THE JOURNAL. °wittier TRINCIPLIES—SUPPORTED BY TRUTH.] HUNTINDDOS, TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1850. TERMS : The "HONTINODON JOURNAL" is published at the following rates, viz $l,l a year, if paid' in advance ; $2,00 if paid during the year, and $2,30 if not paid until after the expiration of the year. The above terms to be adhered to in all cases. _ . . No subscription Liken for le''s than six months, and no paper discontinued until all nrrearages are paid, unless ut the option of the publisher. DEMOCRATIC WHIG COUNTY MEETING, The. Democratic Whigs and all friends of the National and Sate administrations, of Hun tingdon county, are requested to meet in.COUN TY MEETING on Tuasiva EVRNINGI, APRIL 9,1810, for the purpose of choosing a Represen tative Delegate to the Whig State Convention, to nominate a candidate for Canal •commission'- er, and selecting Conferrees, to meet similar Conferees from the counties of Bedford and Blair, to select a Senatorial Delegate to said Convention. A general attendance in request ed. By order of the County Committee. • JAS. CLARK, Chairman. W. B. Zeigler, Sec'y. New Advertisements. B. & W. Snare have I eCeiVell a new stock of spring and Summer Clothing. H. W. SMITH has opened a new Book and Stationary store. J. WILICIISELHAT23I will offer a great variety of Spectacles, Bre., in this place during April Cuart. JOHN STONE & SONE, Philadelphia, advertise Spring Millinery. The Commissioners of Broad Top Railroad Company advertiee a notice. J. PALMER & CO. Philadelphia, advertise Fish, Salt, &c. SCOTT'S Jewelry Store has been removed. See card. Notices relative to Spruce Creek and Philips bong Turnpike road company. Gov. Johnston and Slavery. On Friday last Gov. Johnston transmitted to the Legislature a special message, on the sub ject of Slavery, a somewl.at extended notice of which will be found in our Harrisburg fetter. The message is too long for publication this week, hot shall appe4r in our next. It is a bold and manly expression of Pennsylvania senti ment, ably written and dignified in its tone. Gov. Johnston is a clear headed statesman, and on the subject of Slavery, as on every other question, he truly reflects the views and feel ings of the masses of his native btate. All praise to our worthy Executive—the honor and interests of the old Keystone are safe in his hands. Tux RAILROAD. —The Pa. Ratlroad is begin ning to doe very fine business in the way of car ry:ng passengers. The cars now run to Sha ver's Aqueduct, eleven miles east of this place, and they daily bring to that point passengers Su ffic ient to crowd two packet boats. We are pleased to sea this evidence of prosperity on this road. It deserves it. The road is well built; the cars are the best we ever rode in, and the fare is cheap--.onlc three cents per mile. When completed, we venture to predict, that the Pa. Railroad will do the largest business of any Railroad in the cuuntry. It will be the great thoroughfare between the East and the West, and will yield a handsome profit to the stock holders who risked their capital to start and carry on this great enterprize. Gen. 8, D. Karns. The travelling public will be gratified to know that this gentleman continues to run the packet . 4 Wm. Colder" between Hollidays burg and Shaver's Aqueduct. A few eve nings s' nee we had the pleasure of making atrip on his Packet from the last named point to this place. As usual, we found every thing in the best order. A few minutes after going on board a supper was served up for the passengers that would have done credit to any of the first class Hotels. And then Karns is so obliging and attentive. After getting the passengers com fortably located on his boat he always looks about to see if there are any whose health seems to require extra attention. If so, he never fails to present them with schriething reviting and salutary in its etlect. In skirt Gen. Kerns Is the prince oT good farms, and We heartily wish him a most abundantly sifecearld Season. CONGRESS. During the past week the Census Dili ieiert.; ad some consideration in the Senate, and thi bill to supply the deficiencies in the appropria tions, was discusssed in the House. The Sla very discussion, however, occupied the pcinci. pal portion of the time. The South is becoming clamorous for a compromise, but what kind of a compromise will suit them, is not yet made manifest. Mr. Webster's great speech, it is said, is very acceptable to the south, but on the other band the North will not stand by its doc trines. Indeed we cannot see how any North. ern representative tan consent to go with Mr. Webster in the wholesale concessions which he proposes to make to plavery. The plan pro. posed by President Taylot in his California message is the only compromise that we would consent, ac a citizen of the North, to favor. Let California be adinlnol, and when the proper time arrives, we will talk about New Mexico, Deseret, dec. And as on all other questions, let the voice of the majokty role, and like good Republicans, let the minority quietly acquiesce. Tut Cirs op LzwisrowN.—A bill incorpo rating the borough or Lewistown into a city, passed the House on Tue=dw:• last. Gnat rt.:~tt•O, ti•if The Legislature.--Private Legislation. We spent a day or two at Harrisbtirg ddring the past week, and after attending to'alittle private business, We took a look at the Legisla. tare. And we must confess, that with a few honorable exceptions, we were not faibrably impressed with either the honesty or capacity of the members. The majority of the members, especially of the loOter House, appear to be the smallest kind of narrow minded politicians. Their aim is rot the public good, but hcw they may acqUire a little temporary popularity at home or most effectually thwart their politi cal. opponents. The Speaker's Chair is filled with one of this class of politicians. In all our experience, we never seen a Speaker of the House of Representatives for whom we did not entertain some degree of respect, until the Chair has been filled by John S. itlcCalmont. He is a most perfect specimen of arrogance anti vanity combined. When seated in his chair, ohe would suppose from the peculiar curl of his lip and the forbidding expression of his critintenance, that some (Airfoils matter was in contiguity with his olfactory organ. The busiresi nailer consideration was all of a private hharactet. business has to remain in the back grou'ild; while every slay ' private aces " too numerous to mention," grant ing exclusive privileges to the fevi and infring on the rights of the many, are passing without a dissenting voice! if an individual wants to overreach his neighbors, and there is no law to protect him in doing so, all he need do is spend the winter at Harr IsbUrg,pa) a little at tention to some knave or fool who barmen's to disgraCe some ohs of the many unfortunate counties of the Commonwealth, get him to read a bill in place to accomplish his purpose, and it becomes a law without perhaps a half dozen members of either House understanding its pro visions or its effects upon the community in terested. For the truth of this assertion, we appeal to all who huge pxid any attention to the doings of our Legislature for a few years past, and especially during the present session. And the worst feature of all is, that none but the rich are favored with a grant of these exclusive privileged. All the Locofoco rant against cur porations and exclusive privileges with which the people are entertained, on the eve of every election, is but hypocritical cant, intended to deceive. Go to Harrisburg during the session, and you will there see Locofoco members the most active in promoting the private Legisla tion so fiercely condemned before the people. But we must confess that members of both par ties are guilty of this sin, and we do not wish to screen any from merited censure. hots id att this to be remedied I We answer, by eledY.ing honest Men to the Legisla ture. Capacity should not b'e fhe ohly test in selecting representatives. Honesty and Un yielding morality should be prominent features in the characters of those selected to make Laws. " The greatest good of the greatest number," and not the " greatest good to myself and a few exclusive friends," should be the mottd of every Legislator. It is high time that Hie people should wake up to the importance of this matter. A chw years more of the kind of Legislation now in fashion at Harrisburg, 'will strip the veople at large of all their rights, and transfer them to the ifessigniw, artful few. We may recur to this subject again. Go IV Toll Bridge l--Free Bridge it gsfining on yoii Early in this month an act "relative fo' bridges," on the Juniata, passed both branches of the Legislature and became a law. At its provisions may be interesting to many of our readers, we give it entire, as folio ws SECTION 1. Be is enacted, Th at it shall not hereafter be lawful to erect any free bridge over the Juniata river or its tributaries within the distance of one mite from any Toll bridge constructed by any company incorpora ted by this Commonwealth I Provided, That in case the County Commissioners of arry ceun county in which such *roll Bridge may be situ ated, shall be desirous to purchase the same, for the purpose of malting it a free Bridge, they may offer the owners of said bridge such a sum for the same as three competent disinterested persons (to be chosen one by each of the parties and the third •by the two persons thus chosen) may after n careful view thereof, determine it to be worth; and should said company not ac cept the said offer (which may be made in wri ting to the President or Secretary of said com pany) within fifteen days after it shall he made, as aforesaid, then, and in that event, it shall be lak•fnl for said Commissioners, or any associa tion of individuals, to erect a free bridge or bridges wherever they may see proper over the said river or its tributaries." Last week, however, the following amend ment, explanatory of the above act, passed both Houses, and way signed by the Governor, as follows : That the act passed ttie 11th day of March, 1850, entitled 'an Act relative to Bridges,' shall not be so construed as to prevent the erection of a free bridge within the distance of one mile from uny Incorporated toll bridge which shall have enjoyed the rights and privileges of said act of incorporation, for a period of fifteen years." Adjournment. The Pa. 'telegraph sky , , —The House of Rep resentatives intik up ou Thus situ, the resolu tion for a final ailjoifrinnent. 'rho day apparent ly agreed upon was the 9th of April, though no final vote was taken. We have no doubt, but that will be the day ; though thefe is an appar ent effort making in some quarter, us is evident by not taking up the important bills, to prtilong the session. The people have to pay the piper; andlor a majority of the Members of the pres ent House, one dollar and fifeveenia is high per dices pay, especially with the perquisites which are said to be going. • 07 - The Stockholders of the Pennsylvania Railroad, at a special meeting held on thh 19th inst., resolved to submit thequestion of running the cars on Sunday, to a vote of ail the stock holders, the polls to remain open for thirty days. Irr The last Foreign News reports a down ward tendency in breadstuff's and cotton. No change as yet in Philudeludelphia market. Flour W selling for 51 7.5 per WA., and Wheat at *tete 07 feg Led. end Al I eat I ( wliite. Letter from Harrisburg. Correspondence of the Huntingdon Journal. 7 ; he Goverriorq Ales tage-Slavery Question, HAIIRISLIVRG, March 23, 1830. DEAR COL.: -1 am one day behind with my letter this week. Absolute necessity compelled the delay, but I trust it will reach you in time. The exciting topic of the day—the rights of the south and north On the question of slavery is now fairly before the Legislature. The States of Virginia and Georgia, some weeks since, forwarded to our Executive cer tain resolutions in relation 16 the preservation of the Union, the ihetitutidnof shivery, &c., and on yesterday Gov. Johnston handed those reso lutions over to the Legislature of our State, ac companied by a message, giving his views upon thotte interesting and important subjects. It so hatipened that at the time of the delivery of the Message the House was discussing the proprie ty 61 the repeal of the kidnapping law of 1847. As may be well supposed, the Message sadly discomfitted the pro-slaiery men. The tnessage is a earth, dignified,.and impar tial review of our la*s upon the ilubject of sla very, and a plain untarnished history of Penn sylvania's views and feelings. There is no ' rant- , -no braggaddcia—no "gammon," to use a homely but expressive term. It reviews the whole history of the institution of slavery ; how and why it was entailed upon our country. It proves beyond all controversy, that, while the fathers of our country found it engrafted and fastened upon us by the cupidity and oppression of the mother country, that they, guided by that patriotism and love of hiiman freedom with which they were so' deeply embued, hesitated not to proclaim, it a wrong of the greatest mag nitude; and actnated by that holy zeal for hu man fights, they early sought to circumscribe its limits, and to adopt such measures as they believed would finally wipe out the foul stain of human bondage from among the institutions of a people who believed that he alone was a "freeman whom the ttuth makes free." The message then recites the la - vs of our own State upon the subject, and demonstrates with equal clearness that our honest old com monwealth has never changed the views which our fathers and her children had teamed in that school which first taught tYniversal liberty to the bondsmen of every creed, of every clifire and of every color. It shows that her sacred love of human rights had never grow n Cold, that her honor and integrity had never been sacrificed or silenced by the cold and selfish claims of policy. Stern and unyielding in the cause of right, her voice was ever heard upon the same aide, and hef footsteps ever guided by that pure flame which was first kindled off Freedom's altar-fires by that great and good man who proclaimed that "all men were created free and equal." An allusion is then made to the wrongs that Pennsylvania has received at the hands of her sister States, or the National - government, to gratify the caprice of some of those States ; and in a few brief sentences, then shows how meek ly and patiently she has borne those injuries, and in none of her complaints mingled threats against this glorious Union ; that the chief end and aim of her national being, has been, to make more firm the tie that binds us together as one rretrple ; and to make universal those holy truths WhiCh Duff common' fralteis Write in their own red blood upon a ihonsand fields, & taught when the toils of strife were over, around their loved hearth stones, and prayed for at their family al tars. It is truly refreshing in these our days, when honest truth is hidden, and wary policy stalks abroad at noon day, to see the homely and wholesome sentiments of our faithful Common,. wealth proclaimed by our Executive. Every Pennsylvanian should be proud that her Govern or has risen above the time serving trick of the age, and fearlessly taken his stand in defence of the ancient land marks of freedom; and every honest Whig has cause to rejoice that he has been instrumental in displaying, in its pristine purity, the unfaded glory of our liberty loving State. No More Slave States. A Washington Letter writer says :- 64 There are nren who believe that the Missouri com promise line, with sundry declarations of fun damental doctrines, will answer the purposes of securing to the South the Territory south of the line, and the occupation ivy Slave labor and Under a Slave State Government, of the lower half of California. Ftirthermore, the South looks, perhaps, to the prospect of main taining the balance of power by further ac quisitions from Meticb, where Slave labor, in the cultivation of Cotton, Sugar and Tothico, would be highly profitable. With the slight est encouragement from the United States, the whole of Mexico might Le annexed without the firing of a hostile gun. In this view the Missouri comprothise litre is a matter of great and practical consequence to the Soria." Here, says the heading Journal, is a good and sufficient reason, if there were no other, why the North should never consent to run the IgissOuti compromise fine through to the Pacific. Concede this paint and it would open the dobY to new demands, new aggressions, new concpests, We all know that Texas was annexed and the Mexicali War brought about by the Sotith, for the avowed purpose of "diffusing" their pecidiar institution over a wider range, and maintaining the balance of power by the acqUisitien of half a doi,en new Slave States. Once establish the principle that all Territory . icqnired SOuth of a certain line shall be given O'vec to Slavery, and you again open the doot to War, Conquest and Annexation. To avoid all the evils that would unqueStionably arise, the North should with one voice determine that there shall be no more Slave States. Let this be Understood now, and we shall nor again be plunged into War for the acquisition of more Slave Territory. A Fight between U. S. Senators. A personal collision took place in Washing ton city on Friday the lath inst., between two T.T. S. Senators, which is thus noted by a city correspondent Thera was a personal collision last evening between Senators Foote of Mississippi and Bor land of Aakansas, in the vicinity of the Na tional Intelligenecr. It arose from a discussion on politics. Mr. foreland charged Mr. Foote with a desertion of Mr, Calhoun and of the cause of the South. To this Mr. Foote retort ed that Mr. Borland was n mere tender to Mr. Calhoun. More bitter words followed, and then Mr. Bor..land struck Mr. Foote in the face, and fol. lowing up the, blow injured him coneiderably. tie was carried into the Intel ligeneer office. Jt is reported this morning that mutual friends are already negotiating for an adjustment. Se, condom legent honoree. The Washington Union of Satarday night states that the differenCe between these gentle men VI, nee ir Tile British Party. The fact can no longer be disguised that the Locofocos are the British party of this country —the party that stand up for British at the ex pense of American interests. The British rep resentatives of the Locofoco party in the Penn sylvania Legislature—the Britiet representa tives of the same party in Congressand the Hnn. Henry L. Bulwer, the British Minister resident at Washington, all agree in opinion as to the policy of continuing the present rates of duties, especially upon Br:emu Inc.! The Locofocos in our State Senate, several days ago, true to their British sympathies, refu sed, by a strict party vote, to take up the reso lution offered by Mr. King, in the early part of the session, instructing our Senators and reques ting our representatives in Cdngress to use their influence in procuring important modifications of the present Tariff. So perfectly accordant is the action of the State Senate with the views and feelings dis closed in Mr. Bulwer's impudent letter, that the Harrisburg Telegraph very truly observes, ~o ne might believe our Locofoco friends, in that body had received their cue from its distinguished author himself. It may be, that the Minister's zeal in regard to thin mattde fe , l hint tOaddreag himself to the members of our State Legisla ture, in addition to urging his views upon the at teution of the President. In that sort of diplo macy, if the Minister is a good borer, he will probably be more successful than he will in accomplishing the legitimate objects of his mis sion. But be that as it may, the striking coinci dence exhibited in the action of the Locofocos in the Pennsylvania Legislature, and that of the British Minister at Washington, shows the ddep sympathy for British interests which is every where entertained by the leading members of the Locofoco party." The fact is forced upon the messes whd bade been deceived and injured, that the Loco Foto Tariff of 1816 is indeed a British Tarilf=a Mea sure so highly prized at the Court of St. James, that the Cabinet of her august Majesty Queen Victoria, have instructed their Representative at Washington to remonstrate against any change or modification of existing duties! Does not this exhibit, in strong light, the.BRITISH POL ICY upon which this Locofoco Tariff is based People of Pennsylvania, will you longer be deceived ? Can you support a set of unprin cipled politicians who advocate British interests in preference to tne interests of their own coun try I—who legislate for the benefit of foreign maufactures anti foreign paupers 1 If not, , come out from among the foul party'—take your place in the ranks of the great American Whig party —and let your voice go up with theirs in favor of American interests I A Locefoco Martyr. B. F. Baowet the Biographer of Gen. Cass— the calumniator of Gen. Taylor—the value of whose great services were so strongly urged upon the public by the Washington Union, and whose dismissal from office was trumpeted forth as a national calamity which his locofoco admi rers were about to qualify by giving him a val uable office in the House, has been arrested in Michigan upon that charge from which he late ly fled, of drawing money from the Treasury upon forged papers, and is on his way, in custo dy, for Washington. It is hoped that he has •lost nothing of his hold on the affections of the Democracy and the Union eators, THE CHOLERA AT TILE SOUT/1.--The southern papers contain frequent mention of the appear ance of the cholera in various directions, and in some places with extreme severity. We have already mentioned that in the village of Trinity thirty miles from Natchez, the fatality was so great that those who survived fled in terror, leaving the place depopulated. A party of forty-eight persons embarked at Memphis on an old "stock boat," and before they reached Natchez,, on the 25th of February, twelve of them had died or cholera. At West Baton Ro gue, La., there were eases of cholera on the 25th of February, but not very severe. At Mont gomery, Ala., on the 2d inst. there was consid erable alarm, owing to the appearance of the cholera dmong slaves on plantations dear the city. Fifteen tpr twenty cases had Occutted.=. Nothing is said in the New Orleans papers about the existence of the cholera in that city. A Year in Power. The Union yesterday contains an ar ticle which it calls a "Review of the Administration—the First Year.' In this review it undertakes to assign rea sons, grotving oat of the policy of the Administration, to account for the fact that "it was compelled to face Congress with majorities in both Houses against it." We can give the Union a better ex planation of these majorities. That in the &enate Viis hostile when President TArox came into power. That in the House arrises not from any merit or demerit of President TAYLOR or his Ad ministration. President TAYLOR is stron ger this day in the hearts of the Ameri can people thatr he has ever been. But there is a majority against MO in the House, growing out of— I. The combination at the North be tween the Locofocos proper and the Aurriition ists. 11. The combination nt the SYuth be tween the Lacofotbs proper nod the Dis unionists. The triple coalition of Locofoccism, Abolition, and Disunion, has been once represented in the person of WILLIAM J. BROWN—with what success is matter of history. We have no fears that a coali tion which can never be fittingly repre sented by any better man will ever make any permanent headway against Presi dent Ts vto R.—Republic. IMPORTANT SLAVE DECISION.--The Su preme Court of Illinois, in a case recent ly before it, discharged a slave on the ground that the State law under which he was arrested, is a nullity, because it assumes to legislate upon a subject mat ter over which Congress has exclusive • ir•sdiction Trial of Prof. Webster. The trial of Prof. J. W. Webster com menced at Boston, on last Tuesday, for the murder of Dr. George Parkman. In opening the case to the jury, Mr.. Clitlbrd, counsel for the 'government, made a succinct statement of the facts which it was his intention to prove.— These, he averred, established two prop 6sitions : Ist, that Dr. Parkman was murdered ; and 2d, that Dr..). W. Web ster committed the deed. Dr. Parkman would be proved to have been alive on Friday, the 23d of November, and was last seen to . Enter the medical college, ten minutes before two o'clock in the af ternoon of that day. He was a punctu al man, particularly at his meals ; had a sick daughter who he was tending, and on Whom he Was attendant. For her comfort he bird poschased some let tuce—difficult at that season to b btain— which he left at a store, intending to call for it afterward to carry home to her.— He entered the Medicirl college;trnd was not again seen.. The utmost search was made by his friends, aided by the entire police and liberal rewards ; but no per son had ever been found who had seen and conversed tVith him since that time. On Sunday, for the first time, Dr. Parktnan's friends learned from Dr. Webster himself, that he had bee' in company with him on Friday, between I and 2 o'cloek. On the 13th of Nov. were found in a prify fault in the Medical College, the pelvis and right thigh, to the knee, of a body corresponding to that of Dr. Perlman. On the evening after, were found in Dr. Webster's laboratory, in a ten chest, a thorax and left thigh; from the knee to the hips. After Ward were found, in the furnance of Dr. Web , ster, bones; d quantity of gold, and a block of inineeel teeth, None of fhe bones found in the furnace were dupli , entes of those found in the tea chest or vault. The teeth would be fully 41600- tied by Dr. Keep, as a se: which he late ly made for Dr. Perlman, and a mould would be shown Which exactly coat's- - ponded to a jaw botte fatted In the fur nace. The thotax was perforated in the region of the heart. There have been chemical applications of strong alkali to the remains, and the veins had not been ihjeeted *illr any perservative flu- This was the evidence going to shove that Or: Parkerften had been mur dered. On the second head, that the prison. er murdered Dr. Park man. Mr. Clifford went into a minute detail of Dr. Web ster's pecuniary relations of 1849., when he borrc wed money of him, and had been in debt and embarrasment ever since, and he would show that Dr. Warmer dishonestly endeavored to raise money of Robert G. Shaw and others ; an prop erty mortgaged to Dr. Park man, and that Dr. Parktnan regarded him as a dishon est man, and pressed him accordingly to recover his debt ; he alleged that it would be proved that Dr. Webster had made conflicting statements, and false ones, in relation to money mild to Dr. Parkman, find that at the time of the latter's disappearance, all of Dr. IVeb , ster's property was bound to him. Mr. Clifford also dwelt at great length ,on Dr. Webster i s conduct during the time of his arrest, and contended that a great number of circumstance. would be found irreconcilable with the supposi tion of his innocence./ A License Law that Works Well. Among other provisions of the license law of Wisconsin, is one which requires the venders of spiritous liquors to give bends, with sureties, to respond iiY dam ages to third persons sustaining dam ages that can be traced to the sale of li quor by them. Under this law a suit was instituted by one Loelcy Keyser against Joseph Heath and his sureties sod On the part of the plaintiff it was proved that the principle', Heath, sold sotne time in , the month' of October last, liquors at differetit times to Jacob Key ser, the husba'n'd of the plaintiff; that the said husband was attacked with de. lerium tremens in the month of NoVern. ber, and was the object of great care and attention on the part of his wife, from which care and fatigue she became sick, &c. The verdict of the J ury was for the plaintiff; 13100—the extreme of the jurisdiction'. A GOOD SUGGESTION.—The Register, a etatinch Whig paper published in Knoxville, Tenn., says : nAs the disuninnists to of holding a Convention at Nashville in June next, it has been suggested that the friends of the Union in the south, meet in Con vention at the same place en the 4th of July next, We are for this most hear tily and every other scheme for rebuking the mad spirit e treason to the constitu [tion, which is seeking to alienate the affections of the people from that bond of States that every American citiz'en should estimate as being above all price. Our motto is :--Down with the' Faction ists—Every thing for the Union." TEXAS AND THE UNION.—The Legis lature of Texas, just previous to its ad journment, passed an act providin g for the election by the people of four dele gates to the Nashville Convention from each of the two Congressional Districts, and voted down a resolution instructing said delegates to oppose every act on the part of said Convention which might tend to a dissolution of the American Union. LOUIS NAPOLEON GOING TO ABDICATE. —The Washington correspondent of the Charleston Courier, tells the following queer story: I learn that a letter has been receiv: ed here, from n gentleman in Paris, whd was formerly Minister from France to this country, stating that Louis Napoleon is in a sate of actual physical imbecility, that he is incapable of carrying on the Government, that he has been waited upon by a Committee representing the leading parties, and persuaded to abdi. date his authority as President. Tbd . letter further states that , ins Napoleon cotisented, at their sage" ion, to abdi cate in favor of the Duktiii Bordeaux, With a reservation df the Via of the Court de Paris. So the monarchy is like ly soon to be restored. GOLD HUNTING.—An incident •-*" related to us yesterday of an old man from Syracuse, N. Y., who had 41.4 r!. taken sick at the mines out on SacraMen to, and who having exhausted all hiA provisions, was in a most deplorable state. He went about from tent to tent among the miners to beg a mouthful to eat to keep him from starvation. The miners in scattering out, generally take a rod square; Which is considered the limits of their diggings. Entering a camp one tiny the old Man begged for a meal, and told his stork df ridt.ersity. "Let's give him a chnnee," said the . men, 'he's an old limn and is sick; what say you? let's help him out.' "Well, agreed ' I replied the party. 'Here, old,man,' said one of them "you may have that spot over yonder where you see that rock: so take your pick und go to work." The old man started out, rind oh the first day realized the sum of Sixty dol lars. This gave hint tie* hope; nhd his friends rejoiced with him at his good luck. The next day, however the old man was unlucky, and did not realize a tent. They told him to try again, how everi and he did so. In picking under the rock rift& the ekertlon of a Wholti day; the old man found what is called a 'hen's nest,' from which in on week he realized the handsome sum of $17,000. His fronds told him that he had bet ter stop now, as he was old, and start home. So he adopted their advice, and took the steamer at Chagres for' New York: We hope the old gentle man may live to enjoy his good fortune. 0. Pic. MRS. HOWARD.—This lady, wholorne month since, killed the paramour of her husband, Captain. HoWard.; at Cincinnati, has been appointed guardian of her chii dern, who, by the death of their father, have been left some $40,000 t►►otth of property: Mrs. Howard has recov erd entirely her reason, and made per sonal application to the court to be ap pointed the guardian. IMPORTANT DISCOVERY.-A nentnntot h vein of 'white ash coal, of saperi'ar 4ual: • ity, has been struck on the property of Dr. McCarty, a short. distance north of Port Carbon, Schuylkill county r in this State. It is from twenty to fifty feet in thickness, and as ft was struck on the . 6 saddle," as it in called, or where an up heave has throtva the vein near the sur face, they drove across it, through near ly yolk! Coal ; a distnnre of 93 feet. 'This is regarded as the begining of new discoveries of coal beds in that vicini ity, for which several costly explore. lions are now i'n rn.dgress: Awful Disaster. Buraing of the Stearnar St. John—Thin , ty ilersods Burnt to Death and Drown , ed, &c. MoNTaomiiir ALA., &reit 7th. The steamer St. John was burnt to the waters edge near Bridgeport, Dallas co., .on her upward trip . to Itlontgomervi at 6 o'clock on Tuesday evening. It is isiipposed that stout g 0 persons were burn( to death and drOWned. The fire was accidental and caught from the heat of the boilers. All the ladies on board numbering 7 or 8 were lost. Lieut.. Rice of the U. S. A., Yost some $250,- 000 ; several Californians also lost their all. The boat was insured fo7 $20,000. She cost $40,000. GkoactA.—The people of Cass coun ty, to Ciedrgia, have held a meeting, respectiVe of piny, in which they passed resolutions in favor of admitting Califor nia into the Union rwith proper limits,' , rind protesting against the Southern Con- ; d'ention, proposed to be held at Nash: ville, as involving danger to the Union, MR. BENTON AND Mn. CALRODN.—rt is reported that gr. tienten has or+ dered a considerable number of Mr. Cnl: houn's speech, for distribution in Miss. ouri. He will not reply fo it. When. asked if he should answer, his response ivas—"l‘lo, sir; proves all f said of him, sir. l predicted the *hole thing, sir, in my Jefferson city speech, sir. Rank dis union, sir; nothing else, sir ;• all explain ed in my Speech, sir; here are tiVe copies sir i find the whole explained there, sir." Mae. JAreas K. Po - mt.—This lady has, we kitten, since the death of her has: band, almost entirely secluded herself from society. She seems to be ineon= solable in her grief. The huge pillars of the new house into which they had' Ijiust removed, when the melancholy bet reavement occurred, are still 'roped with black.