6 - 6 12111 THE HUNTINGDON JOURNAL, One country, one censt:turon, one destiny." Mlzta ma aaa Ma) tka Wednesday morning, July 19, 1843. Z*V. B. PALMER, Esq. (N). 104 S. Third Street, Philadelphia,) is althorised to act as Agent for this paver, to procure subpar:prow and adar tisements. To .Advertisers. Advertisements must be handed in on Tuesday =min; before 9 oicloA to insure their iniernon in next moraines paper. COUNTY CONVENTION, ATLI Democratic Harris= Meeting. The citizens of the several townships and bor oughs of this county, are requested to most at their usual places of meeting, On Satirday the 12th day of Au gust next, to elect two Dalogatcl from each of said townships and boroughs, to represent them in the County Convention, which will meet in the Borough of Huntingdon, on Wednesday, the 16th of August, at 2 o'clock in the afternoon, to nominate a County Ticket, to be supported by the opponents of the present State Ad calnistretion. at the coining general election, anl also to appoint Con7r,sional Confe rees, and to appoint delegates to the State Conven tion which will assemble. at Harrisburg. on the 6th day of Sernember next, to nominate candidates for To describe the astonishment, the wrath, the in a Board of Canal Commissioners to be supported dignation, the fury, with which the publization of by the Democratic Whig and Antimasonic voters of these toasts was received by the Porter faction is en this Commonwealth at the ensuing general election, , tirely impossible, says the Telegraph. The Gover and to transact such other businesses may be deem ed necessary for the promotion of the cause of the nor himself, it is said, raged like a lion in the hut people. ; ter's toils—he talked in Indian and he spluttered in By Order of the County Committee. bad Dutch—he cursed in Kickapoo-and I e denoun- THOMAS FISHER, Chairman. cod in Winnebago. Truly front all descriptions he July 12, 1843. must have been " savagerous." Ile set his friends to work, to counteract the effects of the proceedings, Xteal Estate. and the result of their exertions appeared in the Much valuable real property is advertised for sale 1" Harrisburg Argus" of the following day (Thum in this paper, as well by the Sheriff.; by individuals. I day) in the shape of u Card "To the Public" in We call the attention of capitalists, and others deal- i which six of the Vice Presidents and one of the ring to purchase, to the same. Secretaries say " that no toasts (excepting the regu _„.rj. We have placed the Sheriff's Sales, Procle lar toasts) were either offered or drank." They fur mations and Lists of Jurors and Trials for the Au- thee say that they "condemn, most unequivocally, gust Court on our last nime. all such toasts as reflect upon the Chief Executive Officer of this Commonwealth, as an indignity to l our Commonwealth, and as unbecoming the citizens The Cashier of the Carlisle Bank has given of the seat of Government of Pennsylvania." notice that application will be made by the Directors i The " Argus" and the " Signal" of the Gth inst. of that institution, to the next Legislature, for a I —both in the "ThrEan" service—contain articles renewal of the charter of the said Dank. It is to be • which exhibit quite a "meataxish" feeling towards located in Carlisle, and have the same capital it now the "Democratic Union" faction, and charge the has, (a"300,000,) for the specific object of banking matter home upon the "State Printers" as a trick and discounting purpose. I devised by them for the purpose of casting obloquy ' • (j Notice is also given by twenty citizens of on the executive. Clinton county, that they intend to apply to the I The two factions held meetings on Saturday the next Legislature for the chatter of a body corporate sth, denouncing each other in unmeasured terms, under the name and style of ' , The Lock Haven in strict accordance with the usages of the party ;" Bridge and Banking Company - -to be located and at the latest accounts from Harrisburg they I were still fighting each other, and we don't know within the Borough of Lock Haven, in said county —to have a capital of i 50,000 and general bunking but what this Democratic War will yet end like the ' and discounting priviliges. The object of the corp. famous Kilkenny Cat' fight, where they used each teflon is the construction of a Bridge with toning other up so effectually that after the battle was en path, across the pool of the Dunstown Darn, at Lock ded nothing was left on the field but a few scattered ! tails to tell the bloody story Haven, and to issue notes to pay for the Bridge and for gcneral currency. a uiuctf2 cd The last Harrisburg Telegraph contains the fol. I P4'Don.trm, (son of James ;•['Donn'd, formeAy of lowing as one of the toasts given at Fia:dney'a Grove, fail:county) to his biotite, James, of Mifflin coon. on the 4th, j ty, from which we are permitted to make the follow. "By JIM. Snydfr.—J A tr ee IlecnA,or-a mon- in; extract. Some of our readers are acquainted umentof human great . ness--the DemocracyofPenn- with the writer, and will no doubt be pleased to hear L sylvania and of the nion, cannot forget him." " how he is getting along." The same paper says:—Since the above toast ap- "New Zealand, January 25, 1843. peered, it is understood that Mr. Snyder, who is a i I avail myself of the present opportunity of let- Clerk on the Hill, has got his dismissal! Gov. ting you know my whereabouts. I am in good Porter keeps no Buchanan men about !dm. I health. We have taken twenty hundred barrels of altered Relief Netts. oil, and expect to get one thousand more. We lay f The Harrisburg Telegraph says altered notes of four months at Prince Georges, New Holland. We the Erin Bank, Pa., have been put in cireulati..m. spent the time very agreeably. We spent our They purport to be s's Relief issue, but are altered Christmas and New Year at Hobantov,m, Vandie from I's, and may be detected by holding up to the I man's Land—it is about the size of Harrisburg—all light. English. We had a first rate time of it. We are Five's Relief issue entered from of the heading now towards Tequendama, on the Spanish Main. We v.ill then come round Cape Horn to Moyernensing Rank, Philadelphia, are also in circa- Rio Janiero. I think if we have luck we will be in !titian. The vignette of the ore dollar notes, dif „vo females New York by the first of September. I can then ferent from the genuine lives— being holding p sis el SC, ai,S, arms re stin g n beehive. 81.7 I have been round the world Look rut else for Tcwanda bank I's and 2's, al tered from spuriou, Rebel issues. The signature of J. G. Boyd oncl T. Dyer, clerk, are altered to A Ward and W. Boyd, clerk. Terrible ecnEaus.ticn run. River, Mass. The beautiful village of Fall-River, Mass., was GEANT of Pennsylvania for the distinguished honor, nearly destroyed on Sunday the '2cl inst. The whole and a correspondent in the last Washington Rep.- heart of the town was burned down. The number ter earnestly recommends the Hon: P. M. T. M'KEN of buildings destroyed Iv reported at one hundred: nne. They are all good men. If Pennsylvania and e;ghty, among which were the Cusrom House, is to be honored with the nomination, no better man Post OTare, the Poca,et house, the Manufacturer's could be chosen from within her borders, than Hotel, the Fall-River Bank. the Savings Institution, either of the two above mentioned. the Universalist, Methodist uud Freewill Baptist In reference to the recommendation of Mr. hr. Church., and the Printing °free of the Foll. River KEN NON, the U. S. Gazette says: Monhor. The fire swept through the principel That is a very good nomMation. But is not Mr. street, the wind blowing with such fury that no ef. Pennsylvania? Who e NrK tli e eTh i ig " Mdida i4 te l Z forts could stop its ravages. A great number of stronger or a better man than the distinguished P there a dwellings were destroyed and many families ; statesmen of Washington county / made homeless. The loss is estimated at half a mil- I Those are pertinent questions. The Whigs of lion ! ! Pennsylvania are now looking to Mr. MX° nnon Great Piro at Lansingburg, N. T. as their candidate for Cloventor in 1844. The Troy (N. 1.) Whig of Monday week, con- i Our or TOO Caos.—The Lancaster Examiner tains an account de destructive fire at Lansing- of the 12th inst. says:—The notorious " Da. Ai , burg, by which about thirty buildings were comm. PLZTON, " of uxorious celebrity, was releascAl from med, together with a large amount of other property. prison in this city a few days since, it appearing Amongst those destroyed is the larN Hctel known that no oae would take the trouble to pzocurc the as the F.. neeilaer House. I means of hie punishment. The 4th of Silly in 22arrisberg. The 4th passed of in ILurisbuig in a quiet and harmonious manner. The "German and odor citizens, without distinction of party," met at Penh. ney's Gram, a short dietanoe tom the borough, to oelef,rate the anniversary of the day that declared as a nation of freemen. Genets Moss melded, assisted by ten Vice Presidents and three Secteta nee. On the ground every thing wand off quietly and in order, as above stated; but the following day, the proceedings were published in the " Dem ocratic Union," as if officially, which caused quite a "hubbub" in the Rickapoo Wigwam, as may be expected on learning that among a long string of volunteer toasts the following and many others of a similar character appeared: By Leonard Kramer.—David R. Porter, Gover nor of l'ennsylvania ..—Not a dupe for knaves, but a knave for the sole object of lucre. By J. G. Schott.—David R. Porter, "the last of the Mohican." He is at present under a sentence of condemnation, from which neither a veto, a par don, a nol pros, nor an Attorney General's opinion, will he able to save him. By John Ingram.—David R. Porter—Traitors may feed on Treason—" Injins" may epeak of hon esty while under bad influences; but the indigna tion and contempt of a whole community will award retributive justice to the miscreant. By George rissler—Tyler and Porter—The first desalted th; Whig% and the latter the Democrats, mutually intending to divide tho spoils,"—and in loin; so, have spoiled themselves in the estimation of the honest and intelligent of all parties. By Martin Lawyer.—Gov. Porter—with a— broad head and a lumbering disposition, he took 99,000 prisoners from the marble tent of Old Nick. By Martin Schell.—David R. Porter—He has purchased a couch upon whirls his gray hairs will always stand upright in the dark. By John Fa4le;—Governor Porter—A generous Democracy risked their lives to instal him into office —believing him to be honest—an indignant Democ racy now spurn him, knowing him to be a traitor to their principles. Dy S. Horning—Tyler and Porter—The first twice a political traitor—the latter always a political trimmer. From New Zealand. We have been favored with a Letter Com Tema The Vice Presidency. At the recent Whig Ste Convention in Georgia, the lion. JOHN M. Bean tar of that state was note- Mated as the Whig candidate for Vice President.— The Daily Forum closes some comments on this nomination, by recommending the Mon. Joas Ban- What have the liitts done ? This question, lately so frequently put, though not so cften asked now, is answered, in part, very pertinently by the editor of the Hartford Courant, in the following article. What a Whig Congress has done ahottli be kept before the ponple. 77w Tarif-.-libie it Works.—The Whig Tar- IT has boon In operation lees than one year, during all which time it bas met with violent and virulez.t opposition. Nevertheless, let us see how it ope rates. Just before the Tariff was passed, Treasury notes were selling at ninety-six cents for a dollar, or four per cent. below par. Now government paper is selling at one hundred and sixteen cents for a dollar, or at sixteen per cent. above par, making a differ ence in favor of the government, of at least twenty per cent. Before the Tariff was adopted, Congress was necessitated to authorize the Executive to borrow money without limitation as to interest. Now the government is able to borrow at five, and less than five per cent. interest. Had no change been made by the last Congress in the Tariff of duties, our country would now have been filled with foreign goods to the detriment of our home laborers, and we should have been drained of our specie to pay for them. . Since the present Tariff has been in operation, the exports from this country have exceeded the im ports by millions of dollars. The balance of these exports over the imports has been paid us in money; so that cash has actually become the cheapest article in market. Still the outcry against the Tariff is continued, and no man knows how to shape his business, be cause certain politicians choose to connect this ques tion with the popularity of their leaders. Could the present Tariff be permitted to remain unmolested for a few years, we verily believe the government would be out of debt, and its credit en tirely restored. But no : the interests of the coun try in general, and the interests of New England in particular and most of all, the interests of the la boring classes in New England must be sacrificed by demagogues, claiming to be the especial, if not exclusive friends of working men. A great urtjority of New England is made up of emphatically laboring men, and we trust they will be able to distinguish between their pretended and their real friends in this matter." We wish we could say the same thing in regard to the people of Pennsylvania: but as long as they sutler themselves to he humbugged by the mere tinkle of democracy and by pretended democrats, they will never be able to distinguish between their real and their pretended friends ; between the ad vocates of sound principles and mere demagogue,. [Foram. A. New Turn at Washington, An article in the United States biazette on recent political movements, says in concluding,—Unless de ceived very greatly by all indications, there is agood understanding between John C. Spencer and the Van Buren party ; and we will venture one further suggestion, that Mr. Porter will also be drawn into the support of Van Buren, and that the present bit terness of the Van Buren press towards Mr. P. will be softened as Spencer drives him into the Van Buren ranks. Peace between Mexico and Me*asl The last Now Orleans papers contain the procla mation of President Houston, of Texas, directing the cessation of hostilities against Mexico during the pendency of negotiations between the two coun tries for the establishment of permanent peace. An armistice was likewise agreed upon by Sante Anna 1 1 on the part of Mexico. It is to be hoped the nego tiations will result in securing a permanent peace between the two nations. BEWARE or KritAxosns, Gums !—The Lew istown Republican gives currency to the following paragraph: n Married, on the 11th inst., by Henry Eiscnbise, Esq., Mr. Ira Tallinadge, to Mi. Caroline Link, all of Lewistown. To the above, the Clearfield (Pa.) Banner, ap pends the following extraordinary comment: " Mr. Tolimalge is writ known to th e , citizens of this place, having resided here eland nyear. Ile wen: away }other unceremoniously. leaving a re }per:table wife ions; one child to shift ft, Clow/wive." :Me Cabinet. The Madisonien of Saturday, the 6th inat., has the following annunciation: We aro authorized to announce, that the Cabinet arrangements have at length been completed, and that the Departments are placed under the adminis tration of the undermentioned gentlemen : Hon. An. P. Tlemcen, Secretary of State. &m C. SPENCER, Secretary of the Treasury. M. PORTER, Secretary of War. DAVID II ENSHAW, Secretary of the Navy. a CHAS. A. WIER LI FP E, Postnaaster General. " JOHN Nm.son, Attorney General. Encampment at Bloomfield, Pa. The Bloomfield Perry Freemen states that the volunteers of that Brigade will hold an 'Encamp. meat, at Bloomfield, to commence en the Lth of September next. It say.:—..Suitable arrangements, we learn are being made to give to those companies which will visit this place, a cordial welcome.' IMPORTANT DEPTSION.- . 1110 Supreme Court of Errors at New Haven, Conn., have decided in effect, that the proprietors of the lost steam boat Lexing ton, burnt some years since in Long Island Sound, are responsible for all the freight on board at the time of her destruction, although notices were pos ted up in the boat, and inserted in the bills of la ding, that all freight was to be ut the risk of the owners. Members of Congress will be elected on the first Monday in August in the following States: North Carolina 9 ; Alabama 7 ; Mississippi 4; Kentucky 10: Indiana 10; and Illinois 7. A correspondent of the Washington, (Pa.) Re porter tells of a cat, the mother of two kittens, who has adopted into her family a young Rat, which she nourishes tts friendly as her own offspring, WHAT 'RATH TRY. WHIOS Dons?-The Math. !lonian admits they have reduced the expenses of the Government from thirty millions per annutn to seventeen. John Cunningham, lisq., of Blairsville has been appointed, by the Governor, to be an Associate Judge of India ni county, ht the room of Meek Kelly, deec.a.d. A Merchant on the Tariff—lts Operation and Effect. The following letter from one of the soundest, moat influential and intelligent merchant. of New York, we raspy from the N. T. Tribune. "It ex rrossee," mays the Tribune, 'the conviction of a large majoirty of our Merehanle community, bah in the City and Country. We ask attention to the farts it embodies, the fruits of largo experience and careful observation. They put the necessity and vast benefits of a Protective Tariff beyond the reach of cavil." A MERCHANT ON THE TARIFF. To the Editors of the Tribune : Two valued correspondents have recently asked my opinion upon the subject of the Tariff—its ope- ration upon the different interests of the country ; and as one of them expresses a wish to publish the views of a resident of the City, I have concluded, with your permission, to reply through your col- umns. Twenty years ago, through the influence of Gov. Custors, and the late BENJAMIN KNOWER of Albany, I became a convert to a Protective Tariff. Frequent conversation with those gentlemen upon the subject convinced me that no country upon earth possessed the resources within itself of becom ing so substantially prosperous and independent as our own--that in its length and breadth it embra ced every element of prosperity; and when that prosperity was once secured by permanent legisla tion for the protection of our own interests, none could be more favorably situated to prosecute a pro fitable Foreign Commerce. Comtnerce is but the agent of Horne interests; and, when they are sound and prosperous, it twice blesses--the agent, and the employer. Reflection had strengthened these opinions; but it was reserved for the present year ,(1843) to de monstrate their soundness. The late Congo3s, after mature deliberation, adopted a Tariff of Duties which, while it brings ample revenue to the Treasury, fosters, to a liberal extent, American labor. Under the influence of this Tariff, every intmst of the Country is rising from a state of unparallel• ed depression quite as rapidly as could be desired and what will greatly disappoint the opponents of the mersure, the importation of Foreign Goods the present year will be somewhat beyond the wants of the Country, producing a Revenue from Customs of some two or three millions more than the esti mate of the last Committee of Ways and Means. 'This is not mere conjecture. A good fall trade is anticipated, and the orders that have gono forward for goods to arrive in July and August will be found to be quite large enough. The opinion lam aware has obtained, to a considerable extent, that because this city is strictly commercial, its citizens are gen erally opposed to a Tariff. Such is not the fact.— So far as my information extends, a large proportion of our well-informed American merchants are the friends of a Protective Tariff. A few, who are ex clusively in the Importing business, the Foreign in terest, which is large, and generally respectable as regards character, and a portion of the shipping in terest, are the advocates of what is termed Free Trade. Several of the most intelligent of that latter class, however, have said to me, that they had no expecta tion that we could preserve a sound and well-regu lated currency without a Tariff. Talk to them of Free Trade in ships, and they will tell you that they could not live without di. crimination. Nor have the South so much reason to complain of the present state of things. No section of the country is recovering more rapidly from the terrible revulsion of 1830 and '7, than the States of the South and South-West. Cotton, at the present price, pays the planter better than the agricultural products of the Northern and Western States re numerate the farm, of those Stdes. lit Alabama and it it estimated that a good negro will grow six bags of Cotton. At five cents per pound, this would amount to 140 or 150 dollars. To feed and clothe the negro, costs front 60 to 65 dollars, leaving a clear profit front his labor of about 80 dollars. The present value of the negro, is from 350 to 400 dollars, and cotton lands which in 1836 brought 20 to 30 dollars per acre, now sell from 8 to 12. The natural increase of stock, I mean human flesh and blood,) it is always estimated will pay the inter. est on the investment. The consumption of Cotton in this country• the present year, will not probably vary much from four hundred thousand bales, and thus far it has been taken by our manufacturers at prices that have paid the planter 10 or 15 per cent. more than that shipped to Liverpool or Havre. And so of bread stuffs. For years past the sa- fest and best market for Western Flout has been the district of our country in New England devoted to Manufactures ; and although our merchants have occasionally felt authorized, by accounta front the other aide, to ship Flour to Europe, the result has invariably shown that the home market is snore to be relied upon than the foreign. Under the present system it is fair to estimate that the dentestic market for the great staple of the South will increase some 10 per cent. per annum far twelve or fourteen years to come; and before that period arrives, Virginia, North Carolina, Geor gia, Tennessee and perhaps Alabama, will have be come Tara States, each with its Lowell and Pat terson within its borders. During my experience in trade—and it extends back more than twenty-five years—all our Commer cial revulsions have had their origin in excessive importations from abroad. It is win to say the country will take no more goods than it actually re quires. Nine tittles out of ten, all the [mode bro't here will be sold. If the importer finds there is a large surplus itt first hands, he will offer to the job. her inducements, either in price or time, or both, to take them MT from his hands; and when the jobber finds he has accumulated a stock beyond the de moods front his regular customers, he will be sure to place a portion of that stock where he ought not, by taking up men of doubtful credit—and so of the retailer in the country. Preserve the present rate j of du tics, and all them e:•ils will be avoided. The present tariff excludes front our market Man chester pints—an article, the impartation of which has heretofore taken a large sunount of Specie out of the country-and what has been the consequence Why within the last eight months there have been improvements In this country in the machine'' , con noeted with this branch of business, (printing,) each as were never made in England during the same number of years; and the consumer is now furnished with domestic calicoes, at 0 to 15 cents per yard, superior to the import.] goods, for which he used to pay from 18 to 27. And this will be the ease with numerous other articles. Wherever foreign competition is excluded, there will always be such an application of capital and skill as will favor the consumer. Who, past middle life, has forgotten the large amounts of specie formerly sent from this country every year for the purchase of East India cottons— goods familiarly known at that day as , Hunejlamffr The Tariff of 1816 imposed duties upon those goods that amounted to a prohibition. Within two years thereafter their place was supplied by a domestic article superior in texture, and at a reduced price; and from that time to the present, the manufacture of brown bleached Cottons has steadily advanced until New England now spreads her heavy fabrics in the Canton Market, side by side with the Calcut ta goods, and challenges a comparison. To the question—“would you make this system of Protection permanentr-1 answer: A few years will go far to equalize tile advantages Europe now derives from great individual wealth and a full pop ulation. When the period ortives, it will be time enoualt to talk about commercial treaties. For the present, leave the tariff where it is, with perhaps some slight modifications, and a career of prosperity is in store for thil country, such as it has not cape rienerd. Preserl c this hallance-wheel, and as such, it is worth Ufa dozen National Banks; and Com merce, Agriculture and Mechanical Labor will enjoy a btallitity, , with fair remuneration. such as it has not for a long period. MLactt Eslate of Conrad Dittenger Late or 11 norTherry township, de'c'd. srOTICF. is hereby given, that letters sE.I testament:ay on the hist will and tes t,meht nt Celle:id I)ill.•nger, late ci \V nod : ::try township, Huntingdon county, have heen granted to the undersigned. All per sons indehled to said estate are requested to melt, immediate payment, and tilos_ having claims or demands against the same are re quested to present them duly Luthenticattd for settlement, to • DANIEL p,‘UL, 301 - IN SKYLES, $ " July 19, 1:343-Gt EsTATE OF 1:11031AS BLAIR. Late rf Burree icwnship, otice is hen by given, Out letters testa mentary on the List will and testament of the said Then:. Blair have been granted to the undersigned. All persons indebted to said estate ore requested to make immediate pay ment, and those having claims or demands against the same are requested to present them duly authenticated for settlement, to iJORpIC✓II .21JA NSBY. Earree tp. JOHN BORST, West lowndsze July 19, 184.3.-6 t Auditor's Notice. THE undersi g ned :inditor nppointed by the Court. cd . (Ammon Pleas of Huntingdon county, to distribute the proceeds of the sale of the rev] estate of James B. Frampton, (in the hands oldie Sheriff.) among tite venous claimants, will attend at the Prothonotary's Office, 1 Huntingdon, on rlieliday the CM day of t‘UGU3•I' next, ;it 10 Web,' k. A. M. for the purpose of mling said distribution, when and when• all persons interested may attend if they thin k proper. JAMES STEEL, Audilor. Jute 19. 1841 'l'. K. Si NOVI O. vitas just received and offers for sale, 7,500 first rate half ;itnislt AND 31,000 good common SEG A RS. V - Country Mere Wilts can be supplied on reit:4l.llWe t erms Huntingdon. July 19.—tf 014TtiViv t tll sole-criber will tell, at public sale, on Friday the tat day o f September next, all that farm at the north end of the Borough of Shirleyslang,lionitinytlon coun ty, Pa., (late the property of Dr. Peter Swine, deed.) containing NIA more or Iran, 125 :terra thureff cleared and in a good state of cultivation, about 12 acres meadow, and the r,s.clue con readily be cleared and turned into meadow or upland. The improvvnit nts are a iell GRIST MILL, SAW MILL, CLOVER, MILL, and two Kola Houses, kith a barn to each. There are two S Apple Orcimi t 1.4 on the said farm and a spring of never failing water to each t f the boost's, and several other good springs on the place. A great nortion of the farm lies on the Big A aghwick Cret k, tool is among the best fat to or bot tom laud on said stream. The Mills are on Fort Run which passes clear thrutorit the farro and eve ry field can be watered by it. There is also anothergood mill seat or site for machinery on the farm. Any person wishing to see and axamine the premhtes, is invited to call on the sub scriber, residing at the Mill, for that pur pose, ut any time between this and the day of The whole will be sold together, or in two parts, if desired, and the terms will be made to suit purchas-rs. S.tle to continence at 10 o'clock A. M. DAVID IBY I^, 18;3• earpit;Cilfs' eoUrt Slate. , cr4,lc virtue of an order of the Orphans' 4.4.9 Court will be t xposed to Public Sale. on the premises In Barrve township. on Sat urday the 12th day ,4 August, A. 1). 1110, All that certaia tract and phm•ntion of lond. situate in the said toll Barree, :led by lauds ct Thorns, Blair on the "North. Leonard Stt fry on the West. Edward 1) n:ht rty on the South, and John &emit uu the Fast. containing a ED ,ifQ.ccp he the stunt• more or less, with the amnia. minces, The said tract of land has us: Two BOWS, so • and a cabin barn erected thereon, and about 100 Acres derived, and a first rate ORO H AiU) of bear ing fruit trees, late the estate of A saph. Fa gan, deceased. I'Eants OF SALE : One third of the fur chase money to be paid on emifi • maim of the Sale, one tided in one year thereafter with interest and the remaining one third at the death of the widow, Elizabeth Fagan, the i n terest of the said third to be paid no rmally to the widow, to be secured by the bond and mortgage c - if the put chaser. By the Court. JOHN REED, Clomk. Due attendatice be given hi- 3. \V. Trustee, April 19, 19.1.3, ViIIOSE TRIINK A trui.k, of which ~..ere is ii.i kuuevii et,ner liss Ca' smne time iemiined tit the Write !I.'s,: of the subscriber, at M.iunt U,.i Pis. Iluntingdon county, Pa. It is it/Taro:oy sppe nes to hay, a detiblc i ccii c nn the b tttom--11, Newland & Mc-, mithjitz. Where from and where r usl heti to is mit 1-•tible. Judging from its we it yr,,ba bly contains s, meting. The owner is re qiiested to come bi t war,l, prone prop. rty pay cluirges mid t. k: it n w.t v. JOHN SIIARP.I2. June 29, Estate of Benjamin litray, Late (f Barret: township, lluntingdun _ .... ,._county, dcet dad.. WO TICE is lie - reby given that lettere cf al administration til.v.n the said estate have been granted to the undersigned. Al! pet VMS having claims or demands against the same are rcquested to make them known without delay, and all persons indebted to maize immediate pat meat to %VhI.LhAM MAFFIT, Adm'r. July 12, 1841 Estate (WM. Peter Swine, bole 0/ Shirley Intrwthip, Ilirritingdon cortTdy, c'etra std, - - VFOTICE is hereby given, that letters testamentary upon the said estate have been granted to the undersigned. All per sons indebted to said estate are requested to nu.k, immediate payment, and those having chums or demands against the same are re goested to present tnem duly authenticated ,ettlement, to JOIIN LUTZ, s GLt)RGF's SWINE. j Shirley tc.vtimii;p, July 12, ?6.1: Auditor►s Notice. Execut or s MBE undersigned Auditor cppnintmi .by 44 - the Conn of Common Pleas of Mut, ti i ii t ehm county, to distribute the proceeds of the Sheriff sale of the real estate of J Atoll & Kiasel among those entitled thereto.. will attend oc the Protholegary's into, in llunttngdnn; far that purpose, on Tuesday the Bth ci ytf August 1., xt, when and where all person: ir,t:rested nrty attend if they think proper. J.l NIES STEEL, Aud'e. Hu' inmlon, July 12, 1843. :.ccotkuczacza., LL pet sqns h EtVi 11 . 5 t,rcounts standing mo,ithß tmd upwurds, with Vie suliscriher, are reTectluily, hut carte-w:y r.tiaehted to unle immediate payment be tween this and use 10hh day ot. September next, longer credit cannel be ail' irded. GEO. A. SFEEL July 12, 1843.-St. PUBLIC A'ALE, OP -ISi-maesaazx. By virtue of an cuter of the Orphans' Court of the county of Huntingdcn, made the 29:11 i:,y of June, nit., there will be exposed to public tale, nn SATURDAY, the sth day of Al 3 M.'S"' next, nt the house of David Friiker, in Shirleysburr, at 10 o'clock. A. M. the following described property, viz : The undivided half part of a certain tract of land situ ire in Shirley township in said county, near the A ughwtek crel k contaiiiinz in all 110 .ICRES, more sr lessi; about twenty cf whey: is clear ed, the principal p.:Et being well timbered, havi .g thereen erected a log c.t!;!ti house, still house, and a gond spring heuse, t.djoim ing land of ‘Villinm 111'Nite on the east NO of Samuel Grove on the south, hi James Smith's of Smith's heirs en the north, and land of Jo seph Rhodes on the west, lute the property of elezekiall ltirketa, deed._ TERMS.—One third cf the pufehsse money to be paid on the confirmation (Attie sale--.one third one year thereafter, and th r remainder two years after the corfirmatfoo ofsale, with interest. The title will be indisputable. Aticn dance will be siren by JNO. ESSNVFLI,, Jr. Atlm'r. de bonis non &c. of fltz • kialt Rick uts,(lertlisecl. . _ B. The ,ther undivided half of the above described tract of land, !whiff, the half or interest of David \V. Rickets therein, will be exposed to public sale at stArle, time and 'thee, and on same terms by the undersigned Assignees. - RANDAL ALEXANDER, NATHAN nucrrs. Assignees nt David W. Rickets, ly 12. 1843 --ts. P.,9I.7IPAULET LJIPS. VpOTICE is tient.) , given that the Pam- V4Sli phlet L•tws of the late session of the Legislature nave come to hand and are costly for distribution to those entitled to receive - -- _ them. JAMES STEEL, Prot'y. July 12, 1543.::9t, BLANK DEEDS, al: an nnPilaved form, for sale at this office. •.!Ifo.. BLANK PKTATIOr,'S FOR TUR LIZ ATIOti. township,