S3llAtilft9W S rz ' 4 3 I aaßzisza,. _P WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 14,1850 • Whig Standing Committee. The'Wsmb . ors of thelitrVEfonilini Com mitteo Cumberland County are. requested to meet at the public house of' John Hannan, in the borough of Carlisle, on Saturday. the 4th ofJanuary, 1851, at one 51.;te make arrangements preparatory to the special elec.. lion for a member lel,4%.eacmbly from this coon. 4y *Plea of Henry Church, Esq. deceased.— Punctual attendance ie requested. Mr Two fallowing persons compose the Com mittee, as appoNted at the last County Con trontion : _ James Hanle, . i jr• Dppor Alien, , William 'D. Shoop, Lower Allen, John H. Weaver, West Ward, Carlisle, •Jillin B. Thompson, East Ward, Carlisle John T. Green, Dickinson, Thomas V. Flow er a , R. Pcomboro, James L.' McDowell, Franhford, James McGutre, Hampden, Richard Anderson, Monroe, George IC - nettle, • Ephraim , Zug Mechanicsburg, Thomas McKinney, Newton, _•• --- Wm. H. Woodburn, John S. Crist, Now Cumberland, Abraham-Whitener, North Middleton, John W. Cioighead. South Middleton, Thome!! Sibbett,Houthainpton, David tosher - alopei,vell, J. Bomberger, Shipposbure, Daniel Kenower„Shippousburg, tp. Levi Kapp, Silver Spring, George Miller, West Number°. fIZe.Gov, Johnston has issued hie proelama , thirt:trprrointitig 'Tuesday, Decelliber 314., for an, election to be held in the 11th Congressiou .l District °fibre State, recant by the death of hum Catania,. BUTLER. Pew Harrisburg Paper, We learn that a new Whig paper, entitled the "State Journal," is to be started at. Harris- ' . - burg, of which-Mr. Clyde is announced as the publisher. Well, if its projectors think that amid the multiplicity of mammoth "city week- .• lies"ntich now Hood every county in the State, tiereis still-a remnant of population who can be . had as subscribers to a now country weekly, let .. the experiment be tried. Na.teßut - we are no - little surprised to hear it hill. d that this new Whig paper is projected in N s pirit of hostility to the administration of Gov. - . -Johnston. 'lf such iii fact - he its intended mis• [non, we fully concur in the opinion of our friend of the Lebanon Courier, that "its projer. tors will scarcely be able to make it pay, either pecuniarily or politically. Gov. Johnston is too firmly imbedded in the hearts of the whigs of the State to be injured by any such enter . prise" So-we think. Gov; Johnston - is "firmly imbedded in the hearts of the Whigs of the State," and it will notlie in the power 'of this new paper, whoever may be its backer?, to dis place-him in the confidence and affection of the 4 people. Without disparagement to other prom inent gentlemen we may say that Gov. John ' etton is regarded,by the Whigs of Pennsylvania with pride and affection as their great political leader. And they - have no notion of parting with him now. They know who led them for ward.to Victory iii 1898 and the remembrance of that contest' revives their enthusiasm as they look forward to the coming canvass. The spi rit with which our opponents are preparing to open the canvass strikes no terror to the hearts of whigs, who know that our fearless and tri empliarTt whig-champion of 1848 is apiin to be -our standard-bearer I Such a mortifying result is prostrated us last fall need nollibo feared with such a leader as the gallant Johnston to rally our forces.- Let his voice again be heard among the people and the unconquerable whig !pith is again in action! The laggards will be roused-to energy—the indifferent to Viielicne tivity—the enthusiastic to fresh zeal—and that "Tull volt" whigh is ever "a whig victory" will burden the ballot-box with its triumph 1 Such we know is the feeling withwhich_the_w_hig__ - party looks-forward - to another Gubernatorial contest under the leadership of Gov. Johnston. - They have no fears for the result. They are ready and "gager for the fray." We do not know that Gov. Johnston' will consent to a-nomination for re-election to the Gubernatorial chair. But we do know that the Whig party and the great 11101158 of the pen % ple of the State ardently desire and fully ex pect that he will be their candidate. The Far ruers,,the tax-burthened Farmers of Pe'nnsyl xania—look upon Gov.'Johnston as the great guardian of their interests. He has begun a - good work forth° tax -payers, and they bo 'not wish -the progress of that good work endanger- ed by any change of administration. On Gov. - Johnston they' rely to carry it successfully for ward. His-continuance at the helm of Stale they feel to be identical with their own pros perity. And they mean to rally round him and sustain him. 'Gov. Johnston's administration bas given the people of t'ennsylvania the first hope of relief from their difficulties, and it would be strange indeed if they failed .to sue. lain him. 11.,would be strange indeed if IVhigs .united against the noble chainpion of their prin ciples, who first led them the way to victory, and who has never quailed in - the support of ' those principle[ udder the ffercest nssatilisw ----- Political foes._ The man who letheis to victory ' in - 1898 . is 'the man 'for victory in 1851 ! Froin Washington The intelligenee from Washington is of very alight interest. Congress has evidently' made up its mind to do nothing until after the holy. days. Mr. Clay reached. the capital on Friday last in good'health hind spirits. In the House of RepreeentativOs on Tuesday . Jut, the President's Message - was considered in Committee of — the whole. Mr: Giddings, et Ohio, warmly opposed the position us laid down by the President in relation to the domestic policy of the Government, and denied that the general government could 'compel the people of the free States to enforce a law to which they were opposed upon principle--:such 'as the fu gitid slave laity; the constitution gave no such • er. While ho would allowto the'South the gi nht to maintain the institution of 'slavery, ho repudiated the idea that the North could be a bilged to.coatrlbuto to, its existence by arrest. in and sending book those human beings who IMO eacape,d from bondage, and. which would not tend its aid to such a course. There being * an evident Inclination among the members net so discuss' the question further, the different subjects whiolrthe message 'contained Ware ICI. ' (erred Ao the 416ervut..masitteab;-7'— _ . . ThO . aecoptanCe .of tho while of the Tozer Boundary . : pin hawing teen officially .. anitoeit:, Ced. ihe,President of thil baited States 'Las L: sued his prochimation declaring the bill T', - KrAICIX. " Drown, member elei lioiibanip . Ma,c!ianiy,end. a Wye Whig "'anted 'rain,' 4ecimmaimied ee' a iiitable iTor. 'eon to be epripdri4 by 'Rhit; *NO , for 11 . P. ditirrse oomebmint.' InterOsti . or'thela eitiviry .THE P.M. GENE AL'S REPORT: , Although the•yopi . NlostOt:Odifetsl.s - 'recolp.' mend a lion roUlt rtideollan . val jettet".' peslage•hair elicited'a warm expressian•Of approval, hittll. commendation iu respectlct.newspaper postage does not meet With tne•stiMo degree - :h1 especially' from the Pres, Of theAtiletior. The •editors of country newspapers feel, and jtistly too, that the P. M• General's proposition": if . carried out, will do them gross .injustice •and serious injury. Mr. Hall : 1n his:report .recom mends that the present kal up - on .newspapers circulating within'tho county and ,congrestion al district' in w hich• they are published, shall be continued, but that the.ll cents postage on pa pers carried-over 100 _miles, and beyond the State in which they are published be reduced to one cent. ,The injustice of making a paper which passes on ten or twenty miles•through the mail, within the county In' hich it is prin, led, pay as m li postage as one which passes ono oriy ensued miles, will be seen at a glatfa. The injustice of such a proposition is felt the more keenly as it a cirnes at a : moment when the country press tv.as indulgingthe hope that its interests would.receive some attention at thehandsof Congress. What the country press asks is, that all newspapers shall go free ihrougti the mail iii the•cOUnty in ivhicli they are printed. If This should be thought too great a sacrifice on the part of the government, boVvever, they ask, and think they have a clear and undoubted right to ask, that postage on their papers shall correspond s • ometvhat with the distance they Ten cents per annum would be a fair and satisfactdry price. But one cent for all distances it a grossly unfair discrimination in faYorof 7 the• mammoth city papers. ME =II The New York Tribune, one of the very few city journals at all well 'disposed towards the country Press.; and of which class it is the flare= most and most generous, speaks an follows ' "Mr. Hall is very fsir‘so far as he goes with regard to Newspapers, but be does not go .far enough: The weight is the essential point in the tronspoitation 'of Printed Matter ; conse quently, the considerations in fever of a mai -1 form'rate of Letter Postage do not- apply to Periodicals, &c. It is not just and equal to charge as much for carrying a small newspa per'twenty miles'as for carrying a large one two thousand miles. One cent per printed sheet, weighing trot more than 'two ounces -when mailed, is probably a. very fair general rate; but there should be a much lower rate for Country Newspapers—that is for all period= Male conveyed less than forty milks. We think We think ten cents per annum as the postage of a - Weekly, twenty of a Semi-Weekly, thirty lon a Tri-Weekly, and sixty fore Daily—to be paid for a full year in advance—awould be fair rates for all the journals conveyed not more than . forty miles !coin their respeptive,places of publication. We believe such rates., Would be most advantageous, yet but slightly so,- to the Country Press which is now unduly crowded by the city journals.. The Weekly. Tribune, fur instance, now pays seventy eight cents in Michigan, Illinois, Wisponsin, lowa, &o. while the journals printed in the very counties where taken pay fifty two ; this is too little difference; but to reduce ours to fifty,two and leave the local journals subject to the same rate would aggravate the inju stice One cent per -Copy, quarterly in advance, fur every newspaper sent more than forty miles, and - ten cents per-year,- payable annually in advacce, for every Weekly transmitted less than forty miles, wilh,corres ponding rates for papers printed oftener than once a week., would be just about right. We have no faith in the 'lnching' principle whether applied in 'our favor or against us, and , would have every thing pay its own way." The Recruiting Service. The report of Adjutant General Joazs, to the Commander-in• Chief, shows the operations of the recruiting service during the year. The service has been prosecuted with zeal and the male] success. Two field officers, fourteen captains, and ten subalterns are employed for the general service, of whom sia company, offi cers are engaged in. recruiting for the mounted corps, under the superintendent, Major and Brevet Lt:-Colonel - Cooke, of the 2d dragoons: Eighteen Captains and subalterns, under the general superintendent, Major and Brevet Col- Waite, of the Bth Infantry, have been employ ed in recruiting for the foot regimenti. The receiving'iiepols and schools of instruction estab lished in the harbor - of Nowlfork, and at - Novvi , port - barracks, Kentucky, for the artillery "and infantry arms, and the one at Carlisle barracks, Pennsylvania, for the mounted regiments, are commanded by zealous cerfw 'The system greatly conduces econow my, discipline, instruction, and dispatch, in for warding recruits to the several regiments. The principal depot having been some years silica temporarily, transferred to Governor's Island, New York, while Fort Wood was undergoing repairs, has been re-established on liedlow% Island. The number of enlistments during the year.' were 3,695. According to the present laws, the number of enlisted men of the lice is 11;- 528. The term being five years, one-fifth of this number, supposing the army to be full, (2,304,) gees out out every year fiy expiration of enlistment, and if there be added the loss by death, discharges for disability, and "deSei lions, the number will be increased to about else third, (3,850,) which fs required to be an, annually supplied by new recruita.--Tlffi—re cords - titiciW — that* of the 19,699 imrsons. who have offeredAtiemselves the current yeai.atthe recruiting stations, only' 2,884 were Accepted by the recruiting officers as able-bodied, and otherwise .fit for the service. During the year, also, no less than 5,564 applicants have been .refused at the rendezvous on account of their be ing i nom, . . BILL.—The resolution of Mr. Johnson, of Tenn., offered'in Congress this week provides for giving to every' head of a fatAily, alio is a citizen of the United States, one hundred and sixty acres of land out of the public domain. Mr. Jbhnson moved to sus- Pend tho rules to enable him to introduce his resolution, but the House refused to suaThend— ions 95, pays 71—two-thirds not voting in fa• vor of the motion. - -The Republic fears lhat'one accl of the law will - be to destroy any advan lages.that might hate been expected by old soldiers - frinn the Bounty Labill.inv of the last session, as no head of a family' would pay the soldier anything fur his Warrant or 'his laud, if he could get his one hundred and sixty scroll I for nothing. ' cowmen= TO Piln. Coon:rt.—The Weill. ,ington Republic says it has examined a very snuff box, the exterior of silver,vand the interi or of 'gold, richly chased and embellished.— Upon ono side is stamped in relief a . most ex. °client view of the national capital; upon the other is engraved ,the following , inscription "on. JAMES COOPER, from E. P. PRERTIOS end others of his mercantile friends of Philadelphia as a slight token of their .. appreciation of his distinguished services in the United States PO. nate, ILL bohall of the Union, Pennsylvania, and the . Whig party, October 10th, 1850. UOLONIZATWICMUIEENTII.—The Di . .. York, iskmiety will send — Out six persons by Abe 'Abe ria'ginek`et, sailing from . galtimore on- the 15th of lhlef mOnthOindiiii . expedillon will sail from New York in' February - . it 'is ' intended One shall isli•trcim New Orleans in Sinu ai i d another from Savannah in Aeillf the lids n elan be raised: ' p , , W 3 Pf . eG•The,f4l5•49 l PO-I , 44leltura baa, a djo u „ ed i 41torIpte ! ingli, eikllift , 10.COPven the _Philadelphia Vinira interesting article upon the sub jeatiqf :thel,oxitnit. present resources and future pijiinpeote of 'Pennsylvania, from which we ex- Arun thtijollowing paragraphs: • Pennsylvania is undoubtedly A large Stute, - If •comparison with the .older • Sti to iiinleding Massachusetts and New• York, Maryland . ,tind Virginia, New Jersey and 'the Carolinas ; although .sevoial of them have greater, and Lao or three a considerably gloat. or, area. It has.,bee l p.the.polloy,of the govern-. ntent;'of late years, to make tho new States ye. ry vast ones ; and 'oven Virginlo,4hlch, with liar 70,000 Square miles of territory, mold hold up libr head against Michigan with,6o,ooo, and Missouri with 64,000, is now dwarfed before the 175,000 of the State Of California; and the • 265,000 'of the State of Texas. Our renders at home will best appreciate a comparison of the magnitude, of Pennsylvania with New York;' while:those abroad will derive a jester idea from • a comparison of our State, in this particular,with . some of the best known states of Euiepe. Pennsylvania and .New York are vpry nearly' oftho name magnitude—so much • so 'that we find them pueodown, in a New York School go- ' ngraphy, (Morse's,) published in the commer cial metropolis, as having a difference of but five square miles between - timm;•-•Yiz i N. York 46,220, and Pennsylvania 46,215 square miles. BOA Slates may, perhaps more correctly, be estimated at about 47,000 square miles each ; although:we shall he content to give New -V ork the advantage 01 the estimates :teamed in a Pennsylvania school geography (MiteheiPa) in, which New York is allowed an area of 47,000, and Pennsylvania one of only 46,000 square miles. There is not so`much difference, there fore, between the Empire and the Keystone 'Staten, in this partioular;:i some persons—e ven some Pennsylvanians—imagine. • - • To Americans—whose ideas are. adapted to . the scale. of a continent, and who look _at the whole Union occupying the immense area of upwards of three millions of square miles—the territory of Pennsylvania will not seem a very large one ; but foreigners will he etruelt with the comparison that may be made between it and a number—the greater number, in fact, of the independent Enropean Kingdoms- We take ten of Kenn Kingdoms, (there are fifteen' of them altogether, exclusive of the - throe Em:' pires of RusPia, Austria and Turkey, and the dependent Kingdoms, eo called, that aro more fiefs and provinces of these Empires, and of two or three of the larger Kingdoms,) and•pre• dont - them with their areas and.populations, ac cording to the figures, and upon the authority' of the eminent English statistician, McCulloch. They are as follows : Kingdom of Square miles. Population. Saxony, - • 5,705 1,836,433 Wurtemburg, 7,568 • 1,743,827 Greece,. ' 10,206 . . 637,700 Belgium, " 12,569 • 4,335,319 Holland, 13,89 U 4,236,741 Hanover, .- 14,600 . 4,773,741 Bavaria, 28,435 4,504,874 Sardinia, 28,830 4,650,368 Portugal, 34,500 3,412,500 Two Sicilia, 41,321 8,423,316 'Kw aggregate area of these ten kingdoms is 107,828 square miles (moan area, 10,782 square miles;) and the aggregate population, 34 554,- 787 (moan population, 3,425,478, being a mean average of 320 persons to the square mile. Thus,it will be peen at a glance, that of these ton independent European kingdoms not one, in territory, approaches to thu amplitude of our good State of Pennsylvania; which 19, in faet,nearly four and a half times larger than 'the criean aeon or bo caried into eight kingdoms larger than Saxony,six lar ger than Nurtemburg,and nearly four as large. as Belgium. The population of Pennsylvania was, in . 1840, 1,724,033. The indications are that khan now reached to about 2,250,000; or about 49 souls to tho square mile. It is fully capable of sustaining a population as great in proportion as any of the above named .King doms; the average rate of which to the square mile would give it no less than 14,720,000 souls. We may regard such a population as within as within , the ffiture destinies' of the Common wealth. The means of subsistence within our fertile soil are adequate to the wants of a still larger number.' We arc looking, however, at the present, not the future, Out business, is rather with that which is than thlit which is to be. 'Our elm is to illustrate the •;eoeihtion of things already existing ; and wit have compla. ted the purpose of our first:in-tido in showing how superior a position the Keystone State oc cupies in regard to extent of territory and the resources dependent upon that one element of wealth, compared with two-thirds of the indo• pendent mon tirchieo. af the old, world, The Legislature of Vermont, at its recent session, passed an act in effect nullifying, the. fugitive slave law, by making it the duty of the State% Attorney !'diligently and faithfully to . use all 'lawful 'means to protect, defend, and procure to be discharged, every such person so - arrosted --- orclaimed as a firgiand directing the several Yudges of the State Courts to issue a writ of habeas corpus 4Miier a-- person is claimed, arrested or imprisoned as a fugitive slave. This law will probably bring before the Su preme Court of the United Stales the question of the constitutionality of the Fugitive Slave law. Hee we prestime Vermont will abide by (tie decision without seceding from the Union Slaveholders hove their rights and remedies and so have the opponents of slavery. The former, when tfthy can make good their claim, as provided by the law of Congress, are enti to the petceabl6 possession:,-ciPll(eir property ; the 'latter; if -they deem' the law wrong, can petition fritl its/repeal or Moelication —assemble In publiiyineeiinge, and, express their opinion, without rbecomingilldemagogues" but that done, they are bout 1.1,1 as good citizens, to yield .1 to the m i ajority. Th.l3 lioxiatty La nd Law. The Nations' liclefiigeninir learns from the Pension Office, -answer to various inqui ries relative to y he , Sounly Laud , Act of Sept. 28, 1850, dccishins Nave been made as fellows 1. That where, the service has ben render cd'by a substittne, lie is the person entitled. to the benefit, and, nof..his.employer. and e_xpe_rian_od tgric_ 2. That the widow of a soldier u ho has ren dered the serqco rkuired by the - law is enti tled to bounty 'land, provided she was a widow aL the passagetof the low, although she may have been married'seyeraktimei ,• or although her marriagetite the uilicer or soldiernmyhave -- ;i taken place Lifter e left the service ; but if out a widow whir th law passed, the ;benefit of the act inertia', to the minor children of the de ceased soldidr. • 3. That r. person person who has meths.( -is:no tified to bounty , Mod under a prior,law/s enti tled to the ponefii of the eel of the 2tilli of September' ,1852 l .;- ' '4. '1 hat Mb ;Wilier is 'entitled to More than one warrant under this act; although he may have serviill several terms; kit where u soldier has servedl,several herons, ,hill ' will receive a warrant tor the , greatest quakily of land tu which the several terms consolidated entitle I him. .. / ll:rAtiOswego, N. Y., during, the, Month of Novombu Itist;'rrion't than 120,000 barrels or' (lour, and about 350,000• bushels of wheat were received from Panada`. if this rate of impor tattoo einitinues for a year, we will litive reeei ved into dur 'country at this ono.purt alone, an 'amount 'of:produce equal in value toabout 0,11; 000,000-or more lit TO the Whqle . of 'our an• nual exportStion orbreadstuirt &Worm.— Perhaps idler a little while, when the influence of irepotj l tations'of tliia hind' begin to he felt upon our . nittrkets, and the prices of grain go (fowls to 'about two ihirds of their present rate,. some of our farmers, p.artienlarly 'those will ere u'littjahu debt, will begin to understand the , recaning,of Free Trade'. The principle'of .pro. fictiotiACgainit Whiehroany of them have been contending's° loug trill'then.be opened to their oyes. 1 CeiTril or PLMIIIyLYANIA•—Adarns county . hatt Increoso of .2937 yenta. ,Wootkington county 11...8 44,65/ inhobi -18,,,t5t jocioodo., of. 3,37 6 . .Harylaburg hue spa nn ularinoo of 2173 • ' ' Movement in Vermont STATE OF 'EUROPE. ' Apprehensions' of a ?general if'ar Tho London correspondent of the North A merican, in his letter of the 29th of November, received by.the !alit steamer; the America, thus spastics 'of the state of things in Etfrope, and ,the _apprehensions' that are . felt of O genersil war. Statesmen, politicians, and commercial Men are' 'anxiously ,wathhing, says' this ,eorre. !mondani., the course of events in Etirope. , -- . The political .gtimela_ just as perploxing now Milt was last week.. Thera' hail .- been Scarcely one move thwart's its saltier). i‘uslr . la con tinues heri4rinitrients on the same grand - Male, and advances, threatening her neighbor. Prue sia is filling her arsenals witlimilitary,etores, placinglier fortresses in a state of defence, and removing - her crown jewels and ether valu ables•to u Safe place. Denmark - Mid:the Duch- Ms continue their little war,:skirmishing 'oc'ea• sionally, for relaxation and change. ThO se .cession of Baden from the Prussian, League has made o deep impression throughout' Pi - 0,- 1 sia ; but tho lather cannot complain, as she sud. denly recalled her troops and withdrew - her proteutlon from Ba'den; and Baden cannot ns sist Prussia, as mho will require oil, her troops for her own protection 'against foes Rom with out and revolutionists from within. Brunswick adheres - to her decision - nit to allow the Aubtre- Bavarian army to pass through her.territery.— The Russian Ambassador informs Prussia that his government will consider it a causus belli if Prussia. supports the Duke of Brunswick in his opposition to the march of the Austrians.— Fiance is moving her army, oTforty - thousand men towards the Rhine. England—almost in as humble ii.position as Prtissfa in this groat German questions—merely sends her protest to Prussia ; while stern, mysterious' and ambitious Russia looks down from her high position in the north and directs all the moves. ,Russia and-Austria have ngreeddo — ect together(France of course must follow); and a wire Of Prussia against Austria Would Mca war with Russia also; The agitation in.Englinek has increased to a much greater extent in regdrd to the anti-pm:ie. ry question. It has also much increased in Scotland. -The Daily News asserts that •the Attorney General is preparing a bill to make penal the holdlng'of - English titles by the Ca tholic elelgy. Lord fleaument, a Catholic no bleman, has taken the field in Opposition to the measures or the Popo, and maintains that his appointments of English Bishoprics ore derog atory to the crown and at variance with the .constitution. Immense meetings -ore being held every where, uhich denounce the Papal policy as aggressive, and in some cases these meetings have ended.in riots, especially at Mr. kinhead, where the meeting on Wednesday 'was attended with greater disturbance and ri oting than had been experienced- since the days of the Reform bill. Magistrates and police were compelled to Ay before the mob. The Holy Cross was finally exhibited, which had the effect of restoring quiet. South Carolina Fanataciam South Carolina is still playing the madman, and notwithstanding the excellent advice of Gen. Hamilton, In still vauntinghor determination to secede from the Union. On the 12th resolutions were-offered in the `South Carolina Legislature providing for thenleotion of dele gates to the Southern Congress which meets on the second Monday in May, for the purpose of farming a ennatituthin thr the Southern Con fOcra ay p also providing, for a-State Convention tb meet at Columbia on lbw fourth Monday in JulY,'Whieli shall declare South Carolina no Lino'. a minister of the confederacy, in case catior,Ptotosafos4 notion. It is nlpo Pro. posealgo fornri`,all the citizens of . the State Into a military org anization. South - Careina. lute always bean a great t'domooratic"State. But tho kind of domoc mei -that South Carolina delights in is shown in the followitig • . . , . IG.-.Ry—tharesnt.. Constitutiorr•of,Sotrth-' Carolina, whieti was adopted sixty_ years ago, the qualificatim of eligibility to the Legislature and Congress I a large -amount of property— either a freehel of five hundred acres of land and ten neole,_or of other real estateo he eligible-to.toXie„State , Senate, a larger amount of property is tequisite. The House consists of 124 - membirs, chosen for two years—the Senate 30 me bare, chosen for four years.— The Governor Lieutenant-Governor, Judges, Secretary of Rate, B.ze., are.ahosen-by•the Leg iSlature—the oovernor and Lieut. Governor for two soars, anti each must own not lees than £1,500 sterlil, : or $7,500, clear of debt. All voters must be wanly ono years old, have resi ded in the Sta two years, have fifty acres of ,/, land, or a to w l ot, or pay three 'shillingester- IMg of tax. is gives the whole governmen -1 tal power to, t landed aristocracy ; the up- I portionment representation made sixty years ago still ontinues which, in reference to the present hits population, gives the Leg islature to a situll minority. . , PRENTICE te-7'he Louisville JOurnal says a Mississipy i per, in attempting to reply to an article of / bursaro pat Lousiana hal a per feet right to tecedo from the Union, if she pleases, oral esiblishom ,independent Govern; ment of her ova, but that; if site were to se cede, she wool( here no right to shut up the mouth of the lisaiselpph NCIAV, if ,Lousiana' were an ihdepe ant power, the mouth of the. Mississippi wou belong,to her; it would be her mouth—and vouliin't she have a perfect sight to shut hey , n mouth 7 , HOMAN CHA',. ry says that at tum the .23d instant, late of the late following large plasterer,-$2,13 805 ; tease, 24 y years old, JO., $ $730 ; 'Minnie, Hardtisnes, 20 . y' mr.s.—The Charleston Mereu- Alan, at Charleston, S. C.. on . to slaves belon4ing to the es m....Eltockelbank, brought the rices :—Cato, 28 years old, a ; Sam, 30 years old, do., (1,1, , - rs old, do., 81,775; Paris,,24 00 ; Noble, 26 years" bld, do., years old, a laborer; t/.805 ; rs old, do., $660.- TUAOLOAL As, !!!!!! hy_tha_nume of I.r Maine, who 'recently re rnia, with about - $5OOO in a arrested on a requisition of California, for the rub a man lu California, while a that COW) try.aceking gold. 'open:tents would seem to Johnstia's guilt; but the af the alLir is, that , Iwo MI accused of the marital', tri 4mged. • Johmson, of Ban turned front Cali guld, lia;since from the Goren bevy and murder be (Johnson) wa SOMe recent. de leave no doubt most tragical patj niceitipersols wee ed, convicted, ant ANOvica A telegraphic dell boat exploeion t , wi eippi: . The Angt with between two gore, exploded her dod abbot, coven, number, are The overt has caul STEAMBOAT EXPLOSION.-- toll) another teriblof steam ' loss of life, on the Miele• °map, on a pleasure trip, 1 d three hundred rumen- . i Va persona. Am f flora, and killed an d wou Amongttio 1 wn citizens of , tlio Sonth. d doop affliction in Now 00eape. ipmlr Prue° 16.--Thet pow hat hear, Jenny. Lind. brlllippt.that has a this country. Pre! Dapartmente, with all the members dance. •,ThO Mao/ osnm.—WentrinaTos,, Dee, !lilted to overflowing to hO audience the moat r.attended her concerto - in ant Flllmore , VW hen& of lair families, and. dearly Pintos, .oro atte!i: ,talpoiaam Movements, &c. bale pf • cotton, recently sent: frotit Liverpool to the Aberdeen Railway, woo tound,c' on being opened, to eontaitvii:iitite cat, from her emaciated appearacte4Was judge:y to,„ have make the passage across the, thid manner. She must hallo„hired 14.k0 u bear by suclung / hor panc. Tho T .l;ohnstpwn Wreath- goys for Scott for President, old William. F. Johnston for V. President; Johnston maltesso good _ a Gover-; n•r;stivii the Reading J;Mrnal, that the people of the'State will hardly agree to awe hint from; that poet fora while yet; bat a Letter man for Vice President would be hard to find. The Governor of South-Carolina:has of ficially stated to Min -.Legislature, that' 20,000 of the people of thatchivalroui State are igen_ rant of tie.olphahet: it is natty ecr6in then that if South Carolina secedes froin'the Union; she will not 'take "all the intelligence" with ir....Tho Stato of ,Louisiana, through the Attorney General, has appliod ibr the segues trillion of all:the roul estate left by John Mc- Donough. This has been granted by the Court and tiro Sheriff hue Wien formal'possession, to, hold- until the 'question of qwnoralai, is deil ded. . - - • - We learn from the Boston Atlas, that a night or two agO Mr. Paine gave on exhibition of his gas-light at . Worcester, provinus to send ink an agent to London, io introduce thO gas at the exhibition of the World's Fair. The _porty_present pronounces the exhibition as as tonishing without humbug. 0::,,v." - =Roulien Dunbar is to to hanged at Al bany, on the 31st proximo, for the murder of tho boy, Stephen Lester. The evidence was purely. circumstantial, and Dunbar continuos* to proteat • his Mimeo:Mc. • , We learri that the U.S. Mint, In Philo:- delphia, is coining money very rapidly, having.. during the Month of November, comed,.over four millions of dollars. The principal,part of the coinage is gold: XThe radical Loco party of lowa have held n convention and passed resolutions . con demning the Fugitive Slave Law . , and decla ring their dlllierenee to the principles of the Buffalo Platform. DrZThere is quid to be excellent sleighing north and west of Albany. The SchOliarie mail had arr.vcd at that place on runners, and there wore as many sleighs as wagons in tier country market on Monday the 9th inst. Mr It is said that Hartwig Von Blucher. a German naturalist, has introduced. a. heated roller in Silesia, which being passed over the , land r .hurtis the weeds and furnishes in the ash es en excellent manure. Tito Canada papers: state that: nearly thee thousand fugitive slaves fromthe United. States are cengrogated at Sandwich, Windsor, and Malden, besides a number scattered over other parts of the provincr. is stated that two•thirds of the mem bers of Congress, seem to have determined upOn -amending- the Bounty-Land Law -of last session,_ to allow the transfer of warrants before Inca- The Pittsburg Gazette says that Judge McClure remarked lately in the Com t of Quar ter Session's that morn of _ the inhabitants of Pittsburg carry . iBiolB now, than witches. Chaidin, the negro abductionist, itr. still in confinement at Rockville, Md. not hav ing been able to procure the required e 19,0011 bail. . std 1853,wheir the next Preeidentia6 term begins, Mr. Clay Rill tie - seventy-six, Dan iel Webster seventy-VA, Mr. Benton seventy one, general Se, , tt sixty nine. I:C4' "A bill he.; been introduced in the lower House of tho gislaturc of Arkansas, for the removal of all flea ingress beyond the limits of the Slate. CoI. Saloon, it is said, confidently relies. on his re eloctirn to the Senate, of which ha has been a mornScr upwards of thirty years. • MrTlie - Po,t Master at West Fowler, Law— ream county; 11: -. y . 4 . dThorourftlillactrarrbeen arrested for robbing tho mail. ir,s-Goli. J. D. Means has boon elected Gov— ernor of South Carolina, by the Legislature of that-State. riTlie Legislature of Virginia have re elected the Hon. James ,. M. Mason, to the U. S.. Senate, for ' six years from the 4th of March IMM I;l:Z . .One hundred and sixty returned Cali fornians have arrived at St. Louis, and have brought a large amount of gold. IrrThere is considerable cholera among tho emigrants on boa'rd steamboats on the Missis sippi and Ohio rivers. OU-Alfred Tennyson has been appointed Po et liaureate in England. A Righteous Verdlot Jacob Green wai tried bn Thursday week. 'at New Castle, Delaware, for the murder of A brahani Redden. It was proved that Green was hurried• about six years ago and lived happily with • woman to whom he was much attached, and that Redden seduced her Irmo tier fidelity to him. The Delaware Republi- Can no: - • •Fle would frequently' take her from 'her house and keep, her away all night; and there was prOof of 'adulterous intercourse. On Green accusing; him of,it, he said: Yes, I have had your wit'',and will have her again, whenever and Qif if you ,don't keep quiet: I will blow'your liver out.' He carried two pistols loaded fur the avowed purpose of shooting Green ; and, on one occasion, assaul ted and beat him severely. He loaded these pistols with slugs on Saturday, OM 20th of July last, telling his own wife that he inten ded to . shoot Green.' That night he their. Green% wile from her house, and kept hes , out all that night, staying with her in a stack yard, about. three .miles from her husband's house. Green diseovered the guilty pair about 'day break •the . next morning; went some two or three miles and borrowed a gun; returned and found .Itedden sitting asleep in a licigitburing house - and shot/lain 'through .the.open door._ He ' immediately surrendered himself. 'The law in . Delaware makes it no higher offence than a misdemeanor for a husband to kill a mail found in the act of adultery with his•witr; and the Jury, considering even Mat as beyond the guilt of this defendant utider the circumstances of aggravation and outrage presented by his case, - aeciuitted him entirely. 'The unhappy man, on being disonarged from the. dock, was received by a crowd of friends, who glren three . hearty cheers when they had got into the street: Tlie guilty wife was not there, and the widow of the deceas ed contributed, by her testimony, the acquital of the man who slew her own husband.' ~ HUTCHINGOS VEG . ETADLE DIMPEESIA,DITTERS A sure and Certain cure forum:DYSPEPSIA, in its worst forms.' Also, Liver' Complaints, -Jaundice, Heartharn,!Costivoness, Faintness, Disorders of the Skin; Loki of Appetite ; LoW Spirits, Nervous Headache, Giddiness, tation of the Hpart, oinking and fullness of weight at the Stdmach, and, all other disease 3 caused-by an impure state of the blood, liver,' Mo.. FEMALES, who' suffer frond ainorbiti. and unnatural condition, MIL. findohis modi-' eine of Ineatimable Value .01 - In . all cases of GENERAL DEBILITY this Medicine. aces 'like is charm! . Thousande have tested' its efts cony, gild thousands mere . aro now under , treat:' moot; and not ono solitary case of failure has yet .boon reported. Volumes could be filled , with:cortificatee of those who have beenpoi.- Manently cured.' Gircularsicoamining the Der-. tificates of Demarkatile puree, and the. high estimation 'in - which thin Medicine ie hold by the public press, can be had of the agents,' free.: Price Weems per bottle. ; Principal Office; 122 Hutton street, .N. Y. up stairs, Dr. S.'EL-, MOTT,. Ageet fire The Petiole A large 1111 c! enthuolanticmeeding of thn cii .izens of Lehigh county...;%:ps the : ,cou'rt ',ll9tne in' Allentown, :on, the, I instant, nonaibmcd Gencral &Mit as thnir,candidatefor AbsiMeoiclency: C7of,J, Cooffurcsideil, lied by dlerir,i . V,enger;jdfinWrida., Julio-Sea "ger,)a7iel. John RiChaF4 . ns.Vica'Presidents; and. T. 'Good and Reese as Secretaries. A series of resolutions, strongly urging the claims of Gen, Scott; ivere adopted, and a speech n`ns ' dcliebreil by Action McMichael, of ia. Lizy Congress should be spurred up by the people and lip the prois. Two weeks have been alrea'dy wonted without - pity pi-soli eallegielotion, and two inure , will share the name Iltte in holiday adjournments and carou sals. Lel Congress got to work in earnest upon the business of the nelitM;anct the Fatty differ ences of its ections will , somi be forgotten.— There aro important subjects to be discussed end settled; we want revenue, ar.d nc want n p. propriattons Carefully invc•tigatsd bCfure they aro grunted ; wo most end will burn cheap' pos tugc, oh' idle members will raise a hornets nest about their ears; the Rounty Lund Bill requires some aitiendutien, and Pennsylvania wants leg ruse her coal and iron interests from impending ruin.'• TRU SOUTII CAROLINA INQUIRY —The Pres ident has replied to the inquiiry of Cov. Sea broult and the L•gislature of Smith Carana, why so ninny U. S. troops teem concentrated at Fort Nlaultre. 'rite President ,aye in mutt glance, the question is one which :lie Gosernor or Legislature of South Carolina has no right to put,—thol'hy the Constitution, ho is Com mander- iti-Chief, and has a Conhiitutiona I right to djipose of the U. S. forces in barracks, when he considers it heshfor• the public inb•re"ts AS he is not responsible to State authUrity for , his action,. he respectfully declines answerint Ike, inquiry.. 'rite liittei• is very civil but very sienifterint., • Ni . 1 etv 'AbVelliEselliCllo. D.(IGFIEHREOTYPIE FOR"THE HOLYDAYS. , AAJNI: FINDLEY. is - 'nowpreparell to she # V Daguerreotypes of ch ildren o almost any ags. The time required to tube them will be from 2 to 7 seconds. •All those who wish a correct likeness should call'intmediately. Hav ing made an improvement in the art which en ables him to take likenesses superior to any thing heretofore taken in this place. This new and beautiful prom s is styled 'CELERECi- TYPING. He .will he constantly hound at his rooms, corner oh Hanover and Loather his, no stairs. ' Ricci Stf Christmas Presents, THE subscriber has just received _Ladies French Worked Muslin and Lace 'Collars, Embroidered Linen 'Handkerchiefs, Fancy Thibet Scarfs, Neck Rthbons, Fancy Bones, Gold Pencils, with n variety of Goods suitable for Christmas, nre,ents. gleclB G Do! ars. _Reward. • THE Allen and East Pennsborough Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Cumberhindsoun, ty, offer a reward of FIFTY DOLLARS to any person Who will arrest the incendiary who &et tire to the barn of Jacob Eshelman, of East Pennsborough township, Cumberland county, on the evening of the 30th of September, last, to be paid when convicted. declB—.lt. LEVY IS - II Y . ER, Sect'y. 2p. STB,A CAME to the promises of-the subscriter, re l.—) siding in Newton • township, Cumberland • county, on the 3d of December, inst., a BAY HORSE, with black r ovo g mane end tail. lie is lame in one flij. of his hind legs. Hejtas Doodler particular marks, the "owneris re quested to come forward, prove property, pay charges and take him away, otherwise ho will be disposed of according to law. .dectS SAMUEL 111 SHARP. For Sale or Rent A. .1101.1 SE in Pomfret street, a ;~r ;r . few.doors East of Hanover street, now in the occupancy of the Rev. M. E. a Johnston. Possession given on the . Ist of April next. The house is near ly new, well finished and convenient. The lot is 30 by 240 feet, running back to Church Alloy. Enquire of the subscriber. declB-41p ANDREW BLAIR. PLASTER. T;IARMERS look to your interests and pur• r chase your PLASTER at this season of the year; when you can got it for $5.50 per ton _at_thwv _r_e_k_mse of. Wti RRA Y Agt ' 1 dectB ' .SALT. 125 SACKS OF SALT receiving and for sale cheap at the ware house of declB W B MURRAY, Ag't.. TEA OW/C=IES! FOR THE HOLIDAYS! A LOT of 110%N Coffees, Brown and I.Vl4tc Sugars,- Orleans and Syrup Molasses, and all other articles connected with the Grocery bu• sitiess.jiat received by the subscriber, includ ing an ”ssoriment of FRESH SPICES, • - of all kinds, together with Raisins. Citron, &.c suitable for the season. Also. PINE APPLE & DAIRY CHEESE of fine quality sedge fresh supply of the Messrs; JENKINS' BeAlirands of GREEN & BLACK TEAS, in metallic parka of quarters. halves and jibe, Also, a Ithadsome select:on of fine FRENCH & BADEN CHINAWARE and a largo assortment of TOYS for the ap proaching holidays, at the storo of • dcctB J W EBY. Valuable Farm for Sale. THD subscribers offer for sale the farm on which they:now reside, situate in South Mid. (Beton township, Cumberland county, contain ing 150 ACRES adjoining lands of J. Goodyear the widow Green. and 'lto -Yellow Breeches Crook. 'rho whale Farm is in first fate order, and, will be sold in one or two tints td suit pur chasers. 'rho improvements are good at d-so situated as to afford the boat advantages. AM,' person' wishing to buy .can call on ;he subscri bers, living on'the place, Ironi whom they can get all information in, regard to terms, dr.c. not sold at private sale before WEDNES. DAY, the 15th of January, 1851, tho Farm will be offered at public outcry at the Court Rouse in Glarlisle, at 2 o'clock on said day, when attendance will be given:by declB JAMES McHAFFIE.' THOMAS McHAFFIE Application- for Tavern License. NOTICE is hereby given dint Intend. to apply nt the ensuing term of the Court of Quarter Sessions of Oumberland county, for b Licensolto keep a house of l'ublic Entertain. mont in the house now occupied by me as such in the borough of • ,deelB-4t JOHN HANNAN.- WE, 'the undersigned, citizens of the %Vast Ward, in the borough of Carlisle, in the coun ty of Cumberland, do certify that wo are wull acquainted with the above named Joan Hannan that he la of good rt.puto foflionesty and tent penance, and is well for with house room and conveniences for the accommodation - . of strangers and travellers, end that such Inn or Tavern is necessary to, accommodate strangers rind travellers. G.W Milton, w S Chilean, A Noble, A • Noble, Hugh 'Gnalltigher,.J lI Graham, A • B Sharpe, J. Whistler, C C Jim Minor, J. illis Bonham,J , Martin, E. CHURCH ) LEE AND FEEMAN u.w.taxumirmapa s:rdWa'ai eNu STEADI SA.w , • NE,W CUMBEttLANA, Pa. • Estate of James. Watson, decid. LET'FERS of Administration on ibuestato .gf JAMES WATSQN, NeWl.Ol) tp.. ()timberland county, dec'et.; have boen.grant, id to the subscriber residing in Ibtr some town- Oip; AllOaftiC,loowingtlientsolvcs indebt ed to said at titoiiir 0 're'R ueet ad to innitoluanio dime pnyrrigntp p egd those having cicinis to pre sent for.dettletndot to, 7 , &Or" - JANE. WATSON, .4the'rzr. 'a.binictietinents. . The United - , States Life Insuxanee Anriuity and Trust Company. - l'errtuar—Coplial $250,000 - - bash Wijsh m.- rllll2. • constant„Amsolicitgd _application for R.. Life Insurance, - gives the most al Pinion, and' gratifying Root that the' puldie 'mind is deeply iinpressed with the taei iw poilc ace of this subject. The great t , objeet, however , of loan ranee diould be ...,offt . q, otherwise the whole moive to inbure . way_ disappoimed, —T eo much card Cannot be practised in the selection of an Wilco, with which io effect:the contruit.— The:choice should lie 'regulated not by i.resent and constant large ituluccmcuts , UH til l S, is Incompatible with future orneits. The premiums on lice, are calculated for Me/quire, 'if present and prospective benefits therefore are given, the result ultimately, must .terminate in litigation, disappointment and ruin. 'Pile object aimed at by thin institution is stability and po•- pettnty. The rates of premium have been care fully prepared with reference to fluctuations.— The cash systeth of Payments has also been" adopted. Unpaid premium notes constitute no part of the assets of this coolpany, and every cuntingency.,being fortified with .amample esp. ital, security stamps Inn whole_syst cut. This feature, .pararnatint to all other considerations, commends the compapy to public favor'. t :x -pi:watery pamphlet,. blanks. application Mpers information, and eN;ery facility will be ch Melly furnished the public by Hr. E. BBATT , who ,has ° been duly tippoitited agent - of - this - fienniptinv for Cumberland county. Dr. H HINKLEY has also boenappointed Medical .Exam iper. Directors—Stephen 12. Crawford, Ambrose W Thompson, Benjamin W Tingley, ..lar oh L Florence, William M. f; ,, dwin, Paul B Goddard Lawrence Johnson, George 11 1.11enry, James Deveretuc,,JQhn L Linton. President—S Ie p ell R. Crawford. Vice- Proridem .—Ambrose W. Thompson. ~q,cretruw EffTreasurer.—Charles C 7 I'm!ny .Icienri:—Manuel Evrr COI.IISei & Flaw, .41 dica! Examiners.—Paul:l3 Goddard. iVID. N'Srilliam Pepper, M. D. [m1;0 ly A PAPER FOR YOUR FAAIILy NENt SERIES-NEW FEATURES-NEW TYPE, THE HONE JOURNAL, PUBLISHED WEEKLY Ng TIIE CI7 Y OP FLW YCRK AT Two DOLLARS YEAR,A _ ONthe first of January next, commences a New Series of this copious, coniprelien. sive and elegantly printed farnirij.:\twspelnr, which is, now acknowledged to be the indis• pensable drawing room gazette - ol the Country. A home is hardly coMplete, we think rte nine wifely venture to any, without , tlic 110111 E JO URNAL..which is the Chronicle it( all ant te ,i:n„,... interests all classes of S'o 'ety„ and of the in relligence which most nhvens an American Home. -New York is I . e gnat centre, and hero at the fountain head o novelty, incident, lite rature, 'and foreign me:ws, the Dune Joni - Ltd is pruned acid ptililighlidZ/..ts A - diton:, (Georke P. Morris and .V. P. Wi/lis,) -- devote 'their entire time; skill and experience, to the task of giving each Week, "EVERY TILING WORM KNOWING. They particularly 4,ecp an eye on all the whims and novelties of New York society. Presenting sketches of the BELLES OF OUR TIME. and careful .portraits of TH F. DISTINGUISHED PUBLIC UHA - 12. , A__CTER 8. In addition to this, the,•mmest pains are taken, by translations. from French journals, and by .foreign correspondence, to prepare such reports of the Fashionable Gossip of Paris, as will exceedingly instruct and a muse. We preseni to our readers, the facts nn• outlines of all news. In our literary depart. melq, We -- 51 - in ofsk'etchi..f aird *mailable crifirtrin, and in our condensations of cite fecnnd produc tions of rho vast newspaper world of Eng% cI, We aim ' to - avoid the tiresome, and the 1,c.t.1, and transfer to our columns the pick of Eng -Hell _information. and_brilliancy, while we. en deadour to selec with a true sense of pure mo rals, true wit, and get nine humor. In addition try the abovo, ‘ , •O propose to give,' in the course of the edmino . v , lume, ONE ENTIRELY NEW FEA'I S 'URE, which we think willwr tionlarly interest the Ladies, slur—A SERIES OF_ RETURNED - LOVE' _LErf EBS.— This being a species of compoitmn that inter. ests.all readers, we trust .to make the nfindiers of the Home Journal !sore eagerly looked.for. and moro carefully preserved titan ever. Wo have also rims corresponaents in London 071,1 Po. rig, who will send us much that could , never reach us thrOugh foreign journals. As a Ness Year's Present from a Gentleman to a_ Lady, r The Home Journal is one, of which the etort', (trance is renewed every lue,k, and it is unsur passed as a gift in good taste. • Tennis.-1 0 .or one cony, 5.2,; for three copies 5.5, or for one copy fur three years, ss—ufw a y s itt advance. Subscribe without delay. Ad dress MORRIS Sr, WILLIS, Editors S. Proprietors, 107 Fulton street, Ni w York. [oct,3o Sheriffs Sales. BY ;lirtuo of sundry writs of Venditioni Exponas and Levan Facials issued out of the Court:of- Common Pleas of Cumberland - county, and to me directed, I will expose to public sale at the Court House in the Borough CarNle, on Saturday the 4th day of January 1031, al It, o'clock, A. M., the fol. Towing_descrilled_reaLestale,_viz, A tract Land situate--in --- Southampton township, containing 1-10 acres & 43 perches, more or less,bounded by lands of Col. James Chesnu., Henry Mowers, Martin Thrush, John Stough and Conrod Clover, having theron ereeted a Double LOG HOUSL., weatherboarded, a double Log Barn, rt well of water &c. Seized and taken in execution as the p.oporty of John B. Duncan. The above described tract .of land •will,be sold subject to a mortgage for $l5OO with interest front the Ist April 1950. . _ Also, a lot of Ground situate iu the Bor ough of Shippensburg bounded on the north by Main street, on .the west by Rail Road street, on the Sonth by en Alley, and on the. cast by It in. RusselEts, heirs, containing 40 feet on Main street & 240 feet on Rail Road street, more or less, having thereon erected a two story frame weatherboarded !louse, a two story brick back building, a stone shop, a brick Iwo story House, a ware. House, Frame Stable . 4-C. Seized and take in execution as the property of Jonathan Teal. Also, a tract of Land situate in • Mifflin township, bounded' on. the cast by lands of J. Lemur& Peter Fahnestalk, on the south by lease Christlieb,_on the w..st by Andrew Aleillwane, and on the north by . David Bowers, containing 74 acres, more or less, having thereon erected a two story Log House, a ,Log Shop and Log Barn. Seized and taken in exec() ion, ae the property .of Thomas Dunlap. ,) Also, a lot of Ground, situate in the vil lage of Kingstown, Silver Spring township, containing in breadtlf9B feet in front 4-60 i feet, in 'the rear, and n2,dypth 186 feet, more or less, bounded on th south by 'the Har risburg, Carlisle &. Chambereburg turnpike, on the emit by a l(ifof William 11, illiamsun, on the north - I .)y an alley, and on the west by a lot of Mrs. Williamson, having -thereon erected a double two 'story plastered House and a Shop. Seized and taken in execution ` as {hi' 'property of Thomas D. Hampton. Also_,.alLtheinterest.of__ltobert.E...Cook.in a tract of land situate , in Monroe iownshiP; containing 28 acres, more or less, bounded by lands,of James Livingston, Michael Miebler, • Samuel Clark, & P. F.'Ege._ Also, all the interest of Robert, F, Cook in In a lot of ground Siturie in Atonic(' township, • bounded by lands Of dames Livingston; and Richard Clark,' containing two acres, more .or.leis, having thereon erected a two story Log House Sr. a Stable. - Seized and taken in execution-es the property id Robert F. Cook. Also, a lot ofground situate in the L'orciugh of Carlisle containing 90 feet in front 4,240 sfeoeutiiiinbdy bounded on the 'Common, ()ILA° north by Mulberey, alloy, elpitihglm:trreeeto:olserstslle west by Robert & n the east by Samuel Hepburn, Es(t hay-. having thereon erected , a. two story trick House,' back buiffllng, ate. Seized and taken -in execution as the property of Mary Ego, 'Also, a lot of Ground sited e on .he south west eoner.of the public square lit the Bar &lid of Carlisle, bounded erf-"he east by ,the public equare r on the west by ta'!ot of Isaac ' Todd Esq., on the north by High ferret, 4'nd on the-south by. Church alley ; containing iiit ty feet jar bread h in front on High (6410;110 about two hundred & foryfeet is ionikfrofm . said e'reet, afpresaid alley, ha tag there. en erec ed a large two 'Very lieuee,,Whfc aback building one Stone one frame and two brick offices and two Irons ahopti, a e able fke. Seized end taken ,in excpulion 'esitte popery of.GeOrge Ego' &Elizabeth Ego. • And to be - sold by me • . DA,VID,SMITH, Sheriff „ Sheriffs office, . (Miele, Dee. 03, 1860. ropti
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