gb r 44-7,0 main on BY JAS, CLARK. VALUABLE FARM .9T PRIV4TE saLE. HE Subscriber will Sell, at Private Sale, his Woodcotk valley Farm, hear the Cum Roans, in Potter & Walker town nips, Huntingdon county, occupied by David Enyeart, containing about 280 Acres, 200 of *bid) are cleared and under cultivation, with a litrge new Two Story Dwelling • 2-n-CQD M. 23 CS. a A TENANT HOUS E, s large flank Barn, Wagon Shed. Spring house, hog house, and every other necessary building. On this tract is an extensive Bed of Fossiliferous Iron Ore. Any information will be given by Mr. Enycart, on the premises Gon. A. P. Wilson and Mr. George Jackson of Huntingdon, or the subscri ber in Harrisburg. DAVID R. PORTER: Decrmber 4, 1849. Heal Estate [at Public Sales IN pursuance of an order of the Orphans' Court of Huntingdon county will be exposed to public sale, on the premises, on Saturday the 2911 t day of Derember inst., at 10 o'clock A. M., the following real estate, late of John Esq., of the borough of Hun aingdon, dec'd, remaining unsold, viz All those two adjoining lots of ground on the southerly side of Hill street in said borough, bounded by lots of William Ward on the West, and the Presbyterian church lots on the East, each of said lots fronting 60 feet on Hill street and extending in depth 200 feet to Allegheny street, and being lots No. 82 and 83 in the plan of the town, with a large TWO STORY 11 ,v WEATHER-BOARDED "La:::CIDC:I2.MCNA9 part frame and part log, a large fiaino stable with a stone basement, and a tan yard and large frame tan house thereon. The title to the above property is indisputable. TeaMs oe tia..—One-half the purchase mo• nay lobe paid on the confirmation of the sale, and the residue in ono year thereafter with interest to be secured by the bond and mortgage of the purchaser. M. F. CAMPBELL, Clerk. Attendance will he given by JACOB MILLER, Trustee. Huntingd3n, Dec. 4, 1849. N. S. LAWRENCE. “flgent for the sale of Southworth .MOnu facfuring Co's Writing Papers. Whorehouse No. 3 Minor St. PHILADELPHIA 100 cases of the above superior Papers now in store, and for sale to the trade at the lowest market prices, consisting in part of-- Fine thick Flat Cape, 12, 14, 15, and 16 lbs.. blue and white. Superfine Medium and Demi Writings, blue and white. _ _ Extra super and superfine Polio Posts, blue and white, plain and ruled. Superfine Commercial Posts, blue and white, plain and ruled. Extra super Linen Note Papers, plain and Supet fine and fine Bill Papers, long and broad. Superfine and fine Counting• House Caps and Posts, blue and white. Extra super Congress Caps and Lettere, plain and ruled, blue and white. Extra super Congress Caps and Letters, gilt. Superfine Sermon Caps and Posts. Superfine blue linen thin Letters. Extra super Bath Poste, blue end white, plain and ruled. • --- Embroidered Note Papers and Envelopes. 'Lawyer's" Brief Papers. Superfine and Eno Cape and Posts, ruled and plain, blue and white, various quantice and pri ces. Also, 1000 roams white and assorted Shoe Pa pers, Bonnet Boards, white and assorted Tissue, Tea, Wrapping, Envelope, assorted and blue Me diums, Cap wrappers, Hardware Papers, ikc. July 10, 1849.-6 m. BIRMINGHAM Female Boarding and Day School. This School is now .in successful operation. The Rev. lair sy.t. W. Vl' sun, Pastor of the Spruce Creek and Birmingham Presbyterian congregations, is Principal, assisted by a worthy end efficient female Teacher, Miss A. M. Riau. This School is located its the borough of Bir mingham, county of Huntingdon, Pa., one of the most healthy villages east of the Allegheny mountain. The course of instruction is full and thorough, embracing all the English branches usual.y taught in SeleetSchools. It will be con ducted on Christian principles. The Bible to be the textbook. Parents and guru diens who attach any value to the religious training of their children and wards will Gcd this school worthy of their patronage. The Pupils may board with the Principal and will be treated as members of his family. Tuition and board will be moder ate. For further particulars apply tc the Prin cipal or to any or the undersigned, vvlio earnest ly recommend . his school to the patronage of the public. The second quarter of the present term Will commence on the seventeenth day of July inst. John Owens, W. Caldwell, John Grainig, Geo. Guyer, Rev, John K. M'Cahan, James Clarke, Thomas M. Owens, 8. 8. Dewey, James Bell. Birmingham, Aug. 21,1849. Teachers If mated. IVE Male Teachers wanted, to take charge of the Common School. in Cass township un tingdon county. Competent Teachers will be employed for the spsee of three or four months to commence any time previous to the Ist of December 1840. Application made to JOHN R. GOSNELL, Proud. Board of School Directors. November 20, 1849. PROCLAMATION. NvHEREAS, by precept to me directed, da ted at Huntingdon, the 24th day of Nov. 1849, under the hands and seals of the Hon. George Taylor, President of the Court of Common Pleas , Oyer and Terminer and general jail delivery of the 20th judicial district of Penn sylvania, composed of the counties of Hunting. don, Mifflin and Union, and the Hone. James Groin and John Stewart, his associates, judges of thecounty of Huntingdon, justices assigned, ap pointed to hear, try, and determine all and every indictments and presentments, made or taken for or concerning all crimes,which by the laws of the Commonwealth are made capital or felonies of death and other oflences,erimes and misdemeanors, which have been, or shall be committed or perpe. tutted within said county, or all persons who are or shall hereafter be committed or perpetrated, for crimes aforesaid, I am commanded to make pro. lamation throughout my whole bailiwick, that a Court of Oyer and Terminer, Quarter Sessions and Common Pleas, will be held at the Court House, in the borough of Huntingdon, on the 2d Monday (and 14th day) of Jan. 1850, and those who will prosecute the said prisoners, be then and there to prosecute them as it shall be just, and that all justices of the peace, coronet., and constables within the said county, be then and there in their proper persons, at 10 o'clock A. M. of said day, with their records,inguisitions, examinations and remembrances, to do those thingswhich to their office respectively appertain. MATTHEW CROWNOVER, Sheriff. SIIF.RIFF'S OPP., I Dec. 18 1849, 5" PROCL./IM.RTION. WHEBEAS,by precept to me diiected by the Judges of the Common Pleas of the coun ty of Huntingdon, bearing test the 24th day of Nov, A. D. 1819, I am commanded to make public proclamation throughout my whole baili wick that a Court of Common Pleas, will Ito held at the Court House in the borough of Huntingdon, in the county of Huntingdon, on the 35 Monday (and Slot day) of Jan, A. D. 1850, for the trial of all issues in said court, which remain un determined before the said judges, when and where all jurors, witnesses and suitors, in the riot of said issues are required. MATTHE W CR 0 WNOVER, Sheriff. Salmi WA OFFICE, Huntingdon, Dec. 18 1849. $ Orphans' Court Bale. BY virtue of an order of the Orphans' Court Of Huntingdon county, will be exposed to sato on the premises, by public vendue or out cry, on Saturday the 2914 day of December 1849, a TRACT OF LAND, situate in Brady township, in said county, con taining 188 acres, more or less, adjoining lands of James Ross ' Jesse Yocum, James Ker, James McDonald and others. The said tract of land lies along the Kisacoquillas valley, is within a convenient distance of the Pennsylvania Rail road and Canal, and is well ft mbered, which ren ders it very valuable, and offers a profitable speculation to purchasers. Terre.—One-half of the purchase money to be paid on confirmation of sale, and the residue in one year thereafter, with interest, to be se cured by bond and mortgage of the purchaser. By the Court. M, F. CAMPBELL, Clerk. Attendance given by WILLIAM V. MILLER, Ads,'r of John Wiley, deed. December 4, 1819. Auditor's Notice. THE undersigned Auditor, appointed by the Orphans' Court to distribute the moneys in the hands of M. Crownover, administrator of Daniel Glazier, late of Henderson township, decd, to and among the creditors of said deed, gives notice that he will attend for said purpose at his office in the borough of Huntingdon, on Saturday the 29th day of December 1849. All persons having accounts against said dec'd are notified to present the same or be debarred from coming in upon the funds. l'llo. P. CAMPBELL, Auditor. December 4, 1849. Auditor's Notice. THE undersigned, appointed by the Orphans' Court of Huntingdon Coun ty, to distribute the fund in the hands of Jonas Rudy, Surviving Executor of George Rudy, dec'd, amongst those en titled to receive the same, will attend for that purpose at his residence in the Borough of Huntingdon, on Friday, the 4th day of January next, at 10 o'clock, A. M., when and where all, persons in terested may attend. JACOB MILLER, Audiotr. Dec. 11,1849. J. ti 3. rd. ROWE, Broom dr. Wooden-ware Store, No. 63 North Third Street, ONE DOOR ABOVE ARCH, EAST SIDE, PHILADELPIIIA. MANUFACTURERS AND WHOLESALE DEAL ERS 111 all kinds of Brooms, Brushes, Cedar-ware, willow and French bas kets, shoe and wall Brushes, Dus ters, Scrubs, Mats, Blacking Eastern-made Wooden-Ware of every description, &c. at the lowest market prices. Cash paid for Broom-corn at the factory. Sept. 11th 1849. MACKEREL, SHAD, SALMON, HERRINGS, PORK, HAMS AND SIDES, SHOULDERS, LARD & CHEESE, MIRE California r by Oct. 30, 1819. Constantly on hand and for sale by J. PALMER, & Co. Market St. Wharf, PHILADELPHIA. Sep. 11, 1849.-3 m ;old wedding rings for sale NEFF & MILLER. HUNTINGDON, PA., TUESDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1849. SHERIFF'S SALE. BY virtue of a writ of Levari Facies issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Hun. tingdon county, I will expose to sale at public oatcry, on the premises, on Saturday the 29th day of December, inst. at one o'clock P. M., all that certain tract of land situate on the wat ers of Stone creek in Henderson township, ad joining lands of the heirs of David Newingham, dec'd., Nathan Gorsuch, dec'd., and others, con taining 116 acres and 112 perches, (except 39 acres and 159 perches of said tract, now in pos session of John Miller, which has been released from the lien of the mortgage,) hating a house and barn thereon, and a considerable part thcrof cleared. Seized and to be sold as the property of Samuel Miller, dec'd, with notice to Terre ten ants. M. CROWNOVER, 3d Dec., 18.14. __ Administrator's Notice. Estate of D4VID .EBY, late of Shirley township, Huntingdon Co., dec'd. NOTICE is hereby given that Letters of Ad ministration on said estate have been grant ed to the undersigned. All persons indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate pay ment, and those having claims or demands against the same to present them duly authenticated for settlement to JACOB EBY, SAMUEL McYITTY. Nov. 13, 1849-13 t. Administrators. nAmE to the premises of the subscriber,living U in Porter township, Heart' s Lo g Valley sometime in the month of October, 2 STEERS ono between 4 and 5 years old, red and white spotted ; the other is black, between 2 and 3 years old, and having a slit in the right ear and a hole in the left. The owner is requested to come forward, prove property, pay charges and take them away, otherwise they will be disposed of according to law. JOHN BLACK. November 27, 1849. VERY IMPORTANT. THE BRIDGE TOLL REDUCED, And another and the Latest Arrival of NEW GOODS ./1T DORSEY 4, .111.8GUIRE'S CHEAP STORE, pORSEY & MAG UIRE, thankful for past favors, most respectfully inform their old customers and the public in general, that they have just received snot her large assortment of FAIL and WINTYR Goons, consisting of ovory yariety, of Ladies & Gentlemen's Dress Goods, and goods of all kinds usu ally kept in the most extensive stores. Groceries, Hardware, Queensware, 4.c. ROOTS, SHOES, lIATS&CAPS.*_\ READY-MADE CLOTHING, &c. &c. &c. &c. &c. &c. ell and examine our Goods. Huntingdon Dec. 4, 1849. The anglo-Saxons have Come again I GRAND EXHIBIT! iNI T HE Public are respectfully informed as ton have just received the largest and beet assort ment of Fall and Winter Goods ever brought to this place, comprising all the various articles generally kept at other stores, with the addition of a great many articles nev- or offered for sale in this place. Their stock con s. te of CLOTHS, CrISSIMERES, Sattinetts, Vesting., Tweed cloth, Kentucky Jeans, Canton Flannel, Flannels of all colors, Table Diaper, Mustier, Calicoes, Ginghams, Maudlin de mines, Cashmeres,Merrnoes, A Ipaccas, Silks, Mull Jacconet and Cambric Muslin., Linen Cambric, Silk mai cotton handkerchiefs, Fur niture check & calicoes, gloves, Shawls and Trimmings. LADIES' SHOES, /lien's and Boye'Boots and Shoes, Cloth and Glazed emu, Cravats and Suspenders, Looking Glasses, bed Blankets, Carpets, &c.— 'They have also an extensive assortment of Groceries, Hardware, and Queensware, They here a lot of Bonnets of the very latest style. They have also a groat variety of Cedar Ware, ouch as Tube, Buckets. Baskets of all kinds. SALT, FISH, and PLASTER. All of these articles will be sold as low as they can be bought at any other establishment east of the Alleghenies. They are determined to sell off their old stock of Goods at and under cost. Look out for bar gains ! Huntingdon, October 30, 1849. CO.LIA al) ci 6s A GENERAL assortment of groceries just opened and for sale atCoNNlNcm.tat's Gro cery and Confectionary establishment, directly opposite the Post Office, Huntingdon. November 27, 1849. LEMON EXTRACT. PURE Concentrated Extract of Lemon, a genuine article for sale at CUNNING HAM'S, opposite the Post Office. November 27, 1849. FRESH TEAS. A PRIME article of Black Tea, Young Hy soon, Imperial and other Teas, just opened atCUNNINGHAM'S. November 27, 1819. CHEESE. A SUPERIOR article of Cheese just receiv ed at CUNNINLIHAIVI'S. November 27, 1819. Whittier, the Quaker Poet, has written the following beautiful lines, to welcome Frederi ka Bremer to America t To Frederika Brand'. ET J. 0. WHITTIER. Welcome from thy dusky Norland, Daughter of the Vikings bold / Welcome to the sunny Vineland Which they sought and found of old Soft as lapse of Silga's waters, When the moon of Summer shines, Strong as winter from his mountains, Roaring thiough the Northern pines, Swan of Aho ! we have listened To thy saga and thy wag, Till a household joy and gladness We have known and loved thee long By the mansion's marble mantel, By the long-walled cabin's hearth, Thy sweet thoughts and Northern fancies Meet and mingle with our mirth, Anil o'er weary spirits keeping Sorrow's night watch, long and chill, Shine they like the sun of Summer, Over midnight vale and hill. Sweet eyes smile for us in Norlandi Household forms we love are there; In their bitter grief of parting ; And their bridal joy we share. We alone are strangers to thee, Thou our friend and teacher art ; Come and know us as we know thee, Let us meet thee heart to heart I To our household homes and altars, We, in turn, thy steps would lead, As thy loving hand has led us O'er the threshold of the Swede. MONOPOLY ; Or the way Bill Green helpt get oat the The young ladies had collected at Mrs. Frugal's for the purpose of assist ing her in "getting out a quilt." Of course the young men found out excu ses for being there ; some to court, some to see, some to be seen, some for fun, and some to kill firm?. ; but, Bill Green was there for the identical purpose of "helping to get out the quilt."He was a soft handed, taper fingered, assuming kind of what pm might call—in his own estimation—"a ladies' man." The weather was very cold, and it Was some what difficult for a bashful young man to get to the fire; nevertheless Bill was thar, on the side of the quilt text to the fire ; monopolizing the conversation, and to some extent, very much to the annoy ance of some, the fire too. There was some warm policy in Bill's volunteer ing to help quilt—he could have a seat, and with a little impudence, (an abund ant supply of which he had always on hand,) he could be next to the fire. Aniong those excluded from the fire was Dick Justice, he was a native Tex 'an. Ho had just returned from a wild cat hunt, and was as cold as a miser's charity. Now, there was as much dif ference in Bill and Dick, as there would be between freezing to death and being roasted alive in a bake oven. Dick was a full blooded Texian—none of your im ported stock. Dick had an old grudge against Bill, and just at this phenomenon of frigid weather, he had no inclination to keep cool, and let Bill monopolize the con versation and more than his portion of the fire; under the pretext of being there to help quilt. The ladies Were shivering with cold. "Boys," says Dick, "I'll have him out, and we'll all see some fun as a coin. pensation for my trouble. Whenever you hear a mighty fuss in the quilting room—you'll all scatter, every one of you ; and, as soon as you see Bill come out, advise him to run, to travel for his life." " Good, good," unanimously exclaim. ed the boys. Dick walked, or rather rung himself into the room where they were quilting, and took a seat just back of Bill's chair. Bill forgot that he had " come there for the identical purpose of quilting,' and had turned round facing the fire, and was giving the ladies, (the gentlemen being excluded for want of room,) a brief history of a college life and pic nic parties. In the meantime Dick had slyly tied one skirt of Bill's overcoat to the corner of the quilt. Then he placed himself right between Bill and the fire, and commenced telling about " killin' Mexicans, shootin' injins and huntin' bars,'—without stopping to punctuate his story, or looking to see if any one was listening. He was determined to attract Bill's attention by monopolizing a little himself. Bill endured the in trusion until his toes, and his interest in his story were waxing cold. He then with'a long, flowry prelude to the com mand, very abruptly ordered Dick to stand a little on one side if he pleased, and watt till he finished his conversation before he commenced telling about his injins, bars," Sec. . " Heaven and yearth !" said Dick "Bill Green is that you 'I You are the very specimen of human natur I have (-. , l, 40nrivi. been wanting to get hold of to petrify as a sample of modern exotics. Now, if you dont leave here in less time than it would take a wild cat to devour a goslin, I'll make a momentary scabbard of your body for old Bowie And with a yell that caused scores of shrieks from the ladies, he made at him with an old Bowie in his hand. Bill saw the knife, that was enough for him; he made a bounce and a spring, that was but little retarded by the slender threads with which the quilt was tack ed in the frames. "Stop him, stop him," cried Dick cutting and tearing the ireads that im peded Bills escape, pretending that he was trying to cut his way to him. " Murder! murder !" cried Bill. "Run, Bill, run," shouted the boys vvith a fit of laughter that thawed their joints, and produced a market for ped• tars in the thread and button line. • " Mercy, mercy," screamed the la• dies. " 011 5 my quilt," said the kind lady " Catch him !" said Dick. "Murder, murder I"Crled Bill at the top of his voice, and disappeared with as much speed as the dread of steel and the encumbrance of a quilt would per mit, The cotton may be seen to this day, sticking to the plum bushes in the neighborhood through which Bill made his escape. Elegant Extract. At the Great Railway Convention held in St. Louis, to consider the prac ticability of communication between the Atlantic and Pacific, the Hon. Thomas Hart Benton made a speech of immense length, but of intense interest through out, concluding with the following lofty and inspiring conceptions of the future glory and destiny of the United States: " We live in extraordinary times, and are called upon to elevate ourselves to the grandeur of the occasion. Three and a half centuries ago, the great Col umbus—the man who was afterwards 'tarried home in chains from the New World which he had discovered—this great Columbus, in the year 1492, de parted from Europe to arrive in the east by going west. It was a sublime conception. He was in the line of suc cess, when the intervention of two con tinents, not dreamed of before, arrested his progress. Now ' in the nineteenth century, mechanical genius enables his great design to be fulfilled. In the be ginning and in the barbarous ages, the sea was a barrier to the intercourse of nations. It separated nations. Me chanical genius, in inventing the ship, converted the barrier into a facility. Then land and continents became the obstruction. The two Americas inter vening have prevented Europe and Asia ' from communicating on the strait line. For three centuries and a half this ob stacle has frustrated the grand design of Columbus. Now in our day mechan ical genius has again triumphed over the obstacles of nature, and converted into a facility that which had so long been an impassable barrier. The steam car has worked upon the land, and to a degree far transcending the miracle which the ship in barbarous ages, work ed upon the ocean. The land has now become the facility for the most distant communication, the conveyance being invented which annihilates both time and space. We hold the intervening land; we hold the obstacle which stopped Columbus ; we are in the lino between Eur Ope and Asia. We have it in our power to remove that obstacle, to convert it into a facili ty, and to carry him on to his land of promise and hope with a rapidity, a pre cision and a safety unknown to all ocean navigation. A King and a Queen start ed him upon his great enterprise. It lies in the hands of a Republic to coin plete it.. It is in our hands— we, the people of the United States, of this' nineteenth century. Let us raise our 'selves up. Let us rise to the grandeur of the occasion. Let us complete the grand design of Columbus, by putting Europe and Asia into communication, and that to our advantage, through the heart of our own country. Let us give to his ships, converted into cars, a con tinued course, unknown to all former times. Let us make the iron road, and make it from sea to sea. Let States and individuals make it east of the Missis sippi, the nation make it west. Let ue now, in this convention, rise above ev erything sectional, personal or local. Let us beseech the National Legislature to build the great road upon the great national line which unites Europe and Asia—the line which will find, on our continent, the Buy of San Francisco at one end, St. Louis in the middle, the national metropolis and great commer cial emporiums at the other; and which shall be adorned with its crowning hon- VOL. XIV, NO. 50 or, the collossal statute of the great Columbus, whose design it accomplish es, hewn from the great mass of a peak of the Rocky Mountains, overlooking the road—the mountain itself the pe destal, and the statue a part of the mountain—pointing with outstretched arm to the western horizon, and saying to the flying passenger, there is the east' there is India. Western Eloquencer At the recent presentation of a flag from the ladies of Cass county, (lad.,) to the Democrats of Pulaski, the orator of the occasion, a big red headed, doable jointed fellow, made a most patriotic speech, from which we select the follow. ing touching morsel : 'FELLOW CITIZENS —Not alone in out district is Democracy with its head and oars erect like a geese, but the whole world is on fire with locofocoism, which is eight and a half per cent. worse than fihillerism. In France, where the very bricks of the human side walk were down-trodden and herringboned by the cunning of Whiggery, they now glory in being free France ! glorious France! where celestial soups arc distilled from discarded bootsoles, and the epigrastrum is titivated by the fragrancy of frogs stuffed with garlic, is now a free Re public I [Mr. G. fanned himself.]— Germany feels the shock to the bottom of her beet-vats; and the cry of free• dom, rousing the coiled tip sausages of Bologna, encompasses Italy with the links of liberty ! The time of despots is come! The dinner bell of tyranny has rung the oppressors to their last meal ! Henceforth and forever our an cestors snatched the burning brand of regeneration from the hands of timid posterity and planted it deep in the bow els of the future! Let it grow. 'But the end is not yet, (the end of his speech.) The Sirocco of a monied desolation sheds its crocodile tears over the infuriated instincts of toothless wretchedness throughout all England, and the cry among her thirsty and mil dewed millions is for 'gin I gin ! and no worth r Tilts Is Lbw ca wt. even while I speak to you, rings in the ears of Queen Victoria, and causes her to falter in her fruitful career! The depot of Russia turns Prussian blue at his fate, and Austria gapes in dismay at the owl that tells of the approaching knife that is raised to wrench her apart at the hinges. 'And is there no room for reform in free America 1 Can all dons they like) May some of us do nothing '1 Have we any liberty of consciencel Fellow cit izens! I hope that the news from Fn.- laski will sweep the vagrant act and oth• er black laws from Indiana--/ do. Gen tlemen, taket his flag! fair hands wrought it, and bold hands carried it ! Cherish it in your heart of hearts—and should I ever die, my proudest wish would be, to be interred in the meanest puddle in Pu• laski! A Mob Quelled By Prayer. The Pittsburgh Gazette relates the fol• lowing incident, as received from the late Sheriff of the country, Mr. Forsyth. Mobs have been quelled sometimes by discharges of musketry, but we never before heard of one subdued by prayer. Pittsburg mobs must be more reverent than those of some other quarters. Sometime in the course of the past year he, Mr. Forsyth, was called upon to exercise his authority for the suppres sion of a large disorderly meeting, some where in the suburbs of the city. At the time of his arrival on the ground there way every manifestation of an im• mediate and violent outbreak, and while he was deliberating about his duty in the premises, he was approached by the Rev. Mr. Kirkland who acted so conspicious a part in the late trials in our court, with a request that lie would let him try the efficacy of prayer on the excited passions of the throng. The Sheriff' replied that he doubted much the success of such an expedient, but that he was willing to make the ex periment.--Mr. Kirkland immediately, assumed a station a little elevated above the multitude, and poured fourth appnr• antly from the fullness of a Christian spirit, a prayer most appropiate to the occasion. immediately after he corn• menced, those arround him became calm some of them very reverently took oft their hats, and when, at the conclusion, he raised his hand and in the most sol etnn manner pronounced the benedcition with which congregations are usally dis missed, the mob dispersed as quietly as a congregation retiring from Church, leaving the Sheriff no further necessity for the exercise of his authority. SUIT FOR SLANDER. —Tile trial of Judge Pierce, for slandering a clergyman at Brooklyn, has resulted in a verdict of six cents damages sad six cents costs.