful harvest. Hail Storms. On Monday the 15th lust., Gettysburg was visited by a severe hail storm which extended but a tow miles in width and reached in length us far as York, though not with the same degree Of destructive ness. In Gettysburg and vicinity the hail stones were unusually large, injuring cattle dud killing birds &c. The amount of window glass destroyed in Gettysburg, as nearly as could be ascertained by a com mittee of gentlemen who took the trouble of countm:, is 10,5'n, at a cost of at Icnt Locuslo—not guile. Some of our exchange papers are trying to kick up a fuss" about locusts which are to appear this year in as great abun dance as they slid in Egypt iii the slays ofi Pharaoh. it seems to us there must be sonie mistake about this. General obserd vation--(a new General)--goes to estab-I lists the fact that these insects appear reg.' ulurly at intervals of seventeen years.— They appeared in these. dig Ons" in May 1834, and it is therefore'highly probable that they are now an eight year's journey front us, or perhaps nut hatched yet.-1 Who knows ? Business. The indications of the times in all parts of the country, we are pleased to say, are' becoming more cheering. In the com mercial cities an evident change for the better has taken place, and business is reviving, which must eventually lead to •• better times." Bicknell's Reporter, published in Phil adelphia, says, "The spirit of the country is rising once more, slowly, but certainly into activity and energy, and we think we descry in the distance, the bright light of returning prosperity. Certain it is that we have passed through a fiery ordeal." The New York Express, in its weekly review, says :--" The business of the week has greatly increased. The importations have been large. At the Custom linuse upwards of a hundred thousand dollars were received in one day. In the business streets of the city there is a much greater activity than there has ever• been. Ex • changes with every part of the country, except Alabama, a u •e reasonably low. The Boston Journal, says All over the city, no matter which way you tor., improvements meet your eye. All these things betoken a better feeling in our bu siness affairs, and give a clear aspect to the times." The Baltimore Patriot, says :—" That glom and despondency once so manifest, would seem to be gradually forsaking the merchant, as well as the mechanic and day laborer, bearing in its stead the more agreeable anticipations of a swilling mor row." Attorney General Johnson's Opinion. In to.day's Journal we insert the very " luminous" Opinion of Governor Por ter's learned Attorney General on the question of the legality of the election of State Printers. Those who have ever read a law book will at once see that the "luminous" Attorney General has entire ly forgotten that all his books teach that " the fairest and most rational method to interpret the will of the legislature, is liv exploring their intentions at the time when the law was maac, ‘,r ori'gns tural and probabie-- au a 'nese slos are , either the words, the context, the subject matter, the effects and consequences, or the spirit and lesson of the law." (See Blackstone's Commentaries,lntroduction, Section 2.) The " luminous" expounder of the laws must have forgotten this, or, considered it obsolete in these days of lA- , coloco reign ; for he undertakes to prove that the late Legislature were bound by and to the very letter of the law—that their intentions at the time they passed the law—and the spirit and reason of the law, amount to nothing at all. It must be as "clear as mud" to every mind, that the late Legislature, who passed the law, and elected the State Printers, did not MEAN TO DO what they DID DO! True they en acted that the State Printers should be elected in lie manner provided for the election of State Treasurer, and that au thorizes an adjournment from time to time; but still the very " luminous" At torney General, through a grand display of legal astutia, arrives at the conclusion which he was no doubt ORDERED and DETERMINED to come to—that this part of the law amounts to JUST NOTHING AT ALL—that the election of MlCinity is' invalid—and that the Governor should not approve his bind. The Lancaster lntelligencer, one of the ablest and inmit influential Locoloco pa- pers in the state, denounces this attempt at " TREATING AN ELECTION Ai IF IT HAD NOT BEEN lIELD," and says: " When it is known by our readers that, under this law, tho Governor is only authorized to perform the mere ministerial duty Lf pas sing upon the vilitlity of the security offer• ed by the State Printer elect, and that now lie sets himself up to pass upon the validity or the law of the Legislature, the fearful mid alarming extent of the usurpa• turn, may be understood; That the State Printers were elected properly, and ac cording to law, no man in his senses, pre. ltiodl to doubt, he power of adjourn. inent is reserved in the law providing for' 'the election "Ix TIIF.AtANNF.II" provided by the law providing fur the election or IState Treasurer." The Harrieborg Keystone, edited by I Mr. IWKinley, one of the Printers elect, which will therefore not be con,idered the most disinterested and honest paper in the world in its denunciation of this act of executive tyranny, characterizes the con duct of the Governor as " a gross usimeA 111 N of the Legislative and Judicial pow ers of the government, for which IMPEACH MENT is, and unquestionably mi.'. be tke : legal and efficent remedy." The Anti•Portir portion of the Local°. co press in Pennsylvania, and they by far . outnumber the Porter papers, are down upon the Governor " like a thousand of brick" on account of this last act of " ty ranny and usurpation," and cry most lus tily for his IMPEACHMENT. The Pennsylvanian, the leading Locoloco or gan in Philadelphia, says : " There rip. , pears to be but one opinion about this matter, and it is that the bounds of endur ance have been passed, and no course re• mains but that of impeachment. Such then should be the question on which the approaching elections should torn—the formal impeachment of David 11. Porter." '1 he only thing in all this, that appears strange to us, is, that these papers, one and all, of high and low degree, could pass over the thousand acts ofgreater "ty ranny and usurpation" which the Gwei - nor has perpetrated since the unlucky day of his induction into the executive chair of this injured Commouwealth, and even sing hosannas of praise of his " everlasting Wanly," anti should now for the first time open their eyes to his wickedness and call for retributive justice. For our own part we detest die conduct of the Governor in the premises as much as any of his former friends can possibly detest it ; and we speak of it now " more in sorrow than in anger." Ever since the glaring develope ments in the " Lumber Speculations" of 1841, our voice has always been for im peachment. Our cry is still impeach I ! IMPEACH!: General Assembly. The General Assembly of the Presby terian Church of the United States met in Philadelphia on Thursday the 18th inst. The Old School division assembled in the Presbyterian Church, corner of Eighth and Cherry Streets. The opening sermon was preached by the Rev. R. T. BRECK ENR/DGE, Moderator of the General As sembly of 1891—the last Moderator being absent. The Rev. Dr. SPRING, of New York was afterwards chosen Moderator of the present Genei Assembly. The News School , Ivision Diet iu the ? ) resbyterian C , ;tir,ll i , ppubne Washing;on Square.— Toe Rev. Dr. IVIBNER, Moderator of the last General Assembly, preached the open ing sermon, and presided in organizing. 'l'ile Rev. A. D. EDDY was chosen Mod• erator. Trial of Amos Lefever. Our readers, no doubt, recollect the ac• count we gave some time ago, of a most disiressing case of seduction, insanity and death, which occuired in Bradford coun ty, Pa. Miss Esther Maria Woodburn was the victim, and the Rev. Amos Lele. ver the base seducer. lle Wab tried, at Towanda, the first week in May, and con. victed of adultery. An exchange paper says :—his sentence hail not been passed at our last advices, but it must in all rea son be rigorous. lie not only made use of his clerical character to obtain a corn plete mastery over his victim and her pa rents but wrote her piles of letters filled with the most blasphemous intermixture of cant and lust! telling her that the cause of Religion required her submission to his vile desires! It appears that Miss Woodburn, though previously of most ex emplary character, and beloved by all who knew her, was not ignorant of the fact that he had a wife and children living somewhere, but he assured her that his divorce would soon be perfected. This mitigates the sympathy which would otherwise be felt for her error and her wretchedness. (Her lather died on leer• wing her disgrace, and her mother has been I'ur some tune insane in consequence of it.) Lefever's conduct appears to have been one of unredeemed villiany throughout.— Ins conduct on the trial evinced reckless hardihood and remorseless vice. Ile af fected to be indifferent to the last. It appears that this man has run the round of several Orthodox denominations, con forming to any that would employ him.-- He had been advertised as a villian and adulterer in the religious newspapers.— ' Why is not more care used in picking up, these vagrant pretenders i• Sale of the Slate Storhat In June next, the whole of the Stock' owned by this state in banks, bridge,..Sl , 'pike, and other private corporations, v 7", be again of fur sale ; and this time " with some certainly of its being effected without interference train the Executive, beyond whose control the law has now placed it. Those stocks whose location `is in or near Philadelphia, will be sold at the Merchant's Exchange in that city on the 13t1t of June next. Those in the vi icinity of llotrisburg, at the State House I . 'on the 19th. Those in the vicinity or Northumberland, at that place on the 2411,. 'And those in the vicinity of Wilkesbarre, 'at that place on the 29th of the same month. There will also be sales held at Pittsburg and Meadville, in September next, of the stocks held in the various companies in the Western part of the State. The sales in all instances will be perempto ry. These stocks may be paid for in certifi :cates issued to domestic creditors, bearing six per cent. interest. The stocks we an ticipate will bring rather lair prices, as stocks of all kinds appear to be on the rise. The certificates of the State's in dehtdedness are to be received in pay ment fur them have materially advanced lin price since the legislature adjourned, ranging now from 70 to 80e. on the dol lar. The whole amount of them in circu lation, is obout $1,300,000, which will not cover the aggregate of the sales of stock, at present prices. At existing quotations, the stock in the Pennsylvania Bank, will bring B 600,000; the stock held in the Philadelphia Bank, $314,000 ; that in the Schuylkill Navigation Company B 35,000; and with that held in the Allegheny Bridge Company, and in one or two others, will be sufficient to absorb the whole of the certificates issued.—Harris burg Telegraph. Locoftreolsni 031 the Tariff. The locolocos of Indiana lately congre gated for enlightenment on certain measures of Government, and addressed letters to all the loco loco candidates for the Presi dency—excepting John Tyler of Virginia; or rather we may say omitting him.- 1 hey have received letters from all, and it is a matter altogether worthy of specu lation, that with the exceptizer of Old Te cumseh, who, with an improvidence of truth end straightforwardness of purpose, comes boldly out for protection to Ameri can labor, and Atnerican capital, they all take the Southern, sunny shit' of the great question of the Tariff. Even Mr. Bu chanan remains true to his principles of ten cents a day." Is it for this cause, or if not, what other is it, that the brave old Soldier is thrust aside that room may be made for truckling politicians, ever ma king their sales and bargains in the South? There is not one of them else, Buchanan. Van Buren, Calhoun and Cass, but limit American labor to " incidental protec tion," Mr. Buchanan says emphatically that "he will not impose one dollar of duty" beyond the absolute necessities of the Government, and that he is willing to discriminate in favor of manufactures, so feu• as they are incidental to national de fence, But through the whole of his creed" as he calls it, there runs not ono thought or feeling; there is exhibited not one spark of sympathy fur the manufac turer, farmer or laborer. He Imagines himself, like Gen. Jackson, the Govern ment, and his sole care is to furnish that with money. This is true, unadulterated locofocoism, and ought to obtain him sup port in his ranks.--American. Ass OLD OFFENDER ARRESTED.—Last week a man calling himself Hill, was ar rested by Constables Balsley and Sanders, and brought before Justice Snyder, under the charge of being the persoo who robbed a tavern keeper in Huntingdon, in 1898, of $5OO, for which he was then arrested and lodged in jilt, and succeeded in escaping from it Wore his trial Caine on, and whose name was Arson Gale. When brought before Eiquire Snyder, being questioned as to his name he very boldly denied that it was Gale, but-the 'Squire who had seen and know ()ins some years ago, told him that the denial was of no use, and he knew him to be Gale, and for want of bail, sent hint to jail to wait fur further orders from Huntingdon county. Gale was a conspicuous politician in 1838—and one of the most brawling Por terstes in the state. It is said that he was one of the Governor's chosen escort at the time he came from Huntingdon to Har risburg. But whether or not, he was very conspicuous in the Buckshot War, and one of the leaders of the mob. Ile was first recognised by a gentleman from Ilun tingdon county, named Holliday, cupon whose information he was arrested by the constables. He' had beets seen several days in the neighborhood, mixing with the watermen, thinking probably that he would make another haul out of them bes fore he took his departure, and went by the name of Hill, which was the name he entered at the Franklin House where he put up, part of the time.--Har. ANOTHER DECISION.--Me learn from the St. Louis New Era, that Judge Catron, of the Circuit Court, and one of the Jud ges of the Supreme Court of the United States, has decided that the Bankrupt Law passed:by Congress is constitutional. This decision, like that of Judge M'Kinley at New Orleans, is final. Lord Brougham is said to be about to visit this country, either as the regular or special minister. Newspaper presses in Virginia are (ax ed indiscriminately, ten dollars each.