VOL. VII, No. 28.] I'u BUH SED DY THEODORE H, CREMER, TEP.MEI. The ..Joutoint." will be published every Wednesday morning, at two dollars a year, if paid IN ADVANCE, and if not paid within six months, two dollars and a half. No subscription received for a shorter pe • riod than six months, nor any paper discon tinued till all arrearages are paid. Advertisements not exceeding one square, will be inserted three times for one dollar, and for every subsequent insertion twenty five cents. If no definite orders are given as to thetime an advertisement is to be continu ed, it will be kept in till ordered out, and charged accordingly. CORRESPONDENCE. HUNTINGDON, July 8, 1842. Col. E. V. EVERHART, SIR :-By a reso lution of the "Huntingdon county Tem perance Society," passed unanimously at their celebration on the FOURTH inst., I am directed to request a copy of the Cliation delivered by you on that day, for publication ; your compliance will much oblige, Yours respectfully, McCONNELL, Rec. Scc. H. C. W. T. S. HUNTINGDON, July 9, 1942. Maj. M. MCCONNELL, DEAR Stn:—Your note of the Bth inst. soliciting a copy of my Oration for publication, has been received. In reply thereto I can only say that the circumstances under which my remarks were written out, preclude me from complying with your request. So much has bern written on the subject, that I feel unwilling to ask an intelligent public to occupy time, that might be oth. erwise employed, in reading my crude and hastily prepared speech delivered on the 4th instant. I am, Sir, resp. your . Ob't servant, E. V. EVERHART A note of similar impnrt we addressed to Geo. Taylor, Esq. The following is hie answer llosusuuoti, July 9th 1842. Maj. M. McCoxxsu., DEAR Sin:—To your note of the Bth inst., I reply, that I am unable to assign any reason for with holding the requested copy of my address before, the Alexandria convention, except its imperfections, and its great length: if they do not render its publication objec tionable, it is at your service. Yours, &c., GEO. TAYLOR, SPEECH, Delivered before the Convention of lf ash ingliniane at Alexandria, Huntingdon county, on the 4th July, 1849„ BY GEORGE TAYLOR, Esq, FELLOW-WASHINGTONIANS We are here assembled, in convention, for the further ance of a great moral refor►nation—aiming at nothing less than the rescue of our be loved country Irom the withering curse of intemperance. There is a peculiar pro. piety in appropriating this day to that object. There could be no inure become iug way of celebrating the anniversary of the Declaration of our national Indepen dence, than making it a day of effort in such a cause; as there could be no more appropriate day for such an effbrt. And I feel, my friends, that I detract nothing from the importance of that great event— that I do not undervalue the rich blessings which have flowed from it,—when I ex press my solemn conviction that the great cause in which we are laboring is of no less tnoment to us, individually or as a nation, than that which occupied the at tention of the American Congress in Phil adelphia, on the 4th of July, 1776. As sembled here, then, bearing upon our badges and our banners the revered name of the father of his country,"—on free dom's birth day— "With freedom's soil beneath oar feet, And freedoin's banner streaming o'er us"— let us chef ish the hope'that our practical' commemoration of this day may do some thing, may do much, to increase the en joyment and the blessings of liberty. In arising to perform the duty assigned me, I may be permitted to say, for my. self, that although it has not been regar• tied as strictly in order" to decline addressing a Washingtonian meeting, I have, I confess, generally avoided speak ing on the subject; for I have felt that, at a time like the present, when public atten tion . is aroused, and the reasons which should govern the conduct of all are known and understood by all, —when persuasion rather than argument is required to gain signatures to the pledge, —I am poorly qualified for the work. 1 have felt reluc THE tirRNAU tent to attempt pressing upon the attention of others, by any new interest my fancy could throw around it, a subject so pow erfully persuasive in itself, that it must send forth, through any attentive and thoughtful assembly, far more eloquence in the very silence of my pauses. Here, nowever, is a convention ot Wash ingtonians, and who require no stirring appeals to make them such; met for the purpose of consultation—of mutual en couragement and assistance in the great work of moral reform in which we are engaged ; arid, viewing the purpose of our assembling in this light, there could be no more interesting inquiry started, it seems to me, than " what will be the ultimate re sult of all our labors?" And, upon this subject, I propose to lay before my fellow Washingtonians a few observations. If, in truth, we are warranted in the belief that complete success is to crown our tiforts, it is of the utmost importance that that stimulating faith be propogated and cherished. It could not fail to give a new and mighty impulse to the good cause. It could not tail to increase the zeal, and multiply the efforts, of its friends. It would secare the aid of the undecided, who hesitate always to take side with any new enterprize until they feel some assu. ' ranee of its success. Arid, in addition, it would remove the great clfficully with which we have to contend. Seeing, as they trust, every where, its proud, almost miraculous achievements, its numerous trophies, the enemies of our cause(forit still has some en emies), are forced to admit that it is doing much good; but then, they sneeringly ask, "how long will it last" ? They do us the re• luctant justice to admit what all must see, —what none can deny,--that our cause is doing great good; but they aim at strengthening their hands in their opposi tion, discouraging, tenting the zeal, and weakening the resolution of some of our friends, by making the impression that it is a mere temporary excitement which will soon, very soon, pass away,—and its fruits, its glorious fruits, like the golden apples of Sodom, all turn to dust, and per ish with it: This is their principal weap on. They have been forced to ground almost every other. Nor can it be denied. that they use this with insidious dexterity, and with some effect. And even seine ut the true friends of the cause have been, and still are, at seasons, beset with doubts, whether these insinuations of its enemies may not turn out to be truths. They are tempted to ask themselves, cup the ex citement which now bears forward the good work with torrent•rapidity, always last ? Must it not, in the nature of things, abate ; sink down within its former limits; course on in the old narrow channel it now so widely overflows, and the noxious weeds of intemperance again grow and flourish, in regions now washed and puri fied by the overflowings of its healthful tide" I They are partially confirmed in these doubts by their experience and ob. servation. They fancy they see, as if it were one of nature's immutable laws, ex citement of all kinds suddenly succeeded by corresponding apathy ; as inebriation, for example, flushes and invigorates the human system soon to let it sink again as far below healthful vigor, into lassitude and debility or as extreme prostration follows the unnatural vigor imparted by a burning fever. Thus their doubts run and reason, until their fears picture just ahead of the glorious cause they have so Much at heart, an obstacle to much further prog ress, us unyielding as nature; destined to check its onward course, as the rocky beach restrains and dissolves the uplifted waves of the ocean. Gloomy thought!—No one can doubt, that, suggested to their minds as a doubt, or urged by opponents as au objection, it has held, and still holds, many in irresolu tion ; preventing them from joining our ranks. ' Still less can it be doubted that it has to no inconsiderable extent, lessened the zeal and diminished the labfirs of many interested in the good cause; since it tends to remove the principal incentive to zeal and labor in any cause—the hope of ultimate success. The chilling influence has, at times, fallen upon my own feelings; and I now propose to state some of the reasons which convince me as fully and satisfactorily as I am convinced of any thing, yet to happen,—and which I think should convince every one who has doubts upon the subject, —that this good cause must and will move steadily and vigorous ly onward, until its work of redemption be done ; until the sober be all secure, and the last drunkard reclaimed; until tip pling and drunkenness, --intemperance in all its stages and shapes,—shall be utterly and forever banished; and the whole land be covered and crowned with the blessed fruits of temperance, from the rising to the setting sun! L There is sufficient evidence of this in the late astonishing triumphs of the great truth that intemperance is a dread ful curse upon the land, and that its cer tain remedy, and its only remedy, is asso ciation upon the principle of total absti. nonce from every thing that will intoxicate; "ONE COUNTRY, ONE CONSTITUTION, ONE DESTINY." HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1842. and in the existence of the powerful and dark recesses of the infernal grog-shop! last one of the wretched band of widows spreading PUBLIC SENTIMENT which that We are its witnesses that it has dime all and orphans made pensioners upon the truth has created, and brought to its aid. this. cold charity of the world, by intemperance, i i The great truth, and its signal success That great truth still retains its power. shall be no longer seen or remembered ; 1 within the last year, none here, at least, That public opinion is daily becomirig when the last eye that has witnessed the will dispute. And we all feel and ac- stronger ; more watchful—more general end of the poor inebriate, and seen his knowledge the power of publi c o pinion:— more pervading and powerful. Every new bloated remains deposited in the drun- Whether we acknowledge this or not, we convert is another witness before the kard's grave, shall itself be closed in death; all bow to it. We do it involuntarily.— world; another sentinel on the watch- when the family record shall be exhausted lie must be more or less than man who tower. And the increase, we all know, is before it reaches back to the miserable can indulge openly in practices which it not to be estimated by units. Recruits victim, and family tradition shall no lon decisively and unequivocally condemns. still flock in by hundreds and thousands. ger serve as a directory to the spot where Its power may be illustrated by an exam- And that this must and will continue to be his ashes mingle with their mother earth ; pie familiar to us all. A boy who has so ef• the case, until public opinion and individ- when the sable pall of sorrow and mourn fectually acquired the bad habit of profane uul opinion will be identical—until this ing, of wretchedness and wo, which the swearing, that he cannot utter a sentence general national sentiment will be the same blightine * hand has hung over the ' amonest his associates without embellish- sentiment of every mind, and the great land for centuries, shall have passed out ing it with curses and profanity, and who truth which supports it will find a hearty of view—then, but surely not till then, does it involtintetri/y,--without being con- response, a cordial welcome, in every can the calm, but deep-toned feeling which scious, without knowing that he does it,— heart,—is abundantly manifest. Public now pervades this Union, and which has will, as involuntarily, guard against be- opinion, enlightened and correct public brought this assembly together, entirely fraying himself in his habit in the h e aring opinion, especially upon a subject in which subside! Until then, it must increase, of religious parents: and just so, and on all have a deep and vital interest, is, in its, rather. precisely the same principle, does public nature, like leaven. It soon "leavened) the The immese, incalculable evils of in opinion, enlightened, correct, and general whole lump." When its foundation is temperance are sensibly near :—they come pub!ic opinion, ensure involuntary con. mann—truth of general and incalculable home, in all their heart-sioltenine, soul furmity to its explicit and undoubted importance—its power is irresistable ; for, stirring magnitude to the knowledge of sanctions, That public opinion has, al. independent of the well known disposition all; and, although familiarity with those ready assumed this commanding influence of the few to think and act with the mut- evils has to a' great extent blunted our in relation to the use of intoxicating liq- titude, it prepares the way for the truth it sensibilities, yet the vital truth that assoc. uors as a beverage, cannot be doubted; heralds, by removing the common abets. iatiun on the principle of total abstinence for it is felt by all—by the temperate and Iles to the' propagation and reception of from every thing that will intoxicate, is, if the intemperate. It is infinitelj , more so truth—the opposing fashions of society, carried out, a certain remedy, and the than it has ever heretofore been. Not and the established prejudices of men. It only remedy, has, by its inherent clearness long since, indeed, it was fashionable to speaks, and is heard, "as one having auth- and solemn importance, and in defiance of drink; and then, of course, it was not very ority"; for it speaks in all the power of kind or quantity of resistance, arrested unfashionable to get drunk ; and the fa- interesting truth to minds stripped of their the attention and forced conviction on the shions of society, the connivance of public bias, and open to conviction. And that minds of the MULTITUDE; and, by its hes , opinion, operating on that thirst for excite- such truth, thus propogated, and thus re- yen-commissioned fiat, has created, arnil merit of some kind natural to us all, and ceived, must prevail, the history of the sustains, the strong, active, andrgrowing aided by the force of habit, had made us a world fails to furnish a more brilliant il- public sentiment which now spreads the nation of drunkards. The idea was fur- lUstratien, than is presented in the mirac- saving knowledge of it abroad with more' med of arresting the progress of the evil, ulous achievements of the temperance ret'- than the velocity and power of steam.— if possible, by temperance associations.-- urination within the last year. For, even, And if this were the only evidence that it l " Few and far between,” as were their us we !night say, without the auxiliary aids must and will ultimately triumph, 'I, for patrons, it is a fact, known to us all, that mentioned,--in opposition to the current one, would look forward to the blessed 1 they soon succeeded toe promising extent, of national custom, and the feelings and event, with an eye of unwavering faith! in changing the pernicious custoJns of so• prejudices of society,—it has borne along ,11, 1 Ant„the effects already produced y h e o s us s e nn h i t e ., , i containing one I u „ cies'. 'file side-board, and even the hay- with it the multitude, many of whom werst sit! Barr, west s e 'v another convincing a or less, haying a vest-fi e I d , i n , n t i. o : i t c, .04,n,,I t rrie-ye i t .. a l . ti e rie e ,yi s , t, eox, : t r e o tnl n . et t is i i fronting cfek lotst tas a role , i r iat t .ap e it i ll y itti,,tr,.: James ten acres 1 n 1 cp,.e on s ni t 1 , i . : e 1 ;o etl7 l. er. l -. ) !:.„ e . i n a:/ . l y l liquid fire; and drinking men were seen L ectsed three one and a half story houses, two Stor y house looking around on the faces - in a bar-roo , .yeattier boarded, and one log two story story house and a f before they would venture to drink. o n e lot of -hip a'djoining t ract larelsinl t h a d n in d S i m n i s t a l nl i nw p -. house and a frame weather bear - Also , into. other was evidence, indeed, that this infant (' weilir , public sentiment carried with it al t iled ba ' e . "'s bbil;ling. Also, strong moral power, rather than it wi, ' ' round in the new general sentiment ; for it was still you ;h fawn plot of the ho. Oburn, end on rho '' nse-11 i of /Sulfide abut- • north by the 'Move that tippling found sympathy and sant nu 's 1 y gi fronting , 8 feet described tract containing ' sh ove that the multitude. "ii the south side of Walnut street and alio ninety acres, with seventy acres Of which are - cleared, , 'tending back 1 -- fee t The Catholic movement then comme, . 1 s' . a on Union street having two one and a hall' ' t n houses ced, and held the world in utter astonish- terry alley, and 344 feet oil said alley, and a bank barn thereon erected. s(ey ment, until it was eclipsed by the Wash- La small one and a half story frame Seized, taken un ler exe • . execution, ahil to ingtonian movement which soon succeeded like tlieleen erec t ed, the same being be sold as the p • • of " ' . °pet ty James E'nnis. it; and their simultaneous progress and is to check avid town plot. ALSO, achievements, not a tithe abated, but both progress ha under execution, and to By virtue Of a writ of Test. Vend. Ex rapidly on the increase, in conjunction of a stream , sroperty of Edward Mc Pomp, issued out of the Court o t Common with the efforts and influence of the old child may sp, s„ Pleas of Mifflin county, and to direct- society, direct society, have wrought a perfect itzvoeu- channel, but •' HI will be , exposed to public sale at th TION in the feelings and sentiments of the otaries have t i"' 32, situate in the 'ime and place above mentioned, the It l e ' great NULTITUDE; and have concentrated it tin the said county, lowing property, viz: ) .! the Allegheny a public opinion against the use of intoxi- ch c h i t in its for. All the right and interest of Sam uel S.' eating liquors as a beverage, such as we parison, if ii hl ext e tultog on Newry Wharton, one of the defendants, in have never hitherto witnessed or felt on ficiently stror lot owned by Jere- to the following described tracts In f anti have un any subject. One fact will afford some busy tributarP' pert of Lot No. Si, seated land, situate in Iluntined n O couri• idea of the extent and progress of the influence whiPs "riling 60 feet, ty, viz: a tract of 371) acres of ' latiil war change. Before, there had been less than daily acquires 'ding beck 110 feet j ranted in the name of Robert iVaterm i BOOO members of the temperance society numbers ; aptl3si which two laid West township, 75 acres of land inth n e in the city of Boston: now, it is said, there moral power of lec ted a two story name of John Stewart in i Franks t"" are 8000 Washingtonians, 4000 Catholics, by the growing v iack building two township , n .wnship, 300 acres of land in the and 8000 members of the old society ; ma- current, in conse't id Lot N. en, of Thomas York in Shirley ,ownsl)p,'llmoe king an aggregate of 20,000, an exhibiting channel, and the g the last eleven acres of land in the name of Robert 1". EP 'an increase nearly four-fold in one short flood; and, if it fnii"g 60 feet as lie in Shirley township, and a tract of 348 year 1 And the change in other, in many to represent the back 110 feet on acres 48 perches in tile name ofJohn Bow other places, has been yet greater. The which this current erected a frame man in Shirley township. temperance sentiment, therefore, retaining step from its sourther boarded and Seized, taken under execution, and to a ll its moral potter, is now pRocLAimED By banters which fasi' et Ni'• 29 . in lie sold as property of same, S. Whuar THE MULTITUDE. A revolution has been interest, and habiDe last described ton. wrought. The great mass now have their fore it for ages. 60 feet as afore sympathies, their whole hearts enlisted, If it still be a‘ ; 110 fret to said and are looking forward with hope, and citemeut die awrl a frame stable we would have them look with faith also, while the same O i ated• Also, a to its final triumph. the same agenci '" un 'l in said ho- That wonder-working truth which has tion might have sent by Lot No. 1, produced in so short a time, this mighty force and reason north by the Janie moral revolution, has its sentinels, Argus- first murmur'''. by the Dim street eyed, every where. it has us all sensibly through t h e cr etaining about one surrounded by "a cloud of witnesses."— tyrannical exa I, e. a two story frame It has converted fashion and habit into when nssociatstore house thereon, allies. It has subdued political prejudice inn s held ; ari se upper story. and sectarian jealousy; and now men of fo rtune, and • r execution, and to all political creeds, and of all religious the support nertY of Alexander sects, are found laboring together, side by united color si , side, and shoulder to shoulder, in forcing be, tree an, ' SO' ' onward the noble work. Male and female, not the h i r ed sixth parts of the old and young, rich and poor, all,--all lend It was net piece parcel or tract their influence, their time and their talents, that actu'he townships of Bargee their elforts and their prayers. All the wild blip n the standing Stone noble feelings of humanity are its minis- cism I . I ' tering angels,—active every where,--in- its oriel,gil described as follow s, eta Linn corner citing, aiding, encouragites, and rewarding mind 7 lone creek, thence down in the holy enterprise of patriotism and ern s •eral courses thereof, two rue perches a half to virtue, of benevolence and luve. See its Porte , . results! It is crowned in every village by dtit yh s ‘ e t south eighty d eg! ees and five perches to a post, a hundred miracles of salvation from the tion fif ; Y•• y-three degrees and a half , greatest evil that ever cursed the children ()tic olAdain! It has led captive the hearts thii e t n h perches to a chesnut oak, ' and judgments of tits sober ; it has broken of ier ,h irty•eight degrees east, ' site fetters of the besotted drunkard—torn cu t t,C rt and a half to a post, ve t ve degrees east, eighty him from his cups and his degt•adation— fat o a post, thence south eighty and raised him to a pinnacle of freedom us es and respectability in which he loves and to : i e n trees i west, forty-eight per breathes its own pure spirit, and reared is one t ience north twenty de around !tun a wall of protection. Tippling a '• lue t. hundred and fifteen per has fled at its approach, even from the tP tvi 1081 beginning; containing bar-room, net taken its last refuge in the 'taken perches more or less. under execution, and to the property of Henry Corn. JOHN SHAVER, Sheriff. Sheriff'; Office, Hunting. I lon, July IS, A. D. 1842. 5 I El ill l lloin i<=-7-7-41.Af ill RS. 111VCONINELLIS TEMPERANCE HOUSE, iiumingdon. /TIE friends and patrons of the Fate .JP_ John McConnell. are respectfully intimmed . that the old stand will still be kept by his widow, for the accommodation of their old friends and strangers. Mrs. McConnell feels assured that those who shall fitror her will find that I no exertions of hers will be left ournfor riled to render their accommodations such as are sure to please. She earnestly hopes that the Old frjentll and patrons of her las mented husband, will not desert her now, in this hour of her utmost !wet'. Iler house will be kept entirely spun principles of Temperance, ant customers will find there that gitiet and ..freedom which sobriety gives. Connected with the House is a large and extenlive REA D ING ROOM, with daily and week ly Journals from every part orour country. tip' Persons wishing to send their clot dren to either of the Academies of this place, can have them areoinmodated with riniet and comfortable linr iirtlinz [WuoLE No. 340. efficient cause. Intoxicating liquor iv no linger deemed a necessary ingredient in the rations of our soldiery;--nu longer given by employers to hands as stimulants to labor;—no longer kept on the side board and offered to fitends and yisitors in token of hospitality. it is ,io longer respectable to drink or offer to others, even where liquor is kept and sold by authority of law. Hardly a Mall now, in fact, any where ventures to mock public opinion, and invoice the denounced curseof heaven, by " putting his bottle to his neighbor," and "giving, his neighbor drink." Al ready has drinking almost entirely ceased. The multitude have cast away their cups, and forsaken their dissipation; and thou sands are still following their example.— The certain and immediate consequence is, and to a greater and growing extent must be, an immense diminution in the CONSUMPTION of the poisonous lipuid ; tending rapidly and unerringly to its total exclusion from common use, to its "own place,"--alongside of arsenic and prussic acid on the shelf of the druggist. The manufacture and sale, as surely as effect follows cause, must, in the same ratio, cease also. This is evident. Nothing could be more plain. The reported state of the market every week, begins to verify it even now. The distillery and brew ery, no longer finding demand for their y ield, must cease their operations. The Runt pole, deserted, must f.,11. 'th e bar in the public house, no longer needed or profita ble, but sit eye-sore to all classes and con ditions of customers, must be doomed to banishment. The vile grog-shop, stripped of it customers, must discontinue its work of demoralization and death. All this must inevitably follow. A state of things exists now in this very place, & in almost ehottokt.haenel loor.done every place, which clearly indicates the • near and certain approach of the day, when the axe will be laid to the 1100 T Or the Upas—and the poison can only stirs wive it in the effluvia emitted trout its • decaying trunk. survived Henry that glorious day lingers in its tah: ,nsdoa I,:y3 p ridhie r i o ßcBc a ovi c ii,fi,, l ss : ,:ni , incii( c .:l,i, a gox t f: l ,l,K.,li a l ii. t i.i l in: y n : gng , ; i hitherto abte.n,o,odrriiisvlto:,b,,:i s ,..:eki o ci.iefalt b dcisi e nttimtinnrimni, f elo t aBca i 3: l : l ? . How can they 1 Nature shrinks from the El ile i iTtn:l 'u il e e t. ii: v .: " : a ri t n i ; ha t o e il t :ria t i t a ; l ha s i :: .ts ft p : c r 3 0 1: 5 , 1 i t :0:1: 1 8 9 : 1 f ' were lately arting tinder f i , n .arn the e 1 8c tig E l i i, d s e i r tuate the Boning " in feet in front and 90 feet hack, erected nit ' lot No. 6 in the plan of said Borough, and thli let or piece of ground and curtelegeapoirtenant thereto.. Philip Winters :old) Claim $126,76 for work William Jones, tra- 1 and labor done and nil - Jot:lii,f)ighl al‘n:nV6sitie'cliflicreit:..et'rt.s:fiMotikalr'afejtit:lof:ti:ieu,n'etmis.):lnttPist:bsateolti:ieridy:licoil s n ii: lt i a lt r . A i i i ci l e l ki l t i g e s ;l : ,, c r ) : .h on hi j u re c e l , ! n t i , l l " .s . d9 i y : , : , n s t_ a !t f tsa ie _ i ii ::l ,:ede ; t i r f t o it t :be Bur r ugh of Hollidaysburg . , and on lot No 177 in the new town plot of said Borough, b tack, and the Int nr piece of ground and cur ilege appnrtEnant thereto. j a; o- o l i n f : : j l nn ol c c lb : ? : n i i l i . i t s K ir: s a i i :v i c ni lis t:o eE r y , : fp : p w i . . o n ,si e is r t: j . .1 1 t work i s st :i hn e t n u ; : n % a yl i: f y a i : . n ' i la b a : l (m i ti . t ei c i c el i a le k6 lbr' o'tt°l3'na. labor done lip(l.ll.(tlficfol Baptist ,),C.fuhit.:t Edward Church eric! appurtenants. e a! said I t t ni w j i o h - t thereto, laisnhdedmtaotaettii(7lsfofrutrnhe building last above' 1 j eg described and tin e appurtenant. S A er' W hi K iig in g n i : s y owner or I vs l ' o e t p o u t le g c l i •o " u7i n d e a r. nal curt; - • • McFarlane & Garbet'\ . Claim $53,94,• for furnished materialsfurnishedA NV Kinney reputed , ior the building or owner & contracti.r. j Foundry last above described, and the lot of ground and curti lege appurtenant thereto. Benjamin Nugent l Claim 9:20, fur work and furnished done and Philip Reamer Beamer own- terials furnished wand er, or whoever may }for all that certain, he owner, and Phil- frame cooper shop, one. ip Beamer contract- and a half stories high, or. situate on the turnpike road, fronting on said road 40 feet and exten ding back 30 feet, in the town of ,Dunct.n— vine, and the lot or piece of ground and cur- Mtge appurtenant. Cyrus Egbert . ?Clairn $lOO4, for work AN and labor done and ma. .) n ames lletheriniton terials furnished to and for all that certAin twn story brick house sit uate on Newry streetln. the borough of Gays, port, and on lot No, 76 to the plan of son( borough, tieing 2 feet in front and 34 feet back, null the lot of ground and curtilege ap.= purtebant. Charl.es Hughes (' l . laim 8193 . , 15, tit' vs materiaNtiirtuslierf f'r Janes B. Frampton all that certain 2story owner and contrator j brick dwel!ing house . .situate on lot No. 12 in the Plan* Abe Bor ough of Hollidaysburg, being, on the corner of Allegheny and Front streets, and the lot of ground and cnrtilege appurtenant. , • • Jonathan Carrthert) Claim $9O, for writ., for use of Robert done as a mill w rjCht Harvey }for Defendant in tht , ems t ruction ut a saw . Abraham Shoop. j mill on the farm ordr.. fendant in Hares Valley. Union township, ti the Main Ron miming through the said var= ley nut( emptying into the Juniata riYer at the farm of Julio Vandevander. Huntingdon, June 29. 1812.
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