THE GAZETTE. LEWISTOWN, I'A. lUTUKDAT, OCTOBER 1 ?, 1849. T ERMS: O.HL DOLI..IU PER IN ADVANCE. For six months, 75 cents. ?Tt=AU NEW subscriptions must be paid in advance. If the paper is continued, and not paid within the first month, $1.25 will tie charg ed ; if not paid in three months, $1.50; if not paid in six months, $1.75; and if not paid in nine months, $2.00. Messrs. JOHN C. BAKER ifc Co. of Philadel phia invite attention to their advertisement of fering for sale the new medicine of Cod Liver Oil, which is represented as possessing ycry valuable qualities. Mr. S. UOLLIDAT will dispose of a valuable farm in the valley next month. This property, we are assured, is worthy the attention of pur chasers who wish to secure a pleasant home. Mr. JACOB MOJILER, in Dry Valley, oilers for sale a lot of fine young Trees. J. THOMAS IS in the field with a large assort ment of Stoves, tS c. Mr. WATTSON will dispose of Lis stock, &.C., on the farm. Messrs. JAS. MILI.IKEN, Jr., & Co. have dis solved partnership. WATTSON & JACOB have a variety of Coal for sale. V. B. PALMER, E-q , our enterprising adver tising agent in Philadelphia, has commenced the publication of a monthly paper at 2o cents per annum, which will no doubt be made an interesting sheet to printers as well as others. City merchants who desire to advertise in the Gazette for CASH — trade advertisements not being desired—are requested to give Mr. P. a call at the northwest corner of Third and Ches nut streets, where they can learu terms, o days from Philadelphia. REDUCTION or FARE.— The Camden and Am boy Railroad Company have reduced their way fares generally to two and a half cents per mile, on both their roads, and determined to i rue season or commutation tickets between New- Brunswick and Philadelphia. OHIO AND PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD —The 8.-ard of Directors, at their meeting at Mans ion, on Saturday, September 29th, placed under contract twenty-seven miles of the line in ] Ohio, making, with the twenty-three miles in Pennsylvania contracted for in July, fifiy miles now under contract. The work in Ohio is to l-e paid for by the local subscription;: in the counties in which it lies. Riot and Pire in Philadelphia. On Tuesday night the rowdies of Moyamcn ting made an attack on the coiored population, which ended in the destruction of several tuiMings by fire and the loss of several lives. I The California House, at the corner of St. Mary and Sixth streets, had long been an ob- j ject of hostility to the whites. One cause of this was a report that the proprietor of it, a mulatto man, had living with him a white wo man as his wife. Soon after the rowdies with their blazing wagon reached the corner, an at tack was made upon the house. The windows j were pe.ted in with stones, and after a desper- ; at struggle the blacks inside were forced to retreat from the house by the back way. The ; active rioters were at this time comparatively i few, and half an hour at least elapsed before •hey gained an entrance into the bar-room. , The blacks during this time were not idle, and made several rallies down St. Mary and Sev enth streets with bricks for the purpose of j driving off the whites. Pistols and guns were j occasionally discharged on both sides. It was about 9 o'clock when the rioters effected an en trance into the house, and then the fixtures ot ■ the bar-room were broken up and a bonfire j made inside the house. The building was soon in flames, and at 12 o'clock at night had ex tended up St. Mary street, burning two brick dwellings and a carpenter ehop back The heal had abo >-r fire ' > the frame tavern on the lower corner kept by Mr. Mcllvain, and thence fire communicated to the Montgomery House adjoining, and a -table on St. Mary street, belonging to Mr. Bell. PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 10 1 he riots were renewed down town(South wark) this rnommg, and other buildings were tired. 1 ire arms and other missiles were freely used, and several persons very ♦*•! 1 y hurt. At halt-past ten o'clock six or eight military companies, headed by the Sheriff and Mayor, marched to the scene of action, tcok possession of the disturbed district, and planted cannon io the s'reeta io prevent the encroachment of the crowd. A number of fire companies are now ineer vice round the mime Several other buildings have been burnt. Election Returns. Had any stranger been in Lewistown lost year and seen the energy and perseverance with which the whigs labored, and again vis- j ited our town on Tuesday last, he could hardly have believed that these men had fallen into such a state ot supineness end inactivity as characterised their movements on the latter day. A few, it is true, who are ever at their posts, did all in their power, but so few in num ber were they, that no attention whatever • could be paid to dilatory or doubtful votes. The consequence was that an open held pre sented itself to our more active opponents, who improved the opportunity with all the skill and tactics for which they arc proverbial, and thus achieved a triumph they may well be pioud ot, and of which the whigs ought to be heartily ashamed. Some cause for dissatisfaction may have existed—not with the ticket, but with other matters to which wo may some day re - j fer—but notwithstanding there is no excuse for having voted the entire loeofbeo ticket, as a considerable number most undoubtedly must have done. In some of the townships our friends, under the circumstances, did well, while in others the usual apathy that invariably follows a suc cessful campaign prevailed in its full extent. Th-s is certainly a very strange method ot sup porting those whom the people Inst year ele vated to power. In the case of the National Administration, there arc enough slavery men elected to Congress from the South, when joined to their present allies of the north—ab olitionists and professing tree soilers—to com mand a majority in that body; and now, in this State, instead of electing a Legislature willing to give the measures of Gov. Johnston a fair trial, they have sent a majority of partizans j who will spare no efforts to embarrass him. If the interests of the State should suffer through this negligence—if the people in a few years should be saddled with more taxation to supply the money that will be squandered on the ca nals, those who aideJ in bringing about this result, can Jay the blame on their own shoul ders. We subjoin the returns for Canal Commis sioner. which will vary but little, if any, from the official result: Districts. FULLER. GAMBLE. Armagh 26 maj. Union 10 " Brown l6 maj. Derry 44 " Decatur 26 44 Granville 2B '• Lew is town 27 44 Menno 34 Oliver & McVeytow n B4 44 Wayne <& Newton Hamilton 47 44 36 306 36 Gamble's majority 270 The entire locofoco ticket is elected by about the same majority. [lt being nece-uary to put our paper to press at an early hour on Friday afternoon, we are unable to give tiie official returns tins week. The Judges meet at bo late an hour, that were we to await their action, we should certainly iose one if not two mails.] Jcsjata Copktt. —The whigs in this county seem to have sustained as disastrous a defeat as wc did in Mifflin, the w hole locofoco ticket be ing elected by a large majority : Canal Commissioner. Gamble, loco, 109!) Fuller, whig, 918 .hsemlhj. Dimmick, loco, 1127 Cummings, 44 1107 McLaughlin, whig, 829 Slifer, 44 869 Sheriff. M'Kinstry, loco, 9.76 Hecktnan, whig, BGG Treasurer. Kepncr, loco, 1077 Notenstine, whig, 908 Rannels, loco, is elected Commissioner over Kloss. Returns not all in. Guilliford is elected Auditor ever Gruver by nearly 300. In Huntingdon county the whig ticket is elect ed—Cornyn to the Legislature by 600. In Blair the volunteer candidates for Sheriff and Prothonotary, both haif-w&v whigs, arc elected. In Centre Mr. Curtin, who had come out as a volunteer candidate for Senate, awfully scared the Jocofocos by reducing their majority to a few hundred in that county. In Bedford the whole whig ticket i* elected. In Dauphin, for a wonder, Wrn. D. Boas has been defeated for Prothonotary, and the w hole whig ticket elected. Good for Dauphin. In Philadelphia the independent candidate for .Mayor is elected. In the city and county, the locofbcos have elected their Sheriff and Re gister; the Treasurer, Commissioner, Auditor, and Clerk of the Orphans' Court are whigs. CANAL COMMISSIONER; Gamble. Fuller. Cumberland 250 Blair _ 400 Bucks r() Chester mm) Delaware 402 Allegheny mm Westmoreland 2000 Berks 400(1 Dauphin f;i.q York 600 Schuylkill 100 Lancaster 2500 Miffln 270 Juniata 170 Lehigh 275 _ Phila.city 2781 Phila. county 20tH Montgomery 1200 Franklin 4OO Lebanon 7OO Union 4OO Northumberland 700 Carbon 200 Monroe 1200 Mercer 4(H) Northampton 000 StioquehaaiNl !KK> Wayne 050 Huntingdon _ 500 8 rom many other counties the returns arc of a scatterir g character, but enough is known to show that Gamble is elected Canal Commis sioner, and that the Senate and House are both locofoco. MILLS BCRNF.I>. —We regret to learn that the valuable mills of the venerable Bishop Chase, of Illinois, attached to Jubilee College, of which he was the founder, were destroyed by fire a few days since. The loss is eight thousand dollars, there being no insurance upon the pro perty burnt. NEW VORK, Oct. 9. We learn from Boston thai the British brig St. John, from Galway, Ireland, for Boston, struck against the Grampus Rocks on Sunday last about 9 o'clock in the morning, and sunk almost instantly, having broke in piecis. By this painful calamity, it is estimated that 99 passengers found a watery grave. The cap tain, crew and some passengers were saved by floating on pieces of the wreck. Twenty.five of the dead bodies were washed ashore and picked up on Monday morning. NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 8. Five large steamboats lying at our wharf have been destroyed by fire. It broke out on the Falcon last night a little after 1L o'clock, and a strong north wind prevailing at the time, the flames spread with great rapidity. The Illinois caught first, then the Marshal Ney. then the North America, and then the Aaron Hart. Every effort to save them proved una vailing. The Robert Ferris and the America shoved out at the commencement of the fire, and were saved, with but a trifling loss. Of those burnt there areoniy two hulls now in sight, the others having sunk. The total loss in freight is estimated at a quarter of a million of dollars, of which our insurar.ee offices sus tiined but little loss. From California. The steamer Empire City which left Cha gres on the 28th ult, arrived in New Vork on Tuesday. She brings £040,980 in gold dust, and 74 passengers The United States steamer Edith, it appears, was run ashore on Point Conception, on the 2Gth August and totally lo6t. She was bound for Santa Barbara. The barque Kirkland, Captain Philips, of and from Baltimore, arrived safely at San Fran cisco on the 21st Auguat, The barque Paoli has arrived at San Fran cisco in two hundred days from Baltimore. The steamer Empiro City brings favorable accounts from the placers in California. Gold continues plentiful as ever but it is very diffi cult to obtain. New washings have been dis covered and old ones forsaken. The health of San Francisco continues good. The durrbtea caused much suffering during the mouth of August, but it is &!owiy diminish ing. The cholera has entirely disappeared from Panama. The waters of the Sierra Nevada are nearly at their lowest. Two small steamboats were plying on the river Sacramento. SEWH FROM THE PLACER. The Peruvians and Chilians have been pret ty thoroughly routed in every section of the Middle and North Forks, and the disposition to expel them seems to be extending throughout the whole mining community. Our advices from the Middle and North Forks are verv fa vorable. One party of twenty on the North Fork, within some twenty miles from tbesnow, were averaging per day each. A gentle man direct from the Middle Fork informs us i that many of the old miners are doing better this year thnn la?L Yet many are returning, : who either have no luck or no energy; we ! think it a want of the latter commodity. We learn that a party are operating on the Middle Fork with a submarine armor, by wiiich arrangement they take out many thou sands daily of the du®t. They think, when they get their apparatus f-iirly at work, they will average §10.900 per day. svcrissruL 801.8 UKMIIWI. I)r. 11. Van Dyke, a member of the North Fork Datn and Mining Association, which 5 company has recently completed a lateral ca nal it Deal's Bar, a little above the juncture of the North Fork with the Rio Americano, has just returned from their scene of operations.— , The work of drainage had been completed on- : !y three days L fore he left, and though the company labored under many disadvantages, they had raised in this short time over $13,000. Gov. Shannon, ot Ohio, ex-minister to Mex ico, is now working in the mines of the Rio de I los Americanos. i A party of isevpn arrived at llie Dry Digging on the 14th, having left Missouri on the sth of May. Among them are Dr. J. li. Dickson, Pa., and E. tireen, of Michigan. The California says there was much sick ness at the minesat last accounts. The " sick ly season" comprises the months of July, Au gust and September. Two small steamers are plying on the Sacramento. The accounts ! from the placers are very good. The Califor nia says: live the Hrandreth's Pills, ari l rely upon it, that the pain will go, the boJ, will be restored to health as soon as na ture has received sufficient ASSIM TAM E from their effect. The quantity of impure humors discharged from the ! body by the action of the Hrandreth's Pills, is replaced in 1 the course of a few hour* with new and pure Hood, by • the digestion of a moderate meal, fly purging the body | with this medicine the w hole mass of blood becomes cn ! tirely purified and regenerated. That the blood is the life of the b ly, I presume is ■.in disputed, therefore I shall sly that it being tin SCAT or | LIFE, it must also be the seat of disease. If disease be in the Mood, we should abstract the disease only, not the blood It is the impurities winch must be removed by ; purgation to seen re our health, in allstates of the weainer, j in all situations, and in all climate*. The blood, like a j good spirit, is always trying to benefit the body by its , struggles to expel impurities Hut it ia not capable to ef fect its own purification at all times : to do this it must olten have assistance. When the blood is loaded with im parities, especially in this climate, the consequences may I be fatal, provided the blood is not purified at once, and I this is sure to be effected if Ilrandreth's Pills are used. I Purchase the genuine medicine of the following agents: ; JOHN A HTKRETT, I-twistown ; William Hardy, Mr- Veytown; Jt net y Huntingdon; Moore .$• | Sicape, Alexandria ; .1 S; .V Crettetll, Petersburg ; Hart ' mm, CE , Mar.orhill; /' .V. OK EN*. Ihrmirgtuni. ERIE BANK. —Drexel & Co., 94 Sooth Third street, Philadelphia. advertise that this bank lias resumed, and offer to purchase its notes at 1A per cent, discount. HARRIED. On the 9lh inst., by Rev. T. Tanyhill, WII.- LIAM IltivLK, of Perrysvilfe, to Mrs. NANCV JANE ROSE, near Newton Hamilton. DIED. On the 27th ult., by accidentally falling into one of the Vats of James Patterson's Tan-yard, Juniata count}', GEOROK, son of John and Su sannah CTDonald, of Turbett township, aged 2 years, 7 months and 11 days. Communicated. On Tuesday morning last, of congestive fe ver, in the 19th year of her age, Miss ELIZA BETH GRACE, daughter of John and Theodosia Kennedy. In the death of this interesting young lauy, her family have sustained an irreparable loss, i ler gentleness of disposition, her uniform kind ness of heart and sweetness of manners, en deared her to a large circle of young friends, wfio have felt in this mournful dispensation of Providence as if one whose life was interwo ven with theirs was suddenly snatched from among them. V- hile they iiave sincerely wept her transit from this earthly scene, they have felt how piercing is the thought that they have ga/.cd on her sweet countenance for the last tune, felie has thus prematurely, in the spring time of life, sunk down into the clods of the valley ; but ahe passed away as gently Hs the infant's slumber, triumphant in death. Fear fled away, for she cloved her eyes on all beneath the sun full of promise—buoyant in hope—fixed in a deep rooted faith, which feels that the soul is immortal and hvea beyond the grave. Long will her young friends gather around her last earthly resting place, and while they strew roees on her grave, may they fondly cherish her memory, and so walk through life that their fast end may be like unto hers. All will fall as surely—none more calmly. " Thou wert so like a form of light That Heav'n benignly called thee hence, Ere yet the world could breathe one blight O'er thy sweet innocence : And thou that brighter home to bb-sa Art (tagged with all thy loveliness." Obituary. Died, on the 14th September. ALLAN C. MII.I.IKEN, son ol' James Milliken, Esq , of Lewistown, l*a , aged 3t years and i months The deceased was a graduate of the College in this place, and the intelligence of his death will send a thrill of sorrow through the hearts of all who knew hiin whilst here, l'ossessing in a high degree those qualities of character which never fail to command our regard— kindness and warmth of feeling, an amiable and gener ous disposition, gentleness of manners, combined with integrity of principle and manliness of deportment, he was beloved by his associates and resjiected by all with whom he eatne in contact. His talents and acquire ments w ere of no ordinary character. Whilst he ranked high in his class as a scholar, as a writer, and especially of poetry, he had no superior. He excelled in the delin eation of true feeling and emotion—in the natural and touching expression of genuine sentiment. Ills intimate Acquaintances will long remember the sweetly melan choly strains in which he mourned the loss of some friend who had been snatched away, as he himself has now been, by an early death. Although be was peculiarly modest and unobtrusive, his merit was soon appreciated, and he was selected by his Society as their favorite re presentative in the literary contest oflbe College, and in the event proved himself fully w orlhy the high estima tion In which he was held A: the graduation of bis class, he delivered, by the honorary appointment of the Faculty, a poem, which bore the marks of true genius, and confirmed the bright hopes in regard to his future course which his previous performances had excited. After leaving College he returned to hut home in the lalley of the Juniata, and commenced the studies of the legal profession, lie hud nearly completed the course requisite for admission to the bar, when declining health compelled him to relinquish his pursuits. Hoping that change of scene and the excitement of a journey would reT >re Ins failing strength, lie accompanied a friend to th: West Wherever he went the noble qualities of his disposition gained for him the love of those in whose so ciety he was cast The transient intercourse of a travel ler among s'rangers w is so flu lent to secure for him their affectionate regard, and tnanv whose acquaintance with him was thus ca-ual, will receive with heartfelt sorrow the melancholy tidings uf Ins death Many of them will doubtless < all to mind with peculiar interest the language w hi. h lu- so kindly and earnestly addressed to them, con ceriinig their soul's salvation His modest and gentle manner—the sweet and noji-ical tones of his voice—the in ltd expression of bis countenance, constrained gven the most indifferent to religion to listen with attention and rcqu.-ct, while he talked to them on that subject, on . which his own feelings had become so deeply interested, i After an absence of everi months lie returned to his 1 home, apparently in restored health, but it was soon • plainly manifest that he had returned hotue hut to die. Although he had been travelling through a section of ; country where ilie cholera was raging, and had seen one and another stricken down at Ins side by that fttal epi demic, it pleased the Lord to spare his life throughout his journey and bring bini back to be soothed and cheered in his dung hours by the presence and affectionate atten- ; turns of dt-votedly attached parents and friends. Me had been with Ins relatives hut a lew days, when his sickness laid him on the bed of death Here it was that tiie gen uineness and strength of his faith in Christ were most strikingly displayed. No murmur nor complaint es aje i ed Ills lip . in all his suffering, but He patiently submitted to his Heavenly Father's will He endeavored to coin f>art his Humming friends by reminding them that it was the l.ord who gave and the Lord who taiceth away—that he could not but do right and that ever blessed should he Ins name During his whole sickness his mind remained clear and unclouded, anil h- enjoyed much communion with God, in fervent and eloquent prayer When the last moments of his life had come, peaceful and calm, without a struggle and apparently without pain, he breathed the dying praver of Stephen, "l.ord, receive my ! spirit," and like Rlcphen "fell asleep in Jesus." •' May we die the death of the riglueous, and may our last end be like his.'' His body lies in the Cemetery at I.ewistown, in a spot pointed out by himself to a friend, previous to liis sick- | ness. It is in tiie midst ol'a clump of trees, near the wa- , ler's brink He selected this retired place, ns he said, that when his friends visited Ins grave,they might heat the flowing stream murmuring forth a ceaseless requiem Thou art gone, but shall not be forgotten until the ma ny hearts that now mourn thine end are cold and lifeless with thee iri the grave. He who now offers this feeble tribute to thy memory, will ever "remember sweetly" j tin- 1 ist liii< sof poetry you ever penned— " That upon earth there were true hearts like thine. And in the heavens, there is a gracious God." Pinoiton ll'hi/r Tribute of Kc'kpcct. F.t 'rart frvr, the -WitimcM of ' A• L'ilLiv]! kir Society of tht College of .Vt ir ./ troty. The Cliosophie Society of the College of New Jersey, being informed of the death of Mr A:.i i\ C. MIIUKKK, son of J lines Milliken, Lsq., of Leivistovvn, Ps ,11 lei- ; low-member, who died on iho I2tli September, the fol lowing resolutions were unanimously idopted : HIM .' 11, That it is with feelings of sincere regret we have heard of the death of our late friend and brother, Allan ( Milliken, a valued member of this Society, and a graduate of Princeton College, and that we will con tinue to cherish a lively r< collection of his kind and ami able disposition, united to a gentlemanly and upright de portment. Jiesolced, That m his dealt! this Society has lost a tried and devoted f\ lend- one whose tale ills, kindness of heart, . and gentleness of manners would have raised him to em inence in any profession. htsaloeil, I'liat while we deeply sympathize with the parents and relatives of our departed brother in their be reavement, occasioned by this dispensation of Divine Providence, we also rejoice with them in the glorious Consolation of knowing tfiat our beloved friend died in ; the full assurance of enjoying a blessed immortality. Kr.iulrod, That these Resolutions be published in Ihe i Presbyterian, The I.ewistowo Gazette, and The Prince. lon Whig, and that a copy of the in be sent to the family of the deceased Kttwlt td , That as an additional n ark of our respect and attrition for the memory of our deceased friend and brother, we will wear the usual badge of mourning for thirty days I LID HALI , SEPTEMBER 21st, IF 19 OUTRAGES IN ARKANSAS.—A feud LIAS for i some time existed between several families in Marion co., which resulted, a few days since, in the murder, by an armed party, of an old , j man named King and his two sons. A warrant j was issued tor the arrest of the murderers, but ' their friends mustered iri such force that the ' i whole posse of the county was not sufficiently strong to take thorn. Information of these | facts was communicated to Gov. Roane, who has authorised Gen. A. M. Woods, of Marion county, to call out the militia, it the arrest of these murderers cannot be effected by the civil authorities. — Little Rock Democrat. THE MARKETS. Lewistown, Oct. 12, 1849. Paid by Dealers. Retail. Flour - - £4 25 £5 UO Wheat, white - 97 1 19 red - 92 1 03 Rye - - 50 00 Oats - - 31 37 Corn, - - 50 00 i Cloverseed old, 3 50 Do new, 4 00 Flaxseed - - 1 00 1 25 Timothyseed 2 00 2 50 Butter, good - - 12£ 12£ Eggs S 8 l.ard 0 8 Tallow - 8 10 Potatoes - - 50 62\ ! Beef, - - 4 00 Bacon, per lb. 77 ; Wool, per lb. 28 Feathers - - 45 45 The Lewistown Mills are paying 92 to i 97 rents for good wheat, 50 cents for Rye, 50 cents for Corn, and 31 cents for Gats. PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 11, 18-19. Flour is steady, but not active. Small sales at $5.12£ a 5.18; Corn Meal Flour Wheat is steady—sales of red at 103al(J8 cents; white do. 112a115 cents. Corn is steady —sales of white at 02and yellow : 64a65 cents; Oats 30a32 cents; Rye 00 cents. ! There is a moderate fair demand for provi sions—prices continue steady. Mess Pork and kegs. Groceries firm —sales of Rio CofJee at 8i cents. Sugars and Molasses steady. Rice unchanged. BALTIMORE, Oct. 11, 1849. FLOOR. —The market for Howard Street j Flour is still inanimate. Holders are firm at • $5.125. GRAIN. —The ieceipts of Wheat are quite moderate. Sales were made to-dav at i 100a 105 eta. for good to prime reds, and 108a 115 cts. for white. The receipts of Corn are ; light. Sales of white at 63 cts. and of yellow at 04 cts. We quote Oats at 30a31 ceuts. MONET MATTERS, TRADE, kc. BANKING CAPlTAL —According to the last : .Merchant's Magazine the banking capital of New Vork city is 24 millions, of Boston 19 millions, of New Orleans 171 millions, of Phil adelphia 10 millions, of Charleston 9 millions, of Providence 8 millions, of Baltimore 7 mil i lions, of Nashville 6 millions, of Hartford 4 millions, of Louisville 3 millions. Pittsburgh, ° Augusta, Ga., Albany and Richmond, each have rising 2 millions of bank capital, and Sa vannah, Salem, New Haven, Cincinnati, Lex ington, Ky., Mobile, Troy, N. V., Newark, New Bedford, Ctica, Petersburg, Va., Roches ter, Wilmington. Washington, ar.d Portland, have each more than 1 million. WHISKEY. —The Whiskey trade of Cincinnati is enormous. During the commercial year of i •17-1-1, there were 17U,43ti bbls Whiskey import ed into that city, and 165,419 bbls exported. ; During the year lß4a-49, the imports were 186,5U9 —exports 136,941 bbls. W 0 0 D W A.N T E D . \fi-w loads of wood arc wanted immediately at tbis office, Those of our subscribers who intend paying their subscription in wood will accommodate us by delivering it soon. C B A L. Tons Limeburners' Coal, and 40 j Tons Sunbury Coal, broken and screened for Stoves, for sale bv 0ct.13-3t. VVATTSOX & JACOB. j DISSOLUTION. ! Co-partnership heretofore existing iin -1 iier the name and style of JAMES .MILLI- JvK.V, Jr., & CO. is this day dissolved by mu tual consent. JAMES MILLIKEX, Jr., ROBERT MILLIKEX. Lewistown, October 10, 1949. HAYING disposed of our stock of goods, we are desirous of closing up our business; therefore all persons having accounts with us are notified that they must be settled on or be fore the lsf JVorrmber next, at which time I pur pose leaving this place. Accounts then unset tled will he left iu the bands of proper officers for collection. JAS. MiI.LIKEN, Jr. October 13, 1849—4t. Stock and Farming Utensils at PUBLIC VENDUE. rpHE subscriber, having sold his farm above L Lewistown, will offer the stock and farm ing utensils on the same at public sale, on Thursday, Nov. M, 1849 1 consisting of 3 valuable Horses, (one of them a fine brood mare,) a spring Colt, 23 head of Sheep, a few Y'oung Cattle, 1 four horse Wa gon, nearly new, 1 two horse do., 1 Threshing Machine, {'loughs. Harrows, Cultivators, liar-j nes>, &.c., and about 15 Tons of good Hay. Sale to commence at 10 o'clock, A. M., w hen the terms of sale will be made known. L. T. WATTSON. Lewistown, Oct. 13, I^49—id. To the Heirs and feyal representatives of John tiraybil! , late of Drumore township, Lan caster county, deceased. \T an Orphans' Court, hold at Lancaster in . nnd for the county of Lancaster on the 19th day of September, 1949, oil motion of Urn. \V hiteside, Esq., the Court grant a Rule on the heirs and legal representatives of John ' tiraybil), late of Druinote twp , Ijincaster co., dec d, to he and appear a' an Orphans* Court to be held at Lancaster on the 3d Monday of November next, at 10 o'clock, A. M„ to accept or refuse to accept the Real Estate of the said deceased at the appraisement made thereof, or show cause why the same should not be sold according to la-v. Bv the Court, BEN JAMI N K AUFFM AN. Clerk O. C., per James Dtsart. October 13, 1949—tc, PURE FRESH COO LIVER on. miHS new ami valuable medicine, now > , J- lumin al jiri f**ion with tucli a*to; ~i, ... " * | ttie cure of gtffcac >io Pulmonary Consumption. Scrofula. ('j lr nit ■ Rheumatism, (lout, Central 1)1 bility, Complaints of the Rid. neys, djv., dj-c., is prepared from tlie liver of Hie tjmj F", s h f..r | use, expressly for our sales. (F.rtrcc' from the London Medical Journal i J B Williams, M. 1> ,K. Ks, 1'r0f,..,,, „ : cine in University College, London, Coinuim... p 1 riiu to the Hospital for rotwuitiptinn,&r., Mvs "! j !'•" I prescrilied tue Oil in aliove four hundred ' Jv I lons disease of the Luna*, in different state,, w in'n'T' j been under my care the last two years ai.',! , i' r '■' • llie large number of rases, 'JUd out of'Z3l, jt s u , ( . y . 1 lowed by marked and unequivocal improvement v*'.' in degree in different cases, from a tempi.rarv . **! of Hie progress of the disease and Unitijst'nu, ' tressine symptoms, up to a more or lestconiplem'o '.. ation to apparent health. " The effect of the Cod Liver Oil i n tnoat of C 3( was very remarkable. Even in a few days tiie ' was militated, the expectoration diminished in rp,. ,'' and opacity, the night sweat* Mined, th slower, and of better volume, aridthe appetite strength were gradually improved. "In conclusion, 1 repeat that the pure fresh oil f ro! ,, the Liver of the Cod is more beneficial in the treati' of Pulmonary Consumption than any agent, medicinal dietetic or regimenal, that has yet ben employed " As ire have made arrange men! * to procure the Cod lit'r Oil, fresh from head quarter*,it can now be had chemical', pure by the single bottle, or m boxes of one dozen tati ' Its wonderful efficacy lias induced nuaieroui spun,.,, i imitation*. As it* success depends entirely on it, p,, r;[ ' ; too much care cannot ba used in procurir.c it ('mum,. '' F.'cery bottle having unit our written tignatu re i* i depended upon a* genuine. Pamphlets containing an analysis of the Oil, with tih tices of it from Medical Journals, will be sent tu who address us free of postage. JOHN C. BAKER & CO., Wholesale Druggist* and Chrmifi. 1 OO \ortb Third .Street, Phiiadelptin October 13, IfKi—dm. i ~ Fiiui t treesT A LARGE assortment of choice and thrifty 1V grafted Apple Trees of a large size are offered tor sale at the I>ry Val,e mvrsert, Dcrry lownshi P> Mifflin A V eounty, at 10 cents per AL tree ■ B y tf 'e hundred at 9 cents per tree. Persons wishing to purchase are invited to call and judge" for themselves. JACOB MOHLER. October 13,1 *49—st* Valuable Real CMate at PUBLIC SALE, On 14 ED A ESDA Y, the 14f/i of November, 1849, i I¥7 ILL be sold at Pubßc Sale, on the pre- T T misess, in Kishacoquillas Valley, Mifflin county, a valuable farm, containing 160 Acres, more or less, of first-rate limestone land. The improvements area frame DWEL- AmA —i LING HOUSE, frame fPSr5f BARN, dzc. There is a JJjjjSpYoung ORCHARD o;ABmS JsMEgS choice fruit on the farm, and sever al limestone springs near the house. There is twenty acres of good Timber, and the bal ! ance cleared and iu a high state of cultivation. There is also a MERCHANT MILL, with thiee run of Burrs and one pair of Chop ping Stones in the mill, Saw Mill and Plaster Hill, with a good FRAME HOUSE for the mil'er. There is likewise a good appearance of Iron j Ore of the best quality, known as the "Green wood Ore.'* The property lies near Green wood, on the west branch of the Kishacoqui i las creek, a never failing stream of water. It lies within 10 miles of the Great Central Rail road, which has just opened to Philadelphia for travel and transportation. .4fso, at the same time and place, a tract o: 3 ACRES, known as the Reed Ore Bank, on which is erected a Frame House and Stable. The property will be shown by Mr. MCCLEL LAN, living near it. oC7"*Sale to commence at 12 o'clock, M., on said day, when terms will be made known bf SAMUEL HOLLIDAY. Oct. 13, 1949—td. SHERIFF'S MI/IX B\ virtue of ?undry writs of Venditioni Exponas, Levari Facias, and Fur a Fa cias, issued out of the Court of Commou Pleas of Mifflin county, and to me directed, will be exposed to sale by public out-cry, at the Court House in the borough of Lewistown, at 2 o'- clock, P. M., on SATURDAY, A* ovein he r 3d, IS4 0, the following described property, to wit:— A lot of ground fronting sixty feet on Mar ket street in the borough of Lewistown, Mu ll in county. Pa., bounded on the east bv a lot of George W. l'atton, on the south by Market street, on the west by a lot of J. & J. Million, on the north by a sixteen feet alley, with a large two story brick dwelling house, a two story brick shop, a large frame stable,an' other improvements thereon erec.ed. Seiz taken in execution, and to be sold as the pre periv of Sepbartoua 9. CummingK. Also , A lot of ground situate on Mai" e street extended, in the borough ofLewistoivr. Mifflin county. Pa., being thirty feet in front on said street, adjoining a lot of J. C. W i.s'n. with a walled cellar thereon erected, saic id being No. eighteen. Seized, laken in execu tion, and to be sold a& the property of Artiiu' B. Long. Also, A lit of ground in Wayne townsh'?- containing five acres.be the same more or with a two story house and stable thereon erected, bounded on the south bv James Suiil 1 )- on the north and west by Jefterson Decker,oo the east by John Thompson. Seized, takt'-i in execution, and to be sold as the property! George K. Little. Also, A lot of ground situate in the* burottg 1 ' of MeVcytown, Mi ill in county, with a ft*®® dwelling house, a frame stable, and other m 1 * provements thereon, bounded bv lots of J° ! | Ross on the cast and north. George Svvoyen" the west, and frontingon Lombard street Seized, taken in execution, and to be sob t: * the property of Isaac Hemes. D. McKEAN CONTNER. Sherd- SHERIFF'S OFFICE, { Lewistown, Oct. 13, 1849. td. , N. B.—.Purchasers at the above Sberid are hereby notified that the amount ol t.c 1 will fx? required to oe ]>aid immediately on ■ _ property being knocked down, or it will la-' ,o ' with resold to the highest bidder. . 1). McK. C..Sb y I A DIES' Slippers, at low or ices, by J ap -JV. W. ULUI: