gw—mim ihi m*i * ■ aaasgoacKt ,iMEni(\§jr vbtijrjyTJEEß. OU? COUNTRY. tliviainua in political opitlionshave been the cause of the dissolution and downfall of most nations of antiquity: That union is strength is a fact whiclvwill be admitted by ~ all. It waabhjori that'assisted bur brave and patriotic Washingtqh in obtaining for us the liberty and happiness which as a coun try we now enjoy. It was the strong uniting tie (the love of country) which strengthened the valient intrepid Greeks in their hold contest-on the plains of Marathon against the powerful Xerxeswlth the fearful .odds of millions. It was the firm band of union in the same straggle which enabled the Immor tal Leonidas with hi* three hundred Spar tans to cut down the Persians by thousands, at the pass o,f Thermopylae. _ Now let its fur a raomeut jQok at the Condition of our coun try. and ask the question:. Does that happy political union which' so long’ existed in Greece nnd Roma (arid which once existed in this country) now exist? If so why do we see snehrbitter amUatronganiraositycxhibi ted in our National and State Legislatures where all deliberations should he conducted with feelings the inbst gentle, virtuous and honorable. Why are the lives of public men no closely and strictly criticised? Why do those feelings of hostility which exist in ,the bosoms of some warm political men so fre quently break out in duels &c. actions which should never be countenanced by the true lover of his country. Why do we see men from whom better thihgs should bo expected acting contrary to every principle of honesty, love of country or good sense, iif order to carry into effect their political designs? Can our country be in a prosperous and happy condition while party spirit rages to so great an extent,' while she is threatened with civil war wjth all its direful consequences.— Abolition has been the mark et which many able ami experienced politicians have shot with but little effect. If this question con tinues to bo agitated with-increasing /.cal it certainly will tend i to-the.dissolution.o£_these_. United States. It is not my design to cen sure one party hut both; there is corruption on both sidos and it does not decrease but increases in a tcnfold.dcgrcc. May the love of Country increase and bin- great men be come proverbial for theirunion in the com mon interests of the Commonwealth. G. S. J. * KINDERHOOK ASSOCIATION OF CARLISLE. 'the Kiiiderliook Association of (lie. Bo rough of Carlisle, in pursuance of previous notice, met at the house of Simon Wunder lich, Esq. on Saturday the 1 1 thApril,.lB4o. On motion, JASON W. EBY, was appoint ed' Chairman, and Ileury.S. Ritter, Secre tary. . ' The object of. the meeting having been stated by the chair, to be. the organization of the association, when the. chairman pro posed a constitution and mtes for the gov ernment of the associations wlncli penning men - consiuerafion, were on motion, refer- • red to a committee consisting of Messrs. Outrage lo the Amcritan Flag. Todd, Spotswood and Bonham, to revise & The brig Boxer, Capt. Hale, arrived, (it report thereon to an adjourned meeting, to Baltimore, from the coast of Africa.. The be betd at Allen’s Union Hotel, on thp Tol- Sun states that during her voyage she had lowing Monday evening. ( been subjected to an outrage, for which we On motion, the association adjourned to doubt not ample reparation will be at once meet at the time and place above mentioned, demanded. The passengers in the Boxer ,J. W, EBY, Ch’n. were the Rev. Messrs. Canfield and Finney, H. S. Ritter, Sec’y. ' and Mr. Alward, missionaries of the Assem- Mondav Evening, 13th April. - bly’s Board of Foreign Missions; Dr. Me- Pursuant to adjournment, the members of Dowell, of Washington city; Captain J. H. the Kindcrhook Association, and a number Harvey, of New Orleans, and 11 in the stecr of the members of the different Democratic age. The outrage.in question consisted ini Associations of,the several townships tpgeth- her illegal seizure and detention by the For- '■ cr withjpn unusuall v large- and respectable tuguese authorities atthe lsle of Mayo. The meeting of others of the democratic citizens Boxer was chartered by the Maryland State of Cumberland,County, favorable to tiie re- Colonization Society to take emigrants lo 'election of Martin Van c ßuren to. the Pfesi- Africa* On her return she put into the Isle dency, and the candidate of the National of Mayo for the purpose of obtaining a caCgo Convention for the Vice Presidency, assem- of salt, where she was taken possession of . bled at Allen’s Union Hotel, on-the. ISthqf under the plea ofa suspicion that she was a April inst. When, on motion, the meeting slaver. The passengers, officers and crew was called to order by the appointment of were thrust into prison, and with the excep lIOBERT BUSK,Esq. of Mifflin township tidn of the captain, who was permitted to al as President; and Ab’m. Waggoner, of N. tend the vessel, kept there until an exami- Middleton; James Kelso, of Southampton; nation of the vessel took place atPorto Brave, Geo. H. Bucher, of Silver Spring; James a distance of about twenty miles off,.whither Montgomery, Esq. of West Pennsborougfi," she had been taken. After an examination and Christian Cocklin, of Carlisle ns Vice was gone through with; the vessel was given PrCE,identsrand I of-E.-Pcnns- up to the captain, but he waß without hands, borough; James Ri Scott, of Shippensburg; or anybody to assist him to work her, nor nnd William Spotsiuood, of Carlsle as Sec- would the authorities furnish the means to retaries- ■ ■ ._ -- return her to the port where her passoopen The coirimittee appointed at the previous and crew were. These oHlrVessel as best Meeting of the Kinderhouk Association of boat and made the>v.cmand for satisfaction Carlisle, to repprt.the form ofa Constitution they coulib, and the matter will be placed & Rules for ifsigovernment, submitted a con- jj r J r c the U. S. Government for redress. Stitution which will bepublished nextyyv.r,’- • Oiimotioh', a committee of tl\«f no . r o f the FOUBFEDERAIi CONSPIRACY. pointed to report at t D a3 Be r- The Pennsylvanian of yesterday, contains Association, . sujmnfc a ..jevolopement,” of as foul a conspiracy mqnent,officers aftwns*:- the.:pe<iple by- Whig members ,of - r sociation ,l ~and r A ToJd r Congress, as was ever perpetrated in-this . Sterret Ramsey. ~ or cbuntry;--Thef;q n owing state appointed said committee. fflent, which the editors of the Penhsylvan- The business of the Asscici;a , ian sav they are nbleito sustain by undem becn finished, the meeting '' 39 a y . A -—jAtUgivethe reader some idea W col. Charles M;C>re, '• er^,l I |®^p S ®'. ns^ | thedffiertidsof the pepplc- " : nnAnnanirndnalya^' 1 .■ - . ■ The Pennsy lyaman saysr—We - ceived information: from thie-interibr of .this ttiinisf)ed.co-" enc „ e : :n the integrity and po- state-and New-York.'establishiii& the folluw jitice? pnncip es of Martin Van Buren and ing facts, viz: •' b ■■ ; Hfchard M. Johnson, will give them ottnun- X; That'soon after the inectmn' of Con ' v P^ rt -T re - el « t ‘°" toxhe Presi- gress, the federal Whig membere formed . V.Tcpsidency of theti. States,,and theinaelyes into' a Sort of secret Jacobin Club b Thd n^n aV i ol:a * 0 e^ct for the purpose of making use of their pub- so-we will not lie stations, privileges and pay, tocontrol , h i^. on “Bog Cabips,” the political action of the peojpfe of the Uni- tedStatesv ’ A™"?' Skins”: of .‘Shin Bones,” >y»th. a yiew.:tq' '' Tto this clubnptioihted on '"Eiecu-- p l e9 7> n( !/ J' 1 ? T ®,‘i' 9 theta* the atd.qf, Road free Iranspor- seU’ea the pbvYcr to appoint secret Commit - toton,” al ,qf whi.ch.wasjxhibited to ns thjS teeS lb minHem : Mn ! ewry ebuhtv tbrmwh ep ’“ 3 l tms °- r V9l9 »>ntbe sed of .Messrs. E. OAncabb, of Loniaiaba: I— e " eye ■ the pn, P er at *d const;- John Bell, bf Tennessee; J. Mi BAtts o lational time arrives. , : V 'Ylrgihia; Thqs Conwr.;. nf owS'STnM Jemima; democratic Now : Yo'rkV Ueyerett -Sal ’ of .t!i« couniy, be.re- : .queyted.to organize themaqives immediately^'of Connecticut^ 1 w TH ’ «e_ E by flic 'M " County Cbnyentiqn. . r : ’ .* ;; havC I .cnfttri6rt]td& Ufee P. 0 ?? 1 '!??? the placed 7 Standing fo'. n eet^utiye ; eommit(Ce;; to fit the Court .House, oa the .first Monday of thenext August Court, for the purpose of further advancing the. interests of the demo - cratic party of this county. ■ Resolved, That the'" proceedings of this meeting be signed by the officers, and pub lished in the American Volunfer. v For tht Volunteer. We are sorry to hear that several persons in this city who had taken the resolution of .being temperate, have deplorably backslid den, and have become tipplers again since the hard cider mania has seized upon the whig party. At several places the erection of'what.is'called Harrison log cabins, with | a provision of hard cider, has been celebrated with most beastly orgies—Buffalo for exam ple. The'Buffalonian, which’the .Rochester Daily Advertise!;, styles a semi-whig .paper, thus speaks of the occasion of opening one of those cabins at'Buffalo:— . ' “There-was . more-sin committed—more fools drunk-—and more wise men made/ools, than we have ever seen before. 'One' more such fete, and (here will not be decent whigs etiougli in the city next fall, when we want them, to.form a corporal’s guard.” The Buffalo Daily Sun notices the affair in the following pleasant manner: ' “Were we disposed to imitate the whigs in tlieir nonsense, we would raise an old fash- ioncd Dutch mansion; like that on (he banks of the Kindcrliook Creek, in which Mr. Van B uren was born We would surround it with a thrifty cabbage yard—the, raw inatc rial from which one of Mr. Van Buren’a favor ite dishessauer kraut, is made.; Through the opening door we .would have his goad old dutch motherappear, industriously churning, and a shelf of nice round Dutch chccses/and the little red-haired Van Burens, with cocoa nut cup, drinking buttermilk —a beverage which never' inebriates nor makes' sore eyes, like hard cider. We would have a field of Indian corn, growing lifon the hill side, not to make cord-dodger, but as the sure pro ducer of suppaan and millcch, and a buck wheat field in blossom, then pancakes might abound in'due season., On the hill-top, and np-the deep ravine, _ we'Wouldhavcthehick l ' ory tree, for which Kinderhook is so famous; a wood and.fruit for which the hard cider folks feel a kind of phobia peculiar to federal ism. Instead of the skunkskin nailed a- gainst thp side of the house,, there should hang the shad of the Hudson, which having been freshened for broiling, js thus exposed to dry partially, ere it passes to the gridiron. ."There is something rational in such a picture as this:- Such a house, in this city, would be thronged with'sober and conscien tious men,- No ribald songs, or profanity,' or'card playipg; or drunken bawls should be heard.- Nothing .than.donder en blixen should be heard. A~Dutchman. knows no more wicked oath—and he must learn the language of proud England before he can blaspheme in style. - .--"We woultfhcrc remark, that log cabins and hard cider are more congenial associar tions. . Long before the orchards of the west arrive at the maturity which makes cider abundant, the, log cabin gives., way to the frame house. To talk of log cabins, coon skins, and hard cideri in^association, is like mixing champagne with the buffalo hump of thft Missnim rfrarmp>. 7? *• -i (Signed by the. Officers.) From the'New York Evening Post the suffrages of the free and independent vo ters of these United States, . 4. That this secret Committee, by mean a of their county committees and otherwise, are not ofily printing ami circulating large quantities of specchesand essays, false and foul in their character,! but are in every quarter attempting to raise-subscribers' for the Madisonian, to ’give as .wide a diffusion as possible to the libela upon the administra tion and the leading democrats of-the coun try. 5, That the means of paying for the trash they have printed, is their official pa;/ nB members of Congress,, and. thafrnot, only such papers, but the Madisonians!; sent to subscribers, are forwarded- under frank, in palpable violation of law.’ '■ ’6. That'for the purpose of getting means from the'Treasury,, to carry on the opera tion of this Jacobin Club, keep .up a corres pondence with their secret committees a; broad, and send out. frecof postage, not on ly their libelous publications; but the Mad isonian to its subscribers, CongreSs ia to he kept in session and tinier pay until next September! ,> , , Accompanying the foregoing, the Penn sylvanian contains a circular of this estraor- : dinary "Executive Committee,” the original of which is now in the possession of the edi tors of that paper. This circular is signed by all the individuals named above, who have disgraced thtpiselves,. and shamefully abused the high trust reposed in them as members of Congress. We are sorry, that we have not room fur -the' correspondence referred to in this week’s paper, but will endeavor to publish the, whole in pur next. —-Stale Capitol Gazette, ’. Jl Splendid: aiid Substantial Victory I Democracy Triumphant IN A LLEGHE NY CO UN TY J Our friends 'far and near must not mistake this for an empty shout, such ns are contin ually-raised bytlie whigs.—lt is-the- honest and true annunciation of a.most gratifying triumph; The election for Justices of the peace, judges, &c,, has terminated much -better than the most sanguine of our friends had Imped. We have elecfcdsrjusticea— while the opposition have elected hut-13, and .these, with few exceptions, after strict party contests. Nor have the whigs fheironiinary excuse that the vote was not out—ln 17 townships there were polled! last year 27T4 votes—atthe last election 3367 votes were polled—ah increase of 593! We repeat then, that the victory is complete. • It is ab solutely astounding to the federalists here, and their presses'have made'buf liiitle efKtrf' to explain it—they feel they are soundly beaten, and the less (hey. say about k the better. _ We have not room for details, but merely give the general .results as made up by the editors..of the Pittsburgher from the official returns: Total Democratic votes Total federal votes. Democratic majority, I cy*%7 Democrats !—|CrMS Federalists. The numhcrof votes polled on the Demo cratic candidatcfor Senator last Tall in the whole county was 355 Z; now, cvclosivn.nf {jo? I c i/15 wftTiVn "\7 So? Relr whole' vote last year—Will the federal presses tell us about that 2500 majority for Harrison in this county. —Pittsburg Mercury .■ NEW GOODS. The subscribers have just received a large and well selected stock of SPRING 4- SUMMER GOODS,. which they offer for sale at their stores in Carlisle and il/EcuANiCsnußa. The stock .consists, in part, of superior fine cloths of all colors and qualities; super cassimeres: striped and plain summer cloths; super mar seilles, valcntin, cashmere and silk vestings; silk-velvets; a variety of cords: a large-quan tity of plain linen and linen drilling; Ameri can nankins; painted lawns; a fine assort ment of calicoes, muslins, laces, and edg ings; silk parasols and umbrellas; bonnets, &c. , . The whole stock was carefully selected by ourselves, and, purchased on such terms as. will enable us. to offer bargains to such as may. favor ns with-a tall. ,• ARNOLD & Go. Nearly opposite the Carlisle Bank. Carlisle, April 9, 1840. WRIGHT’S -PENNSYLVANIA . ■;* or «• rights, duties.and jurisdiction of Justices of the Peace,) from the yen- 1700 to (he close of the extra session of IBS9 with m.l the necessary forms, enties, and directions, in 1 vol. For sale by | J£S. LOUDON. Booleltcr. THE. CONSTABLES MANEL, a neat pocket volume prepared for tl use of Constables in Pennsylvania, will I issued in a few days. • ' j G CENTS REWA y Ran away from tin .eSalffl residing in Carlisle, «?S” "‘S* l * the 2 9t>> ult.tv \vSst. a PP rentices to the C —business named Jm - 'S?and Abraham Crin is about 19 years of ng§, about 5 dies high, and light hair—C/ide 19 and 20 years of age, about 5 es High, and light hair. All peri bidden agains't harboring ;or tr boys on my account., , STEWART! Carlisle, April 9, 1840; SfMON WUJVOER* mHANKFUI. W. former fayol i nieibnO of ipformingihis frie public geherally. -ttiai he rhas i-e old siaml, sign of tlie ■ ; . ooiDSN-eaaA in High street, n.few dcwraenat House, jvhsre he sjhall pt all times with 'the.beat .of Liquors,'and ev markets catiaffSrd for .the, comfort catipn of those who may .favor- hit custom-. ,> 1 A careful and attenUvehostlcr i in-attendancei . , . ■ will be tnkep b month and year, on reßsrriabfe tei C irllsloy April „:,C' •' Of the Financial Condition of the Borough of Carlisle, showing the amount of small notes outstand i., ihg as per report of former Council, the nmount redeemed from April i 839 to Abril 4840 nn the halaiice Unredeemed, outstanding or lost. Also the existing debts of the Borbuo-h and fli amount of her assets. * Balance, of sigal I notes outstanding and unredeemed as - per statement ofsformcr Council, ■' OIOT - ! 82 Debt due the Carlisle Bank, tOpb, 00 Statement of monies received and expended by tl the Borough of Carlisle, in pursuance DR Cash rac’d from P. Watts, Esq. balance of judgment vs. ~ ■ Moore & Biddle, *lO7B 63 Cash rec’d from Trea|urer of Saving Fund, part of de pogite by former Council, ' • 1 420 00 Cash rec’d from J. Squier, Esq. Borough Tseasurer, 680 00 'I he account of. Jacob Squicr, Ksq. Treasurer of his receipts and expenditures from the laih d cn. •' ■ To amount of'taxes authorized to be collected for the year 1839, , . . ' $1733 0 g Cash received of John J. il/yers, Treasurer of the Car lisle Saving Fund, ■..*!., .front /olm Spalir, D. Bailey, J. ,Wetzel, S. Hol lander, S. Gould, S. A. Doyle, H. Sanno, J. Sei lers, alid G. Deice, (6 mo.) for liceinse to keep provision stores, ' ■ IT 00” Cash'received from sundry-persons-fordicense-to-exhibitj— 28-00 “ “ ’/ohn Peters,collector for 1838, 103 00 ■" M- Dipple, clerk of the market and hay scales, ’ t< ■■ Committee of accounts, “ J. Holler,, J. Harri 97 J r . SheFcr, C., Gould, VV.Cart, H.Gould, C.MnrrayJ J. Wyn koop, F. Fen-ion, S. Ormstefler, D. Espensheth, A. F. Smith, and H. Depford, for -stall rent of market house;*” To cash received from Jos. iHerrikle, Jnc. Zieg and J. if/oore, license for keeping dyster and eating “ from J. Latshaw, for spouting of old market house, R. il/cFarlane’s administrator, balance for roof of old market house, 5584 2619 r 65! Cumberland County/Slate of 'l24 . ™ '*LIST OP XsBTTX&S Sale Of Unseated aana 0 ’ John Reynolds’ heirs, 376 47 Remaining in (he Post Office at Shitmcns- ■/ Chppmger’s heirs, 400 C 3 bur S fa., on (he Ist 0/ .fyrill 840 Pcr Notice is herdr. e* vei ' that ‘" Kf u .? r,cc , J of i ~e Jacob Carev Shippensdurg Bonouoii. sms calling for letters in the following nets nffho p - I-Assembly pa"™ the 3d day <3?™ nr one lot 5G list will please sail they are atlverllxprl D. 'lBO4, entitle 0 " aet dlre ctin£T T Soctu Middleton Township. Bert John* U V, \ advertised. v ° f AMo of selling Unseated"? 8 106 37 Bw V n Philin o Kmer M„ till of the several acts ar'? u PP* ements thereto ?®.^ er^J, y’ • .1,4 I]3 x, , P .? LancJy Geo. lassed the 28th day of ,’?E cfl •80S—the 4th day £ oh " *-by, M 70 »?" Jocob B- Lamly. Mary >f AprillSOO—the 2f‘ March ISlS— l the ,13th , l nie J, K ® n 7 °' VCI V . . 60' ,394 S amtei- Margt Logan Susan 1 Uarch 1815—the 12).'- vlarchlBl 7—theS6thMatcli John M. Woodbum, one lot . 13 53 Beytricr SaralriVliss LounsberrAbiiriil 1817—the 39th 1 884~the act passed 26th ~ .i, «1, **«»“» Twwwnt Most Henry Lesher Eiivaheth March 18S1W a T U n°Ani.?. c lf refeiTin £ to sale 1665 6 93- Birchell Eliza Mrs; M’llllia™ Ar^?.>r I °f I, ROBERT SNODGRASS, N.eholas Ulrich. > 8. 12 Blymire Abraham A Treasurer 9 enocountyof Cumberland, will, on ' Dickinson Township. BibrllS, S. C ," ne ,? mhM « the seoondMpoday (being the Bth day) of Juno 10ma3 Craighead,. l()0 • 1I9p„ / Jlannah Maclay Mary Mrs next, at Court M:nse in the borough of Cat- r® ob .? ri P e i 30 328 S at J e > ?"I CS ' M’Ganly Sarah Miss lisle, irsaid county of Cumberland, commence a ,°J]n Htlrsh, 4 Bernier John Mirstand Elizabeth nublp sale of the following tracts of- Unseated John Long, sen. 5 41 3 Mark ward Jacob Lanls to pay the arrearages of Taxes due said £ ohn L ,°5F’J*- ' - 5 41 Clark William MondorfJohn and the costa accrued thereon respectively,, f amuel ifonhland, 8 ' 105 Cummins Jane - Mower Heiirv • Warrantee or owners’ . *“ r ‘James Nealey,. 130 172 Collier Osnl V n ? y , ~ ; Ar„.p e r. Jtm'ltaxdue: J Myers/ co., ; , 20 42 ItoJ • NoHTH.Mmw.ETON Township. Joshua Snyder, , 20 52 Bewail pZ.. ' £T er lsh 3 Mat. Hollenbaok’s heirs, 800 ' «o 4 r.q Solomon Bower, 7 60 n! *” Palmer Benj’-n; Mathew Irvin’s heirs, 100 . ■ ".o, George Deardorf, 14 105 i? ev P r Win. Prague Mr. heirs,: 7 ; -Si- Darnel Punk, .—_.—2s ..'. 69 . Pavig Sarah _ Pagui;\Vm. Seeley’s heirs, 16 - 62 J ,OSOB P“ nlf > 30 108 Kfger Sami. C. Rlcards Seven RevM Philip Lonhart, 10 21 n mo""!? 30 161 EHiaUJamesEsq. Reicherd Wm' ■ Col. Win. Chambers’heirs, S 80-6 1M W 30 ■ 206 Fox Henry Shcaffer Pll»nh‘»ih . Mippun Township. • “ Damelßrown, , 8 28 Giles James ' Col.'Ezekiel Kilgore.-- ■ -6 ao Jacob Gipe,- g •_ 50 p .. .—, . ... . . oterjla Jacob , Sarah heirsi 40 29 S^Vr l ’ r Baker, 6 24 r£irt w's to • 1 " 10118 Bcb. John M’Cahdlish, .55 Willmm Mooro & Lewis, 230 116 a '“ rn| th Robert 2 Stemman Augustus Abraham;Grove,: ’ 45 . 3s £?.*?,( Myers, . -- oheldt. '*' 12 „ c . r , na . n . Mary Miss Schwelgart nan’l • . 35 William Yeats, -.6 . ; Gail wicks r' Stbith Cel- Elizabeth Hazlot, 170 119 fe° B T C?r ’ c 110 25 Howard Ehz’th. ; Salsman Sbhhia Baltzer Smith, ig an William Line, Esq. 19 40 Holler Peter 'IV.-i « op !. ,a Ezekiel Kilgore, 9 John Jacobs, * , 9 36 Hammnn A Lei n! et , Dan K Elizabeth Drummond, -6 14 ? 001 JS2 B“ obs > " • 16 65 Hendricks Peter Adam Monroe Township. 14 Jacob Lemus, 32 16 2. Pet«r- Watts James . William M’Cinne, 5 .6o l£ MO , Mdmfert ’ ’ ' 8 > • w «niJer Reuben Nancy Campbell, '..3 , Mumfert & Gunfert, 9 34 'l > J* nB t on Edmonson Walker Win. • ■ ■ „ West Pennsdorovsh Township. Adam Wampum, 2 •35 J. o «nBton \y'm. Major : ’■ .asssfe: > “SW/ •; Courier, , 200. • • 100 . 1^ e ,^? n,b^ o rt>e atlaok was Tu he J?"," cm ’ . 403 . • 140 thatan^ : e, beheld^^onSatunjarthe^ • v . » 43V 18th:insL.betweeiv the Kotjra of^ John.Nicholson 80 "’ Ini- rnormrigi and Six in the evening, at the pnb- mstent have nre^fuin»pmhf - V ~ r 'T i. "Jv' .Rpbert Lnsk,-. $37 V ' Iyo E. Cornman .will 'Bunerinlehd venf.rf<ti^a^ e co, tghB,,they'woiild:prfc i ' ••••; April 9 ' ; : : Myd#»- * [bscriber Sunday ndented wainine t fibula 'Gould :t 8 in between. 16 inch tarc fbr tpg' said ORE , r 3t 3H, takes 'Oils' -and- the led to the lie. Court prepared thing, the rt. gratifi lith-thejr alwnyabe he..week. C Sin • A General ExliiMt GEORGE W. SHEAFKR, J. H. GRAHAM, M. HOLCOMB. Committee of Accounts. $217,8 63 2188 94J GEO. W. SHEAFER, J. H. GRAHAM, M. HOLCOMB, Committee of Accounts. Amount of small notes redeemed by Connell a'nd burnt, 8275 orf Deposite in Carlisle Saving Fund, ' 59 S 8 Balance due from estate ofA. Rdmsey.Esq.lateTrean.,. 115 35 " “ Jpp. Reichter, dec, (& bail,) late Collectors?? 16 " outstanding ph sale of old market house, - . 5 ??j • due by John Peters.-collector for 1838, , 6 02 ®2ori oo' « « " 1839, 530 09 oy M; Dipplc.clerk ofmarket & har scales, 13?? remaining in hands of J. gquier. Esq. Treasurer, 229 53J “ due by John Noble & Co. stall rent for IBS9, 40 00 " T)o by James. Holfer,' « ' «c - nOO ", Do by-John Wynkoop, •• •« y<j 5^ Examined and passed by Council, 3d-April, 1840. Test— Jacob SaoiKßV'Clerk. *C. M'CLURE, Prest. 'Since paid in full. tOf.this.sum sixty-dollars-lias been-since-paid.- ie Comfiliftefe of Accounts of.the Town Council of of resolutions passed by stud Council. Paid- loan due_E. Watts, Esq.’ Interest on same. Back interest on borough note to Carlisle Bank of .. $3500 at first renewal. Instalment on same note to Carlisle Bank. S roos. discount on renewal of note for 82050, Back interest on note of $2050 to Carlisle Bank at second renewal, Instalment on said, note of $2l Discount on 2d renewal of nol Balance of receipts to J. Squii Examined and passed li_v Counci Sotheb, Clerk, tlie TJorongh of Carlisle, exhibiting an aerount of ay of April 1831), llie time uHiis appointment. “ CR. [Cash paid :S. Moore, expenses of borough election, 1839, SlO 05 " If. ffendcl for winding town clncK, ■’ 10 00 I " P. Gutshaltfor boxes over spouting, 2 25 “ S. Resaler for boxes for trees planted on squafe, " M. Brandt for oil, „ “ ' W. Linc, Esq. for seven’ Linden tries and planting the same on publicaquaie, , - 21 00 " ** . M. Mathews, street com’r for repairing slrccts,~&c. 112 19 — u —Sanderson & Cornman for printing, ■ 44 00 “ H. Devor for G. M. Phillips for printing, 34 25 *• Thus. Trimble, balance due him as former Trcasu ' rcr & for services rendered in organising Council, 345 “ H, Gould for glazing windows'in Tow n Hall, ‘ '2 80 " I. Angncy, late Constable, costs due by borough* 10 93:? ■" Jn o. Agncw, for cleaning Letarf spring, ‘ 35 00 •• ./. Kuhn, for carrying chain in surveying bor. line, ' 150 “ S. Kirfz, “o “ “ j 50 " .- Ji Squier, Esq. balance of costs due by borough, 5 06$ •' J. J. Myers & Co. for oil, stationary, Sic. ,18 00 '• Committee of Accounts, - . ‘ • ' 680 00 \V. M. Biddle & F. Watts, Esqs. fees in suit, E. “ I. Todd /Esq. for costs due, by borough,' ’s fs ./. Squier,"Esq. salary ’as Clerk to Council, , g 0 0() S. Moore, salary as High Constable & mess, fo coun. 80 00 " M. Dipple. as Clerk of market House, 55 00 ./. Squier, Esq. for making out two duplicates, 10 00 “ M. Dipple, for removing snow out of market house, , 5 oo “ S. il/nm-e, costs as Constable, j g 95 “ ./oh'* Peters, for serving notices, ■ ’ . , - sqq " n. Afafliews, as Street Commissioner, so 00 ' Es-i'erhtions to -/ohn Peters, collector for 1839, 48 S" J/.ommission allowed Tulin Peters, collector, on 91686 /2 84 33 Amount of fas outstanding (of 1839.)./. Peters, collector. 530 90 Commission allowed to Tat-oh Squier, Esq. as Treasurer ■ of the Borough of Carlisle, To balance icmaining in the hands of Treasurer, 100 06 110 87 12 56 55 50 6 00 5 00 5 75 14 S7i This account examinee] am] passed hy Council, 5d April 1840 CHARLES M’CLURE, Prcs’l,' Test— Jacob Squieb, Clerk. ” $1578 473 CR. SI 62 i 229 5 5} $5OO 00 • J 7 08 67 OS 450 on S 3 11 34 SO' S 95} 2 50
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers