Puntingbon `,ljoarnal. .o • VA6 - Zt / C.RANZI‘ '44L\ 4;l' EWsTER, Editor and Proprietor, - - Wednesday Morning, January 271858, The Circulation of the Hun tingdon Journal, is great er than the Globe and Am erican combined. CLUBBING WITH MAGNZ .NES. Tne•filnitingdoll JOURNAL for one year, and either of the Magazines for the same period, will he sent to the uddrels of any ontbicriber, to ho paid in advance as follows : The Journal and Godey's Lady's Bonk, for one year, ~, t 3 50 The Journal and Graham's Mao:Lune, for One year, , $3 50 - - . The Journal and Emerson's Illagazine and Putnam's Moidhly. fur one year, 443 50 The Journal and Frank Leslie's Family Magazine and Gazelleqf Fashion, fur one year • $3 50 The Journal and Lady's Home Magazine, for one year, $2 75 71ee Journal and Peterson's ILlyazine, fur one year, $2 75 The Journal and Atlantic Monthly, for one year, *3 50 It will he observed by a notice in another part of our paper, that the Hum ingdon county Teachers' Institute atilt meet in this pluce ou the 22d o/ Februar.y We have not seen a programme of the bu siness to be transacted; but we understand that one object of the ace ing is to cLI,- brute, in a suitable manner, the fifth tuna. versary of the Institute. A more appro priate time could not have been selected for such a purpose ; and we feel assuied the occasion will be one of unusual inte rest to the friends of education generally, and to all who may find it convenient to .attend. err Prof. M. \lcl\l. Walsh, the new Principal of the Gassy'lle Seminary. has accepted an invitation to address the Ed ucations! Mass Meeting to be held at Spruce Creek on Friday and Saturday next (January 29 and 3Jth.) We would variculurly direct your at tentipn to the advertisement of a tract of land situated about a mile below Mt. Union, to be sold on Thursday the 18th day of February, by John Anderson. Nor A short time ago we published a notice in the loar;,al stating that 1V in. Lewis, Ex-Postmaster and publisher of the Huntingdon Globe. had been tabOring un- der a des, orate spell of the disease, cal.ed in conunon parlance, ..the man with the poker." But since Billy has recovered to almost reasonable rationality, and (lads the c are chuckling over the courqs he h s taken he reeks out his v?ngeance upon us as a kis' der. &c. Why Billy. it really would appear that you have not recovered sufficiently yet, for you published in the Globe a few Java be fore the .spell" came on you, Altar a parti cular friend gave you a bottle of 'poor, and perhaps getting it for nothing induced you to indulge inure freely than if you had to pay for it ; hence the consequence. But we have only to say to those who disbelieve the report, to look at the man, and keep an eye single to the grag.shops, and they will have nu difficulty in coining to a conclusion. our Kennedy's Bank Not. Review for the month of January has at this late date. It looks as if some person had taken the benefit out of it before we received it, Kennedy's Detector is one of the best published, and is always a welcome visitor. use February number of Peter son's Counterfeit Detector, published by Peterson & lin tilers, Philadelphia, is be fore us. It is perfectly reliable, and will prove invaluable to business wen, and all who require to be posted up on the ourren ey. Price $l. The Executive !dungen. PENNSYLVANIA CONGRESSMEN. I .Prom the Philadelphia Ilidiciiii. Pennsylvania has at la.t. agreed to provide a house for Chief Magistrate to rei.ide in. Gov. The Na , " """k Gazette le..ns from um Por.t.oce immediately signed the bill providing quo.limmble authority, that the lion. Wm. ILI for the purchase, thus gracefully making one Dimmick, Democratim. Member of Congress of his last official acts a provision for the rem, from that district, notwithstanding his • lever fort of 116 ...SUM in office. boy. PACKKR to the Philadelphia Buchanan Administration I enters upon office with a salary of 14,0(10 per meeting, will oppose the Lecompton Cunsti. maim—five hundred more than Gov. PobLoce I " it "' from timt to last. This ma"' 6" received, and a handsome house provided for Dentiieraiie members hum Pennsylvania him by the State. Ile will thus be enabled to.i known to he opposed 'to th 6 Lecompton Com keep up a little more state, a n d practice a iff , stitutien, the two others being Messrs. Hick tle more hospitality than his predecessor., have man and . Montgomery.' 9°"te others are been able to afford. strongly suspected of leaning the name way, The Joiut Committee of"bOth Houses, the Secretory of the CommOnwealth, State Treas• urer and Auditor General have made an agree. meet with Mr. Worrell for the purchase of the "Griffith property" on the river bank as a rest. genee for the Governor; the price to be paid is ten thousand dollars fir the property, and One hundred for the gas fixtures. The agreement has to he ratified by both Houses before it can be made binding, but there is no doubt of its satisfaction, and Gov. coot PACKER wl,l reside ita that locality. 4 Atten‘ion is directed to the now ad. vortaw am veto is to day', paror. Einem Elections. LATER FROM KANSAS. The results of the recent elections in Kan sa,. seconding to the latest nod corrected Tele- Special rorrespowleal ttr IS': Y. Tribune. graphic reports, are as follows: I Lawitneee, K. T.. Jan. 13. 1858. At the former of these elections, held under Thwfamon,s or infamone Jack Henderson— the auspices of John Calhoun and the bogus or, as we used to call him :luring, the bogus Lecompton Convention, the total vote stood: Constitutional Convention, "A pprehenderson," For the Lecompton Constitution with Slavery, f ree , t h e fact of hie b e ginning ever y speec h he mode by equeaking through his nose, "Mr. For the same without Slavery, President I a rehend " Ac.—has at In t hero As theree-State men had no voice in form- P P summarily "apprehended." Ile was brought this Constitution, ns they refitirded the body , here by a Deputy United States Marshal, which called it as a bend of usurpers and op. charged with committing frauds on the etee pressors, and as no one was allowed io vote rive franchise. The part which Jack played against this Constitution, the Free-State men in the recent bogus gatne is shout this : 'rte very properly refesed to vote at all, turd only , i some twenty five honored Free State men of Leavenworth having polled went near the polls to see how many nowresi it was die. dents or minors were allowed to vote, and how ntred votes, covered that even Kiekrilmo, in all its glory, many voted several times; lint even this slight ! would he unable to reverse this decision. A aw.e,ini, was paid bet in a fen , instances. _ Poll had been opened at the Delaware crossing 11i.st of these 6,712 votes were returned from I of the Ktee, in the Indian Reserve. At that half ad, et points along the Missouri border Point, there is a little Indian village. The wl me it was not possible that Two Then:sand Delawares. not being naturalized, cannot vote, votes should have been honestly cast. It is wit and there are but few others there, except an probable that Three Thousand legal bona Me votes is alt were cast at this Election, whether agent, and perhaps a ferrymen. There may be a sprinkling of the whitey browns common "For the "Constitution with" or "For the Con "stitution without Slavery." An since! ". in Indian countries, which are styled "halt recognised and perpetuated in Kansas in either Indian and half agent:" but even the doubt case, and as no one could vote at this Election fel paternity of these does not entitle them to (if challenged) with taking at: oath to support the elective franchise. However, at the point the Constitutiou if adopted, when there was no in question the Pro Slavery men polled some t possibility that it should not be adopted, the thirty votes, most of which were probably from Free State men were clearly not right in voting. Westport. Finding that more.votes would be needed, the Border uans ant J Hardly a vote was cast at Lawrence, Topeka derson down io the ß Del ffi aware crossingaek foHen r the and other Free State strong holds. In fact, this Election was sternly ignored by a large returns. Jack accordingly went after them, majority of the People of Kansas. rind, although he started with only thirty votes Another Constitutional Election, ordered by by the time the retort's reached Lecompton , the Territorial Legislature, with Gov. Statiton's the Delaware vote stood at upward of five approval, was held throughout Kansas on the hundred—a number sufficient to save the 4th lost, Unlike the fanner, at this election "Democracy" of Leavenworth County and each legal voter in Kansas was invited to record , the country generally—the increase having, his rote "For the Lecompton Constitution with been mad , ' us the lawyers would-say, in trot:. Slavery," or 'Tor the same without Slavery,' or "Against the Lecompton Coestitution."— From this Election the Pro Slavery party stood aloof, not wishing further to expese its weak. ness, and very few but Free State men voted. The votes cast have just been canvassed, and the Telegraph reports a majority of 10,22" "Against the Lecompton Constitution." As but few votes were cast for it, we presume the total r oll at this election was probably under, rather than over, eleven thousand. It is very certain, however, that two.thirds of all the le. gal voters of Kansas cast their suffrages against the Lecompton constitution. Still imuther Election was held on this 4th of January, under the Lecomptun Constitution, by officers appointed by Regent Calhoun and in structed make their returns to him, For this elecitoin a full "Democratic . ' ticket was noniinatel, headed by Frank 51arshall for Go - - en:or, with George W. Carr for Congress— Pro Slavery of course. The Free State party, ignoring the Lecompton Constitution, and re• pestling it as a gross Pru-Slavery fraud and usurpatiou,resolved in full convention not to vete under it at thin election. A minority of the Conveution, however, in view of the con. tingeney that Congress might accept Ilia Con green might accept this Constitution, admit Kansas under it, and thus fasten upon her not only Slarery but a Pro• Slavery government, with Callitten and sous other ruffian for Seen. tors and Carr fer Meniber of the house, bolted and (rained a State Ticket, headed by George W. Smith fur Governor and Marcus J. Parrott (the present Delegate) fur Congress. Gov. Robinson, though be declimd to be a candidate supported this movement ; en did Den. J. li. Lune, irreverently bight ',Jim Lane,' and a geed share of the old leaders. Lawrence. To• peke, and other Feee•State wrought:ld:3, voted but spariegly, hewever, while enormous frauds, partly by treble and quadruple voting, were perpetrated by the pro Slavery party, who there by polled over six thousand votes, though they have .t half that numbee of voters. Our last telegraphic advises, huwever, assure us that the entire ticket ut the Feee.6tute butters is elected, with u derided majority in both bran ches if the Legisaiture. 6.11 being the fleet, we do nut see how Congress ca: proceed to three Kansas inti, the Uniun under a Constitu tion so overwhelming rept:dated by her people, nor can we see what Slavery 'will make by the outrage, alieuld it be consummated. Can the Slave Power insist on the annihilation of its Northam allies fur uothing? Why should it? Tribune. Gov. Packer's Cabinet. - Secretary(lif Stale—Wm. Dl. Iliesler,of Berks. Deputy Seerelttry—Henry L. Lielfenbaeh, of Clinton county. Attorney General--Hon. Jno. C. Knox, ol Clarion county. ',,,jiileuttal Clerk futile Secretary', office— A. Innis, of Easton. As ue before intimated Wm. A. Porter Esq., has been appointed Judge of the Supreme Court to supply the vacancy occasioned by' the resignation of the Hun. Jno. C. Knox. and the suspicion Is - iiicreased since Gov. Packer's inaugural address has been read and received with so much favor by the De. mocracy of the State. Among the suspected ' ore M. curs. Phillips of the IVth District, De wart nl the filth, Leidy 9f the. Xllth, and White of the XV'th (Gov, Pucker's District.) Como unt handsomely, gentlemen, for you may by sure you will be doing• eight and your constituents will sustain you iu condemning the Lecompton trick. A Bra Itut.—lt is eaid that fleoeral Walk. I er lays his damages sustained by his arrest by Commodore Paulding; and deportation to the United States, at the elegant little son, of $1,000,000, and ban presented his bill fur that 1111•11111; Nothing can indicate the spread of "law'. more conclusively than the fact that oar friend "ApprelnMderson" should have be,s apprehended for such a peccadillo. The Free State met , of Leavenworth hunted up the judges of election at the Delaware crossing. got sundi3i affidavits from thein to the effect that 30 votes only were cast, and that the returns showed said fact;. and, having secured these preliminaries, *next thing was to se. cure "Appreh telerson." That °Atonable individual having done his duty, as above recited, started for Washington yesterday, no doubt to inform the President of thetriumph of th 3 Democracy." At Wyan— dot, however, he tons taken off the boat by virtue of a writ of something, and a U. S. Deputy Marshal escorted him to Lawrence. When Jack arrived, ho was all viraeity. He no doubt felt t nt he had done nothing of which as a "good Democrat," he need be ashamed. Ile jumped out of the carriage on his. arrival in this fanatical city of Lawrence, and in his usual way proposed to treat the party that had given him so honorable an escort. He proposed adjourning to one of the drinking places that have been established in this city since the people grew "conservative," and played the part of a 13,der Ruffian gentleman unembarrassed by the difficult'es that surroun ded him. What will be (lane with him I do not know, but fear he will not get his deserts. He has for some months been acting as an agent of the Administration here. For his services in securing the Lecompton swindle just as it is, he has obtained the post of mail route agent for Kansas. Beside.a good sala ry, this position affords n fine opportunity for speculation to a man of such unmistakable genius as "A pprehenderson." Thu customn• ry way is to mulct all town companies along any post route he may establish in a share or shares of said town, in consideration of his services in securing said-route. So notorious is this that it may be set down as a regular branch of the business. I observe that the President has been pro tending to his Northern friends that Martin, and Henderson, and 'Elmore, and his other creatures here,•deceived him in fixing up the Lecompton swindle as they did. Do not be. here anything of the kind. • They are, indeed quite capable of cheating 'oust for the man who pays them most, but as the President has been paying them mast, I know WO 13111d1 of them not to know that they are doing pi. work of the Administration. Martin, who is a clerk is the Department of the Interior, left here, ror Washington with the news of a Democrat lc victory in the recent State election. Ile hasvcitlubtless, trumpeted the result ero this. Prior to his leaving, he was most indefatiga ble. That he conspired at, and was an ac• tine party to the late outrageous election (rands, is now very conclusive. The State Legislature has passed a Militia law. This law will, in many respects, conform to that passed by the Teritorial Legislature, and will exist under the state organization should the Teritrrial Government be destroy ed by Congress. An election law, laws for the crusty and township organization; and on see eral other important matters, are in progress•— There have also been a number of applications fur special legislation from this body, some of which have been acted on. Clomo TO WITIIDRAW.—It 01 rumored at Washington that the Southern States will take measures to withdraw their delegations from Cengress in the event of the rejection of the Leeetupton Constitution. The movenient of the lAislature of Albama for the call of a Convention upon the contingency named, is the first step toward the object. The positions taken by Gov. Hicks and Gov. Wise, however, do not favor a union of action on the part clf the South, and the probabilities are that any such movement will end in a failure, and sub ject the authors to the contempt of all sensible people. Special Dispatch to the Phila. Bulletin. WASHINGTON ; Thumlay, Jan. 21, 1433. A deputation of twenty leading Democrats of New York City, headed by en-Mayor Wood, k here for the purpose of urging the President to reconsider his policy in regard to Kansas declaring that, unless he dues so, ho will destroy the Democratic party. They desire him to hare the Constitution fairly submitted to a vote of the reople of Kama, Correvowlen , 6 of the IluiVingdon Journal. j CITY ITEMS. Puit,ApEr.rniA, Jan. 26th., 183 S. I MR. EDITOR Of course, the first remark in conversation, or in common-place writing is now the goes tion, "Did you ever see such weather in thou. ary T---aud the answer naturally is "Surprising indeed I It seems like a providential act of mercy toward the huhdreds of poor who have lost their employment, and means of living, by the late monetary stringency. Well and rap turously may they now exclaim : "Immeasurable good is all around, Good gleams upon us in our infant time, Good makes the youthful heart with joy rebound And goodness crowns our manhood in its prime." The prospect of labor at remunerating prices is growing bri,:i,ter every day, and mills and fouudri,•e ar al :ttiy res,niiiig operations while the ilecesAity a plenteous coall/in, to de creased in like rota . A New Improremerri ire our City—The City I Passenger Railway, running from Frankford to Southwark, (the north . and south extremities of our Consolidation.) has afforded much w:•rk in its 3unstruction. arid now it :,as, within the last week, gone into operation as far as Kensington, yet it employs many men as drivers, condor. tore, ireck•cleanere, and stable men. About twenty-five cars are daily running at intervals of five or ten minutes up sth and down 6th eta. five cents fare each way. And indeed their convenience as an easy mode of travelling is fully appreciated by our hitherto benighted population, who begin to look upon omnibuses us nuisances. Mrln the matter of city news nothing has occurred of importance since the acquittal of T. W. Smith, the murderer. The verdict was anxiously waited for from day to day, and the people generally were well satisfied. That the man's mind was tetnpotarily unsettled I can believe, btt that the act was one of insanity, and committed by an iresponsilde being, I do not concur in. Murderers, L think, for the to. tore good of the community, should suffer a mast severe penalty, but r hesitate to judge that a legal murder is better, or more just, thou one from motives of revenge, or jealousy, &c. Both are cold•blooded, and break the sixth corn amid ; nest. Mr. Allibone, of the Penn'a Bank, you truly notice by the papers has again returned, and tries . hard to persuade the public that he did not abscond, but went to the continent fir the good of his health—denying positively the charge" that the money of the Bank was used i t the sugar, or cotton speculations, which have so frequently been flaw in his teeth. The question remains yet to he solved "Where ar e over a million of dollars of assets of the Bank? But I turn from this unprofitable.sohject to conclude by a short notice of an excellent ser mon I heard on Sunday, 24th inst., by the Rev. D. A. Tyng, of the P. E. Church. It was on "The safe-guards of Young Men," from 119th Psalm, 9th verse, and he truly said that "ores. pinion, education, and domestic attachment, with a pure loon of tho gentler sex, combined with piety, and shut firm faith in an over ruling merciful God, were safeguards that all evil powers could not subdue; and that would crown us, hoth here, and hereafter, with unending bliss." Yours, etc., TB ADMINISTRATION. In the matter of Kansas, Mr. Buchanan seems liko,, to experience a full measure of the inconvenie pee and difficulty of attempting to play fast and loose between the rights of the North and the greedy pretensions of the South, Mad he chosen, when he came into office, to sustain Gov. Geary in his endeavors to do jus tice and to secure the inhabitants of the Terri tory against any new encroachments or love• slot's, he might by so doing hove shaken off any responsibility for the original conspiracy to deliver ~v er KII/19119 hound hand and foot to the slsveholders. liud be ever chosen to sus tain the Governor or his own sclectiou ant up pointmmo, in the course whic ti that Governor who encouraged by Mr. Buchanan himself to enter upon, he might have escaped the charge of being a fellow-conspirator with Pierce, and the disgrace, too, of being like him a baMcd conspirator uguinst the rights of the people of Kansas. The project of Mr. Buchanan in sending Walker to Kansns, and in giving him the instrue• aorta and full power lie did, seems to have been this. lie expected that Walker, since the inhabitants of the Teritory were determined to have it a Free Slate, would at least succeed in twinging it into the Union as a Democratic Free State. Ever since time of Mtn Ratidolph the Southern politicians have been accustomed to put the Northern Democracy in much the same category with their niggers, so that to have Kansas Democratic might be coins con siderable consolation• to the slaveholders for having failed to make it negro. It cannot be denied that Walker exerted himself to the utmost to bring about this result. Never did u man labor harder to create a now party.— But in Kansas patties wete already formed lung Were Walker's arrival ; and as both the existing parties had an instinctive distrust of of hint, he failed to establish any influence with emitter. Ot course he didn't succeed ma king Kansas, Democratic, and having failed to do so, Mr. Buchanan silents to have consider. ed himself disearged front all his promises to sustain hint. Having failed in the project of making Kan. Democratic State, Mr. Buchanan's next Budge was to appease and pacify the South by bringing it into the Union under the Lecomp• ton Constitution. He, no doubt, expected, when he sent his Message to Congress, that the Slavery clause in that Constitution would be rejected. Hod that been done. lie might have replied to the complaints ot his Southern sup porters that he certainly could not be expected to go any further in the mutter of imposing Sla. very on the State than hod been dune by a Con. %nfirm notoriously chosen in the slaveholding interest But the turn which things have now taken has Moiled the door upon that avenue of escape. Mr. Buchanan is now brought to the point of either yielding to the wishes and the *rights ot the majority of the people of Kansas, by throwing the Lecompton Constitution over boars, or at setting those wishes and those rights at palpable and undeniable defiance ; and that too, with nothing to gain by it. It is an em barraseing situation certainly, but one fur which Mr. Buchanan has nobody to blame but him 101.—New-Ter* 217,nrir. INDIA. • The semi-monthly mail from India arrived at Suez on the let of January, with dates from Calcutta anti Bombay. Gen. Havelock died on the 25th of Novein. her, from dysentery, brought - on by exposure and anxiety. On the 27th of November an engagement took place near Cawnpore, between Gen. Wind. ham s division and the Gwalior mutineers, in which the British troops retreated with the total loss of the tents of three regiments, 3,000 in number, which were burned by the enciny.— 'flie filth regiment is reported to have been nearly cut up in the encounter. The Gwalior mutineers numbered more than 8,000 men, completely organized and equipped. Sir Cohn Campbell, hearing of this disaster quitted Lucknow for Cawnpore. Os the 7th, of December he catne up with the Gwliot mu tineers and totally defeated them, captureing If guns, 25 carriages, an immense quantity of amunition, stores, &c., and the whole of theii baggage. The British loss in this action was iusiAnihcant, only one officer being killed. All the women and children, sick, &C. from Lueknow, had arived in safety at Allahahad. The official report of the defence of Luck now is published, and shows that the privations endured bt tile heroic garrison, and particular ly by the 1.1111111, were fearful. Troop-ships combine to arrive rapidly at Cal cutta, and' among others the celebrated Ameri can-built clipper Lightning, had arrived nut in a passage of 87 days from the Downs. Ex. chauge.at Calcutta, 2s. 2.0. Buchanan's Political Secrets. The Republic (Washington) has the follow. ing interestitir chapter of political history 'Governor Wise's defection from the Admin. ii,tration hasla secret history, which, in the pro. greys of the quarrels between the Democratic leaders, cannot be kept secret much longer. 'The President started out with the policy of securing to the people of Kansas a fair vote upon their constitution. Ila sent Guy. Walker to Kansas to execute that policy. For a while he stood firm, and wrote a letter to Gov. Wal ker (not yet publidhed, but shown by Governor W. to many persons,) assuring him of the sup port of the Administration. "Let Georgia and Alabama and Mississippi howl," said the Pre. sideut in his letter', "I will stand by yore." That the President used substantially this language, is a well authentiested filet. 'ln the end, the 'howling' become so terrific, that poor Buchanan was frightened out of his wits, changeg his policy, and abandoned Gov. Walker. 'Before he changed his policy, he had arran. ged with Governor Wise to make a diversiue against the tireeaters in Virginia. Governor Wise, and the Richmond Enquirer, nndrr Gov ernor Wise's influence, were to support the Ad miniotration programme in Kansas, and the Administration were to support Governor Wise for the United Stales Senatorship against Mr. Hunter. Governor Wise arrived here, to cote plete and perfect these arrangements, on the very day that the Union announced the Presi. dent's submission to the nullifiers. Gov. Wise went home, and has been educe nursing the wrath which breaks out in his letter to Tamma• ny Hall. Not only was his lichees of defeat. ing Mr. Hunter blown up, but he himself had been drawn into commitments upon the Kansas question which destroy his Democratic standing disabled as he is from making any effective fight by the treachery of the President. Gov. Wise is a betrayed man, and, as a Democratic politician, ruined. It he does. not compass some. 1 'rerenge,' even if 'victory' be unattainable, it will prove that age has wonderfully softened his temper.' PENN Important to Liquor Sel lers and School Directors. It was decided in our Court, lit-a week, in the case the Cowma.,lth for the use of Ithe Schotd Directors of the Itorung'a of Shirley* burg against Dr. J. D. Lightner and his bail, that a cot victor in the Court of Quarter Sea slims for any violation of the liquor license laws, is an absolute forfeiture of the bond re (inked by the act of ISA; and that the whole penalty of th 3 bond can be recovered for the use Of thd Public Schools of the proper dis trict. TLe same dieission was made in the ease of the Cototno.twealik fur the line of the School Directors of Walker towtothip against Fades Lehnrd and his hail. These were amts for the penalties of the bonds and resulted is a verdict of SSOU fur the plaintifrs in each case. A NIONErk:It Gmf.—The Daliglren gun of the U. S. corvette Plymouth weighs 16,000 pounds. The weight of each shell discharged therefrom is 136 pounds; that of each solid shot 17.1 pounds. The sound of the shell and shot, tra versed a distance of three miles, Is lost in tli6 enormous space which it traverses. In experi• mews made to test the strength of one of these guns. it had becu fired off nearly two thoustoul times, with 4 large portion of shell shot, without bursting. Itar The President is in travail with Kansas again. Ile denied himself even to members of the Cabinet on Thursday, and was supposed to be engaged in the preparation of number med. sage on the question of the day. NW The Administration has at length be gun to perceive a speck of danger ix the hori. zoo of Utah. Gen. Scott is to sail in the next steamer for California, whence, with the regu.. Mr troops in that sei t tion of the country mud such a force of volunteers as may be needA he will march for Salt Lake City, in case the news from that quarter wear the same complexion as now. The Army will probably be conducted' up the Colorado River, which is believed to be navigable for 300 miles from its mouth, and will (oral a junction with Col. Johnston in Juno at Salt Lace City. Ic FRIDAY AN "UNLUCKY DAY?"—.The year 1858 Logile and ends on Friday. January, April, July, October and December end on Friday, and January and October begin on Friday. There are 53 Fridays in the year. We trust, however, it will not•provo 'more die estrous than 1837. Fitom WssitiNnror.—Jan. 20.—The *a i r Department has asked Congress for athepro prietien of $1,224,000 to pay for 4,800,000 re.. time for subsisting the Utah expedition for twenty months, from the let of July last ; that. amount being required ter 5600 soltliets,.3o9: women, 300 servants and 1894 employees—in the aggrrgnte 8,000 pe=eves'., Pills 'ARCMS. ter On the Rth inst. the Rev. Lowman Hawes was installed as pastor of the First Presbyterian church of Madison, lowa. The Rev. Thomas S. Crowe of Hanover preached the sermon; the Rev. Charles Lee of Dupont, presided and gave the charge to the pastor, and the Rqv. Smiles of Pleasant, the charge to the people. NEW AND FEARFUL MODE OF EXECUTION ny THE INDIAN Rnintt,s.—The following has been communicated to the Poona Obsenr• It appears from trite journal of a European traveller that a new and fearful mode of exe cation has been adopted by the king of Delhi. The, inetrument and process are than descri• bed. A box, each aide of which is fifteen feel square, is constricted of timber about eigh. teen inches thick. dovetailed together, and braced with iron rods. The outside.' of the bottom of the box is covered with a. plate of beaten iron, one inch in thickness. The in. feriar is filled with perfect cubes of granite, weighing in the aggregate several thousand • tons. A machine is erected after the manner{ of an ordinary pile driver. knit of coarse on an enormous scale, and of tremendons strength The mass is raised by powerful machinery. The human victim is placed upon a block- of granite,.of a cinWesponding surface buried it, the earth immediately beneath the enormous mass, and covered with a plate of iron. At a signal, the executioner tonehes a spring, the mass falls, and the victim, crushed at once, is suddenly annihilated. The huge weight tie ing again raised, the flattened borly is with• drawn and dried in the Run. When com• pletely prepared, it is : hung over the wall of a public building, there to servo as a warning 1 to the multitude. A FOG ix PAIII9, FIIANCL—BetWeen six and seven o'clock, on the evening if the 19th ult., a dense fog covered the streets of Paris. The darkness was so complete thut a pedestr, an could not distinguish an object at a nh,,rt distance from hitn. In some streets it became impossible for 'coachmen to continue their course. Tn others. coachmen were obliged to descend from their seats and lend their horses, calling out, at the same time, to avoid a mall. Slon with others. The authorities commanded that policemen should be placed at short die• tames front each other, bolding lighted tor ches. DISAETER iw TIP.OOICT,TN.—Ott Tuesday of ternmn, 19th inst., a fire_ originated in the large public school N0.,14, nt the corner of Leonard find Concord streets, Brooklyn, New York, in which were TOO children, when a most agonizing scene took place. The tea. ellen in one of the moos, in ...Tience of the increased hear, not knowing the cause, threw up the windows, and it was not until the smoke poured into the room, that the ohms. ing fact that the building, being on fire was suspected. A statnpede ensued among the alarmed children, uttering the most agonizing cries. Many were thrown from the windows at.d saved from injury hr being caught in the arms of the firmness and other!. SeVen or the ' children were surfocated or killed Iy being, trampled upon in the rush for the various stairways, nt the first alarm. It, is belie. - ed that none were burned. The teachers re. mined at their pasta until all the scholars were riot. The building was entirely destroy. ed. It is believed that the fire originated in this way. As the weather was very mild on Tuesday but few of the registers were opened, and it is supposed that the pent up heat igei ted the uosdw•orh with which the fluei came in contact. The flues were of tin, and all the wood work near them was cased in the same metal. A Tokens Petite.—The Victoria Ilridge across the St. Lawrence at Montreal, which has been in course of erection for several years, will be the largest and fittest in the world. it is to be two miles long. The to• tnl amount of masonry in the bridge Will be'. 2,000,000 cubic feet, which, at 13} feet to the ton, gives a total weight of abed 22,000 tons. Fourteen of the piers are Completed, and it is expected that eight more will tee fin ished next season. leaving only two to ereet in 117 , 59. The total weiglitof iron in the tubes will be 10,100 tons. The bridge will cost a• bMit live millions of dollars. . ice^ The State of Rhode Island, kith population of newly .200,000, and no .death pontlty, had no murder committed within her borders daring the year MIT. The City of New York, with about quadruple the pup. lation fghtide Island, had not less thou thirty murders. It must be borne in mind that Rhode Island has a dense population, en gaged in manufactures, much of it foreign born and uneducated. The Chanthersburg R , pnsitnry and Tran• s cript announces the death of George K. liar. per, who had leen the editor of that paper for more than forty years. Cowtt•ren or MUDDED.—The trial of An JorSon and Richards, the murderers of Mrs. GMber and Mrs. Ream, near Illanheint, iu Lancaster Comity, Clime uu yesterday in the Corot 6f Oyer and Terminer. Alexander Au• derson• WWI tried first, for the murder or Mrs. Ann Garber, and the Jury last night brought" in a verdict of “guilty of murder in the first degree." To day.the other prisoner, Richards is to be tried, and au doubt exists . an to •his conviction. The trial causes much excite• mcnt, nod as the prisoners were conveyed be tween the Court blouse and the prison, they ' were jeered and ho6ted at by the crowd. air The captain of a Mississippi steamer has started a morning paper on hoard bit boat called the Bulletin. Ile is►pes it regularly, serves it to customers at stepping places, otid fills it with news and' pleasant g(isoip. lie is one of the veterans of navigation, having fol lowed that caHing for twenty seven Years. It .is prof/mm(l especially to make the paper an organ of the ricer boatmen. This is similar ft thy Vanderbilt einem itamorpre: Meeting of the Democratic State Com• mittee. The members of the Democratic State Com• ' mittee met at Buehler's Hotel last night, and judging from common rumor about town this morning. we infer that a good deal of dirersity of opinion existed no to the tint, a Convention ought to ho called 'for the purpose of nomina• ting State officers, to be voted for at the next election. The friends of Mr. Buchrman desired a postponement of the Convention until some time is July next, whilst the friends of Doug • las insisted that the Convention ought to be called in March next, which was after the withdrawal of come of the members, finally greed to. The Convention will, therefore, be Lend on the 4th day of March next. Mn. BUCHANAN IN FHANCE.-1110 Paris Charivari, the French Punch, pretends to have been informed by its correspondent at Washington that, luring the reading of his Men. sage, Mr. Buchner. was present in the Mouse with'his !mkt° full of revolvers; and that. not satisfied with the reception given to the does• meat, he shiest the Clerk, the Speaker and several members of the opposidoni and, while ,passing home through Pennsylvania avenue amused himself by emptying the contents of the remaining barrels on the passers by. it morkover, that the President is a con. firmed and that Cum. Walker wrote thnt portion' of the Message which relates to , his movements. R I atria', On the nit inst.. at A. Lewis' Hotel, in Mount Union, by 11. Ilav Weaver, Esq., Mr. John 'limes and Miss Margaret Lewia, both of Edward Furnace, Huntingdon Co., l'a. On the 191, inst., by Rev.,J. MeKee. Mr. Robert Reed. of I,lSa 'Cm, 111., (son.of Sara• .1 Reed of this Conn ty,) to Miss Margaret J. Watt, of IZishneoquinas, Mifflin roman, Pa. In Cosgville, on the 6th inst., by E. B. Wit. so, Mr. Thomas Orowdon, of Bedford muniy. to Mini tiarith A. Chileott, of dm fur• t, Cnco. PHILADELPHIA MARKETS FLOUlt.—There is nn new feature; $5 25 in slt per bbl. • WilEAT.—hiees are stendy. CLOVER SEED.--Is minted nt 51 per bush. NEW AK ERTISEAIENTS. 171172e/PROVIOD TRACTS OF LAND WANTED In exchange for TWO BRICK HOUSES IN Philadelphia, Pa., as fur Stocks Ste., Address COL. F. BRADS', No. 123, Snob Seventh st.,. Philadelphia. Jan., 27, HEAPEST PAPER IN TILE WORLD, NATIONAL . MERCHANT if Large fre,lcly at Si.rt,y Cents a Year. contains choice seiection of Literary I matter, Tales, Poetry and a large amount at' commercial informally:l. The reviews of the Markets and Bank Note Reports are of themselves worth more than the priers of suhseription. and the paper itself I.fme it is print•sl, costs more than an get for it. For Ten Riillars tvi teill 3e11 . 1 slxteen cop , ivs of the Mett.hant and n cnpf ttf any three dollar Mg/17.111e, snch as Gudey's Lady's Book Graham's Magazine, rte. Specimen copies of the Merchant will be sent to any address on the receipt of a pos tage stamp. . Activeyoung men wanted to minces* f the paper, to whom a liberal eommissimi will be allowed. that will amount is some cons to eighty dollars a month. Address, S. B. ASHTON & CO., National Merchant Office. Philadelphia. t Jan., 27. '3R. TAKE NOTICE Notice IA hereby given that Mr. S. T. Hill 1101(1:4 the fullowing,notea aLminut me :,..no rot fifty dollar.; dated Jannary Ist.. 1858, lobe doe on the tit* day of April, 1858; another note dated January Ist., 1858. to be dun June lat., l• 58, tor .whielt I received no value, and do nut intend to pay then; nidesv compelled by law. A BRAM AM' GRESSINHER. Jackson tp., Jan.27,'58,41. Exturrows NOTICE. • TITE untler,igned Executor of the last will and testament of Ann Stewart, late of the Unto'ad' of Alexandria, due' 1., herby elves no tice to all ',emu. who know themselves to he 'wielded to the palate of said dee'd, to make immediate pajama, 'and all persona loving claims against said estate to present their se rout.," properly authentiested for aettlement to John G. Stewart of said b0r0ugh,....... G. 11.-S'fIN'AF.T. PUBLIC SALE OF LAND. THE t‘ubserib, will ailitr for role a tract of I load, either by small guar dues, or by whole• bale, as way suit the bidders, on terms as fol. lows , One third of the money paid on confirma tion of the sale, the balance in two equal pay. steins. without imerest fur one year, by giving ommity by mortgage on the property. This land lies on the bank of the Juniata River. one mile below Mt. Union, in Shirley township. There is FIFTY SEVEN ACRES in the tract, alma; twenly five acres of which is cleared, anti in a geed state of cultivation. The balance is timber land. The DOI TOM land is chiefly MEADOW. • fh e e,, is a Qabin on it and some fruit tree., and a never 'falling spring of irater. This pruperty.will be sold on the 18th day of February, 1858.-- . Pue attendance will be given, and a good title wade. JOHN ANDERSON: Penn township, Jan. 27th 1838.-3 t. ADNINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Letters of administration on .the estate of Eli. Donal(ls., late of Springfield township, dee'd., having been granted to the undersigned all persons indebted to said estate are mine. ted to make immediate payment, anti those ha. sing elaitns present them to ELLIOTT RAMSEY, Adair. Jana:l;s7.4h.* WANTED! V 111 , 4), /1.,N0 thte Thiso having as diopese4 die tamp .11010:,