lucky, which has been veined by the Presi dent. llis-hut true, as has been asserted) that this bill is o nitre cojiy of the former b 11, with mu other change except what was necessary to cunliue.the colouration, to deal ing in exchange." When 1 heard.it suggested tm this floor that an "officer- of the present liank of the United JStates.had been consult ed in the preparation of the new bill, I was at once awure that it would be necessary to scrutinize its provisions with the utmost cdre; and this task 1 have performed. The Senator from Virginia tells us thatif the bill becomes a law, the stock will-all betaken. Taken!' My examination of tho bill induces me to say, undoubtedly it will. • Nay,-more, .there will-be a scramble fur it. More stock will probably be subscribed in one day, than ‘the whole amount of the capital of the bunk; and .wliy? Because it is a bank exactly ac cummbdated to the.purposes of speculators. The Senator from Mew York (Mr. \V right) had some old/fashioned notions.on the sub ject of banking. lie thought. it was nut right that a man should subscribe for stock in the fiscal Bunk, and pay fur it not in Inohcy, but in loans'obtained from the bank itself on the security of the stuck subscribed. It is true that past experience was in his favor, because the late Bunk of the United States had been nearly ruined, in the first years Of its existence by these stock-notes; and by their -use many hanks have beeii brought into existence, which were mere frauds upon.the public. 'Hence that Sena tor proposed as an amendment, to which the honorable. Senator from Kentucky assented, that such loans to stockholders to pay for their 'stock should be excluded) and that every subscriber should be compelled to'jiay his subscription.in gold and silver. . But no such rigid rule prevails in this bank in re gard to individuals. The Government is a part stockholder, and it alqtic is required to pay up its seven millions in hard specie or its equivalent. But what must thespecula tor.pay? There will hq only ten per cent; required from him in,money as a first instal ment, and he can meet the remaining ninety per cent, of bis subscription- by a stuck bill of excliange-jTirsby borrowing the gold and jsilycr out of the seven 'million fund placed in, this bank, by die-Gov eminent, .'jl'his is one important and . striking difference be tween the present bill and that advocated by the Senator Irom Kentucky. The subscri-' be;-may fly his-kite on Mew York dr Pbila the Senale to the 14th fundamental article of.tlie lull-to create the Fiscal Bank, where they will find the following wise provision, .which, has bcen.ajmiUc.iLiu-.the.present'bvlli. “Nor sli'afllhe said directors, either of the said principal bank or of'any branch or,office <>f-drecount and deposite, oy any age'ncy, dis count, or suifer to he discounted, or receive ill payment, or Suiter to he received in pay ment, any ..note or other evidence of debt as ! a payment of or upon any instalment'of the said capital stuck actually called fur and re quired to be paid, of with the intont~nf pro viding the means of making such payment; nor shall any of the said directors receive or discount, or suifer to be received o.r discount ed, any note or other evidence of debt, with intent of enabling any stockholder to with draw any part of the money paid in by him on his stock.”. . It is not intended to suffer this bank to coniine itself to real business transactions. If it were thus confined, it might, to a cer tain extent, be of consiberable. use. A man in one portion of the Union, who had funds in another, might draw upon those funds, and thus, without trouble, obtain his money at the place of his residence. But dealing in bona-fide bills alone will not answer.— There must be kite-living: there must be ac commodation paper; or, if that were nut in tended, it will at least be the effect, and that to a vast extent. Accordingly, in- order to make this.an easy process lor the specula-, ting gentry, the provision contained in. the Fiscal Bank bill of the Senator from .Ken tucky, intended to limit its business to real transactions, has been stricken from this kite-flyjng fiscality. The 20lh fundamental article of bis bill provided that— ".‘No paper shall be discounted, or any loan made by said bank fur a longer period than one hundred apd eighty days; nor shall any note, or bill, or other Jebt, or evidence of debt, be fenewedmr extended by any en gagement or contract of said bank, after the . lime for which it was negotiated shall have expired,” This .was a wise, a. salutary provision.— .It would; have confined the dealing in-ex change to the actual wants of the country, had it been rigidly and .faithfully enforced. Hut tfiis, too, has been omitted; and the ef fect will be to make-it the easiest thing in the world, by drawing bills backwards and forwards between different States, to furnish all The"accommodations that speculators can desire. Bills of exchange may be discount ed having years to.run; and they may be re newed, when due, by the substitution of new bills, during an indefinite period, without any restriction whatever. Could the most unreasonable speculator desire more than this? There is a third striking difference be tween the two bills,, The former bill went oh the presumption that members of Con gress are men of mortal mould; that they possess the same passions and the same frail ties as other men; that they are neither bet ter nor worse than their fellow-citizens; and that, as it'depended upon the vote of the ftvo Houses of Congresswhether proceed ings should be instituted to forfeit its. char ter in case it were violated, they ouglit'not to have any accommodations-from the bank, lest they might be thus swerved from their integrity of pufpose. _ This, to he sure, was a very severe restriction;because'gentlemen may desire, like some of their predecessors, to form another congressional land company; and it might be very convenient, to obtain money on kite-dying bills, a& Suriienf.their 1 predecessors bad done., Under similar cir cumstances, it would certainly - be a Very convenient matter foraniember-uf Congress to fly a kite as far as Baltimore for t'en.or twenty thousand dollars, and no doubtjic would find the bank extremely accommoda ting. Another advantage is* that-if he .should not.be able to pay at maturity, there is nut the least danger that he will he ever , publicly exposed.; T Relieve it is a rule in . 'love never tell;'and this rule has; been most pertinaciously observed by the ; Vdd:eoflbpt:afid tpltenißank^ : .of'the United Siates. ;; if tHatbankaccummodated mem-, berSofUangreSs—andweknowitdidy-To an immense amount—it has always refused to give up their names. The tears 'and the groans of the widows and orphans whom it has ruined have ascended to Heaven and ac cused its directors-. - These..directors have been changed again and again; but still they have kept the secret. No resolves and'no efforts of this body, dr of the other House, have, ever been able to extort it from tbenil There is aniong the secret arcana of that bank a document known by the name of the “suspended list,” Which, if ever published-, would give the information; but every human being who has liad access to.that paper has most religiously kept the secret. If (hey had not, it may be that men who now huld their heads very high,’.and who occupy dis tinguished stations i,tT the State, would be covered with, shame and humbled in the very dust. Could that list be procured, it is at'least possible' that we might learn how bank accommodation's can be paid off by the transfer of lots in lithographed paper cities and valueless western lands. Happily, un der this bill these golden opportunities will again be afforded, and the wind will again prove fair for members of Congress to fly their kites na well as other men. And here let me point out something of the working of this new patent machine.— Why, sir, to use a western phrase, “it will go without greasing;” there will be no man ner of difficulty in the way. The borrower in Philudelphia'will, as 1 told you, draw his bill on some far remote city in another State ~such as Camden; and when Ids bill isdue, his bona fide correspondent in Camden, can draw back on him just such another on. Phi ladelphia; and thus, without discounting a. single promissory note, thb<bank can lend mure money and make more profit than if its discounting power were without restric tion. I was really astonished to hear the 'gentleman from Virginia (Mr. Archer) as sert) whilst he denounced the power of dis count ns. being so immense and so danger pus, and so,.utterly inadmissible, that this oilier power of dealing in exchanges was the most benign, the most beneficent,'and the most felicitous power that ever was devised by'man; and that a bill which conferred it should, as a matter of course, unite in its favor the votes of all the whig.party. Then die' city of'New York" anil Jersey city; . If the honorable; Senator' should at tiny timef wtujt a loan, he has only fp fly his kite across-the Hudson fiver; and he can be > '^TyiV.'*’Ak(SEßT l had one character and assertcd.anolher.3 Yes\but when you establish a bank of such a character as- this, you must expect that such .consequences iv iU-fullow.. .-Abank. from whit h all restrictions are taken away, and at whose counter the. whole speculating . world, is'invitetf. tor-borfow,’'—from sucti a bartk what else can you expect? It will loan money on bills of exchange, instead of loan ing on promissory notes; and, for my soul, I' cannot perceive any essential difference be tween the two riiodes. The only effect in thus changing the form, will be to induce men to.commit fraud. -Instead of drawing on real funds, lhgy will draw bills on places where they have nothing to answer them.— They will thus make their loans, and the batik make its profits, with this only differ ence,—that they will have to- pay a little more far their money, while the batik will receive a larger interest, in the name of a premium, than the law would allow it to take on the discount of a promissory note. 1 can sec that some cities—and cities of great bu siness, too—wjll derive little benefit from (his bill. Buffalo, fur example, and Pitts burg, will both be in a “bad fix;” for Buffa lo cannot draw on New York, nor Pittsburg on Philadelphia. And why?. Because, un der this.wise hill, two cities in the same State cannot draw on eacli other. 1 cannot imagine how the merchants who conduct the immense flour and other business of'Buffalo will be able to obtain accommodations,; —un- less, indeed, they resort to flying kites to the Canada sbore,.aml thus present foreign bills to the bank for discount. Cincinnati will be well off, because Newport is just across the river, and the drawer and the acceptor will be almost-within hail of each other. This machine, such as I have described it, will regulate the price of every commodity in the country, and it will be done by thiskite-fly ing process.—)— ’’ • • - • ’ : There arc on- the stock exchange two classcs'of spcculators-the one called "068™,” and- the other “bulls.” The business,of gambling assumes different farms at differ ent times. ; Gambling at “all fours,” at “loo,” at “faro,” &c., has gone outrof: fash ion. 6 -' The fashion how is’to gamble-in stocks. Those-Who play at.the game are either bears or bulls.' The bear does what he Can to de press, the price of stocks in the market, whilst the bull is equally intent upon raising it. The bear'wagers with the bull that on a certain day (three months for example, af tcr the date*) a particular stock will be ten per cent, lower than at present.. So to work they both go—the one to depreciate, the oth er to enhance the price of this stock; - Hence there is a constant struggle going on between these two classes. .And this gambling as sumes the form of ah agreement by the bear to.trnnsfcr to the bull a certain amount of stock ata fixed price on a future day, which is called “selling on time,” the bulls often combine to buy up all of a particular stock in the market before the day of transfer ar rives, so that the bears cannot fulfil their contracts; in which case they are compelled to pay “smart money,” and. then they are said to be “cornered,” (a phrase, by the by, more appropriate Ilian "headed, ’’ aa applica ble to Captain Tyler, when the modnaoper andi is to push this kite-flying fiscality at him.) Such being.the stale of things, these gamblers in stocks'will cnler into a fierce struggle as to which class shall be the, direc tors pf the branch agencies, because they can. then elevate or depress the price of every kind of stock, as well as of all other proper; ty throughout the entire country, just as it shall suit, their purposes of speculation. Afid this, forsooth, ia tlie aurt of President Tyler is, expected .lo.approve, af ter having; placed' lus deliberate veto upon ; what ivas,comparatively’,'-' a .respectable in stitution;; This is Ihe’guestronpn which the great vvhig party are to. go before the people; and -in regard tu which they, suppose they can disturb' the serenity of: the public mind; by denouncing John-Tylenfoc his refusal to s;gn the bill.' A cabinet which would gomuf of office on such' a question. aV tins, ;would subject themselves to scorn ami ridicule.', , But this Fiscal Corporation is,Jij regelate Heal ly, M r. President) t thollglitwe liad heard enough on that point. Regulate the- exchanges I • Why, the ex changed are regulated at this moment, anti ae well regulated'ns they have been fur many Veafs past. There seems to exist a general conspiracy a mong the public journals to im - pose upon their unreflecting readers in rela tion to this matter. The- exchange list, for instance, will tell you that the exchange be tween New York and’Detroit is fifty per cent.? It is, in.truth, only the-difference between the value of gold and silver in New. York and the bills ot somc Wild Cat bank in Michigan, (That, 1 think, is the name of this sorf ofmohey.) £Mr. Benton, 'across: “Red Dog.”] 1 never heard it called , “Red Dug,” but, for aught I know, that may.be the proper name; I . hive in my pocket a letter from Detroit, assuring me that exchange is as low as it ever was before] the real difference be-' tween hard money in Detroit and hard mo ney in New York being only from one to one and a half per cent. .And yet this bill is to regulate exchanges! Unless under very ex traordinary circumstances, the late of ex change always regulates itself.- It is the course of commerce that regulates the ex changes between any two places in the same country; and the true rate of exchange be tween 'one place and another consists only of the cost of transportation and insurance on gold and silver.’ Exchange between N. York and Philadelphia is quoted at 2 to 3 percent. And why? This is.the difference between gold and silver in New York and the depreciated paper circulating in Phila delphia. Let us no longer indulge the hope of establishing this, or any other hscal hank ing corporation like it. Let John Tyler send Us a good old-fashioned Jackson yeto, which will place the bank question at rest as long as he shall continue President, and (he public mind.will settle down into a state of calm and tranquility; and in less than six months the commercial business of.,the coun try will again be- prosperous. How is this business conducted in .Europe? Do their hanks deal in exchange ! Very little, if any. And yet 1 can take a letter, of credit at St. Petersburg, travel with it all over the conti nent, and not pay mure than n very small premium.' . .To talk of. exchange being-10,, add 20 perile/iit; Vetmeinphce and place in (he United States, is tq.suppose that people ;do not understand the difference between guld-and silver,and a depreciated paper cur dp'l’liay; far th du rd o m es tiem a mi fac turers beware of this bill. The Fiscal Cor poration is to deal in exchange between this and foreign countries. This will greatly, in— ,ertasa,tUe impsilaUonvof foreign goods, by gflurding the’easiest mode of payment. Du ties will be collected in bank-paper instead of gold and’ silver, id .conscqucrice'of, the,ret: peal of the independent treasury. Large accommodations will be obtained by our im porting merchants from this corporation, and the country will be inundated with foreign goods. Pass (he present bill, and this object can easily be accomplished. A friend of mine said to me. in conversation, that this bill ought to paSs because the bankrupt bill had passed. Now I think that we should have passed the fiscalily first, to enable the speculators to run in. debt beyond their means of payment; and afterwards have passed the bankrupt bill, to enable them to discharge their obligations in the easiest manner possible. [A laugh.] And now "I have one Word to say on the late presidential veto, and then I shall have done. It has been said that John Tyler was bound by the fidelity which he owed his par ty to approve the bill tor a Fiscal Bank. I deny it altogether, and say that if he had ap pioved that bill, be would have deserved to be denounced as a self-destroyer, as false to the whole course of his past life, false to every principle'of'honor, and false to the sa cred-obligation of his oath to support.thc constitution. He hpd declared again and again that such a bank was Unconstitutional; and.yet be is.denounced because he did, not, render himself infamous by an utter disre gard of that instrument. The President had but one righteous course before him; and had be taken any other, it would not only have blasted bis own character, but it would have fixed a blot on the history of his country to dll future generations! - How was he Gem ini tfed to Bign a BiTTwliiclrlie believedto be Unconstitutional? Wlmt was the history of the Harrisburg convention?—and it will be remembered that I. do not live far from that celebrated place. How was that convention compbsd'fl? It contained; 1 admit, many men of the highest respectability; but, in a political view, it was made up “of .all na tions, and people, ami kindred,and tongues.” “Black-spirits and-white, blue spirits and gray,” all. mingled their counsels there to attain a single —an .available candidate fur the presidency. In this they succeeded; and the result was to turii ; Mr. Van Buren out, and put themselves in. The infidel philosopher Vulney, in his.celebrated “Ruins of Empties,” presents us with an imaginary picture of an assemblage in which all the re ligious sects of the earth were collected to gether, and engaged in defending their re spective creeds; and such a confusion ensued as might put to shame that at the tower of Babel. Just so would it have been at Har risburg, if they had attempted to discuss any political There was tlie'-abuli tionist, ready, to call down fire from heaven to annihilate slavery from the face of the earth; and side by side with him sat. the hon orable anil high-spirited southern slavehold er. 7%ere was the anti-mason, whose motto was, “Destruction to’ all secret societies,” mingling in sweet communion with the bank director, jtvlio, with the fidelity of a , vestal, had preserved the secrets of Ills prison-house. There was Iheconsnliduliorlist, holding, as my friend from Virginia‘does, that the mere power to ,buy a bill pfexchango vested in Congress , the power to create an'exchange bank; while hand in hand withhim we miphl see the •. tight-laced strict constructionist, who” wilt hardly'allow to the Government jibwer to do any thing. In that one motley assembly were? to be.sceh all colorsand all shades of .political opinion. ' From absolute necessity,not from choice, they were com pelled to' abstain .from making pny.public declaration of tbeirprincijrletu; Now, if John Tyler had a right, to infer-any-thing from the proceedings of that body, it was, that he wuuld’ be fet liberty to oppose a Bank ; of, the United' States. Certain leadeto; of . that .conventiop were, it is true, in favor of, • a bankV biit. While the convention as a body selected well: knoWn anti-bank men as their ; ohosen candidates for- tbe presidency & vice ; presidency, were those candidates'to Infer, that they must change all their opinions dhd become bunk men? Sir, I deplored the death of General Harrison, from the deep respect I entertained fur his name and character, however muchXmay have tliflered/from his political principles,', But-General Harrison was, par exceliihce, an' anti-.bank man. ' All his public.declarations, Up to the very mo ment of the election, establish this tact.— Nay, more; we who have been denounced as (he loco foco, barn-burning, agrarian portion of our patty, because we assert the constitu tional right to repeal a public corporation intrusted with the sovereign power of inah.- aging the finances of the country, when the’ public interest demands it, may claim him as a brother in the faitli; for when a resolu tion was introduced into the House, in 1819, to repeal at a single blow the character of the late bank, he voted in Us favor. And as. to John Tyler, he basso olten declared him self against, a Bank of the United States, that there is no need I should especially re fer any gentleman to his opinions-on that subject. There they both were,-holding these -opinions, and having openly avowed them; and it is utterly impossible that the members of this convention should have been ignorant of the fact. The convention, then, made no avowal of it's principles. And what was the voice of the people? I can truly say that, duringthe whole election campaign,' I never saw one single resolution in favor of a national bank, which bad been passed by any whig meeting in any part of the country. In some of the States a bank might have been popular; many of the leaders certainly de sired it; but that was an issue which they carefully kept from the public eye. The Senator from Virginia (Mr. Rives) denoun ced a bank, ns he has informed us, all over hat State; and the Senator from New York (Mr. Tallmadoe) has admitted that in his public speeches he was silent on the subject. 1 had thought that if any State in the Onion was favorable to a [bank; it must have been Ohio; yet in the Richmond Enquirer there is a letter from the present Secretary of the .Treasury to his friend L. D. Parker, Esq.,- from which, a very different inference may be drawn.' 1 shall read an extract from it:' Lancaster, ().,-July 1840. “My Dear-Sir: On iriy return from Co lumhus this evening, I received your letter informing mc'(hat : it was asserted at a pub-. lie. meeting-in'Washington county, that in a -- question between the partiesrivas a Uank-of the United Slates; and that you, from a knowledge of the real, question, and of me, had contradicted the assertion. In this, of course, you were perfectly safe ... / made.no. such statement, hut the very contrary,” sc. In'the State of Pennsylvania, 1 know that .flic establishment of.a national bank :was nowhere made the' issue. I assert, then, that all the evidence we hare is for, and none against, the fact stated in the Presi dents’s message,—that the people of the U. States never had declared themselves in fa vor of a bank. '■ The whole spectacle presents to US a mem orable moral. Divines have said (hat na tional sins are ,always visited by national punishment; because, in a future state, re tributive justice cannot reach nations collec tively; and, for the same reason, a. violation of principle by any political parly is pure in the end to meet with its appropriateicwatd. Where, on the face of the earth, can another example be-found of a great, influential, and highly talented party having assembled to gether from all points of the country, and, when collected in one grand convention, having refused to announce to the world any political principles? The whigs expected to rouse the nation to a struggle which should displace their.adversaries; but they announ ced no principles “for the public eye;” and when we asked them for their political creed, they always referred us to. (he puhlic decla rations of their, candidates. Well, whafwas tile punishment of this double dealing? It was, that a party, tyhpse leaders desired a Bank of the United States above all other tilings, should have been so infatuated as to select .as their candidates two decidedly an ti-bank men. There was but one.principle in which the whole Whig party seemed to be unanimous, and that was—in proscribing proscription.— Theic vow was to pu tan end forever to the maxim that and yet the venerable patriot who had often bared his breast in battle to the enemies of his country, was, in less than a single month; hunted to death by -the importunity of whig office-seekers. - A friend offered to show me a medical pamphlet, published ip the city of Philadelphia, declaring, that it was from this Cause President Harrison came to his death. I say that President Tyler could not hare done otherwise than, .veto that ‘bill, if he wished to preserve his character as an hon est than. He must have done it from neces sity, if not from'Choice.' He' could not have approved and sighed that bill, without exhi biting to the American people the disgrace ful spectacle of a high public officer contra dicting all the professions of his past life, and giving the lie to all his own often avow ed principles. A rumor exists,, we have teen told oh this floor, that the veto was giv en against the unanimous opinion of the ca binet. And supppse.it' Was; Who is respon sible to the people of the U. States for Con ducting the Government? Is it not.the -Pre sident? Undoubtedly, he oughtto consult the opinions of the cabinet; but if he and his cabinet cannot agiee in sentiment. Which is to yield—-the cabinet or the President?— Certainly, according to the theory of : our Government, .it is the I was glad 'to find, in the official organ of the adminis tration, such good old fashioned democratic doctrine as I.saw there a. few days since.— It is true I WasV nut, to every extent; infa vot of “the,unit;” bold would say, in be halfof the'article to which l refer. that it is one'of the best! have ever read, and one’ that would not disgrace the palmiest days of the democratic administration.. If the Pres ident cannot agree with his cabinef;or if the cabinet cannol agrce withtHe President, I do not say What ought tit be the. consequence. I have ho feeling'on the'subject; it matters nolhing to me .who areJn,.or .who are out of office. ’ 'rp ■ p , - The Senator from Kentucky tells-us that he never said President Tyler ought resigned, but only that resignation was one of.the alternatives. before him; A President resign,! A President, Who had-been-but three months;-in' power,’resign bis place!— \Vhy v BKV thi> is almost a moral impossibil ity,'so-dfcply is the love of power rooted; in the humftiubreast. No President will ever think of doing any such.tbing. In the whole range of history, I recollect but two memo rable ii.istanccs'of the kind; one was that of the Roman, emperor Diuclesian, and the o ther of the emperor Charles V. The Roman: emperor, you know, went to raising cabba ges, as Mr. Van Buren is now doing; and Cliarles buried himself before he was.dead —a very fit emblem of the condition of a President who should resign’ his office, that he might suffer a bill fur a FISCAL BANK to become-a law! ■ ... fMri'.B, resumed.his seat amidst d gener al laugh;] , ' Assigneeslilp Account. IN the Court of Common Plead of Cumberland county: 9th of August 18?1, HenryDutfield, as signee of C. E. R. Davie, presented to the court an account of the execution of big trust under a voluntary deed of assignment, and Monday the Bth of November next, Is appointed fur the confirma tion of the same by the court, of which all persons interested will take notice. GEO. SANDERSON, Proth'y. October U, 1841. " „ Asiigneeship Account. , IN the Court of Common Pleas of Cumberland county : 9th of August 1841, Henry Dutfield, as signee of Oliver & Smith, presented to the court an account of his trust under a voluntary deed of assignment, and Monday the Blh day of November next, is appointed for the confirmation of tho same by the court, of which all persons interested Will take nottce.- geo. Sanderson, Proth’}-. October 14, 1841. Election of MStinh tHrecfors. Caklis2.e.B ask, Oct. 14,184 i. Notice is hereby riven to the Stockholders in this institution, that sn election will be hold on the Third Monday of November next! (being thti ISthday,) ntflic Banking Houso, forTliirtceu Directors, to serve during the,year then to ensue. , WM. S. COBEAN, Cashier; Carlisle, Oct. 14, 1941. ■ - THE FRENCH LANGUAGE. THE Trustees of Female Seminary” have placed this Department nhder the care of Miss GAL She was instructed in, France, and reads, writes, and speaks 'the language with ease and accuracy. She can be consulted at Mr. James BeWs. < ■ * -As snoa asr n class Is'organized, glfe will meet with*, the pupils for instruction at thc/Btinday Schaqt Room, in the basement.of the "Episcopal .Church', on Mondays, Wednesdays; and Fridays >n levity.: wM- a 110 h'clhck.Aftiiv JiH The Trustees would urge upon all who are de sirous of instruction in..this Department, to em brace the present occasion, ns they wil i rarely have it in their power to affoi’d So good an opportunity. • . ' JOHN ttEED, r President of the 'Hoard oTTnisfees & Principal of the Seniihary:' Carlisle, October 14,-1841. , 3t # . * Valuablfe Fri'pcriy Fttf Salc. TH E subscriber intending tp remove to the west, will'dispose of his.property at public sale, on Saturday the 30th of October instant, at I o’clock* P. M. ’Said propertyris situated about 4 .miles south cast-of Carlisle, Middleton town ship, arid one mile west of. Michael Ego’s Forge, and is on-the road leading ffom Shippensburg to York. It consists of 2$ acres of prime limestone land, under good fence, and in an, excellent state of cultivation.. The improvements are a -jfea. laOcj house, fllllll AND LOS C3O?, A LOO STABLE, a well of never failing water, and an excellent orchard of all kinds of tyait: It is one of (he most desirable properties in the neighborhood for a me chanic, or a man with a smallTamily. Possession Will be given on the Ist of April next. An indisputable tide Will be given and the terms made known on tlio day of sale by PETER SLOTHOWER. October 7, 1841. _ 41 SPECIAL COURT. BY virtue of a writ from the lion. Anson V. Parsons, President Judge of the 12ih Judi cial District of Pennsylvania, bqaringdaleat Har risburg, tho 17lb day of July A- D. 1841: • NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a-Special Court will be hold by the said Hon. Anson V, Parsons, and-lhe-Assoc.iato Judges oi the Courtof Cbmmon Picas of Cumberland county, at tho Court House in the Borough of Carlisle, commencing on Monday the 29th day <f November, A. D. 1841, to .continue one week, for the triul of certain causes depending iii the Court of Common Pleas of Cumberland connly, in which the Hon. Samuel Hepburn was concerned as counsel for one of the parties, prior to Ids appointment as Pre dent Judge of the 9ln Judicial District—said causes being embraced witiiin the provisions of the 391 h section of an Act of the ed Hth April, 1834, relative to. the organization of Cburts of Justice; Of said Special Churl, Jurors' and all persons concerned, will take notice. - : > PAUL MARTIN, Sheriff. Sheriff's Office, Chrlisle, ? tf. September 38, 1841.- S - SSWTIE.BLY NEW LABELS'. THE public will please take notice that no Brapd rcth Pills aro ( Gcnuine unless the box has three la bels upon it, (the top, the side, and tho bottom*) each containing a fab-simile signature of-nay hand-writing thus:—B. Brandrttk, M. D, These labels are engrav ed on steel, beautifully designed, and. done at an ex pense of $2OOO. ■ Therefore !! will ,be seen that the on ly thing necessary to procure the medicine in its puri ty, is to observe the labels. See if the box .has three upon it, engraved.. , t Remember, the top, the side and the bottom. The following respective persons are duly authorized *and hold Certificates of Agency, for the sale of Brandrcth’s Universal Vegetable Pills, in Cumberland county. .■ . George W. Hitncr, Carlisle. 8. Culbertson, - Shippensbarg. Adam Rciglo, ' Mochanicsburg. ■ M. G. Rupp, Shircmanstown; Isaac Borton, Lisburn. ' Gilmore & M’Kinncy, . Ncwville, * , L. Riegle'dc Co., . ; Churchtoven. J, Sc J. Kyle, Kenady’s. ,■ A *§amuel L. Sentman, Newburg. Brechbill & Crush, -Boiling Springs. . Henry Brennoman, - New Cumberland,, Ascounterfeits of these pills are in some cases so’d for the genuine ones, the Kifcty .of the public requires that nbne.shbuld be puichased except Iron) those re cognived a^above.. - * ; Remember no Brandreth Fills sold, in Carlisle, arc genuine, except those sold by George W. Hitner, and be partijbnlar to .' Observe that each Agent has an Engraved Certificate of Agency, containing pf Dr, Brand rath at Sing-Sing, and upon which will be seen exact copies of the pew labels now used upon thq Brandrtth pill boxes. L ' 1 ' * ft. Biunsbxtb, M. D:. OfHce/ No. 8, North Bth stj Phib. ~ -V'look-sans. THE subeorlbere continue to s'ell the-bnlance of their stock of Cloths, t'oesimeres, Cosiinetls, Me rinos, Calicoes and CAfn(jn, nt first cost. • Bargains may be had by calling soon. ■ : : HITNER & MULVANY. -October 7,1841.. 3t :.o-; N.- Sal An excellent Cannon Slore~toilh a large Oast Iron Dithjfor tale at the stored JUST recrivcd a supply of Tqma(o Ketctaup & Ilorsc Xlaaisli. L& E- (’aasaiAN.. • , Jt-IST. or. CJUtZMISi For Trial at the Special Court, commencing on Monday the 29th of November, 1841, Duncan for use tv Modrc’s Adm'r Drclton . ' tv Brctton *• ** Gray, \ •• tv Wilson Agncw . ' tv , Bredin’r Adm’x. Commonwealth • ,*•* / Neal Dredin Same Bank Marlin tv . Rrcdin’s Adm’x.. tv .Montgomery tv Herron v* Rail. Road , .tv. * Houk tv Same •.. „ vs'' . Craighead ct als , vs . Stuart " * - vi - McClure’s Adm’r tv • Keller . vi ; Mooro' vs Samo ' vi Same vs - McKeehan tv Lamberton For Argument. tv Rail Rood • vi Moore et al CEO. SANDERSON, Proth’y. Bonk - Roil Rood Commonwealth. Irvine V Lee Same ct a] Walts •, * Bank' 1 Ege’a Ex’r Himos Forman Same iS’amo • Price for use Adm’r fihccly Foreman Sept. 28, 1841, Trial list. List of tauses for Trial at November Term, 1841, commencing on the B hit day of AV vetnber . Wilson Church Mode Pursel for uni ’Wise for use Roiglc Grubb Em m Inge# lutings Fund Sumo bi ' Same cl dl Second Week, Palm Eg® Pohl Bank Littig Bradydc Co 1 Shuuk 1 iJtoyd .• « ’ i McClay H arlan’ Brindlc Lajnbcrton '' McanS . /A . .Houser ' • • , u. Miller . ~W, , Myers t >a Noble «fc Cd ... - -. * • ra Undenvood Ramsey., tv Craighead O Donnel ca Craighead Noble w Harper Cake - - i ?McCluro ' Reed■ ' ra ■ Mehaffey *, ■ Moiling** r a • leavers jSchhwser . . ~r «a _ Fenner ■ -£ame * va Bechcr Ramp t*j <&turgis Mrtfecr . t*a -Thomson Brandt . n Glvfcr Same fig JSamh Gorges ft al m . Alexrfiwkf* Kennedy ra McFecly GEOc SANDERSON, Proth'p' •Sept, 28, 1841 A I’AUM FOR SAI-E. BY order of the Orphans’ Court of Cotirt of .Cum-' bcrland county, will bo exposed to public sale,; on the premises, on Saturday ftp 2Cth of November next, at 12 o'clock* no6n, the following described valuable property situate in Silver Spring townsijp, about one mile north-vvest of Hpgestown, and near the Conodo guinct cftcK, late the property of Michael Saxton, de ceased/ Containing 106 Acres of patented Limestone arid Gravel , land. About 80 acres is cleared, under good fence, and in a high state of cultivation—and.tho residue coVefed with excellent timber. 1 The improve ments ore a M Double Frame fy Log 'Fwo Story IIOUSK* A Double Frattie Drirn. and other outbuildings. ’ There is also a-stnall Apple Orchard, and other fruit Uees—and a well of ncvtr foiling winter, with a pump in it, near the door., There arc two streams pf running water go through the pre mises.: ■ ' \ Tehms.— J2oo on the confirmation of the sole—ono half the purchase njoncy, deducting the J 200, on the Ist of April, when possession will be. given— and.the .residue in four equal annual payments, without inter est, to be secured by J udgment Bonds. ■ An indisputable title will be' given, and any person wishing to see the farm, can be Shown it on application to the subscriber. JOHN SAXTON, Adm’rof October ?, 1841, * M. Saxton,dec’d. # N, B, If the above Farm i» not sold on tlial day, it will then and there be. rented for the term of one ycar^ NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Take notire, that tvF have afTplietl tn lire Judges of (lie .Court of Common Pleas of Cumberlnml county, for (lie bentfUofllie Insolvent Laws, umd they, have appointed Mouday'tlie Bth of November next, for (he h'enring of.ud and our creditors, at the Court House, in the borough of Carlisle, when and" ivhere you" may attend if you think proper.' THOMAS JONES, JOHN-McKinney,., - JACOB MINICH, HENRY GIB, BENJAMIN RUBRICHT, lv ' FREDERICK WENTZ, WILLIAM CARTER, j* WILLIAM HARRIS. . FREDERICK KEEFAUVER, . ‘ GEORGE lIARTLINE, DAVID McBRIDE, JOHN KELLY-, ISAAC BARNET. CONRAD FURST, - HENRY MURRAY. ' ' JOSEPH ESLINGER, JOSEPH WALTMAN. HENRY JOHNSTON, . JOHN M. WOODBCRN, GEORGE ADLEY, . WM. M. BAXTER. * - October 7, 1841. , ; '■ . Assigncesltip Account; IN the Court of Common Plea* of Cumberland county/ 6th October IB4l;tWilliam M.’ Porter,; assignee of Jamb Wetzel,'presented to the eonrt an account of the execution of his trost under a voluntary deed of assj- nrocnl, and Monday the* Bth of November next, isappoihted for the ronfir roation of the’eame by the court, of which all pone - sons interested will take notice. • ■ CEO. SANDERSON, Prolh’y. October 14,1841. . .Assigneesbip Account. , -.IN the Court of Common Pleas of Onml’crland county: - sth Ocioher:lB4lj Jacob Kirk,jr.a*si ghee of DavidßeicharVpfeepnled to the conrt ah account of the execution of hi* trait under n vol- 1 nntaiy deed of assignment, and Tuesday thn'l4lh day of December next, is for'the confix ■nation of the same by the court, of which all per sons interested will lako. notion.: ■ ' , : -' : GKO: SANDERSON, Ptolh’y.. ; October!!, 1811. ;,v i-.-jJ tv Shcafler et al vi K Mathews tv Mahon tv Wolfs Adm’r Pint tVec&» tv Miller ct el tv The College vs . 1/ybn vi McClure, tv Samo vs Ahl tv Croft ct al tv McHoes tv Moore • vs, . RcLsher vs Kaufman vs -Foreman vs - Woodbura .to Wilson to . Hilcmen to * Alexander w ""Barton to Ctoft . vs Martin .M -Drml»ug r U;.- xs , . .Noble -<• t w -The Church Ijrcisbpugh " Mahon
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers