Huntingdon journal. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1835-1839, October 02, 1839, Image 3

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    The Election
-------
Will be held before another one of our people how Democratic he and hi; co 1•
papers reaches you. This is the last time leagues are I how very honest 1 and with
that we have of appealing to you. all, how very intelligent 1 We would ad.
Do you detest villiany? Go to the vise him to say modest also.
polls and give your vote for James Steel, Does it become them to abuse personal
the subject of the lies of bill m'cay and ly their opponents ? yet are they busily
the torrs•tits, that holi around the chair Of engaged in the shameless course. He
can say Mr. Steel went to see and pray
him who swore he had paid nil his debts
. donaefor dollar, ,, when in your own with "a sick nigger," and for that he does
, not want any one to vote for Steel. Those
court he paid a poor creditor with the
Statute of Limitations. I who visit and pray with the sick, are the
Do you hate deception? Go to the
polls and oppose the whole ticket of that
party, who say they are opposed increa
sing canal officers—yet put double the
number of any former administration up
on the works. Oppose the party which
say they are opposed to strangers,--and
yet give offices and contt acts to foreigner,
—sulderts of British tyrants, ayd the pen
sioned slaves of a crowned head—aliens I
to our country, our feeling, and our laws.
Oppose the party that told you they would
listen to your petitions for offices—and
'then make your officers of darcted
ihieves, ccmmun drunkards, and Eng
lish slaves. Did you petition for then'? Did
American freemen ask to have such to
fill their offices.
Do you scorn a knave? Go to the polls
;and oppose the nominations of David it.
Purter. They are his companions—and
.be they ever so honest now, it is danger
•ous--"Evil communications corrupt good
;manners."
Are you willing to be made the dupe of
'Porter? If not, go to the polls and by
.your vote say that he cannot delude any
longer by presiding at Anti-Bank meet
ings, when he now gives the U. S. Bank.
the former object or his pretended hatred.
$400,000 to join his party.
Are you prepared to let the new consti.
lotion expire at its birth? If not, go to
the polls anti vote for the right of the peo
ple to elect canal commissioners. The
party who advocate Patterson and Mas
sey, are pledged to oppose the people's
right to vote for canal officers,--while the
party who support Higgins and Morrison
are pledged to carry that I)emecratic pro,
vision if - they get a majority in the Legis
lature.
Are you willing to support those who
date violate every pledge made to the
people last fall —and plunged'into every
act of villiany and knavery, that they then
charged upon their opponents? If you
are, then vote the Loco Foco ticket. For
they promised to reduce the canal officers,
and they appointed seven where there
were four—and made one new office for
Mr. Riter, a superintendant on a fin
ished line--the first in Pennsyivania his
tory. They promised to obey your yeti•
'fions. Who petitioned for the appoint
ment of Rita . / Who petitioned for the
appointment of David Woods? Who pe
titioned for the appoitAinent ofJohu Piper?
Who petitioned for the appointment of
Squire PARSONS? Who petitioned for
the appointment of Thomas Levers? And
where fee the long petitions of the num
ber of honest and capable men that did
ask for these very offices? Every promise
has been viaated.
Are you ready to tell such traitors to
their own friends, that the scales has fal
len from your eyes—that you can be cajo
led, duped, and decieved no longer? If
so, go to the polls next Tuesday and vot e
the entire Democratic Antinaasonic ticket
—the only Democratic ticket— and let
the perjurer, the drunkard, the rowdie,
and the thief learn, that from you they
steed expect n'o countenance.
Are you opposed to the scenes of mob
and riot which disgraced the seat of gov
ernment last winter? If you are, let the
actors in that scene learn that you record
that opinion at the ballot box.
The Infamous falsehood of the "Adco•
care" about Major Steel, we observe, was'
not re-uttered last week. We take it
for granted, that they are gathering up all
the malignant poison of their guilty hearts
—and this week will open the flood-gates
and deluge our friends with their filth.
We trust they will heed them not. Did
you only know the real character of bil
ly m'cay, you would see at once that it is
all harmless. He is the spout through
which others reach the public. They pitty
even condemn his conduct themselves;
yet, what can they do, they do not wish
to be seen in such timings, and of course
they stick in poor billy, like a vagra mit in
tim.3 pillory, for us to pelt, while they stand
back and laugh at his, as well as their own
situation. We wish all our readers, and
in truth every honest man in this county,
to bear in mind that much of the praise
m,l* the candidates of Mr. Porter, erne
ti rotes from one of thetnselces, Ile is de-
voting his time incessantly to telling the
subjects of his special enmity. Major'
Steel, he would intimate, has stolen from ;
the Commonwealth. Every man that'
knows the two individuals, knows, that
tie would sooner trust James Steel Esq.
with uncounted gold, than he would the
writer of that article with an untanned
dog's skin; if it was where it would sell
for ticker .
Turn Out! Every Man.
NM° values his rights, and the rights of
the people will be on the election ground
early, and when there will deposite his
vote in favor the Democratic Anti-Ma
sonic ticket.
Every man who is opposed to the party
whose head man pleads the statute of re
pose on his poor wood chopper, to cheat
him out of his pay, must turn out early
and oppose David R. Porter's ticket.
Every man, who is in favor of the peo
ple's electing their officers must vote for
Morrison & Higgins, for their opponents
are pledged to keep the appointing power
in the hands of the Governor.
Every man, who is convinced now, of
the truth of Porter's character as we said
it was last fall, must turn out and vote
against his ticket, to teach him that if they
did not Olen they do now "KNOW HIM."
Every man, who was dupe►l by the lies
of Porter and his friends, to believe they
"you'd give them oflice, or that they would
listen to the petitions of their friends, is
bound to oppose his ticket now.— Or he
admits that he is willing to be du [Ted still.
Every man, who voted for Porter, be_
cause he thought he was opp.sed to the
U. S. Bank, is in duty bound to vote
against his party now.—For a deceitful
friend is a thousand titries worse than an
open foe. .
Every man, who thinks the people have
a right to make their own nominations,
should 'oppose the Loco Foco ticket, for it
was nominated by Porter--and the con
vention was afraid to oppose, his men.
If lw are the Bank Meek?
Two years ago, and Porter and his tools
were all abusing the U. S. Bank. Now
they give her four hundred thou.
sand dollars as a bonus to lend them
money, and save their credit; and what is
still worse, they give her the privilege to
issue five dollar notes.
Do you doubt us reader? We can
tell you that it is believed that the Bank
has the •vritten opinion of Porter's At
torney General, that she has the right to
issue the whole loan in small notes.
Can any honest man vote for a party
that profess one thing and do another ?
Give us an open and frank foe, to a sly,
treacherous. and deceitful friend. Porter
and his party have decieved the people ;
and we feel confident the people will de
cieve them on next 'Tuesday.
Do not the citizens of this county re
member how Porter and his party, abused
Joseph Ritner, because he did not appoint
James Steel Prothonotary? In their meet.
inn they proclaimed, the outrage, that had
been committed. They said that nearly
all th 3 citizens of this county were in fa
vor of his appointment.--They said, he
was honest and capable. Now they say
he is, dishontst—a state robber--an abo
litionist-3very thing that is bad.—
Thev said the first, because they were
willing to show their friendship, after his
appointment was defeated. But now when,
Mr. Steel, is placed before the people to
prove that he was, and is their choice,
then these hypocritical scoundrels; turn
and abuse him without measure.
When he attends the sick bed of the
d3ing—and tries to "kindle a flame of sa
cred love"—in the last moments of the in
valid—they call it "going to see a sick
nigger."--Is there a christian in our
county will sanction such baseness, and
such wickedness.
James Steel is too well known, to suf
fer from the taunts and jeers of a com
mon reviler of religion. The people of
this county will tell these common defa
mers that it is no place for them.
Their candidate for Register we will
not name in the same day of the week
with ours—Because, we respect Mr. Reed
—Mr. Reed is a gentleman, and does not
tintt , it necessary to write his own praises
in any
If you vote FOR Patterson & Massey,
-
you vote against the election of Canal
[Commissioners.
If you vote FOR Patterson & Massey,
you vote to sanction the tyranny of Jimmy
Clark--on the Public works.
But it you vote FOR Mortison
gins, you vote in favor of all these Demo - -
Icratic mcasure--aad against the dictation
of one man
Are you in favor of electing Canal Corn
missioners ? If so, go to the polls and
vote for Morrison and Higgins. If -you
vote for their opponents rest assured they
dare not in the Legislature vote totake
power from the hands of Porter.
Do you wish to see the public works 'a
source of revenue 1 If so, vote for those
for Assembly who will pass a law to elect
Catial., Commissioners. Then and nut
till then will they be under the direction
of experienced and faithful officers—while
the power of appointing them, remains
with the government, so long will they be
the means to pay ollpoliticians; and their
means will be sqoardered, and each swarm
of office holders driven oft; will only give
place to a more greedy horde, who will
onl) tntten upon the spoils to give place
I to others more rapacious still. Whereas
elected one annually, the fluctuation
cannot be so rapid. The Board can at
no time be filled by unexperienced men,
and the officers will not be the paltry
slaves of the Governor or his advisers. To
secure this latter result, vote for Morrison
and Higgins—for to vote for Patterson
and Massey, is to say the people cannot
elect their officers.
FREEDOM OF OPINION.
* * "What barrier is there against
the universal despotism of public opinion
lin this country, but individual freedom?
Who is to stand up here, but the posses-
Stir of that lofty independence ? There
is nn king, sultan, no noble, nu privileged
class; nobody else to stand against it. If
you yield this point, if you are forever ma
king compromises, if all men do this, if
th e e ntir e policy 6rprivate life here, is to
escape opposition ant: reproach, every
thing will be swept beneath the popular
wave. There will be no individuai;t;, no
hardihood, no stern resolve, no self-sub
sistence, no fearless dignity, ne glorious'
manhood of mind, left among us. The
holy heritage of our lathers' virtues will
be trodden under foot by their unworthy
children. They feared not to stand up
against kings and nobles, and parlitnent
and people. Better did they account it,
that their lonely bark should sweep the
wide sea in freedom—happier were they,
when their sail s-velled to the storm of
winter, than to be slaves in palaces of ease.
Sweeter to them was the music of the gale,
that shrieked in their broken cordage, than
the voice at home that said "submit, and
you shall have rest:" And when they
reached this Wild shore, and built their al
tar, and knelt upon the frozen snow and
?flinty rock to worship they built that altar
to freedom, to individual freedom, to free
dom of opinion; and their noble prayer
was, that their children might be thus
free. Let their sons remember the pray
er of their extremity, and the great res
quest with their magnanimity has left us.
* a w * *
I know of but one thing safe in the uni.
verse, end that is truth. And I know of
but one way to truth for an individual
mind, and that is unfettered thought. And
I know of but one path for the multitude
to truth, and C.at is thought freely ex.,
pressed. Make of truth itself an altar of
slavery, and guard it about with a myste
rious shrine ;
bind thought as a victim
upon it; and let the passions of a preju
diced multitude minister fuel—and you
sacrifice upon the accursed altar, the
hopes of the world
lIYAI ENEA L.
The silken tie that binds two willing hearts.
MARRIED-At the Methodist Par
sonage on Wednesday the 25th inst by the
Rev. Geo, L. Brown. Mr. JACOB BAKER,
to MISS MARGARET WAREFIELD, all of this
county.
OBITUARY,
"In the midst of lye we are in death."
DIED—On the night of the 29th inst.
WILLLIAM MOORE, after a long illness,
aged about 27 years.
ITOTIVM%
According to a resolution of the Quar
ter Meeting Conference of Huntingdon
Circuit; the new and commodious NI eth
odis Chapel at Mannor Hill, will be dedi
cated to the worship of Almighty God, un
Sabbath morning the 15th of October.
JAMES STEEL, R.S.
Notice.
ALL persons indebted to John Savage will
please immediately settle their• accounts with
the subscriber. And those haying claims
properly authenticated against him will pre• ,
sent them for settlement to me at Mary Ann
Forge, Trough Creek Huntingdon Co.
A. R. CRIONI r, Agent for John Savage.
JAN. B. BAL. Iron for sale at Mary Ann
Forge.
Trough Creek, Oct. 2, 1839,
Temperance Convention.
A Temperance Convention will be held
in Hollidaysburg, on the 22d day of October
next, at which the friends of the good
cause are invited to attend, and also any so
cieties in the county of Huntingdon ; who a
are yet organized, are respectfully invited to
send Delegates.
October 2d, 1839.
INFORMATION WANTED.
IVHE undersigned is desirous of obtaining
1 information relative to Adam Show
ers, who left his family sometime during the
m o n th of last June, for the avowed purpose
f seeking a place for himself and family.
(The undersigned (his wife) takes this me
thod to tell him that she as well as his chil
i dren, are in circumstances which need the
attention of a husband and father. If this
should meet his eye, she hopes, that the love
he bears his children will at least induce
him to come to their assistance. Any per
son knowing where said Showers may be,
will confer a favor upon an anxious wife by
communicating such information to her at
the mouth of Spruce Creek, Huntingdon
county, Pa.
MAGARET SHOWERS.
October 2, 1839.—p,
TEACHER WANTED.
A good teacher of a public school is wan
ted in the borough of Petersburg, to whom
liberal wages will be given
By the school committee.
Silk Worm Eggs,
Mammoth Sulpher,
White, •
Peanut,
Two Crops Mammoth White,
do. do. Peanut.
Persons desirous of getting the best
'stock for feeding, at fair prices, can have
them put up and sent to any part of the
United States,
S. DAVIS.
Huntingdon, October 2, 18S9.
Oztr'All necessary directions I urnisbed
if req•iired. S. D.
FURNITURE,
FOR SALE.
The sascriber residing on second • street
in the Borough of Alexandria informs the
public in general that he has on hands a large
and good asso'!ment of all kinds of
Fuuri►tftUre,
not inferior to any in the county, which he
will sell cheap for Cash.
. GEO. WILSON.
Alexandria, Sept. 25, 1839. _
COMMISSIONERS SALE
Of Unseated Lands, in Hunting
don county for 1839.
'WHEREAS by the 7th Section of the
" act of the General Assembly of
this Commonwealth entitled "an act to
amend an act directing the mode of ael
ling unseated lands for taxes and tin oth
er purposes," passed the 13th day of
March A. D. 1818, the Commissionet's of
the respective counties within this com
monwealth are directed to make public
sale of all lands boUght by them at Treas
urer's sale, which shall remain Unredeem
ed by the respective owners thereof, at
the expiration of five years from the date
of such Treasurer's sale, and by a further
supplement thereto passed the 29th day of
March A. D. 18:24, such !and is directed
to be sold for the best price that can be
obtained for the same, and that the Com
missioners shall have full power to make
and execute a deed or deeds of convey
ance to the purchaser or purchasers in fee
simple, and such deeds are declared to be
good and valid for such title as the com
missioners had a right to convey. There
fore we the undersigned Commissioners of
Huntingdon county, hereby give notice
that in pursuance of the aforesaid act of
Assembly and supplement thereto, we
shall at the Court House, in the borough
of Huntingdon, in the county of Hunt..
ingdon. on Monday the 11th day of No
vember next, commence the
PUBLIC SALE
of the following tracts of unseated lands,
purchased by the Commissioners of Hunt
ingdon county aforesaid, at the 'measu
rer's sale of June 1834, and remaining
unredeemed by the respective Owners
thereof, and continue such sale by ad
journment until all the lands below nam
ed are sold, viz:
A. Per. War'tee names. Townships.
406 " Margaret Hunter, Allegheny,
406 " James Blackford,
97 12 John Chambers,
433 163 Jesse Wolf, Antes,
132 " Alexander M'Hatton, "
433 163 Patrick White,
433 163 Jesse Rex,
433 163 Martin Boreland, "
433 163 Patrick Bush, ft
433 163 Jesse Bush, ft
433 163 Patrick Davis Antes
433 163 Jesse Peters;
433 163 Jesse Neils,
Samuel Marsha( Barree
400 Robert Caldwell
400 Mathew Simpson 46
400 James M'Cuim
400 Joseph M'Cuna
400 Samuel Steel, If
400 John Fulton
400 John Galbraith
400 John Gccrie
,438 124 Edward Dorn Spri ngli cid ,
1428 Eliza Horn
447 James Elder
'450 James Old
415 140 John Paywell
450 101 George Ebert
SO Peter Cornelius
388 94 John Boggs
431 60 Gabriel Bell
409 145 Anthony Bell
288 18 Amos Laughery
301 106 James Coleman
391 141 Daniel Bell
400 68 John lyiug,hery
409 114 Matthew Simpson
426 15 Stephen Drury
478 31 Andrew Drummond "
425 1,3 Peter Shank
402 152 John Vandyke
400 Samuel Riddle
400 Samuel Riddle
400 Samuel Riddle
300 Samuel Riddle CI
300 Samuel Riddle (I
300 Samuel Riddle 61
415 159 John Marshall
532 Charles Green Woodberry
JOHN STEVER,
PETER SWOOPE, Comm'rs.
• JAMES MOORE.
Comners. Office, Sept. 24, 1539.
Tyrone,
Union,
CITIZENS of Pennsylvania, you
have now before you Du. PETERS
CELEBRATED VE3ITUILE PILLS.
These Pills are :13 longer among those
of doubtful utility. They have passed
away from the hundreds that are daily
launched upon the tide of experiment, and
now stand before the public as high in rep
utation, and as extensively employed in
all parts of the U. States, the Canatlas,
Texas, Mexico, and the West Indies, as
any medicine that has ever been prepared
for the relief of suffering man. They have
been introduced wherever it has been found
possible to tarry them; and there are but
few towns that do not contain some re
markable evidences of their good effects.
'The certificates thaa have been presented
to the proprietor exceeds twenty thousand
upwards of five hundred of which are'
from regular practising physicians, who
are the most competent judges of thei!
merits.
01 ten have the cures performed I . y this
medicine been the subject of editorial
comment, in various newspapers and jour
nals; and it may with truth be asserted,
that no medicine of the kind has ever re
ceived testunonials of greater value than
are attached to this.
They are in general use as a family
medicine und there are thousands of fami
lies who declare they aro never satisfied
unless they have a supply always on hand.
They have no rival in curing and pre
venting Bilious Fevers, Fever tuzd
Dyspepsia, Liver Cdinpiaints, Sick Head
ache, Jaundice, Asthma, Dropsy, 'Rheu
matism, Enlargement of the Spleen, Piles,
Cholic, Females Obstructions, Heartburn,
Furred Tongue, Nausea, Distension of the
Stomach and Bowels, Incipient Diarrhoea,
Flatulence, Habitual Costiveness,Loss of
Appetite, Blotched or Sallow omplex
ion, and in cases of tgrpor of the bowels,
where a cathartic or aperient is needed.
They are exceedingly mild in their opera
tion, producing neither nausea, griping nor
debility:
. . .
Exti:act of a letter written by Dr. Fran
cis Bogart, of Providence, IL 1. Dec. 17,
1828.—Peters' pills are an excellent ape
rient and cathartic medicine, those effects
l.eing produced by the differences of the
quantity taken, and and are decidedls su
perior to Lee's, Bratidreth's or Morri
son's Pills.
Extract from a letter by Dr hopsim of
Bangor, Me. Jan. 9, 1839. They arc a
peculiarly mild, yet tilicient purgative
inedbine, and prodri.ce little, of any grip
ing or nausea. have prescribed them
with much sie.ccess in sick headache and
slight hill'.ous fever.
Extract of a letter by Dr Joseph Willi
ai":.s of Burlington, Vt. July ft, 1857.-1
cordially recommend Peters' Pills as a
mildly effective, and in no case dangerous,
family medicine. They are peculiarly in
costivenenss and all the usual diseases of
the digestive organs.
Extract an letter from Dr Edw. Smith
of Montreal, U. C. Sept 27, 1836-1 nev
er knete a single patent medicine that 1
could put the least confidence in but Dr
Peters Vegetable Pills, which are really a
valuable discover 3. 1 have no hesitation
in having it known that I use them enten
sively in my practice, for all complaints,
(arid they are not a few) which have their
source iu the impurity of the blood.
Extract of a letter from Dr. Dye of
Quebec, LT., March 6, 1837. For bid
lions fevers, sick head-ache, torpidity of
the bowels, and enlargement of the spleen
Dr. Peters' Pills are an excellent medi
cine.
Exiract of a letter from Dr. Gurney IC
Orleans, La., Oct. 9, 1837; I hare teem
ed much assistance in my practice; cape
daily in jaudico and yellow fever, from
the use of Peters' rills. I pt esome that,
'on an average, I prescribe 100 boxes in a
rinonth.
Extract of a letter from Dr. Prichard of
Iftidson N. Y. June 3, 1836; I was aware
[that Dr. Peters' was one of the best diem
lists in the U. States, and felt assured that
I l e would some day (from his intin ate
knowledge of the properties of herbs and
drugs) produce an efficient medicine, and
must acknowledge that his Vegetable
Pills fully respond to my expectations.
They are indeed a superior medicine, and
reflect credit alike upon the Chemist, the
Physician, and Philusoper. _ _
Rxtract of a letter from Dr. W'ains of
'Cininnati, Feb, 9, 1888; your t ins are
he mildest in their operations, and yet
most powerful in their effeciit, of any that
I have. There action on the chyle. and
hence on the impurities of the blood is ev
idently very surprising.
Extract of a letter froth Dr' Scott of
Baltfinore, Dec. 17, 1836; I am in the daily
habit of prescribing them (Peters' Pills)
and they in nearly all cases answer my
purposes. I 'have directed other medi
cines, some of them very good ones, in
their favor.
Charlotte, N.C., June I, 1837.
Dear Ski I have frequent use of your
Pills in the incipient stage of bilious lever
and obstinate consumstion of the bowels,
also, in the enlargement of the spleen,
chronic disease of the liver, sick head-eche
general debility, and in all cases have
found them to be very effective. J D Boyd
Mecklenburg Co, Va. Feb. 7, 1837.
Having use Dr. Peters' Pills in my prac
tice fur the last 13 months, I take pleas
ure in givin my testimoy of their good ef
fects of cases of dyspepsia, sick headache
billions ferers, and other diseases, produ
ced by inactivity of the liver. They arc
a sale and mild aperient, being the best ar
tide of the kind I ever used:
G.
0. Show M. D.
These much approved and justly cele
brated Pills, are for sale by the following
agents
JACOB MILLER, IltifititTgcrob, Pa
J 4 J MILLIKEN, Mill Creek. Pa.
GEO DBEHMAIV, Waysburg, Mifli
CLOCKS, IttriVITES,
5.7
,40
JEW ELRI
THE subscriber has just received a
rich assortment of Clocks, Watches
and Jewelry, consisting of Eight Day end SO
hour Brass Clocks, Willard Time Pie
ces; Gold and Silver Levers, Eng
lish, Quarteir and L'Pine Wa
tches; Gold, Fob, 8c Guard
Chains; Gold Seals F. b
an l Guard Keys;
Gold Enamled
and SEW
Breast
Pins, and
Finger Rings;'
Silver, Table, Tea
and Salt Spoons; Sugar
Tongs; Silver, and German
Silver Butter Knives, Silver Pen
cils, Cemmon and Patent; Pen-
Knives, Pocket Books, Steel Chains and
Keys; Pocket Pistols, Powder Flasks, Steel
Pens, Tooth Brushes, Musical Boxes.
Silver Thimbles, open and shut en
ded; a full assortment of Spec
' tacles, of Silver, Steel, and
Plated Frames, Double
and Single Glasses,
Spectacle Glas
scs of all
• , Ages,
kept on
hand, and put
in Crimes on the
Shortest notice. The
subscriber still continues to
repair Clocks,Watches, and
Jewelry at his old stand.
MICHAEL BUOY.
Huntingdon, September 18, 1839.
rum° imourarcitiiDD
A T the New Store of B. E. +
McMurtrk.
304, Pitees 'of Splendid MERL
Air A OES.
3% Pieces of Splendid CASI
- NETTS.
A la:tre variety of Fancy Mawls, an
extrAsive assortment of Fall Voods. The
' whole, of which, will be disposed of cheap
B. E & W. McMURTRIE.
Sept. 25 1839.
ORPHAN'S COURT SALE.
IN PURSUANCE of an order of the
0: phan's court of Huntingdon county,
will be exposed to Public Sale on the
premises, on Saturday the second day of
November next, at one o'clock P. M., a
tract of land situate in Tell township, Hun
tingdon county, containing fifty acres more
or less, a few acres of which have been clea
red, and cultivated, late the property of
Andrew French deceased. Terms of sale,
one third of the purchase money to be paid
on the confirmation of the sale, tine thirti ui
one year thereafter, with interest, to be se
cured by the bond and mortgage of the pur
chaser, the remaining third to be paid en
the death of the widow, the interest to be
paid yearly and every year, to be secured by
the bowl and mortga e of the purchaser.
Attendance will be given by
JOHN BLAIR,
Guardian of the minor childred at Andrew
French, decet,st d.
DAVID BLAIR, Attorney.
September 25, 1839.
NOTICE Citt.Dl'loltS.'..
roAKE notice that I have applied to
thu Judges of Common Pious of
Huntingdon County, for ul,e benefit of In—
solvent Debtors, and the said Court have
ippointed the 2nd Nlotolay t f November
next, fur the ,tearing of us and our credi
tors, at the Court House in the Borough
of II u nting,lon, m hen and where they muy
tten.! t!;•,' think proper.
KEM:EY KEITH.