3effcrsottian Republican. Thursday February 6, 1S51. 03rJxuwr SUteiXegislaturc, -little has.ycUbeen accomplished. -Wc cannot. find any thing in the reported proceedings during the past. week,, worth copying. a. y " - - . Pasl-Office pcralioris. The Postmaster General,' during the weekc end ingjthe25th ult, established thirjty:six new offices, discontinued two, and -changed the names of six, -in 'rift fjiom Knmir that of Brakelvvillc.'' Monroe VUW V S - V I changed to ft Ahalomiriki" " The; j , 0- . . . ... r. , following are Uie new offices established-in, Pern sylvania : Office. County. Clearsville, , Bedford, Warrordsburghi Fulton, Leesport, . Berks, Little Gap, V .Carbon, Paradise Valley, ' ' Monroe, Postmaster. John' L. Gove. Barnes L,. Stevens. Geo. W, Althouse. Jos. L. Albright, David Edinger. x Congress. There is .nothing, specially worthy of note-in .the proceedings of this body last week. The Post bf fiice Committee reported the House postage bill witjx amendments, one of which strikes out tlie clause giving newspapers. a free circulation in their coun ties or within 30 miles of the place where, printed. Gctosvs of Great BnMwn. The census of Great Brittain, including the three kingdoms,' is to be'ta: ken on .the j 31st of next month About 30,000 enumerators arc to be employed, atfrom 18 to' 25 Rhillings each. Good Idea. Afcer Building Material has late ly been introduced in Pottsville, Pa. tt is a brick fifteen by thirl)' 'inches, so made as to promise al most dqual durability of stfrieT'&t' one third the cost Stale Canals. The Canal Commissioners met at Harrisburg on the 22d nit and ordered that the main 'line from Philadelphia to Pittsburg should be put in order for the resumption of navigation on the lothjof February. New York; The Empire State, according to the Census returns of 1850; now nearly complete,' contained a Population on the '1st of June last of nearly if not quite 3,100,000 an. increase of about C50,000, or over 25 per cent during the last ten years. The estimate of 95,000 is the liew Ratio of Representation in the House would give her 32 Members henceforthTrlcss-of tiro. The Rev. Walter Colton, Chaplain of the United States Navy, and widely known as an accomplished writer, died at :his residence in Philadelphia, on Wednesday the 20th ulL It is said that he, has not been well since his return from California, where he- officiated as Alcalde of Monterey. A Curiosity. A colored woman in Crawford Co., Pa. who is 89 years-old, it j said can see to pick upa needle in theYark, and;in theday.-time cannotsee across the room. So writes the Marshal upon -his census schedule. National Holiday. The Natinal Intelligen cer strongly recommends tlie observing of the 22d instras.ageneral.holiday, in commemoration, of the Union. OCT" Democracy in Lancaster County. AXan- rn c-triT Anrrncnnnrlnnt nf the T?f?irluior JTmirnnl film. IV n - . f. . r .l- ishes the following piece oi miormauon oi me, tlninirc nf Tinmrwrif in tlint minrtrr nftb Kfflt The two vings of the Democratic party of this county are not very harmonious. The Buchanan faction are bitterly opposed in all their proceedings Urr.n u Wr TTnrcn" itMnrr ttin lpa.W nf whinh is Col. Frazer, ivlio, by some means or other, lias won for himself the above fierce title. As he is the 'I War Horse," his followers have been styled the " Ponies," and the latter, led on by the former, Beemed determined to use all their efforts to defeat Buchanan's prospect for the Presidency: How they will be able to .succeed time will develope. Iticn Men inOincinnat! The Cincinnati pa pers publish a list of individuals and firms of that city paying a tax of over 500 per ;annum. N. LoRgwarth heads the list, he .having- $17,008 an nexed to his name ; four others pay each between ,OjD0 and 5,000 ; ten others pay each between -2,00 and 3,000 j nine others pay each between $1,000 asd QDOj and one hundred and fifty pay eaph 3500 The Stale, of New YorkJias abandoned all the uits - against the manorial estates, questionsng their titles ; and the anti-renters are finally left to snake the, best termshey.can with ,their.( landlords, or jfiye up their leases. : . Judicial Diitrict. , : ' . The'bill introduced into the Senate by m. F. Packer, for the appointment of the Judicial districts of the State, makes the foUowmrahgemenV: v lsi aiairict, xo consist .oi tne city b cyuiu; oi Philadelphia, to have three law judges. ' ' ' , 2. Bucka, 'Montgomery and Delaware1. ' : ' 3. Lancaster and Cheater. 4. Berks and Lehigh. 5. Dauphin und Lebanon. G. York, Adams and Cumberland. . 7. Juniata, Perry, Ujmoo and' Northumberland. 8. Schuylkill and Carbon. - - Nbrthamptoni Monroe,-Pike and Wa)i&.: 10. Luzerne, Wyoming, Susquehanna, arid Sul livan. llr Lycoming, Columbia, Montour and dintohi 12-iiEFranklih, Fulton Bedford and Somerset, , IS.rfCentre Clearfield Jefferson, Forest and jElk, 14. ;Huntisfdon, Mifflin, .-Blair .asd Cambria. 15. Westajorekiid, Indiana, Armstrong and .Cla- 17. Washington, Fayette and Greene. '"- 18. Allegheny. 19. Beaver, Sutler, Lawrericejand Mercer j 0," Erie, AVarren, Crawford and Venango, , , . The Following TAWiEtshows the condition of of thetBelvidere ifenk, onhe let inst as reponeo, to the Legislature: ; jinn n "nonncitn anil dividends unclaimed, 25,74p 1 10,270 38 Due other uanics, AwwwtiM Profit and loss, discount received ana exchanges,.,, 47.535 78 Discounts and Bills receivable, Due from other Banks, Specie, " : 326,142 85 '24V785l00' 26;305 49 4fl.4a80 61 'J 734 40 Real estate and fixtures, State tax, 7 The Postage Bill, as passed.the House of Repre-Bcntativ1eBjby.-Jia,0 ayes,- to, 79 noes,, embraces the following provisions : A uniform, rate of three cents, on letters, weighing not over half an ounce. No diminution in the existing mail service and com pensation to postmasters. On printed matter, not over two ounces, one cent postage; bound books, not over -30 ounces, to be mailable. On newspa pers, in the state where, printed, only half the fore going rates no postage when mailed, to actual subscribers in the county where printed, or within 30 miles. A deduction, of .50 per cent on, maga zines when prepaid. A three cent coinage ; and stamps, as now, to be sold at post offices ; forgery of them to .be punishable with fine and imprison ment An appropriation ot i,oou,uuu ui iuuul nuy deficiency in the revenue. Letters uncalled format . ... i . j the. end of two weeks to jaaveniseu ouuu yuiy. Suitable places to be: provided in cities ortowns for the deposit of lettenfto be collected and deliv ered by carriers at one and two cents each. Dai ly News. , Death of Mr. Kaufman. The Hon. David's. Kaufman, a Representative in Congress from the State of Texas, died in Washington on Friday evening. The Intelligencer says that about two o'clock on Friday he was in his seat in the House of Representatives, but, feeling a painful sensation about the region of the heart, he returned in a car riage to liis lodgings at the United States Hotel lie there lay upon his bed for some time,',in appa rent tranquil repose, in the presence of his wife. - - - i' ' 1 " i' ill,. n'-.Mftnn About sunset he spoKe, in repiy ro&n.ouba from his child, and suddenly expired. His disease was an affection of the heart Mr. Kaufman was a gentleman who had won -general esteem by the amiablenesa of his disposition, and his death will be deeply regretted by his brother members, and be a loss to the State in the National Councils, which few of her citizens can supply. Our Consul to Trieste. The Hon. Henry D. Maxwell, arrived in this place on Wednesday last, after an absence of about a year, in Austria. A number ot nis inenas ieu here in the afternoon of that day, in a coach to meet the New York stage, and convey him to vpd a welcome reception. He LUWll, rwv - v,- . - j. is the bearer of despatches from London, and will proceed to Washington in a few days. Easton Whiff- The Deputy Marshal, in taking the census of Will county, Dlinois, found at Bourbonias Grove, a girl at work by the week, bearing the name of chel lid Fayette, and claiming to be the great granddaughter of Gen. La Fayette. She is 20 years of age speaks English well, and appeared .1 11 :1Kn.nnf rtfrmf III PV to be more man usuauy position of life. Her grand father, she slated, had emigrated to Canada in an early day, and reverses in fortune had brought her to her present position. The population of Pennsylvania by the recent census, is about 2,200,000. She wilL probably lose one -Member of the House of Representatives by the next apportionment 07"The Washington Monument has now reach ed the height of eighty feet above the surface, thir- ' tv piirht. of which have been raised during the past v t r i tii mii i it . i ini: wi. - ,,c. nf onn nor tnnr f nnmDer J VIU) a . ot stones irom ameren, ouli I already been inserted in the column, and many ' others are on the ground, ready to be placed m the Walls as the WOrk aUVailCCb. Great Britian in 1800 and In 1S50. According to tlie Leeds Murcury, the popula tion of Great Britian has nearly doubled between 1800 and 1850; at the begining of the century1 it Uasl,elow 11,000,000, and it is now upwards of 20,000,-000. Adding the population of Ireland, the United Kingdom will number upwards of 28,000,- . 000 inhabitants. The Murcury adds: 'In manufactures and .commerce there liave been prodigious advane'ds; but the money value of our imports and exports is very far from showing the real increase, owing to the extraordinary reduc tion in tlie price both of raw materials and manu factured goods. For example: in 1800 our impor tation of cotton wool was 56,000,000 lbs., and in 1849 it was 755,000,000 lbs., showing an increase of thirteen" 'or fourteen fold; but the increase in the value of cotton goods and yarn exported is only from 6,000,000 to 27,000,000, or four-and-a half fold. The number of children under education in our day schools has increased, within the half century, from 500,000 to more than 2,000,000; whilst Sunday schools, also containing more than 2;000,000 children, are almost entirely the growth 6f tlie present century. Perhaps the increase in . the number ot newspapers may anora & rair r.esi .01 the growth of popular intelligence; in 1801 the number of stamps issued for newspapers was 16,- 085,085, and in 18$ it was 72,447,707, being an increase of four-an-a-half fold. But the increase in the general size ofthe newspaper is far greater than the number issued, and may be regarded as f even a more decided indication of the intellectual appetite of the readers and of the xteiit .of Jheir reading,' . , ..... A Washington correspondent of the New York Pv.enisg Post gives' the population of the United States as 23,130,000. The official returns will p'robaly make, the .aggregate range between 23 &pd 23 millions. We may safely , infer, there fore, fliat .the population of .the United Stateais- o ver twenty-three millions ! -; ' AlIrhinoIRailroad AcciDE.VT.-On Wednes- day evening:pne of the carsot tne, express ua-- -New York,jon tne x,ne xuuiroau, wao -r- the track and precipitated down a. banK some uuuj feet1 into 'the Delaware river: , , Twenty persons were in it, several of whom were injured. It is feared that some may have fallen into the river and been swept off by thecuntjbut inoown ?w Zh'wna the case. Most of the passengers lost their liats and'cafp'et bag ahdlbosc articles of hn rrn trp. The accident was caused by one ot tne jails'breaMiig', ' ov.irig ?to, the ihtens'crcdH&ridje weight ofthe.train. .s., , -r PiTnTTrER...PARTicuLAR8.-Yesterday morning about 2.0'clock, a most singular accident happened nn th Nfiw York and Erie Railroad, the particu- lara of which we have gathered from the, i.ips ot mRm are. ,as, follows : The- tram, to wnicn pn?,int happened, was the 2 P. M. express train from Hpr&lsYffle, passengers, by which, rid; imr all night reacli N, Xprkat y A. m. . Yesterday, 2 p'clpqfe as this train was coining along tqwards Piermont, at the speettv.oi uvemr five miles aiLjiour, tiie hindmost, .paenger containing between thirty and forty passengers, suddenly got off. the track, broke irom. lis connec tion, and tumbled with ereat violence aown an e- ii-nont fnriu feet in hcierht, into theVelav.arc The car rolled ..oyer and over in its progress. down the embankment, breaking, into many pieces, the. roof flying off;in one direction, the sides, wheels, timbers and passengers all landing in a heap in the river. Tiie consternation and confusion among the passengers was, of course, indescribable. For tunately, the car landed at right angles with the .river, one end being near the shore, where the wa ter was only two feet deep, the other end wnere the water was five feet deep. The accident, was instantly known on the train, owinf the sudden jerk, when the car became de- Cached. The train was stopped instantly, and all the passengers' ran down to assist those who had fallen-intp the water. It seemed almost marvellous that any were saved alive, but it is believed, that notmore than three or four are lout All who were taken out were greatly bruised. The brake man who was on this car, jumped off, and fortuna ately landing, on his feet he received no injury. This gallant fellow seeing two ladies struggling the water, one having an ;infant child, in her arms, immediately plunged into the freezing ele. J ment, and brought safely to the shore the child, wlio had become separated from its mother. Ta- kine- off his only coat, he wrapped it hastily about thn child to prevent it from freezing, and returning uu, cuuu, tu ia . b j to the river, rescued the mother and the other la- dy from a watery grave. The nicht was intensely cold, and clothes of all who where thrown into the water became frozen ' mi,n ;jorit tnnfc nl-irphptween m two .minutes. . The accident took p ace between . the stations of Hawkins, and Equmunk, -UU miles from New York. The train was delayed about in (i,n i,ni, three hours. Most of the.p,cngcra who woroin the car, were so. ouisea as w oe uunuic w wain, dilu nni nfiKi'sfitAnee but not manv had limbs --broken. Two gentlemen were left at Narrowsburg, whose b recovery is considered impossible, so dreadfully were they lacerated. The accident occurred oy reason of some defect in tlie rail, which throw the car oft' the track. N. Y. Sun, Execution of Dunbar. Albany, Jan. 31. Reuben Dunbar, who mur dered David L. Lester and Stephen V. Lester, on Saturday, the 28th of September last, paid the penalty of his crime this morning, on the scaffold. A grent number of persons was collected, around the jail, and the streets leading to.it were crowed. The Artillery nd Burgesses Corps were on duty acting the 'Sheriff's Sentinels, Tlie Sherriff's posse assembled at the County Clerk's office, and proceeded in a body to the jail. The prisoner was executed in the large room in the jail directly over his cell. He made a fall con fession of his guilt and admitted the justice of his sentence. To show the stoic nature of the mur derer, it is stated that at 9 o'clock this morning he ! sent a messenger to the publishers of his life and confession, writen hy Rev. Dr. Beccher, asking for a copy of it, as he said he wanted to persue it. Magnificent Present to the Hon. Daniel Webster. We yesterday saw a splendid carriage, rjust finished at the depository of Wood, Tomlmsoh & Co., Broadway, and intended as u present to the Hon. Daniel Webster,, together with a span of horses, whip, &c. The carriage cost 1,406,, and the horses will be worth at least 81,000; so that the present, when it 'is at Washington, will tte valued at about 62,500. The carriage is perhaps the most superb piece of workmanship ever turned out in this country. It is a large state carriage, built after the English style ; it is what iB called a close quarter coach, having a hammer, cloth seat exquisitly fringed, and resting oh eliptical springs. The color of the body i3 a dark green, and finely varnished. The handles are pure Bilver. The crest of Mr. Webster, a horse's head, appears on the door with the motto vera pro gratis. The lamps are heavy silver plate; also, the hub plate, which contains the nameB of the builders. It is lined with cherry colored feroca feZeftrimmed with silk lace of the same color. The present comes jointly from a number of the admirers of Mn Web ster' in this. city. N. Y. Herald. The barn of a Mr. Wister, at Frankfbrd near Philadelphia; was burnt dbwn, on Friday night ast, and twehty-one cows, a Dull and tyvo horses' peished in it TheCattle were pf . the DurKam. breed, and were very valuable,. - Incendiarism is, said to pre vail to an alarming extent in that region. 1 r tt-. -i -H f Commonwealth vs U. S iBank. The - Common wealth has just qbtained, befpre Judge Sharwood, a judgment, aganst the United States bank for, 1, 2QP,750 and costs. The suit was brought to recov er the hundred thousand dollars annually .which the Bank, by its charter agreed to pay as a bonus to the school, fund for twenty ears. The issue, will of course be carried to the Supreme, Court,, and will no doubt be warmly contested, as there will be an effort to make this judgment take the prece dence! ofthe assijpmentai ( For the phareholdera there seeius but . Jittle hope.j -nTQcvwraY. We learrirpcsth Honesdale.Democrat that Mr. E. Wjiite,of 0t place has succeeded in constructing, a; furnace y which glass ia manufactured with no other fuel than anthracite coal. The result, aaau ix wr ocratj is so completely satisfactory that Mr. J. M. Brookfield, the proprietor of the Gl&ss-Works, nas dismissed all his wood-choppers, intending as eoon as the nres are eximguisueu iui mc wu Wtebuild his furnaces upon Mr. White s plan. Anthracite coal has nfver heretofore been used in I Be. any parti of the prl in manufacture of glass Ur cnrnwtr into existence on the Delaware, a short at w r distance below Burlington. The whole original plot of 50 acres is laid out into streets, the foot- -.n a m p.. Church. Odd Fellows Hall, a TownHouse and some sixty oth- er buildings were erected within tne past year. Ftra Mileage. Wten Mr. Greeley, the editor of the New Yor mJiZ I woe in nnn,. he used his exertions'-to put a sSp to Ihe prevailmg practoce of plundering the public treasury in the shape af extra mileage, and for this he incurred, the displeasure oi a iorg number of members, who resorted to ridicule and every other means ro aeier nuu ujiu um fuif' that they might continue their profitable specula- tions upon the public purse. , But notwithstanding, the buffs and ridjcule he met with Mr Greeley had tlie consolation of wit- nessing, what every; faithful servant sooner or later wiiness, mat niHuuiuHc wa amurtu by a majority of the people throughout the coun- try Subsequently, in his Almanac for 1850, Mr. Greeley published a table of the mileage of the members, from which it appeared that all, with two or three exceptions, jeceived extra mileage, taking the Post office books as the,guide amount- ing in the whole we think to about S50.000 extra, illegally drawn from the Treasury ! Mr Greeley most certainly deserves the thanks of the cummu- nity for these exposures. If members are not sat- ;0fin with dfi fpnti? ner mile travelling", fees each xjai.vu - -i -r -t I way, when they can ride on almost any itau noaa for two cents, why, let them stay at nome. The Whig Almanac for 1851, also contains some curious disclosures- From a- table therein, of the mileage received by members of the present Con gress, it appears that some of the Ohio members receive pay for 500 miles more than others. In this State, Jas. Thompsori received pay for 786 miles, while no other member with the exception of Wilmotl was allowed for over 471 miles, -and but two others, oyer 300 miles! !Qavid Wilmot P- 0lS3S from aBhinonf and yet he drew pay forfre hundred and twenty miles. We need a radical refojm in this matter. . Such robbery and inequality ought not to be tolerated. of a miBsin horse ij related by the Monmouth (N. J.) Inquirer. It states that about the first of December last, a-horee and wagon were missing from the ; vicinity of Collier's MUls, Jack- son township, and was supposed to have been Bto- gome two weeks since they were found in the woodg the horse yet attached to the wagon, wliich had become entangled in the trees. The horse had with his hoofs dug a hole deep enough to 1 """V! . , -P r. , aTdZTK tion. JwofJ aiycly into the cultivation of Madder, some of them rcalin(r over g200 per acre. JURY LIST. February Term, 1851, commencing on the 23L Grand Jurors. Polk. Henry D. Shafer, John Kibler, Reuben Gregory. Paradise. John Roth Esq. Hamilton. Jonas Neyhart, Joseph Barry, Chris topher Felker, Mathias Stecker, Henry Tittle. Smithfield. John W. Huston, Reuben Weiss. Chesnuthill. Joseph Brong, Melchoir Kresge, John Kintz, George H. Weiss. Price. Eleazer Price. Ross. George Flyte. Stroud.; William Coolbaugh, John Ransberry, James Hollinshead, Abraham Rhoads, Samuel Miller. Jackson. John D. Fraily, Esq. Middle Smithfield.Daniel Brown. Petit Jnrprai Stroud. William Dean, James Brewer, William Clements, Adam Shafer. M. Smithfield. James Mosier,, Adam Overfield, Samuel lilne-Ie. Martin O. Mosier. John Deitrich. Hamilton. Joseph Metzgar, John Brewer, Ja- cob Stackhouse, John JCeller, Joseph Keller, Levi eiuuqr, ueorge iirtman, jonn xeiienzer, jr., jonn Bossard, Rudolphus Storm. PoconoGeorgc S. Knipe, Simon Labar, Dan- iel Deitrich. Polk. George Dotter, Jacob W. Kresge, John r ii t i cia. Kunkle, Jacob Sterner. Smithfield. Charles Transue. Ross. Joseph Kresce, George Lessig, Jacob Buskirk, Joseph Hawk, Emanuel 'Smith, Joseph Getz. ' i- . Jackson. John Osterhout Peter Fraily;. , Tobyhanna. Wm. Adams. - , Trial List. Fellenzcr et al vs. Brew;er et al. Fellehzer et al. vs. Depue S. Miller' Wm. Trainer vs. Jacob B. Teel. ' ' Abraham uyer io tne use oi vviiiiamjweiincu vs.. y- . t I'tTMl" T x 1 rnnip uyer. John M. Deibler vs. The Township ot 1'rice. Wm. Overfield and Sarah his wife vs. Simon Smith. Jacob Hardenstine vs. Joseph Dusenberry. Jon'asf Greenswoig vs Adam Mcckes J : ArgEimcnt List. In the matter of the Auditor's report of the ac count of Michael Brown, one of the Testamentary Trustees of P. Shrawder dee'd. Place use of Brodhead vs. Vanwhy. In the matter of the account of Simeon Schoon pvervqommitte$otajenjamin ocnoonoveral.unatic. Simeon Schoonover vs' Elizabeth Schoouover. Owen Rice attorney for. tho, heirs of Joseph Horsfield dee'd, vb., Abraham utz,.J!$cf Mckes and Terre Tenants. Sa'me'Vs. same. ' " ': ",4 n " ' 1 - ' Sbnie vs. Bame; ' - f r Jacob, jBuskirk vs. Jacoh Shafen In the .mater of the Exceptions to the Auditor's report in the Estate of Joseph Vanvlict dee'd, , In the 'matter ofthe Exceptions to the Inquisi tion on the -Estate of Joseph Vanvliet deceased: Commonwealth ex reletidn Adam Custard ye, Samuel Heller. Godfrey Grecnsweig's Execututora vs. Charles Smith. ' .'" . . George Serfose and Joseph Chriatman' vs. Sam uel, Gunsaulee. ' "4 .' Eliiah Quiirlov vs. Peter Albert,. . , . . t Joseph Kemmerer vs, Thomas W, Rhodes,K,: CARRIED, ,Jn Alie'ntwn, on the 12tb ult,. by the Rer. JLicfetrd. Walker, Mr. Mifflin Hannum editor of the 'Allentown Democrat," to Miss MaTIL DAfGlAHGEWER. daughter of Mr. Solomon Gan ges? er, both of Allentowu. " SHERIFFS SALE . .By.iriue of writ of venditioni-exponasji sued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Mon m ennntv. Penti'a., and to me directed, I will expose to public sale at the public house of Jacob Knecht, in the Borough of Siroudibart rftnf,r,v. to wit : A certain messuage, lene- j m- meDt( Saw Mill and Tract of LANUj aiiuate formerly in Chesnutbm, now rout wnH-u.. Monroe county, adjoining land how or late oi Daniel Dotter, George Hawk, Jacob Letter, rniiip uouer, anu ubihci & 129 AcreS aud a Hf f fnri strict measure be ,Ue aajne mpn ' W1 acres of which is cleared; seven of which is g0od MEADOW, the re5tdue o the una ,s COvered with Timber of an excellent quality. i'ne jmprovemcnis inerouii i 3, , . u r tRM nnpiUH. two-tone high, frame fKM. oneUw JL0G STABLE, one fi AW Mi and one large CTF Apple Orchard: which i ,he partition ...w r Pnn, j nn. and valuswon-ui B oaittlB u, .ter, deceased, made m and confirmed hy the the Orphan's Court of Northampton county, on ,he lwenty-second day of August, 1 834, is deig- nale(j aJJ porlion No. 1 of the real estate of said docease j o-i-p.i'and taken in execution as the proper- trlX o be sold by l JacoD er. UCUBd ' me. TVr,rrrci o Tn?XyTATl?P T?T? PETE R KE MiMJii Ki -K, ou. .p. Offlf. Strnndahurp. ) Sheriff tJl'vi 111 111 W W ' - o February 1, 1851. SHERIFF'S SALE. . By irue of a writ of venditioni exponas is sued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Mon roe county, Penn'a,, to me directed, I will ex pose io public ale at the public house of Charles D. Brodhcad, in Chesnuthill township, on jprtdau the 2lst day of February next, at 10 o'clock a. m. the Rowing described prop, erty to wit : TEiN ACRES of land, situate in Tobybanna tdwn?hip, on the Wilkes-Barre Turnpike, adjoining land of Perry Sox, Adam Laufer and others about six acres of which are cleared, more or leas. Improvements one FRAME HOUSE, Rim . 11 ;lpone h0Gr bARN wealherboarded, a JJIIiBUream of water runs throufih the premise, P Seized and taken in execution as the prop- Qf, oJ gamuel Kohn, and to be sold by me J P1?TFR TCRMMERER. jur;(r .onfi' Off-.. Stroui&bsrc. ) ohertlt. UIIWI III '-J w--f d ' ' January 30, 1851. 5 SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of a writ of levari facias issued out of the Court of Common Picas of Monroe coun ty, Penna., to me directed, I will expose to pub lic sale at the public house of Jacob Knecht in the borough of Stroudsburg, on Saiurdy the22d day of February next, at 10 oclock a. m. the following described prop erty to wit : All that certain tract, piece or par cel of land lying and being in the township of Price, in the County of Monroe, bounded and described as follows: Beginning at a hemlock on the east side of Brodhead's creek, thence south east 70 perches, thence east 270 perches to a stone, thence north 50 degrees west, 395-3-4 perches to a Pine, thence by or near the late proprietaries tract soutn degrees westr 93 perches to a stone, thence north seventy five degrees west, 130 perches to a stone, thence by racant land souih one hundred per ches to a white oak, cast 34 perches to a hick ory, south 26 perches to a beech, east 24 per- . ... i i j n j rrr dies to a wntte oan, aouiu iu uegrees casi, w perches to the place of beginning, containing 330 Acres, more or less, together with the hereditaments and appurtenances. jjlQ improvement are a m Mm Two Story Tavcu House, one LOG BARN, and other out buildings, and aD0Ul ajXiy acres of cleared land, more or lesa, I y . . . about 5 of which is meadow, and a rarely of FRUIT TREES. There is an excellent well of water near the door. Seized and taken in execution as the prop erty of Anthony Peters, and to bo sold by me. PETER KEMMERER, Sheriffs Office, stroudsburg, ) Sheriff. January 30, 1851. . In the Court of Cesimou Pleas of ITIonree County. 1 . . vn TTV . vv am Cra b to the use 1 no d.i. ubc I 1 of Nicholas E. Emmons, Term, 1837; and vs. i now reoy; fnow Feb'v; 28th John H. Miller. J 1850, on motion of Mr. Davis and affidavit of defence filed, rule to shew cause why he above Judgment shall not be vacated and set aside. From 'tlif record. M. H. DREHER, Proihonplary. January 30, 1851. Stroudsburg Female Seminary. Mioc R.DTnv will cive instruction toYounsr La(jje8 attending "he Stroudsburg remale Sera inarv in the following branches. Spelling, Rea ding, Wriiing, Geography, Arithmetic, Gram mar, H8'ory Natural, Moral and Intellectual Philosophy, Physiology , Chemistry, Phonogra phy, -Algebra, Geometry, Geology, Astronomy, Botany, French, Drawing and Painting. Terms per session of 1 1 weeks: - English brancbea $2,00 DiawjBg and Painting 2,00 French - 3,00 No deductions made in case, of absence, ex cepting iUno$, November 21, 1850.. The eub3criber, wants io hire 6 or 8 good and aoh'er men, to wotk at the beam. , ' JACOB.. 3INGMASTSR.-. it
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers