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jiakio.v ciucviT couirr. Criminal Cases. Reported for the Stale Sentinel. August 2, 1 15. State vs. Jiimes Washington Ituekhart. On the charge uf grand larceny. TI.e ail Huckliart was re cognized to the circ uit court on the charge if teal i'rg a keg of lewder from E. llwlderly. William J'.lake Has, who testified against L'uckliart before a justice of the peace, refused to give any testimony in t!ie case, so he was released. . Gentlemen: I was much pleasrd to see, in the Journal, the other clay, an opinion of the Editor that if. there be an ordinance against Hying kites it should 1 e enforced ; if nut, the Council should enact one im mediately. Such a sentiment appearing iii such a paper is one of the best omens the country could wish for. It hovs that the Whigs arc givirg up their favorite measure the system upon which their hopes are founded, and for which they have been long and anxiously contending. Why did .they wish to place 3Ir. Clay in the presidential chair 7 Merely because he is in favor cf kitc-tlying. Had he been made President they expected all li s iniluencejo be exerted in favor of re-establishing that stupendous kitc-tlying machine, the U. S. IJank, the machinery of which was so crwlly put out of gear by Gen. Jackson, and in the multiplying of similar machines throughout the whole land ; and with the same vi".v and o'jtct have all their measures been adopted, iiut the Jour nal comes out boldly, loading the van, and without fear of consequences, reckless whether it shall oilend its own party or not, stoutly declare?, that if there be an ordinance against kite-ilyiug it ought to be en forced; and if not such an ordinance ought to be past-J immediately. Truly this is coming round to democratic views in earnest ; and augurs well for the increase of democracy. Petei: Teazle. Royal Rcleks. We find the following interesting observations in the New Orkans Courier : The Indians of North America and other primitive people are never governed bv women. They think it a slur upon manhujd to have a female at the head of their jruveriuiient. There never was a female consul of Rome, there never was a woman on the thrune of 1'rance or, until now, on that of Spain. The free men of America will not of their own accord have a woman for President, nor would the freiruen of Brit ain Iiave a won a i to rule their d -stir i a if they could help themselves. The London Spectator has lately made a comparison between Elizabeth and Vic toria, very much to the advantage ot the latter. Ui.- abeth possessed great wisdom and firmness of charac ter; hut her wisdom was minirled with cunning of the most sordid kind, and her firmness frequently as sumed the character of ferocity and unnatural cruel ty. Victoria, thus far, has exhibited no character at ail, except that of a romping, jaunting, chattering hoyden. She is completely under the thumb of Wel lington, whose counsels she fdlows with the blind obedience of a child. True, she is happy in having such a counsellor so wise, so prudent and so disin terested. Rut is the influence of Wt-llingtoii attribu table to her good sx-nse or her weakness ? l)id he originally seek him for an adviser, or did he take it upon himself, aware of the infirmity of her nature, to exercise the influence of a, strung mind over a weak one, and to force her into the track which he designed, by allowing her that none other could he followed with safety 1 It is a striking and radical defect in any system of polity that a puppet, a thing of straw, that knows nothing of the machinery of government, should be placed at its head, maintained at vast expense, for no other end than to be gazed at having it every moment in its. power to change or ar rest the course of public atlairs, while itself is utter ly incapable of administering the lowest department. Royalty is the great humbug of these times, and in his sober senses every Knglinman must so regard it. It is remarkable that the greatest tnonarchs who have figured in this nge, were not of the legitimate stock of royalty. There was Napoleon to begin with; vhse name strikes hereditary kingship dumb. There was liernadotte, the greatest man that has swayed the Swedish sceptre since tJustavus Adolphus ; there is Louis Philippe, not only a great king, but the wisest statesman in his dominions. Hallain says the prince of Orange, who drove his father-in-law, James the second, from the Rritish throne, was a better and greater king than any of his successors and there is in doubt of it not only so but we are inclined to believe that he was the ablest and most honest sove reign known to the Dritish annals. Royalty is a grand humbug and being a humbug it cannot last long it is revolting and odious to the common sense of mankind. Catital Punishment. The f jllowing isan extract from an able esay, by the Kev. F. W. Holland of Kochester, N. V. 4.Ve can easily imagine a more awful penalty than the gallows a murJ'seSs jiris.m separate from all other prisons, beyond the power of pardon, except in case of the after demonstration of innocence, its convicts earnings applied to the support of their families, when they had any, and their intercourse with the world terminated for ever the terrible words of the Italian poet inscribed over the gate, Who enter here leave hope behind. This doom would be un speakably more severe, yet less cruel than the iral'ows ; its sight would not brutalize the community, but would, year after year, continue to moan forth its dismal warnings. Xo jury would palter with their oaths, because of the natural horror at taking life in cold blood ; the ipiestion having already arien in some States between no punishment at all and a sub stitute for the scaffold ; the criminal himself would become (what all churches are coveting as their high mission) prepared to die; the intemperate man would be released from the fascination of his darling sin ; the ambitious would relinquish every thought of distinction ; the covetous would forget his echemes of wealth. Left much to himself, with simple food, constant labor and suitable moral teaching, every thing would favor the return of the pjor prodigal to his Father's house ; his own conscience would resume her reign ; his heart would open u ith new sentiments, sympathies and aspirations; his lifo prepared to change, in (iod's time, from a healing solitude to u blessed society, from one continued privation to one endless joy ! Will not humanity gain strength, under the impulse of thci; fict.s, to repeat the uorJs which moved the Emperor Augustus to mercy, ami saved his tribunal from the pollution of passion, ' llangm ni, begone !' " lJrsnop Ondekponk. An intelligent correspondent of th? llosiosi Post, who writes from New Vork Fays 44 We are soon to have exciting times in this Fpis copal diocese. From the time that Iühop Ond' rdoril was sus:h nded, up to this hour, the friends of that prelate have been assiduously engaged in an efiort to sustain him, and to continue him in Mssession of his bishopric. And they have not labored in vain. He will, I Ihink, be reinstated, and wear once more his robes. 1 understand that he has a decided majority of the clergy in his favor ; and among the laity there are many who are determined to su-tain him at all hazards. He will very s on preside in the pulpit of Trinity church, and, you may depend up a it, will ollichte at its consecration. Thousands who were at one time bitterly opposed to him, and would not listen to anything that was said in his favor, now assume that he has been already abundantly punished, if he ever was guilty about which th-y doubt and should bo reinstated and reinvested with all his holy ollicial function. The tiling will be done ! " The Clf.kgy in Tkolt.lf.. The Old School Pres bytery of New Vork have been engaged nt the meet ing now in session, in the painful work of discipline. A young licentiate, whose name is not nuhli.shed. was deprived of his order f r an unjustifiable breach of promise ot marriage, it was a case which clcarlv justifies the action which the presbytery took. It is also said, though we do not k'io-.v that it i published, that the Presbytery have d"posed, or indef initely suspended from his ministerial functions, the llev. Paniel Newell, late editor of the Christian Family .Magazine, for immoralities. Amm;t Pif;:iT. Somebody who writes more truth fully than poetically, says: "An. angel without mon ey ia not thought ho much of, now-a-ihys, as a devil wit!i a bag full of guineas. " Th crj are inanv h gs in this world with invisible 5tiou!ri. Their Lristlcs grow inwardly, and th-ir hou1-; wallow in the inire until they become fattened for the deU' p'-rk tub, into which thty go after a hi'id scald. C'aunda. . The population of Lower Canada,, by the census of A--1, amounted to 01X5,(3 I'J souls, of whom .olb.Oöö are French, t,070 of JJritish origin, i.:.: from Eu rope, and 11,013 from the U. States. The French population have never assimilated to the English that have com? among them, nor have they assented to the laws enforced upon them by their coiirjticror. With the exception of those of Rritisli origin, there is no doubt that the continuance of Rritl?h rule is distaste ful to the w hole people, and even of the l'ritisli immi grants, of whom .77,303 are Scotch and ItlAi, proba bly a large portion are in favor of the independence of the Colonics. This is indicated in some decree, ' we imnw, irom tlic Met tnat most ot them who arrive j at Nova Scutiq, and New Urunswick pass through the provinces into the cstem States, where cheap and fertile lands, freedom from taxation, and self-government, are offered in competition with at least no bet ter advantages, clogged with imperial meddling, and government without representation. Since the cap ture of Lower Canada in 17"J, and of the' tipper pro vince in 17(50, they have advanced with far less ra pidity than have the most northerly of the United States. We daubt not that if the will of the people were fairly taken by vote, a vast majority would be found in favor of "annexation." Why does England want colonies ? For the solo reason that their con nection with her in that capacity benefits the mother country (as she crroneouly supposes) more than they would it tree. Ihcse benefits arc, therefore, derived from the action of imperial laws without representa tion, by which the proceeds of colonial labor are transferred, without adequate compensation to the mother country ; precisely in the same way that the serfs of Russia are compelled to labor for the b?ncfit of their lordly proprietors. When some politician at home becomes troubbsome to the government, he is sent to govern a colony ; and the people suddenly find a Lord Jack or a Sir .Dick, come among them, with out their being consulted, to turn their alVairs top.sy turvy, and rule tha roast at his pleasure. The Democratic principle is advancing too rapidly throughout the world to permit this state of things ioiy to continue. As soon as the popular will in the provinces begins to manifest, itself the connection with the other side of the water will have reached its close. That KiivrLmd will make a desperate !itru",rle to hold those j-roviniTs may perhaps bo the cue, but owing to the growth of commercial intercourse be tween the United States ar.d Great Dritain, the prob ability of war is yearly diminishing, and with it de clines one jreat reason fur holding thee colonies?, and that is the immense advantage they will give us over the commerce of England. Nova Scotia has twelve magnificent harbors, including Halifax, of a capacity suliicicnt for the largest ships and fourteen others of smaller capacity. New llrunswick has aloo many good ones. The annexation of these provinces to the United States will restore to the Eastern States the preponderance of the commercial interests, and make this Union indeed the rival of England at sea. The time will come, and that shortly, when the colo nist:" will Income ashamed of their state of slavery, and catting otf the yoke of England, set up for them selves. The spirit of commerce will recapture peace ably from England those fair provinces which her bloody sword wrenched from the feeble hand of France. .V. V. X es FeukralijvII MiowiNc its i in;. "Put war, in the aspect that it comes, if it om s now, hits with all its horror-, one redeeming feature. It will abolish slave ry ! Yes, a War to protect ISlavery will terminate its existence. Our enemies well know where we are most vulnerable. They will strike where our defences are weakest. The slave now knows how his own lib erty is to be achieved, and will not, as in our two past wars, be fund driving rivets into his chains. ',g Inwl, when .7i? arts h'r hostile Jim4 iifwi our soil aj;ahi, irill ror'uiri fftt ;hm to t'ip ni!.tu l. And the tlave, arcfj'tini; tlv hom, trill stand l j Vn' sub' if his ti r (, fg'iting . "" the randan if his rare. 44 Let the Sjuth, then, f r the sake of Slavery, plunge us into a war about Texas; or let President Folk, by his silly flourish about Oregon, bring us in to collision with Kngland, at thdr jn il ! It will cost the North much bl od and treasure. Put the retribu tion the just retribution of the South will be appal ling. Let them wantonly provoke ar, if they will, in full view of its responsibilities." The above is from the llvming Journal of last night. No coinmcnt is needed to bring into bidder relief, the infamy of its sentiments. The words ppeak for themselves. The thought and hope, the purpose, indeed, which they reveal, is one of treason, coward ly, cruel, and fiitiih ss. The threat is distinctly made that the assertion of our rights in Oregon the asser tion of uny right which England may dispute and the extension of the federative system over the inde pendent republic of Texas are to be pershtcd in at the peril" of the vengeance of the Pritish Crown are to be punished by Lritish troops, aided by the cru el and infamous alliance of the blacks of the South, and we s.uptose the .hxinml will hardly affect to conceal it, by the sympathetic allies of the Pritish and ncrroc nt the North. The suggestion is not new ; but it is new from an American source. In the revolutionary contest, the Pritish ministry proclaimed its purpose to avail itself of the Indian tribes against the colonists ; and the eloquent rebuke of Purke against fucIi an inhuman alliance one of the noblest specimens of Pritish par liamentary eloquence recorded the sentiment with n-ti!"li t!if iid.ob riviTtyed world reim rdiwl tin tiroftosi. tion. Dunn" the last contest with Threat Pritain, that j power disclaimed so cruel and savage a policy of war- ; firi nnd iti incitements of flu savairp tribes anrninst us were made in secret and with shame, and the snm- mary punishment of its agents by which our govern- j i l ;t.,.if Cow ; t1(. o-.w.. ,.r Api...ii....t .,.1 on ilk n iii'-ii in- V 1 v "i I Ambrisfer) was suUcred to go unrcbuked. The pub lie sentiment of the world revolted then at the idea of such an unnatural aggravation of the horrors of war fare, niid they w ill hot le more likely to tolerate it fin " I ! 11 j' I . I . . - . . now, Journal win mm mains prop"suion is too atrocious even for JJritish twdicy, and that it has merely earned the shame of inventing an infamy j A - . ..fw k m m m 4. . i a 4 1 . ,h. la -. . I I n.r.iifist it eonntrv. too .toss tor even the dec ; in d enemy of that country to put in practn . . ictiee. M'xinii i Atlas, July P. Six IIi'NDiir.n Slavks FviANcirAThi). A letter pub lished in the N. V. Journal of Commerce monitions the decision recently given by the Supreme Court of Louisana, which emancipated six hundred slaves. The late Stephen Henderson directed by his last will that his slaves (siv to seven hi "mired in mur.lcr) should le sent to Liberia, by the American Coloniza tion Society. His directions were, that at the end of live years from his death, (which took place about six ) ears ago,) the slaves should be permitted to draw 1 its, and th ten on whom the lot should fill, should be sent to Africa ; at ten years from his death twenty others, by lots; ami in twenty-five years, the whole d the re-idue should be vnt, after securin' an outfit of one hundred dollars. The suit now deci ded (it wn Kn in the lower Court) was brought bv the heirs, against the executors of the will, and the decree of the Court now is, tint the will must he car ried out, (the intention of the tci-dator being clear,) and the slaves .-cut to Africa." IIem uxs ok J.Mi;r. Pk.e. The remains of lan iol Puono and wife were brought to Frankfort, on the Jild inst., under the care of Col. William Poone, of Shelby county, the oldest surviving nephew of the de ceased, and Messrs. Thomas L. Crittenden nnd Philip Swigert of this place. Theo gentlemen vii ed Mis souri as a committee for that purpose, being charged by the Frankfort Cemetery company with the patriot ic duty of removing to the land of their early vicis situdes and trials the remains if thcie noble und fear less pioneers. Their history is known to the world. They were the first white, male and female that ever trod the "dark and b! edy ground ;" and their early adven tures, indomitable perset vrence, unswerving patriot ism, and pure and spotlcf licsaro indiisolubly inter Woven in the enly tradition of our Stale. Frank Jort ('onunoiiu t ii'lh. Monky to Am Pr.r.miors Skots. .According to a reretit pirliam- ntary return of money applied by the Pritish parliament in aid of the religious sects, it ap- p'-ur.s that from the year IM 0 to HW, the sum 1m stowid u;ou the Established Church, in r.ddition to tithes, church rates, church binds, &c, was (VJt7, ;!, viz: in Finland, (J'.M)o5,(ili ; in Scotland, JC-V .t, and in 'irelaml, .Cl,7tD,-H. -To Protest ant ihs-enters in thrme time there have been paid .CUUU.On V.U. 1L, viz: in Kngland, .FJH,mi Is. M., and in In land, fJ-7,7 !U Jd. ; and to the Church of Hume, including M lyne.dh, Y6 ),W Is. The Trial of Gkeex at Tkoy. A fier twelve days devoted to the examination of testimony, and its ex position by counsel, the trial of Green has terminated in the verdict of guilty, and the sentence of the high est penalty of the law passed upon the accused. TJic crime of which the prisoner has been convict ed was one of singular atrocity. Both the murderer and his victim were yo.ung lie of some twenty-one cr twenty-two years of age, of wealth, of respecta ble position, and of .some education she, his newly wedded wife, a girl of but eighteen years of age, without fortune or position in society, but of good character, and of attractions which won him to mar- nare. The crime was committed in the first week of the honey moon, the young husband sitting by the bedside of his newly hurried wife, and administering .to her arsenic in her food, in her medicine, and in the tooling draughts with which she sought to assuaje i;cr uurning inirst continuing to dose her and nurse her with poison, pcrsistirgly and remorselessly till she died ; and with a malignity which seemed to fresh en with the suflerings of his victim; and that was exhibited, after the consummation of his crime, in a merciless exultation and a brutality of demeanor that became a powerful evidence ogaint him. Vet as if Jhc murder of a young, innocent ärid unprotected girl, by the husband, to whose love she had but a few days before been consecrated, through such cruel tortures, by. Mich cowardice and malignancy, were not suffi ciently revolting, it seems that a new horror is lent to the tragedy by the suspicion that the mother of the brutal young man had instigated him to the deed. The Albany Atlas, from which we derive this state ment, adds ; 'The trial of a crime of this magnitude excited a deep intere;t, even beyond the neighborhood of its perpetration. Day after day the Court Houc was crowded with an audience painfully intent eä the pro gress of, the cause, and anxiou r's to its events. The respectability nni wealth of the prisoner, the influ ence of his family, the ability cf his counsel, the un certainty which the testimony, when partially render ed, left as to the legal proof of guilt, and the know ledge of the reluctance of the law to convict, seemed at one stnge of the caufc to have inspired an appre hension in the public mind that the prisoner might es cape. Vet at the close of this hardly contested trial, and the full development of that accumulated weight of evidence with which tire District Attorney had pre pared to sustain. the indictments, nnd after the? Attor ney General, Van JJuren, had closed on the side of the people, in a speech of singular legal ability and a high order of eloquence? there was hut one sentiment on the part of the court, the jury and the public. It was known long before the hour of the re-assembling of the court, that the jury had agreed on their ver dict though what the verdict was, was not permitted to be revealed ; yet, (says a correspondent of the Ar- gus) "upon the re-assembling of the ccu.it, so per suaded were all that the prisoner ought and would be convicted, that the verdict when rendered, fell upon the immense audience, prisoner and all, without ex citing any apparent serwition." The accused, who had exhibited throughout, the tri al, rimidst the recital of the sufferings of his wife, and of the circumstances that proved him her murder er, the utmost apathy of demeanor, listened to the fi lial sentence of the law with the same apparent indif ference." 'Fr.rJWv'1 of Foktunt:. The Parisian correspondent of the t.'u,-ri'r dis Hints t'tis relates two cr.rious incidents as illustrative of the extraordinary freaks dame Fortune will som. times practice upon mankind. He states that several years since, Möns. Puchemin emigrated from France, and came to reside in this country, and settled in some part of Louisiana, where he lately died, leaving a fortune of seven millions of dollars, but 110 issue to inherit it. As soon as this fact became known .in - Paris, a host of relatives suj. denly appeared vli"i;o consanguinity was unquestion able, however far removed in its degree ; but all these failed to establish the fact, and two young sis ters, Hose and Planche, are the only persons whose claims have been recognized, and their titles ore now under verification, and they await the decision of the Judge to decide whether they shall receive an Income of two hundred thouvand livers or three francs a day, which they now earn, as simple ?i!o,!iste!-, at the es tablishment of Mine. Parotitic, place Vqrdcme. As a reverse to tin, the same correspondent states that a friend of his lately had occasion to make a visit in the Hue de k Michodiere, nnd not knowing the number of the house where his acquaintance lived, he inquired for him of a porter, at one of the miserable looking mansions for which that street is remarkable. 44 He does not live here," .says the porter in reply ; 44 this is the house of the Prince de la-Paix." This announcement caused not a little rurprise ; Prince tie la Paix ! in that miserable house nnd in that obscure street ! he who had passed his time in palaces who had. been among the most brilliant of Europe who had hi5 company of body guards duchesses awaiting his commands, and a Queen at his feet! To have been the Mnariu and the I'otcmkin of his country ; to have held in his hand the destinies of a j great jeople, and then, at the age of eighty ycars, to j be a iw Ixiriois of l'aris ! Truly Fortune is indeed a tickle jade. FltKNCIt METHOD OF FlSUiNU ON TI1K f HAND IANK of Newfoundland. French vessels, it npears, nrjstly anchor in lat. f0 '. and long, Ii) rJU W. in about J3 fathoms water, veer or 100 fathoms of cable, and prepare to catch Codfish with two i inch . . 4 I j v , Ik ,f :0l,n fathoms long each On this a small ork is placed at every ij, leel, ami wjuie nie a hooks IMilCtl will jidiiaut oiu. in ii.iii) i i'j u.i nun u niuiiiip! -ye alternately fastened by swU of l feet long, six nnari, miu me wnoie neat.y co icii in a nan uu.n- el basket clear for runniri'' out. Jlall the number 1 baskets are then placed in a large strong built lugjjajl boat on each side ; at 3 o'clock in the ufternoon both make pail together at right angles from the vessel, and when the lines are all run out straight, Jink them within f feet of the bottom. The crcc h iving rested nil night, they proceed agnin the next nurnin y, at day break, to trip the sinker, and while hauling in lines, aril ."a n .1 . t uniiooKing Hsu. vc. the men left on hoard heave in i.i .i l.-.i tin me l!llicr CIUl wiui a wyncn. v i hen in that manner ICO codfish arc caught in a night, some arc then em ployed line-clearing, tih-bi heauing, splitting, salting and Mowing them away in -layers fross each other below ; livers and refuse boiled to oil put in large casks on deck. Three m nths seems to be the average time employed, arriving early in June and departing again in October. Salem (Mass) (iazttle. A Cur.rors Fact. A Mrs. Lair, on the Little Sci otto, was struck the oilier day by lightning and killed. At the time she was holding an infant in her arms which was not killid. It was burnt on the lips a lit tle. Tue ajjinitrs of electricity are very remarkable. It not only prefers one substance to another, us water to glass, but it has cho'ee of one body over tir thcr of the same suhstancr. It is po.is.lde that in this in stance the clothing of the chil 1 m vy have been whit saved it; but its head wa mvrovercd, and its lips scorched. The allinities of Electricity have pnud the broadest field of modem Science ; and it is plain ti.ey are liktly to be the ground of many future dis coveries. ( 'in. ('hr oniric. A Pnr.Anrcr. D'sasti:i; '.m. r.t. t." Just after dinenr on Saturday afternoon, two upper floors of store No. I'J Milk street, now under going repair, fell in, and buried a laboring man, who was cosily smoking his pipe behind a pile of bricks in the lower story, and his son, but they were Fpedily dug out, nnd hapjdly found to be uninjured. ( hie end of the llooring caught on the bricks, and formed a snug recess where the la ther and son were sitting, and thus were their lives preservid in a remarkable manner. After he was brought out into the light, the astonished man stood for several minutifl as motionless as a statue, appa rently uncertain whether it was himsidf or somebody else who had been po near the jaws of death. The hoy hopped alxr.it as brisk as a Ilea. H sUm Fust. 0".V"T!irro dollar rotmtr rlcits, mi tbo Uitik f L" isvillo, aro in circulation, sijMiod A. Thrnton, ivisbier, j).iv:iblo to J. (. Tulbot. Siiriiatiin? anil tilling tip wi'll duno ami calculate! to dotoivo tho IkkI jtnlos. Ob serve that Iii lloiirisili over the b tU r Iv in the wo ru batik is omitted in the conntcrfv.it. Inthville Jour' mil. i . ' k i r v'mi.'I ii.i iLAuiil t ill I UN V'1" v i inc nirt oi irovniiiKo, utul iMiuci inrne iir, ii.-.vh .1 . .i n- c .1 l.... r.r comnirncrd suits ajjainst the olbcern (1 the law lor 1 . . iaio iiiijtrisoiuiioiit iiirin' tln i'orr rxeitomoni in ilhude Island, llarh lavs hU dim.itrcs at Sl0,K)i. DOCTOR EVANS. Orrii F. over .Miller V Hat More, !2d door caa f Wathfimton Hull. kv y IXDIA&'AI'OLIS 1VMOLESALE 1'ICICES Corrected for (Ac IrAiina State S.viin,l bf X $ ). CARLISLE CO. , JiMerg awu McrthaaU. ' I! KEF net HACON pr lb Hog round SlioulJor! S'Mcs clear Ham 3 00 a 3 RO NAILS cut i Eights a a 4 J a 51 Sixes 5 4 5 I tours 04 LEATHER side lb a 2u a 2-2 c 7 tall pr doz . IG OILS per gal Linseed 22 a 23 75 a 75 a - C2 a 75 20 a 25 37 a 50 G a 7 0 a 12 (S a 7 45 a 50 7 a S 3 00 a 4 00 75 a 80 1 00 a 1 25 22 a 25 25 a 25 a 5 a G 4 a 43 3 a 3$ ler G2 a Ss 02 SS 30 a 50 1 a 2 COTTON1 YARN lb 15 CANDLES per lb Steaiinc Tallow mould COFFEE er lb Uio St. Domingo CASTINGS 10 8 1VLard : PROVISIONS Beans while S a Potatoes 0 a 'Uni'os 4 a 43 Cfn ec 4l Ihilfpr Plough inou Ids r LOU It AND MEAL (Lard City mills pr bM 3 00 a 3 2o SALT pr bh t ountiy brands 2 75 a 3 OO'sUOAU pr lb Corn meal pr t-uh 25 a 3o'SEEDS pi buh FRUIT per buhcl Clover Apples dried 88 a 1 00 Klax Do Kieen 37 a 5frimothr Peaches diicti 1 00 a 1 12SUND1ÜES J.-LASS (Feathers J l,y 1 2 25 a 2 f0 Ui-cswux 10 by 12 3 25 a 3 öO Ginsci. nn iv v.. l . 1 mv.vt.i per uusnci TaUow Whcnt 32 a 37A'Sap bar No 1 5 a 3lt No 2 15 a 16 TEAS gun pow Impciial 4 50 a 5 00oung hyson 4 00 a 4 50 TORACCO leaf Corn Oats 11 AY per ton Timothy Clover IKON per lb 4J a bj WHISKEY pr gal 5 a MOLASSES pr gal 40 a 45 t;i! jtiwiiurrs. LOUISVILLE, August I.Deef Salted. Demand limited at $.",()0;VC,oO, according to quality nnd order. Uacon. We quote Sides at C;.; llains C .; and Shoulder fc. from wagons fur choice lots. From stores 4" per lb. advance on-theso rates is asked. A f.iir supply has been coming in this w k, nnd a good deal.of it is inferior particularly ol the joints. The rtock on hand ia fair, and tlo demand from stores h tolerably goodj al though principally confined to small orders from planters. Corrr.K; Tlu-ro appears to be a belter feeling in tlio market in rtpsrd to tli.s article, nnd several hundred b.vs have changed hands this week at rates ranging from ?i Fur llio. tlok lair. Nothing of consequence doing 111 other kinds, nd not much in market. ' l'LOun. There has been some activity in t!ic Flour market this weik, and considerable ales have been made for shipment. The city mills havr, indeed, been unable to eupply the orders coming in ujion them. Prices have been gradually declining during llio week, and wo now quote i &t $:t,00 by the quantity. $:t,10u3,ir bv the drav loud, nnd $:i3a30 at retail. It is aluioJt without exception of a quality nn:ch superior to nny mnnufcturt d for many year?. There is an abundant supply in stures, and the mills are daily making large quantities. Fkathf.rs Are firm and in ready demand at 25 els from wagons. Fruits. No dried fruits coming m. Apples would command $1,00, and peaches l,.ri(J. ' ; (jINSE.ng. Wo quote in demand at iGc., which is an advance over last wcwk'a figures. Laud. We quote at 7e. from wagons and TJ ic. from Mtori-s, and in ready demand. The supply coming in is ccant; indeed, there is, if wo are correctly informed, none of consequence, remaining in tho country among farmers or country merchants. Moi.assks lias again advanced slightly, and is now held at 33a31c. per gallon. Demand moderate and stock very light for the season. INjkk. We quote Aless and I'ritnc at 10 and 12,.r0. The Etock of Mcsh is verv light. tfAi.T. We fjuote nt ä-'fai&ic. per bushel, j umar. We que to lair to prime at CJifj. Seven hundred hhds. have changed hands during the week, but none of consequence has been taken out ol the market. The stock is still fair, and holders evince a belter feeling in regard to it. Loaf .Sugar we quot at 10ul3 cts. for the dilleicnt numbers. Havana is llalvjjts. Sekds. Kye, for sowing, is in request, and at all that comes in commands at present Horn 37u45 per-bushel. Timothy ced brings $ 1 ,50:i 1 ,75 from wagotu. The season for oth r seeds is not yet opened. Wheat. Large quantities of heat have been coming in this week, and prices have gradually tended down wards. Yesterday the Mills were paying GOe.per bushel for it. The Wheat is generally finer, heavier and better than any be for a raised in Kentucky. Wool. Not much coming in. It brings 1 lalSc. for unwashed, and ü&i'JGc. for washed. ' Whisk r.r. None coming tn by wagons. Receipts bv boats sufficient to supply the demand, w hich is l.tir. V e quot raw at ?l :., and rectified ill) cts. Courier. C.VC.V.V.iZY, July 31. Cheese. We quoto 4a5cts. as extremes for large and small lots. Fi.oi'K. This morning, a sale of 100 bbls. uniform brand at $2 b7, delivered at boat I From store, 7j bbls! at Ö.0C c h ar, und 300 do nt 3,00. clear. From -'anal, 27 brisk at 3 03, CO do at 3 00, an 1 Vi at 3 00, all clear. Guai. Old wheat GOe. per bushel, a very superior lot occasionally commanding a triilu inoro. Cut liltle corning in. 1'kovisions.- A littla moro movement in Provisions than for a week or two past. Among the sales of Hacon aro 15.000 lbs. Shoulders at 5c, hhds extra ; iJ and 10 hhds Hams, in rather uncertain condition, the former at f$ bag;fd, at 7: hhd extra, hhd common country Hams at J4:, hhds included ; 0 hhds Shoulders at f hh'ls cttra, 3 hints, fair quality' Shoulders at 5c, -hhds rxtra, 45,000 lbs. f-vdes at t.Jr, takeo in bulk : nnd 55,()U0 lbs do nt f, casks eitra ; 10 casks tinrarivnssed Hams at 7e, casks included ; und i)O,M)0 lbs do. at t"l in bulk. A sale of 100 bbls mess l'oik at $ltV0. A sale of Hi bbls do. in lots at same ; and 14 bbls c'o., country at Cc. . Wiiisuev. The last rnl"n are at 17:r. SI'IXIAK kotici:s. C'oii nt)' Seminary. Tho I'xamination of the Scholars of tho Feriinary will commence Thursday, Aug. 11, nt 9 A. M. The ex ercises will close on Friday evening with some speaking by the scholars. Tho irieiids of tho Institution and ot" education generally arc cordially invited to attend. J. T. AITOKI,lYm. II. H. Minnie', Ass. JLiti'rarjr--Notit't The first (iiiinijiienni il czliibition of the Philological Society uf thu Indiana Anbury UntTcrsily, will be held in the Collego CliajH-l,on Tuesday , August l'Jth, at 7 o'clock P. M. All who fuel an interest in tho prosperity of the Literary Institutions of our country uro respectfully invited to attend. Tbo nttendancn uf h tue f':r..r members of the Society is especially solicited. They will be cheerfully received by their lellow members. The annual valedictory exercises uf the Society will bo bi ll on Monday ltflh, at .r o'clock V. 31. in the Society Hall. W.M. It (IIIIITITH, Corresponding Secretary vf the I'hilelrjical Society. (i ti i: r. n c a s r i. e , J u ly 1 C !". I.ilci :ii y Xoiiee ,The first U'linquonnial Kxhibition of the Phtoncan ?ciety of Indiana Asbury University , w ill beheld in the College Chapel on Tuesday afternoon, August lltb, nt halt alter 3 o'clock. The annual Valedictory perform ances will lake place in the .Society Hall on Monday tho 18lh, at 3 o'clock, P. 31. Thu friend of the Institution aro respectfully invited to attend. All former members of the Society will be warmly welcomed on their return tu the Halls of their Alma Mater. . J()(IN W. CI1IUKS, Cor. See. of the Platonean Sociitij. (i'keencastle, July Iti, 14.". illOKOfX'O CASK l!AXUFATOSSY. r m 1 1I II ml ist liber has taken tlir stand at .V. 2:1, .'ul Fourth !rrct, 8- Cincinnati, lately oci.pied by Mr. J. A. Iviuiliill, where he will inaimf i( lure to order, Surgical, Dent il, Jewell f and Ifcirrueireyiie Mini .Hire Caes, of the very best htyle and quality, and at the lowest eastern prices. Miniature Cases of all sizes constantly on hand and fcr sale, who'.e s: lir and retail. Jiiltrs fiMti the rtmnfry respectfully solicited, and promptly af.rnd rdt... iy-lm U.M. r. VALV itaiTixtj croTiss. SHUT fcrs;.le the Is-.-t quality of Cerinaii Archer htand IWtw (V.'tht, and milleiiare inviied liifwiiiiiif litem l.Hoie pun lianii;; ; fjr their qualitv 1 icier to Mr. K. K. C'lderloU, of Indian qs tis. WM. S. -JOHNSTON, N. E. roriier of Fiiirih and Walnut rtrects, Cim !:m iti, Ohio.. l"-4w Tli3iTilii:il lsMi liism-iince Company tti' Xew Vol k. falllS losiittnioii, during Km iiioiilli ol June, sied Ninety new lol''-ies, vi f !" Merchants and Traders, .11 I II I lit To ..iwers. To Mo ii.uiic. To Aiti-trt, To Superrarpo, l'o IViident of a Bmk, To Cashier, do To'.'ci.tlellien, V. 1I . . ...a I o l W ik, To Aecni, To I'.ri.Kcr-, To Mannt vi tnrcf, To l!H.k.elii m and I'ul) libbers, To Iron Mnai'r, To Heiitird, To Tear hem. To (Grocer. 4, ToCltrpyiiieii, til 4 :t o o T 1 1 f To läidM'S, t; J) Lives insured, C,mJ,l,m nf thli ufRcr on Ihr l t f fhruitrj nt ri J.tr. Iat. .V. VvUnr u.utd. Ur. ll.tvli. i'j'p. Ain't In d. i noiiiry yhst, lo-ii $11(7 i-7,l4 J'JT,:.. Juneyi, J.I,M7 IM'.W . ,m j 'iYiiy'' io,.m $ 0,311 ROI5LNSSO.N, Pres idvi.it. j Fjimcicl IIaikut, Fecretnry. 4 it li i x iK'riBA'roit'N s i.i: - . r - - , ,.:"",,.,:,,-,. TLJDTIt.'IJ Is hereby Rbrnlhatl will eiHis-T l aal ul public attr. , ii,.,M,.,s11t,.rd..y,the:oti,d.,yof a us ' tsr,Mih Ue .es.den.f . . ... : .....moll of Peter Kink .I.h .- iI. in IVn lie low lo-hip. MitrH'il connly, la., nil Ihn H r."ou.i property of he uniJ deceu-d,4onst'iig of Inn, one riiw.iiLHti-vi l. iv i '.,ii.oie trt o horse iVacnc' t toi'üli one sliu e pluiicti, ..ri iir(v ! mdillcw, pe:ir", collar, and fit 101114 h'ciimI., lliMix liiidl I'm r.. nii.t itllu-r :ii ln le l.m teilloM' lo O'C lllloll. " " Hoi nine iiunithx will le utcii 011 all miih of ihrre ilidLos and up- ward, the our. hjcir civin'f:ra nclc it t .ipi-rove I fi nii'y. J'y -0, Ü 15. I'J ü. -V .y.iTJUMU. LLLL. Amt. FIFTEEN DAYS LATER!! Another Arrival ' - "CARLITrON inrAVn just received .y th Eiprcss lÄe from New York, a Intge and gpU-iwIuf jwmtmrt.t ..f Fancy nnd FtupV Hry 1 1 , ,, r" tll Ckeup i.r tV Auxm s ihcir gda mm opening uiay be found a U auliful vatuiy of ih w tf C l.aUk-8 8 wnir. I oriMiMin e in :lrt uf fc! Scutch, English and French Law 11, Halaxiiics, Dercses, Tarltoas, nioiise ne i.iines, a id lc J..iiftes; . Very rkh fiunrrd an! t li.ini:f.ilie Silkr ; l(lucinc blue Uro de Swiss Uimibaziiie and AInaca: . ff , 1-rem hand Scott Ti Giiiliants ; A t plt-nilid axMirt.ncnl of French, Kndish nnd American Calicee, plain nnd plaid Jacuuett. Uouk and Swiss Muslin, and coloird r lorenre ; i S'ilk dress Handkerchief Rnt Cravat : lhruidered Mcritillaiitkrrciirü ' SirijN d Painas't fcs jaivls, n:,irt nt.ti ,j0 . Corded Shirts, Loop fringe, Uulik-n and variegated do; c , x- . Honnefs, Mien ftiiajmtjtanf Florence Hraid, Rird F.ve l.nre, Straw, Willuw, Lawn,tc. &.C., and a jreai varirty tX tidies' Trimminntoo numerous to n-nlior, which they will nil cheap f-r Cash. . or . . . -,4 Cloilis :itiI CassInirrrsV or every variety. oT fbade and rr'ccj. Hain ..d Fancy Vestins, of evetv Ftj le and der. F i'.lfiett and Jeans. A niii4 assortment, at every price and rjua'tty, cf ' ' 1 M-,rl.. nf.fr .1 . r, . ' 'CjirpClS Jl lid It IlffS, . K 2 r?fr? rrrY,e V 'T ,,y ,nUt(1 lj ca" "amine their stock before narchaslng e!febere. JO tli lew doors hjistof the rosl Ollice. IltdlttHnjwln , JlH'rtSt 4, lfj4.'. i-ist or MmvrcRs REMAINING in the Post Oltce, Indianapolis. Indiana August 1, 1S45. Persons calling for these Letters icill phase say ADVERTISED. 1 J. The inland ))nsteire on all Je! tern or vnnrri f,ir foreign comlt i -mnst Ac re-airl otherwise then aillltitl ftfl fnrir.t 1.1 ' u. t . J cannot be funra. ded. A Aaron AMrede 2 Thomas W Mansfield Win Muir James Mitchell MACS John McLean Mill McCauley McMantiis John McCoIlum Mis Nancy McÜanalJs rhillip McCoimick John Mc.Mahan. A I) McCormack John McN'ijiht Dcmas L McFaibnd Mrs YL McLaughlin li4l McMtitliu rc:: 'y McKlvirrf ' Miss l'hebe MeMiilbn N L'iwrrrrc Nutiic or Atnci Clark n.iPi 1 M N" ,ae Cli nics S Ntl.lc (le-oge Xoiwood O William Ovnly Sarah Ann Ostium John II Oliver Mhs Marv Ann Ouic!: C V Oneai v Mis Ma iv I p?rr 2 J -hn L I'attcrsoa J' hn I'aiker Aipiilli Poker Auosuis retlcs .lame" Paines K I'j le Wilil?m IVcl:' Jairitf K Paiks K.noch P tecuJ John Peebles Koily or James Tauley Kia 1'iotMitnn Wilson Paikcr II James RitrKcy Ilenjamin Itnlfa James Khoids V K lUdchir Caleb llailsback ' lliiMin Rhuads 11 W boop Littleton llan or Eva Ran 2 .T..M i h Holt lln itn II Puihcifoi! J-jiu Kusse 11 , 3 T:m Hiy liberty Whither Roll ( Win V ode Thüiiua lUilback S C.eoipe W Stbwttzcr Miss KlizibtthSlolie K iv l M Stewait David Sliarp .limes Ski Hin Jacob Schramm Samuel Sebein Lew! Smither David ShitlTj' Ldwin Mi'cllers John T Sinith Ati-lrew Smith John S Schein Phillip Sacks Miss Rebecca Strain Thomas Sinith William Stor.t Will Shuait 11 ule r oois Maty Ann Sarver John Smith Axim Stewait Jos Drake Mele liai vy Strain James Stiihei land Lot F'vtfr Petei Snvtck David Sibeid T John Therms Mi Turner Samuel A Thomas Mis Klia Ann Tuwnsan Kirnaid Thomas fijim TliPfinsen ii'Tniiisr Abialinm 1 riler Kdwm Tingle J 11 Tin tier U S W Ulleiy 2 V Jeiemiah Vcach (ieoije K Vanblaiicum Anuiola Vickers W Rotcit'C Wlbon John Wilson Ceorgo Apple n Jos iah Dos worth John Hutsch Sarah Heeler John Uuairarncr Klick Ii.iwlcs John William Bowles llHirh'Ilaiuhill Joseph Keeler Oliver Hums Samuel Dakcr Mi-s Caroline Huckhenrt Miss Maitha Urooks llcniy üienton Aiitlioiiy Hads Jesse D !lif-!u Ccui.Te "tuce C Miss 'Klizihetli Cooper niiinmiiictk Joeph V Cooper M Cm C hill Arad 1) Chinch Jose; Ii Collins J S Ctagott Miss ?iuucy Clnik : ' n 11 M Pcmpsey U I e lev Mil Mary llivis A M iiellevan Jonathan lJav'i.i Williair. Delay l'ieley Delon Willi m Uonlioo William or James Diis i: Nicholas V.Hon Isaac Kstep I lei an Ktter Klilia Kndaly William K Kllis Ll-jyd Kitzler F Tcter Fiances Samuel Fisher William Franklin Jonathan Folts DiviJ Ferry Miss Ann Mai iah Fjucttt Klizalith Fiazt e G l Fletcher Daniel (.tes . JoscpVttritTitri UiijhGaus Aiidiew (iaidnei Hiniy (Iier Uiiarn U tlat-jn titoie (lo-sin G W liricndatr II A tram IIouktulT Jolui llany IMtrl Hording William Holmes O Haitis J llcii cr Mis Jane Heady John Holmes Mis Lydia Haws Miss i:i:iubeih llollaud La ban Harding rhclia Harlesty Isac Iimsley Jorrph Heltuian Dan lloilon AnJiew Hoover Nukon Hughs rinisbv llollidir John W HuI.ey Sjmucl Hildiirh . J Cliiistopher'JcrJori 1. I ill JoIltrS .Miss Hester A Jours Isaiah J.ickson or William Siulfjid Mrs Julmson Iliiam J tckmin William Jones Miss I'atiicla Johnson Thomas Jones K Ianc Kelly Albeit K'xRcr John Kiushurjr Andrew Kiiscr l:li ih Kini Mis Clariesa K.iin 11 Karu L Therms Ltcki ty a w hn Little Samuel Loucks i T J Lojih l'jvid lAo il M Col IWhard Leuna id Wollen Joid n Wliht 3 James Wallace Iaac Wilson Harvey D Whcclcr Mis Woodwaid Robcit Wood lijac N Waie Jcicri h Wilson Jo.M-piniC Wouall lleorc Weaver Pat'cison P Whitosel Henry Watkins James Wallace James Webb Y Z Gianviüe Young Peter Zubtf . S. Hi.NDF.RSON. P. M. Williim Mitchell J S Menick Davll Mitchell ! pavid Mats Huh Morrow Unbelt Ma tin J V U Miller Jacob S Mustard firi'iant Moisr-Ju William W Miller Cliailc Mat U ns John Malierin;; James W Mi'chcll Samuel Mobbs John Pains (Ico Mai(uis C 11 Man it Ccotge Maitiu Larkiu I)tMS Michael Miller lj-Cw Mate l I iili:ui;iSI;t milfoil omity. IHK IIaMII.T,)N IV Brt CiUKT, Al't'ST Tl.BM, I H Williitlil V kolt' H9 Adm of Uirt est.Uc of jo.shna lluiollloli decM, r. Suimiei II ll.imiUon, Sidney Ann C'owtn and Andrew Cow en, her husband, el al. (ileleiidants ) I'ctiium to cU Heat totale. rCMlC said petitioner having Ihn day imived by tne alhdavit of a H ihintcreiiie(l tersuii tlmt tne taiil :innel I. nanoiioii, M.iney Ann t 'ow e 11 and A mln-w Jiwcii, ili l ol;uit. to raid in'tilioii nie not iciileiitn of the Stale of Indiana, I hey are l here lure hereby riotitird lb it a petition w an tiled in aid cotnlatthe list term thereof against the lieirs of Faid Joshua llaniilion dc'd, fo :15111p Ut the nal of iwjd real estate, to le made at ls 111 the liardsoi bant pt'tiiamer, lor I 'e piiipk of pajiim the debts actios! iail Male; that paid etitioii i hlill ieiidiiij:, and that unless Ih. y appear ami plead, demni or answer lo Find IM-Olnni on Hie lost il.iy ol lae oexi irim or k;ii1 l'ruie cooil. to I C holden at the Court !loine 111 I lie town I .ol.l. bvIIw hi naid county, on 1he second i'otiday of August, Ic'Ij, the sil I pelltloli will le heard u:il rtrteriiiiueo in oieir ;inseme. July 'J I, I '(."'. l(-:iv-n-T. jnn.-v lii'K.NS, t'lk. Have been apjtointed 8le agentu in I mlianatulia for the aale t.f the following valuable. .Mfdiiiu-: H;rl5rttrs S:ir:i:irill:i, l o'Ci'iltis; Frrofnhl, Tellers, llr pIk I is, Cancers, old and malipnnnt mire, Mprciitial UlViaHe, and all di.onlcis evidencing un impurity of tliebl.K.d. I iice l 1:0 ht buttle. aj"riilloy,! Oiiifnieiif, Called by tniny " f mry V Sift Wimm Vintmr ur ironi na eniuemaa leryover nil Tetter, (or t?all Ithciim,) Sculd JlcaJ, Vir arm, etc. Price 7. et, a iKittle. lirf. IltimpIiKw'N Vcul:ble Ointment, Foi the cure of "PILLS," 'c. No i1"' l capable nT being prf lied mote admirably adapted for the relief and thorough cure of this distressing diMiiM? Piite Jl 00 a j ir. ; 07 ilt lnsi'H Pom' MukV Plasters, I'or nhevins PAINtrvoy den ripuoii. Kor tre b'actttv,l.rry in the nie and iron, mid all oilier diseases that require an eiternalop plication rtoothiiiK ami plcis.ol to wear; and lhie ho once use them w ill buy no othei. I'ric onfy 1 els. iLTüi'. Sl;ukvtiii!teiN Hepatic Kllxir, Fur lle rnje of Ainer ComftatHts, a-fwii, etc. See advertioe- tne nt in tuV.iVl toUiuu. Price $1 00 -r bottle. nj'Pos.cnirV Aiit!ync Cordial, llif-h'y recommended by Ihr medical lantlty and Mhera, na Ihe be medicine known for Ihnrrhtr t, lUrrl Ci'Uits. CfTaW..rfta,and moNt Snmmcr CompUiint t.f Children. Prk 31 finU boill. O Dr. Willi:iniMir? Pill" Sooilier, I'or l he TIM ITH A'-IIK. It will cm Use " obstinate caea In five iiiiiiuit b-besidt',' ri'iitaiuiot iic p.ittKl of KrtorfoK, or other i.'-.ii'i.aiJ d'lctciioua Jruj. JH pi'J - il tKtnL J'lueiJtta abvf le. l -f at the New Store! liROTiiiTn Renie GimH, whit and oJored Silk and CotU n How, Fitncb Kil and Silk ilovc, and Miit 4 rverv quality, nonnet and Cap KiWxns, Linen, Cambric mid Lawn Slitih! Hand - kerchief ; Thread Lares and Edgings, Cambric Etriiiss and iu'ettingt: Swim and Jaconett ju ja Ciinji TiiuMJiini,' of rerr kind; Lace Veils and Nrtu, Aitin. i.d Flnn-ers, Straw Dlrnr, Taraaot. Sun Shade, and ShawU and tcarf ; Jet Hutten for I JtilkMlrr, .Mauile-Silk Witterv! ; Bonnet Silk, i:nis Is UuUlinj, Taiicy lk4uiet, IJar'd Swiss lluslio -lace, Cambritk,&.c. ' 3vr" l!-y fill' vütH uiiK) I i "SV TiiTI iTgiTU fRD l hi invalitfihle medicine w a prcpaied fnm au eaunie prac tice of emt year in a liliu: climate, and t never Lnoiiio f -il of curing I'n-er ani or any uf the diseases hlmvc naimU. T1ioe who re utTcriii from lieca.' of iliia kind, a thoe bo have iKtnmr Invalids from rl 5r t ffV-c khi tUv citiiirioion( will fiiul the Inilia ( hob o?"jc a most iinaluablc mm it) fir juri- (Vint; I In- blwil, and thoroughly ik-aitting Iroiu tlie yau.'tu tin.- inor l:d tlVct of a li lions climate. ' l lic wotuleiful ojKral'u n if the Cliolaouc in rratlicatiiifr bile fioin tli; human ayslt m, ran only plain it exlrawiilinai jr np-nrjr in i he jHcdy, thorough and K rniHiM nt ton- of f er and ;", od tbe v arious graiht uf iuurmitunt ami ruuittint fttin. Frum Hun. Koss Wilkij, Cntcd Ä'.'a'r Pofr'cf Jadjt fsftht ViArut vf .Michtun. Mr. r.'limnl Ii'igini. It In.if, Oct. 30, 1841. 1). e r Sir With jrr-at j h anrc I ctate 'he fct of the criplte ami radical tutv of the Fvcr and Ague uiih wlilcti my mn W il liiia ai at tack. l, by ibu u', :uoait to din cl.mn, f lr. O r;iHd'i India Cl'iolaoa?. He had a tcix- au atuik a I vcr nitncc, auI I appn liuidYri a long winter tl tlii cJia-e, ijliich st tome ' ir uro tlir a.- m I n-i.nl d at 'IVtuiunh: 'Il.it I wa prdvM.ntiall) ltd lo notice )otir ii nicm nt in rt liiion iu ih' medicine drtcrm'lK d n try il, aod iIk- l ie if ne ludtle broke the tliieam, and I mil cu.ilulriit lot t fleeted a in Jitnl nolto month, luie now il.ipntl without a return of i, and my wi i in lfi- cnjo) iik.hI r ti.lml Inallli. 1 1 in an in alimtilf im !n ioe and hoiild he gcat rail) known. lt)!tS II. KINS. Ftv-i -. SiLriro V. K. Tnowi-vir ;r., rfrWicJti?an Stf Srtmit. l!ii.MH;!UM, Hec. 13, 1811. Mr. Iii ng ham You wi-li meto inturni jti w hat I km.u nf ir. O-pxnl'i India Clndit.gtie, or ami IhIkhih ntetliclni-. ldulMlit that if the in :r and clacaey of thi mi-t!ici:ie wi n gnu rail) knowr.f the Icrrr ami .J'ic would diapH ar in M-chigmi. I pri-ciirxd a Ixilllc in the vpring' of 1841, and live k d reatoli ( lx lieve that niyti lfantt family cteupctl the njr.c latt . rpring in t vn- srlfteif itt lite. ' IVriia4 Iij simimer iure t'te w n' rncnl tf llii fine petti UMilar hat the focr and aoeUtn o pu valciit a the la I. I l ave it com mended tili liMtliciiie in tintneroii instance, ami wliii the titaw had become tixtd and tuitttid the kill tif ph)i(ian; and I have nrvtr kiieu n it Jail ' It ha unteratly prouuetd ihe imi Uapy in.- It, and I Im Im-vc it lia m vi r Ih ii ce- di d b) any in divine t rt inoviiifj the bilinut dieM-l of the climatr. Vour re.j-ctfully, bTKVIIKN V. II. TKOWUUtlKlK. fVa lion. C. FtwoBTM, C-otrfhr t the .NMf tf .Vi.iiina. ' ' Htihr, .March iJ. 42. Mr. Hthva: d Ringham, Dt uggi f , :0 f'"'. bir-l bae made .e.f Ur. tu'n In-Via rHta-.iKue and bad ...H.vioaote.. wttm-itMi; oi altttary tT-et when ohI by otlo r. 1 1m 'ice 't a mot al table mcdn im- f f eure mf Jrvrr aii't tijnr ; and a Wo that it proper i'V jrove a wi intuin fi rxt urivr aauml if it-curience, lo which jron wlubat;b it n til. c ted with il arc liable. Vci rptciluily, Ii. FAUNS WOK I II. From Lrciff Abbott, .V. D., lite Surgeon Cnitrd States Amy. HtiaoiT, Oct. I, I'M!. Ttt FAirartt Bingham, Esq , Jgent fur the nie vf the lt.ilaCh tiZfcl do her by cert") llittt 1 ;- icd lite India CltwbjRotcMc pit panl b) Charles ()g ad, M. !., fr iott i mitit nt ft. er, ami it l.m . .-.t. rf n,t m.l aantruilte an lal'iima in ihe ctireof id di hi.1. I ferl :t confidence in rtcommcmlinj; it a a rfectl af and highly Untritiat it mt tlj ami r;ie f-r ft vt r and apoe, thill fe-L-r. dumb ague, of any.utLrr frni of inurmitu feer. I tin forilit r letif tint Ire mttlo ioe Im in tl.i n iniiy. atwl in o'.ln r uhcic it hau Invit ucd, acipiirtal a t ry high reputation, "mi that ill I very rane' wbtit-itha Im- t hmI In my klHt kl , il ha iMiitt-ically i ntJiittd a ttty ctii,aiid itxmtd to the iimmI r fccl health, when all other niiKilitiliac laihtt. It. iptTtfully y.rnr, I.LCIl'S Altnoi T. Price XI 50. Sold in Cincinnati, Oho, w h..b le and retail by SAMOltO ?c l'AHKi pütral ai't fur'thc t ttat ihcir Wtt- iexil for the n'e of atiisKlrf Kanty Iititiitf, no ih at .'criH-r of Fourth and Walnut tsecti. Sold by TOMUXSOX HUP H1KHS. Imüaiiapoli. Hblai's lSa!aii f Wiltl Cherry! Will Miracles never cease! More, tudenre. tf its svrj'assinif hrnllli Ilesto'uli er Virtues ! ! ! n -n' n ? n ? frcn Ihr. Baler, SprinSeM, It'änkmton tn. Km. Mcort. Sunford rk Pai k. Spriiirtitld, K). May 14, ltii. Ci-iU 1 lake tili tipportutiily of infutmiiig jotiof not re maikable cure pcrloriuitl upon rr.e by the uct'f 4l)r WiüarV Kal ium ot Wild Cht riy.' In ihe year 1 "? 40 I w a i taken w ith an iiifl-imtnation cf tlw litiweta wliich I htlxutd under for i tetk w lit tt I gradually recover. In the fall of 18H 1 wr.i auatktd with a MVtrv cold, wliich iraud ittelf ti'pon my luilt ; and fur ite fpacetif three )ear 1 ! fined to mj txd. 1 tri el all kin i ot m tlicimt, and every variety ot mcdi'-at aid without Itemfit ; and thu I wtaiicd abop titttil the winter of 184, wlieii I ht ird of " 'i'tar't Ratsam v ' Hif,l Chrt ry.n ' My Irtt iida H-r rnaleI ine io);iie it a trial, though. 1 had givc-ii w all hop;"t of rrcovt r) and 1s t piepaittl rnjef f r the thanrv of annlher worKI. 1'hrto;h tlu ir olit italioii I ti induced to make ttae of the t!-nuine It'tttar't Dultatn ef Wttit Chrrry. 1 he tvffce t wat trul) atoiiihiiiR. After five yran of alttirtioii, pain ami uf- ferio ; and after bav nU wiit Jur ar f.x-e humlrrtl iM art to purMte, and the ln-t and mol ripcciahU pb)iciaii had provtd onuvailinc, I "at mmi retortd to entire health hj'ltie blowing of flott tid the n-e of lir. Witr' llaUam o Wild Cherry. 1 c: t new eiijoyiritf prod b.-ali!i, and ::eh i my altered apMar- ance that I am no longer Kt.on when 1 im i my furnier acquaint- ancei." 1 hpve pMined rapidly in weight, and Til) ilehifirm and aid id. I can now tat at much a any pt rou,aud m final tiiittuppn with me. I have eaten more during the lal mouth than I had eaten five year btfure. Considering my rate almoat a mir.itle, I det m it ncevfary for ihe good of ihe afllicud, and a duly I owe to the mjiitiort and mj fellow melt (ho iiotild know where reliel may be had) to make t'.ii ttatomeMt fo.blic. r. Mcy the hleiii of (iod re t i:ptn lite proprietor of valua ble a iiiediriiie a Witar' HaWaiii of Wild Cherry. - Your reiH-eilullyt WM. II. IIAKKII. fVl h' following letter Irom Doctor Hittiiey, of Franklin, Ind., who stand liiKli in Iii rot 4ioii, ml röiük4 mnoiiij the fir I oli- ticiait r f the Sta'e, halt jak for ite tf n commendation of the 'Genuine WUtar' IlaUam of Wild Clo rry.' Franklin, Intl., A pr:f 14, 1?43. Minn. Saufurd ft Park I hate but a fi w lMtile of iiai' bat- am of wild cherry remaining on hand ol the labt ht fumisTiVd mt by you. 1 hcirtoforc waited until I hud old out and had ov'üiiit d the niout y fir one tot betöre I ordered artotlur. F.'Jt 'ii i the tlemaiul for the aitic'e that I do not wish to tr willroit it, and am inert lore led to anticipate a little. The money fur the lat lot hall be fin llieomin b) the time the lot i 1im it if, w hirli, l"rtii the ale I have made lat I). 1 think will Ik- bin a bort time, "Ihe. fett ol the Im I taut an in many eat ti iLinf-l) Im nn'ii i.tl. It imii wo t.ion nrtfuuhi'aif r ti.orr I htm any fitr i't:trtit ßt tin ine I have ever Amirw.J5 Almud allotln r l.m upon uui. a.m not m-ini- able lo bear the let c! UHtHii(f, !mi iU miu di.i--. 77",howecr, ccni4 to U-r.iot highly aiicd by tho4e wbi l.ae U-miil it virtue, arid t vperi med n healing c 111 cat) iii thclt own ...it- -ttt. i hi i r-itt: v ruM'l. ltllvTJ nril'i" - - Price I tier boP.le. SuM by SANFOHU Ar. PAUK, Nui th-t al ro ritcr of roiirih and aliiut t. Ami hy TOM LI X SO V II It O lJIKItJi,Jnliitaoii. 4l Ir. Jacob IlecKers Celcli-atel i:VI2-KAIaA.H'ä 4 srrciFic von cuko.vic, souk, i.vvlam- F.U A. VI H EAK KY VS. Amonc Ihe many entraoctloiai'y eure eilet led by llii trily twoitdec- f.l Itttlmiin, we have rtnu only l r the folhiw inj : Poac Li t. "Humanity Induces me t make known to the riiirews of Ciminnali,h,rt' iu;ty lie 'atfluted wit Ii the above, an a-Atjnialiini cere eflected in three week in a cae or seven year" stamiitic, ny ins - ,,f HKCKEICa LYK UAIAM.' The case, referreti to I that of my liltieboy, who mi U.rn w ith is.imtrf fje hdt. Tbeiw- fl immation cotitinued lo intrriw, retiring ailTrim-flies, u-uw pc seven years. Having heard of the remarkable cures effdetl by "Becker's tye lUlsaui," as a UM resoit, I made a mal U il, -nd am haiT 1 ccitify that it effected a jnn-vt Vut Cll AULLS NOfTll, llüh m 1 &"ri wcsl uf 8oldby T(Ml.tXja()rilOntL, InduiiaHis. 41-y lI.linjTliTÖl X11I1:!,tt.,.' -TnTll.i Ulere' v eiien tlmt the nnderm.Mied hrs taken lvUsia IX '" i ;Wtll.y.i:Vn .b. eM.te f Peter U.irk. late of M-rm July iii, - riisniiiif 11