ATES OF ADVERTISING. El oar lines or leas constitute half a einare. Ten DM* more than four, constitute a square. 0.25 One K., oneday.-.----$0.60 MAWeels..-- LOU " OZAWeek.-- /.20 .: one month— . 2.00 " one 'month_ 9.00 three Months. 9.00 4 ‘ three months. 6.00 sinmonths— . 4.00 " six months.— 8.00 -A one year-- 6.00 c I one yes t. • • •-• 10 . 00 Bnsittese notices inserted in the LooAL coma, or Ater.e marriages and MAMA, errs OF.STO reS LIN'S for each imertion. to merchantsand others adrertisingby therms sberal tea DS will be olfered. The numberof insertions mast bodeeignateden the irrtisement. the will be inserted at the same Marriages and Dea ease regular advertisements. Booker, 'itatiottexp s , sz,r. ,—ICHOOL BOOKS.—School Directors ; Teachers, Parents, Scholars, and others, in want of 8,11001 Soaks, School Stationery, ace., will find complete ;Sortment K. POLLOCK & SON'S BOOK STORE, % E tat Altura, Harrisburg, comprising in part the follow iSADßlll3.--hteGuffere, Parker's, Cobb's, Angell's SPELLING BOOKS.—McGuffers, Cobb's, Webster% ) Torn% Byeries. Combry's, oziaLISIE GRMDIARS.iII —Bultion , s,Smith's, Wood triage's, Monteith,s t Tutb 's, Elart'e, _ RlSTOBlES.—Gonshaw's, Davenport's, Frost's, Wil- Willard's, Goodrich's, Pinnock's, Goldsmith's and Clark's- AULTIIIIETIC'S.--Greenlears, stoma:revs, Emerson's, Pole's, Bagels, Colburn's, Smith and Duke's, Da Davie's.ay% A LGEBRAS.—GreenleaPs, Dav Davies, re, R 8%44 6 ' 8 . D.LOTlONAltYS.—Walker's School, Cobb" Walker, Wmester's Comprehensive, Worcester's Primitry, Web ster's Primary, Webster's High School, Webster's %USTI*, leademm , NATURAL PHILOSOPHINS.—Cornstock's, Parker's, Swift's. The above with a great variety of others can at any time be found at my store. Also, a complete assort ment of School Stationery, embracing in the while a com plete outfit for school purposes. Any book not in the store. procured st one days notice. Country M erchants supplied at wholesale rates. ALMANACS_ --John Baer and Son's Almanac for sale ai S. 14. POLLOCK & SON'S BOOS STOBB, Harrisburg. / KT Wholesale and Retail. my lUST RECEIVED A.T SCHEFFER'S -BOOKSTORE, ADAMANTINE SLATES OF VARIOUS SIZES AND PRICES, Which, for beauty and nee, cannot be excelled, REMEMBER THE PLACE, SCH.EFFER'S BOOKSTORE, NO. IS MARKET STREET. mart N - EIV BOOKSI JUST RECEIVED "REAL AND SAY," by the author of "Wide, Wide World "Dollars sad cents," dm "=STORY OF METHODISM," by A. Stevens, LL.D. For sale at BOREFFERS' BOOKSTORE, ap9 No. 18 Marko et. JUST RECEIVED, A lABGE AND SPLENDID ASSORTMENT OF RICHLY GILT AND ORNAMENTAL WINDOW CURTAINS, PAPER BLINDS, Of various - Designs and Colorg, for 8 cents, TISSIM PAPER AND cur FLY PAPER, At pny24] SWIRFFER , S BOOKSTORE. WALL PAPER! WALL PAPER II . - Just received, our Spring Stock of WALL PAPER, BORDERS o rno sonERNs, &c., &a. It is the largest and best selected assortment in the city, ranging i n price from six (8) cents up to one dollar and aquarter ($1.25.) As we purchase very low for cash, we are prepared - to sell at'as low rates. if not lower, than can be had else where. if purchasers will call and examine, we feel confident thvi.t we can please them in respect to price and quality. E. M POLLOCK & SON, ap3 ' Below(' Tones' House, Market Square. LETTER CAP, DOTE PAPERS, 2 Pens, Holdera, Pencils, Envelopea, Sealing Wax, of the best quality, allow prices, direct from the mann- Arteries, at mar ail SCHEFFER , S CHEAP BOOKSTORE lAT AW BOOKS! LAW - BOOKS ! I-A general assortment of LAW BOOKS, all the State Reports and Standard Elementary Works, with many of the old English Reports, scarce and rare, together with a large assortment of second-hand Law Books, at very law prices, al As one price Bookstore of E. M. POLLOCK Ar. SON, Market Square, liarrisbnrg. myB Itliectilancouo. AN ARRIVAL OF NEW GOODS APPROPRIATE TO THE SEASON! SILL LINEN PAPER FANS! FANS!! PANS!!! AilOTNlfft AND SPLENDID LOT Or SPLICED FISHING , RODS! Trout Plies Out and Hair Snoods, Grass Lines, Silk end Hair Plaited Lines, and a general assortment of FISHING TACKLE! j, GREAT VARIETY OF WALLING CANES! Which we will sell as cheap as the cheapest! Silver Head Loaded Sword Hickory Pancy Canes. . Canes! Canes! Canes! Canes! KELLER'S DRT I O AND .FANCY STORE, • No. 91 MARKET STREET, Swath side, one door east of Fourth street je9. B . J. WORKER IN TIN, SHEET IRON, AND METALLIC ROOFING, &cora Street, below HA Chestnut, RRISBURG, PA. 111 prepared to fill orders for any article in his branch of business; and if not en hand, he will make to order on hart notice. MEMETALLIC G O OFING, of Tin or Galvanised Iron, on ha. Also, Tin and Sheet-Iron Ware, Spouting, &a. He hopes, by strict attention to the wants of his custo mers, to merit and receive a generous share of public pat 'Every premise strictly fulfilled. B. KASSA jaul-dly] Second Street, below Chentaat. F i. s .11 1 ! FISH!!! ELLCHEILML, (Nos. 1, 2 and 3.) SALMON, (very superior.) SHAD, (Mess and very fine.) lIERRING, (extra large.) COD FISH. SMOKED HERRING, (extra Digby.) SCOTCH HERRING. SARDINES AND ANCHOVIES. Of the above we hare Mackerel in whole, half, quarter awl eighth bbls. Herring in whole and half bbls. The entire lot nevr—DIREOT FROM TRH FISHERIES, and will sell theta the lowest market rates. seen WM. DOOR, IR. , & CO. CHAMPAGNE WINESI DEC DE MONTEBELLO, HEIDSIECK & CO., CHARLES HEIDSIECH, CrIESLER & CO., ANCHOR—siLLERY MOUSSEUX, SPARKLING MUSCATEL, MUMM & CO.'B, VERZENAY, CABINET. In store and for sale by JOHN H. ZIEGLER, 73 Market street. de2.o - FT IcKoRY WOOD! !—A SUPERIOR, LOT .1.1. just received, and for sale in quantities to suit pur chasers, by JADIEB M. WHEELER. Also, OAR AND VINE constantly on hand at the lowest prices. deed FAMILY BIBLES, from 1$ to $lO, strong and handsomely bound, printed on good paper, with elegant clear new type, sold at utohla SUMP IDRIS Cheep Bookot-bre. 0 - RANBERIBIES 1 I I-A SPLENDID LOT V just received by eerie FOR a superior and oheap TABLE or SALAD OIL go to ;SELLER'S DRUG- STORE. THE Fruit Grower? Handbook by WARlNG—wholesale MA retail at mobil BOBBIIIPER , S Bookstore. SPERM. CANDLES.--A large supply just received by seDlll Whf, DOCK. Js.. & CO. YELLER'S DRUG STORE is the Owe to And the hest assortment of Poste MOUnlifili. VOL. 3. THE PUBLIC: HABBISBYPRG, PA., Where he hag constantly on hand LYKENS VALLEY BROKEN, EGO, STOVE AND WILKESBARRE STEAMBOAT, 13RoKEN, STOVE It will be delivered to consumers clean, and roll weight warranted 1:17- CONSUMERS 4:1-IVE ME A CALL FOR YOUR WINTER SUPPLY. tEr Orders left at my house, in Walnut street, near Fifth; or at Brubaker'a, North street; J. L. Sped's, Market Square; Win. Bostick% corner of Second and South streets, and John Lingle's, Second and Mulberry streets, will receive prompt attention, jyl3-d6m COAL! CIOAL!! ONLY YARD IN TOWN,THAT DELIVERS COAL BY THE P A TENT WEIGH CARTS! NOW IS TEE TIME or every family to get in their enpiply of Coal for the winter—weighed at their door by the Latent Weigh Carts. The accuracy of these Carts no one disputes, and they never get ont of order, as is frequently the case of the Platform Smiles; besides, the consumer has the satisfaction of proving the weight of his Coal at his own house. All Coal of the best quality mined, and delivered free from all impurities, at the lowest rates, by the float or car load, single, half or third of tons, and by the bushel. JAMES M. WHEELER. ilarridburg, September 24, 1860.—5ep25 UP PATENT WEIGH CARTS. For the convenience of my numerous up town custom era, X have established, in connection with my old yard, a Branch Coal Yard opposite North street, in a line with the Pennsylvania canal, having the office formerly occu pied by Mr. R. /Jerrie, where consumers of Coal in that vicinity and Verbeketown can receive their Coal by the PATENT WEIGH CARTS, ' WITHOUT EXTRA CHARGE FOR HAULING, And in any quantity they may desire, as low as can be purchased anywhere. FIVE THOUSAND TONS COAL ON HAND, Of LYKENS VALLEY and WILICESBARRE, all sizes. 117` Willing to maintain fair prices, but unwilling to be undersold by any panzer. JAll Coal forked up and delivered clean and free from all impurities, and the best article mined. Orders received it either Yard will be promptly filled, nd alf`Coal delivered by the Patent Weigh Carts. Coal sold by Boat, Car load, single, half or third of tons, and by the bushel. malTmmsan. Harrisburg, October 13, 1860.—0ct15 LKENS VALLEY NUT COAL- For Sale AT TWO DOLLARS PER TON. j Ali Coal dolit erect by PATENT WEIGH CARTS 7AMES M. WHEELER Er Eoaldelivered from both yards. nol7 HELMBOLDIS HELMBOLD'S HELMBOLIPS lIELMBOLD'S HELMBOLD'S HELMBOLD'S BELMFOLD'S FOR SECRET AND DELICATE DISORDERS. po R SECRET AND DELICATE DISORDERS. 10E SECRET AND DELICATE DISORDERS. FOR SECRET AND DELICATE DISORDERS. FOR SECRET AND DELICATE DISORDERS. FOR SECRET AND DELICATE DISORDERS. FOR SECRET AND DELICATE DISORDERS. A Positive and Specific Remedy. A Positive and Specific Remedy. A Positive and Specific Remedy. A Positive and Specific Remedy. A Positive and Specific Remedy. A POBL'iVe and Specific Remedy. A Positive and Specific Remedy. FOR DISSABES OF THE WM. DOOR, 3n. , do CO 4..? 7.,______,,,,,,,....._. * -.,- • • ••• •.= . ,-,,------ - , - - 1(1111. - _-_- ___..... ♦ IP . . . . -..,,,,=,_,...=,• .. _.• rmit, ._____•., •. er .; ._, .::: :. ;.-; = -, i -,„,-, , ..-r m - -- ' _ ... . : • CI 010 -:-.' _ _ I I 0 II ~1 • . . i.. tint on • _ - ."- _,..„..„--- --, ts' r—,, .__ . . ._. _ . . . tfoal. JO - lIN TILL'S COAL YARD, SOUTH SECOND STREET, - 4 BELOW PRATT'S ROLLING MILL, NUT COAL ALSO, AND NIIT COAL, ALL OF THE BEST QUALITY. I have a large supply of Coal on hand, cot:de:tog of CO. , S LYBENS VALLEY 00Ab all aim% LYKENS VALLEY WILKESBARILE BITUMINOUS BROAD TOP do. T O W NI llebicat. Extract Bitchy., Extract Machu, Extra !Wahl; Extract Bachu, Extract Bachu, Extract Each% Extract Dacha, Extract Dacha, Extract Barka, Extract Dacha, Extract Bachu, Extract Bachu, Extract Bucher, Extract Bachu, BLADDER, GRAVEL, KIDNEYS, DROPSY, BLADDER, GRAVEL, KIDNEYS, DROPSY, BLADDER, GRAVEL, KIDNEYS, DROPSY, BLADDER, GRAVEL, KIDNEYS, DROPSY, BLADDER, GRAVEL, KIDNEYS, DRGPNY, BLADDER, GRAVEL, KIDNEYS, DROPSY' BLADDER,. GRAVEL, KIDNEYS, DROPSY, ORGANIC WEAKNESS, ORGANIC WE aKNOsS, ORGANIC WEAKNESS, ORGANIC WEAKNESS, ORGANIC WEAKNESS, ORGANIC WEAKNESS, And all Diseases of Seareat Organr, And all Diseases of Sexual o r gans, And all Diseases of Saxon! Organs, And an Diseases of Sexual Organs, And all Diseases of Sexual Organs, And an Diseases of Sexual Organs, ARISING FROM Excesses, Exposures, and Imprudencies in Life. Excesses, Exposures, and Imprudencies in Life. Excesses, Exposnre , , and Imprudencies in Life. Excesses, Exposures, and Imprudeneies in Life. Excesses, Exposures, and Imprudencies in Life. Excesses, Exposures . , and Imprimensies in Life. From whatever cause originating, and whether existing in MALE OK FEMALE. Females, take no more Pills ! They are or no avail for Complaints incident to the sex. Use EXTRACT BI7OIIU. HelmbORPS Extract Bustin is a Medicine which is par featly pleasant in its TASTE AND ODOR, Bat immediate in ite action, giving Health and Vigor to the Frame, Bloom to the Pallid Cheek, and restoring the patient to a perfect elate of HEALTH AND PURITY. Helmbold's Extract Bucen is prepared according to Pharmacy and ChemislrJ j endjs prescribed and used by THE MOST EMINENTPHYSICIANS Delay no longer. Procare the remedy at once Price a per bottle, or eix for $5. D..pot 104 South Tenth street, Philadelphia. BEWARE OF UNPRINCIPLED DEALERS Trying to palm off their own or other articles of BUCHU on the reputation attained by BELMBOLDIE EXTRACT BUCHII, The Original and only Gamine. We desire to rua on the MERIT OP OUR ARTICLE Their , sis wfothless —iB sold at mnoh less rates and com missions, consequently paying a much better profit. Wit DEPT 00.1iPETITION I lialr. for RELMBOLWR 'EXTRACT BUCHU. Take no other. Bold by JOHN WYETII, Deno t ed, corner of Market and Second streets, Harrieborg, AND ALL DRUGGISTS EVDRYIVIINKE. nol4 d&w3m. EXTRACTS! EXTRACTS! WOODSWORTH BIINNEMS SUPERIOR FLAVORING; EXTRACTS BITTBR ALMOND, NECTARINE PINK A PPLE STRAWBERRY, ROBB, LEMON AND VANILLA, Just received and for We b WU. DOCK, /a., & CO, HARRISBURG, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1861. CITY LIVERY STABLES, aB., BLACKBERRY ALLEY, TA IN THE REAR OF HERR'S HOTEL The undersigned has re-commenced the LIY.E It Y BUSINESS in his NEW AND SPACIOUS STABLES, located as above, with a large and varied stock of HORSES, CARRIAGES AND OMNIBUSES, Which ho will hire at moderate rates octl3-dly FRANK A. MURRAY Successor to Wm. Parkhill, LIVERY & EXCHANGE STABLE THIRD STREET BELOW MARKET. • " 01111 1, • AMMO HAVING purchased the interest of J. Q. Adams •a the establishment, and made large additions to the stock, the undersigned is prepared to accommodate the public with SUPERIOR HORSES for Saddle or Carriage purposes, and with every variety of VEHICLES of the - latest and most approved styles, on reasonable term. PLEASURE PARTIES will be accommodated with Om aibusses at abort notice. Carriages and Omnibusses, for funeral occasions, will be tarnished, accompanied by careful and obliging drivers. He invites an inspection of hie iltock, satisfied that it is :ally equal to that of any other maabliehment of the kind in town. FRANK A. DIURRA.Y BRANCH STABLE Theandereigned has opened a branoh o r hi s “Livery and Exchange Stable? in the buildings. lately occupied by A. W. Barr in Fourth street, opposite the Bethel, where he prepareds to accommodate the public with Horses and Vehicles, at all times, on reasonable terms. HIS stock Is large and varied, and will recommend itself. aulti-dtf PRANK A. IdURRAY. JOHN TILL F• RENT—FRom Tay.ltBT DAY ar E APRIL RIM—A Owamodions Two-Story DWELLING ROUSE, (in Second street, below Pine,) with wide Hall, large Back Build.ng, Marble Mantels in Parlors, Gas in six rooms, all the rooms just papered and painted.- The second story divided late seven rooms, one of which is a Bath. This, in connection with the fact that the house has just been placed in the most thorough repair, makes it one of the most desirable houses in the city. Enquire of . E. M. POLLOCK, do " " " do. Diailiat aquare, Harrisburg. Also, Boveral SMALL HOUSES for root. dols-,ltf LI OR SAL E—A Light Spring One r Horse WAGON. Apply at Patterson 's Store; Broad street, West Harrisburg. oa3l-dtf NOTICE TO SPECULATORS ! ' VALUABLE BUILDING LOTS 70l SALE! A number of large size BUILDING LOTS, adjoining the Bound House and Work Shops of the Pennsylvania Sakiltoad Company, will bi sold low and on reasonable terms. Apply to an294om JOHN W. HALL. T AKE NOTICE! That we have recently added to our already full stock OF B,EGARS LA NORMATIS, HARI KARI, EL MONO, LA BANANA. OF PERFUMERY FOR THE HANDKEROHIEE TURKISH ESSENCE, ODOR OF MUSK, - ILSAMISTCLE TarQUAT. FOR TR& HAIR EAU LVSTRALE, CRYSTALIZED POMATUM, MYRTLE AND VIOLET POMATUM FOR THE COMPLEXION : TALC OF VENICE, • ROSE LEAF POWDER, NEW MOWN HAY POWDER, BLANC DE PERLES . OF SOAPS BAZIN'S FINEST MOSS ROSE, BEINZO/N, UPPER TEN, VIOLET, NEW MOWN HAY, JOCKEY CLUB. Having the largest stock and beet assortment of Toilet Articles, we fancy that we are better able than our com petitors to get up a complete Toilet Set at any price de sired. Call and see. Always on hand a FRES H Stock of DRUGS, MEDI CINES, CHEMICALS, Ice , consequent of our re ceiving almost daily additions thereto. KELLER'S DRUG AND FANCY STORE, 91 Market Street, two doors East of Fourth Street, 800 South side. lIELMISOLMS HELMBOLD'S HELMBOLDS HELMBoLD 3 S HELMBOLD S S HELMBOI.D 9 S HELMBOLDN JUST RECEIVED! A FULL ASSORTMENT OP HUMPHREY'S HOMEOPATHIC SPECIFICS TO WHIM WE INTITH TRH ATTENTION OF THE AFFLICTED I For Bale at SOREFFER'S BOOKSTORE, sp9 No. 18 Market et WE OFFER TO CUSTOMERS REMOVAL. JOHN W. GLOVER, MERCHANT TAILOR, Has removed to 60 MARKET STREET, Where he will be pletteed to !see all his friend octB-dtr CANDLES!!! STAR (summit) OANDTASI TALLOW OANDLSS. A large invoice of the above in store, and for sale a unusually low rates, by WM. DOOR, SR., & 00., janl Opposite the Court House fthern Otabtro. Jut sate Bzcoo rant. atisctllantous. A New Lot of LADIES' PURSES, Of Beautiful Styles, substantially made A Splendid Assortment of GENTLEMEN'S WALLETS. A New andjElegant Perfume, KNIGHTS TEMPLARS' BOQU;ET, Put up in Out Glass Engraved Bottles. A Complete Assortment of HANDKERCHIEF PERFUMES, Of the best Manufacture. A very Handsome Variety of POWDER PUFF BOXES. KELLER'S DRUG STORE, iY 3 / 91 Market street PARAFFIN CANDLES, SPERM CANDLES, STEARINE CANDLES, ADAMANTINE CANDLES, CIIEmicAL SPERM CANDLES, GUN AND BLASTING .POWDER. JAMES M. WHEELER, HARRISBURG, PA., AGENT FOR ALL POWDER AND FUSE 11AN177.1271:111ED BY I. E. DUPONT PH NEMOURS & CO., 'WILMINGTON, DELAWAE.V. r - "A large supply always on hand. ' or saLe at mantt facturees prices. Magazine two miles blow town. U 3 'Orders received at Warehouse. nol7 QCOTOH WHISKL—One Puncheon of PURE SCOTCH WHISKY Just received and for sale by JOHN H. ZIEGLER, jan2 73 Market street. EMPTY BOTTLES I I—Of all sizes and degeriptions, Minh; kw by OGG Wit. DOCK, 7a., & CO. Ely atriot Nnion. WEDNESDAY MORNING, FEB. 6, 1861. THE SUNBURY AND ERIE RAILROAD, AND THE STATE LEGISLATURE. The act also provided that, in case the com pany should sell the property for a larger sum than three and a half millions of dollars, they should pay to the State seventy-five per ccntum of the excess, in the securities received from their grantees. V. It. SWART% The company sold the canals for the nominal sum of $3,875,000, of which $3,200,000 were paid in the bonds of the purchasers, secured by mortgages of the property. The excess of 75 per centum, amounting to $281,000, was ex acted by and paid to the State in the 6 per cent, bonds of the Wyoming canal company, a good security, on which the interest is promptly paid at maturity. The result of the transaction left in the hands of the company, five hundred thousand dollars in cash, or its equivalent, and $2,919,000 in the first mortgage bonds of the several compa nies who became purchasers of the canals.— From those resources, the company constructed, and partially equipped, sixty-six miles of rail .. road, extending from Erie to Warren, and forty two miles, extending westward from Williams port, through Lock Haven, making, together with the forty miles previously constructed, one hundred end forty-eight miles of completed road. Section VI. of the same act. provides that if the company shall fail to pay the interest on any of the said bonds for ninety days after it becomes due, it shall be the duty of the Attor ney General to sue out the mortgage, and by execution, directed to the Secretary of the Commonwealth, to sell the mortgaged premises, together with the franchises of the company, and on such sale being made, the Secretary shall grant and convey the property to the purchasers, who shall hold and enjoy the same tree and discharged from all inoumbranees. Now, it so happened that the company, al though possessed of means exceeding by one million and a half, the sum required for the completion of their enterprise, as testified to officially by the commissioners, charged with the investigation . of the company's condition on behalf of the State, were unable to pay the intertist due to the State on the 31st of January, 1860. The crisis of 1657, and the indiscrimi nate distrust engendered by that event against the description, of securities held by the com pany, having reduced• their market value far below their real value, the board of managers did not feel justified to dispose of their canal bonds, and after these should be exhausted, of the issue of $3,500,000 of their own bonds, Secured by the same mortgage which secures the bonds received by the State as purchase money of the canals. The sale of such a large amount of new securities could, under the ex isting circumstances, not have been effected without a. still greater depreciation of the bomb held by the State, as well as by the company, and without such sacrifices as would undoubtedly have defeated the main and great object the Legislature had in view in .passing the act for the sale of the canals, viz : the completion of ..the _mad._ _The board deemed it, therefore, their duty, to both the State and to the company they represented, to lay the true state of affairs before the Legis lature, asking such judicious action as the cir cumstances, and the interests of the State, as a creditor of the road, required. The bill they submitted, contains really the solution of the whole difficulty, and, as it will be demonstrated hereafter, the only solution possible to this day. Pprfectly fair on both sides, and without invol ving the outlay of a single cent on the part of the State, it would, had it been enacted, have furnished the company the means to carry the construction of the road successfully to its ter mination within somewhat more than a year. The first question which naturally presented itself to the Legislature was, whether by a foreclosure of the mortgage the State could re cover the debt. This important point was thoroughly investigated and discussed, and an swered in the negative so conclusively that the very idea of such a sale could never again for a moment be seriously entertained. It was argued that, as the property to pay for the debt in full would have to bring a sum in cash, not only equal to the bonds owned by the State, but to all the company's bonds out standing at the time, and that as the bonds se cured in the same manner as those held by the State, could not be disposed of for fifty cents on the dollar, the mortgage premises would not sell at fifty per cent, of the mortgage. It would, indeed, be most difficult to raise even one million of dollars in cash for the purchase under such. circumstances, since the money, if it could be obtained at all, would have to come from many sources, and every contributor, be fore investing his means in an unfinished and unproductive railroad, would have to make up his mind to risk the whole of his investment by a mortgage upon it, to secure the completion of the work. The danger was also pointed out, of attracting by advertisements of the sale of the road, the notice of New York speculators, who might arrange matters so that there Would be buione single bid, which would secure to them the property for five or ten per cent. of its actual value, to be opened as a new tribu tary to the city of New York. The State of Pennsylvania appearing as a bidder at the sale was not to be thought of.— Considerable appropriations would have to be made to effect the purchase, for the State could not pay in the bonds owned by her for the pro perty, because other parties would be interested in the same issue of bonds, enjoying the same security as those of the State. In , case of a sale, the company must, fulfill their obligations and pay their debts by all means at their dis posal. They would be compelled to use their bonds and other securities for that purpose, and the holders, would, of course, claim their proportion of the proceeds of the sale. The money required, the State could not afford to take from her present revenues, nor could it be taken from the sinking fund. The credit of the State could not be pledged. A tar would have to be levied upon the people; audit would be impossible to make them believe in the wis dom and economy of spending some seven mil lion dollars, in the hope of saving a debt of half that amount. if the State purchased the road she would be in possession of an unfinished and unproductive work, and would have to procure the means to continue its construction, assuming all the risks and responsibilities at tending such a transaction, heedless of the bit ter experience of the past, which teaches that etterprises of this kind are better managed by private parties than politicians, not to speak of the unconstitutionality of such a scheme, and the political corruption which it would encourage. It was further represented that, as the city of Philadelphia owns $2,250.000 of the stock of the road, and the city and county of Erie $500,000, while over $2,000.000 were sub scribed by citizens in every portion of the State, the whole of which would be swept away and lost by a foreclosure of the mortgage, con siderations of justice and equity alone would [Continued.] surely prevent the Legislature adopting any course detrimental to the interests of these parties. Philadelphia, which contributed to the State Treasury one-third of the entire reve nue; which pledged her credit to the extent of $5,000,000 to aid the construction of the Cen tral railroad ; which invested $1,400,000 in the stock of the North Pennsylvania; $760,000 in the North Western, and $500,000 in the Hemp field railroad companies, whose citizens had invested millions in improvements in the inte rior, daily benefiting and enriching the State, was entitled to the affections and fostering care of the Commonwealth and those who represent it. These arguments have lost nothing of their intrinsic force. They are just as applicable to the conditions of the company to-day as they were a year ago. The company is still unable to pay the interest on their bonds in possession of the State, for the reason already stated, being unable to sell their bonds which other wise would afford the means required for the prosecution of their work, rendering legislation unnecessary. The bill, submitted by the company to the Legislature during the last session, proposed in substance, that in the first place, the com pany should cancel $2,625,000 of their five per cent. bonds, and that the State receive the re sidue of $875,000 in payment of five years interest on the debt. This would suspend for that time the cash payments of interest, and add it to the principal, which - would be in creased at the end of the five years to $4,375,- 000. The mortgage of seven millions of dol lars would bo reduced to that amount, and Would be owned solely and exclusively by the State. It proposed, in the second place, that the company issue $3,500,000 of six per cent. bonds, ttnd secure the payment of them by a mortgage which should take precedence of the security now held by the State. It will be seen that the company did not ap pear before the Legislature as a borrower.— They did not ask the State to lend them her money, nor even her credit. They proposed simply the conversion of a bad debt into a better one. Their proposition originated in events and circumstances over which the com pany, no more than the Legislature itself, could have exercised any control. It was dic tated by a mighty stubborn fact, a sweeping financial revolution, accompanied by a general depreciation of paper values, and especially of railway securities, and all the company asked was, that the Legislature, as it had done with reference to the banks, and as the community was compelled to do in most other business transactions, recognize that fact the more as thereby alone the interests of the State and of the people in an enterprise of the highest con sequences to both could be saved. The deeper the subject is looked into the firmer must become the conviction, that if any thing is to be done hereafter, it can be done only on a basis similar to that underlying the plan submitted by the company to the last Legisla ture. There cannot be the least doubt that that plan, under similar circumstances, be tween private parties, which are notoriously keen and quick in perceiving their advantage, would have been accepted unhesitatingly, and this consideration alone, their being no con stitutional objections to the bill, ought to have weighed sufficiently with the Legislature to ensure its passage. - When the work - un the - 14e - 11 railroad MAW suspended, and that company was without means or credit to complete its con struction, and owed three millions of dollars to the State of New York, the Legislature of that State passed a law for the release of the debt, on condition that the work should be completed within a limited time. The work was comple ted in 1851, the aebt released, and the State has since realized an incomparably larger sum by the steady annual increase in the valuation of property through the influence of that im provement, than the whole debt that she for gave. Had the company's bill been passed, the year 1861 would have seen the Sunbury and Erie road in full operation, carrying the produce of the lake States to Philadelphia, and the man ufactures, the iron, coal, and timber of Penn sylvania to the north-west, opening new and most promising fields to commerce, mining en terprise, and agriculture, attracting population, and increasing the value of lands and other property, thus promoting the prosperity of the people and the revenues of the State in a mea sure that even a total relinquishment of her debt, after the example of New York, would have been a matter of little or no account in comparison to the losses sustained by the de lay. As it is, the State continues to hold de preciated bonds, of which she can neither col lect the interests, nor secure the debt by a foreclosure of the mortgage, while the people of Pennsylvania continue to be deprived of a means of intercourse, which for nearly two generations was regarded as an absolute ne cessity of the full development of the rich and manifold resources of their State. The supplementry act which was passed last session, instead of the bill submitted by the company, is an indirect, yet nevertheless plain admission of the practical wisdom of the latter, as well as its constitutionality, for the Legisla ture, unable to devise any thing better, actu ally adopted all its propositions, though they reduced them to a smaller scale. This suplimentary act grants ! That the provisions of the act for the sale of the State canals, requiring the Attorney-Gen eral to sue out the mortgage in case of the de fault of the company to pay the interests due on their bonds owned by the State, be suspen ded until the Ist of May, 1861. That if any judicial sale of the Sunbury and Erie road should be made hereafter, the amount due contractors for work done, and materials furnished from the Ist of August, 1859, to the Ist of April, 1860, shall be preferred to the mortgage held by the Commonwealth, provided the amount exceed not $600,000; and that the president and managers of the road be en abled to enter into contracts with the managers of other corporations with a view to the com pletion and working of the read, provided the lien of the mortgage to secure the payment of the bonds, issued under the act for the sale of the canals, be not affected thereby, It will be seen that in principle, at least, this act concedes every point asked for. The com pany asked for an indulgence of several years, the act grants indulgence for one. They asked that $3,500,000 of their bonds should enjoy precedence to those owned by the State, the. act grants precedence to $600,000 of the com pany's scrip; and that the action of the man agbrs might not in any way be hampered, the act expressly authorizes them to conclude con tracts with other corporations, according to the best of their judgment. The unavoidable inference is, that the bill, proposed by the company, was not rejected on any constitutional, or even state-economical grounds, which might have proved a satisfac tion to its framers, but for the fatal drawback of its provisions having been so curtailed as to render them ineffectual, and defeat the great object for which they were devised, and which is the same the State had in view in disposing Of the canals. The company's bill was but a logical consequence of the act for the sale of the canals. We may here mention, that while the sup BY 0. BARRETT & CO VIZ WILT PATRIOT AND UNION Will be served to RR 111 scribers residing in the Borough for SIX ONNTSTERW7ANZ payable to the Carrier. Mail rubscribers, vows DOL LARK PaR ANNUM. Tug WEaKLY will be published am heretofore, semi weekly during the session of the LegielatureteMd once week the remainder of the year, for two dollars In ad vance, or three dollars at the expirstionof the jest*. Connected with this establishment is an extensive JOB OFFICE, containing a variety of plain andlaney type, unequalled by any - establishment in the interior of the state, for which the patronage of th'e DAM le El - Belted. NO. 133. plementary act proved of but little benefit to the company, and of none to the State, it has nevertheless affected the question of a fore closure of the mortgage in a manner to reduce still more the prospects of the State of realizing by this means any considerable portion 'of. the debt. When it was extremely doubtful, last year, whether the State could secure more than one million dollars by a sale of the rotid,it is certain, now, that from the sum that might have been realized, a year ago, a farther deduction must be made of $600,000, the amount added by the supplementary act to the claims enjoying. precedence to the claim of the State. It is to be remembered, morecrete, that the State has not a mortgage on the entire pro perty, but only on the property in possession of the company, at the time of the passage of the canal sale act, consisting of about forty miles of completed road, with a previous mort-_ grge of $1,000,000 thereon; the right of way to Erie and about one hundred acres of land in the vicinity of the latter city. The State would receive, therefore, in case of a sale by foreclosure of the mortgage, next to nothing, and this part of the question, at least, ought to be regarded as finally settled. In discussing this subject, before the Legisla ture, it was also remarked that the existing relation of joint ownership is open to a consti tutional objection, the fifth section of the amendment, adopted in 1857; expressly provi ding that the Commonwealth "shall not become a joint owner or stock holder in any company, association, or corporation." It was argued, on the other hand, that a railroad, two hundred and eighty-eight miles in length, of lighter maximum, grades than are found on any similar work extending to the West, north of southern Virginia—well con structed and fully equipped at a cost of twelve millions dollars, forming the larger part of a great commercial artery that will connect a city of 700,000 inhabitants by the best and nearest route, with inland seas whose com merce exceeds $600,000,000 in a single year, ought to be, when finished, a good security for all its other debts and liabilities. LETTERS TO THE PEOPLE OF PEJ.VN ON THE SECTIONAL DIPP ERENOEP,WHICHPLACE IN JEOPARDY THE UNION OP THE STATES—No. 3. FELLOW-CITIZENS : —The topic of this letter is, the cause of the accomplished secession of six States, and the probable withdrawal of eight or nine more slaveholding States, from the Union. The cause usually assigned; is the predominance of a party, based on anti-slavery principles, in the non-slaveholding section of the Union. This undoubtedly is bite proximate cause, the immediate occasion. But a moment's reflection will show that the anti-slavery agita tion is itself the eject of an ulterior cause, the fruit of a radical political error, which regards the Government of the United States as an original and integral Sovereignty, a consolida ted Empire, an Unit, and not an Union or Con federacy of Sovereignties, formed for certaim ex press, statutory and limited purposes. The idea of "an irrepressible conflict," on the part of a sectional majority, waged with property in slave labor, or with any other political institu tion of a sovereign State, either to abolish it within the limits of the State itself; or to inju riously affect it in any common: territory, is wholly incompatible with the idea of an Union or. Confederacy and. iodetiendent States, although in perfect keeping with that of an original, inherent, integral and supreme Government, ruling over subordinate and de pendent States_ To affirm that the dismember ment of the Union, now in active progress, is attributable to the anti-slavery agitation, i 3 simply to assert that it is caused by a spirit of determined resistance, on the part of the sece ding States, to the rule of a seetional party, which is about to employ all the powers of the Federal Government, regarded as an original, inherent, integral and supreme GroVermnent, dominating over inferior and dependent States, to injuriously affect, in a vital particular—viz : their right of emigration with their property in slave labor, worth the almost fabulous sum of four thousand millions of dollars, into the common territories—their safety, prosperity. honor, dignity and equality as sovereign and independent States of the Confederacy. The great political issue, between the doctrine of "State Rights," as distinctly and philosopically enunciated in the Virginia and Kentucky reso lutions of 1798 and 1799, and the antagonistic view of the Constitution of the United States, tending to consolidation and centralization, held and contended for by Alexander Hamilton and the elder Adams, joined at the very com mencement of the Federal Government, by the Democratic and Federal parties, and ever since agitating the mind of the country, is at last brought to the severe test of revolution, blood less as yet, but fraught with vast suffering, disaster and ruin, in any view which may be taken of it. Politicians and statesmen may theorize as they please about the advantages of a strong and splendid National Government, based on a recognition, in the administration of the Fede rative system, of popular majorities, where they are not expressly admitted, as an element of political power in the Constitution, yet What has been long predicted by the only true con servators of the Union and the Constitution, the Democratic party, has at last come to pass, that State Sovereignty has arrayed itself in an attitude of armed resistance against even the initiatory measures of a consolidating policy. The seceding States have waited for no "overt act," other than the construction of a party (the Chicago) platform, wholly at variance with the fundamental principle of the Constitution of the Union, " the equal rights of the States of the Confederacy," and the recent triumph, at the polls, of the sectionalism, which erected it and stands pledged to administer the Federal Government, in conformity with its oppressive requisitions, to place themselves in a position of safety and defence. They have found a sufficient cause for their prompt action in the manifest fact that the fetters intended for them "are already forged, and their clanking may be heard on the plains of Boston." They per ceive no propriety or expediency in awaiting their actual imposition. The consummated and the threatened revolutionary action of fifteen out of thirty-three sovereignties of the Confede racy, embracing nearly half of the population and territory of the Union, about to involve, in inconceivable disaster, the commercial, manu facturing and agricultural industry of the Con tinent and the world, furnishes the best altar mentary upon the political character and design of the sectional party which has caused this incalculable evil, and renders unnecessary any further e xposition of its hostility to the princi ple of the Constitution of the Union. Wherefore, endeavor to show, by argument, that nowhere, in the Constitution of the United States, has there been expressly' delegated to Congress any power so to legislate in respect to the Territories of the Union, as to discrimi nate between the persons and property of the respective States, favoring the people or inati. talons of one section, and proscribing those of another? Palpable and incontrovertible proof of the unconstitutionali ( y of " the Wil mot Proviso," and of the free soil doctrines Of the Chicago platform, is furnished by the Vorld.shaking fact that a dismemberment of ttta great aud, *lttrions Union' of American j:Cf I PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING, ' SUNDAYS EXCEPTED, SYLVANIA