I t tiavcs from ti.- r mPsfers-m every instance tn- an 1 :.ae heard. the marl has averted ti.P riviifs of the owner, and the jury hut promptly returned an adequate verdict on hie h 'liaif. , ~ W ell sir, there is then some remedy whilst vo.i are a part o( the Union for the recovery of your saves, and some indemnification for their 1 h,'. What would vou have if the Union was ►■-vered 1 Why, limn, the several parts would be independent of each other—foreign coun " following a dissolution of fhe Union ! Sir, we may search the pages of history, and none s" ferocious, so b'oudy, so implacable, so extermi nating—not even the wars of (irecc, including those of the commoners of England and the revolutions of France —none, none of t.'iern all would rage with such violence, or be character ised with such bloodshed and enormities as woi Id the wur which must succeed, it that event ever happens, the dissolution of the Union. And what would tie its termination ? Standing ar mies and invi'-s, to an extent stretching the revenues of each portion of the dissevered members, would take place. An extermina ting war would follow—not, sir, a war of two or three years duration, but a war ol intermi nable duration—and exterminating wars would ensue, until, iifterthe struggles and exhaustion of both pame, some Philip or Alexander, some UJKVI it or Napoleon, would arise and cut the (mrdian knot, und solve the problem of the ca pacity of man for self-government, and crush the liberties of both the severed portions of this common empire. Can you doubt it ? Look at a 1 ! history—consult her pages, an c.wiit or isudero —fooir at human aature; look at the character of the oonirst in which you would lie engaged in the supposition of war following upon the dissolution of the union, such rs i have suggested ; and 1 ask you it it is possible for vott to doubt t hat the final dispo sition of the whole would be somedesjxit tread , ing down the liberties of the people—the final result would be the extinction of this last and glorious light which is leading all mankind, who ate gazing upon it, in the hope and anx ! ious expectation that the liberty which prevnils here will 6ooner or later be diffused throughout 1 the whole of the civilized world. Sir, can you j lightly contemplate these consequences ? Can ' you yield yourself to the tyranny of passion, amidst dangers which I have depicted in colors far too tame, of what the result would he if ; that direful event to which 1 have referred ' should ever occur 1 Sir, I implore gentlemen, 1 adjure them, ! whether from the South or the North, by all that they hold dear in this world—by all their love ul libeity—by all their veneration for their ! ancestors —by all their regard for posterity — by all their gratitude to Him who has bestowed on them such unnumbered and countless bless ings—by all the duties which they owe to mankind—and by all the duties which thej ' owe to themselves, to pause, solemnly to pause | at the edge of the precipice, before the fearful and dangerous leap is taken into the yawning I abyss below, from which none who ever take iteliaii return in safety. Finally. Mr. President, and in conclusion, I implore, as the best blessing which Heaven can i bestow upon me upon earth, that if the direful and fad event of the dissolution of this Union is to happen, that 1 shall not survive to behold the sad and heart rending spectacle. TIIE GAZETTE. LEWISTOWN, PA. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1830. TERMS: o.\i: DOLLAR I* LI It A\ \ I 71, IX ADVANCE. For six months, 75 cents. NEW subscriptions must be paid in advance. If the paper is continued, and not paid within the first month, $1.25 w ill be charg ed ; if not paid in three months, $1.50; if not paid in six months, $1.75; and if not paid in I nine months, $2.00. 11?" The Authors of two eommunica- I tions signed 4i Order" and '* Clem," have neglected to give us their names. nr The proceedings of Congress are void of interest, slavery and efforts to em- : barrass (Jen. Taylor's administration being of greater moment to the locofocos and abolitionists than the welfare of the conn try. In our legislature apportionment bills have been reported—the iocofoco monster being all on one side. It gives Mifllin a member of the House, and unites it with Union and Huntingdon as a senatorial dis trict. Another bill gives Mifflin a member ol the House, and makes Perry. Juniata. Mifflin, and Centre a senatorial district. 'l'he discussion on die amendment to the Constitution making Judges elective is con tinued in the House. Mr. Cibbonev has presented petitions in favor of a I'oor House in this county, and Mr. Cunning ham one for the incorporation of a certain turnpike company (probably Milheim)and two for laying out a state road in Mifflin, Union and Juniata. Sudden Death.—J. li. Appeehaegh, Esq., for a number of vears a much re spected citizen of this place, died very suddenly on Tuesday last at the residence of his son-in-law ( \. McKee) in .Cram die township. He had been in usual health, and while engaged out of doors was seen to fall, and a few minutes thereafter breath ed his last. He hied profusely, and is supposed to have died from the rupture of a blood vessel connected with some \ itul part. New Turnpike.— There is a project afoot in Centre county to construct a turn pike from Milheim to Iteedsville. My this road the distance frotn Milheim to Lewis town would he about 18 miles, and if con structed would add materially to our trade. Business men here ought to aid the matter in consideration by a liberal subscription. Bedford County.— The locofocos of Bedford county seem to be of that ram pan! class who can make a good deal more noise in time of peace than in war. A meeting was lately held " in the majesty of their strength.'" as one of the organs de scribed it, and resolutions unanimously adopted which clearly entitles them to the banner of \ ulgarity, if nothing else. Much a tissue of low \ituperation and shameful abuse of public men, is fortunately seldom met with, and the only wonder is that any man laying claim to respectability should sutler his name to be coupled with such billingsgate. *y" A locomotive upset an omnibus at j MeVeytown on Saturday last, in which several gentlemen had taken seats. The omnibus was somewhat injured, the pas sengers but slightly. The vehicle was standing on the track at the time, a spot J which no carriage of any kind, horse and rider, or person ought ever to occupy, whether a locomotive is in sight or not. Keep off" the track, and you will always be safer than 011 it. Dr. Charles Loib, of this State, has ■ been appointed Special Mail Agent. Profession and PrarfDe. ' 'l'Jie Democrat, in an article on the pros perity of the country, says: j " The Democracy hold the noble sentiment of | the patriot Jackson, that 1 it i 9 the duty of the I government to dispense its favors, as the dews of Heaven, alike upon the poor and the rich.'" | Although there is more of Shakespeare than Jackson in the above sentiment, we'll let it pass with the remark that such is the J profession. \\ hat the practice is, we will ! let Air. MEEK, a locofoeo member of the Legislature from Centre county, answer. In his speech on granting further "special ; privileges" to the Reading Railroad—priv ileges which no poor or unfortunate man could obtain—he said : 1 hare watched the progress of this bill, now | before us, with mingled feelings of grief and i j dignation ; nor do 1 now rise to address lite I house in opposition to its progress, with any i hope of arresting it. No, sir, 1 have seen too much legislation to hope for any such result. I have learned, by painful experience, that there is no resisting a measure of this kind when backed by corporation power. But 1 must ex | press my total dissent to its passage, and repre | senting as I do a plain, unsophisticated demo ; eralie constituency, 1 dare not sutler the passage , of a bill so MONSTROUS IN rrs PROVISIONS, with ! out speaking out my disapprobation in the most | unmistakeahle language. 1 cannot disguise the fact, that my own heart j heats more faintly—my high expectations of | successful legislation now drag in the dust—ali my hopes quail, and I am wounded for the cause | of my best devotions—the triumph of sound i democratic principles. How is it, sir, that we promise so much at home, and net do so little u-hen here, (hat is REALLY DEMOCRATIC? Are j we not continually deriding our whig opponents with the meanest subserviency to incorporation privilege—with the most abject devotion to wealth and its usurped prerogatives—with being i the party who are always ready to confer privi lege upon the few, while we claim to be the de votees of principles known only by this motto, j "equal and exact justice to ali men—exclusive privileges to none?" I should not liaye said a word on the subject, l hut that I wish to hear my testimony to the soundness of our people at home and their hon j est adherence to principle. They send us here | with right views, but alas. Iff.' do not stay right, and our DECEIVED and BETR.IYED constitu ! ents are still left to wonder why it is so—why they elect a majority of the members of this House charged with the cause of their rights and principles, and yet, whig [Mr. Meek ought to have said I.ocofoco ] principles always prevail. But look at this bill before us. Two years ago this company was here a-king us to incor porate eight or ten millions of debt as preferred stock. Wc refuse it that privilege. It now comes, and asks us to suspend for 20 whole years the operation of our collection laws, while it acknowledges over sixteen millions of liabili ty ! How comes all this to pass? Two years since it was involved, we are told, in a debt of ten or eleven millions, it has increased to be tween sixteen and seventeen millions. The offi cers of this company have grown rich, built palaces, and ride as nabobs through the land ; they have paid no debts—no sir; they have in creased them vastly. Hir, did you ever know, j or read of any people in their corporate capa city, paying a debt of this size? Never, sir, hut in the case of our own noble Union. Whether she will be able to pay again remains to be seen. With this corporation, 1 hold, it is impossible that ever it should pay its debts. The road is one hundred miles long, and cost $16,325,032: I each mile, therefore, cost $103,200, and must at least yield an annual income of $lO,OOO for in terest, beside the cost of repairs, management, j ckc. This it cannot do ; no sane man will be lieve that it can possibly subsist any longer than it can borrow money. Sir, 1 dare any man in this commonwealth, in i his private capacity, to come and ask us thus to step in between him and his creditors ! No, sir. no; such an application would be scouteO from this hall! Well do I remember the man with the red shirt, who, with many other hard working men, had settled upon a tract of what they considered vacant land ; after years of toil, sacrifice, and patient endurance of privation, and when they thought themselves in possession of homes for their declining years, a British sub ject sued upon them a writ of ejectment. They preferred their cause to this body, and asked us to interpose the shield of our protection. Were they heard? no sir: the constitution was in our way. Poor fellows! we could do nothing for them ! they were not a corporation. " Alas ! poor Yorick!" Sir, we hear, with the deepest emotion, of the threatened rupture of our hoiy Union : and dis may portrayed upon every face when the hare possibility of such a catastrophe is spoken of— one lays his finger upon his mouth, and dumb with amazement, he hears the fearful and por tentous word " DISUNION"" pronounced as the death knell of his country's glory. His country —aye, the country of destiny—the glory of all lands —the beacon light of the benighted, down trodden, oppressed, and injured of all the na tion®—the country to which we invite the hungry, homeless, and persecuted of every clune to come and find an asylum in the " Land of the free and the home of the brave." And yet, sir, ice, by our profligate legislation, are likely soon to make it hut an empty name—a shadow—a skeleton j only will he left to the people, if we continue thus to rob them, for the benefit of soulless corpo rations. Sir, we shall hear of this bill again, when we come to elect a Governor or President. The whigs will hurl it upon us as the party in the j majority, and having the power to prevent such legislation. We profess to hold the best—the only good principles upon which to administer a republican government, and urge men to sustain us by arguments addressed to their hopes and fears, their rights and liberties, A.VD YET I)IS- i A PROW ALL A.VI) BETRAY Oill PAR TY. la the name, sir, of the democratic parly and its principles—of my constituents ot (,'cnln county, and of the constitution which I have ; sworn to sustain, I protest against the passage of this hill. . II '* an honest confession is good for the soul,*' Mr. Meek lias made a clean breast of it, and portrayed the hypocritical pro fessions of his party as well as Hogarth himself could have done it, were he still living. As predicted, this " monstrous" hill was passed hy what is called a demo cratic legislature, and as the governor could not doubt the " democracy" of a bill em- j anating from old Berks and advocated by ! her representatives, lie of course will in terpose no veto. TRAITORS. —From a remark in the 11. S. Senate of Mr. Butler, of South Caro lina, it appears that Foote of Mississippi and Hunter of \ irginia, both locofocos, first suggested the project of a Southern Disunion Convention. These fellows, as well as their abettors, whether whigs or locofocos, ought to form a lodge, with proper banners and regalia, and call it after their illustrious predecessor, Benedict Ar nold. LIST OF TAXABLE IMIABII AMS OF TIIE (OHFLO WEALTH. Counties* IS3>. 1812. 1819. 1. Adams, 5,1G7 5,212 5,619 2. Allegheny, 13,684 18,610 28,547 3. Armstrong, 4,553 4,398 6,086 4. Beaver, 5,314 6,670 5,743 5. Bedford, 4,712 6,763 6,286 6. Berks, 11,743 13,701 16,262 7. Blair, (erected Feb. 26, 1843,) 4,457 8. Bradford, 4,721 7,197 8,569 9. Bucks, 10,450 12,027 13.151 10. Butler, 4,322 5,335 7,490 11. Cambria, 1,912 2,433 3,642 12. Carbon, (erected Feb. 15, 1843,) 3,742 13. Centre, 4,705 4,44 4.946 14. Chester, 11,682 13,433 14,769 15. Clarion, not erected 3,311 5,087 16. Clearfield 1,395 2.236 2,639 17. Clinton, not erected 2,019 2,316 18. Columbia, 4,818 5,641 6,721 19. Crawford, 5,164 7,516 8,130 20. Cumberland, 6.047 6,477 7,554 21. Dauphin 5,508 6,652 7,683 22. Delaware, 3,900 4,462 5.267 23. Elk, (erected April 18, 1843.) 877 j 24. Erie, 6,082 7,285 8,434 ' 25. Fayette, 6,094 7,008 7,611 j 26. Franklin, 7,060 7,766 8,386 27. Greene, 3,347 4,277 4,447 28. Huntingdon, 6,102 7,430 5,309 29. Indiana, 3,193 4,538 5,530 30. Jefferson, 902 1,769 2,622 31. Juniata, 2,065 2,459 3,112 32. Lancaster, *16,583 18,967 22,844 33. Lawrence, (erected March 20, 1849) 4,425 ; 34. Lebanon, 4,410 4,901 5,708 | 35. Lehigh, 5,355 6,175 7,286 36. Luzerne, 6,0b3 7,651 10,898 i 37. Lycoming, 4,396 5,101 5,418 ' 38. M'Kean, no return 1,089 1,213 i 39. Mercer, 5,196 7,356 6,923 j 40. Mifflin, 2,411 3,122 3,17*2 [4l. Monroe, not erected 2,374 2,785 42. Montgomery, 9,773 11,697 13,516 | 43. Northampton, 9,211 9,604 8,908 I 41. Northumberland, 3,933 4,472 4,655 [ 45. I'erry, 2,942 3,989 -1.455 Philadelphia city, 16,449 17,559 22,730 ' I Philadelphia co., 31.398 33,562 54.554 i 47. Pike, 937 889 11,200 43. Potter, 556 681 1,346 49. Schuylkill, 4.700 8,086 12,867 50. Somerset, 3,639 4,428 4,924 51. Susquehanna, 3,592 4.940 6,116 52. Sullivan, erected March 15, 1847.) 769 53. Tioga, 2,585 4,091 5,237 54. Union, 4,353 5,053 5,350 55. Venango, 3,014 3,157 4,027 56. Warren, 1,690 2,593 3,149 57. Washington, 8,470 9,079 10,029 58. Wayne, 2,120 3,078 4.375 59. Westmoreland, 8,223 10,353 11.618 60. Wyoming, not erected 1,540 2,14*2 61. York, 9,559 10,693 13,060 Total, 317,300 387,417 466,733 'Columbia district not received, j Estimated. The return of taxables for this countv, compiled front the returns made by the Assessors, is as follows : Districts. Tuxahlts. I)ea/&( Dumb. Blind. Lewistown, 527 2 Oliver township, 330 2 Union " 296 Armagh '• 333 3 Brown " 212 1 Wayne " 254 Dcrry " 277 1 Menno " 25C Granville " 244 Decatur " 206 2 M'Veytown, 156 Newton Hamilton, 68 - Total, 3,179 5 6 There are doubts in the minds of manv persons as to the correctness of this return. After making all due allowances for tran sient laborers on the railroad, (which swilled the vote of 1848 to 3155, only '29 less than the number of taxables now re ported.) for emigration, Arc., it is still diffi cult to conceive that this county has in creased but 57 m taxables in seven years, while the couuties around us can count their increase by hundreds and thousands. In Centre, during that time, the increase is 500; in Juniata 700 ; Union 300; Hunt ingdon and Blair about 1500; Clearfield 400; I'erry 500! If correct, it exhibits the fact that there must he something " rotten in Denmark," or our noble hills and fertile valleys, abounding in inexhaust ible mineral wealth, would not remain stationary while all our sister counties are on their march with rapid strides to power and wealth. APPOINTMENTS. —The most sensible thing the Canal Commissioners have done this winter is the appointment of a number of editors to such offices as State Agent, Cargo Inspector, Ac., but it would have been more sensible had thev been named for Superintendents or Supervisors. Among them we are pleased to notice that our friend CUNNINGHAM continues his duties on the Columbia Railroad, and that TKAUGH, of the llollidaysburg Standard, has been promoted (?) to count the regiments of pretty girls, nice young men, and " dirty faces who may pass over the Portage. r3T An adjourned Court lias been HI session this week, at which some intricate law cases were ably argued. During one of these trials, JAMES T. HALE, Esq., of Bellefontc, delivered an argumentative speech which we have heard spoken of as one ol the best delivered at this bar for a number of vears. ? v" It is said that nearly one-half of the members of the present ('ongress were once journeymen mechanics. V\ e doubt this—mechanics arc not the men who would make the House of Representatives a lfniisr of J?t probates. The Journal, published at New town, Bucks county, will be offered at public sale on the '23 d inst. It is consid ered an eligible situation for a practical printer. A new I'ostoflice has been established at Ennisville, Jackson township, in Hunt- i ingdon county, and Alexander Stewart ap pointed Postmaster. From California. The steamers Empire Citv and Ohio j have both arrived from Chagres, the for- I mer with more than a million, and the j latter with half a million of California gold dust, besides a large amount in the ; trunks of passengers. The account of the great tire, as at first ' published, was much exaggerated, but the i property destroyed was immense, being estimated at a million and a halt. A correspondent of the He Aid, writing : from California gives the following account of the PROGRESS OF SAX ITANCISCO. Since the commencement of the present year 1,000 houses have been erected in j San Francisco, and the levee at New Or- I leans, or the wharves of the East River, do not display such an amount of business ! as the banks of the San Francisco bay ex | hibit. Among the oilier improvements, ! several wharves have been built; the most ' extensive, the Central, built by a joint stock company, already extended 290 feet into the bay, thus enabling vessels to lie alongside and discharge which u ill, when completed, be 2100 feet in length. Seven churches have been erected—2 Episco palian. 2 Presbyterian, 1 Baptist, 1 Meth odist, and 1 Catholic ; so that we now en joy 44 the stated preaching of the Gospel" iu our churches, beside having a tearing sermon on the plaza every Sunday after* ! noon, from a brass-lunged Methodist itin ■ erant. A large theatre is now in progress of erection, under the auspices of Col. 11. T. Myers ; and saw-dust and dimity fly right and left in a capacious and well managed circus. THF. CALIFORNIA ADVENTURERS. The town is crowded with people. Every day some new vessel pours its hundreds on our shores, many of them with fine prospects awaiting them, and many destined to be most bitterly disap pointed. Many a poor devil landing here with bright visions of " big business" be fore him, finds himself, in a few days, rendered penniless by the enormous Cal ifornia prices, and the next we see of him : is peddling newspapers in the streets, or shovelling gravel for the corporation in filling up mud holes. Many a man finds ; night coming on him in this town, where : gold appears to be the staple commodity, without a place to lay his head, or where : withal to purchase him a supper. 1 fear that much misery will occur this winter. | Almost every morning a dead body is found in the streets. This is owing, how ; ever, in most cases, to drunkenness and dissipation. But California is a great ; country " for a' that," and men with strong hands and stout hearts need never lear to come and see our elephant. SQUATTING AMD MEXICAN LAND TITLES. Extensive "squatting" operations are in progress throughout all portions of Cal ifornia ; in some cases extending so far as locating upon town lots and mission lands. THE BURNT DISTRICT. The rebuilding of the burnt district of San Francisco bad commenced, with an energy surpassing anything we can recol lect to have been recorded in our Atlantic cities, after similar disasters. The tire occurred on the 24th, and on the 28th several house frames had been erected over the ashes, and two of them were al ready weather-boarded and shingled : the iraine of the Exchange was up, and was to be completed, as per contract, in 16 day s, at a cost of between 25 and $30.- OOO—the builders forfeiting $ 150 a dav lor every day beyond that period. Lum ber u as bringing $325 a thousand. A FREE SCHOOL. At San Francisco a movement was in progress to establish a free school, under the charge of Mr. J. C. Pelton. DISCOVERY OF ANCIENT RUINS. A long account is given bv a writer of the discoveries he has made in Northern California and New Mexico of ancient ru ins. pillars of granite, 11 feet high, which still retain numerous traces of the pictures ol men, plants and animals, intermixed with hieroglyphic characters. Another discovery, on the Colorado, was that of American pyramids. THE GOLD GAMBLERS. 'Die New York Tribune savs, an intel ligent friend, who enjoyed good opportu nities lor iniormation in San Francisco, estimates the amount of gold in the hands of the gamblers idone of that city on the Ist of January, at fourteen millions of dol lars. These 4 sporting men,' by the way, have done the largest business of any class of operators in California during the last y ear. Toil-worn diggers who had bagged their thousands at the cost of unsurpassed fatigue, privations and exposure, ha\ e come down to the citv and gambled, and lost their last dollar within a week. The gamblers, it should be stated to the credit ot their forecast, never hesitate iu such cases to lend a 44 cleaned out" digger $56 or $lOO to enable him to return to the mines. Nor do they confine their favor? entirely to their customers. They sub scribe liberally to new churches, and as sume the character of public spirited eiti zous. THE MARKETS. Lewistown* Feb. 15, 1650, Paid by Dealeri. Kttaxl. Flour - - $4 12J $5 00 Wheat, white - 95 I 10 red - 90 1 05 Bye - - 50 60 Oats - - 26 35 Corn, - . 45 00 Clover seed old, 3 75 Do new, 4 00 Flaxseed . . 1 00 1 25 TiinotliyseeJ - - 2 00 2 50 Butter, good - - 15 15 E" (r s - . j2 pi Lard ti S Tallow - 8 ii) Potatoes - c-.'s I'Hll.UHa.i'lliV, Feb. j 1. 1650. The I'i-OVK MAKKKI eunlimies quiet. Eale* .if coiiiiiioo bi&uds fur shipment at .$,l 7") ir barrel. Sales t" the city dealers at >1 -q, a $5 for common brands, RYKFI.OL'R is steady at V 2 1)4 CORN MKAL — A small tale of Pennsylvania At . cn T >" rr. A. W ATE teL * r PHE public is hereby cautioned not to inter fere in any manner whatever with the fol lowing articles, purchased at Constable's sale on , the 14th instant, as the property of E. Brittain, ' j viz :—A Corner Cupboard, 2 lots of Carpet, Ta ble, Clock, Bureau, Stove, Cooking Stove, Tabie Fixtures of Oyster Cellar, 11 Chairs, Oyster Lamp, iVc., Looking Glass, 1 barrel Cider, and I Counter—which property 1 have left with and loaned to the said E. Brittain during my will and pleasure, and will hold all persons responsible in law who mav intermeddle with the same. WM. F. MOVER. Lewistown, Feb. 16, 1850—3t /.\ 111E .V.ITTER of the Partition and I 'aUii tmn of the Real list ate of ill LLLLM /,. JI.IRRIS, deceased: IN the Orphans' Court of Mercer county, Penn sylvania, No. 31 of September Term, 184b. Writ issued to the Sheriff to part and divide, or value and appraise,donation lot No. 726,0f two hundred acres, in the 4th district in Mercer j county: Which said land has been appraised i and valued by a Jury summoned by said Sheriii. i at the sum of Eleven Hundred and Twenty-Five j Dollars. ($1125 ) Notice is hereby given to ! James Harris, Martha Harris, and Laird Howard, Thomas Howard, David Howard, Harriet How- I ard, intermarried with Dr. Thomas Vanvalzah, Ami Howard, intermarried with William Wilson. Jane Howard, intermarried with Joseph Green, who were children of Elizabeth Harris, who wa< intermarried with Thomas Howard, both oi whom are deceased, that the Court aforesaid did, on the 29ili day of December, 1849, confirm the inquisition aforesaid, and give judgment thai the same should remain firm and stable forever, and made a rule on the heirs and legal repre sentatives of the deceased, to appear on the first : day of next term, (Ist day of April next,) and accept or refuse the premises at the valuation. Certified from the Record, at Mcrccr, this 29th day of December, A. 1) . 1849. M. C. TROUT, crk o. c. Notice to be given by three publications intti e Lewistown Gazette and Lewisburg Chronicle. Feb. 16, 1850—3t M. C. T SHERIFF'S SALE. HB virtue of a writ of Venditioni Exponas issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Mif flin county, and to ine directed, will be exposed at public" -ale, at the Court House, iu the bo:* ougli of Lewistown, on TIU KSD.IY, Jlarch 1-lth. 1850, at It) o'clock, A. M., the following Krai Estate, to wit: A Tract of Land in Wayne township, Mtlllm county, containing 29 acres, more or less, about six acres cleared, adjoining lands of Samuel Withrow on the west, Abraham Lukens'heiis on the east, and having thereon erected a log house, small frame house and stable. Also, A Tract of Land in Wayne township, Milllin county, containing f>3 acres, more or less, about 15 acres cleared, adjoining lands ol Samuel Withrow on the west, Cyrus Stiue on the. north, John and George Lukens ou theeasß and the above 29 acres on the south, hav ing there on erected a small log house and stables. Seized, taken in execution, and to he sold as the pro perty of George W. Coulter, Administrator t William Laughlin, dee d, with notice to the \v idow and hi irs. I>. MckKAN CUNTN'BR, Sherif SHERIFF' * Orwrr. i Lewistown, Feb. 10, 1849 \ :d. N. R.—Purchasers at the above Sheriff's said are hereby notified thai the amount ol the sa will be required to oe ua.d itmnediateiy oB e property bring knicked down, or it vi i ib- u'- with ii-sold m :IJ.* liijiivoj biiU'-r.