Huntingdon journal. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1843-1859, January 01, 1852, Image 2

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    THE JOURNAL.
HUNTINGDON, PA.
Thursday Morning, Jan, 1, 1852.
J. SEWELL STEWART-EDITOR.
TERMS OF PUBLICATION:
Tas' Jo CRICAL:' japllbliehed at
the following rates, viz :
If paid in advance, per annum, $1,50
If paid during the year, 1,75
If paid after the expiration of the year, • 2,50
To Clubs of five or more, in advance, • • 1,25
Ttus above Terms will be adhered to in all eases.
No subscription will ho taken fora less period than
six months, and no paper will he discontinued un
til ell arrearages are paid, unless at the option of
the publisher.
V. B. PALMER
Is our authorized agent in Philadelphia, New
York and Baltimore, to receive advertisements,
and any persons in those cities wishing to adver
tise in our columns, will please call on him.
FOR THE PRESIDENCY IN 1852,
WINFIELD SCOTT,
OF NEW JERSEY.
FOR VICE PRESIDENT IN 1852,
JAMES C. JONES,
OF TENNESSEE.
DELEGATE ELECTIONS.
The Whigs of Huntingdon County are
requested to meet at their respective pla
ces for holding delegate elections, on Sat
urday the 10th day of January inst., to
elect two delegates from each election dis
trict to meet in Convention on Tuesday
evening of the first week of the next court,
at the Court House in Huntingdon, for the
purpose of appointing a delegate to the next
State Convention, and doing such other
business as the interests of the party may
require. J. SEWELL STEWART,
Chairman of Co. Committee.
Huntingdon Jan. 1, 1852.
117" See new advertisements.
Tr' CONGRESS has been doing nothing
bat talking on the compromise resolutions
and Kossuth. When any thing of impor
tance occurs there we will note it. a.,
fl Kossuth was received last week in
Philadelphia on a magnificent scale.—
Speeches were made, big dinners eaten and
good liquor drunk. Of course Hungarian
liberty was the absorbing theme. He is
now in Baltimore, and will shortly be in
Washington.
1X..- -4 " Buffalo, New York and Philadel
phia have each been the scene of destruc
tive fires during the late cold weather.—
The loss in each place in estimated at
$lOO,OOO. At the Philadelphia fire on
friday last several lives were lost by the
bursting out of brick walls.
Kossuth Invited to Harrisburg.
We see in the Harrisburg American, the
proceedings of a meeting of the citizens of
that place, held for the purpose of inviting
Kossuth to pay a visit to the Capitol of
Pennsylvania. A preamble and resolu
tions, were offered by the Hon. J. C. Kun
kel fully indorsing the three propositions
of Kossuth at the New York Banquet.—
The meeting expresses sympathy for, and
offers aid to, the cause of Hungarian inde
pendence. It was addressed by the Hon.
John C. Kunkel, the eloquent member of
the otate Senate from the Dauphin and
Northumberland District, Richard M'Al
lister Esq. and others.
A Goon "HINT."—A cotempoary very
truly remarks:—"lf you wish to earn res
pect and everlasting gratitude of an editor
let his exchanges alone. Don't touch a
paper. He has laid them where he can
And what he wants with the least possible
trouble. All he asks is that you will keep
your hands off. When he wishes you to
read a paper, rely upon it ho will give it to
you. He can't endure your pitcliforkigg
his pile of exchanges all about the room.
Ug"' The entire value of capital invest
ed in manufactures in this country is five
hundred and thirty millions of dollars.—
The raw material used amounts to five
hundred and fifty millions. The amount
paid for labor is two hundred and forty
millions of dollars. The value of manufac
tured articles is twelve hundred a'nd thirty
millions of dollars.
ELECTION NOTICE.
The Stockholders of the Juniata Bridge Com
pany in Huntingikm county, are hereby notified
that an Election wilt be held at the house of Chris
tian Coats, in the borough of Huntingdon, on
Tuesday the lash day of January next, for the
purpose of electing one President, six Managers,
ono Seoretary and 'Prewar, to manage the con
cerns of said Company for the ensuing year.
JA NEB. WIN, Secretary.
Jan. I, Met.
The Glorification of Human
Fiends.
We are one of those, who occas Tonally j
entertain visions of universal liberty and
the perfectibility of man. Often, after
having contemplated in delicious solitude,
angels and beatified spirits as they freely
mingle in the harmony of Heaven; and af
ter the revery had broken and the sweet
illusions it created been dissolved, leaving
only the remembrance of them behind—
have we propounded•the question—Why is
not the earthly, a reflex of the celestial
world! Why does not every living thing
which contains any portion of the venom of
hell, slough it off, and become a dweller
among the innocent the poaedful and the
just. We have sometimes thought, that
as serpents and beasts of prey shall be
gradually banished from the earth by ad
vancing civilization, the heart of man will
be mollified in a corresponding degree,
until the human race shall eventually ar
rive at that point of millenial excellence,
which wasits distinguishing feature, at the
commencement of its career of glory and
crime in the garden of Eden. It is cer
tainly delightful and gratifying to look up
on man as capable of those lofty perfec
tions which make him a welcome compan
ion with seraphs and arch-angels; but
while poetry has accorded to a few men
such transcendant associations, sober facts
admonish us, that the great body of the
human race must be described in humbler
terms. The eternal war which each man
wages upon his fellow, is indicative of a
disposition in all to get more than a share
of this world's plunder—and hence riches,
poverty, social inequality, ignorance, vice,
tyranny and despotism. A world made up
of such miserable ingredients is calculated
to suppress all hope of "the good time
coming."
But enough of this. We intended to
throw out a few reflections suggested by
the late usurpation of Louis Napoleon in
France. He holds his present position on
ly, because he boars the name of that man,
whose military fame captivated the nation
and who wore the laurels won by the rev..-
lutionary energy of the French people.—
When that enthusiasm died away he sank
with it. But for the purposes of the free
dom of mankind the world makes a Dais ,
take in the manner in which it treats and
speaks of such diabolical fiends. We
have never been able to see any-thing in
Napoleon Bonaparte but a strong intellect,
infernal malignity and a travelling moral
pestilence. Of what use to mankind were
the battles of Marengo and Lodi, of Leip
sic and Austerlitz and of the Pyramids and
and Acre? Of what use moral, social or ix
' teleetual was his conquest of Italy, Germa
ny and Spain, and the conflagration of Mos
' cow? France was not rendered more pros
perous and happy, because four hundred
thousand of her people were frozen to death
on the plains of Poland and Russia. His
usurpation of imperial power afforded no
• benefit to the people whose rights he in
, vaded. The hundreds of thousands of wid
ows and orphans; whom his barbarity threw
upon the world, were certainly no benefit,
to their respective countries. The great
glory of this emissary of perdition, was his
• inordinate success in the destruction of hu
[ man life. The victories and conquests of
, Alexander and Julius Caesar, of Diocleti
an and Constantine, have added their con
▪ tributions to the tide of human suffering.
Tamerlane and Zingis Kahn literally butch
• red the human race from Hindoostan to
erusalem and from the wall of China to
the Arctic Ocean.
Such are some of the men for whose
praise, the choicest imagery of heaven and
• earth is laid under contribution—men, of
whom orators have delighted to speak and
poets to sing. Look through all the his
tories of the world and the heart sick
ens at the endless story of human blood,
while the actors are lauded as brave,
gallant and chivalrous. The profession
of human butchery has thus been invest
ed with the attractions of elegance, while
the harsh music of dying groans seldom
intrudes itself on the historian's page. It
is time that literature and poetry should
commence to use their effective weapons
in the cause of liberty, humanity and peace.
, If the French people had cast the name of
• Bonaparte into everlasting infamy and
oblivion, as it deserves to be, they need
not be living under the usurpation of a
man whose only recommendation is, that
he bears the name of one whose track
through life was marked with blood. Ev
ery plaudit bestowed, by the unthinking
and enraptured crowd, upon such human
blood-hounds, are so many wounds in the
heart of liberty and progress. As long as
man is ready to throw up his hat and shout
the praises of one, who would take a pecu
liar pleasure in cutting his throat, he is a
fit and proper subject for the oppressor's
yoke.
THE COMPROMISE.—It is is a little re
markable, that the professed friends of the
so called compromise have been the first
to re-agitate the questions involved in it, l
which they rejoiced had been finally set
tled and adjusted. Mr. Foot's resolution,
which professes to have for its object the
re-affirmation of the compromise measures,
is but too plainly designed to produce an
excitement from which Presidential capital
may. be derived. If Mr. F. had really de
sired the compromise to be a final settle
ment of the vexed questions it involved,
he would have been the last man to have
disturbed it—he would have let by-gones
be by-gones, and have suffered the country
to remain at repose, and not striven to stir
up the old embers of discord, and kindle
them into a flame which may consume all
that he professed so fondly to cherish.—
We do not believe in Mr. Foote. He is
worse than a humbug.—Democratic Re
corder, Fred. Vu.
Look at this, Farmers!
President Fillmore says in his late Mes
sage to Congress—
“ The value of our exports of brcadstuffs
and provisons, which it was supposed the
incentives of a low tariff and large impor
tations from abroad, would greatly aug
ment, has fallen from $95,701,921 in
1847, to $26,051,873 in 1850, and to
$21,948,653 in 1851, with a strong proba
bility, amounting almost to a certainty, of
a still further reduction in the current
year.”
The Tariff of 1846, we were told, was
to be especially beneficial to the Farmer!
These facts and figures tell a different
story.
GOOD.
John Van Buren, while making a con
ciliation speech to the Barnburners, had
the 'wind taken out of his sails,' after the
following style:
'Fellow-citizens,' said John, 'we have
the best country" in the world, and the
best government. No people on the face
of this globe enjoy more liberty of speech,
and liberty of the press, without onerous
despotism.
'What, fellow-citizens, is more desirable
than this? Do you want anything more
my countrymen?: _ _ _
' , Yes sir-ree." sang out a red faced
Barnburner, 'this is the dry work. I want
a suck out of that flask sticking out of
your coat pocket behind."
John struck his colors and came down.
BURNING OF THE CAPITOL.
The Congressional Library Destroyed.
We copy the following telegraphic de
spatches, from the Philadelphia Daily
News:--W AsiiINGTON Dec. 6 24.—This
morning, about day-break, the city was
startled by an alarm of Sre, and the great
est excitement when it was ascertained the
Capitol was on fire.
The fire commenced in the Library, and
before it was discovered, had made such
progress that it was feared the entire edi
fice would be destroyed. The weather
being intensily cold, and water very scarce,
the fire companies, although exerting them
selves to the utmost, could do but little
checking the conflagration. The fire en
gines were found to be perfectly useless,
and resort had to be had to buckets.
The speaker and members of the House
and many others were on hand, laboring
manfully for the preservation of the splen
did building. As the danger of its being
altogether destroyed seemed great, many
persons began to remove 'valuable works
of art, &c. The large national historical
pictures by Trumbull and others in the
Rotunda, were removed to a place of safe
ty
At the same time, when the library
seemed doomed to destruction without any
chance of being saved, efforts were employ
ed to confine the flames to that apartment.
The largo amount of wood work, the books
and manuscripts all combined to spread the
fire through the spacious room, and but
few of the books were saved.
[SECOND DESPATCH.]
WASHINGTON, Dee. 24, 12 M.—The
fire at the Capitol is subdued. The Libra
ry and the Document Room above it are
completely burnt out. Fully three-quar
ters of the Library are consumed, inclu
ding the most valuable portion. Many
rare worke can never be replaced. There
was no serious damage, except by water, to
any part of the Capitol beyond the Libra
ry.
The fire was discovered about sunrise
by a watchman. Sometime elapsed be
fore a general alarm was given, the watch
man endeavoring to extinguish it with
buckets. There was an hour or two delay
in getting the engines to work, as they had
been engaged the latter part of the night
at another fire, which destroyed Baker's
Franklin Inn, corner of Eighth and D
streets. Besides this, their hose was fro
zen.
The fire is supposed to have caught
from the flues connecting with the furna
ces on the main basement of the Capitol.
All the lire companies of Washington and
one or more from Alexandria wore on hand,
rendering good service.
President Fillmore, the Mayor of the
City, Speaker Boyd, and numerous mem
bers and officers of Congress were early on
the ground, and very active.
Foreign French Items.
[By the Canada.]
No less than four more Departments
have been declared in a state of siege ; but
really serious disturbances were few and of
limited extent.
The total number of arrests, thus far, is
stated at 1800.
Thiers having imprudently declared
against the Government, immediately after
his liberation from prison, is said to have
been a second time arrested, by order of
the President. Certain it is that he left
Paris in haste, and has passed the Prussian
frontiers.
At Sisteron, 2,000 insurgents succeeded
in taking possession of the citadel, which
was defended by only eighty men. The
municipal authorities were compelled to
resign, and a Socialist Committee, at the
latest dates, was sitting in the Hotel de
Ville. The town has the appearance of a
place taken by assault.
The Minister of War has addressed a
despatch to the General of Corps, in which
he orders that all persons resisting the es
tablished authorities shall be immediately
shot.
Many of the leading members of the
Mountain party have fled the country, and
many others, for whose arrest warrants
have been issued, are believed to be still
in Paris—among the latter is said to be
Victor Hugo.
Emile de Girardin has resigned the edi
torial management of La Presse, and it is
understood that he would shortly take his
departure for the U. States.
In the Nievre, the Socialists, during a
short ascendancy, had burned the archives
of the Department, and destroyed a large
amount of property.
The Compte Chambord, Henri V., had
sought an interview with Prince Schwart
senberg, at Vienna, who assured him that
Louis Napoleon would receive the counte
canoe of all monarchical cabinets.
It is said that the President has sup
pressed the publication of 78 newspapers.
Paris papers contain a letter from Jer
ome Bonaparte, addressed to the President,
in which he advises moderation and a gen
uine appeal to the people.
Several legions of the National Guard
have been disarmed, on account of some
manifestations of disaffection.
The Inspector of the Var writes from
Toulon under date, Dec. 9th, that the pail
from Dragradiew brought news that 2000
insurgents who were marching on that
town, had retreated in the direction of the
Brigriolles and Bayols, making some hun
dred public functionaries march at_ their
head, with strong chains round their necks.
The director of the Post-office at Luck was
amongst the prisoners.
The. Minister of the Interior, in a report
to tho President, states that " the insur
gents have attacked the public forces at
different points, and have engaged in san
guinary collisions. They have attacked
and taken towns and commence, which,
thanks to the energy of the authorities, and
the troops, have been taken from them."
•
It is stated that several of the troops of
two or three Legions of the National Guard
have tendered their resignation.
France.
The advices by the Baltic, show that ex
pectation of immediate resistance to the
usurpation of Louis Napoleon by any con
siderable portion of the French people was
altogether futile. He has put down all op
position, and is firm in his seat.
That seat may or may not soon bo
adorped with the gilding and the name of
a throne, but a throne, to all intents and
purposes it is. There can be no doubt that
he aims directly at the imperial title, and
what is to him of more consequence, impe
rial revenues. He has imitated his uncle
in usurpation, and like him, has accom
plished his end by military force. But un
like him, he does not control that force
through the power of his own genius or the
prestige of victory. He will soon find that
he is controlled by it. Such is the pros
pect. France is in the hands of the Pre
torians, and Napolean is but their tool.
It is true that no discord is yet apparent
in the army; the reports that two or three
prominent generals had declared against
the usurper prove to have been erroneous;
and the soldiers have, with few exceptions,
voted Yes on the question whether Napo
leon should be President for ten years, with
power to form an entire system of govern
ment. But this cannot endure, we suppose.
The French nation will not allow itself
thus to be bound and handed over to mili
tary despotism with neither great talent
nor gigantic achievements to veil it with
their illusions. The present state of things
will be of brief duration, and when the next
downfall occurs in France, all the Govern
ments of Geomany and Italy will go with it.
ENORMOUS OUTLAY FOR ADVERTl—
smo.—Townsend, the Sarsaparilla man,
says that his books exhibit an outlay for
advertising, in the course of five years in
the various papers of the United States—
sBoo,ooo. He says for six months he out
off all his advertisements, to see if his me
dicines would not go off on their merits,
just as well as by advertising. He lost
$300,000 by it; sales dwindled right down
to nothing—for his competitors seeing bin'
drop off, went on advertising heavily, and
got the start of him.—Great West.
X?" Local polities run high in the wes
tern country. A candidate for County
Clerk in Texas offered to register morn
ages for nothing. His opponent, undis
mayed, promised to do the same, and
throw In a cradle.
FROM OREGON.
The San Francisco journals contain ex
tracts from papers received at that port by
the steamer Columbia to the Bth Novem
ber. The principal intelligence which they
give is the arrest of some members of a
large party of horse thieves, who, under
the lead of one Charley Smith, have long
infested the neighborhood of Shasta city,
whence they made their way into Oregon.
Smith, however, escaped with four hundred
horses when the party went to arrest him
at a rancho in the vicinity of Klamath
Lake, on information obtained from an ac
complice. Subsequent information was re
ceived that the bodies of Smith and three
companions had been found near Barlow's
Gate, in the Dalles, where they had been
murdered by two Indians who had accom
panied them.
The farmers of Oregon are represented
as being very prosperous. The farms are
rapidly being extended into the interior,
and comfortable frame and stone houses
were supplanting log cabins in every direc
tion.
The Oregon Spectator, of November 4,
says that winter and the rains had set in,
the river had risen four feet and was still
rising, navigation above had been resumed
as far as Marysville, and business upon the
river was quite active.
A partj , had left the Willamette for
Queen Charlotte's Island to search for
gold. Flouring mills were going up in the
territory, and a general state of prosperity
seemed to prevail there. _ .
The brig Orbit had been fitted out as a
regular trader between the Sandwich Isl
ands and the ports of Oregon. Her first
cargo was fish, spars, &c.—N. Y. Com.
Advertiser.
A GOOD NOTION.—In some of the cord
wainer shops of Paris, workmen hire a man
to read to them as they work ; and this is
the case especially with the class stigma
tized as socialists and republicans. Twen
ty years ago, or more, the rustic poet,
Bloomfield, held the post of reader to a
shoemaking circle in a London garret—
which may have suggested the excellent
notion to the Parisians.
The Three Propositions of Kossuth.
The following are the three propositions
of Kossuth at the New York Banquet, in
relation to the intervention of the United
States in the affairs of foreign countries :
First. That, feeling interested in the
maintenance of the laws of nations, ac
knowledging the sovereign right of every
people to dispose of its own domestic con
cerns to be one of these laws, and the in
terference with this sovereign right to be
a violation of these laws of nations, the
people of the United States—resolved to
respect and to make respected these laws—
declares the Russian past intervention in
Hungary to be a violation of these laws,
which, if reiterated, would be a new viola
tion, and would not be regarded indiffer
ently by the people of the United States.
Second. That the people of the United
States are resolved to maintain its right of
commercial intercourse with the nations of
Europe, whether they be in a state of rev
olution against their 'governments or not;
and that with the view of approaching
scenes on the continent of Europe, the peo
ple invite the government to take appropri
ate measures for the protection of the trade
of the people of the Mediterranean, and
Third. That the people of the United
States should declare their opinion in res
pect to the question of the independence of
Hungary, and urge the Government to act
accordingly.
Curiosity.—Mr. Thomas Smith, Jr.,
of Jamaica, L. 1., owns a cow which gave
birth a few days since to a calf without eyes
or anything resembling an organ of vision.
The calf, at the present time, is some nine
days old, and is doing well.
CALAMITOUS EVENT—BURNING OF THE
ADAMS' EXPRESS CAR.—We have just
learned that Adams' Express Car, coming
over the Penna. Rail Road, caught fire at
or near to Johnstown on Sunday night and
was entirely consumed, involving in the
same ruin nearly all the contents of the
Car—which is said to have been unusually
heavy loaded. Some of the wrecks of the
baggage have reached here—Trunks, Sm.,
half burnt up. The loss will no doubt be
considerable wherever it falls.—Pitts
burgh anzerican.
SHOCKING DEATH.LSIT. David Brister,
of Trenton, was engaged with several men
yesterday morning in cutting away the ice
that obstructed the wheel of his mill. He
was standing on the top; while the others
were prying it loose, when suddenly it be
gan to turn, carrying hint down through
an aperature of not more than three inches,
and consequently crushing and killing him
inunediately.—Newark Daily advertiser.
3 DR. HOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS.- This
celebrated medicine is one of the very best in the
country, and its good qualities only need to be
known, to give it precedence over all others now
in use. We have seen its good effects lately, after
the total failure of many others. This is saying
more than we can for any other medicine within
our knowledge, and we lilt it a duty to recommend
the Bitters to the notice of our friends. The gen
uine is prepared by Dr. C. M. Jackson. Phila.
MARRIED.
On the 18th ult., by the Roy. Wm. R.
Mills, Mr. ROBERT MALSEED, to Mies
MARGARET SWARTZ, all of this county.
On the 29th ult., by the same, Mt. BEN
JAMIN COUTES, to Min MARY WESTBROOK,
both of this borough.
On the 25th ultimo, by the same, Mr.
JOHN LOYD, to Miss MARY Moss, both
of this county.
On the 26th ult., by the Rev. T. Bar
ton, Mr. ENOCH CHILCOTE, to Min Bat-
BABA. EDWARDS, of Tod township.
On the same day, by the same, Mr. BEN
JAMIN ERB, to Miss LEAH PHEASANT, of
Union township.
On the mime day, by the same, Mr. PE
TER M. BATY, to Miss ELEANOR B. SMITH.
of Union township.
On the 25th ultimo , by the Rev. J. H.
Reid, Mr. AUSIIIIRg LAIRD, to Mill EVE
ROSANNA LEFPERD, both of Porter town
ship.
In Hollidaysburg, on Thursday 26th
ult., by Rev. R. W. Black, Mr. 'lmmix
MORGAN, to Miss Lucy ANN STALLICiIto
both of Mount Union, Huntingdon county.
Administrator's Notice.
Estate of Sample Fleming, late of the Bor•
ough of Alexandria, deid.
LETTERS of administration have this day bead
granted to the subscribers upon the estate of
Sample Fleming, late of the borough of Alexan
dria, dec'd. All persons having claims will pre
sent them properly authenticated, and those in
debted are requested to make immediate payment.
JOHN FLEMING, Admre.,
JAMES S. FLEMING, 5 Alexandria.
Jan. 1, 1852. et.
Administrator's Notice.
Estate of John Plummer, late of Penn tam
s*, Huntingdon county, deed.
LETTERS of administration upon the estate of
John Plumurr ' lute of Penn township, dec'd,
have been granted to the subscribers. All per
sons having claims will present them properly au
thenticated, and those indebted are requested to
make immediate payment.
ELI PLUMMER, Hopewell tp.,
ABRAHAM PLUMMER, Penn tp., 5 Adm.
Jan. 1, 1852. 6t.
Huntingdon County Medical Society.
A meeting of the Huntingdon County Medical
Society will be held in Huntingdon, in the Hail
of the Sons of Temperance, at one o'clock lu the
afternoon of Tuesday the first week of the Janua
ry court nevi__ _
JNO. brCULLOCH. Sacratary.
Jan. 1. 1852.
Executor's Notice.
In the matter of the Estate of Abraham Zimmer
man, late of Tud township, deed.
Letters Testamentary, upon the last Will and
Testament of said deceased, having been granted
to the subscriber, all persons knowing themselves
indebted to the said estate will make payment to,
and all persons haring claims against said estate
will present them duly authenticated, to
ANDREW G. NEFF, Ex.
Marklesburg, Dec., 22, 1851.
TRIAL LIST--Jan. Term, ISSR.
FIRST WEEK
W k G Eckert for Gates' ads. vs. G. W,
M'bride
Jos. Stewart's ads vs B E M'Murtrie et al
Robert Barr vs J W . Myton's heirs
John Marks vs David Barriok
Christain Prough vs James Entrekin
Isaac Wolverton vs Elisha Shoemaker
W R Thompson & Co vs P & Ohio Tran Oo
James A Cummings vs Wm H Patterson
Ennis & Porter vs And Stewart's Admr
Aaron Shore vs Stains & Rough
John Wingard vs Jacob Brubaker.
Kel Trans Co vs 0 Friels Admr
Danl Kurfman's Admrs vs Robert Speer
Samuel P Wallace & Co vs Joseph Shona
Elias Hoover vs Daniel Teague et al
Samuel Shaver vs John S. Miller et al
Saml H Shoemaker for use vs Hunt Pros
Cong.
John Dearmit for M'Coy vs Joseph Ennis
SECOND WAK. •
John Whites Admr vs Samuel &kitty
Samuel Stoffey vs Michael Steffey
A P Wilson Esq vs John H Stonebraker
H N McAlester Esq vs Same
Joseph Milliken &o vs Wm Couch's Ears
Fetzer & Riddle vs John List
George Hawn vs Henry Isenberg et al
Mart Gates Admr vs Math Crownover Erq
John Hare Powel vs James Entrekin
C Ladnea $• Co vs M'Gran & Fitzpatriek
Comth for Loury vs John Shaver
Nancy Wallace's Admr vs Sand k Robt
My ton
Samitel S Barr vs John Wilmson
Johnston for Love vs MitchZill V & A
John H Bridenbaugh &o vs Philip L Fox
William Gaghagan vs William Colder et al
Mary Ann Hileman vs Spang, Keller & Co
Summers for Given vs Israel Grafflua
William M'Nito vs John Dougherty
Ralph Bogle vs Lewis Palmer
Manning & Lee vs B E & R A M'Murtrie
Samuel Bollinger vs Willliam Johnston
Val Wingard's Exr vs John R Hunter
Comth of Penn for Johns vs Wm Ramsey
et al
Joseph H Spayd of al vs William Moore
Thomas Ashton vs Henry Keester's Hier
A Burns Admit- for use vs Burkheart &
Capper
Jacob Lea & Son vs Royer & M'Naniara
Glasgow & Bro vs J & H Bumbaugh & Co
Samuel Caldwell vs John Dell jr
James K Moorehead vs Leslies Assignees
George Jackson vs Peter &Emmental.
George Crouse vs Jonathan Gordon
William Crotzer et al vs Peter Ripple et al
William G Lenville vs Leonard G Kessler
Same vs Wm Buchannan
Rich Cunningham vs And Couch's Ears
Orleady & Dean vs t ohn Montgomery
John Murrits et al vs George Murrita
John Brown vs Caleb Brown
Ralph Bogle vs Lewis Palmer
Bernad Sweenys Exr vs Cadwallader& Exr
W Jennison &o vs John H. Krug
Samuel Coen vs (hind. Livingston
A Mattern &o vs J & P Livingston
L W Gosnell & eons vs Hugh &Neal
Same Vs Millie
Same vs Same
Same vs James Entrekin
Same vs Same
Same vs Same