Sunbury American. (Sunbury, Pa.) 1848-1879, April 17, 1858, Image 3

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    REMARKS OF COL. A. K. (leCLtlRE. .
On th Bill for li Salt of the Main Lute.
This bill hat two object I la Ti Which
sLoold enlist ibe fnror of amy trae-horled
renimylvanian. It will entirely froa the
JStato rrom the management or improvement)
U'will connect the seaboard with the lakea,
lT the completion of the 8uiibury A Kria
itiilroad, end develop a portion of the State
nn other means, in our dn can pbaii
My reach. Were 1 to apeak Id our fronds of
tlia North, as haa my colleague. I Mr. mix.;
nnd lell them to pot forth their own Mronp
arms and Ml their fotesta, I fear that I ahoald
be made to blush when aome one would re
mind me thnt our boasted Cumberland A nlley
liaabeen the child of fortune of thu Coni
monwonlth. It i to day the richest and love
liest portion of Pennsylvania. It haa a weal
thy. intelligent, industrious and happy people
it hat tnilroaiU and turnpikes traversing it
from ono end to the other; it liai colleges
nnd nchonls which command our rridn he
voUiona may sweep over our land, and com
nerce and credit may be shaken from the At
untic to the Gulf, still our peoplo sow their
,eed nnd reap their harvests unscathed by
he storm, for the reward of peaceful industry
:nows no cessation. 1 turn with unmingled
iride to these evidences of greutness ; but 1
m not unmindful that they aro not tbfi fruits
f our own unaided energies. Five penera
ons have lived and passed nwoy in the Cum
erland Valley ; and tho men who held the
osition I now hold half n century npo. reach.
I out to our people with generous hands the
sieving care or the Commonwealth. My
illeagm-, (Mr. Nn.i..) may stund in the con
e of ten beautiful town wherein we both re.
le, and he cannot turn in any direction with,
it beholding the living monument which
II of the liberal bounty extended to ns.
it-re is not n railroad thnt passes through
r valley that was not initiated and aided by
o State; there is not a turtlpika now tra
rsing our county, with perhaps but one un.
portiint exception, that was not Marled by
eet appropriation from the public treasury;
re is not a college in our section uiui. mis
shared liberally of tho generosjty or the
mmonwenlth. I rejoice that this is SO. 1
as the memory of those who founded the
iev of improvements by the government,
so improvements have made our great
le mighty and rich to-day, beyond compn
on. They have served a wise nnd beneli
l purpose. They hnve made blooming
Is nnd happy homes where thny found thu
and thu panther, then strangers to the
t enemy man.
it it is urged by my colleague (Mr. Kill)
the Statu has been bountiful to tho por.
nf Pennsylvania, to be hem-titled by Iho
detion or the Snnbury Itiilrdad. It is
as be alleges, that the Slate IniS been
li in her bounties upon the "otih and
I J ranch Improvements, coninlei'.cing,
e shows, in 18'JS. nnd continuing, as I
ained to say. in IMS. 1 want hy the
of these canals at ortce and forever to
iliese annromiatinns. Bnd 1 was mor-
to find, but a few days ago, when I
j led against this lloure voting eppro
unj to our ranuls by the hundred tl'.nn
tlvit my culleugiie Was not in his seat.
iiee was hushed when half a million of
t was voted to the Canal Board, mainly
p np canal nfiiaiMls. Had it been some
ipprupriution to a jilst ennso, this Mull
proh.iiily have resounded with his in
:t protest. It was most unfortunate,
r him to cite the appropriation to (.'a
the North to justify his opposition to
f those canals. If the State has been
'ill to our Cumberland Valley, we have
ned her bounty by returning to her
V each year crying for more ! more !
h section through which the Canals
It is the long continued aild it would
idles demand from the tarsals for uld,
lots clearly lo the wisdom of a sulo at
e.
ly unfair are the allegations TTihdo
.lie most general terms, that the Sun
,i Kri Kuilroad is not solvetil, and
,i!e of tho State Canals to thai Com
I involve tho loss of the purchase mn
v colleague ( VI i Nti.i.) limls Philadtl
f ir.hury liouds :pioted at 40 cents
oliar. ati'l he very tvilliiiL't.V. it seeing,
s them with Snnbury nnd l': bonds
es here that such is' tho value cf the
i advisedly when 1 say that the Sun
Krie Uai'road Company is solvent,
ego it had a nominal debt of sis mil.
! with tf'.ai staring him in the face,
.man r.o:ii Lnr-erne (Mr. Jenkins)
lend tho 'Company three millions of
;t best bonds ; . Tow it has but one
' iVbt, and that is h morlsaE" on for
f finished road, am1! jet 1m refuses to
his bill, for fear it is not solvent.
puny has no floating 'debt nono nt
at a mortgage of ono 'million execu-
forty mill's of titiislnid road, and of
s issued on that, mortgage it has
(H)(l still in its hands, so thnt its
mil debt is but little over hulf a
Its bonds have neveV sold below 75
in tho dollar, even n rider tho sever
re, and could not now ha bought nt
gure ns can the five percent, bonds
iiinonwenlth. Lust year tho forty
mpleted road paid the irt'lercst on its
nod the nett uaruings'ot the road
SIOP.OOO. Such is the condition ef
.ny financially, and I challenge cun-
gentleman from I,07erno (Mr. Jet.
IV colleague (Jtir . ?"ill) insist that
'from 8lo.U0li.000 to 830,000.000
a the road. I am not amazed nt
te. Neither of them seem to havo
tton of even the length of tho Road
- Seal to defeat a sale of the canals,
e the foad to be from fifty to one
!es longer than it really is. The
from Luzerne (Mr. Jenkins) says
320 miles loop, whereas it is only
of that is completed, stocked, in
J paying ten per cent. Consider
makes a mistake of over 50 miles
ihe road, it will not surprise many
i fix the cost of completing the
n 30.000,000 upwards. My eol
Kill) follows him in his blunders,
a little more caution, lit in
naking the whole Sucbury and
id over again from end to end.
ions aro all based upon the as
st. there are 2C8 miles of Railroad
ich is a strange perversion of the
have taid, the Sunbury and Krie
b8 miles long, of that distance
completed, and in successful run.
eviu 223 miles to be comple.
tiinate of the Engineer as per
V for the completion ol tlie tiul
road, was 9.000,000. Since
nt DolicT has been adopted
bewil increased ; 12,000 feet of
i beeo uvoidu i, secoud clung ma.
igle track, bridges, ic, have
ned upon, and with the work ul
ion it, competent and reliable
v fixed Iqu cost l completion
I. Alreudy a lurge portion (
am Williamsport lo Farrundg.
ce of 33 miles, hat been done,
B ulready owned by the compa
liberal eftimntu fixet $400,
utside cost of completing the
nsville. which will put 13 miles
ml resDootible par-
JnVingto taketbii iwt'"f
oon at compieieu buu yj n-u
Uu cost of its constructi"" 'or
time. Thus the 73 miles ol
ui Sanbury to Farrutidsville
uku interest on tho indebl.
,n nt tu the bute. From
tJ tSioaniKhouiiig, 35 miles, a
n.ion uf uradinn has also beeD
n nun will complete it. Thus
out into operation 108 miles of
be East bd ud 210,000,
U towstj and toetl inbwriptiow
ii Xrie and Warren eonntfef, will complete
the road from Erie to Warren. TKe people
of these coon ties La etroggled witn a nero.
Ism worthy of ao noble a cause, to keep np
thu enterprise. They have glren tha credit
or those counties, nrid iubsenbe or tnetr pri
vate meant with a most liberal hand, and have
kept th work progressing tlowly but surely to
ran. nnd the 108 miles from Suubnrj to Sin.
namahoning, making 172 miles in all, can thus
be completed at a cost uol exceeding h.ihmi,
000, leaving 96 miles to make entire, aod (4,
500.000 of the estimate to complete it.
I have shown that the objections urged
against this bill are groundless. We have a
a responsible purchaser offering Us the most
ample security. We are offered a fair price,
and toventr 'five Per cent, itt addition for
whatever the Canals may bring above the
consideration named In ihe bill. What more
do we want? lTwe.hcId valuable improve
menta which, under Stuto niunaeetnent ?iel
ded a revcuue to the State, thero might be
some excuse Tor men to hesitate i but we are
importuned by tho people of all parties, and
ull sections, to relieve the tax payers of the
Canal ISoard and the entire Lunalt, lor trie
reason that, however valuable the improve,
ments are, they are mere instruments of pecu
latiou in tho hands of officials. As to the
necessity of a sale, there has been no divided
counsels in the whole discustiot) on tins bill.
All. ull have puid trihnte to the great issue
every voice lias joined in a profession, at least
that tlie sale is ona of our tirst and liigtiesl
duties to the people. hy this misrepresen
tation? V hy tins struggle against tins bill,
as if it presented n question of life or death ?
I cannot bo unmindful of the fact thnt we havo
a Canal Hoard hard by us lo which we hare
jist appropriated four hundred and eighty
itj'ltand cMars of the pMijltc money. vnu
that power this bill grapples, and one or the
other must die ; and is the Cunul Hoard hue
ho resurrection. That it should have friends
here is not. surprising. It hits power, it has
hnmit, it has emoluments it has now in its
dutches which mufl come back to the treasury,
if this bill succeeds and it would be strange
If it hud not friuuds who would put forth their
best energies Whuli It is Struggling in tho
throes of death !
Ry this bill we cot only yield to the long
unheeded prayer of tux-payers 13 sever the
S'U'te entirely Irutii ull improvements ; but we
also accomplish what is not of lobs inteiest to
every tux-puyer the coniilelion of the Sun
bury and Erie Railroad. It is at bnco a great
question of Lcotiomy and Reform, and also u
question of Progress. The Pennsylvania Ca
nal, stained and blotted as is its history, in
creased the taxable property betwien this
place and Pittsburg over one huudred ii'.ld
fifteen millions of dollars. Its const ruction
was therefore wise, as was its sale after it had
served its purpose. And such is tho history
of every important Improvement mude by the
Stale. Some huve been utterly abandoned ;
others have been a constant drain upon the
treasury, aud ull have been made the engines
of wrong upon the people by corrupt officials,
yet il they cmild this uay ne voiea oui oi exis
tence, with tho good points which have fol
lowed them, we should spread desolation over
some of tho fairest and richest portions of our
beluVed Commonwealth
1 regurd the completion of the Sunbnry and
lirio Railroad a9 tho great measure of this
age; It is not merely a question of to-day,
nor cf this generation. When you nnd I,
Mr. Speiker, shall have passed away, the j
fruits of this great measure will not yet have
ruu'-hed ther fullness. The hardy farmers of
Iho North, who nn; strangers to the bounty
of the Ci notiwealih. will teach those who
to corho after thvui to bless the men who this
day p'euJ their cause. They have struggled
for a quarter of century, but now enn point to
nu evidence of progress around thetn t lint is
not the fruits of their Unceasing toil. They
huve hoped on 03 disaster clouded the pros
pects of this greut movement ; nnd Btill they
hope for the day which 1 trust is now soon to
dawn upon them, when the Lakes and the
Atlantic shall strike hands in the Northern
tviMness, and pour its exbaiiktless tiutive
wealth into the lap of commerce. They have
bornu llieir share of the burdens imposed upon
ih" people lo make our more favored sections
develop their wealth they have helped, by
the fruits of their. 1.. her, lo build our Ruilroads
our Caiinls, and oar Colleges ; and now they
uk not our bounty, nor our gifis, nor our
crerlit; but they ask that we shall enable,
thorn, I'y a generous policy, involving no pe
cuniary firnfiCH to the State, to consummate
un cnterprico that must scatter enlightened
progress and uulolcd wculth over the long
neglected regions of the commonwealth.
Tllfc DKATII OF THOMAS HART UE-T'JS
The premature announcement of Mr. ftenton'
death, which was sent forward from Washington
on r'riduy afternoon, was followed, earlv on Sa.
tunlay, by the realization of the expected event.
We were prepared lor ihis result by ihe condition
ol bis health for two or three months past, and
hy hi own clear expectation and energetic pre
paration for it. It is rare that the last days of a
public man are devoted to labor as his have I ten
in the uoseeutiun of a purpose requiring f real
physical and mental strength, and all this applied
wilh the most distinct cortsciousness thnt he had
but a few week oi day to wo'k. !' is a fioble
and honorable spectacle to fee a long life sotigo
rously and manfully carried loin very close, and
the nation pav a detprr tribute of reSpett to the
memory of Mr. Benton for ihis course, hy which
he has tiscn in dignity of lone and value ol pub
lic service, not only through the last yenrg. but
also the very last days of his life. II dictated
portions of bU work, the Ahfement of Con
giengional Debates, and letters to various persons,
during the day preceding hig decease.
Thomas Hart Benton was horn near Killeho.
rotlglt, Orange county, N. C, March J4, 1782.
Ho was imperfectly educated, though spending
gnino time at a grammar school, ind subsequent
ly gluJying irregularly at Chapel Hill. Hi fa
ther tiied when he was eight year old, and hia
mother, gome year la.er, removed lo I rnncsse,
where lie tuilii J law, giuined pramiiienre in
practice, and wag elected tu the legislature of that
Bute. In one term of service he originated and
procured the passage of a law reforming the ju
dicial system, and another securing jury trial liir
lavra. Andrew Jackson wa an early Iriend
and patron of Mr. Umilon, and when Jackson l
cu me major general of tlie Stale militia, Denton
waa selected a big aid-de-i-amp. and raited a re
giment lor the war of 1812. Hi intimate per
tonal relation with Cien. Jackgnn were about
toig lute interrupted bv a' suildeh quarrel and
atl'ray, which estranged them from mmy year,
and after a temporary acceptarce from Mr. Md',
aon of a place in the irmy a licnWnunt-colanel.
in IS 13. he resigned on the newa of peace, and
removed in 181 b to Kt. I.oui. Here he engaged
in law and politic, establishing g paper, the
Missouri Argus, in 1117, and stoutly advocating
Ihe .Missouri side of the great content of 1820, in
regnrd to slgvery in that btate, gnd its admitsion
into the I'nion. for ibege gerviceg hgwag made
one of its tint Senators, and his energy, ability,
and attention to western interests soon gave him
gn at populaiity. r'or thirty yean lollowing, and
al five uccenveeleclione, he kept the fivor of
his ow n State, few public men hav ever done,
and raid a mo.l important and controlling place
in the legislation ol the county.
k 1R.SU ihe harn antagonism between himself
ano vn-inuii(ierg." ag he alwayg cglleJ them,
with Ca!tiv,n at ,j,ejr head, produced a divUiou
oi ui own p, j Missouri. ,nj the anti ueo-
Ion wingcoale.cb , .I,,, In Jefr.i him.
HewMibu.iliuglhu. f (lie b,,,,,,, thounh
mora upon prg.inl gtv wU lin ,her.
g nc the ! nullification wink - bj ju ,h,
never a nmiority ovi ...
. - , , - iiiurrg. in
18a he was rlrcted to th.
. u, l n..,B utrvii.ir aetivelv. L
laiive iroin oi. .., - -- ' j.,,!
v. ith big former senatorial auccea. in thgt W...
for on term. Mr. Benton oia awv w "....
U6. or f.l at homeln the J Ifa--. -
.m'enlgr ha, t M did no. fit bin, and
at disdvanug, a be olun did. For lbs last
"2 .f Iha.n. h. P(&3''(S
up she ldef
to Ma inenag " "
have relinqvigfied to hope of abtafning leadership
tliera. In 1864 he apun offered bimgelf aa a
candidate for the House, but wa beaten by a
combination of th anti-Benton men and A meri
can. lu 1856 lit wka guddenly Induced lo enter
polltiei again, aftet having once yullgd aettled
down to literary labor, and be made one of the
moat extraordinary and laborious catvaningnof
hi Slate on record j perhaps the most thorough
of recent year In any SlaUi, though then gvn-ty-four
years of aga. He was donated by tha
m causes a In IRS 4, tine of Id opponent
succeeding by a moll plurality. In tha presiden
tial election of 1866, he very singularly opposed
hi on-in-law, Fremont, and supported U Urban
an, probably a much from an overstrained defer
ence to the Komen virtuo, which digregarde fam
ily ties, aa from any olhef cause. During the
last yar. be wrote a severe review of the I'red
Ncofl case, and quite recently he hss made vigo
rous gptaulls upon tho Kansas policy of the Ad
ministration, taking. on both these points, ground
wholly cntsgoniitic to theHresidcnt he supported
and placing himgelf with tht division in Mis
souri which Is struggling to limit slavery, and.
indirectly, to make Missouri a free State.
Such is theakeleton ol exterior event In Mr.
Denton's remarkable life. In characteristic and
triking person! incident, and in ihe detail of
great public tneasures with which he wgg asso
ciated, there Ig a degree of intereat warranting a
fuller statement than we have apace to make.
His imperious will and restless energy brought
him in early life into frequent personal collision
with others, and after his unfortunate alVray with
General Jacksdn, and removal to Missouri, he
fought two or three duels, and in one case killed
his antagniiUt.ahd event which caused him great.
Subsequent to this entrance Into the Senate,
however, he doe not appear to have had any
personal cnll'iMon, though often violent and harsh
in hi denunciations, and most unreserved in his
attacks when excited by any great occasion. Hi
long struggle with the L'nited Stairs Hank and it
supporters, extcndilig for l29 to 1847, nnd his
contest with Calhoun nnd the "nulliliers," which
waa engrafted on the fust, and lasted, with the
"anti-Ilenlon" crusade in Missouri at the various
later elections, to the very close of hia life almost
were all full of incidents of severe and bitter as
saults upon his opponents, whoever they were.
He fought fiercely fur lien. Jackson in the case
of the removal of the drposits, and obtained one
of the most sihgular victories known to legisla
te proceedings in thin stormy way, by procuring
he ''expunging" of this celebrated resolution ol
the f'enale, censuring Cell. Jac kson for hscourso
in removing ibe dcpo!ts in 1837. Thismustex
trnordinary aud futile freak of legislation was car
riedhyfhe meic prrscrtal force and persistence
of Mr, Benton, 'i ho like personal determination
in a minor matter, was chown in his refusal lo
receive his mail through the St. Louis Test Office
for nearly two yeirs, when that oflice was filled
by an anti-lienlon incumbent by President
Pierce. His felling toward the West Point
officers eT Ihe army was also characteristic, and
for many year he lost an opi ortuuity of leveling
altf-ckj at those who came info the army at the
'West Point gate." lioore sc ntintr the moro
peaceful aide cf ihe Mcxics li w ar contest, he ob
tained a nomination to Ihe post of I.iulinant.
General f Ihe Army from President i'olk. but
hostilities bad been hurried forward so much by
the Texan people, and bv Mr. Tyler's messenger
that Mr. Kenton's policy failed, and he was not
confirmed as Liutcnant-General by tlie Semite.
Ills lirst considerable euoits in the Senate,
in 1824 were to obtain the adoption of n con
stitutional amendment providing for the elccv
lion ol 1 resident and ice 1 resident by pnp.
ulur vote, but ho made no decisive exertions
on this point afterwards. Next to his oppo
sition to the Rant, as n great object ol his
publis life, was his antagonism to "iinllifjcn
t ion," or to Mr, Calhoun und bis friends. In
this course be did tlie country great service,
nt a time when, but for Jaciison't vigor, and
i'ctitou s untiring energy, there miuht have
been serious and iicuihI secession, not only
becuuse of turifl'sdistnsleful to tho party Mr.
Culhoun represented, but for such cilnses us
have iuduced tho recent contests in which the
same party thought ilself aggrieved. Re
tueen Ronton und Calhoun there wag a natu
ral antagonism, which no changes of politicuti
foi'tu'-.e-could wholly remove, and in bio histo
ry of Thirty Years he concedes little or
nothing on this point, while doing full and
umple justice to Clay nod Webster. In regard
to M r. Clny, it is Caul tiiat the very last thing
written in Iho Abridgement of Iebates, is a
limine in mm siaifMiiun :reai ami nouiu i
publico life, with which, un thb bank and cur.
rency questions, Kenton often contendei".
fiercely when in tho Seuatij. Conceding
everything e!.e to the groat statesmen whom
he opposed, Mr. Denton, to the last, is stem
and nn) ieldni; on tlie question of nullification
and Mr. Culhoun aud this is at least histori
cal justice.
The practical mersures for the amelioration
of our national land system, which foully tri
umphed in the establishment of the present
low pt ices, and easy means of purchase by
settlers, were carried through Congress,
mainly by Col. Heiiton's persistent efforts.
His power with tho democratic administra
tions was such that he could do more for wes
tern interests than any other man In public
life, and the ripht of preemption, the reduc
tion of price, after ba injj been in murktt n
certain number of years, tho release of min
eral nnd salt lands, were all measures which
if not originated by him, were carried forward
tOfUcciS-, mainly by bis aid. In tlnj same
spirit of devotion to western interests, were
his earlier efforts to aid explorations in the
interior, und to open up a trade with Now
Mexico.
Altogether, on the Texas qnettlon, and on
nearly everytiujj relating to slavery his course
wus iudopendant and national, with a strong
leanitiir for lbs free State side, and against
the ultraists of the south, on whom he was
always reddy to throw the column inherited
from Calhoun's nulification Schemes.
Col. Denton devoted the first year after bis
election to the Senate, which was spent in
waiting too final admission or ins Mate, to
tho most labofriutis and thorough study in
preparation for his nert career. The Spauish
luniiuage und history, especially that of its
Amerfcah pioneers were particularly rTludied
and for many years bo claimed almost the
first rnnk among Senaters as a thoroughly
informed man in I istory und geuufal litera
ture. II is acquirements in Una respect fully
prepared him lor bis later historical labors,
and the evidences of this thorough culture ap
parent in his last works will surprise those
whose ideas of him have been drawn from bis
eiteroul political life alone.
in private Ida ol Mr. uenion was most
genial and vivacious, lie never rested in
social idleness, but gave all bis family a large
share of participation in his labors and relax
ations. I'or three or four years past at Wash
ington, be lias ulmost daily rode ont on horse
buck along Pennsylvania Avenue, at the close
ol tho day usually with some young menibir
of bis family, and his erect port ana tine fig
ure gave the impression ol decided health
aud enjoyment, His physical ttrunglu and
endurance were remarkable and his regular
tubus und full employment Converted every
mouieutto the best use. The cobutry will
kiudly remember him for these personal char
acteristics, and will greatly lienor biin for the
literary labors with which he so nobly closed
a public life of extraordinary duration aud
activity.
Col. Denton wai married tn Elizabeth,
daughter of Col. James McDowell, of ltock
bridge coauty, Virgiuia. soon after his first
election to the Senate. Mrs. Benton died
in ISj4, after having endured ftiucll from pur-
uly-is fur ten years. Subsequent to her first
stroke of paralysis, in IH44. Cel. Heuton rate
ly or never went in society outside ki own
nouse. tiis surviving ciuiuren are lour daugn
urs, Mn. William Carey Jones, Mrs. Jessie
Lemon Fismout, Mrs. Sarah Benton Jacob,
and M aiiu in e busun Demon Uuileau, wife of a
a"rJU'ctlM,mber of the frenchr legation here,
t. - 1 General of France at Calcuw
Mat. SwtssiDiLai'a printing office. In Min
oeaota, was lately attacked by a ineb and nor
prow utwirujsea.
Now Advertisement,.
N Dissolution jf Partnership.
OTICE I hereby given that the partnership
lately sulwisting between 8. A. Dergatrcsaer
and John Hull, trading under tha firrtt of llcrg.
stressor it Hull, lis been this dsy dissolved by
mutual consent. All debt diia to the taid part
nership are to be paid, and those due from the
ame discharged by John Hull, who conlirfucg
in business at the old stand.
Lower Augusta tp., April 10, 1858. 3t
E.-Y. BRIGHT & SON;
suxDunr, pa.,
WjTAY'fc received, and are now opening their
Spring atnek, embracing new and desirable
Dres Goods, Calicoes tnd llrcss Gingham of
the latest Style, Muslins of fill qualities nnd pri
ces, K. Jeatls, Llricn Checks, and a choice selec
tion oil! lacs and Fancy Ciisnimeies, new style.
Groceries of all kinds. We respectfully invito
an Inspection ofdUr Goods.
W COUNTRY PKODUCB wanted in ex
change at Ihe hichest market prices.
April in, IS.'iS.
GEORGE HILL,
J, WXkJL4 J2i ytVl'
T LAW
r.SPKCTFL'LLY inform Ihe public ahrj
hi friends generally, that he ha remc ed
to Sunbury, and has opened a law office at hia'
residence, in Market square. Hia acquaintance
with the English and German enablea him lo
transact business in both languages.
April 10, 18S8. ly
Prices Reduced to Suit the Tiraei i
(Ull WII1TX SIVA.1 )
A'liee Street above Third, Philadelphia.
'I'llF. Prnpristnis of tbt nlmve Wt-il-llnowii ralaliliah
1 incut liciiiK tlmiikl'ul fur life very liliernl patronage I.
I"hI upai them tlie post year, laku this rrieiiiml m" in
forming, llieif fririiils m,il tlie pul.lio that tliry are sli:i pie
port (I to nccnmmiMlate tliem il favorrit wilh ft cill.
Daring IhB Winter months the house lets Iwes thornnsh
ly reiMivait-il, imprnveinents nisde niitl other extensive al
teriilions in conti-mplntioit.
We are ileteimiiifd to devote our whole flttentinn to
buaini'U and llallar ourselves well the conviclion that we
shall he uuli: to givereneral satisfnrtion.
SIHKS & STOVEtt,
Roee btreel, aouve Third.
TF.P.Mi.-fi a.-! per day
N. H. Cnrri.ires will nlwavs tie in reftrfincsa to e-invev
Pasrengers lu uuil fioiu Sleainhoat Landings and- Railroad
UeP"ts. 8. 4 8.
I'hiladelphiu, April in, 1S 3m
l'itlir, M I t IMIOYISIO.VS,
N. IIF.LL1NGS,
Xo. 12 AWlh Wharves, 1'hiladetphia.
100,000 lbs. Dried Apples,
3,000 bushels Pea Nuts,
CtlO barrels Green Apple,
COO bote Granges,
200 boxes I.emoi.s,
t.OOt) bushels I'otatocD,
1,000 bushels llaana,
100 doz. Pickles,
Also liaising, Figs, Pruueg, Set., in stora ard
for sale at the lowest prices!
April 10, 183? ly
Oflice of Shamokin Valley and PottB
ville Railroad Company.
309 Walnut street.
ri!ILAi):i.PIIIA, April 7lh. 159.
A M F. ETING of the Stockholders of the Sha
mokin Valley and l'uitsvillc liailrnad Company
will be held on 3d May, at lio'ciock, at the
office of the Company, in ibis city, lor the elec
tion of ft President and six Managers, to aerve
fur one year.
EDWIN MIDDI.ETON. Jr.,
Acting Secretary.
April 10, 18.1S.-4t
READER 1
Co you intend to Embark in to Business!
If so, DON'T FAIL lo geo advertist mcnt in
this paper by the subscribers headed "A Card to
the ruolic."
J. F. & I. F. KLINE.
Kline' Grove, Ta., March 13, 1858. tf
NOTICE.
4 LI. persons indebted to James Heard, late
I'rclhonotary of Noitliuniberlnndcounty, for
fees, Ac, are requested lo make immediate pay
ment, and thus save cost and further trouble, as
an ai'coum remaining unpaiu win do placed in
the handa of a Justice for collection. Payments
can be made either lo tlie eubscribcr or to J. 8.
IJeard, al bis ollice.
JAMES BEARD.
Sunbury, March 27, lRf.8 tf
Treasurer's Sale ol ftcul
Aireen'j'v to the pr ivisi ins of the Art cf Asscmb!
entitled '-an Art I reduce the Hlnte ileht, Scr.'! preed ,
Ihe -2-MU day ol April, 1-44. f,r iru-pnymei!t ul luxes, and :
its itippleiiiem thereto, the Treasurer of Norlliuttilerluiid i
cunly herehy esvts iiolu-e toall pers inscotii-eriieil therein i
that unless the Couiitv, Slate, llnadiiuil eKhool Taxes. r. '
tine nn the li-il.iwuifr Iteul Kslate in Ihe county i.f ir- I
thuiuherlaiid, are not paitl before thu U:iynt sale, the wh 'Is '
or sueh pulls of each us will pav the charces mill eosts '
cliiireitiie Iheieon. wih Ins sold al Ihe Court House, in the
Imrini'-'h of Shinhiiry, eotintv of N'rtliuaiherlnnd. on the
second Monday itl' . uue next ; nud the s-ile will be coiiliu.
ued by adjournment frma ilay. f,r arrrmnpes of taxes
due Ihe snid county, and the cost arcruiug on each respec
tively: No. Acres. ,r Am'l. of Tax
Upper Augusta.
13" Jasob ; Cutlin'iuc Earteher,
Ih do du dj
loo Civ.d Daruhart,
K0 da do
f 3.1S
i.ii
4,40
towe Augus'.H'.
30 John Jones' eslat SO
30 do do ea
S William Gaugler, Islaud, 35
Cu John U. Vouiigmun, 6Q
Co Jutia Vouiif , SU
Chillisqua'pit.
S3 John Iteekley, S 14
W John Paliuii, 4,(9
Ruth.
104 Hugh Beltss, f M
SO Isi ic or Isaiah Parses, S Si
so do do do a.iu
"0 V.'oi. D. Ocurhart,
Sunhury.
t lot George Hall, tuxes of 3 years, S OC J
I fn lianiel lloitman, laxes ol S years, 3,5a
1 14 Win. M'Caifcv, taxes 2 yeois, Sl.oo
I lot Martin Irviu, S.7S
ll.nl I hjisnau Folk, tax of J years, . 2M
40 aires, Sunbury Water Power Co, W I.. Dew-
art, rres't, siw itini, lux oi years, 44,w'u
t Lot .V 16 Lots, Philadelphia 4 Sunbury Ituiliuad
CoiniMinv, 4. 57
S A, 10 A, S A, SO A, 13i A, llelfene!n S Co., tax
o: j yeais, M,40
Coal toienshijt.
400 aeies, Char es Cox. 4,N
161 .timers nans oi iMtiseiiie, ;w
lb J " Us age or Alexander Thornpgoa, 3,M
Point toicnsnip,
100 " nartrsin Alexander, now Uradfotd's beira tl.JS
lu James Ainineiinau's bcirs, no
Cameron.
ii " Carbon It rut 'mpforemeut Co., Alexander
II timer, x.vu
Zeibs Run linp'i Co , wairautee J Cowdea 4s,;s
Mituouoy 4 ttusiuokin linp't ce., warrantee
T. Grant, r,tl
1)04 "
Zerbt.
ISTfl Russet St Decl, wariautee W. Croul k XV.
Wilson tux ul S years. SOu.bO
Lot No. 0, II. feJ. John Uutes, 'J I
174 acres, Curiam Run Improvement Comp. lS,tU
181 acres, 'I'ue 1'iesident and Directors of ih l'nited
Slates Hank J N. Uallv P. Moaict
f. Susaimiu, Sti.Sl
Trecorton.
Lot No IS 13, D 1J9, Bcrdanlel Authonr, SJ
L t N , Hurk John, l,'J
Lot No 3, U 91, Camermi Booon, ob
Lot No 1, Campbell Juridi, 64
Lot N a I'J, li. 5s U,by Uoltleie, IH
Uh No I'J M 13 H laii.lluucluiwvat G tor re. 30
lot Nov 11 U4 Uanmg Ja ea, 37
1 L "t, Hum J. 4c It. Kunely. g
Lol.N'oS B. 4n,li((iiigU. NV. 4J
lt ti lu, B 4b, J'lidsn Alexander, au
lot No IU. U ee, Kelly Oauial, ai
1 lot, Kelly I'airk k, - , la
1. a No 4, U US, M'Donatd ChaileS, tl
Loi Nufca, li 1'JA. Milter widow, oo
Lot No II , U Si, Newiiinu llcv'J So
lot Nn II..B. 30, Pernairal Jacob, 18
lot No 1, 0 IU7, Reeds I'athck, CS
I lot, Reilry I' uiuk, 34
1 ll. biodrr Kaiuy. . , , 00
lot Nn 9, II , BhareU gamnel, . 00
lot No 3 It 4, B 77,see Charle, 30
lot No I. B Ine, Sha.vpel Lanicl, 4-t
1 lot, B 109, Watera Jonathan, 3-J
t UU, Warsrivk Samuel, ft
Loiter Mu jonojy.'
.t
ao
I.H
1M
Lota, J4 lrlcklers ssuie,
1 1&. aivracx, Trcasaiw.
Aett! IQ,r&
TEEASUEER'S SALES.
A list of the Unseated Lands advertised
for Hale by J M. Simpson, Treasurer or Nor
IhnmbeHnnd connty, agreeably tu an Act of
the General Assemtily of the Oommonwealth
of Tennsylvatiia, past Ihe 13th day or March,
1845, and the supplement thereto entitled on
Act direclinff tho modn or selling Unseated
Lands for Taxns and other purposes, will be
eposeil to public sale at the Coort Hons in
the Itoronirh of Sunbury. on the 14th day of
June, 1858, at 10 o'clocit. A.M., tho follow
itifr described Tracts of Land for arrearages
of Taxes due and the costs ocrruins on each
Tract respectively, unless previously dikhnr
Red. to wit tlr "not sold on tho day above
mentioned, to lie adjourned from uay to tiny
No. aeraa. Warranto'! names,
Antis llehry
AmHrioe
Acinins i nomas
Foster Thomas
Jenkins James
Antis Frederick
Adams Hubert
T. Joiilsius
l' Antis
1074
Coal elB3 17
1
H. Adams
T. Foster
Kic'd Salman
Itich'd Manning
K'Jwit'rJ Hull
Tlios. (Jrier
Ttios. Uricr.
Robert Camplain
Thos. Camplain
Win. Morrison
1704
Cod! irjoO
9G7
James Stephenson
Conl 621 7G
'as. Cowaett
Isaac Neif
Baily John N
lioyd John
lirosioiis l'uter
J5rndy John
150
447
60
Coal
do
do
do
do
do
f2 GG
232 bl
33 US
20b' 34
13 50
19 33
22 12
2 2d
7 t)l
17 Go
ft GO
0 78
190 21
ftl 20
127 84
2144
205 Jiilliiiglon Thos.
40 llllus lino),
liowor Chrisliatl
do
fit)
it J
425
1U0
1CU
45
258
15
45
4j
3'.i
204
20')
80
50
130
lUO
153
lSl
l'J7i
250
l'JGJ
US
Uoyla Luke, CumeruD
llulton 8utnuel do
llettertoii Hi-nj. tjlmmokin
Uattraini Alixander, I'oiut
Karroo Julin jr. U0
l-irudy John. Coal
lrady John, do
liradv Win i' do
lJrudy Walter, Low. Augus'.a
07
vvnuci tlillll, .uttl
Cumplain liobert, Mt
Cuinpluiu li.
lJurr John. Cameron
153 3o
Curuiel 21 So
do 2l M)
10 (18
11 52
10 3G
lid John, do
Darr Mary do
Dan Luke do
l'arr l'eter do
Did John, Upper Muhanoy
Darr Mary do
Darr l'eter do
Darr Lube do
Dewait Wm., Lit. Mahanoy
Dewart John do
Dewurt Win., Low. Augusta
Dewart J obi!. ftn
3 12
2 15
10 92
8 40
13 32
15 20
5 5ti
7 00
11 01
8 28
14 CSptr Davidson Mury, Mt Certnel G 02
14 03 per Davidson Mary do G G2
3G8 hlliot Wm.. Coul Jii i:"
115
jo
:so
170
4321
12(1
2071
247 i
2531
50
1(10
300
100
100
3U0
12!)
200)
300
250
100
40
420)
210
b'.'l
21S1
10t)
4141
413
80
2171
203
203
300
354
22G1
2ticl
20
2U0
315
327
20 J
207
101
300
80
200
31)
150
2!l)
190
140)
100
50
Ul)
340
5'i
211)
211)
114)
190)
30!)
127)
231
211)
2G9)
223
188
333)
235
403)
171
43?)
lo
ss) 300
171
12
2041
1971
227
303
1971
203
202
304
218
318
110
C4)
110)
300)
tpley Andrew, l'oiot
Kvans .Smith. Coal
Fegcly Heuben do
Fejtely Win it Solomoc, Coal
File Luke, Cameron
Grant Thomas do
Grant Thomas, Cameron
0
4
52
0
4
9G
2G sa
147 '.12
17G 9'.)
lb I (12
G oil
4 87
14 G2
1 G2
1 52
ft GO
0 (ill
Gray Hubert, Coul
Gray Hubert do
Green Wm. do
Uriitit Thoinasdo
Gardner A. jr do
Gardner A. jr do
Gardner A. jr do
Gardner Win. 1'., Jackson
Guidner A. Foint
Gardner Wm P. do
Gurdner A. Little Mahanoy
Gardner Wm. 1. do
Harrison Win. Cameron
Harrison Win., Up. Muhnno,
I loust-l Johii tin
Hunter JaiiifS, Lit. Mahanoy,
Hull Chin lis do
Hunter Alex., Low. Augusta
Hall Chatles do
lluUey UernurnarJ, Coal
5
4
10
GO
20
52
10
3G
20
1G
c
G
2
C
SI
12 '
12
35
Himmelrich lleury do
Hepborue .laims do
Hilemuti John C. Camerod
Irwin Hubert, Coal
Jackson Jerell!i do
Jaclisoti Jereiiiinli, Shamokin
Irwin Hubert, Up. Mohutioy
Irwin Hubert, Point
Krow Mtcbucl, Coul
Kidd John. Lit. Mahanoy
Kentznig Abrubuui, l'oint
King lv:i'itii'l ilu
Lukins'Abignll, Coal
Lukius Smith do
Luke Hit'hord i!o
Luke Hlcl.'ard, Shainokih
Laliu Kichaid, Jackson
l.uko Hichaid, L Mahanoy
Lyou Joseph do
Lake Hichard, Point
Morgan Samuel, Coal
SInry l'eter do
Martin J. U. do
Myers Mary do
I8f 0
lot; '.in
Id 80
123 S3
3i 811
13 08
18 Oo
11 10
10o 10
10' 27
fill
5 00
5 GO
S 31
78
2 02
76
4 20
2 24
5 til)
19 84
79 no
15 18
12 35
.Miner uiiiiu uo
Moyeyer O'eorje do
Meadlmg John, Cameron
Muadling John, Up. Mahanoy
Martin l'eter, Point
Me'.znof J po !) do
Noddinot Jus. do
4 oo
1. I
3 2fi
2 12
a 30
C 92
1 00
5 b3
Noddinnt James, Chilisquaque
5
63
i rinoo lieorge, coul
Reese Sarah do
Heese Thos jr do
Huston Thos. do
Huston Mary do
Reynold John do
Huston Churlblt do
Reese Daniel do
Sassaman l'eter do
Shannon Win do
Smith Mary do
Steedman Wm. do
Scott Abraham do
Smith Luke, Cameron
Smith Abigul do
Smith Kvans do
Smith John, Up. Mahanoy
Scott Abraham, Shamokin
Schall George, Mt. Cariuel
Titsworth John, Coal,
Taggart Robert do
Tyson Joseph do
Titsworth John, ijbumakin
Tapgurt Robert do
Trickel Chas G . Jackson
23
110 21
6f 92
7 37
13 30
6 30
15 39
13 28
fO 07
37 98
3
11
4
30
CO
64
11 32
8 ft'2
2 20
G 00
1 72
3 73
2 S3
6 5S
12 92
6 08
3 92
2 00
Trickel Chas G Lit. Muhacov 4 04
W hite John, Coul 173 45
Wilson Wm. do 34 92
Walker Lewis do 3G 27
Wilson Wm. i Win L Dew
art, Coal 4 73
Yoxtheimer Ilenry, Cofll 29 43
Zeigler Isaac do 34 96
Zimmerman Mathias do. 119 33
J. M SIMPSO-V.Treascrer.
Treasurer's Oflice, )
Sunbury, April 10, 1858. j
J CHIT STOITE & SOUS,
eat Cbrinnl Ptreet, above Khtli, (lute ef No. 4 S'alb
Seeond Street,) rillLADF. LrillA,
. aaS Sow asciiviso inna
sritf:;o ijtportatio.n o?
tltt AND MILLINFUY GOODS
Coniniinf iu part of
Fancy Ibm,et and Cup UiUnns,
Batiu B id TuiTil.lI Itlbuons,
(ifue de Nuple. (iilaee and I'luui,)
Siarceloies and Flounces,
Hl.ii k M.aJtai,
i.nslisn Cranea,
Mubuc aud iilustua Laees, etc.
T LuMmI "laMul FtUiW jVMJiWCAN
Kaiek au, ISo 4Boa
A Cash Hcsinkss Lxci.t'sin?i.v. .
CIHnLl'f AHAMS, K K. 0.rnr'r of V.iitliih and Arrti
Hlreels, rhilidelphiit, inf irnis his -'d pustomrre, an4
the buyers of L Gtl(H(S flliNKIl ALLY. Ibil l "ls
snnking; eslra paeitifns for thppr isppuii -nof his business
the pruning sua. in, and hi order lo ennble him to I uichnap,
(ToihIi for rsn, mid sell Ihem at the wxvrsT snasur
paiPKs. lie has di-ciileil to sell at the smallest p.lble
advmipp ir Foa Cni F.sti.rsivgi.v I A1
Me bus iclnced the ptlu) of most of the Goods In Stole,
and lias now open mn iy Nw (ioot.. snhnble for the
iriwt, tu whir h will be itindp dnilj- adilill -ns.
. Cnrg will be to aceomm alnte FH1LMJS and rlnii
Pi:f(!OX!enefiillv, as hprelofure. . .
NIC XV l)HI;fSS OddtJ, FII.XXVI9, l,Wr,M, Siirl
rUKNIPfllNG GOODS gi n-rally.
rnrphnaer will find Rrra! .Iv inlncu In civil'? 'irIV
pn',1, Ihe motto being "ilu-nimble sivpente is teller tunn
th- sl.nr shi!ini(f "
The siiiiutbm is enntrai; ami the state well hghtifl.
March S7, l3?S.3ni3v.
FlWr ANl) FEED 1
6 I It t N G A R li A N (J K M E N T.
HHE subscriber has recently made an enlarge-
inrnt in his store room and h.i just received
a fre-h supply of Flour nrid Ford. Comfrral, et c
His stHtk consiftg of Corn and !!) !om and
Oats, and Corn CHOP. United Corn Meal and
buckwheat Flour in sacks, all of x-hich will le
suld low FOU CASM. .
Also, (lie best end Cheapest r.-sortmenl of
flour in th' Market, from FIVE to MIVEN'
D'li.LA lis per liartel, according li iiiality
A Iso, a lot of Flour in snck at vrry luv rat".
'J ho subscriber astures his customers, thai hia
arrangements lor Ri'ttin Westerh r'loiir enable
him lo give them better aaiief tclinn or belter bar
gains than ran lie att.iiucJ elsewhere
ISoiiiR tliuiikrul for pat patronage, lio hopes
to merit and contiue to receive the favor of tho
public generally.
CO. HAVEN.
Markst square, Sunbury,
March 20, 1858.
FARMERS O F P E f N S V i , V A ' I A
ATTENTIDN I
You can sunnlv (iurst:hes wilh l"!hem'i"ll Stiinnrrs.
wurrunled pure, which has been in auei-essiiil use m .New
Jersey f,,r n,e vej, e o -l'i, ) h u e rneivrd Hie
DII'I.OAI Ar i l l-vr Jerstv, .N't-v Y"ik. Deluuare.uml
1'eiuis Ivuiou Anrii Mill, nil .S.K-ieties. nnd huve b-ril lineii
by (lie PifMileiil .!' the I nited rl:ili-s. nn ins tjiiiilen unit
on Hie I'ubhe urotimls nt uslniifioii, 1). C ( und by the
billowing ijeiitluinni vii:
7. IK-ke, I'm. I
J L Kejves, I
i i-i'im, tiASsamono' ."'ew Jcrst".-
V
rviinti.r Huberts, 1
Win. Miller,
Chas X oik, I
of Cape Isln'u!, Ns'v Jcrs?y.
Th. s Mull rd, Kaq, Cnmilen N.J. Di.llcrKea.nr.
K.imlit, Mr. Field, Mr Atkinson, nnd Levi Johns ml ,.
New Jersey they any it is the cheapest ;nd tu.-sl relrO
Mmiuie now in t se, lieinj- petitlniient and nnpr. .vni- t!e
laud by enriching the soil II is suneil I,, Ihe viinousir ; s
joiiniisi Com. ill,,,, Wh nt, r.biis. Ac Hv
ene:osinf u t heck, mi -iny New Jeisey i,i l'l.i:.nl-a. IS ink
or I'-P-tNii-i- t,, uay "-.ii II. use in r,nl;itle.p)na ,-r in ex
change in- '"oibn-e, in :nr .Market ral-s here, your mders
v iil be filled uml flopped to ynu, Tiee of Cerlii ji expense.
t&Tlwery article sold by me is G'uarai,htl,.fSl
Super riii.sph.ueof Lime, sin Ou n ton.
Hone I'ri isplntle, S5:l- lid u ..
Ainericnii Feilibeer, ni u
rr a iMitRFi, isui-ri'iciKNT foii an ackk
OF liHlU .NO liHO.M) CAST
1'urc Hone Dull, (0W birrelsnow ready.) ut O i CO per
turn I or i:)3. u tun.
I'.MIihct'e, N,,. 1
n Ulttel
( )C0 '.'3'rels now ready.) ut Si lo S J
I jiii.i Pi nter No. I 1 ion Cartels, at 91j tu ii uLarni
I'ol Ash, 5(1 barrels
I'cruvun, l'al.iy aiiu and Chilian
O U A N i) .
liLOIHi!'. A. l.LINAf.
riopilet-T.
No. 51 South ri!ONT9ire;t, l'hiladelphiii Cily, fa
iir x iioi.i-:iAi.i: dkalijhs ali.oxm-.h a liu-
LU AI. LlrCOl N T.
IV I'auiphleu cun be had nn pj plication to ir.v OSii-c,
or of my Aieut
March in. Ir,.? liul-WOwr.
B I'lUsN G A Jl It A K GH MEN T.
LACKAWANNA & BL00MSEUr.GR.Il.
VrFonnt.N'li superior facilities for travel n New j
York, I'hiliideiph n, ued the North ui. I XX't-sr, br nm.
liei'ti.ins nt r-ranhiii with ihe trains ol Ihe ile'-iw.ne '
Iickuivaiuia and XX'csteill Kuilrtaiil Coir,itu;v ; aln.) i,,i I
travel Soulu and XX' est over ihe CntlawifcSj, X iji'iiuypiirt
and lOne Kuihuua und coimeclini; trains :
GOING NORTH.
N. Y. Acconimo- p'nilni'j
Leave , Mini. d.nio :. M.ni
Rupert, On AM. Sib I'M.
iii"Pip, o is d i :i -.ii ,i ,
Kspy, U Ui dJ U '" d
Lu.ie Hidce, 6 411 dj 3 :i do
Her wick, 7 10 d .1 Si i!.i
Heach Haven, 7 3j u n.i d
Hiuch tiiove, 7 Si) do 4 is ,!,
.ncksiiini'y 8 ID ih( 4 a'l i:o
Unci ii; sCir-k, t to ilo 4 M ilj
X st Nu ihcoke, f an d i 5 oi a
I'l;. iiionth, o 15 dj 5 jj , ,
Arrive ut
Kiiii'ston, C DO il i ;10 do
Leave
Kiiikiioii, 0 m do I la P M. i 3', ,!,,
XX'iiMinnir, ll 3n do I. In do a r,,t
XX'eal I'niston, 9 63 i!o 'J '.' i do j ,lt
rntston. In co d-i a .vi d i 00 no
Lucaawunna, I'l ll do i 1.1 i it in , ,
1 .i b o vr! i-, IU 20 do 'J in) i'u bin il ,
Arrive ut
Sciuutn-, '0 "0 c?o Of, ,!.- 0::i ili
Is wilh t!,e l.xj risk
goiii? Last, oil IJ I. .V XXr. Kall.oai
Arrive i.i ..evv oik 7 I1 :.
do rillinJelpiiU. !V Ci,:..,'.C!l
S !di IV M.
Kare I't. m ltu;ieri to New V.nk tj no
Arih- ; Uai!
I' v - '.
eil through.
Trie u, cmmod;itu!i Train Nnrih, e -i iu-'.-i- r.' Sc
with Hit- Lxpn-w '1'iuiu XX t:' nn tiic U. J. '.'
rouj.
ODiNC S'1 Til
rin'.t.
Mi;l
8 isi A. M.
8 in tin
An
I.eirs
eiunttii.
Taylorville,
l.iicknviunnn,
I'litston,
XX'esi rntstcti;
XX'yomiuc.
Arrive ut
Knu:st.iu,
Leuvc
Kniirmon,
IMyin lutii,
Ni'iniiciil.-e,
llnulock s Cr k,
.iicksliiuny,
Ueuch lirovc,
lleucli iluvea
Berwick.
Lime lti'.'ge,
,
Ui.Hiin.
Arrived at
IC.T. 1-
M.
4 M l'
4 I i
1 'JO
I :.ll
I .'Ii
4 in
5 e0
Ifl
II I.I
II lo
0 .'.o
7 -J 'l
7 411
; i i
S M
S 41
tl HI
0 ii
II
II
:in A. .M
1. 1 di
in M.
-jo
2u
6 35
ti IU
U 1.1 1
.'I.
di
l-J
I 'J 411
l!
0 00 to
1 UO iL'
M 40
di
do
10 ill
11 or,
do
II 15
11 4-t
14 .10
do
il IHJ
(I
I'J III P. M.
I J 30 do
1J 4U th)
I'J 40 d.)
t tO i'.o
It ii pert,
0 15 ilo
The PI'llndeVliia Wail Tr: il- l.Vw- South, c un r-s ; i; :
thtt Mill! Truin at lupeil, ,.0'U Last ,.l 1 .'l M.i",,f
CallawiSM. I'ort ChilO'll. I'on vibe li-.aiti.iv.. ' ., ;rit .
inc. at Philadelplnt, at ! SS 1. M Aluiwuli MailTiuiu '
(line XX'est nt Oo'eloek I. M. ir Humille. .M ..ti n, Mini- ',
cy. XX'ilhainspoil and Kauila. ' i
Pnssenzera by lhe-4 ..'cl-rk P. M Trr,:n ,..:M? S. mh I
can take Ihe II o'cW-k P. M I'.xp.enr. tr,.,,, '.: ., 1
and the XX'eel.ot todite nt III.shcsIiCij. fn,.t I
elnek A.M. Train (.hiij; Lust, att.-.i,,. ut I'lo ijdvh.cu cr I
Uunikbure; at I'J noon. i
, L,. - r.J.Lt:vr.NVO!!TII :
March 13, lSS?.-0ir t-u, erinnnJi:!:. I
SCHOOL LETTING.
fpiIE Public Schools of tlie borcf.-V ef Nor- i
-1 thuriiber'iand, will le let on t".it jr,l:iy ilie j
S4th inst. All persona ni..!iine; t apjdy as j
Teachers are rrqneste.l to meet die Uiieitor on I
thr.i day at 3 o'clock, 1. M-, ut t!;v t'ent r .ilio.l '
ilouae. '
Hy orde- of '.ht b ijrj. i
JOS. I. -J l'DTi:;, Ser'y. ;
Northumbcrlnn:!, April :i, lvoS. :)t j
NETT CASH THY GOODS HOUSE.
tr tlPEIN j (if rl'IM i t;tKi;s: J
EYRK l.ANDKI.I., r. urthA. .M h S,s pnil-ij-a
are now c-Aeimg a .mi sio-k ol" '
New Goods for Sprirrj of !
FAsmoNAiit.i: spisix'i titinns.
WI.ACK rtll.Ksi, -Jl t..:;ii i, w,ei.(
Spruie. Uress lioiHtu, New S, !es,
fawls, in nil 1 !ie iMvi Miles,
lirrri-sh. Flench nnd American I ..ii.t.--s,
Kui ii. li oi D, n , i;.n:.
Ku'l Siock of Ki:ro :.in
N M llurraiiit in Seas nuCile (;o..d. ihilv rcce 'eeJ from
theALCTUiNSoi New Verk a.,.1 l'l.ud,lphiu
Te-iiTw'Mr ,"v""', ""-e i!'eio;
J KIIMS etl Cali and iv pi ices
I'hiludclpuia, Mair n, ,'JiiiJvi-.
FOR SALE ORiivK
pHE large double framo house in ibe Itgrougli
Z . Dt'la,,;, hf''"'1l''g to the estate of
v vay, ceceaKU. l bta I. a very dcr..! '.
"uui.ji.y Mluated on iJ- .or,;i
Urancli of the Si, tn,,..i. ...:.i. .
. . - ---Mi,irt, .iu a -.aruo eai.len
Car.uga House, fc'table cVc.. tdon -ina u, it
Jermg moderate. Fnuuire t,f w. .... ..
V illianuport, or D. UriutijF4a. vL Northum"
berland. ' '' u'ul
berland.
March 27., IMS
Ki, .'s aa Breime'g Enee of Gir.ger
and Husband' Magnesia at
March U.'ftT. FISHF.R'ti;
I JUK I' MO.N Al La. Tooth and Hair Urusha
all aualitia, and an uvuuli y, Ctr sal by
a- w. rwijeu.
WASHINGTON n0U.
IlE propiiPinr re.i tltilij inb.rn.a bin f,ip
, nJ rt'hlii U i e.Rlly. tint be i, , .ilir.
and renovatin,! Il.e Va.l,i.,Kloii . lie;,.,"
to eiilrrtmn both transient and perii-.ai.u.t v',i'u.g
In a suitiililp and cnmrri!i!c manrrr.
Thankful for tbe jirrnnr. eXemlrd tn l i.
r.illifr. hn rcs pciiitliy M,li .i f, c iomMik--..!, r .r
tl.osninp. l!.t will t.,l,e d,,.,;.,. n ,... tr, .
inclon HntiFe" on tbe fiiht dj cf Ai-ril mvt
He will b.ivn nn Omn'ibu. rvi.nii.s t tie
dillerrnl l.'iiilroml lb-pots for the a.-c.,n,i!,od;,lin
of l'aseehgcrs, ficti ol chnt)re.
w. a. r.ovnr.T.
Sunbury, March 50, s:,-'r-
iMfUUTCll ANO Itnl.i.aal L !!.. t. r. II IX
B -A. L T ,
aii'iaSr
ir,4 &mth HVn'irr.t, Phihuhlphia,
ASHTO.N FINE. l.IVI'.RI'ooI.' f,!;(it..n.
Ashton end Star Mills D.itrv .ik.ioitcd fi.'is.c
s'antly o:i hand cr J for rele in w.e lo euit tbc
triilr.
;. 13. Orders sr,!i iird.
March 13, IS'iS 6:n
A Card to tl:v St?iJ;t.
READ! I! K A !J ! ! HEAD!!!
3. F. & 2. P. KLSNE,
MKHCKA'H XS,
Kline's drove, Kurtltui. Jirrlaml roou , ',:,
liTE have di tcrniti cil Irorn liie poUcio n i
' ' llii notice lo si ll at greatly rt'duce:'. i r
for CASH our stock of lijml-i. nii.ir,i.
l)iy (ioiids, (jroreries, I! ard'Varr. Ijocen.-w aic,
Houl.i and S'nh s. lllits and Cnpr, M 'iIm in., .te..
and nil K 'oils lisua'lv kept In a coimt'V nioic
I'.i I'ir do.-'irous of iuiCiu ll i l ii-iiici-: v c
di.-ipofic of our stock aof tioods on or I. f.oc li.c.
Hlsl ,.-.y of Mail h. IS-'S, ton .ieon ur t-or.-'siia
w isliiiii; to pinOuik. ill tlie buriii.ci .- on f:t ornVi'
terms. 'J'lie situntion i:; a good one u i tl ,:.i.; nn
extensive mercantile trade.
I'or furl her partirnlnr r.-.M pri.-nnl' npnn
the subscribers, or adilr.-s them bv mail.
.1. F. cv 1. V. Kl.tNK.
Kline's Grove, Ta , February Clli. lt:,a.
1-C CUErrnanco!!. mai.cc rrrs y
commitEioa atitrcnrtnti cr.u jJealjr- in
I vtsu. sit's-.si; .f.t fESiVsii-;i,
j aVt. li, 2. li'n.'r r .,'., ;) i',rjors vl.r-re Mai l.t!,
I llllL.Mjr.I.PIilA.
R B ate e r siaiiily on I. so. I an ?se.f'r;n t.t cf
8-M l'ricl mid I'ollcii Kisii.cvc., c.
Slmi.-Mi rs,
Cheese,
lJir.lir'.:c.
I cl. 27, Is.'iH !lm w.
SadrriG nnd Harness Uakcr-
HEITP.Y tIATJPT,JR.
.V KCsl'KCTM'I.I.V iiif.ii m Ce
Sj-s. rHiwn of f5unburv ai.t! the pub
lVfev;'liR ge't'-rallv. that l.c lins uj,ei
SsMS"- the shop oc.-o,ieil bv Uripht a:.d
Iiee!;, one door east ol .s I'snpt's Cabint t Ma
ker i:c.j. v,: c.-o lie i3 j.rcpririd tn uun rut wol!:
in his line of business equal to any iii n'c in tbis,
section of tho country. Order promptly execu
ted and all kinds ot 'produce taken in Exchange
JSimbuiy. .Match 20. I8SS. v
FLOUR hedussb
Vo
S. 10 i-cr tgai rt !-
'piIE huhscril.errespirtf,;l:y inform ij'.c ;iii
J 7Piis ofSunldivy ,i!i,!viciI:ity i!,:,t hchasjost
received a supply ,. Kl.UI'li, ,ic!, be is o,1. rin
I 0 8 '4 I" r M'Xffel. tie also si lls eoine n; b.w as
I iO ct-. per rjuarler, all of v.bicii h; Ml
j HANTS li be (jjud.
in "Kim- ur rctpu irojo a,., m s.r. -:-i
I. .."..t.s I .ir sale, wholesale or rrliil.
Thai.hful for past piiruuasi he hoo-i to rca
linue to mcnt Ibe same.
OIVU HIM A i.'Al.L!
M. C f;i;Aif'!AiiT.
... Markc! tit , t-jnbury, pa.
Fenruary 37, Ij.
SADLEHY AND HAEKiSS kAKIXG
I g ilir,-,,!-,,.!, ,,..,,,, iiiiorni the "i!i-
I file ot bunbury und vlcsiijiv lh;.t l! t v i'.ne
coniiiH-i ced t'.c ai-i ve liUi i-. a . iv do ir-iiiove
! H.e I'ot Ollice, Maikei 4iUiirc. .Si n! nrv I',i
I ,VX ''rk ,:! B,I H"' ' Uieir i'lie l' Llmucm :ii
i be done proinpt.'y and iiemlv on tli nio-t rea-'
; sonniile term-. CI.L'.M K.T & OYSTER
Fibru:i y U'. 1 85..
O.COO CROSS-TIE'5
! IVANTKll Tiur.y Thousand fr.o's Ti.. e-
' i. , i,'"'1;1' 1 !NlU ''"r N'":""" IVntrai
j I ai! lieaJ. i oi illicit r p-fiicnlnis iiioi.y i,
Hi '- T. fl.KML.NT. Co, tractor.
Sutil urv, l.'ccemlicr 2h. kd7. tl
i Jj.s. . :: jiij:. ':'. i'i'i
- f r .
Karkci Street, Znnhiirv"
-' i j
'ipni: Mibcrihcr icspecll'tillv itii,i.-is ;1 1. .;,'
aens ol Sunl-nry u,l l!lC ,,;
i lb at lie ba purchaid. nnd t,i;c ,,V!1
ii. the aboiewcil know,, Mai.,1 o',h9 Ul' Of
I April next, orno rlv kept 1 y Mis. Tim,,,,,,,,,
i Ilia lievM.I p.,, ,,.0 sHlUe ,,-,,,,,! ;,.
! !. aihhl.oi, be ;, vil,e co;;V ,
, passengers l,. ,:j ,!;:;lrci:t
I ?".' ""i1 - '-rsru nr.-;,-,,! . , tt.,Utt
Ih. h.,tcasiral.le ,toW ii!a pU-e ,..r
JUjr.N LKi-JKl'i.
rcbr.inry 50, IS.'.s.
j iii j .ii n si i i u u '
ATrOHNEV ATIiA?-,
HjXce in Ma-A t ., ooio.,,',',. i;.e (.l;i7 ,u
SUNBtTlW'', 3? A.
Collections maile and Piofi's,ii,in, r,u ii,p
qenera!!) atln.ded lo I'rmnptly und ( 'a.eii.;iy.
rintnM.riiti Kirrnrxrj. .
llullitl iV Kairthorrr, Jl eiil v WVrl'
Davis A. IJiriief, 1'. Tyim & Co!
Kiiubiiry. June SO, i.."7.
l'IsOril AND FEE!) STtilfE;
,V.:.'Ve .;iifi;'e. -,.,.'.,. ,
"T0 nl'i.C ) I'l I I. Y iiifonu i!;e p; ' he tlut
L h he CojifiiMijtly lo.;.,: en baud, f-'u.a ni.,1
!-'.o,l.:e UigWhMi riocr.ii, .,a,-t.r Intel
, ".lens - -Vs.. superior iJuckuheut i'bmr. ail,
L l.p oelojull ki:,d3, wbi,.-!, . . , ,v,ll ,.,
i .i.i.l sell til the lowest puce, I'OV. CASH UM.y.
i Cl.il tnd tee for yourselves,
j L'eceiP.'.icr I'l, "l "; v.
7.'f'':f
; 'MA MilSSLKR,, e,.eetr,:iv
i Corm the ritizon o: Trevt,r.. . ,,.,.
ir,.un,.:,,e1;only, thai vlte hits .,;,-.. i a ,
: 'tore of V.li.nery and Faucv Coo;,-. ,i Tnvt.
1 1;:" 111 T" 'Ui.t street. , r-nrii- 0, -u le Kn.iuV
. 1 aver:-., win re H!l U,u), o( tn.iinct., and Fancy
l.o.Hh csn ba ha,l at the lowe-t ti r-rs.
, l'ic niaV',nu. au, ard-d lo in ) c.
I manner and latest stvlu.
i Apiil ti, 1S57. if
' TT AT.I
r.vrFit. w iluV'-v bl ades. I I,., ,r
' C
arriaiji". and Tabl Oil (Jioths, Coeoa'
! Malta an.) a u -erior
nt:cte hoi llrii""t.
! Dec 1P.S7.
BRIUJ'T cV RO.
V " '
9SO' 1 ARI,s-'AHPKTl.NO in.hrarirg Wool
Insrjin, Cutlan, and a sunericr a lie!
' "f ,!"s Carrcl- Maitufucturtd al home, lor !'
. at uncus to suit ih.-lim.a
. lec. il.'S7.
nnir.HT 5; MliV
30 0 fcAt-'Ks 6A ,"' 'i'iiiiv, i. i .pi .
tly, Urijc sacks', nu for sale atibi-loi.vt
WniiLtiry, Uee. It, IS57.
gJf.'KE OL1VK OU. lor table u.i-ins k.M
al 8; J and 63 J ebUs just u.;v( i hr
Mrrli It, '6
Mackerel, t'oi'lieli, laid,
W.almo'l, licet, I!in,
liail, 1'oik, tildes,