THE JOURNAL. HUNTINGDON, PA. Thursday Morning, May ii, 14-52. J. SEWELL STEWART—EniTon, TERMS OF PUBLICATION: Tun "Iluw MOD ON Jo V UNA L " is published at the following rates, viz : If paid in advance, per annum, $1,30 If paid during the year, 1.7.5 If paid after the expiration of the year, • 2,50 To Clubs of five or more, in advance, • • 1,2.5 Tea above Terms will be adhered to in all cases. No subscription will he taken fora less period than six months, and no paper will ho discontinued un til all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the publisher. V. B. PALMER Is our authorized agent in Philadelphia, New York and Baltimore, to receive advertisements, and any persons in those cities wishing to adver tise in our columns, will please call on him. FOR THE PRESIDENCY IN 1852, WINFIELD SCOTT, OF NEW JERSEY. FOR VICE PRESIDENT IN 1852, JAMES C. JONES, OF TENNESSEE. FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER, JACOB HOFFMAN, OF BERNS COUNTY Look Out for the Locomotive when the Bell Rings I A public meeting of the citizens of Hun tingdon and vicinity, favorable to the Hun tingdon & Broadtop Rail Road, will be held at the Town Hall on Friday evening the 14th inst., at the ringing of the Court House Bell. Preliminary measures will be adopted towards raising material aid for the enterprise. . _ Gen. Ayres, of Harrisburg, will be pre sent and address the meeting MANY. TO OUR READERS. We have disposed of a portion of our in terest in the Huntingdon Journal to our friend J. A. Hall, of this borough, who will hereafter be associated with us in its publication. Mr. Hall is a man of intelli gence, strict integrity of character and an unflinching and undeviating Whig, whose connection with the paper, as far as the department assigned to him is concerned, we doubt not, will give satisfaction to its numerous patrons and friends. He will direct the principal part of the business of the establishment and control its miscella neous and general reading department; while we will control, and be entirely re sponsible for its politics, which will be pure and unadulterated Whig, as we understand them. The back accounts for subscription will be payable at the office to the business partner, so that subscribers will have no more trouble in settling their accounts than if the new arrangement had not been made. WHIG COUNTY CONVENTION. After due consideration it is thought best to hold the next nominating Conven tion of the Whigs of Huntingdon County at the usual time, which is the first week of the August Court. We have consulted several of the Whigs of the county, who very generally oppose the calling of the Convention in June as recommended by the Whig meeting held in this borough du ring the last court. It will therefore not be called to meet earlier than August. • BROADTOP RAILROAD.—We, this week, publish the act incorporating this road. It has been signed by the Governor, and on Tuesday morning last, one hundred dollars was raised in a few minutes by contribution in Huntingdon and sent to Harrisburg, which will procure the charter. At the meeting in the Court House on Friday evening next, the preliminary steps will be taken to effect the organization of the Com pany, after which every person who may wish to make a speculation, will have an opportunity to subscribe to its capital stock. It will be a splendid investment for Hun tingdon county as well as'the stockhold ers. The prospects of the road are now flattering. [Cr The Westminster Review for April 1852, of the republication of Leonor Scott A: Co., N. Y., is at hand. The subjects discussed are—The Government of India —Physical Puritanism—Europe; its con dition and Prospects—A Theory of popu lation—Shelly and the letters of poets— The commerce of literature—Lord Pal merston and his polioy—The early Quakers. and Quakerism—Contemporary literature of England, of America, of Germany, and of France. Price $3,00 yer year. Spiritual Telegraph—Communica tion with the Spirit World. We have received the first number of the Spiritual Telegraph, a paper published in New York at $1,50 per year, and devoted to the discussion and illustration of spirit ual manifestations, or spiritual rappings, as they are more commonly designated. The device at its head is a dark globe, exhibi ting a shadowy outline of the American Continent and surrounded by heavy dark clouds, through one point of which breaks a cluster of rays which fall upon North America. We had thought at one time that independent clairvoyance was the boldest stride that human aspirations could ever make; but it, electricity and animal magnetism sink into insignificance, before the spiritual wire that dips its farther point in the burning batteries of the skies. The angel which Jacob saw, was engaged in the vulgar exercise of climbing up and down the ladder whose top was lost in heaven; but now, at the end of near four thousand years, despatches can be trans mitted to the earth, from the world of spir its without the intervention of such mate rial connections. We can now converse with our deceased friends through the me dium of persons, who have the power to put themselves in some kind of magnetic con nection with their disembodied spirits.— Messages are daily received from the informing their friends on earth of the hap piness they enjoy or the misery they suf fer; and the wonderful faculties of the seers of antiquity and the Witch of Endor are fairly surpassed by the nervous or illusive susceptibilities of American Yankees.— Physical science having become nearly ex hausted, inquiring minds are beginning to wander in the shadowy realms of psycho logy; and we shall be gratified to learn their ability, to descend at any time from their etherial contemplations, to the con sideration of things earthly, with minds such as wo should desire to find outside of a lunatic asylum. There are plenty of women, and probably some men, whose minds, a message from eternity would very considerably disturb—in view of which we would advise, that the Spiritual Telegraph be worked with great caution. A few ticks, by the operator at the celestial end of the wire, might very essensially jerk some of the earthly batteries out of their boots. Whig State Convention. At meeting of the Whig State Central Committee, held at Harrisburg on Tuesday the 4th instant, it was resolved that the Delegates to the late Whig State Conven tion be requested to assemble in Philadel phia on the NINETEENTH DAY OF JUNE next, at 9 o'clock, A. M., for the purpose of nominating a candidate for Judge of the Supreme Court, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of the Hon. Richard Coulter. Among the can didates suggested for that office, the Hon. GEO. CHAMBERS, of Franklin, Hon. Wm. JESSUP, of Lycoming, and the Hon. JA3IES POLLOCK, of Northumberland, have been respectively named, either of whom would do credit to the station, and receive a cor dial support. The meeting of the Judicial Convention will take place a few days after the ad journment of the Whig National Conven tion—just in time to ratify the nominations made at Baltimore, and open the Campaign with an outburst of popular enthusiasm that will cause a general waking up throughout the entire Commonwealth. A State Mass Meeting on the evening of the 19th ofJune, in the city of Philadelphia, is also suggest ed in several papers, to set the Whig ball in motion. The idea is a good one. We should be glad to see it carried into ef fect.—Reading Journal. The Farm Journal for May has been received. We have glanced over its con tents, which are very instructive, and of practical use to the farmer. Every far mer should take it, especially as the cost is so trifling. It is published monthly, in Lancaster, I'a., at $l,OO per year. Church's Bizarre for the fortnight ending Saturday May Ist, 1852, in on our table, with pretty cuts and good reading. It contains 30 pages and is published eve ry other week at $l,OO per year by Church & CO., Phila. SHOCKING OCCIIIRKKCE.-OH Saturday night an Irishman, name unknown, was put off the Express cars at Bell's station by Conductor Boley; but before the Cars were under way he got on again. On Sunday morning he was found on the track a short distance below, cut in two! It is supposed that the train again stopped and put him off, and that the freight train which came along some time after ran over him.—Hol lidaysburg Register, sth inst. Great Eruption--Magnificent Sight. We have in our boyhood read and won dered over the accounts of the eruptions of "Etna and Vesuvius—we have traced the last days of Pompeii in Bulwer's pages— and we have read of the excavations of Herculaneum, and other ancient cities; but we have never read of anything to equal the magnificence of the eruption now going on from Mauna Loa, in the Island of Ha waii. The latest accounts from the scene of the fiery visitation are dated March 6. The spectacle is said to be sublime beyond anything of the kind ever witnessed. The eruption exceeds in grandeur any of the volcanic convulsions of Mauna Loa before seen by white men on the Islands. We subjoin accounts of its action from the Po lynesian : "We have received verbal information in regard to the state of the eruption, as late as to the 6th instant, from the leeward side of Hawaii. At that date the light from the flowing current was as bright as it had been at any former period, sufficient to enable a person to pick up a needle from the ground at midnight, from which fact the inference is drawn that the current is still flowing on towards the sea. "The current seems to have broken out through an old fissure, about one-third down the side of Loa, on the north-west side, and not from the old crater on the summit, called Moknoweoweo. The alti tude of the present eruption is about 10,- 000 feet above the level of the sea, and from the bay of Hilo (Byron's bay) must be some fifty or sixty miles. If it succeeds in reaching the ocean at the point suppo sed, after having filled up all the ravines, gulches, and inequalities of a very broken country, it will undoubtedly be one of the most extensive eruptions of modern times. "It would seem, from the last note from Mr. Coen, that the stream had divided— one part taking an easterly course towards Puna—while the other took a northerly one tawords Ililo. This may so divide the vol ume of lava that neither branch will reaoh the sea; but from the latest acounts the northerly branch was still burning its way through a dense forest; and if the supply holds out long enough, it will naturally fall into the course of Walluku river, and fol low it to where it diseuthogues into the bay at Hilo. We anxiously wait further intelli gence." An abstract from a correspondent's let ter, in the Polynesian, is of so much inter est that we copy it entire. A jet of la va playing five hundred feet in the air, must be indeed a magnificent and sublime sight: "By an accurate measurement of the en ormous jet of glowing lava, where it first broke forth on the side of Mauna Loa, it was ascertained to be five hundred feet high! This was upon the supposition that it was thirty miles distant. We are of the opinion that it was a greater distance—say from forty to sixty miles. NVith a glass, the play of this jet at night was distinctly obser ved, and a more sublime sight can scarce ly be imagined. A column of molten lava, glowing with the most intense heat, and projecting into the air to a distance of five hundred feet, was a sight so rare, and at the same time so awfully grand, as to ex cite the most lively feelings of awe and ad miration, even when viewed at a distance of forty or fifty miles. How much more awe inspiring would it have been at a distance of one or two miles, where the sounds ac companying such an eruption could have been heard. The fall of such a column would doubtless cause the earth to trem ble, and the roar of the rushing mass would have been like the mighty waves of the ocean beating upon a rock-bound coast. "The diameter of this jet is supposed to be over one hundred feet, and this we can easily believe, when we reflect that from it proceeded the river of lava that flowed off from it toward the sea. In some places this river is a mile wide, and in others more contracted. At some points it has filled up ravines ono hundred, two hundred, and three hundred feet in depth, and still it flowed on. It entered a heavy forest, and the giant growth of centuries is cut down before it like grass before the mower's scythe! No obstacle can arrest it in its descent to the sea. Mounds are covered over, rivers are filled up, forests are des troye4, and the habitations of men are con sumed like flax in a furnace. Truly 'He toucheth the hills and they smoke.' "We have not yet heard of any destruc tion of life from the eruption now in pro gress. A rumor has reached us that a small village has been destroyed; but of this we have no authentic intelligence. Should it reach the sea without destroying life or property, it will be a matter of thankful ness and almost unhoped for exemption. "A largo number of the residents of Honolulu had gone to Howau to witness the upheavings of Mauna Loa." BROAD TOP RAILROAD. AN ACT To incorporate the Huntingdon and Broad Top Mountain Rail Road and Coal Com- pang. SECTION 1. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Com monwealth of Pennsylvania in General As sembly met and it is hereby enacted by the authority of the same, That John G. Miles, A. P. Wilson, Thomas Fisher, John McCa hen, James Gwin, James Entrekin, David Blair, James Saxton, John Ker, John Scott, S. S. Wharton, John A. Doyle, George Jack son, John Porter Israel Grafius, S. M. Greer., John McCullough, James Clark, J. B. Wint rode, Jacob Cresswell, Charles Mickley, Alexander King, Job Mann, Samuel L. Rus sell, William Evans, Andrew J. Neff, Wm. P. Schell, David McMurtrie, John B. Given, Wm. Ayres, George W. Speer, William P. Orbison, Levi Evans, James Patton, R. B. Petrikett, Adin W. Benedict, Alexander Port, James Maguire, Isaac Cook, George Gwin,James Campbell, Daniel Grove, Henry Zimmerman, W. T. Dougherty, and their as sociates, successors and assigns be and they are hereby constituted a body politic and corporate by the name, style and title of the "Huntingdon and Broad Top Mountain Rail Road and Coal Company," for the purpose of constructing a railroad as hereinafter is pro vided; and also for the purpose of mining coal, and for the transacting the usual busi ness of companies engaged in mining, trans porting and selling coal and the other pro ducts of coal lands. The capital stock of said company shall not exceed three hun dred thousand dollars; and the said Company may hold not exceeding at any one time, One Thousand acres of Land, in the counties of Huntingdon, Fulton and Bedford, togethet with such quantity as may be necessarily required in the prosecution of their legiti mate business for stations along their road, and a depot on the Pennsylvania canal and railroad, at or near the borough of Hunting don; and the said company shall have the same powers, liberties, privileges, immuni ties, and be subject to the same terms and conditions as are imposed in the act regulating railroad companies incorporated by an act of Assembly, passed the nineteenth day of February, one thousand eight hundred and forty-nine, entitled "An Act to regulate rail road Companies." SECTION 2. That the President and Direc tors of said Company, be and are hereby au thorized if they deem it advisable to pay to the shareholders entitled to receive the same in the months of January and July, in each year, interest at the rate of six per centum per annum on all installments paid by them on their several shares of stocks and shall continue to pay the same till the •road and improvements ate in operation, and the said profits or earnings of the said road and mi ning within the same time, shall be credi ted to the cost of construction, and all inter est paid shall be charged to the cost of con struction ; Provided, That the interest shall not be paid on any share of stock upon which any installment which has been called for re mains unpaid: Provided further, That the stock of the said company shall not be sub ject to any tax in consequence of the pay ment of the interest hereby authorized until the net increase of the company shall realize at least six per cent. per annum upon the capital invested, and the said corporation are hereby authorized and empowered at such times as the President and the Directors may deem necessary for the purpose of raising funds or paying for iron, to , issue certificates of indebtedness or corporate bonds not ex ceeding in amount two hundred thousand dollars, none of which shall be of a less de nomination than one hundred dollars, signed by the President and attested by the Secre tary of the Company under the corporate seal of the corporation and bearing an inter est of six per cent. per annum payable on the first Monday of January and July, in each and every year, at the office of the Treasurer of the company, or at the Harrisburg, Phila delphia or Baltimore banks. SECTION 3. That the Stockholders in said company whether holding the certificates of stock in their own names, or being the par ties beneficially interested therein, shall be jointly and severally liable in their individu al capacities and estates, for all debts, con tracts and liabilities of said Company for ma terials and labor in the mining of coal <luring the time such stockholders respectively own their sail stock ; Provided, That the busi ness of this Company shall be managed by nine Directors, one of whom shall be chosen President. SECTION 4. That in any action brought to enforce any liability under the provisions of this act, the plaintiff may include as defend ants with said company any one or more of the stockholders of such company; and if judgement be given in favor of the plaintiff for his claim or any part thereof, the execu tion upon said judgment shall be first levied on the property of the company if it be found in the county where such judgment has been rendered or execution issued ; and in case such property sufficient to satisfy the , same cannot be found in said county, the de ficiency shall be collected of the property of such stockholder or stockholders. On the payment of any judgment aforesaid, or any part thereof, by one or more stockhold ere,. the stockholder or stockholders so paying the same, shall be entitled to have such judgment or so much thereof as may have been paid by him or them, assigned or marked to the use of him or them for his or their benefit, with power to enforce the same first against the company. And in case the amount so paid by him or them shall not be collected of the property of the company, then rateably against the other stockholders if any such there be liable for the claim on which such judgment was obtained. And no suit or action brought as aforesaid shall abate or fail because and person or persons shall be included as defendants in said suit who may not be liable as aforesaid, but that judgment shall notwithstanding be rendered against any other person or persons as well as the corporations who shall Appear to be li able as stockholders as aforesaid. SEcTioN 5. That the President and Direc tors of the Huntingdon and Broad Top Rail Road and Coal Company are hereby empow ered and authorized to mortgage their Rail Road with all the franchises connected with the same or belonging to the company; and also their corporate lands if they think prop er to secure the payment of their corporate bonds or other evidences of debt which the company may issue for the construction and completion of their Railroad and improve ments. CO. Six Thousand fugitive slaves arrived in Canada during the last two years. Common School Department. SYNOPSIS OF DECISIONS OF THE SUPERIN TIENDRNT, &C. Directors have no authority to pay the treasurer more than two per cent for collec ting school tax, under any circumstances. . Trustees of a school house demised for the use of a neighborhood or township for school purposes, or of a school house erected by voluntary subscription for such purposes, may sell or rent the same to the school di rectors, " for the same uses for which it was originally granted to said trustees." If for any cause there are no legal trustees, the court may appoint. . . SchoolciireCtors have power to establish schools of different grades in their respective districts, and to require the scholars who have attained different degrees of advance ment to attend such school as is best suited to the course of study of each. Every branch of English education may be taught in the common schools. The law does not authorise a teacher em ployed by the directors to collect additional compensation from the parents, guardians, &c., of scholars, nor can the directors author ise him to do so, nor do it themselves. Where it is desired by persons sending scholars to a school to pay a teacher a high er salary than the directors are willing to pay him, they my either make a direct con tribution to the teacher, or pay the same in to the school treasury of the district, and the directors can appropriate it to the purpose designed. But no person can be compelled to tnake such payment, and the school must in every respect be governed as other com mon schools are, and conform in all things to the requirements of the school law. The school law of 1899 constituted every township, borough and ward in the com monwealth existing at that time, into a sepa rate school district, except where a borough and township were connected in the assess ment of county rates and levies. If the president of a board of school direc tors engages a teacher, without authority, the contract is not binding on the district, but if the directors in any manner recognise the contract, by paying the teacher, or permit ting him to go on with the school, knowing that he has been thus employed, &c., the dis trict is bound to pay him the salary agreed upon, until he is legally discharged. No person can be imprisoned for non-pay ment of school tax. The law does not pro vide any means for enforcing the collection of school tax from persons who have no prop ertTY(a school treasurer, contrary to the ex press provisions of the law, keeps the dupli cate in his possession until the expiration of his term of office, the auditors in settling with him should charge hirn with the whole amount of tax, deducting payments and ex onerations. By such palpable disregard of the requirements of the school law, the treas urer renders himself liable to the fullest ex tent for the whole amount of the duplicate not exonerated by the directors. Having as- Burnett the duties of the office, the treasurer is responsible for the duplicate, and can only be relieved by fulfilling the requirements of the law. Directors are not personally liable for the debts of their district contracted in the usual way. As to the liability of the district or its property, there is in the mind of the supe:in tentlent much difficulty in enforcing it. Al though the question has not been settled by any of the judicial tribunals, the superintend ent holds, and has no doubt the supreme court will decide, if ever the question comes before them, that the property of a school district used for school purposes, such as school houses, desks, tables or books, can not be taken by execution or otherwise and sold to pay the debts of the district. The common school system of the state is a part of the machinery of its government. It pre pares our youth for an intelligent exercise of the right of suffrage and their sovereign duties as citizens, and public policy and interest will therefore not permit so important a branch of the public service to be empeded or thwarted to satisfy individual claims.— The law, however, is defective also in not furnishing an adequate remedy for the re covery of debts due by a school district and should be remedied. A person removing from one township to another is liable to the district from which he removes for school tax assessed upon him previous to removal, and no additional tax can be collected from him by the district into which he removes until the next annual as sessment. County commissioners are required by law to furnish the directors of each school district "with a correct copy of the last ad justed valuation of proper subjects and things made taxable in the same for state and coun ty purposes." These subjects and things are all taxable for school purposes and the directors have no power or authority to omit levying a school tax upon some of them, or to add other objects of taxation to them.— They cannot enter property on their dupli cate not returned by the county commission ers, nor strike off any property so returned. But where a palpable error has been com mitted by the assessor, they may exonerate. It is not proper to exonerate the school tax levied upon money at interest at the time the assessment was made, but which was paid previous to the levying of the school tax. The board of school directors and council of a borough may erect a building jointly, one story of which is to be owned and used by the school district and the other by the borough—provided, the schools are not in any way interfered with or prejudiced by such occupancy of the house, and it Is re commended that the directors in all oases re serve the privilege of occupying or purchas ing the whole house whenever it may be needed for school purposes. A sub-district is not "established" and cannot be recognised as such in a legal sense, until its boundaries are entered upon the minutes of the board of directors. Such en try is necessary to constitute a sub-district, or give it an existence. --- Raw The Worcester Palladium says of the banking system, "It is nothing more nor less than the chartering of one portion of the community to give their notes, not bearing interest, in exchange for the notes of the rest of the community, bearing interest." [o' Good Sense is a bank bill convenient for change --negotiable at all times, and cur rent in all places. U 7 It is a shame for a man to live like a stranger in his own country, and to be unin formed of her affairs and interests. HORRIBLE EXPLOSION.—One of. the Boilers of the Stationary Engines at Plain No. 6. on the Allegheny Portage Railroad, exploded on Monday last, and mortally wounded two men, besides slightly injuring a number of others. The shed, and several cars were considerable damaged. Since the above is in type, we learn that two of the men have died—Hollidaysburg 'Register. Kr The Muscatine (rows.) Journal tells of a couple of romantic looking females who were, with their husbands, destined for Oregon. They were dressed in the Bloom er style, or rather in the far West Bloomer style. This dress consists of a pair of pants made of cassinct, and loose sack coat, "all buttoned down before," with a standing collar, a pair of boots, gloves and a Kossti,th hat, with a fox's tail stuck in-it. 2 HOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS.-ThCSO cel ebrated Bitters prepared by Dr. C. M. Jackson, 120 Arch street, Philadelphia, are performing as tonishing cures throughout the whole country.— We can bear witness to their curative powers in the case of a friend of ours who had the Liver Complaint, and who had tried almost every other medicine, bat without effect. After taking a few bottles of these Bitters he was entirely cured.— To those who are similarly afflicted we reccom mend them to take the preparation, knowing the t they will cure the disease spoken of and Many others to which "flesh is heir to." There is at spurious article made in Philadelphia. The only place to get the genuine article is 129 Arch street. Philadelphia, of Dr. Jackson, or his agents throughout the country. MARRIED. On Thursday the 6th inst., by Rev. Mi chael Bolinger, Mr. ABRAHAM Connor to Miss HARRIET Manx, all of Huntingdon county. SCHOOL DEPARTMENT, HARRISBURG, April 19 1852. To the Commissioners of Huntingdon county: GENTLEMEN:—In pursuance of the thirty second section of an act, entitled "An Act for the regulation and continuance of a sys tem of education by Common Schools," passed the 7th day of April, 1849, I herewith transmit to you a statement of the amount to which every district in your county is enti tled, out of the annual appropriation of $200,000, for the year 1852, as follows : Districts. Amt. Districts. Amt. Barree $120,47 Brady $84,13 Cass 61,62 Clay 60,83 Cromwell 114,15 Dublin 115,73 Franklin 106,25 Henderson 78,21 Hopewell -72,28 Jackson 127,19 Morris 55,69 Penn 63,54 Shirleysburg bor. 31,60 Porter 170,28 Springfield 56,48 Shirley tp. 127,59 Tell • 86,50 Tod 101,51 Union 52,14 Walker 95,59 Warriorsmark 140,62 West 171 03 Huntingdon bor. 142,59 1 Graysport 30,02 Your obedient servant, F. W. HUGHES, Superintendent of Common Schools. Published by order of Commissioners of Huntingdon County, Attest : H. W. MILLER, Clerk. May 11, 1852. Stolen. A fifty dollar Bank Bill, dated Alexandria, Oc tober 9th, 1851, issued at Bank of the Old Do minion, Virginia, in Alexandria, Wm. Fowle, President; James McKenzie, Cashier; No. 232, letter A, countersigned by B. Butler, State Trea surer; and the letter W marked with a pen at or near the margin of the right end. The bill was stolen from a letter on the route between Alexan dria, Va., and MeVeytown, Mifflin county, Pa. The embezzler doubtless will blur the letter W with ink, or tenr it oft; and give it a home destina tion. The public are cautioned against a note bear ing such description with said letter W, or the same erased or blurred. The object of the loser is to discover the point on the route where it was abstracted. Any information touching the above, will be politely received at the office of the Hun tingdon 'Journal.' May 13, 1852. A. W. BENEDICT, STTORNEY .4T L.AW, Informs his old friends and the public that Ito has returned to his old home, and will attend to all business in his profession, entrusted to him, with fidelity and his beat ability. Office in Mnin Street. south side, the last houso below the Court house. Huntingdon, May 13, 1852.—Gm. NOTICE. All persons nre hereby notified that the under. signed, on the 10th day of May inst., bought at Constable's sale, as the property of Isaac Bow man, in Cass township, two acres and a half of wheat in the ground on the place where tho said Bowman resides, adjoining lands of Joseph Ste ver and others—and they are notified not to med dle with the same as it now belongs to the under signed. J. HENRY DELL. May 13, 1852.—1 t. Dissolution of Partnership. The co-partnership heretofore existing between James Bricker and J. B. Lenney, was this day dissolved by mutual consent. The business will be carried on at the same place by the undersign ed JAMES BItICKER. Huntingdon, May 13, 1852. American manufactured Pen Knives and Ra zors, all warranted, for sale by J. & W. Saxton. 150 Sacks G A Salt, in More, and for snlo it $1,70 per each, by J. & W. Saxton. it 5 g B ib ar r ro sa ls le ag y d . 10 by a ro xt ls on of fresh No. Cie 20 Barrels of Mackerel and Shad for sale )3 , J. & N. Saxton. liF i r Lead Pipe inch, inch and inch, for In hy J. & W. Saxton. lit'r Oil, Paint, Varnish, Turpentine, Tar, Ro 'sin, Pitch, Oakum, Ropes, &0., for sale by J. & W. Saxton. Wl' 500 yds. Rug and Listen Carpet, just re• eeived, and for sale by J. & W. Saxton. Cr 600 yds. Ingrain Carpet for sale by J. & W Saxton. 200 Bushels Rock Salk for sale, at 42 per bushel, by J. & W. Saxton. 6 Brass Mama and Fancy Clocks for sale by J. & W. Saxton.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers