Huntingdon journal. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1843-1859, November 29, 1843, Image 3

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    A
7-73 U4aD ci7coullpuima.
Huntingdon, Nov. 29, 18413.
WOOD WANTED.
Wood is wanted at thi4 Mike in payment of sub
scription, advertising and job work.
To Advertisers
Advertisements must be handed in on Tuesday
owning before 9 o'clock to insure their insertion in
[next morning...paper.
Religious Notice
Divine worship, according to the usages of the
Protestant Episcopal Church, will he held at the
Academy in this Borough, every Sunday, at the
hours of 11. in the morning and 3 in the afternoon.
The,Rev. Mr. Fi elm is the officiating minister,
and resides in this place, at Mrs. Clarke's.
W ANTED,—On accounts due
at this dfice—
200 Bushels of Wheat,
60 do. Corn,
10 do. Buckwheat,
100 do. Oats,
50 do. Potatoes,
30 do. Apples,
1000 Pounds of Pork,
300 do. Beef.
• Persona desirous of making payment in any of
Ike 60 , 8 ru ddy, will please bring them on soon,
Or give notice of their intention to do so, and state
p what amount, without delay. The market pric
Frll be allowed for them by
From Me Cincinnati Gov,lc.
JOHN QUINCY ADAMS,
AT CINCINNATI,
THE WELCOME,
The booming of the cannon at hull past twelve
,o'clork yesterday, announced tho arrival of Jottx
QUINCY ADAMS at Mount Auburn, the beautiful
village north of Cincinnati.
Quickly the word sped throughout our city, and
as quickly as our citizens gathered in front of the
Mamie House, where he was to be welcomed by
the Mayor of the city. This area was tilled early,
and, as the gathered throng, which followed him
from the corporation line, poured into it, the dense
mass looked like a sea of human beings.
At half past one, Mr. Adams reached the Henrie
House—and soon after appeared on the balcony,
when the welkin rung with the ahoutof welcome.
The Mayor, Henry E. Spencer, then addressed
Mr. Adams. The effort was a happy one. A
native of the sod, and familiar with the growth of
the West, he referred—eloquently referred—to its
past progress, and its present advancement He
eaid :
10.. M a. ADAM,' :-4 t is with no common
emodans of delight awl pride, that I am
required no this occasion, as the Chief
En cutive officer of Cincinati, to tender
you a hearty welcome to the hospitalities
of my fellow• citizens. If, sir, the pur
pose of your visit were alone considered,
it would be deeply gratifying to acknowl
edge the obligations you have laid us un
der, in giving 3 our counten truce and aid to
the advancement of au undertaking, so
ditinctly characteristic of our growth and
rrosperity as a people. But he. are con
ideratiuns of a deeper and more abiding
- character W bleb bind you to our hearts,
a.til 'cause them to so ell with the liveliest
affections of gratitude and esteem.
IVithin the short compass of your own
memory, the spot
y ou now occupy was un•
trodden by civit7.ed man. Now, as if the
ellehalitN wand had passed over the
scene, where stood the wilderness is
raised a city— a city where art has erected
its enduring monuments, and science and
refinement taken up their permanent a
bode. No where in the whole history of
man, can be toundlthe parallel ul a trans
ition so rapid yet so complete.
In tracing the cause of such a wonder
ful Iphenomenon, and just acknowledg.
men} to the divine bounty in the bestow
menNit a rich and exuberant soil, may we
not seek them in the well directed energy
of an active people, fostered and cherish.
_ed by the freest institutions of govern•
ment ever established by man. These
istiiolions were fountled . by the descend
ants of the Pilgrim fathers—that indomit
able race *lnch fled the persecutions of
' - ti-otry and superstition, and sought an
It ' ~.
~ ,sylum fur religious and civil liberty in
the wilds of a new and untried trot Id.—
) To their And establishment none inure
I conspicuously devoted himself than your
, distiuguished sire. lle it was, that pros
claimed in tones 4 soul. stirring eloquence,
hen the great question of American lib
-11 , r.y was about to be proposed to the world,
in the asloption of the Declaration of In
dependence by our Revolutionary Fath
ers, that. "Sink or swim, line or die," he
was prepared to abide Ly the principles
therein so solemnly proclaimed. Aye—
he it was, (in the language of our Terri
ninth- Legislature more than forty years
ago,) "to whose firmness we are indebted
r the enjoyment of the rich country we
1 .
ow inhabit." He it was, (whose soul
) 10
swelling with the desire that this liberty
should covet the largest possible territory,)
that, during the Treaty of Paris, in 1792,
1 to negociute a peace, successfully resist
ed the proposition of the British Commis
sioner to make the Ohio River the north
ern boundary of the United States. He
it was, that refused to leave this Smiling
and beautiful Valley, all West from the
isisiftsaftylvania line, and from the Ohio
north to the Lakes, under the dominion
of the English Lion,
The spirit which always animated the
father, has ever since breathed forth from
the bosom of the son. To the maintain
ance of these same principles in their
pristime purity, no one has been more
signally active than )our honored sell.—
Forn hateecr din ersity of sentiment may
exist in regard to the many opinions and
actions of your life, none will deny you
at lea,t honesty of purpose; and all yield
admiration to youilardent love of liberty,
and your devoted attachment to the rights
of 1111111.
And now, sir, allow tne to add that
these same principles are deeply iinbi ded
in the hearts of all these poople, who
have come up with one purpose and mind
to pay their hest tribute to the country, by
rend. ring homage to the worth that adorns
it. Your aged compatriots, with tearful
rye; awl trembling lips, are waiting to bid
you ,‘ chrome. The generous youth, with
quickened pulse, and throbbi-ng bosom, are
encr to is elcome you—all, all are alike
i.opatient to mike known their love and
to,pret for the great defender of the
ItiOtts of mitt. In their name, and on
Omir behdf, I bid you a hearty, a thrice
told wrlcome
'rho Mayor's Address was received inset enthu
siastically ; when the applause subsided, Mr. Adams
spoke in reply as follows, in a manner characteristic
alai true greatness—his simplicity, directness, and
earnestness. His heart was full. He felt what he
said,and others felt for and with him. More especially
was this the case, when he replied to the Mayor's
allusion to his venerated father, in tones and lan
guage so touchingly eloquent. It produced a thrill
in the mighty multitude, and in nothing were there
sympathy so strongly expressed, as in the deep
stillness which reigned while he thus spoke:—
Mn.MAYOR AND FELLOW CITIZEN,:
THE EDITOR.
I have lived a long lite, pcblic and pri ,
vat', during three fourths which I have
been witness to the birth, the rise and the
progress, of a ptople, over that which I
first knew to be a wilderness, and which
has already become what might now be
termed tn► empire. I have known the ter•
ritory which now constitutes the State of
Ohio, as a wilderness, in possession of the
savage and original proprietors of the
country. Fifty years have passed away
since tile teats streamed from my eyes at
the lo,s of dear bosom friends, upon a field
which now constitutes a part of your
flourishing State. I have seen in the se
quel of that transaction, the men of that
savage lace, by whom that savage act had
been perforated, subdued by the superior
education,religion, and military
power of my country. I have subsequent
to that, seen the establishment, by the
Revolutioeary Congress of the United
States, of the North %Vest Tel ritory.—
And there,with a jay that has never yet for
saken my bosom, I have seen emplanted
the race who have declared unto the►r pos
terity, thtough all the lapse of time, that
neither slavery nor involuntary servitude
shall exist in that territory. 1 have seen
that principle Implanted in the elementary
principles of your existence as a State.
Under the provision of that principle of
the ordinance fur the government of the
North West Territory, I have seen the
State of Ohio spring into life. On the
same day in which it was my fortune to
enter the Senate of the United States, as
a representative of one of the oldest orig
inal States ot• this Union, on that same
day I had the satisfaction to see the Re
presentatives of your people enter the
Hall of the House of Representatives of
the United States; and Olt that same day
I took by the hand two members of the
Senate of-the United States from the State
of From that time forward, a space
of fmty years, I have witnessed the
growth of that State. And iu the vicist
tudes of human life, and making allow
ance for the imperfections which belong to
human nature, iu the li4ht of those pprint -
ples which I hope may never be eradicated
trotn'the bosom of man, I have seen the
people of the State of Ohm, not always
right, but always intending to be right,
and always advancing in prosperity, to
happiness, in virtue, and every thing that
can give glory to a people. All this I
have seen without indulging in the hope
of ever witnessing her progress, or her
territory itself. It is so tar distant from
the place of toy nativity—there was so
little occasion to call me here—occupations
numerous and oppressive made it so im
probable that it would ever be in l my power,
that 1 had ale ays helieved I should be
able only to admire at a distance, and
not to comae to the enjoyment of personal
observation.
In the course of last summer, bring on
an excursion (ruin my own State, one of
your immediate lellow-citizens came to
me, an invitation from n Society
formed in the bosom of your city, for the
erec.ion of a building, to be dedicated and
devoted to tl►e purpose of human improve
ment by the acquisition of knowledge, in
the firmament above our heads; the soci
ety, of which he was a member, having
passed resolutions inviting me to come
and take part with them in laying the
foundation of ihat building which I hoped
would tend to the improvement of the
condition of man on earth On receiving
that invitation, all difficulties and °bin.
tiuns vanished from my mind. I could
not possibly refuse. Every obstruction in
the way vanished before a hope that I
should be permitted to take part in a step
which I believed would tend to the ad
vancement of knowledge on earth, and
the glory of my country. I have come
among you, fellow-citizen's, on that ac
count, but on coming here, little did I ex
pect to meet a multitude like this now
before me. Little did I expect the mark
of respect which your Mayor has done
me the honor to show in your name,—
The purpose for which I came among you
'is nut yet accomplished ; but before the
sun of to-morrow shall have gone down
in the West, I hope, it will be. And fur
myself, permit me to say, if I should not
live to see the light of another day, there
would be none more glorious un %%Inch to
die.
Allusion has been made, fellow citizens,
not only to the services, which with good
intentions, it has been my fortune to be
stow on you, as a portion of the country,
but also those which have been rendered
to the same country by my father. In the
act of Legislature of the territory north
west of the river Ohio, they formally and
solemnly acknowledged the services which
he had rendered to this Union and to them
by refusing the proposition of time British
Commissioner for the ne,sociation of a
peace, which would nave bounded the ter
ritory of the United States on the Ohio.
Fellow•citizens, any testimony of re.
Bard from my countrymen, for any ser
vices ever rendered by myself, touches
toy heart in a manner which can never be
forgotten. But to that which refers to the
set vices of my father, any thing which re
gards myself is, in the comparison, as the
dust in the balance. I know it in true—
from the lips of my father I heard it more
than once, that the greatest enjoyment of
his I fe, was the acknowledgment by Ohio
of the services he had rendered on that
occasion. With regard to my services, I
trust, my fellow•citizens, that they are
not yet entirely concluded. I still enter
'
fain a hope, from the disposition which my
tellow•citizens of the Congressional Dis•
trict to which I belong, have shown to
• place me their sentinel - upon the watch
tower of the Constitution, that it may yet
be in my power to render sonic slight ser•
vice to them-and you. But whatever that
may he—whether or not my services may
hereafter be of any importance to them or
to you—the remembrace of your k indness
to me, this day, will remain with me till
the lust drop of blood shall cease to cir
culate in my heart. And with this, I trust
you will permit me to add my prayer to
Almighty God, for his blessing upon you
and your posterity so long as time shall
last.
Warm was the greeting of the people when Mr.
Adams concluded ! Hearty and enthusiastic his
reception! One deafening shout spoke out their
joy, and tho honesty of their welcome !
The day was fine, and the welcome to the ven
erable patriot was a glorious one, marked by the
enthusiasm, and unattended by any untoward event
calculated to mar the happiness of the occasion.
LAVING OF THE CORNER STONE
Thursday, the 9th, the day appointed for laying
the corner stone was wet, and before ten the streets
were filled with water. However the procession
was formed, and proceeded to the spot selected,
overlooking the whole city and surrounding coun
try. The Gazette, of the 10th, after giving an
account of the procession, with some beautiful and
appropriate remarks, proceeds as follows, to wit :
Nor could there have been a better selection
made, than John Quincy Adams to dedicate this
temple ! There never was a time when he has not
devoted himself to education—the education of all
men—in the best and broadest sense of the word.
As a Professor at Cambridge, as a public man,
whatever the part he may have filled, he has felt
this cause to be the cause of religion and liberty.—
Per this devotion, too, he has been taunted and
abused. Who does not recollect the sarcasm which
John Randolph heaped upon him when, as Presi
dent, he recommended a National Observatory to
be connected with a National University 9 " Light
houses of the sky," the words he used, were sneer
ingly bandied about as party catch-words. The
Corner Stone of one of these light houses of the
skies he laid yesterday, and his prayer was, that,
through it, and through all such efforts, the light of
heaven might be brought down more vividly upon
the earth ! But all taunts and sneers are forgotten,
while the common heart recognizes him, as if by
common consent, not only first among the great in
tellects of our day, but as first among the great
benefactors of the age! Wise, therefore, was the
selection of Mr. Adams as the dedicator of this new
temple of science!
Under these imposing circumstances, with these
stirring associations, and by this Man, was the Cor
ner Stone of the Cincinnati Observatory laid yester
day at half past 12 o'clock. In perforMing that
ceremony, the venerable speaker addressed the
gathering throng es follows:
The usages of civilized life made it a
common practice to mark the erection of
certain edifices devote,) to purposes of
inure extensive interest than the common
dwelling houses of individuals by the cele
bration of solemnities at the laying of their I,
corner stone. The palaces of monarchs ;
the churches devoted to the worship of
Almighty God—the flails of Legilation
—the Tribunals of Judgment—the pla
ces of the assemblages of men for the
exercises of the rights of power—the
houses lire the receipt of Customs—the
Mint for the coinage of money—the Ex•
change of the Merchant—the Batik or In
' surance Cu. of the dealers in money, or
tie adventurous navigator—the market
house of the multitudez—the hospital of
the friendless diseased—the prison or pen
itentiary fur the trangresso•s of the Law ;
the retreat of the deaf and dumb, and the
blind—the receptacles for the maniac, the
lunatic and the idiot—the Seminaries for
for education, Universities, Colleges and
Schools, all have been, from time to time,
dedicated with grave and solemn dignity
to the purposes of their construction.
'fits usage, long established in the old
er World, has been partially adopted And
frequo“tly imitated tu ours. We have,
indeed, no monarch from his palace to
rule with his sceptre of iron a groaning,
oppressed, and submissive people, but we
have built a palace for the abode of the
Chief Magistrate of our Union ; and all
the other edifices, which I have here mot
!iterated, besides the mighty works for the
supply of water to populous cities, not to
speak of light houses, bridges, turnpike
roads and railways that have, in every
i part of our Union, been auspicated at
their inception by ceremonies invoking
the blessings of God upon the Tabor and
enterprise of man, for the in►provement of
his own condition. Cast your intellectual
eye over that immense territory waived
by the St. Lawrence and the Alississipi,
ft um the St. John to the Sabine, and from
the Neversink to the 1111111th of the Cutout.
bia, and at every step of the soil over
which the foot of civilization has trod,
you perceive spires and turrets, steeples
and pinnacles pointing to the skies alrea•
dy completed or statoltig up as if by en
t, under the plastic labor ut• her
hands.
You see you are no longer in the wilder.
ness of savage .men. You see provision
made for the cultivation of the mind, not
less than of the soil. The cities gathered
and gathriiig upon the shores of the ocean,
the margins of rivers and the bottlers
of the lakes, tell you that Arts, Sciences,
Commerce and Navigation, Law and Juss
tice, Christian Truth and Virtuous Mor
als have fixed their abode on the borders of
the Western World, tied as you pass from
the coast to the interior, the gardens, the
cornfields and the orchards, the bleating
Hocks and the grazing, herds- •the barn door
fast and the courser in the stable, and the
watch dog at the gate, were you not even
to hear the sound of the human voice,
would by their presence attest that the tun
ter is no longer there. That the forest has
Wien and is falling under the axe of civil
ized man.and rising again under the
hammer and trowel of the carpenter, the
farmer, and the meson in the form of per
manent nod comfortable dwellings. The
scene be-lure your eyes is covered with
edifices, the corner stones of which have
been laid with religious rites, or in the
ceremonies of solemnity, importing that
the purposes of erection were subservient
to the wants, comforts, or enjoyments,
not of single families but of successive
multitudes of the race of man.
In the midst of the delights with which
your hearts will expand, at the contem
plation of this cheering view does your
love of the arts and sciences of civiliza
tion which are spreading this enchanting
scene before you, does it prompt the io
quity, whether arming these monuments
of civilized industry, perseverence, inge
nuity, thee is one Light House of the
Skies—one tower erected on the bosom of
the earth to enable the keen stied observ
er of the heavenly vault, and the profound
calculater of the infinite series, to watch
from night to night through the circling
year, the movements of the starry heav
ens, and their unnumbered worlds, and
report tosou,and to all the civilized race of
man, the discoveries yet to be revealed to
the tireless and penetrating eye of 'ruined
curiosity? Look around you, fellow-citi
zens--look from the St. Johns to the,
Sabine—fluor the Neversink to the mouth
of tire Columbia, and you will find, out
one: not one ! or if one, not of our crea
tion, but Tram funds liberally poured out
from the coffers of that mother fatal, from
whom our fathers have decreed an eternal
separation.
FELLOW-CITIZENS !—The • Astronomi
cal Society tit the city of Cincinati have
determined to wipe the reproach from the
fair Cline of our beloved country. Here;
upon this spot, they have determined shall
arise an edifice, devoted to the cultivation
and advancement 'of the science of As
tronomy-- devoted to a skillful and per
severity.' search into the laws of the plivs
creation. For the execution of this
purpose they have done me the honor to
invite me from a distance of a thousand
miles, to conic to share with them, in the
office of laving the corner stone of that
edifice. And for the performance of that
service we are now assembled.
Let us proceed then so to do, and here
in the presence of the vast multitude of
the free citizens of the United States of
America, of the State of Ohio, and of
city of Cincinnati, I do lay tWs corner
stone, invoking the blessing of Him in
whose presence we all stand, upon the
building wl.ich is here to rise, and upon
all the uses to which it will be devoted—
upon the observaturs and other officers
who may be employed in it--before the
Society by whose will it was constructed;
before the people of the city where it will
stand, and the State to which they belong,
and linallv upon the whole North Ameri
can Uniot - i, and the whole brotherhood of
Mao!
Tho Lady's Book.
The December number of this justly popular
publication is before us. The embelishments are
" rich and rare"—constingof ffled.sl lion Seals—
a novelty never ;3 eforc attemped in a Periodical.
Venetia's Requiem, engraved by A. L. Dick.—
Rustic Hospitality, engraved by do. Would-be
Literary Characters, Engraved by W. Croome.—
The Lady that was too Fashionable, engraved by
E. K.. Frost. Engravings of Ancient Fashions,
by do. A Plate of Fashions—Head Dresses, 4.c.
Mormons.
About fifty Mormons, from Massachusetts, sr
rived at St Louis on the 3d inst. on their way to
Nauvoo.
$5O Reward.
Escaped from the County Jail on last
Thursday morning, a convict ;named.
HUGH B. ORR.
Said Orr is about five feet six inches hi
bight, has black hair, dark complexion, and
bears the appearance of a gentleman• ' he
escaped without hat or shoes. The above
reward will be given for his apprehension
and delivery to the Jail.
JOHN SHAVER, &OE
Huntingdon Nov. 11343.
03111121211 L,
.ITTORXIN Zan".
Iit:NTMGDON, r.i
HUNTINGDON
CABINET & CHAIR WARE ROOM.
Messrs. Cunningham & Eurchnell.
ESPECTFULLY[inform the cit'zens
‘94 of the borough and county of Hinitio,;-
don, the public generally, and their old
friends aid customers in pArdcular, that
they continue to carry on busines in their
new establisment, one dont east of the
north eastern c.irner of the Diamond in said
borough, where they are prepeared
wholesale and retail, all articles in their
line of business; such as
Sideboards, Secretaries, So.
(as, Settees. Bureaus,
workstands, card, pier, centre,
dinning and breakfast tables;
High, Field, French, and Low Post
BEDSTEADS
ALSO—Eve ry variety of
Zatn. e:1 , 2 a.,a3
Such as Rush seat, Cane seat, Bulb, Bent,
Baltimore, Straig,ht•back, Boston patter n
it Gain man Rocking Chairs, together with
\it.elaattearagi
of all colors, qualities and sizes; and Paper
Hanging of various patterns and qualities.
N. B. Coffins made and funerals attend
ed either m town or country, at the shortest
notice. They keep a splendid HEARSE
for the accommodation of their customers.
Nov. 29, 1843.
Estate of Margaret Clayton,
Late of West township Huntingdon
county deceased.
Notice is hei ehy given, that letters testa
mentary upon the ia ill of said dec'd have been
granted to the undersigned. All persons
indebted to said estate are requested to make
iminediate payment, and those having claims
or• demands against the same are requested
to present theist duly authenticated for set
dement, to
JOHN WATT,
GEORGE WILSON, .1
Exr's
Nov. 29, 1843.
VALUABLE BEAD ESTATE
70 1 2 04111.21.
.411 HE subscriber offers for sale the follow
eta, ing property:
I st.-4 Tract of Land
situate in West township, containing about
90 acres, about 80 acres of which are clear
ed, cultivated and in good order, bounded
by lands . of Wm. Moore,
Robert Moore,
Samuel Mosser, Wm. Oaks, Lk.c., having
they eon erected
A Grist Mill, a saw Mill,
Large Frame Dwel
-4". ling House,
A Good Frame Store- n
House and Ware-RooM attached, Dwel
ling house for mo r e k ee p e r, a
large Bank Barn, a Black
Smith Shop, and (tenet
ling house for Black Smith with other
buildings, and an
APPLE ORCHARD.
This property is one of the best and most
desirable business situations in the county
being located in one of the richest and best
improved Valleys in this section of country,
and only six miles from the canal.
2nd.--The Frankstown (Elizabeth) Fur
nace property, consisting of a
Tract or parcel of Land,
situate in Frankstown township adjoining
lands of Michael Hileman on the north,
Christian Garber on the west, and Arthur
Craw ford on thereast, ct taaining 40 acres,
more or less, thereon erected a •
BL A S7' FURN,ICE,
one flame house, log stable and six other
houses, and about 30 acres cleared thereon.
Also, A Tract of Land,
situate on the Southerly sided Brush Moun
tain, in Fiat lc..town township, adjoining
lands of David Mai key, John Weistling,
land late of Joseph Patton and others, con
taining 192 acres and allowance (warranted
to Christian Garber.)—Also,
A Tract of Land,
situate in Frankstown township, adjoining
lands of Smith and others, land surveyed in
the name of Robert Elliot& land claimed by
the late Benjamin R. Morgan, Esq., con
taining 416 acres, 12 perches and usual al
lowance (warranted to Alcx. Dysart.)
Also, all the two adjoining tracts of land
situate in Frankstown township, in the name
of John S. W eistling, one containing 432
acres rml 32 perches, and the other 102 a
cres and 80 perches, adjoining lands in the
names of David Finis, Andrew Div i nney,
Arthur O'Friel, John S. Weistling, and lands
of Christian Garber.—Also,
A Tract of Land
situate in Frankstown township, adjoining
lands of Michael Hileman,
land I ate of Jos.
Patton, Christian Garber, John Adams, and
the heirs of iLazerus Lowry or Wm. Steel,
containing 215 acres and 129 perches and
allowance, with an ore bark, wale cleared
land and a couple of buildi iigs thereon.
3d. —A Tract of Land.
situate in the same township of Frankstown,
adjoining lands of John F. Lowry, John
Kamberling, deed., now (Joseph Shannon')
and others, containing 170 acres more or less
of good limestone land, having 155 acres
cleared, a good bank barn and a frame
dwelling house thereon.
A reasonable time will be given fur the
payment of part of the purblme money of
these several prope.ties, ildestred; but what
ever amount is not paid at the making of a
contract, must bear interest from its date.
Persons wishing to purchase, instead of
asking what I willtake,will,please state what
they are willing to give and the terms of
payment. Communications in writing on
the subject, by mail or otherwise, Would be
preferred.
Any one or all of these several properties,
or
which
before the 2
lmaynot 2t s cl.
ell'JJtanpUta.l a y y nex ates:::
on
will then rffrr at public vendue, first for sale
and, if not sold, for rent for a term of rears.
J. M. BELL.
Huntingdon Nov, 27, 11113.
Caution.
ALL persons are hereby notified finit
we, the sulmscriocrs, purchased at a consta
bles sole, on the 24th day of August, 1843,
the following I ropyrty of John
(blacksmith,) of Porter township, .Huating
clucounty :
. . .
Eight pieces of carpeting, tone mantel
clock, one bureau, one table, one stand illid
cover, one deik, and one set of smith tools.
which we have I:ft in the nt of the
said Isenberg.
All persons arc, therefore, hereby can.
tinned against intermeddliug with the same,
as it belongs to us and we will proceed ac
cording to luw against any person so' doing.
MAGUIRE & MOORE.
Nov. 28, 1843.—pd.
Auditor's Notice
E the subscribers, auditors appoint, d
by the Orphans' Court a the county
of Huntingdon, to settle and adjust the ad
ministration account of Satn'i Dan surviving
ex'r of the last will and testament of John
Dean, late et Morris towcship, deed., the
administration account of Samuel Dean and
Wm. Caldwell exe'rs of Robert Dean, dl c'd
for the said Robert as one of the cxecu Oro
of the last will and testament of the said
John dec'd. and the administration accom.t
of Samuel Dean and WM. Caldwell, exec
utors of the last will and testament of Rob%
Dean, late.of said township, dec'd. to which
accounts exceptions have been tiled, do
hereby give notice that we will meet fer the
purpose of attending to the Mai• s of our
said appointment at the 'lncise M rs. M'-
Connell, ill the borough of fintingdon, on
Tuesday, the 10th day of December, next,
at 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said day ,
where and when all persons interested way
attend if titer think proper.
.
GEO. TAYLOR,
DAVID BLAIR, Auditors,
WM. DORMS,
Nov. 29, 180.
I:Paul/2D Un.cis) f:Maa.U.cD.
VHF. undersigned will expose to sale, by
vendue or outcry, en the premises. on
Monday the
25th DAY OF DECEMBER NEXT,
at 1 o'clock P. M., all that certain planta
tion or tract of land situate in Morris town•
ship, Huntingdon county, about one mile
frunt ; Water Street and the Pennsylvania can
al and near the Turnpike, bounded by lands
of John Shaver, Frederick Hileman, Heirs
of Samuel Htrnish and others, containing
aa
of which about 120 are cleared and in a high
state of cultivation, having thereon an apple
orchard, a two story log
!•" s ; l ' Dwelling house,
log bank b.iro with twn perms and other' otit
buildings, and the residue of the tract is well
timbered. it is limestone land, of the best
quality and a
- -
Stream of tinder,
sufficient far a Saw Mill, rises thereon. The
said land being the farm lately occupied and
owned by Robert Dean who', now deed.
The terms of sale will be reason able and
made known on the day of sale by the un
dersigned Executorsof the said dee'd.
Any person desiring to examine the land
car, do so by calling on W. B. .I.,knston, who
resides theron and will show them the boon
duties &c. Possession will be given on the
first day of April next.
SAMUEL DEAN,
Wm. C A LDWELL, S Ex'rs.
Nov. 15, 1843.
Stray Heifer.
Come to the residence or the
kir subscriber, in Snyder township
) Huntingdon County, about i the
15th of June last, a Red Heiler,
supposed to be 1 year old last spring, The
owner is requested to come forward, prove
property, pay charges and take her away,
otherwise she will be disposed according to
law.
JAMES MILLER
Nov. 22, 1834.—pd
STRAY HORSE.
L;tziCame to the residence of the
k,......- 7 fubscriber at Piney C reek,
' „ ?,' Huston township, Huntingdon
,), ! county, a dark bay horse with
•
black mane and tail, a white
stripe clown his face, one hind leg and one
forefoot white and a piece of a head stall
on. The owner is requested to come for
ward, prove property, pay charges and trke
him away.
JOHN B. SMITH.
Nov. IS.—pd
Atrag Atter.
Came to the residence of the stibscriber
in Henderson township, Huntingdon county.
some time in October last, a black steer
about two years nld. The owner is request
ed to come forward, prove priperty, pay
charges and take him away, otherwise 114
will be dispesed of according to law
Nov. 15. 1843. pd
JAMES KERR
STRAY COW.
AME to residence of the
WI subscriber, in Walker tp.
Huntingdon county, about fout•
11111114 « we. ks ago, a heavy bodied,
black cow, apparently about nine years old,
with a white spot on her shoulder, and her
hind lengs from the knees down and her tail
also white, 'i'he owner• is requested to come
forward, prove property, pay charges am
take her away—otherwise she will be dispo•
sed of acovding to
Nov ! 15, 1843
GEORGE ROLAND.
.~ 0 :3 z a
LL persons indebted to the subscriber,
..Vvit to save cost will make immediate pay
ment. All the accounts are now in the
hands of a proper officer for col!ection—it
is useless to wait any longer. He is deter.
Bed to have money if it is to be hnd ; he has
a desire to pay his creditors, and therefore
urges payment of thoss• who Ow e him .
JACOB HOFFMAN.
Huntingdon Nov. 15, 1843.
N. 13. The subscriber still continues th
prattice of Physic, as usnal, at hi. old ' , diet
it few doors west vt the
Huntingdon
1.