untingbort /annul „ rt ., it 4_ll k < l l - A tek t " - 4 ‘, , ......:_...1 WM. lIIREWSTEU, Editor and Proprietor. Wotan'lay ltornlng lievember 17 1858 The Cireuiatioit of the Hun tingdon Journal, is great er than the Globe and Am ericas combined. :LUBIBING wru 1N41124.Z INES, The ligntingdon JOUUNAL for one year, and either of the Magazines for the came period I will be sent to the address of any subscriber to be paid in advance as follows : The Journal and Godey's Lady's Book, for suergaJeer, $3 50 Journal and Graham's Magazine, for ere year, $3 50 The Journal and Emerson's Magazine and Putnam's Monthly, for one year, $3 50 The Journal and Frank Leslie's Family Magazine and Gazette of Fashion, fur one year $3 50 . The Journal and Lady's Home Maganne, ones 2 73 The year , Journal and Itlerson's Magazine, for claerrea's2 75 Journal and Atlantic Monthly, for one year, $3 50 BOOK TABLE GODEVB LAD'S BOOK.—This v tluablo monthly for December is again on our ta ble, we think that the Lady's Book stands at the bead of the magazines. Now is be time to subscribe. as the new volume is t abont commencing. Price $3 a year—see our club list. -0- Emsasom's MAGAZINE.—This excellent Magazine for November is now on our ta• ble. It is an excellent number. The Publisher, are about publishing a new magazine which they say will far excel all the magazines. -0 - COURTSHIP & MATRINONY.—This is the title of a volume from the portfolio of Robert Morris, Esq., the able editor of the Philadelphia Inquirer. In these days, it is gratifying to find a volume, like the present, wherein taste is tinvitiated and sense undestroyed ; in which simpliciiy I of style and clearness of expression are Ultt i alVitag i t MO Col passions of our nature, but to inculcate lessons of wiedem , as well as to draw to tears and move to laughter. We ore re minded, in rending these essays, of the genial.hearted Goldsmith. They contain the delicate lency, the good sense, and the quiet humor which characterize Gold. smith's writings ; and they are moreover written with like correctness of language. They treat beside that of courtship and matrimony, of a variety of subjects, from scenes and experiences in social lice, and are particularly adapted for every day family reading. They are, indeed, such as will bear to be read aloud about the eve ning lamp, and will please ant. instruct not only the 'old folks at home,' but also the 'little folks.' As the work has been most enthusiastically praised by such men as John Grigg, it is needless to say that we trust that all persons will extend to it their hearty patronage, by sending for it. The publishers will send a copy to ony person, to any place, per mail, poet pod, on receipt of $1.25. Send for a Dopy to T. B. PETERSON & BROS. 306 Chestnut St., Phis. -0- - 1,1 VERY WOMAN HER OWN LAW yer ! A Private Guide in all Matters of Law, of professional interest to women, and by the aid of which every female inlay to whatever situation, understand her Legal Course and Redress, and be .‘her own Legal Adviser; containing the laws of the different states relative to Marriege and Divorce, Property :n Marriage, Guar. Antos and Wart's, Rights in Property of a Wife. Rights of Widows, Alimony, Die• •carded wives. Breach of Promise, Deser ted Woves, &c. By George Bishop.— Large 12rae., nearly 400 pages, bound in half leather. Price li. This book should be to the hands of every woman, young or old, married or single, in the Dated States. Published by DICK & FITZGERALD, No. 18 Ann-st., New York. Also, for sale by all Booksellers in title vicinity. Arrival of a 64i - wed Slaver. Charleston, Nov. 11 The captured Slaver Ketch Brothers, which was taken on the south coast of Af rica. arrived at this port this morning in charge of Lieut. Stone of the U.S Sloop of war Marion. The Ketch was former ly (owned by Messrs. Street & Bro's. of Chaslesion, and was sold to parties in Ha vana, She was provided with a slaver's outfit, but she hay no slaves on board...— Eighty-seven hundred dollars in gold were found on her: lellirThe Scrivener of the Globe, un der the caption of a cotemporary, writes an article for a hit at the Journal, which does not opply to US in any wey whatev. er: but be could not write a more appro. priate Miele for the Globe, it suits com pletely. •; cellanens Attu. A INDElfil ALB%ANDER SELKIRK. In the United States Districts Conn yes terday, Judge Hervey presiding, was tried the case of Jeremiah Austin, master of ship Betsey Williams of New Bedford , charged with having lett on a deserted island John Francis, a colored man, one of his crew, in the month of November, 1855. The mate of this vessel, Mr. Wes ton, has already been convicted of an as• sank upon Francis with a belaying pin, by .which the sight of one eye was destroy ed. John Francis testified to the fact of his being put ashore. At the time that the orders were given by the captain the wit ness was below in irons; his irons were knocked off, and he was put on board a boat, the captain instructing them if they could not land Francis without staving the boat, to throw him overboard and let him get ashore as beet he could. He says that as he was leaving the vessel the cap tain gave him one or two smart kicks, an•l said that if he ebou'd live and any one should ask who put him ashore, he should reply, "Captain Austin kicked me ashore.'' They gave him a few articles of clothing and landid him alone on the beach, after which the ship sailed away, and he was left the solitary inhabitant of the island. For txenty•six days he lived on raw crabs and young birds soskcd in the water, ta king refuge in a hut, which he made of sticks, at night, Every morning he was in the habit of going down to the beach before sunrise to look for a ship because his eye could not hear the reflection of the sun upon the sand. Finally the ship Old Hector touched at the island, and he was carried off to Talcahuano, where he remained for seven mon hs ens a half in the hospital. There was corraorative evi dence of his being put ashore, and also some evidence for the defense, which did not deny that fact. The case will be ar gued to morrow. The island in quest ion is on, of the Ga. lipagos Group, and was formerly used by the Peruvian Government as a penal sta. tion; it was afterward abandoned, but was sometimes visited b) whalers for the beef of the wild bullocks left upon the island, and thls fact probably led to the rescue of Francis. The trial of this case reminds us of a somevi!nt similar case many ye ars ago on board an English man sf war, which England. There was on board the flgi;.!'!' ship a mere lad from the West Coast of England, wh., had been caught in some trivial theft, and for no other cause titan this the captain ordered him to be tak en, with scarcely any food or clothes, to a then deserted island of the West India Group, and notwithstandtug the protesta. dons and tears of the lad, they tailed sway, and left him to his fate. Afterward the facts were made public in England and great interest WAS expressed to know the fate of the poor lad. So great was the ex citement that at last the British govern. sent was obliged to take notice of it, and an expedition was sent especially to the island to search for the boy. Nothing was found there but a skeleton, from which it was supposed that he had perished. It was not long however before it was whis pered that the boy had been rescued and taken to the American continent. he nglish Government found it necessary to send another expedition for the public in dignation grew hot against the inhuman captain, and at last the lad was discovered wilh a family et Marbiehead. a Yankee yes el having rescued the boy at almost the last moment from his place of abodon meat. He was thus restored, after th e lapse of a number of years, to his mother in England. So much had the case at tracted public notice, that as the vessel reached the shores the greatest curiosity was manifested to see hint, which coptin ued as he passerthrough the country, and in consequence of thin expression of pub. lie opinion, the inhuman captain was obli ged to compound for hie cruelty by the payment to his victim of a large some of money. Austin was sentenced to pay a fine of $lOO. The extent of the punishment for this offense is $5OO fine, or six months imprisonment. In a suit brought by Fran cis for damages, Judge Harvey awarded hint the sum of 800, to be paid by the captain. The mate of the same ship was fined $5O for assaulting Francis with a be. laying pin. Dacotah. According to a letter in the St. Paul, (Min,) Pioneer, the people cf Dacotah have completed an independent temporary organization of their Territory, to continue until Congress shall give them the usual form of Territorial government State officers were appointed, a Legislature con. vened, laws passed, &c., and the Minneso. to code of 1857 adopted. The reasons as_ signed for this step are that the people aro left entirely without laws, except those promulgated by the Indians surrounding them, or the still worse code as laid down by Lynch and Bowie, and that the absence 1 1 of laws kept away emigration, In vindi cation of their course was cited the exam ple of California and Orevn under similar cimutretanco... The Late Election in Il inoia. Rock Island, 11l , Nov. 10, 1858. Some of the Republican newspapers in this State wish to attribute the triumph of Douglas, in the recent election, to the course pursued by a part of the Eastern I press, hut the party in Illinois find the rea• sons for it nearer home. It teas apparent , from the beginning that the large major'. ties against us in Egypt would not affect the result, but that the contest would be decided in a few doubtful districts, where the vote of '56 was so close as to give no indication of the result. In these districts, our organization was Imperfect, and strange to say, comparatively little work was done. ; Here was a large American element, which I I it has been plain would decide the battle. These men, who voted for Fillmore in '56, had no pasty ties to bird them anywhere, hat' no particular objection to the Exten sion of Slavery, and "did not care whether it was voted up or voted down ;" but they generally voted the Douglas ticket, for no other earthly reason than that they wished to rebuke the corrupt Administration, The Republicans are strong in the conscious ness of having twice in succession elected their State ticket, by good majorities, and in the belief that some time our State will he so divided into districts, that, when we have a large majority of the People. we may possibly Also have a small majority in the Legislatu•e, and that at no election hereafter will the "Nationals" go about and make friends for our opponents by abusing them. Abraham Lincoln has fully equalled the exectations of hi t moat partial friends; in no instance has he varied one hair from the orthodox Republican doctrine, and to•day , he is nearer the hearts of the people than any other man to the State. ; In Stephen A. Douglas, the Republi• cans of Illinois have no confidence, and never can hove in any pledge he may make, public or private; they know his ca parities for evil and his proclivities in that direction. BROWN. Extensive Issue of Fraudulent Bills. It appears by the New York papers that some persons in that city have been cluing a pretty extensive business with pretended issues of a Maine bank, The Times has the following: 'The bills—they are all of the denomi nation of ten and twenties—bear the ina• press 'New England Bank,' and purport to be issues of a bank bearing this: natne lo• cated at Fairmount, in the State of Meine. Maine, but no such banking institution t h ere as th a t r:f.tmed. The issues are frau• dulent, and got up in t';:.* most approved style of deception, A firm of note engravers is reported to have execu• ted the engraving part of the job, and the amount of bills put in the market is said to be 6500,000. Of this large sum the bulk has been taken into the Western States, and $50,000 is said to have been found among the Wall street brokers in exchange for stocks. The bills are capi• tally executed, and have been taken by the best judges of money, and are signed by E. Rittenhous, President, and A. Martin, ;cashier." One broker in Wall street is said to have passed off $15,000 of them; another $O,- 000, and still another $3,000. They were not, it appears, aware of their true character. The Times adds : • A t he "It is not known yet who introduce d bills into the market, and who issued them with a guilty knowledge. A young man named Underhill was arrested at the Inter. national Hotel, who had $4OO of the mo ney iu his possession. He gave the pack age of bills on his arrival at the hotel in charge of the book-keeper. He gave a boy an order on the cashier for $l5, in payment 1:r some purchases sent there, and through this citcumstance the charac ter of the bills was brought to light. Un• derhill was taken before Justice Kelly, and held to await examination. He says that he received the money of a broker in Wall street in payment for some land in Cum berland county, Pennsylvania. Contested Seats in the Next Congress. According to newspaper reports A. J, Williamson, American, will contest the right of Hon. Daniel E, Sickles, Demo crat, to represent the third district of New York in the thirty-sixth Congress. Gou verneur Kemble, Democrat, will join issue with Hon, John B. Hoskin, anti-Lecomp. ton, for the right to represent the ninth district of that State. John W. Ryan, Republican, denies the claim of Hon B. Florence, Democrat, to the seat of the first district of Pennsylvania. Alfred W. Johnsen, Democrat, will endeavor to show before the next House of Representatives that he is better entitled to vote for the third district of Maine than Ezra B, French, Republican, who has received the certificate of election Francis P. Blair, jr., Republican, has announced that he stands ready to prove that his opponent, J. Et Barrett, Democrat, in the the first dia. trice of Missouri, was elected by fraud, land on that ground he will claim the sent. • MAMMOTH Ox.--An ox weighing 4,200 pounds, and measuring eighteen feet from the end of the nose to the tip of the tail was on exhibition at the Petersburg (Va ) Fair lust week, Termination of Indianrar in Oregon. It has been the fertile Mr. Buchan an, since his innuguratio as President, to be very much engaged war, either for_ I eign or domestic. He igan the military glories of his reign by anOedition against Utah. With immense penditure an er my was concentrated in,at territory; but, owing, possibly, to thtinfhtence of his ' I star. the Mormons declitd an engagement I and abandoned their hollity. 'Phe an war in Oregon, wt h threatened, at one time, to prove a lonpnd serious one, has been suddenly broupt to a close. The Indians, instead of bing the impetuous and numerous braves trey were repreaen ted, seek peace at th first peal of the trumput, and yie:d as abinissively as wo men. Those two warshowever, have cost the couetrp an immese sum. But we suppose we are thank% I that it was not larger, rather than grenble at its actual amount, and certainly we have Callse of congratulation that thee hostile demon stration, which at one Ime seemed so se rious, have ended so aupiciously. The difficulties with Paraguay note re melt to be adjust.•;!, ~ ! gif the expedition which has been sent Other shall escape a conflict with the foces of that power. Mr. Buchanan may feliitate hiinselt upon the rapid and peacefuitermination of all his military enterpries. Pf 7 ooden Cannon Botts. —A Russian corresspondent of the Radie,ter Union re I hated the following anecdote of the Czar, which shows that no , e , en Emperors are exempt from the operatbns of sharpers : ' , Th, Emperor Alexander gave a large , order for the manufacture of cannon balls to some concern at Ildsingfors, a port on the Gulf. They completed the order, stac ked up and delivered the bulls, received their pay, and put the money in their pocket. The Einpero. being there one day, lie took it it into his head to inspect the balls. Taking one up, he discovered it to t e exceedingly het for iron, and to. king out his knife scraped it, and behold it was a wooden ball painted black ; ns was , the entire lot. He caused the arrest of the swindlers, and they were transported for life to Siberia." Supposed Insanity of the President. A writ de lunatic,' tbquirendo in the case of James Buclinnan, would be well timed just now. There have, for some months, been doubts as to the sanity of our President, nod the results of the late elections must have still further damaged ed ' 3 . O t Ctio his P tini v t i rß4 nothing of the similar shocks, received at the same time, from Ohio and Indiana.— Now he is suffering from a still more vio adintrustered by New York, New Jersey, i;;:nis and the other Staten that voted on Tuesday last. 'll.e blow from Illinois is the severest of nit ; fur has proved hint totally -without friends in one of the Stews that voted for him i i 18-' 56 The administration party in is completely broken up. The votes' re ceived by the candidates ore so few that they are not thought worthy of being re ported. The success of the Duglas party is more galling to the President then the success of the Republicans would hove been, and his friends must be opprelien sire of the worst effects from it upon his disordered mind. If the President is re. ally insane, as his course since his inaug ration wool I indicate, some measures ought to be adopted to prevent further in jury to the country and its interests from his madness, The Constitution makes no special provision for the emergency of a crazy Chief Nlagistrate. though there is a provision for his “inabitity to discharge the duties of his office." This einergeo cy has note arrived. We are in the con , di.ion of Prussia, with her crazy king.— Prussia has wisely put the reins of gov • eminent into the bands of a Regent. Con- I grew must provide by a law for the inabil ity—that is to say, the insanity—of the President, and it should be one of the fire. . ;ids of the next session to make such pro- Butleart A Prisoner Shot by a r ol:ee CLiioer and Killed—Surrender of the Moir. New York, Nov. 11. Policeman Cairnes, of the First Ward was called upon to suppress a disturbance on board the St. Charles, laying at the foot of Wall street. Cairnes araested a man named John Hallis or Michael McGovern, a longshoreman, and while conveying him to the Toombs the prisoner knocked the policeman down and attempted to es. cape. The officer pursued, firing his re volver, and the third or fourth discharge struck Hallis in the back. The wounded man died while on the way to the City Hospital. Cairnes surrendered himself, and is now in prison awaiting the result of the Coroner's inquest. !rennin ACORN.- 7 A friend sends the Richmond Dispatch from Moulton Lavaca county, Texas, en acorn, which our co. temporary supposes, is the largest ever neen in this latitude. It measures six in• then in circurniernece around the cop, and four inches around the acorn itself. It is quite a mammoth in its way, and if the oaks of Texas are very prolific, hogi as well as acorns ought to grow an enormous size m that section, a CONVICTED —As will be seen by our court reports, "E. L. Snow, Esq.," of New York. has beon e nvicted of receiving tho avails of many robberies committed in phil adelphin, know:ng the circumstances un, der which said 'merchandise was procur. ed, The arrest of Mr. Snow was an im portant one, his offence was a grave one, and his sentance will probably be propor- 'innately severe. Mr. Snow's case is a hard one, yet it is the case of every man who sets a rat trap to catch bears. Mr. Snow undertook to find a short cut to for tune, yet in following it up came to a dead halt at the doors of the penitentiary. Mr. Snow was the proprietor of a dry goods store to Brand street, New York, and olso of an establishment. Herkimer county, in the same state. Although os tensibly the proprietor of a dry goods stole where great bargains were to be had, the police knew perfectly well that he was in reality the head of a "fence" establishment where burglars could securely dispose of their plunder. When the heavy robber ries at the store of Barcroft Beaver & Co., and other establishments in this city , were committed, Snow was telegraphed f ir by the robbers, came on to this city and purchased the goods for a tenth of their value Silks and rich laces were pocked up in barrels, as though they were so many apples, and in that way were sent to New York, without suspicion, and de pcmited in Snow's stole. In course of time the burglars were ar rested, and one of the members of the gang of burglars, not being entirely destitute of honesty, told the whole story. This story was confirmed by Tout Walker, the mas ter spirit t . f the party, when he felt that he was dying, in prison. Snow wss arres• ted and held by the ltecorder in *lO,OOO bail to answer. With his subsetibent re lease upon bail. his escape to Canada, and his re-arrest by some rather sharp prac tice our readers are already acquainted. and it now only remains for the business community. while It commiserates the family of the crmtinal. to congratulate it self that for once an example has been made in bringing tm justice a noted one among a cluss of criminals who have hith erto laughed at the law and treated our penal code as a mere mockery. Three Thousand Dollars Stolen from a Colored Man by a Gipsey. A short time since a respectable colored hack driver, Cornelius Clark. living on K street.. Wash in gran City, was nio,t outra geously swindled by a Gypsey Watson, sld of int s of its.\l'Ve u n id u?nr re ii t a „. c . h c i ; her all cf 6is ready mosey, amounting is about five Issidred dollars, she informed hits that she was about to place a spell upon the patient which w ould forever re licre it of its pains, but that she would re• quire the sum of $2,000 to perform the „p„,viffil with. Completoly "bamboo. 2 1,1“ by i,,;r art., Clod: went away and mortgaged his house and lot to the of Washington tar two thous's,' dollars receiving, from the clerk twenty 14100 notes which he placed in the Gypsey's hoods nod whicd die disposed of as she had done with the previous amount. She then made her victim shell out all the jewelry and silver . .vare in the house, consisting of a gold watch and chain, a number of bracelets, ear rings, finger rings, breast pins, gold shirt studs necklaces, silver spoons, and goblets, to the value of about fire hundred dollais, which he placed in her hands. She now got ready for her last perform. anct.s, nod requested Clark to go up stairs and bring various articles, and a large nap kin in which to tie up the valuables. lle soon returned with the disired articles, which she spread out, and laying, as he supposed al the cash, jewelry etc, in a handkerchief upon the napkin, made her dupe take it by the corners and Ito all se curely together and lay it under the sick child's head. She then left and did not return again. After a few days, she not awaring, and he being aftraid to disturb the bundle for fear of destroying the mag i is spell, yet becoming suspicious that all was riot right, sent to her boarding-house ! where he was informed that she had b 'en go ne from there for several days. His suspicion ;vas sow sufficiently strong to overcome his fears (or the safety of his child, and, rushing to the roma, he anateh ed the bundle and tore it open. What was his dismay at finding nothing within l it but a hew copper cents and some pieces of paper cut in the shape of bank notes; every single article of value was gone, and lie ruined ! The "fair Sybil" has not been found, although the police have been on the search for her whereabouts for see . eral days ' Ex GOVERNOR MEDARY.-- Washington Nov. 13.—Ex-Governor Medary will leave Washington tomorrow for Ohio. Ho will answer, in the course of a week, whether he will accept the tender of the Gouernor ship of Kansas. - ELECTION IN NEW YORK.—By the offi cial returns of the New York election ; Morgan's majority over Parker is 17,487; Tucker over Clap, 18,057. Republican gain, 85,544. The majority againt the Constitution is 31,755, Condition of the Gouldy Naps ttins, One of the Domestics Dead. NEW Yoßic, November 15. ' Elizibeth Corr, one of the wounded do. - • • wir-A Washington Monument IS to be inestics.of the Gouldy ' faintly, died at at erected in Washington Square, e hilada. Charlesh City G i o l o n ' ll i 1 n i is n Y o e t s e le x r pC r t e . d :o r he recover b President.—The Sandusky Register an- front his injuries, and NI r. Gould v and the nounces the nomination cf Abraham Lin firl Johan na . Murphy, are in an exceeding - y critical condition... , coin for the next Presidency, by an enthu . :thistle meeting at Mansfield. . REMARKABLE VERIFICATION OF A DREAM , --...-•...... A lady from the South, sojourning at the house Mr John Each, No. 3G East Fifth Heavy Frosts at the South.— A killing' street cincinoti, for some weeks, Dreamed frost is reported to have occurred in this i o and enjoymenti vil,rn of she perfect left vicinity, and it is certain that there has one night that a favorite sister, to whom been a heavy white frost. The growing sl t ' M s o o o n i t le n in uc th h e f ullt ehed n notion crop is supposed to be damaged, if at health, had died, and so greatly was she not killed, greiven that sir awoke at one, and could Seat in congress Contested.—Philn• I not sleep again. It was useless L., rea- Nov. 10.—Mr. Ryan, the people's candi• s rO n w. '" l h r i n r in or s c e a e m k e to tt a n s cra g ie e l ia l r e e r tak n fa n a r t . date in the first Congressional district, yes' hour, but she g could not touch a morsel terday served the legal notice on Col. Flor- of food. Still the storm of woe swept n once, contesting his right to a seat in the 1 cruse her soul. Her agony thus contin next Congress. Mr. Ryan claims 450 ma , ued until ten o'clock, when the telegraph i informed her that her sister had died that 1 morning at two o'clock precisely. amity, The Tee ms.—The terms on which Dim. ' glas will make pence with the Admiti!strn. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.. tion are, that all his friends who have been removed from office shall be reinstated. PUBLIC SALE. Otherwise lie will carry on the war with PUBLIC SALE OF TOWN I.OTS IN THE tow redoubled fury, This is the latest news' , Tnie % e ' t oi l : A i T i ,: r m i r, p k ee ; l Z i ',`T , (2 l ( t 43 B will. Irma Illinois. ! These Luis are elegantly situated and worthy the attention ofall who desire a cheap home. ger, ;or. Packer has issued hls pronto PAITKRSON (opposite :Merl.) is one of the motion announcing the election of John most thriving towns in oar State, and being the site of one of the Jerrie Machine Shops of the M, Read, as Judge of the Supreme Coin p onnsykani . ftaiiro;d, furnishes a dem" of Pennsylvania, for fifteen y ears, from the for labor of all kinds .—Now is the time for first Monday of December next. Artizans of nll descriptions to' secure a hams in this rapidly growing town. N. 11.—Terms will be made known on da y of sale. Payments will be made easy. Foe further inforutation apply to 1. MIDDMIII. • Patterson, Juniata cu., Pa. Senator Bigler is said to be in a state of , inconsolability" in consequence of the late election io this State. Buchanan blames him for the defeat of Gillis in the Wildcat District, and he blames Buck for appoint rig Gla u c•; Jones Minister to Aus tria. A "blow up . ' is expected. Union of ill,thotlists.— correspon• dence has teen going nn between Northern Protestant Methodists and the '•Wesleyan Methodist Connection" respecting a union of the two bodies. There seems to be 110 formidable difficulty in the way of the de sign, Subbury an 1 Erie Railroad.— The Su. preme Court hare filed, with the P.M.• entry at Pittsburg, au opinion in favor of the case of the Sunbury and Erie Hai!road vs. Cooper, deciding that the Act of As sembly for the sale of the canals 10 con ti• tutional, and that u. decree will be entered accordingly at the next Nisii l'rius Court , subject to an appeal to the Court in Iliac. Capture of Staters,—Another slay, has been capture(' on the coast et (Amu. The barque Venus, formerly s Mli m2 uu der the Mexican flag, was taken log a Spanish war steamer a few days since, ~fi Moro Castle, with nearly six Loud red ;roes on board. The barque li, tch Cr,, titers, captured on the coast of Africa, ar• rived at Charleston on Wednesday morn ing. She was formerly oat lied in Clint leF Ws, but was sold to patties in naval. I?onia. Cat hob, Orphan .Isylant Foul, —New York. Nov. 4.—The rumors in circulation for home days I ast rchitive u. the fraud perpetrated by the ity autliori ties during layur Wood's administration, in donating to the Roman Catholic Orp Asylum valuta'', city property worth atom' 000,000, was fully confirmed yesterday, by the Grand Jury presetting to the Cella a bill of indictment ngnitist tome sixty persons. fuming whom are cx•\layer ' Wood and a number al other prominent individuals who were officially connected , with his Administration. na. to chop off his correspondent of the Vevey (Ind ) Rev'lle writing from Carroll count , Kentucky. stat .0 that a few days since a party of inert were raising a log budding. One of the company, a young man known as Thos. E. Seamy, suddenly left his work, seizing an axe, cut several severe gashes on the top of his head. Ott an attempt being made to wrest the we Ton, he brandished it in the air, threatening to kill any one who approached him. Ile then laid his head noon a log, and was about to chop his head off, when his companions managed, after a desperate struggle to secure him.-- Searcey is described as being an intelli gent, upright man, and had never before given evidence of being insane. Expulsion of an ilmerican Illvorionary from South: .linerica.—The Rev. Mr. Crone, a missionary to Central America from the American Bible Union, has been expelled by the Government front the Sate of Salvador. In July last Mr. C. opened a school in San Aliguei, but through the 'interferenCb of the priests an attempt was made to drive hum away, and he was or dered up to the capital. On his way he , was seized by an armed force, taken down to Acajutla and placed on board the Co. lambus, bound to Panama. The case, as represented by Mr. Crown himself, ap pears to be one of great hareship on his part, and of unjust persecution on the part of the authorities of these Staies. p ndent of the anxiety which he has had , to undergo, his health has been seriously impaired by his imprisonment in a close, damp room in Acajutla, and he has been compelled to leave all his property behind him.—Boston Journal. ' Nov. 17, OAI.I.EPS MAGICAL PAIN TOR. Ili all diseases inthimtion mote or Iv, pre dowitutte6—now to alley intintaatio, strikes at the root or all tliseases-Lhenee no i•notedi nie cure. DALLEY'S MAGICAL PAIN EXTRGTOR. and nothing else, will allay inflaiwation at once, wild oink, n ci r win cure. I)a;ley . 6 Magical Pain Extractor trill cure the fo'h.wings among a "re. catalogue of : BIIIIN, SCIVIdA, Cure, Chuti•e, rare Nipplc4. Corn;. Bunions, Bruises, Strains, Bites, 1 OiSl,ll, ChiltinYS, Gout, Swelling, Itheit • Scold Head, Salt Rheum, Baldnecs, lirv,idelas, Ringworm, Harbors Itch, Smolt 'Mcaslo. &e. I'o some it may appear inerethiloui that to fliicases should be reached by one arti cle ;- such an idea. will tani,h when reflection point; la the fact, that the ,alve is a ei•mbitta lion or ingredients, eaelt and every ave applc io;; uf•rrect antitf,de to ily apostate disontto.. DALLEYS MAGICAL PAIN EXTRACTOR in its effects is magical, because the time is short between diseases -mid a permanent turf.; and it is as extractor. as it draws all diseases our 01 the a &Tit part„ leaving, nature: as pertact as helor, the injury. It is scarcely ne. 1....5,ury to say that nu house, workshop, or taanntaf•tory Af.itlfl benne moment without it. No lain Extractor is genuine unless the ha:t ha.: upon it a steel plate engraving, with the nann, of Holly Dailey, Manufactu rer. l'or ' , HIV I.y all the Druggiste and patent tn. ~lit•inn dealer, throughout the United States Canada,. Principal 1)45,p,.!,. 165 t'Lamilors York. 0. F. CHASE Ln h• ffuntiowlon l'a. Nov. y. HAIR DYE? HAIR DYE?? A. Hatchelors Hair Dye - 1 The Original and Best in the World ! All ode 1, are mere imittoion, and should 1,, ish to escape ridicule. (111A1, EEO, (lii RUSTY lIAIR Dyed in stantly in n bvnutiful mtd Natural Bmwti or ]duck, withmt the least it..inry to Hair or Skin. Fit:teen aml I tiplomas have beer e• warded to \\*m. A. Itatchclor since 1839, and over 80,000 oppliLations have been made to the Mira hiN Norm; 111 his famous live. \V M. A. BATetiELows 11A 111 DYE pro duces a valor ant to he distinguished from na ture, and is warranted not to injure in the !mot however lung it may be continued, and the ilk clrects of Bad Dyes retttedied ; the 11, it in vigoratedfor life by this splendid Dye. Made, c(1.1 or applied (in 9 private rooms) nt the Whig Factory, 233 Broadway, IV, York.' So'd in all cities and towns of the trui• tett States, by Druggists and Fancy Goods 1./elders. 110r.e. 1 he Genuine has the name and address upon n steel plate engraving on four aides of imx, W Id. A. BATCHELOR, . 23:1 Broadway, New York. John Rend, Agent Huntingdon Pa. Nov. 17, ...,il -1y• BATenliunts WIGS AND TOUPaS surpass all. They are elegant. light. easy and durnide. Fitting to n elinrm—no turn up behind—no shrinking, off the head indeed, this is the only Establishment where these things are proper ly understood and mnde. Nov. 17, 'sP%—ly. •?33 Broadway, N. V. T HE I ASSVILLE SEMINARY. Wax Fruit, $5,00 ; Wax Flowers, $5,00 ; Grecian Painting, $3,00 ; Ornamental Pain• ting, $3,00 •, Leather Work, $3,00 ; Chenille Work, $3,00 ; Ocean Shells & Mosses, $2,00 ; Pinno Music, $5,00. Those wishing to learn the Above from R. teacher of experience, should do so immediate ly, for Miss Stanley can be retained at the, Seminary only a few months longer—she re turns to New York in the Spring, siLanze, BLANKS I. BLANKS 141ATIllig3. A general assortment or Blanks of all de• arra:idiom just printed and for sale at the "Journal O f fice' Appointeet of Referees, Commou Bond, Notice to Referees, Judgment Notes Summons, Vendue Notes, Executions, Constabb's Sales, Scire Facies, Subpcenas, Complaints, Deeds, Warrants, Mortgages, Commitments, Rood to idetnnify Constable, &c 'PRING SHAWLS Anil Mantillas of every atvie at the Mivrwtfrft LIT /t