untingVon fiurnal. \\ \e:-‘• - ."."1 Wednesday Mormng, October 10, 1855. WILLIAM BREWSTER, EDITORS. SAM. G. WHITTAKER. 5 IT 18 TO YOUR ADVANTAGE. If you want help or domestics of nny advertise in the JOURNAL. If you want any kind of laborers, mechanics or clerks, advertise in the JOURNAL. If you want to exchange property, or to bor row money, advertise in the Jou I:NAL. If son want to rest o'r sell houses, lots, or farms, advertise in the Joyasst.. If you want to rent moms or offices, adver tise in tho JOURNAL If you want to dispose of your business, ad vertise in the Joutt.t. If you want any kind of employment, adve, tine m the JOURNAL. If you want a situation, advertise in the JOURNAL. Whatever you want, or have to dispose of, advertise in the Jot•avAL.. If you want to lead a happy life, keep "pos. ted" in the news of the day, have a pleasant wife and a pretty baby subscribe lbr the HUNTINGDON JOURNAL. OUR PLATFORM. Believing that modern Locofocoism and its inseparable ally, political Romanism, are inimical to the good morals of our peo ple, and the safety of our institutions, we declare inveterate and uncompromising ho stility to both; and we support our declar ation by maintaipng the following princi ples : Ist. 'We will at all times oppose any u nion or coalition with the Loco Romish par ty, and every other faction or party, which advocates ns it does, the spread of human bondage, over territory now free ; the per. petuation of the British Twill .of 1846 t the extention of our national domain by foreign conquettt ; the free importation of the effete population of Europe, or the re vival of the liquor traffic, in our already rum-cursed Commonwealth. 2d. We demand the restoration of the MISSOURI COMPROMISE, and the adoption of a TARIFF to protect American labor and devclopo American resources ; we contend for such modification of the naturalization laws as will keep foreign paupers and criminals from oar shores, and such am endments of the federal constitution as will secure the rule of America to known and tried citizens of She Republic ; . and we will, with all the energy we possess, war against the spirit of conquest, rapine and plunder commenced under the administra tion of James K. Polk, and winked at, if not festered and encouraged by our present rulers. Finally. To insure success is the signal and final overth row of Locofoecism and its Roman ally, we will advocate the union of alt their honest enemies—W higs, Ameri cans, Freesoilers and Republicans, and an open organization again.t the common en emy. The War in the Crimea. The latest intelligence from Europe is that anxiety was felt in London and Paris at tho last dates, in relation to the actual position of the Russians under Prince Gortschakoff, and the course that would be pursued by the Allies. One report mentions that Gen. Pelisier had refused an armistice to Prince Gortschakoll; who asked for one, in order that he might bury his dead. The French General said that he would bury the Russian dead himself and take the same care of the wounded that he did of his •own. He had also tel egraphed for instructions, should the Rus sian's commander offer to capitulate, inas much as the Russians had provisions for only fifteen days, and were short amuni than. The reply was, that ' , the Russians must surrender at discretion, lay down their arms, and give up the Allies, all the fortified places in the Crimea, including Odessea, with all the munitions of war contained in them, and without any dam age being previously done to the towns and fortifications." But these, it should be remembered, are only rumors. They nevertheless foreshadow the disposition of the s Allies, should they be enabled te ex act terms. The number of British officers killed in the attack upon Sevastopol was 20, wound ed 114, missing 1. Total 1-11. The number of men killed was 221 wounded 1599. Total 1817. According to this calculation the total of men and officers killed and wounded would be 1958. The I'arie Moniteur announces that the trench had about 4500 wounded, of which number 240 were officers; it was estimated at about one-third of the wound ed. The Paris correspondent of the Lon don Times says that five generals were killed, besides ten superior officers. The Journal. Now since the election is over, we shall be able to pay greater attention to the pa. per than heretofore. it is our intention by using our every energy, to 'mike the Journal second to no country paper in the State. We have more reading matter at present than any of our cotemporaries in either this or Blair county. We hope our friends throughout the county will exercise themselves a little in increasing the alma fly wide circulation of the Journal. The New Liquor Law. The Liquor Law which was adopted by the Legislature, last winter, and which went into operation on the Ist inst., is ve• ry generally observed. The Act hats been strictly observed in this borough, and the sale of Intoxicating spirits ended. We re joice with a cotemporary, that the law, if right or wrong, expedient or inexpedient, be fully carried out; because, like the fu• gitive slave law in the free States, and the one dollar law in this State, the non.obser vane,: of the law would only have still fur ther added to that contempt for obnoxious enactments, so dangerous to the maintain ance of those statuary provisions which are truly wholesome amt . salutary. Many people are of the opinion that the restraining Act will be repealed by the in coming Legislature. If this be trite or faire, we are not able to answer ; but we are perfectly assured that the repeal of the law was made the question in many coun ties—Berks for instance—and how far the scheme has been carried out, and how far the newly.elected.Legislature has obligat ed itself to the designs of the Liquor League, can only be solved by its next sit. flog. If the law is repealed, we think it would be a very unwise movement, but not so bad as the direct disrespect shown to the will of the majority, by its duct ment by the Legislature, last winter. We are not opposed to the law, on the contrary, we have ever advocated the pas sage of an act for restraining or abolishing altogether, the use of intoxicating spirits as a beverage. We advocated the law, and urged its adoption, ON CONDITION that the majority of the people of the Com monwealth should decide for its enactment at the ballot-box. The result was not as we anticipated, for the people rejected a prohibitory law. This being the case, we believe the law should not have beets en acted by the Legislature, in the first place, as it evinced ou its part a total disregardof the opinions and desires of the majortty's . will. But, since it has been adopted, we deem it but the simple duty of every citi zen of this Commonwealth, to use his in fluence for the enforcement of the Act. Should the next Legislature 'decide on the repeal, we shall of course have noth ing more to say. If in the estimation of n majority of the people, the present law is productive of more good than evil, it ought to be sustain- ; , i.nw island has been filiireevered in ed ; if, of more evil than good, it ou g ht to the South Pacific Ocean, by a .Nantucket what. li;ig vessel. It is situated about 130 miles be repealed. I south of Desolation Liana, and thd shin which Thera is no occasion (or a amorous or l'n4 tun!: front it. in teen then practical defiance of the Jaw, by those lie- . e four V . p; sl i dic lieving not in its e ffi cacy to put down the in coarse of preps • ' ra tio'n thith er, foe 't purpose think it . 4,f profiting by this valuable discovery.evils of intemperance. Il they should bo repo-tied, why then repeal it, re- Heavy Venni,,A RAILROAD Col, SpC ctubly, quietly, and legally, at the bal. Me 71tesant' tunn ''" -eh° fynurt lot-box, as thvy have done in Maine •; but ; o rd e county 9eltdO£ they must allow those who think different, ' o il,ooo against the Cier Gammon fleas for i rc eln ° ,l,l: ' Colunil ' is i and Ciacinnati Railroad . Company, for injury e'en to exercise the same right without recrim- Inert bill isation. Whatever the Representatives of t l a i; t o 'e n d e l'oYf trice from • s fi U t ii r a k g on the the people see proper to enact or repeal, ; 000(1. whether. right or wrong, we are bound by CATASTROPIII, ED II •.t C t T AI L , the duty which we as citizens owe to the ;—A small child ' of Thoi . nasMl ' ir'ins - yassistii i i i il Commonwealth, to respect. freight agent of the Boston Railroad, while playing near a well in oast Albany, N. Y., on ZOOLOGICAL WONDERS. sdi urday afternoon, slipped, and was just on ;l i i tt e l :vxf gras h r g e g i e ie ett t al ) ed i ttoj, when old It is seldom we come across anything as and bell magnificently rich as the "Circular" which ; on to it, until the cries of the child brought as. the "Turks, Armenians sad Kurds," pub I It:tninnen' when it was rescued. The cat was sitting an p Ing,.and g n death-like was its grasp fished prior to the election, in the Locofo- that the print tit nail.; were easily detected • no, pro-slavery, Cameron, Frank Pierce or- I it. the log gan of this county. We design giving it TRIAL ne Gov. I. 7 n7ee.—'rliett 7 i;l of G o v. a passing notice. It was to the effect that Price; of New Jersey, for an alleged defslca they no longer recognized the Journal as Oren of tic I,ollo, while purser in the 'United SLd the organ of TIIEIR party ! Whyl—Be • I States Ijoul;rt'it'Jqts•cilii,"l.ul(hir'se United cause we would not aid in the elevation of Grier and Dickerson. Gov. Peniiiii moved t° pten, coon- Locos to office. "THEIR PARTY," indeed! pao the 99vt- Who are the majority of signers to that Gov. Price, in order that he night p a r ti cu l a r s a g ainst paper? Whigs? No—Men who served how to tlitivid himself, which !notion was yes • denied by the Court, as we.are infer• an aprentiesship to every political fai th in mo d. the country, in the purSuit of office, and r eiglity•fivo persons who have openly embraced the new fans-' Ixro,rrea Locofoco scheme, cminonly termed fu- October, seventy- si committed even• Verent:ii:rnZild d uring. '‘ Z b ut i see, ton, that in New York, on Sunday after sion, not from any substantial reasons, from sinister motives— for office. Some I , l .:Z t a i i ., l , l :,„ (2 ll7„" t ti ge n t as G ur i g n j' i r:; of the signers to the oircular, "knew not saloon, mid attended to political matters, and what they did" when they affixed their F er g. Tnalonleilital7 compiniT also had a meet- - e e n f i r n o g in sea. , 7 p l , o r tr b o e r etir i natures; such must be excused, but those ; se l ;ved up nitPt v i , and Norma, and the Caliph of Bagdad. cred who signed being members of' the know nothing order at present, expelled mem- r • RLECT ~ nc '- lON. An Cleetion for bets, or disappointed applicants for mem. town dicers topic place in Connecticut on Mon. til,tLeelnlitehoconntretsyt called t4 lc h i tt i o ci a b i zo mninlß bership, have carried the joke a peg too high. Perhaps the Globe may desire us ; the Know Nothing. So for as • heard front neither party has much to brag of. There was to point out a few of these characters ? at We are not only able but perfectly willing. I th i e n e i l l e e e= " itlt} l i 'e p ( i l o ° :its " "%t at ere i r Such signers, will have no weight with a son shall be able to read any particular n Y r4 ofof z a n t s e titation, or !my se _ction attic st • community of orthodox Whigs, They the The ~.bee f u l em b e e n i t u gadmitted as nn e - will be marked by us, and peradventure tor," appears to be adop we shall be able to expose their truckling toil to Locofoco interests, when their political aspirations shall induce them to run for of fice. MYRON H. CLARK.—Seven yews ago Mvron 11. Clark kept a °itchier.) store. In 17849, Myron IT. Clark was deputy sheriff. In 1850 Myron 11. Clark was one of the marshals for .1 taking tho ceases of n onetharso village. In 1853, Iron H. Clrak was elected Senator— Myron . Clark is now Govern°, Whether Myron H. Clark will go still higher remains to be seen. IF he should, it would only show that l a man's position in this world depends loss up on his deserts than upon 'surrounding Mecum. stances.' Think of Myron H. Clark, and never say die. Tho man who will ho President to 1870 is now, probably, peddling Indintrut,ber rat traps. Again we repeat, never despair.— I Albany Rile, Tribune. Pats InrviiNTutt —A neat, sprightly, in teresting little worlc, with the above cap- 1 A NEBRASKA ELEVTION.—PurpIe, who is 'the t gentleman from Burt county' just at this time, lion, is on our table. Publitthed in New informed a gentleman of tins State at Chicago York, by Quimby, Haskell & Co., nt $l. short time since something how members aro ns It is devoted to mechanical interests, and !", utele l e up retary iu Kansas. , said totue one morning .P Ho said—T.ll'u'rp-le' is a work which every farmer and :incite- we want member from Burt Counti . ."S4'l ole eltould own. harnessed up and took aloe fellows with me, ' anti wo started for the woods; and when we thought we had got far enough fur tort county we . mtpacked our bidlut•box and held an ohm ties, canvassed the vote, and it was astonishing to observe how great was the unanimity at the first election ever held iu Burt county. Purple had every role: fin Purple was declared duly elected, and here 1 tua! —Ddrvit Advertiser. In regard to the letters we received from Petersburg, being forgeries, we pronounce untrue. We have the letters in our pos. session yet, and one of them is written by the principal signer to the Glo letter. That we permit any one to write for our paper in an editorial capacity, except our selves, is certainly incorrect. PranntioN'e ivistaAziNt, for November a number unequalled for beauty and inter est, is before us, The Engravings, Fash- Moo, &,c., cannot be excelled. C. J. Pe terson, publisher, Phil. LI per year. That's the Way. An old lady subscriber in the upper end of the county, writes us that there is a de ficiency in the columns of the Journal, be ing the only obstacle to its attaining a hun dred thousand circulation. This she says consists in the scarcity of murders, and the entire absence of elopements and sed uction cases. We shall take our corres pondent's communication into considera tion, for if a well-digested murder, a ras cally elopement, or a barbarity of any kind will have n tendency to rarify the moral at mosphere or her neighborhood, it would be highly ceusu rabic in us to withhold it. The other day a lady took us to task for our remissness in not supplying recipes for succotash and fricassed cucumbers, while in the same mail WO got a letter wanting to know if we were a "no nothin' " and 'if we would vote for the fusion,' Mrs. S—, of • B—, supposing us to be omniscient, writes us for the best method of cooking a yeller rabbit which her William Henry had jus. shot. The letter bears a postscript, like every other woman's letter, which reads : "Write quick, or the.critter'll spilo.'' Another correspondent thinks we should devote a regular column to teaching polite deportment, as his Welheltnina, the young lady ho sets up with, is a subscriber, and she recently told him he was “it hlnmed fool." The young gentleman looks to us for a rebuke to his flame." An individu al who' was taken in by five silk flounces and pearl colored gaiters, and was done out of a doubloon, whe'n attending the State Fair at Ilarrisburg, writes to request us to advocate the propriety of putting all showy looking passengers in a baggage train ! Who wouldn't be an editor after this ? DAN RICE'S CIRCDS.—A pljor affair.— the managers are "three cent" men.— The whole performance was a tirade of a busive language towards one of our wor thy ministers. Shame on such miserable affairs. Ocurallittvs. I'ASAMOIIII WILLIANNON, .wen.—David Walter and James U. Can Dyke, Esqrs., have commenced suit in the United States Circuit Court, tbr Colonel John 11. Wheeler, agaiust, Possmore Williamson, to recover the value of June Johnsen. Don nod Isaiah—nod damages personal injuries. DEATit OF A Misna.—The Chicago Press mentions that a few days ago, a miser named Andrew Grunderson died in that city from the effects of the miserable food his avarice corn• yelled him to eat, and because he would not take medicines or have a physician, lest he should bo called upon to pay the expense. Since .his death it boo been ascertained that ho had $4OOO deposited in a bank, and owned a block in the western division of the city. He left no will, and had respectable ohildren, who, when he was ill, flocked to his bedside and relieved his sufferings, all they could. Bastrop Hunoss AT Wonz.—The following front the Dicomville, Delaware Co., Minim., tells its own story. It is time for Americans to bo,awnke when Archbishop - Hughes and his agents take the field I Read (I): "The Roman Catholic Post Master General, James Campbell, has removed •Is from the Post 011ie° in Bloomville, and appinted Walter Hill, a Roman Catholic Scotchman, in our place. We i.now no reason for our removal other than because at all times and on atl oc casions we denounce Roman Catholic Princi ples as dangerous to the cause of Liberty and the welfare of the American Union. Qt rne editor of the Lancaster Daily says that the State Pair at Harrisburg is a failure ; that its friends so consider it; that the grounds were laid out on a most extensive scale, but ihat not one third of the stalls had anything in them ; and that the exhibition of many articles ofprocluct and manufacture, usually exhibited, was meagre. It adds : In tome articles, however, the exhibition was quite creditible and abundant. In poultry it has hardly been surpassed, and in rich quilts and needle•work, it would vie with any before is. In Agricultural machinery and implements the exhibition was most gratifying. And in some of the fruits, pickles, preserves, flowers, &c., it was ample, creditable and gratifying : — But as a whple, it was a sad and discouraging failure, and lutist be so considered by all who attended it. ' Tue (immix Et.zeztos.—The telegraphic returns indicate the re-election of rforschell F. Johnson as Governor of Georgia. The Demo crats, thankful for small favors, call this a coot• plete victory and ore banning mightily ! The American party in that State has scarcely been organized mrl its outset meets tho oppo , ition of Stephens,,Tuombs and other advocates of Slavery extension and fomenters of Slavery Ration. When the broad Ainericon doetrit i e of confining Slavery to its State localities, and preventing its extension over• the free territory of the Union, con i es to be distiuctly understood at the South, we have no fears but that those glorious doepisce will take root there and soon bring forth ample fruits. All this clamor eon corning a Democratic victory in Geor , zia, is 'nisei) Ibr the sole purpose of indneing despoil deney in out ranks next fall—but it 'till tail or its inteno , l effect. 13 s', LAP Soor.—The house of Mr. Lewis, roar Moira, N. Y. was entered on Thursday _night last, tip three bunglers, while the tinnily wore nit,,cp, Mr. Lewis, Lacing awkenctl, got up aul was i • shot at by .of the villir nt,• o and then struck twarg,hoth „ with a revorto, Mr,. Lewis; like a tru e . roine, as she is, not relishing such treatment fr. m testis's stranger, seized her lets. bend's gun *lied out of the house lifter the scoundrels, and ?Jive them a brond•sido no they were about hawing in their wagon; and her son, who slit* in an adjoining room, lowing Neon emus,* by the eonfuoion, also came to time soon enough to give them a partingsaltee . they retreated in great dismay from the seat of war,.: They all escaped with their lives, but the wagon was toclied to Reading. Centre, where a mon by the ham of Miller, Was foowl wenn• ad in the aide, and is not expected to MORE CORIWPTION.—The New York Tr ib une contains a letter from Missouri, snaking state. mems, which, if true, no they. appear .40 be, shows nu amount of corruption in the President and his administration, that excels all the pem plc have yet witnessed in the head of the gov ernment. the not appropriating swamp lands to the !hate in.whieb they lie, the alrtc of Missouri Selected nearly 500,000-acres, about 200,000 of which is known to be good, dry land, not indluded under the specifications of the act. So notorionsseas this fact that the General Lund O&M refused to issue r.ity pa. tents. Thesnatte: has stood ia 311 CC the spring 0f1.853, mail recently auv. Price, of Missouri, rent to Washington, and by a per. sorad arrangement with the President himself, proc treed indents foe the fraudulent appropvia• test Muds. 'The fact that Missouri' t 9 a Slave ' State, probably accounts for the criminal pre ference of hey interests to those of the country, by the head of the government. 0110 LIQUOR LAw.--,bul g e Roosevelt, orthe New York Court of Oyer nod Terminer, has added his decision to the ninny that have afrendy pronounced the prohibitory liquor law unconstitutional. This opinion is to the eltoct that the law interferes with the reve nues-of the Vederal GOvernment which it was the leading abject of the new Constitntios, as distinguished from the old articles of • Confede ration, is antliorized to pass, says the Judge, 'is an act layiim duties, specifically by name, on wince, branilies, nod other foreign liquor. As these thirties, in the language of the smistitu. tion, have Mien so laid, and are to be collected, in order to 'pny the debts nod provide for the common defence and general welfare of the United States.' Can aState Legislature, then —if one may, any number may—without the consent of Congress, say in effect that one whole branch of the revenue of the federal Gov eminent, expressly provided by Congr ess for its support, shall he cut off"?' Th o Judge thinks not. Devon l.ow is f'ITTSBURG.--The Pittsburg , Dispatch of T nnsday says: "The Grogshops, with sumo few exceptions, were closed on Mon slop. Some continued to sell malt liquors, un der unexpired 'beer licenses," granted before the passage of the present law, and three or four sold brandy and whiskey openly. The di rectors of the Temperance League haveinstrue ted their agent to report all breaches of the law, with the .111,1 of witnesses, to the consta ble of the preper ward, whose duty it Is made to return the cases to the court. The• agent was in possession of evidence sufficient to cop yist those who s o ld on Monday but as there stun some doubt os to whether the words of the law "From and atter October lot," would in elude that day, no prosecutions." At the spotting of the Court of Quarter Set sim,s of Allegheny County on Monday Judge McClure charged the grand jury at length in the sobeet of this law, in the course of which Ile said - , However much honest men may differ as to the expediency of a law before it is passed, no man east refuse to yield obedience when it be-• comes a law of the land. There is an immense difference between the duties of the chi,en and the Court which all men should hear in mind. It in the easy and passive duty of the citizen, and the easy,uutl passive duty of each member of the Court to obey the law. Hut the• Court, as a Court, and the men com prising it, tine bound under the tremendous sanction of a solemn oath, to administer the laws of the land, and this is ono of them. This oath is recorded in the Recorder's office and no hoaest or fearless magistrate can for ono moment Comm to remember that it is also recorded eliewhere in characters• that will en dure forever. Thia law shall be administered a ithont fear. ,vithout favor. and without affection. Mexican Items, Decidedly the most menacing condition in the affairs of Mexico, according to the accounts brought by the Orliaba, on her late trip, is that to which Harory Tamarix is so prominent a party Zuarua, on behalf of Vidarri, having re quired him to surrender the place, he replied that he she'd defend it to the furthest extremi ty. Some doubt was experienced whether Gar zit had not actually joined him, and the roper ted convention foreZnaraa found himself nna able with the troops under hint to force Hero to stirrender,aed had therefore sent for rein brcements, which he expected to arrive very protnptly. in the meantime, the brigade under Marquez. 2500 strung, is reported to have left Salamanca for San Lords to join Hero. The troops in San Louis, however, were reported to be discontented and deserting ; while new reg• Mations had been adopted for the exercise of the powers of the now Council, and 'Tlaxcala Monticello, San Juan du Guadalupe, in Seled ad, el Cerro de San Pedro, Rrio Verde, San Francisco de los Adatties, of the capitol, and the brigade of Zuarita had arrived at the Villa de la Soledud, which, is only a league from it. The Bolelin Official of San Louis, declared that Gen. Comon tort had proposed a conference with Haro. Gen Carrera haring appointed Sonor Traconis, who had been exiled by Santa Anne, to supplant Vassmioras as Governor of Tsinaulippas, the latter refused to make way for him, and addressed a remonstrance to Gen. Carrera; but it seas believed that he would go further and join Hero. The action of the garrison at Mexico, how ever, in declaring in favor of the plan of Aynt la,mits considered a terrible blow fur Hero. I 'The report with respect to a convention be. twern Hero and Germ is curiously involved.— It is stated that in the first place Garza obtain ed Viditurri's consent to it, but that the latter afterwinds sought to impose inadmissible con. (Edens in granting it that on being refused, the outputs of San Luis wore attacked; on which Haro calling together the Council of State, obtaining their consent, sent out a force of 1,- 000 men with six field pieces under Gen. Pat , rodi. The result is variously stated to have been the defeat of the attaching forces, their going over to the San Louis plan, and fecting of au arrangement.between flare and Conlon. fort. During the occurrence of these events, great rears were expressed for the course affairs were likely to take. The provisional government of Carrera was said to lack energy and iniative power; the liberal party was said to be doplm rahly divided; Alvarez and Comonfiirt were said net to he expected at the c,;,:!al Li! t' cod orate mouthl the approaeh -,r, fetes of the.inclependento Wee remrded ns•! canoe of apprehension. It WOO complained that there was the cst inconsistency in the few nets the chiefs had performed. For instance.whF, datn:ti hog proclaimed the p!an has coon. Ivy to it, fenced Ole the army tel the e,ergy, the grist le.; • d,spotista who warded to overthrow Comonrort proclaimed the plan or but had modified at the Acapulco; proehlned it, guarantees the pro/ erly • clergy; the partisans of Carrcra's had accept,l the plan modified by the som flAvore4 Vidnurri :led the d.t,••• lion of the the pi•ohilli4oeisto,iTp.,ea ; • did the, C'eliallus tivriff, the Monitor wanted the cation or it, hot Iy Conionfort, Hari), or V id. nutiii.by the garrison cf Mexico; the CO.CIT ntiveg wanteasoinethieg die, nod BO forth.— Xi:a , (Mew. Plea VII., Do Di c e's Gratitude. . . Ass interesting, incident is related of Don Rive, the celebrated circus performer, in a Into number of the Reading Ga,ctle. It appears that some fourteen years ago DAN left Reading with nn exhibition.of some sort,-which turned out badly, and involved the vruprieter in diffi culty. judge llninu.ilunll, of Burks Cu., found . him in this condition, gave lima suit ofclothes and lent hint a horse and waggon, in order that ho might pursue his business. - DAN was still unsuccessful, and destitution soon ovatook him againfwbilc to add to his distress, his wife got sick. In this di'mnton he was forced to sell the horse and wagon, which the Judge had only lent him, in order to raiso means to take his wife home to Pittsburg. Not long, after this he obtained a situation in ono of the thea. tres in this city, where tho Judge one night saw and recognized him, and in the morning called at WS lodgings. Don was still Fens and Seedy, and fully expected reproach., if nothing worse, from Lis old potent,, but instead Ito went a semnd tines to the tailor's . ' rust ing fitted out at his expense. this, ktivev. or, DAN would tint consent, And they partsd, never meeting agnin until one day lot Nr , clc, when liD company was performing rt Reading, and the. Judge come down to attend Court.-- Don's first ditty woo to bunt Op his old friend, and invite him to take a short drive:dam; town to which ho consented, nod a horse and cle we're :sten at the doer. D stes cquiphge, that of his pr.trossion generally, seemed a pretty styiish turn.out. It consisted of a bran new can loge of elegant make, a cream colored Arabian pony, and a 'spick and span neW set of harness—worth, when yon come to estimate such things by dol. tarn, some $3OO. Time went minty by, as the two friends talked and Jaughed over the balfforgotten events of old timeS. DAN drove the judge back to his lodging,s, stepped out op en the pavement, and, before the Judge had time to rise from . his seat, handed Lim the reigns and' hip, with a graceful bow, and said: "These are yours, Judge—the old horse and wagon restored, with interest—take them, with DAN Itlelki warmest gratitude!" The Judge was stricken with amazement for a roso mo ments, but soon recovered his self-position and began to remonstrate. But DAN wan inexora ble—he closed his lips firmly, shook his head, waved a polite adieu to his old friend in the carriage, walked off to his hotel, and hift the Judge to drive the handsome equipage now re ally his own, to the stable. Ass honest tutus, and a snarl of honor, is DAN Rum, the Circus • Clown I'—Phil. Sun. Tan Maoists fA7.ll;:—The 7 Vrovidenpo Journal says that "the stories about' new . ovaries of gold in the Gadsden purchase ltgre tuned out, as we stated seine months ago they would, to bo mere titbrications. These reports came first from California; but, to ,onewho had ever been in the country, the sttane t w 4 were ; so glaringly false that it boo evident were) concocted by someone who ncv&i. been in that country, The surveyi. „ arty,stignged iu running the now line, some of members (T which have returned, found nethillint n ren demi." The New Orleans Bullion, in inelitinni the ivturn of Major Emory and other members of the Boundary Comnia d isitni, says 'The e•nin. try is represented as mi rattly poor. There are but few Inhabitants throughout this whole ex tensive region—only three villages in all, aud not au acre of arable ground suitable for eulti• Cation, owing to the scarcity of water.' TUE MASELICUIMETI;i'IIItISTATE CONTENTION met on Tuesday. Letters were read front non. Robert C. Winthrop, and Hon. Rufus Choate. Samuel IT. Walley, of Roxbury, was finally nominated for Governer. Moses Davenport was nominated for Lieut. Governor. A full State ticket was also nominated. A Series of resolutions was adopted, declaring that the Whig party should snore than ever keep aloof from entangling alliances; repudiating the Per sonal Liberty Hill and advocating its erasure front the statute books ; declaring the Liquor Law a failure, and urging boats constitutional measure, and also urging the formation ota na tional party to resist at once the aggressions of slavery on the one baud and fanatism on the r.thur. PEN, PASTE AND SCISSORS. Ar~tunnuia—The weather. The agony over-14t Tuesday'ended it. Personal—The Pop Curti moo is in town. "Away with mtlancholy"—and go attend the fair. Don't like it—Jeems, our lifelike portait of himself: Tire Returna.--Next week we will give the fall official returns. seri. Columbus, Ohio, flour is selling at $7 per barrel, and hay at 139 per ton. "Hark !from the Tombe"—Wonder if the man who wrote that ever voted illegally. Finished, and glad of it—The personal wax , fare, which was begun by "friend hems." Too wang—The Kum. Herald, says there are only fifty slaveholders in that territory. Another show coming—A total eclipse of the moon will take place on the 26th of this month. The Fee Plalfornz—Free Drinks, Free Soil, Free Fights, Phrenology, Free Love nod Free. dom. Not .Respected—The new Liquor Low, in Pittsburg. Tho liquor dealers continue the traffic. The bnde—Brigham Young has ninety wives and between three and four hundred children. That's Mormonism. A Good Supply.—A farmer in Fayette co., Ky., has raised, this year, upwards of nino thou. sand bushels of potatoes. ga-Tho wife and daughter of Chief Justice Taney died at Old Point Comfort on Sunday. The daughter died Of yellow fever. More "Hot corn."—A young girl only 16, was sentenced to three years' imprisonment at Boston last week, on a charge of stealing. Can't (Toni it—To exchange with the Era, of Tyrone City. Yon have a Moo paper Keys but we have two many °'x" dead heads already gerThe manager of Perham's Colored Ba by Show has nearly completed the arran;c in ents for a grand oro,dnz on Tuesday, the 9th .1 ; • . nt Hampton ...• re. . you of a' hit. /,', IVlti{ par applicants iv ttlt. , • , ; 1,. ,latn.o': t at wic no tail at el', (W." Tie up—Wo wish it to be diitinelly an. tler,t,e,l tho.t we have no more v,..111:$ v.ich the American. IVe can not pru.,titwe nor ted- try anuther libel suit os Lill: Payiity Shol.—The lumen, Lanen,ter gnu sl),,kot of in the English prints cost ;'-110 per shot --nt lewd so it is said. In 1;i:a n,o, no would rntberdischarge the 110 tlr,u the bill! Del wa7.—The ltev. Geo. Ilchidt no elergyinuo, n ,ori of rsi,liop of Nov-Jeney, lih joiarii the 'Etonian Cato lie chuck lfe hes Lena deprinni by h's own nn.,lting cern.' 1,, , 1ng ;witched in a country church, all roll a weeping het one man, who, when naked why he did not weep with the teen, 'O," said he, (•I belong to.anoth er parish:" - ',kJ' k,love. - nun,nt of Conn.:lout Las removi•il Ow Ailjniant lieneial of the State for neglecting to disl.mnd the Milk military compa nies, at NA timed, minin tea another, who lone performed the duty. 117,ich, tis rivhi or thc left• 1--McCulloch by the "41iftea hand" he never sat Cvovit in a k.m.loage ; Crewit swears on the "lioly F.vangal;,t," to did. There' , some thing rotten in Denmark. Sued for votiug.-JeNua Las anti - .' us for as ho terms it, "illegal voting." lie, ha,— he has s*orn that 'we were not of age.—Seen Quarter Sessions wilt decide whether we voted /t will. Look out hems. To hoc rxhibited—nt the County Fair. The Globe man, as a specimen of 6laknes.,. As ho has been in the bands of 0101,481r/um ev er since the opening of the late political 'cam paign, we o4cet to hear a good report of him. Who can it Lc P— . ll lady sends us this sock dologer :—"The man with the red "wool on the top of Ids head," would confer n favor by at tending to his business and leaving offslander log married ladies, on the tfrner,." Winegar. What of the.figure CMe calls the k. the Dark Lantern Party. Well, what of it ? There is a strong suspicion that the lan tern which they carry is tho same as that car ried by Dingenes—and is carried for tho samo purpose, namely, to find an honest man for of fice. A Small Item..—Tho New York Son, des. canting on the extramgancies of dress in that city, estimate4i the annual cost of dressing and A/ailing theindies of NeW York and its vicitt- pat from thirty to forty millions of dollars, is much mi it cosh to maiutain tho General Gurcrnmui,t, is There are now in the Treasury near;; tweLty.two milliuua subject to draft. Sin mil. lions nt.,rn thousand arc deposited in Now Yor::, oko Itundeed and fifteen thousand and in Phiindidpli:a, one hundred and hurter thou sand in lialtitnore, and three and a third mil lions in Boston. aels'lhe negroes of Norfolk, having nothing else to do, all work being suspended, hold rv ligions meetings at their• churches every day, and the lend wailing and psnlm•sioging chat,. ting.:, elite afflicted sons and daught,s _f. rich, v.-sound constantly through the air with a melancholy and solemn cadence. ko 'The prohibitory Liquor Law, though it has foiled in surpressing the traffic in New York, yields, nevertheless, a considerable reve nue to the municipal treasury, as largo num. hers of snouts aro made daily, for intoxication, .te., and in most cases the parties armsted pay their tines. Those who do' not are -cent to pri son. Seim Later Croat Europe. ARRIVAL ofthe PACIFIC. FROM THE CRIMEA. The Czar Going to the Crimea. The steamer pacific, at New York, brings a week's Inter dates having sailed from Liverpool Sept. 22d. The Hermann arrived at South ampton on the 22d. Despatches from Gen. Simpson, from the seat of war, had been received by the govern ment of England, describing the assault and capture of the Malakoff. He says "At 12 o'clock on the morning of the Bth of September the French columns, under Gen erals Bosquet, McMahon and Do La Motte range, entered and carried the Malakoff with the most impetuous valor. The 13 ritish col umns stormed the Redan, but after a bloody combat could' not hold it. A second assault could not be organized until the followii.g Mot , sting, when the Baden was found to be evacuated: Tim loss of life has been fearful, particularly among officers." Gen Polissier's despatches bad not arrived. The retreat of the Russians to Perekop was contradicted. It was expected they would be unable to hold the north of Sevastopol for want of provisions. Nothing decisive was known in regard to the next move of the Allies. hone thousand cannon, fifty thousand bells, and immense stores of gunpowder, were taken i‘gl of by . the Allies at Sevastopol. ups n,s despatch to Lord Paumure, • •mils of the fall of Sevastopol, has been at London, but it does not differ in it; statements from the telewaphic despatch es previamly received in London, and brought to liable:: by the Union. The English attack was led tty Sir W. Rod rington and Lieut. Gen. Markham. The English officers killed in the, attack up on the Roden were 25 in number; the ollicerg wounded were 126, including 20 dangerous. ly. • It is said that the Czar, on hearing of the disaster at Sevastopol, despatched a telegrnhie message to the king of 1,10,i0, saying that "Russia. never made peace ar.cr a defeat." A descn:cli from the Crlinea, ilatcd the Mutt the greater part of the southern for left standing by the Itassiuns, hay lion blown up by the Alike. The Allies were quiet, tied 1.0 ret•: tdb.ei Lad been commenced. The Rupiiitus hail begun to make tlwir up. pt.:nt.ce in small groups among dr,: ruin; of the town. 6.11t.ral lat,t th•spateh naffs:-- "We are beginie:s ta occupy the t!te, 0 So.. '• ; 1. 1 1h, l”. ' by y IA We al, ; • .pa- mC u , ;,~;:;ua :;~} ut . largo culitun acre cal. thousand cannon balls and •rcat ~ount ~ITpowdt.:r nod other mat, A dtspetcli fluom Yuma stntto that the de : of French troops that emerad Voiotia the' 14th, found the streets •v,tre i.di of rMns end barricaded tbrougheut.. (.I,tecles at ti,, entrance uf the port were tibo.t to be re moved, to admit the entrance of ~hip. - A report, says that when the. Itiksians saw the Friaich were master of the Halakotf they blew up the ricdon. All the towers were mined, ret they trod nu time to blow up the. 111MM:off. It is rumored ti.a.t.Prince no re• ecirrrl un order from S.!. Pc!ersbarg to Error thkie the Crimea on condition of bnieg allowok by Marshal Polkaier to gait the Nualk Fun privi,ions, and (truer:ll Flosquet was wounded, but trot scri m:fly. A Icttd fi t,i \l'urFavi sny; that na soon :Is Panhicwitch received intelligence of the Gdl or Malakoff; he despatched his aide-de camp, llernidoll; to Sevastopol. It is cortaii, that ninny inqre troops are to he scot to the Crimea. it lie Czar ..iitlexitndor, in an addreits to his Army, cayii:— . l rely confidently upon your courage to repel nil future attnekst' niol in a letter to Ito King of Pi-might states that he will accept hu conditioirt of rraCe derogatory to Rtasia. 'rho Czar, in e:•,npouv three Urand Dukes, Laa b:,,JOULd Ica intention of proceed. fug!o !Ile Crimea. The Turk 3 Kara, having repulsed die Ituasians on the ith iwit. with connidern• Lie 10S, the ltuniiana retiring to ErneroMM The limperur of Austria had congratulated Queen Victoria aril Lanis N . :Tolima on the victory of the al 'I hero was air talk abut negoti ation:l. The big wri, Cant Anatria was wil ting to undertake the teat of mediation nt and Prance at l'arit. It was report' d Clot lta , .sia foul undertaken the task of Inediatien between, Denmark and the United Sthes on the &Mud Putts question. The inauguration .uf Don Pedro, lilt% of Portugal, was celebrated on the Litt, with great enthusiasm. - The King of Ni.p'ea had tKo'ogiee to England and France fur raw, inEults. kazzies revolutionary munifeio to the Neapolitans had been published. Tim Reuounn RusstAK RUMAT—The Gazette no Prussi, the organ of the Russian party at Berlin, publishes the following con• indiction of the report iroai Vienna, coutaitt• ting the retreat of the Russian Army upon Per. chop; The (-lentos des Portes,Frankfort, and the Cazette de Allegemainedu Nerd, announce that Prince fiertschakoff has received a des. patch from Warsaw, stating that the Russian core; at Biduci•Serai has commenced a retro grade movement on Perelcop. We can assert in the most positive manlier that this is false. Pnorosso NICUOTIATIONS.—IIitniturg, Sept. 20. We have good private intelligence from Viennii, to the effect that Austria signifies her willingness vain to undertake the work of mediation ' act proposes now conferences at Vienna. Prance hes limitel her willingness, to negotiate, but only at Paris. TUE A•rr.tcK oi TUE MALAEOFF.—The tack on the Malakoff, as has already been sta ted, was direeted by Gen. Baguet. .Gefi. Me- Malin woo the lirEt to lead his division to the preach, having the Znuaves ul the Guard r n reserve. General de Metterinii4o led the next having the Grenadiers and the Voiti• goers of the Guard est reserve. This division attaekea the curtain whirls connects the Mala Koff to tho Itedan. THE Cumrs.--Act omits from the Crimea of the 11th state that Gen. nostpieee wound is not serious. The fuel detudneent of the al• lied troops entered the eastern part of Kara• belnia suburb of Sevastopol on the lith inst., I by thi: order of General Pelissicr, uud on the I following day the city, having been previously inspected, was occupied only by small bodies of troop, I Tue. Emrenon or THE FRENCH TO THE An. ! mfrs.—lmmediately on the receipt of the news of the capture of Sevastopol tiro Emperor Or• dered the Marshal Minister of War to scud the following despatch to Gen. l'clissier: 'Honor to you! Honor to our bravo army ! My sincere congratulation to all." At the same time the Minister of war wrote as follows to Gen. Pelissier,by order of his Mu -1 jesty : "The'Eniperor requests you to congratulate, iu hit new, the English army for the constant !bravery and moral strength of which it has given proof during this long and trying cum ' Mongol. hundred