l)c Scffcvsonian. THURSDAY, MAY 6,1858. The Lecompton Constitution has passed both Houses : the Senate by 0 to 22; the House by 112 to 103. The original position of tbo Admiuis tration party was to pans Lecompton with out submitting it to the people for thei ratification. But that plan of making Kansas a slave state could not receive a majority of votes in the Lower Ilouse A conference was then resorted toby the Administration party, which conference was composed of a majority of Ad minis tration democrats, and the conference re ported a bill to the following effect: If the nconle of Kansas will vote for , r--the Lecompton Conr-titution, which wil malic Kansas a Slave State, they shal immediately thereafter be admitted iuto 1 the Union with a population of nearlj 40,000 inhabitants, and shall receive donation of 3,500,000 acres of public land But if they vote against making Kan sas 8 Slave State, they then shall stay out of the Union until they have a popu lfitmn nf riT.nut Oo.OOO inhabitant', and nhall receive no public land. Why not subttit it fairly to them with mi, a nonnltv for votin?? against it 7 That , j c a would have been the true democratic doc trinn. nml a doctrine to which we most heartily subscribe. t But the only answer is, that this weak lave diiving AdminUtration is so fully bent on making Kansas a Slave State that it ha- resorted to thi contemptible hift, believing that the people of Kansas have been so long and so much barrasscd and impovcri-hed, by constant agitation, that they will eagerly grasp at any op portunity that may offer to free themselves from their territorial condition. But we tru-t that Buchanan and hi abettors will be mistaken in this their last trick to make Kansas a Slave State; for we think that this bribe will be rejected by nn overwhelming majority. Philadelphia Election. The Municipal election for the city of Philadelphia, on Tuesday lat, the 4th inst., for Miyor, Solicitor, Controller, Receiver of Taxes, Commissioner, mem ber" of Council, and Ward officers, re ulted in the election of the People's tick et. Ilenty, tbo People's candidate, has about 40(10 majoiity. 1T2. On Tuesday last, the Tavern and dwcl line Mouse of Mr. Melchoir Depue, in Middle S:n:thfield township, was destroy ed by fire together with nearlj the entire 'contents. The fire occurred about 10 o' clock in the forenoon, and is supposed to have originated from the stove-pipe run ning through the kitchen roof, attached to the main building. Mr. D. and fami ly, we have been informed, were in the house at the time, but the flames spread to rapidly that they were unablo to save jiny articles of value, except the li brary of Dr. Cushing, who was residing witk the family, which was saved. Mr. D.s loss is estimated at $3,000. 2o in-uranee. 2y-A.0THEit. On Sunday morning laft, Thomas Quinn and wife, residing in the shanty, at the lower end of the Forge Cut, near thif place, on the D. L. & W. Railroad, left their two children in the building, the eldest aged 2 years and 2 Hiontbs, and the other aged about six month", and engaged in making garden, and while at work, the bhauty took fire and. burucd to the ground. The young eat child was rescued from the building in time to save its life, but horrible to re late, the other was burned to death. When recovered both legs were burned off as far up as the knees, ouc arm off at the shoulder and the other at the elbow. The origin of the fire not known. Mr Quinn lost all his household furniture, in fact, everything he bad, except the cloth ing himself and wife, had on. The population of some of the princi pal cities of Ohio are as follows: Ciuciu nati 200,000; Cleveland 60,000; Coluoi bus 23,000; Dayton 16,000; Toledo 14, 000; Zanesville 12,000; Steubenulle 10,. D00; Chillicothe I0,O00; Sandusky 10,000; bpnngfield 8,000. JSo other city has jmore than 5,000. Since the Mayor's police squad of New York have broken up Lhe leading lottery and bogus gift swindles in the city, 4,202 letters have been taken from the post of- ace, airectea to mejr assumed proprietors. xu meee letters was enciosea over $20 O00. The letters, as fast as they are ta ken from the post office they are forward ed to Washington, to be remailed to their writers. At the late municipal elections Cincin nati polled 15,984 votes. St. Louis 13.- Chicago, l o,4 1 and Milwaukie 7f- - K)R THE JEFFERSONIAN. BE INDUSTRIOUS. Addressed Particularly to Children. Mv LitTiiE Friends: You all know what it is to be industry OU; it 13 tO D6 aiwaya uuay. - theduty of every body,--grown men and women, to be ludustnous, as it is yours, but I wih to address this article especial ly to you because your habits are now forming, and you can be more easily per suaded to do right than those who arc older. Those traits which arc to accom- pany'jou through life, and lead you on to happiness or misery, are now being moulded and stamped indelibly upon your characters, it is now in jour power to ber come almost any kiud of men and women that you determine to be. If you arc i dle, careless, and indolent, you may be sure that, unless some miraculous change takes place in your characters, jou will be usele.-s members of society, when you grow up. You will live and die, and be forgotten, tbe world will not be benefit ed by your having livid in it, and will therefore forget you; you will not accom plish the purpose for which you are crea ted, your existence will be a blank, a void and fiually you will be summoned before the great Jndge of all, to render an ac count for those talents you will have mis employed, for that time and those oppor tunities you will have squandered. But if, on tbe contrary, you arc indus trious in the pursuit of good; if you ex ercise discrimination insclccting tbo high est and noblest objects of ambition, and pcrscvcranco and indomitable resolution until you attain those object-; then you will be meeting the cuds of your exist ence, and though you may not all bo dis tingui.hcd in public life, yet rest assured that you will be honorable and respected citizen, and great aud good examples, e ven though your influence extend not be yond the boundaries of your native ham lets. All of the greatest and best characters, those mot deserving of admiration, that ever figured before the world, have been distinguished for Industry and Per severance, and for sound moral principles that turned their efforts to good account For though the first mentioned qualities are very desirable in themselves, yet il they are perverted to bad purposes, they only render their pos-essor more danger ous in proportion as his power for mis chief is increased. Have a care then, that you are not only industrious and en ergetic, but also that your energies be ap plied for the promotion of good, for the Ixnrfit of the whole human race. This will be servini? tbe binhest purpose of o o your creation, you will be happy your selves, nnd vou will be making others , j w happy. Tlure is one other thing to which I wih to call your attention; Never under take to do but one thing at a time, and whatever you are engaged in, endeavor for the time being to excel in that partic ular thing. If you aro at school, give your strict aud undivided attention to the means pro vided for your education; rest not sati3 fied with anything fbort of a first class place in the school to which you belong. Be industrious until you attain that place, and then be industrious vi order to retain it. If yon arc at work, whatever that vo cation may be, provided it be useful, work with your whole heart and understanding. Endeavor to excel all others in your particular department. If you are at play, if the amusement is calculated to benefit your mind or body, and if you indulge in it at a proper sea son, give tlialjour special attention, and exerci-e all your faculties to become pro ficient in the game. It is better to be a first-rate player even at Ball or Marbles, than an indifferent one. Finally whatever your hands find to do that do with all your might, and never eat nor sleep while you are counted only a medium scholar, or a medium mechan ic, or a medium player even. Lord Chesterfield, an accomplished scholar, and a polished gentleman, in his valuable "Letters to his Son," admon ished him while at school in the strong est language, and threatened him with his serious displeasure, if he fell short of being the fust in his clas: and at the same time, assured him that it was an ob ject also worthy of his ambition, to play at Cricket better than any other boy of his age. The principle is a good one, and if fully carried out by you all, will result in your possessing well cultivated miuds and vigorous and athletic bodies. Let your motto be; "Whatever is worth doing at all is worth doing well !" and be assured that a long continued system of judicious indslry, will raise you up to be ornaments of the present, and brilliant ex amples for all coming generations. SCRIPTOR. Dr. Goldsborough, practistag physi cian of Denton, Md. was stabbed a few days since, and died soon afterward,--.- xue quanrei which terminated. sorrow-, fully originated about tbe pronunciation ma J - laDd. seems, one mutt 'mind their P'd and Q's 1 Tha English Iniquity Successful In Saturday's Telegraph we chroni cled the passage of the English bill; and to-day we present a full analysis of the cote bv which this unjust and wicked teheme has been foisted upon tbo people of Kansas and the whole couutry. Ibis is a dark and fatal deed of profligate pol iticians; and will Mir the moral VeVe o! the country, to its. profoundest depths.; But the contents not' over, only now to be transferred to Kansas, and to the neonlc of the Free States. A GuEAT Wrong, a Great Inequality, a Great, Injuctice has been mulcted upon im States, and tlmy will . never .submit The Wrong is in. bribing tbe people of Kansas with 3,500,000 acres of laud to Imiia if if til PC ncrvnt. Locompton; and IJUtW IV 1 4 nt fn Imvo it if thev do not The Ine 35.000 or 45.000 noriulation only necessary to a Slave State, and 10U.OOO necessary for a Free State.' The Injustice is in keeping Kan casontof the Uniou, choosing to be Free and admitting, only ou coudition that she be Slave. . . The shameless Lecompton Constitution was sent to Congress with an ordinance claiming a grant of 23.50.0,000 acres of public lands. The Committee on Terri tories, in their report in favor of the ad mission of Kansas with the Lecompton Constitution, said: The Committec'does not approve the ordinance accompanying the Constitution, and report against its allowance; but they do not regard it a any part of the Con stitution." The English bill puts jn the 3,500,000 acres which the Crittenden bill gave at once to Kansas adopting any republican constitution but, if the people take tin land they must take the Lecompton Pro. Slavery Constitution. No "Lecompton." no land ! No land, no admission into the Union ! The Bribe, therefore, is the land to take in Lecompton. Mr. Crittenden gave tbe lands to Free State or Slave State. Mr. English gives the lauds only to Slave State. The anti-Frcc State discrimination is the next great outrage in the bill. The English Bill admits Kansas with the Le compton (Slave) Constitution into the Li nton, with its present population of 35, 000 or 40,000, but forbids its coming into the Union, if it persists in being a Free State, until it lias the u?ual repre sentative population, which now 93,000, and undci the next census will be over 100,000 it may be 1 25.000. Then the Judges of Election that is. the Judges upon the acceptance of the Land Ordinance in English V Bill, are simply the old Calhoun frauds and con trivanccs again Moutgomcry Bill, the Governor and Sec retary of the Territory, and the prinding officers of the two branches of the Terri torial Legi.-laturc The President of the Council and the Speaker of the IIouc of Representatives were made a board ol commissioners to carry out the Act of Congres, to make the arrangements for voting upon the constitution, and to de termine and announce the result. Mr. Ecglis-h has quietly added to these offi cers the United States District Attorney, placing iu the board of commissioners a majority of Federal officers creatures of the Administration with full power to take any measures needed to secure a no minal adoption of the Lccomjton Condi tion. When we recollect the enormous frauds perpetrated in Kansas, is it not clear almo.t that the Crittenden bill was thus purposely changed to count out the 'ayes' on the Land Ordiuancc, without any reference to the number of people vo ting in Kansa-. Indeed, what is the use of elections, if there can be no fair count? or what better arc they than the prima-, ry box-stuffing elections in our cities, which have been the scorn and hiss of all honest men ! But we have no rejoicing over a com mon si ame. We have no word of con gratulation at an event which iuflicts dis grace upon our common country. The more wo deliberate upon the record of the lat fourteen months, the more do wc feel that a blow has been struck at the very heart of our institutions, from which we may never recover. The battle goes now to Kansas, and to the Free State. Wc predict, it will return to Washington next winter, spectre-like, to gibber and sqeak before, and to haunt the authors of all this wrong, this inequality, this injustice, this fraud"! Daily Tele grajm. "The Horrid Creatures." A Sicilian bark has lately arrived at Philadelphia, bringing a cargo of oran ges and lemons, intermingled with cock roaches from two and a half to three inches in length. The reporter of The viortli American says : "Soino of them aro called 'scorpion back,' and carry around a style of shell that crunches under one's boots like a re markably tough egg-shell. Those fel lows are very queer looking. They are dark brown in color, and, when running, look like a strip of highly varnished ma hogany under great excitoment." -The Official Journal of the Two Scicilies publishes a complete list of all the victims of the earthquake at Naples of Dec. 10, 1847. The total number of dead amounts to 0,350, and the wounded to 1,359. It appears that the number of dead has greatly exceeded that of the persons more or less seriously injured. Mr. G. P. Lowry, who was Reeder's Secretary in Kansas, has formed a part nership in tbe practice of the law with John W. Ashmcad, for eleven years TJ. S. District attorney in Philadelphia. A South Carolina gentleman writes from Jvdgefield, that the wheat and other grain cions never looked better, or fairer for a large yeld, than they do at present. WaE FitirTT- Accounts from different sections of tho .coaDtrJ South and West) eAate that thn f,ni? ba9 been seriously la. jiirod by the cold M,er of last weebt The Glorious Uncertainty of the Law. An incident his occurred in our Court which has been the occasion of mucn live ly cmi-nlnn nnd remark, as well as no small merriment at the expense of tbe j Ijei'lslaiUrCi It will be recollected tnai me nouse m Hpnrc.-cntatives, at the last sesion, pre- nnred and passed 'a bill for free trade m l ... .. . t e Pnnrlc I ellinT liquor to lane irom iu v"ui i" in ll'dlCreilOIl IU mc Kiuuinii; """- t nn.1 to mako it obligatory on tuem to erant to every applicant wliosc .napors were in ducorqOf without inquiry into the necessity or tne noue iui iuu commodation of the public. The Senate demurcd to This feature of the bill, and a- mended, so as to allow an inquiry into tin nrcessitv of the license, but, by the pertinacity of the House, was compelled Vo vinld the noint. and the free trade bill of the oue, became a law. On Friday last a nutnbes of new appli- cants came up and were confidently press- cd upon the ground that their necessity for the accommodation ot the putuic was not to be considered that having com- plied with the forms of the Jaw, they were entitled to their licenses as a mani of course, and that the Court dould not refuse them. Gov. llceder, however, who was adversci? employed, took the ground that the Legislature were entirely contusion on the forehead, which is con mistaken as to the meaning and effect of sjdered quite dangerous". Mrs. Wills and the law tliey had passed that it had no such operation as was generally ascribed to it. and that iu fact, the Court Was bound to inquire, as uuder the old law, whether the tavern proposed was neccssa- ry for the accommodation of tbe public, and if, iu their opinion, it was not so nec- essary', they must reject the application, .r. . i. .1 I 1 l he matier was argueu ou i-Miuay even- ing, (wo learn from the disinterested members of the bar,) and baturday morn- ing, and that Gov. lteeder so clearly and conclusively established hi? positiou that there can remain uo doubt upon the sub- ject. .Nearly, if not quite all, the mem- bers of the bar, as we learn, concur in the opiuion that the argument cannot be an swered, and all the citizens we have heard speak on the subject are of the same opinion. It is confidently expected that tbe Court will adopt and act upon it. Wc shall give their decision to-morrow. Singulurly enough, the counsel for lhe applicants was Mr.Gcopp, who was chair man of Judiciary Committee in the IIou?e, and has the reputation of having prepared the bill. lie is certaiuly an able lawyer and a clear heaucu, logical man, aud yet, wc aro told, be was unable to meet tbe po sition taken bv gov. Reeder. aud argued the question in t-uch a manner as to con vcy the impression that he was convinced against his will. We arc not learned in the law, but we undestand that the posi tiou is based on the legal operation of a proviso in the sixth section of the new a. law, aud also upon tho argument that by the repeal of a n pealing law the third iectiou of the act of 1934 was unexpect- edly revised. It is generally considered here a capital joke upon the Legi-datrc. P. S. Since putting the above in type the Court have given their opinion upon the application- referred to, and decline giving any licenses to tho parties apply- ing, except in the case of Charus Dawes, which has bceu held over, under advise ment, until June 4th. Daily Times. A New Home. Tho Union aunounces officially that Surveyor General Calhoun is to have a new home. Owing to the coudition of the Surveyor's health, we suppose, the climate of Nebraska Territory is recom mended to him by the president. lie will return not to Kansas but to Ne braska, lie is still to be surveyor Gen eral of Kansas, it seems, for the Union remarks, "This latter site, being immedi- ately on the Missouri river, is more ac ceptable than the present location of the office iu the interior of Kausasl" Docs the Union, meau that "the latter site" is more acceptable to Calhoun, or the peo ple of Kansas?, And would it not have been as well to give the reason for tbis strange procecdurc; which is, that Mr. Calhoun's conduct in Kansas has been tirli flint tin u nfrntil tn nn tmrlr nmnnn his. old neighbors. JSat. Jbra. Prof. John Wise, of this city, exten sively known for his aeronautic voyages, left Lancaster yesterday for Washington -city, to make preparations for a series of the most exteusivo and interrcsting bal loon experiments ever witnessed in our country. Mr. Wise has been engaged to make these experiments for the Smithso nian Institute, with instruments provided by it for the purpose. One of tbe exper iment will consist of a squadrou of bal loons in tho shape of a balloon regatta. In another one he will cut loose from the balloon, when two miles high, leaving the balloon in charge of a companion, and descend with a canvass air conductor. Mr. Wise expects to establish the practi cability of guiding balloons along tho lines of telegraph, and by other means, so as to bo able to steer for and arrive at a given point, with as much certainty as ships are made to navigato tho ocean and carry on commerce with tho world. Lan caster Times. A Young Girl Lost. A young girl about 13 years of age, strayed from home near Caldwell, yes terday morning., one is rather short for her age, of a light complexion, full fore- rolling thunder, and I ran like tho nim head, largo blue eyes and brown hair. ligbtning; and springing over the She had on ritber a brown calico or red 'cnco wtb the swiftness of a star falling merino dress, a buff hood or a green shir- red silk hat. and a plaid rod and croon woolen shawl; she had also a small bas- kct in her hand. Any information re garding her will bo thankfully received by her afflicted parents, if left at this of fice or No. 141 Mackot street. Editors and others will please extend this notice. yJSewarc Mercury. Blessed is he whoblowa hfa own- horn;- for whosoever bloweth not his own horn, the same shall not be blowed. What bar is tbat which often but. never, shuts ? Crowbar.. opens, Terrible Whirlwind in' Alabama. The Montgomery (Ala.) Mail says : On the 20th inst., we learn, a terrible whirlwind visited Tuskegee. in Macon Gounty; It destroyed, totally, only tbe UOUSC Ol UOSIJUa Jiua, -iij., muugu BCV craj others were injured. jcive or six Dersons wero badly injured. A negro WttS blown a considerable distance in tbe air, ana ;was Bineu. ( hu a iu . . I 1 -111 TT n riuiC uuuac, iicui i'jii. ii iijw uuuo. Willis, his wife and child, were all badly ;n:ure(j though there arc hopes fat their rcC0very. Tbo scope of the tornado was, not more man irom sixiy to one uuuuiuu yards. wide. - . . 'j'Ue Tunkegee Democrat says : "There evc jn ana about Mr. Willis' bouse at tne tjme ckii or ten persons in all, and how tUl,y au save om.f escaped death, seems nothinsr short of a miracle. All were hurt, and some of them severely. Soon after the wind had abated, the neighbors hastened to the relief of the sufferers, whom they found to bc'soprfr- jyZed as to be unconscious ol what had occurred. Several of them had their arms broken and their faces badly bruis- etj; and JJr. Herbert, who was present at lue t;,ne thought to be dangerously hurt jn ti,c .piuo. & tle child of Mr. Willis received a and j, Herbert are also bruised and uave eaCQ a broken arm. nne neerro man. the nronertv of Mrs. patterson, was found dead at the distance 0f two hundred yards from where tin house had been. Another negro the prop erty 0f J. E. Reese, was blown to a great distance and severely hurt, but not dau- . . ... l - jyerouslv. A necro mtaut was touua in lt:j cradle, buried in the rubbish, entirely unhurt. The test were unhurt. The family were just sitting down to dinner when the awful crash came upon them. It was all the work of a moment, giving tbeni no time to make their escape, The hurricane then passed the house of Mr. Bilbro, dung Fomc little damage, and next that of Mr. L. Johnson, which it unroofed, severely hurting two negroes, one of whom will likely die. It then passed the residence of Gen. B. Graves which u damaged to a great degree, ki! ling horses and blowing down all the fen ces and timber in its way. A perfectly new carriage, belonging to the latter gen tleman, was so torn to pieces that uo two parts were found together. Wc are still hearing of further destruction to the dis tance of ten miles from this place, but have not learned the particulars. Information Wanted. John Moore, son of the undersigned, residing in Danville, Montour county, Pennsylvania, ran away on the 21st ol February, 1855, in company with two other boys. The latter returned in a few davs afterwards, and the la.-t that was heard of my son wa, that he had en- gaged himself to work at a farm about two miles from Lewistown, Miffliu couuty, but, upon close search, no traoo of his whereabouts could Le found. I now call upon every person, to whom this notice may come, to give me information of the whereabouts of my son, if in his power. lie is now in his ninuccmn year, was T .1 small for his D;e when he went away, had had a light complexion, light hair, and a rather pleasant countenance. Address the undersigned at Danville, Montour county, Pa. JOHN R MOORE. fiSg- All papers m the United 'States, disposed to further the cause of humanity are kindly requested, to publish the above advertisement, or to give the substance ol it to their readers in an editorial notice. The Mormon Rehellion. Rumored Skirmish and Heavy Loss of Life, St. Louis, May 4. The Leavenworth Ledger, ju&t received here, says that a despatch from Utah was received at tie Fort on Monday last, asking for reinforce ment", and giving accounts of a skirmish' between a Guerrilla party of Mormons and a body of troops under Capt Audcr- son. in whicn three tourths were lulled on both sides. A company of light and heavy artillery and a company of dra goons were immediately de-patched from the fort. The statement is discredited here. Yield of Maple Sugar. Tho Montpelier (Vt ) correspondent of the Bo.-ton .traveler writes that the ma ple sugar, season is about over, the crop being a full average one, or a trifle les than three pounds to the tree. Last year was an extraordinary season, the yield being over .five pounds to tho tree, or near ly enough, if equally distributed and all kept for home consumption, to have supplied every family in tbe State. The Crops. Tho journals in tho Western States speak without a single exception of the :ommg crops, and wc have seldom or never uau a year in which the promise it i . t thus early in the season was as good aft now. l he same accounts come to us Irom riti jb England and the continent of Europe, and causes a continued fall in prtces at nearly all tbo grain marts. Sublime description of au Escape from a Mad Bull .The bull roared like thd from tue firmaneut, I toro my trousers assunder with a crash as loud as if the glbe nat" bcen biverod by a comet. Angry Debtor "Here's your money, dolt 1 Now tell mo wbv vour master wrote eighteen letters about that paltry 'sum? Simple Shop boy "I'm sure 1 ican't tell, sir, but if you'll oxouse me sir, 1 think it was because seventeen lettera idid not feteh it." Sonio ono asks, "is it lawful to hang olothes on Mason and Dixon's line 1" Just as lawful as planting beanB around too uorth pole. Eesurrecton. The bodies of Anderson and Richards hung at Lancaster, havo been exhumed by the doctors. Anderson disappeared . . CJ-..J-. - J irom ois grave ou ouiuruay morning, suu Ilicharda was non est a day or two later; . r Counterfeit $2 bills on the Che mung Bank, New York, were put in cir culation at Mauch Chunk last week. Sew York Market. Wednesday, May 5, 1858. FLOUR.1 4,000 bbls. Wheat flour at $4 a S4 20 for ordinary to good State; S4J22$ a .84 35 for cxlra do.; S4,a S4 20 for, superfine Indian and Micigan. Rye flour is in fair demand aud quite steady; sales of 160 blls. at 63 a S3 50. Corn- Meal is.bcavy; sales of 100 bbls. Jersey at S3 50. GRAIN Wheat, 800 bushels South-- em Red at $1 05 a $1 12: White do. at $1 20 a 81 22; White Michigan at SI 25 Rye is easier and in fair demand ; sales1 of 5,000 bush, at 65 a 66c. and small' lots at 67o.: Oats, Jersey at 40 a 43c. Pennsylvania at 42 a 45c. and Western at 46 a lo. Corn at 6fca07c. PROVISIONS-Pork 814 G2 a 814 75 per barrel; S 17 90 a 818 for thin Mess; 810 50 for Clear ; SI 8 25 for Mess, nnd 16 75 for prime Mess. Shoulders 6 a 7c. Hams 8 a 10c. AN" OLD FABLE REALIZED, A oook in the family of an old citizen of Augusta, Ga.f iu cleaning a fowl, a. few days since, found a cone shaped piece ot gold, valued at five dollars iu the gizzard. We have had recently occaaiou to remark several instances of good for tune emanating from the State of Geor gia. The above is another to be added to tbe list. We have constantly te re cord the never ceasing run of good for tune that flows from a small risk in the legalized lottery of S. Swan & Co , which draws every Saturday in Augusta, Ga. The holder of a fortunate ticket will bo entitled to the capital prize of S70,000, which draws next month; while the pos sessor of a half or a quarter will secure a proportionate share of the same. Tickets 810, 5 and 2-$. Borough Ordinance. Be it enacted by the Chief Burgess, and Town Council of the Borough of Stroud.-burg, and it is hereby enacted by authority of tbe same, Tbat the side or foot walks on the several streets hereinaf ter named, be graded, curbed and paved viz: West side of Franklin Street from the South side of Main Street to North side of Ann Street and the East side of same street from the North side of Main street to the Court Ilouse square also the side or foot walk iu front of Charles Trach's stable on the west side of said Franklin street between Main street and the Court Ilouse squre North side of Ann street from the East side of Green street to the West tide Franklin street and the South stde of same street from the East side of Green Street to the West side of Centre street Also Sarah street on both sideH from the West side of Cca tre street to East side of Franklin street' the said grading, curbing, ard paving to be dono by the firat day of September next, under the direction of the Town Council, and in accordance with the sur veys, (as to height and width,) made by the same. All of the above side or foot walks to be curbed with good stone and paved with good hard t ricks. Provided that tho foot walk on the Wct side of Franklin street in front of Charles Traohs stable as as aforesaid, may le paved with hard rick on cdg or good flat stones. And if any person or persons owning property fronting on the several street above nan.ed, should neglect to have the side or foot walks iu front of the fame, graded, curbed, and paved, in accordance with the above euactmcnt and within the time therein specified, then the Town Council alter the expiration of the said time, will have the ianic done at the ex pense of the said property owners, accor ding to the provisions of tbe Act of Gen eral Assembly, passed April 3, A. D. 1851, 'relating to Boroughs,") in tuch case made and provided. Approved the nineteenth day of April, Anno Domini one thousand ciubt bun dred and fifty-eiht. SAMUEL MELICK, Chief Burgess, Attest -Jackson Lantz, Sec'y. May 6, 1848. Borough Ordinance. Be it enacted by the Chief Burgess and Town Council of tho Borough of Strouds burg, and it is hereby enacted by au thority of the same, That the side or foot walk on the South side of Maiu (or Eliz abeth) street from the present termina tion of the pavement iu front of Samuel Emery's blacksmith shop to the West cud of John Palmers lot on said street, bo graded, curbed and paved with good curb stones, aud good hard bricks, tho said grading, curbing, and paving to be done by the firs-t day of September next,, under tho direction of tho Town Council aud in accordance with tho survey, (as to- height and width,) made by the same. Provided that the said pavement in front of improved lots shall be of tbe width of thirteen feet, and in front of unimproved lots of the width of soven feet. And if any person or persons owning property fronting on the street abovo named should neglect to have the side or foot walks in front of the same graded, eurbed and paved in aocordauco with tho above en actment, and within the time therein spe cified, then the Town Council after tho expiration of the said time, will havo the samo dono at the expense of tho said, property owners, according to tho provis ions of the Act of Goneral Assembly, pas sed April 2, A. D. 1851, ("rogulating Bo rough") in such case made and provided. Approved the 3d day of May, Anno Domini one thousand eight hundred and fifty-eight. SAMUEL MELICK, Chief Burgeas Attest Jaokson Lan'tz, Sec'y. Ma j 6, 1858.