act lt against all Wept, fradulent er unjust claims which may be-presented for their adjudication. This tfistriet, which has neither voice nor vote in your deliberations, looks to you for protection and aid, awl I commend all its wants to your fin-ara ble consideration, with a fnll confidence that you will meet them not only with justice, bet with lib erality. It should be borne id mied that in this city, laid out by Washington, and consecrated by his name is locates! the Capitol of our nation, the emblem of our Union and the symhol °four great ness. Here also are situated all the public build ing. necessary fur the use of the Government, and all these are exempt from tnlntion. It should be the pride of Americans to render this place attrac tive to the people of the whole Republic, and con venient and safe for the transaction of the public business and the preservation of the public records. The Government should, therefore, bear a liberal proporition-of the burdens ofall necessary and use ful improvements. And, as nothing could contrib ute more to the health, comfort, and safety of the city, and the security of the public buildings and records, than an abundant supply of pure water, I respectfully recommend that yen make such pro visions for obtnining the same as in your wisdom you. may deem proper. The act passed at your but .session, making cer taM propositions to texas for settling the disputed boundary between that State and the Territory of New Mexico, was immediately on its passage, transmitted by express to the Governor of Texas, to be laid by him bonne the General Assembly for its agreement thereto. Its receipt was duly acknow ledged, but no official information has yet been re ceived of the action of the General Assembly there on; it may, however, lie very soon expected, no, by the terms of the propositions submitted, they were to have been aeted upon, on or before the first day of the present month. It was hardly to hare been expected that the se ries of measures passed at you last session, with the view of healing the sectional differences which had sprung front the slavery and territorial ques tions, should at once have realized their beneficient purpose. All mutual concessions in the nature of a compromise most necessarily be unwelcome to men of extreme opinions. And though without such concessions our Constitution could not have been formed, and cannot be permanently sustained, yet we have seen them made the subject of bitter controversy in both sections of the Republic. It required many months of discussion and delibera tion to secure the concurrence of a majority of Congress in their favor. It would be strange if they bad been received with immediate approba tion by people and States, prejudiced and heated by the exciting controversies of their representa tives. I believe those measures to have been re quired by the circumstances and condition of the country. I believe they were necessary to allay asperities and animosities that were rapidly alien ating one section of the country from another, and destroying those fraternal sentiments which are the strongest supports of the constitution. They were adopted in the spirit of conciliation, and for the purpose of conciliation. I believe that a great ma levity of our fellow-citizens sympathise in that spir it, and that purpose, and in the mein approve, and are prepared, in all respects, to sustain these en actments. I cannot doubt that the American peo ple hound together by kindred blood and common traditions, still cherish a paramount regard for the Union of their fathers ; and that they are ready to rebuke any attempt to violate its integrity, to dis turb the compromises on which it is based, or to resist else laws which have been enacted under its authority. The smies of measures to which I have alluded are regt.rded by me as a settlement, in principle and subtstanee—a final settlement of the dangerous and exeitingenhjects which they embraced. Most of these subjects, indeed, are beyond your reach, u the legislmion which disposed of them was, in its character, final and irrevecable. It may be pre sumed from the opposition which they all encoun tered that none of those measures was free frdm imperfections lout in their mutuid dependence and connection they formed a system of compromise, the most conciliatory, and best forth entire coun try., that could be obtained from conflicting section al Interest nod opinions. For this reason I recommend your adherence to the adjustment established by those measures, NW til time and experience shalt demonstrate the ne rushy of further legislation to guard against era- Mon or abuse. By that adjustment we have been rescued from the wide and boundless agitation that surrounded us, and hare a firm, distinct and legal ground to rest upon. And the occasion, I trust, will justify me is exhorting my countrymen to rally upon and maintain that ground as the best, if net the only moans, of restoring peace and quiet to the country and maintaining inviolate the integrity of the Un ion. And now, fellow-citizens, I cannot bring this eommuuication to a close without invoking you to join me in humble and devote thanks to the great Ruler of Natiors, for the multiplied blessings which he has graciously bestowed upon us. kits hand, so often visible in our preservation, has stayed the, pestilence, saved us from foreign wars and domes tic disturbances, and scattered plenty through the land. • Our liberties, religions and civil, have been main tained; the fountains of knowledge have all been kept open, and means of happiness widely spread and generally enjoyed, greater than have - fallen to the lot of any other nation. And wldle deeply penetrated with gratitude tbr the past, let us hope that his allwise Providence will so guide our coun sels, as that they shall result in giving satisfiaetion to our constituents, securing the peace of the coun try, and adding new strength to the United Gov ernment under which we lire. MILLIARD FILLMORE. Wasarnorost, DECEMBER 2, 1820. Railroad,Accidents. On Wednesday evening last, as the Night Line was proceeding front this city to Philadelphia, it was thrown from the track a short distance this side of Morgan's Corner, in consequence of one of the rails being out of place. There was no one in jured, however, with the exceptionof theeugineer, who was slightly scalded, and a passenger, who sustained a trifling wound in the head. The loco motive ran a short distance into a field, where it was almost entirely imbedded in a bank; and to gether with five new ears which had been placed upon the road but a few days before, and belong ing to the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, was' reduced to a complete wreck. When we take into 'consideration the number of passengers the cars contained, we cannot but look upon their escape as almost rairactiloqs. On the day following, the Slow Ling came in tallish= with a burthun train, near Walkertown, by which both locomotives were injured to a con siderable extent, so as to be rendered unfit for use for some time. The first of these accidents is of course attributable to the had condition of the road ; bat in the latter case it is evident there was mis management somewhere, as both trains were upon the same track, else the accident would not have occurred.—Lancaster Tribune. Cholera in Jamaica. Verbal accounts by the officers of a steamer just arrived from Jamaica, report the cholera to be in creasing there to a frightful extent. The loss of life is very great, the deaths per day being 150 to 200, the inhubitancsocen dying AO hat that coffins could uut be prepared to supply the demand; in sumo instances pits were obliged to be dug to bury the dead. Every precaution wee being used to *soli in wagon. THE JOURNAL. CORRECT PIIINCIPLES--81:PPORTED UT TRUTH, L L 1 4s t. t7 n,B HUNTINGDON, PA. Tuesday Morning, Dec. 10, MC TEILBS OF PUBLICATION: THIS "HUNTINGDON JOURNAL" is published at oho following rates, viz : If paid in advance, per annum, $1,"15 If paid during the year, 2,00 If paid after the expiration of the year,• • 2,50 To Clubs of five or more, in advance, • • • 1,50 THE above Terms will be adhered.to in all cases. No subscription will he taken for a less period than six months, and no paper will be discontinued un til all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the publisher. Ifir For a variety of new advertisements see advertising columns. -0 - ion. S. CALVIN Will accept our thanks for an earl• copy of the President's mosinige. • Cr A. J. JONES, Esq., the gentlemanly and obliging Postmaster at Harrisburg, will please ac cept our thanks fur copies of the President's mes sage in advance of the moil. r The Commissioners, to fix a site for .the County Poor House, will again assemble its Hun tington on the 14th inst. THANKSGIVING Der.—Thursday neit, (12th inst.,) is the day set apart by Governor Johnston, fur general Thanksgiving throughout Pennnsylva- President's Message. The annual message of President Fillmore will be found in this paper. It is an ably written, dig nified and business-like State paper. And not withstanding its brevity, every subject which prop erly comes under the notice of the Chief Executive is lucidly presented to the considered. of Con gress. On the subject of a Tariff, Internal Im provements, &c., the President shows himself worthy of the confidence reposed iu him by the Whig party. Our agricultural friends will be pleased to observe that the President is not un mindful of them, and recommends the establish ment of an Agricultural Bureau, to be charged with the duty of giving to this leading branch of American Industry the encountgement which it 83 well deserves. This recommendation is impor tant, and wiil be received with great satisfaction, throughout the entire country. It is useless, how ever, to go into extended comment on this Ines ' sage. All will read and judge of it for themselves. Post Master General's Report. The most important feature of the Post Master General's Report is the recommendation of a re duction of the inland letter postage to a uniform rate of three cents, pre-paid, rind five cents not pre paid, and that the Postmaster General be empow ered to make a further reduction to two cents, whenever, after the present proposed reductions, the revenues of the department shalt have exceed ed its expendetures for two consecutive years, five per cent. He also recommends that a reduction to twenty cents be made on correspondence to and from the Pacific coast, South America, the Eastern continent and its Islands, and points beyond either and to ten cents on all other sea-going letters ex cept when the rates shall be otherwise fixed by postal treaties. Ile. recommends a reduction on the postage of newspapers sent out of the States to one cent, and also a reduction upon pamphlets, periodicals, &c. THE U. S. Slur PENNSYLVANIA.—We learn from the National Intclligcncer, that the Secretary of the Navy has given permission to Stout the a- Love named vessel to cany articles to the World's Fair at London. The matter, however, depends upon Congress making an appropriation to meet the necessary expense; and, as the ship would be an admirable specimen of American naval archi tecture at the World's Exhibition, in addition to its superior capacity for the purpose for which a national vessel is to be sent to London, it is to be hoped that the required means wilt be promptly voted by the representatives of the people. rUIITiTER anon GEORGIA.—We learn that re turns of the late election for members of the Geor gia Convention have been received from upwards of eighty counties. The result is, that, with the ex ception of ten, all of them have elected the Union candidates. Their popular majority is said to be overwhelming. Whatever it is, it would have been greatly increased if the Democrats had con tested all the counties, and thus brought out a full vote. In some of the counties they presented no candidates, and in others made but a slight show of opposition. DnEADFUL ExmostoN !—A despatch from Charleston (8. C.) under ante of Dec. 1, says:— "The steamer Antoinette Douglass burst her boi ler on the Alabama river, on Tuesday morning last, killing 30 persons, and wounding 28-25 mis sing." Pennsylvania. Interests. "More than three-fourths of our population," says the President, in his late message to Congress "are employed in the cultivation of the soil." If this is true of the United States, it is specially true of the State of Pennsylvania, which produces so largely, wheat, corn, provisions, wool, that, and other staples that are the original elements of wealth. Pennsylvania sheep produce soma of the finest "fleece" ever fabricated, and well entitled to the ancient name of "golden fleece." Her flour commands a preference In the markets of the world and her rye whiskey forms the basis of rivers of French brandy. Commerce, manufactures and mechanics all draw their wealth originally from ag riculture, which furnishes the raw material for fab rication. Let farmers think of this and "speed the plough"—and let more operatives cultivate farms, as inviolable "homesteads."—Ledger. EDUCATION IN SOUTH CAROLINA.—Govenior Seabrook, in his recent message to the Legislature says that over twenty thousand persons in South Carolina era ignorant of the alphabet. Report of Secretary of the Interior. The report of the Secretary of the Interior is a highly interesting document. We give an abstract of its contents, which we clip from the Daily Sun, on follows It recommends further legislation to define the duties and powers of the Department, and the cre ation of the office of Solicitol to decide queStiOns of law upon appeals, subject to the revision of the • Secretary. .The estimate of the Px penses of the Pepartraent tbr the next fiscal year, exceeds that for the pres ent $1,728,670 . 68; the Secretary fully explains the reason for this increase. There are now 10,758 persists on the pinsion rolls, and the amount expended for pensions du ring the year, was $1,400,000. The number of hind warrants issued for services in the revolution ary war, is 12,588; in the war of 1812, 28,878; number of claims for laud warrants and scrip in lien thereof, for services in the Mexican war, 84,- 705. The number of claims presented under the Bounty Land law of September lint, up to the sth of November but, was 9,468, and the number is increasing rapidly. The whole number of claim- ants will be about 250,000. The report of the Commissioner of the General Land °lke, shows that the aggregate amount of lands sold, located by warrants, and otherwise dis posed of in the Ist, 2d, and part of the ad quarters of 1850, is 2,815,366, 42 acr es. • The appointment•of a Commissioner is recom mended to adjudicate conflicting-land claims in California, and also that the mineral lands be di vided into small tracts, and sold in fee simple, to the highest bidder at public auction.• The extent of the lots should depend on the apparent richness of the mines; but they should be small enough to afford all an opportunity of becoming bidders. Our relations kith the Italians will demand the prompt attention of Congress. The annexation of Texas and the treaty with Mexico have added about one hundred and twenty-four thousand per sons to our Indian population—many of them fierce in their dispositions and predatory in their habits. Agents have been appointed for the Indian tribes of California and of Oregon, and two special a gents have been commissioned to co-operate with the resident agent in Texas, in conciliating the In dians of that State. Three commissioners have been appointed under the same act, to accompany the Mexican Boundary Commission, for the pur pose of obtaining information in regard to the tribes on our southwestern frontier, and, if possi ble, to establish friendly relations with them. It is to be regretted that no authority was conferred by law for the establishment of resident agents is New Mexico. The Indians of that country arc the most savage within our boundaries. It is es sential for the fulfilment of our treaty stipulations, as well as for the protection of our own citizens that agents should be sent among them, who can exercise a restraining influence over them. The importance of a great national highway to the Pacific is considered, and the propriety of an immediate examination of the country, to deter mine the practicability and probable cost of the work, is suggested. The establishment of an Agricultural Bureau is recommended, and the purchase of a farm, to be managed under the direction of the bureau, sug gested as an auxiliary in illustrating the hest modes of culture. The Secretary adds that, if this idea be favorably received, Mount Vernon might with great propriety become a model farm, to il lustrate the progress of that pursuit to which the Father of his Country was so much devoted. The returns, coming in daily, give assurance that the census gill be completed within the time limited by law. The immediate completion of both wings of the Patent Office is urged, for the accommodation of the Department of the Interior and the officers thereto attached. Congress. The second Session of the Thirty-first Congress was opened on Monday of last week. In the Sen ate forty-two members were present. In the House a large number of members answered to their names. The old officers holding over in each branch, there was nothing to do by way of organi zing but call the roll and appoint the usual com mittees to wait on the President. The President's Message was transmitted to both Houses between three and four o'clock on the first day of the session. After the reading the usual number of copies were ordered to be printed. Be fore adjourning the members of the House drew lots for scats, and thus closed the proceeings of the first day. On Tuesday little was done in either House. In the Senate the acting President was authorized to appoint all the Comtnittecs. Col. Renton gave notice of a number of bills which he' intends to of fer. Athong them is ono granting lands for the construction of a Railroad and common highway front St. Louis to Situ Francisco. In the lions:: Mr. DANNER, of Pa., elected in place of Dr. Nes, from the York and-Adams district, appeared and took his seat. Mev, Mr. GURLEY was re-elected Chaplain. On Wednesday. the President of the Senate an nounced the' Committees. They are the same as last year with one or two exceptions. An election for Chaplain was then held, resulting in the choice of the Rev. C. M. BUTLER, Episcopalian. Ten thousand extra copies of the Message and docu ments were ordered to be printed. Mr. Cooper announced the death of the lion. Chester Butler, of Pennsylvania, and pronounced a feeling eulogy upon him. The usual resolution were passed and the Senate adjourned. In the House, Mr. Butler's death was announced by Mr. Chandler, coupled with a beautiful eulogy, similar resolutions were adopted to those of the Senate, and the Rouse adjourned. On Thursday, the Senate adopted aresolutioo to print the President's Message and accompanying documents in two volumes. The several parts of the Message were on motion referred to the appro priate committees. After the transaction of other unimportant business the Senate adjourned over to Monday. In the House the Speaker was authorized to ap, point the Standing Committees. A resolution was adopted raising a special committee to consider and report upon the Bounty Land Bill of last session. Mr. Schenck offered a resolution that thecommit tee on Ways and Means be instructed to inquire and ascertain the requisite expenses for fitting out the ship Pennsylvania, to send to England with works of art and productions of the United States to be exhibifetAttltd , rtiii.• Objection' was made, and the motion lies over. The House then adjourned to Monday. Jenny Eiiad- Jenny Lind, the "§wedish Nightingale," capti vates till who have'the good fortune to hear her sing. A correspondent orthe Lancaster Tribttntr, who attended one of her recent concerts in Phila delphia, dins writes r What shall I write of the singing? Words 104 their sympathy, when they attempt to describe the. vocalism of Jenny Lind. It is past all human con ception. At times like the tinnily)f a thousand silver hells, hying -away in the notes of the softest flute. Anon it whispers with .the sweetness of the evening zephyr; then breaking forth will m the wind, and clear us the trumpet. But the most re markable feature in her. voice, is the echo. Yon have heard the echo of a deep cavern, or sonic ro mantic vale. 'Jenny Lind excels them both. It is astonishing. l)on't talk of • the music of the spheres, or the song of the stars ! Jenny Lind, as the music-minister of heaven, has caught the per fection of the one, and the inspiration of the other, and blends them into one glorious flood of sound and beauty. And theta, 'Rothe, Sweet Home." She sang this little song with a fervor, a pathos, and an originality, which elicited the most raptu rous applause. I had a near view of the songs tress, and noticed distinctly the feeling which evinced itself during this effort. The audience hung with trembling emotion to each note, and the Swedish Girl gave vent to her heart in tears.— '•Home, Sweet Home," struck a tender chord in the bosom of every one present, which reverbera ted to the yoke of memory, and the dear thoughts of that dearer spot. "Home, Sweet Home," ap pealed to the heart of Jenny, and slit leo. She sang, sad thought of Sweden, she looked as if she had caught the image of those dear faces who were the friends and companions of her early days. I would not have missed the hearing of this song, for the prolonging of life fur years. In personal appearance, Jenny Lind is common place, and reminds one of many a familiar, bene volent thee, which we often behold in society.— She is not handsome, but possesses true, natural beauty. Her eye is bright, and sparkles with the tire of the sours purity. Her mouth is large, and well formed, and the general contour of her figure is that of a woman who does not know her attrac tion or. her real worth. She is modest without being prudish; frank and joyous, hut devoid of levity. Indeed, I scarcely trust toy pen, in at tempting to describe Miss Lind, for fear it might be guilty of committing ludicrous extremes. Hear and see her by all means, or miss the greatest en,: jOyment ofihred to us poor mortals. The Pursuit of Wealth. America has produced some eccentric characters whose morbid acquisitiveness has mead them the wonder of mankind: A recent instance is to be found in Illinois, in the person ofJacob Strewn, of Jacksonville, a very extensive,landlord and cattle dealer, and probably the .sealthiest citizen of the State of Illinois. He is .the owner of some forty thousand acres of land .inthe. State, and his agri • cultural and °than itusiness transactions have been of an extent correspthuling with his landed posses sions. Fur years he has been by far the most ex tensive cattle-dealer in that or any of the Western Stretes,.and bits, by continued and the most mire mined. exertions, accumulated a princely fortune. The. St. Louis Union says— Mr.. Strewn has been even more extensively known for his excentricities of character, than for his great wealth. For days and nights in succes sion he has been known to pursue his business without intermission, never sleeping, unless whilst riding in his saddle. He chose his wife, as he would a ,fitrin, or a hat of cattle, by mere inspection of her person, selecting her froth among her sisters, who were called to. the door at his request, and married her withoutauy more ceremony than was necessary to complete a moneyed transaction, and conform to the laws of the State. Everything with hint was a matter of money and business, pursuing these :It the sacrifie of everything else; indeed, at taching no value to anything which could not be measured by a pecuniary standard. The St. Louis Union of the 16th inst., states that Mr. Straws was brought down the Illinois river' the day before a maniac, in charge of some of his friends, who were trying to convey him to the Lu natic Asylum at Columbus, Ohio. His insanity was brought on by the terrible tasks to which every energy of his mural and body had been subjected for years in pursuit of wealth. In artier to induce him to travel in the direction of Columbus without violence, it had been neces sary, nays the St. Le a k paper, to deceive him by the promise of great rewards for accompanying his protectors. Even in 11. i, his all absorbing passion was predominant. muds to a large amount; with large penalties in ease of breach of contract, were readily executed, to secure hint the compensation agreed upon. Even before leaving the boat, and with the appearance of a correct regard to business he had the agreement read—re-read it himself— and called the attention of the bystanders to see that everything was correctly and explcitly under stood. "And this," continues the print above quoted "is the value of wealth ! Life, health, great en ergy, everything devoted to the utmost stretch to secure immense possessions and to enjoy nothing. Truly idler all, there are grouter slaves than they who come, and go, and labor at the bidding of an other. There ate those who are poorer than they who are fed by the slow and unwilling band of charity, and there are none more to be pitied than those who bow down in adoration of their countless thousands, knowing neither comfort, pleasure, rec reation or intellectual enjoyment in aught besides their treasures:" Hospital Destroyed by Fire. A despatch front Augusta, Maine, under date of Dec. 4, says: ~r ho hospital for the insane was totally destroyed by fire this morning. It is sup pwed that from twenty to thirty inmates perished in the Haines. The fire was caused by a defect in the chimney. The slam was first given by some of the lunatics as soon as the fire was discovered, but the keepers supposing the noise to have been made by some of the insane, such as they were ac customed to, gave no attention to it. QUEER DFCISION.-In the Sup. Court of Penn sylvania, at Pittburg, Chief Justice Gibson deliv ered an opinion in the cam where a Railroad Com pany took a man's house from him for the purpose of laying the rails on its site. The decision was in favor of the power mourned by the Company.— Judge Coulter dissented from his opinion, and said that a man's hon.° should be sacred, and should nut be taken by a private corporation against the ounce's consent, unless where the public safety absolutely required it. Judge C's opinion seems to us to be the more corret of the two.—E.v. Late News From Europe. New York, Dee. 4. The steamship Arctic, Captain Luce, from Liv erpool, lion arrived here, with four days later nova from Europe, having sailed on the 20th ult. Corn was tirmer, andtptotedat 30s 6d. for white and 315.-per.quurtcr for yellow. Floor maintained the Into rates. Wheat was improving. F. ugiali d: The political news generally is unimportant.— Thlt last accounts front the West highlands and Isles announce a failure of the potato crop to a very.cowidemble extent. It is the impression that a severe and very general distress will prevail in 1851. Parliament, ori Wetlunlny, was further prorog• ned to the 17th December. cerintut y... On the 15 th 'November, the Prussian troops eimcnated Kiel, which was immediately occupied by 'Baden troops. The, Thltssian troops were in full retreat from Baden. ,i,counts front Berlin have been received to the 7001. The Prince ofTrussia has been appointed to the chief command of the second, third,, and fourth eerie of the Army.— These corps are to hold the ground between the Oder and Elbe. Great excitement has bcew created among the Bavarian population of the Palatinate frontier, by false reports of Prussian invasion. The inlvices from Vienna are mare pacific. The Wurtemburg government has applied to the Em peror of Austria for troops to compel the refracto ry subjects to submit to lawful authority. The Itolsteiners advanced on the 14th ult., against the Danish lines, but retreated after losing several men. The Danish Are concentrated upon Sanderburg and arc fortifying their position at Ban. France. The Moniteur of Saturday published a decree of the President, calling under arms 40,000. mem :of the 78,500 young soldiers still at disposal of the contingent of the class of 1849. Some of the lead ing journals of Monday comment with surprise on the ordinance for increasing thmarmy, as being in contradiction with the Message of the President, and the less called for asthe German disputes are in a state of settlement. Private accounts state that the true cause. of.inarease is to be found in the revolutionary disposition of a portion of Switzer land, and fear lestrim withdrawal of Prussia troops from the Grand Duchy, Baden should attempt ano ther revolutionary or insurrectionary movement in that quarter. The4leurse on the 18th ult., was dull. The first volume of Harris, the new Supreme Court reporter, it being the 13th volume of the se ries called the Pennsylvania State Reports, is now out, and in the course of distribution to the profet , area Terrific and Destructive Tornado. LorolvaLE, Nov. 30, 1850. Ono of the most appalling and destructive tor nadoes which has been experienced in the Missis sippi V.iiiry fur several years, occurred about two o'clock in the afternoon, • It *wept over the town of cape Girardeau, Mo., situated en the Mississippi river, just below St. and demolished sonic seventy or eighty buildings, many of them the fittest and principal houses in the place. The Baptist and Catholic churches, and the Catholic convent were destroyed. Two of tha large and splendid telegraph masts belonging to the St. Louis and New Orleans Tel egraph Company were cracked, shivered, and brought to the ground with as much ease as though they had been stems. The steamboat Saranac, No. 2, which - had just rounded to at the wharf, hod her upper works com pletely blown off, and several persons on her were severely injured, and some it is probable, were drowned. The wharf boat was likewise blown front her moorings, and almost irreparably injured. In order that you may judge of the tremendous violence of the storm, I will state that a cow was unceremoniously lifted caller feet on terra firma, and deposited in the top of a tree, sixty feet front the ground. The loss of life by this awful visita tion cannot as yet be ascertained, but it is certain ly very great, us numbers are doubtless but Tied be neath the ruins of the fallen buildings. There are also a great many persons who are seriously inju red, and some of them are so crippled and maimed that they will never recover. The town is literally torn in peices, and looks truly wo begone. Many citizens who were this morning to be seen with light hearts and milling faces are to-night wrapped either in the anus of death, or else are weeping for their friends who have been thus untimely swept away. MURDER IN TIIE JAIL OF ALLEGHENY COENTy. --On Friday lust a colored lad aged fifteen years who had been committed to prison on a charge of larceny, was killed in the county jail under the fol lowing circumstances : Cox was in the sonic cell with James Kelly, a white boy, aged sixteen years. Jacox, also white, and Alfred Miller, colored boys. All were committed for larceny, and nono of them were over sixt,n years of age. On Friday eve ning about 7 o'clo,k, Kelly announced that he was going to flog Cox, us ho alleged, liar having told lies on him to Mr: Glenn, the jailer. lle procee ded at once to execute his threat by beating him with a stick after which he stripped off his clothes and placed him on the pipe used for heat ing the cells, burning him in the most horrible man ner. lle then beat him on the head, face and neck with a bottle which was in the cell. When they found Cox he was insensible; an alarm was raised, but it was too late. lie died at live o'clock on Satur day morning. A Coroner's inquest was held up on the body, before whom Butler, Miller and Jocose testified to the above related. The jury returned a verdict, that Cox had come to his death by blows and injuries inflicted by James Kelly. Cox was a small buy, and unable to defend himself from Kel ley's attack. The others were smaller than Kelley and it appears were afraid to interfere. We have never heard of a more cold-blooded and atrocious act committed by one so young.—Bilsbary Chron., ad inst. ANOTHER OF JENNY LIND'S GOOD DEEDS.— The citizens of Calais, Me., were much pleased and the heart of a needy woman cheered by the receipt ou Tuesday last, of a cheek on the bank fur $5OO drawn by Miss Lind in favor of Sarah W. Clark, widow of the late Joseph N. Clark, mute of the barque Sophia, of Calais, who lost his life on the 3d of September, in taking off the crew of the Swe dish barque Johanna, w 14.11 was in a shaking con dition. [For Aho JOUrII4 Our Borough. • "Night" has been more frequently "made hide ous," in Huntingdon, for the past few weeks, than for along time previous. Rowdyism seems to be the order almost every night M the week. Now thin should notbe so. The peace of the citizens forbid it, atul•the welfare of these engaged in it also calls ou the otlicemandorder loving citizens to #utti dawn. Boys 'are ; now frequently seen in foxiented• iu the evenings. Where do they get the liquor? Certainly not at our regularly licensed houses. Are there nay unlicensed haunts where the youth of our Borough are_beinpi deMortilized and ruined? RitsPicions plac'es sliotild be closely watched, and if any violation of law is discovered, let the guilty be duly punished. This street row dyism will be suppressed, end the came of it root ed out, if the citizens have any regard for their own peace and satety, and the morals and future pros pects of the rising generation of the place. • Let us, then, Mr. Editor, one end all make an etlbrt to give -a high and noble direction to the - ambition of the boys of lluntingdon Ronough. To rescue such as two about entering on a career of vies, and witinhem'aver to a virtuous and orderly course of life, should be deemed worthy the am bition of every good Cttiien. A CITIZEN Asti FRIEND OF mini-Bore. The Message.. The Ledger, a neutral paper saver "Philadel phia hailed.the•Ptesident's Message with a hearty welcome, as more adapted to her peculiar notions and interests thou any similar document that poli ticians have produced for• a series of years. Mr. Fillmore is opposed to land monopoly. He receom mends that "the mineral lands he sold in small parcels, under such restrictions as will guard most effectually against combinations of capitalists to oh - tain monopolies." This inn excellent suggestion." Again, the same paper says : "Benejolence al ways shines with double lustre when it conies from thosein power. President Fillmore has not for gotten the "old soldier" and his sufferings in . hit. recent message, in which he recommends to "the favorable consideration of Congress the establish ment of an asylum for the relief of disabled end destitute soldiers." Such . an institution is neces sary to rescue our country from the charge of want. of humanity." Law Reports. This volume, was printed at Lancaster by Ham - ugly & Co., and is remarkably well got up in style and appearance. The reports published a feW years ago will not bear comparison iu appearance with this volume. We congratulate the reporter upon the evidence of satisfitetion with which this volume is received. It is admitted by those who have read these reports that the industry, clearness, .and general ability displayed in this volume are highly honorable to. the new reporter.—Pennsyvanie Telegraph. Progress of Invention. In 1809 there was only one steam-boat in the whole world, now who could count the number?— They navigate the Nile, the Red Sea, the Ganges, the Clyde, the Hudson, the Ohio, St. Lawrence, the Mississippi, the Danube, the Rhine, the Thames and the golden sanded Sacramento.— America, Europe, Asia, and Africa, exhibit in eve ry steamboat a monument in the progrest of vent ion. In 1830 there were only thirty miles of locomo tive railway in the world. Now there are no less than 18,000 miles. America has no less than 7,000 miles, and will soon have 10,000 in operation.* Massachusetts alone has more than 1,000 and Pennsylvania 1,200; In 1830, there were only 15 miles of Railroad in the State of New York, now there are nearly 1600. Then the slow canal boat and stage coach would lazily up the Mohawk Val ley, and we remember well how it required snore time to whip an old bolter into a canter, than it now requires the iron horse to whistle itself from the crags of Cohoes to the rocky pass of thh Little Fulls. What with the Steamboat, t h e Railroad, and the Telegraph, as inventions for distancing distance, the ends of the earth are brought togeth er, civibration is fast binding its way into the most darkened corners of the earth.—Scisatfic Ameri can. IRON WORKS STOPPED. -The Allentown Iron works, in Lehigh county, Pennsylvania, were do sed on the sth of November, and all the workmen discharged. These furnaces have made as much as ten thousand tons of iron in ouo year; and in that time consumed 20,000 tons of Anthracite Coal 23,000 tons of ore, and 12,000 tons of Limestone. They were constructed with all the new improve ments, and were very advantageously situated on the Lehigh Oliver. The quality of the iron was so decidedly superior, that it always obtained the highest prices. But the price of iron under the present Tariff has dwindled down FO low that it will no longer pay expenses to keep the works in operation.—Reading Journal. IMPORTANT TO TANNERS OP LEATIIEL-ITCII- • ry NV. Ellsworth, Esq., says the Lafayette Jour nal, has shown us several specimens of leather, which were tanned under his own eyes, in tho space of ten minutes, by a process of which Mari on Hibbard of Rochester, New York is the inven tor. This statement may seem almost incredible, when it is considered that six, 'eight or ten months are required to tan leafier by the ordinary pro cess. Mr. Ellsworth has in his possession a pair of boots and a pair of shoes made from a raw hide is less than a day and a half, tanned by his new pro ems. The loather is finned by a compound of chemicals, and in time and materials is a saving of at least flee thousand per cent. over the pres ent slow method or snaking leather. Tho right, says the Journal, for Connecticut and. Massachusetts was sold for $500,000; Ohio for. $150,000; Michigan tar $100;000. This is un doubtedly ono of the greatest improvements of tho ago. The Mayor of Pfttsbtug. PITTSBURGH, l'a., Dec. 6th.—The trial of May or Barker closed yesterday, and resulted in his Le ing convicted of misdemeanor.