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THE VOICE OF FREEDOM. National Aunivesary. The Executive Committee have appointed some seventy odd delegates to the coming annual meet ing of the American Anti-Slavery Society. Tho' we do not expect to find allof these at Broadway Tabernacle on the 7th of May, still we trust that an unusual number will bo on the ground. We need not specify reasons. Our friends who have watched the progress of events the last six months, need not be told that the present is a period of un precedented interest to the ca.usc of the slave. Questions of great importance and delicacy are coming up at the next meetings the decision of which it is vastly important to have a full expres sion from all parts of the anti-slavery field. We trust that those who have been appointed delegates will consider these things, and let not trifles hinder the attendance of any one on the list. Anecdote. A gentleman residing somewhere near the 44th degree of North latitude, who acts as a sort of Informer General against abolitionists, was lately discoursing on the subject of slavery After protesting, in the usual way, that he was as much opposed to slavery as any body, he. at once began to apologize for the slaveholders, alleging that 1 they came as honestly by the slaves as our farmers have by their cattle,' &c. The conversa lion soon turned upon the treatment of the slaves, their religious advantages, &c. ' Why,' said our colonization champion, ' in Pennsylvania it is a common thing for masters to call in their slaves ometimes 40 or 50, to attend family prayers.' Extract of a letter from Orleans county, of April 16 : " The cause of ' immediate freedom to the slave is rapidly gaining ground in this vicinity. Al most all our public men, ministers, deacons, law- years, doctors, merchants, and beside these our intelligent farmers, are strong in believing this should be the motto of every true republican." E7" Of twenty-three weekly papers in this state, only five have published Morris's speech in reply to Clay. These papers are, the Windham County Democrat, The People's Press, The Thursday News, the Vt. Telegraph and The Voice of Free dom. Mr. Clay's pro-slavery speech has appear cd in about the same number of papers. tD,"We trust that the length of Gov. Camp's letter, on the first page, will not prevent its perusal by every reader. We have another letter, addressed to the Presi- den of the State A. S. Society, from the Hon. Waitstill R. Ranney, Senator from Windham County. C7 Our friend at the North is informed that the failure of the package is not chargeable upon us. The suggestion at the close of our friend's letter is important. The subject has already been laid before the Executive Committee. The Maine ' Advocate of Freedom' is not re ceived at this office. Will the Editor do us the favor to exchange ? We shall find room soon for the very ac ceptable offering of our friend B. of Franklin county. E7" The Champlain Steamboats are now mak ing their daily trips between St Johns and White hall. C7"Dr. Channing is out upon Mr. Clay, in a long letter, an extract from which we publish to day. 017" A slip from the office of the Woodstock Mercuy brings us intelligence of the death of Ben jamin Swan, Esq. For the Voice of Freedom. Savngelsm. " The Flag of the Union, published at Tuscaloosa, the eat of government in Alabama, states that since the com mencement of the late session of the legislature of that state. . " no less than thirteen fights had been had within sight of the capitol! And fights in that region, be it understood, mean something more than a gentle tap on the head; pis tols and Bowie knives were used in every case." Zion'i Watchman. Mr. Knapp : In this extract we have a fair specimen of the blessings of slavery, and of the safety of living in ociety where slavery reigns. Fistols and Bowie knives are common companions. Feuds and bloodshed, occurrences of almost every day. Civ il law prostrate under the foot of Lynch law. Vio lence triumphing over right. Assassinations hard ly worth a passing remark. And dueling the climax of honor. What a charming state of so ciety ! What wolf, or savage, or infernal, would not be delighted with such scenes ! But is there any thing strange in all this ? If you sow the wind, what can you expect but the whirlwind ? If children are cradled in the lap of slavery see their parents insult, abuse, and treat their slaves with unrestrained cruelty, and are al lowed even from their infancy to play the petty tyrant, and to give unbridled vent to all the lusts and passions of their evil hearts, what can we expect, but pistols, and Bowie knives, and assas tinations, and duels ? Such effects should be ex pected from such causes. Those who sow ad der's teeth, must expect a crop of vipers : and those who will go to reside in such a region, must expect to feel the fangs of the viper. Evil com munications will corrupt good manners. Chil dren will oon learn to do as others do. And those that live with the Romans, will conduct like, the Romans. Tyrants at home, will be tyrants abroad : and passions that are daily indulged -in acts of cruelty towards slaves, will not brook re straint when roused by a brother, a friend, or a neighbor. It is then just what we might expect, that Lynch law, Bowie knives, and duels, and as sassinations, and blood, should be the order of the day. Can a christian then, place himself and children in such a situation for the sake of gain ? Remember how Lot and his family prospered in Sodom. - K. B. From the Pennsylvania Freeman. Dr. Cliaiiiiiiig's New Work. We have received a copy of a new pamphlet of 91 pages, by William Ellery Channing. It is mainly occupied with a review of Clay's speech in the United States Senate, but incidentally discus ses the whole subject of Abolitionism. It is, judg ing from the few pages we have found time to read, one of the ablest efforts of the author, unu sually nervous, eloquent and impassioned. It ex poses, with somewhat of lofty scorn, the misera ble sophistries, and animadverts with becoming indignation upon the monstrous and unchristian sentiments of the Kentucky orator. We cannot envy the feelings with which these strictures will be read by Henry Clay. Their justice and truth will be felt, even through the triple searing of a slaveholding conscience. We make a few extracts from the pamphlet, to give our readers an idea of its power : " The constitution requires the free States to send back to bondage the fugitive slave. Does this show that we have no concern with the do mestic institutions of the South ? that the guilt of them, if such there be, is wholly theirs, and to no degree ours ? This clause makes us direct par takers of the guilt ; and, of consequence, we have a vital interest in the matter of slavery. I know no provision of the constitution at which my. mor al feelings revolt, but this. Has not the slave a right to fly from bondage ? Who among us doubts it ? Let any man ask himself, how he should con strue his rights, were he made a slave ; and does he not receive an answer from his own moral na ture, as bright, immediate, and resistless, as light ning? And yet we of the free States stop the fly ing slave and give him back to bondage ! It does not satisfy me to be told that this is a part of that sacred instrument, the constitution, which all are solemnly bound to uphold. No charter of man's writing can sanctify injustice, or repeal God's Eternal Law. I cannot escape the convic tion, that every man, who aids the restoration of the flying slave, is a wxpng-doer, though this is done by our best and wTsest men with no self-reproach. To send him from a free State into bon dage, seems to me much the same thing as to transport him from Africa to the West Indies or this country. I shall undoubtedly be told, that the fugitive is a slave by the laws of the territory from which he escapes. But when laws are ac knowledged violations of the most sacred rights, we cannot innocently be active in replacing men under their cruel power. The slave goes back not merely to toil and sweat for his master as be fore. He goes to be lacerated for the offence of flying from oppression. For hardly any crime is the slave so scored and scarred as for running away; and for every lash that enters his flesh, we of the free States, who have given him back, must answer. I know perfectly how these views will be re ceived at the North and South. Some will call me a visionary, while more will fix on me a hard er name. Jiut 1 look above scotters and denounc ers, to that pure, serene, Almighty Justice, which is enthroned in Heaven, and inquire of bod, the Father of us all, whether he approves the surren der of the flying slave. I shall be charged with irreverence towards the fathers of the Revolution, the framers of our glorious national charter. But I reply, that, great as they were, they were falli ble, and that the progress of opinion since their day, seems to me to have convicted them of error in the matter now in hand. 1 am aware too, that good and wise men, friends who are dear to me, will disapprove my free, strong language. But I must be faithful to the strong moral conviction which I cannot escape on this subject. If I am right, the truth which I speak, however question ed now, will not have been spoken in vain. To day is not Forever. The men who now scorn or condemn, are not to live forever. Let a few years pass, and we shall all have vanished, and other actors will fill the stage, and the despised and neg lected truths of this generation will become the honored ones of the next." The author thus comments upon the Kentucky statesman s valuation ot slave property : " Mr. Clay maintains, that ' the total value of the slave property in the United states is twelve hundred millions of dollars,' and considers this ' immense amount' as putting the freedom of the slave out of the question. Who can be expected to make such a sacrifice ? The accuracy of this valuation ot the slaves 1 have nothing to do with I admit it without dispute. But the impression made on my .mind by the vastness of the sum, is directly the reverse of the effect on Mr. Clay. Regarding slavery as throughout a wrong, I see, in the immenseness of the value ot the slaves, the enormous amount of robbery committed on them. I see 'twelve hundred millions of dollars' seized, extorted by unrighteous force. I know not on the face of the earth a system of such enormous spoli ation. I know nowhere injustice on such a giant scale. And yet, the vast amount of this wrong is, in the view of many, a reason for its continuance! If I strip my neighbor of a few dollars, I ought to restore them ; but if 1 have spoiled him ot his All, and grown rich on the spoils, I must not be expected to make restitution ! Justice, when it will cost much, loses its binding power! What makes the present case most startling is, that this vast amount of nronertv consists not of the poods of injured men, but of the men themselves. Here are human nerves, living men, worth at the mar ket price, ' twelve hundred millions of dollars.' That this enormous wrong should be perpetuated in the bosom of a Christian and civilized commu nity, is a sad comment on our times. Sad and strancre, that a distinguished man, in the face of a great people and of the world, should talk with entire indifference of fellow-creatures, held and la belled as property, to this ' immense amount.' But this property, we are told, is not to be questioned, on account of its long duration. ' Two hundred vears of legislation have sanctioned and sanctified negro slaves as property.' Nothing but respect for the speaker could repress criticism on this unhappy phraseology. We will trust it es caped him without thought. But to confine our selves to the argument from duration ; how ohvi- ous the reply ! Is injustice changed into justice by the practice of ages ? Is my victim made a righteous prey, because I have bowed him to the earth till he cannot rise ? For more than twp hun dred years heretics were burned, and not by mobs, not by Lynch law, but by the decrees of coun cils, at the instigation of theologians, and with the sanction of the laws and religions of nations ; and was this a reason for keeping up the fires, that they had burned two hundred years ! In the Eastern world, successive despots, not for two hundred years, but for twice two thousand, have claimed the right of life and death over millions, and with no law but their own will, have behead ed, bowstrung, starved, tortured unhappy men without number, who have incurred their wrath ; and does the lapse of so many centuries sanctify murder and ferocious power ? But the great argument rerr.ains. It is said that this property must not be questioned, because it is established by law. ' That is property, which the law declares to be property.' Thus, human law is made supreme, decisive, in a grave ques tion of morals. Thus, the idea of an eternal, immutable justice, set at nought. Thus the great rule of human life is made to be the ordinance ot interested men. But there is a higher tribunal, a throne of equal justice, immovable by the con spiracy of all human legislatures. ' 1 hat is prop erty, which the law declares to be property.' lhen the laws have only to declare you, or me, or Mr. Clay, to be property, and we become chat tels and are bound to bear the yoke ! Does not every man's moral nature repel this doctrine too intuitively to leave tune or need for argument V The italics are by Mr. Clay. From the Friend of Man. "Abolition hinders Revivals I" 'Tis Sunday evening and I have just returned trom meeting where I witnessed a scene around which angels linger with delight and which causes loud anthems of joy to resound through all Heaven, and which adds another refutation to the long list already adduced, to the base calumny in serted over this article, so often in the mouths of pro slavery men and abolition haters. Mr. Al ien's (formerly Mr. Kirk's) church, as you know, friend Goodell, is on North Market st. in Albany, and you know too, somewhat of the reputation of that church lor its spirituality and that it has maintained and still maintains the character of an abolition church and it has recently been said to me by some of its members, "we are all abolition ists in our church," and by the way, it is the largest church by lar, as to numbers, there is in the city. Their minister prays abolition, and preaches it too and so do the members ; and this forenoon, the minister preached from the text, Ex odus 14: 15. " And the Lord said unto Moses, wherefore cryest thou unto me ? Speak unto the people that they go forward." From the text the preacher illustrated most conclusively the doctrine that it is always safe and right, to obey God, even though a sea rolls its waves before us, we are to go forward and though he requires an Abra ham to offer up an only son, there is to be no shrinking, but to go forward. When the Israel ites were required to go round the walls of Jeri cho seven times, or when the prophet required Na- aman to dip seven times in Jordan for his leprosy, how naturally would the suggestion arise " what good will these simple acts accomplish ?" But the command of God is go forward. And who does not know in all these cases, the grand, the triumphant results which followed obedience to God, and what would have been the results of dis obedience? who can tell? The principle was brought to bear upon the obligation to sanctify the Sabbath, in which the minister referred to the late session of Congress upon the Lord's day, by which that body has provoked the judgments of the Al mighty. He also applied it to our obligations to go lorward in the great benevolent causes indeed the text itself is a sermon of reproof to all time servers and expediency men, who choose to gov- ern inemseives oy man s wisdom ratner than by the wisdom of God. Well, now to the point hint ed at, at the commencement of this " sketch." Under all the circumstances named above, could any one suppose that a continuous revival of reli gion is going on in this church. Yes ! Aboli tionists would say that would be the result, as a matter of course. Anti-Abolitionists would say, no; they would be looking and anxiously expect ing (not to say hoping,) that the " peace and har mony ot the church would be disturbed by tntro during such subjects into it ! But what is the tact ? Why, a large number have been hopefully converted to God, some hundred or two ; and when, after service this evening, the minister, Mr Allen, invited those who had indulged a hope re cently, to rise up, and walk into the next room, perhaps one hundred rose, and thus separated themselves from the congregation for religious ad vice and instruction. And who were the subjects of this work? They were the old, the middle aged and the young of both sexes; and this is the scene to which I referred, as causing joy among the celestial inhabitants, and it seemed as though the bounding hearts of Christians too, who were present, were full of joy unspeakable. So we see that, so far from the caption of this article being true, the reverse is the truth, that those who come up unitedly to the help of the Lord in behalf of the slave, against the mighty, are sure to expe rience the refreshing dews ol divine grace. It is said here, that this is the only church in the city where any revival at all exists, and it is the only church among the multitude in this city, where the slave's cause is not fettered. In the other Presbyterian and Dutch Reformed churches, his cause is so dispised that even a notice cannot be read for an anti-slavery meetiner. No wonder dearth reigns, and that souls are not converted ; and that infidelity is strengthened. As further evidence of the truth of the position, I have as sumed in this article, I would cite the fact as sta ted in Zion's Watchman of March 16th, which I have just received, in which it is stated that the Congregational Church in Syracuso has shared in a glorious revival of late, where there have been one hundred and fifty or two hundred con vertecP"and the work still going on. Now this church Watisn it sustains the holv cause of hu manity and unfolds its doors to the advocates of the bleeding slave is sneeringly called in lvra- cuse, the " negro church !" How true it is that " the Lord dvvelleth with thein that are of a con trite spirit, and that tremble at his word." I'. W. U00DW1X. National A. S. Convention. In coniformity to the recommendation of a large number of aux iliaries, the Executive Committee of the Ameri can Anti-Slavery Society, some weeks since, re- solved to call a National Convention of Abolition ists, to bo held some time during the summer, to consider our duty in the present crisis of our cause. At the meeting of the committee, March 21, it was voted that the convention be held on Tuesday, July 30, at 10 o'clock, A. M. This was thought to be a time as little encumbered as any in the summer, with calls upon the farmers, and it would enable the friends from the different parts of the country to unite in a solemn commem oration of the first of August. The place is not yet fixed upon, but will proba bly be Albany. Email, Forei gn JYc tc s . I'onrtcen days later from Europe. The Great Western has arrived at New York, after a passage of twenty-three days. She en countered head winds all the way. She brings London pnpers to the 22d. On the 17th of March, in tho House of Com mons, Sir S. Canning inquired of the Secretary of Foreign Affairs, whether he had received any in formation from Washington with reference to the recent collision which was reported to have taken place upon the boundary between the State of Maine and the province of New Brunswick. He need not remark how important this subject was. He was desirous to know whether the noble lorfll had been informed of the course which the Amer ican government proposed to take in consequence of this transaction. He also wished to be inform ed whether there was any reasonable probability of the negociations which had now been carrying" on for eight years, for the settlement of this ques tion of disputed territory, being brought to a sat isfactory termination. Lord Palmerston stated in reply, that he hud received but very imperfect information upon this subject from our minister at Washington. The circumstances to which the honorable gentleman referred, were only known generally in that city, their details not having arrived. It was not yet, therefore, in his power to state what course the American government intended to pursue. He would be, however, fully justified in stating that the most friendly disposition toward this country prevailed in that quarter (Hear.) Sir S. Canning What is the date of the com munication to which the noble lord refers ? Lord Palmerston replied that he aid not remem ber the exact date, but that the communication had reached him by a rapid conveyance (the Great Western.) He could not say whether the result of the negociations referred to by the hon orable gentleman would be satisfactory or not; but this he could say, that both governments were an imated by a most serious desire to obtain such a result. (Hear.) In the House of Commons, on the 21st, Mr 0' Connell repeated the question he hud before ask ed, whether the capital executions in Canada were about to cease. Mr Labouchere said he was happy to inform the House that communications had been received from Sir John Colborne, and Sir G. Arthur, in which those gallant officers stated that they did not imagine any farther capital executions would be necessary. Mr. Hume brought forward his motion for the extension of the right of suffrage, which was op- osed at great length by Lord John Kussell, and ost ayes 50, noes 85. The Maine Boundary Question. The steamer Liverpool had not reached England when the Great Western sailed, consequently the action of Congress on the Boundary (Question was not known there. The special message of the President, how ever, was carried out by the packet ship England, which had arrived. The subject has been far from producing the ex citement which many have apprehended. Some oi me more violent lory papers seem to be ratner belligerently inclined, but in general the tone of all the journals, both Whig and Tory, is exceed ingly pacific. This is especially the case with the Times, which advocates the settlement of the con troversy by an exchange of territory. Any further apprehensions of any collision growing out of this aiiair may now be sately dismissed. JPomestic . Death of Benjamin Swan, Esq. We perform a melancholy duty, in announcing the decease of Benjamin Swan, Esq. who died at his residence in this town on Thursday the 11th instant, at the aee of seventy six years. It is needless to say that he was universally respect ed and beloved. No man was ever more highly esteemed by the people of this state, and no man was more deserving, none more faithful, none more honest. For nearly half a century, Mr. Swan has been a prominent man in the community. It is nearly fifty years since he came to this town and estab lished himself as a merchant, having been bred to the business in one of the first housesJn Mas- , Tt- .1 1 .'1 J sacnuseiis. nis inorougu mercantile eaucauoi and his correct views of commercial and financia matters were of great assistance to him in the va rious public avocations to which he was called,. and rendered him valuable as an accurate and ready man, in all business transactions. In pub lie and private life his urbanity of manners, con ciliatory deportment and undoubted integrity, se cured the respect and confidence of the whole community. With the elevation ot character which ho possessed and the deference universally paid to him, he was a man of great modesty and humility. His christian character was as we distinguished by meekness, as by his numerous acts of benevolence. He lived and died without an enemy, at peace with oil mankind and en iovinc the hope of a happy immortality. ilr. swan lias sustainea a variety oi oiures ami public trusts. He was the first postmaster ap pointed in this town, and resigned the office when other cares engaged his attention, in trie year 1796, on the resignation by Gnu. Morns of the ortice or me county clerk, :wr. :van was ap pointed to that place and from that tune lo his death, a period of forty three years, has held the office of clerk of the supreme and county court. In the year 1S00, m was appointed by the legis lature, treasurer of the state, and thenceforward for thirty two successive years was elected to that office by the freemen of this state, and gener ally without opposition. Ho lias, with great cred it and perfect fidelity, executed many other respon sible offices. It is impossible in the short space allotted to a newspaper article to do justice to the memory of such a man, out H win live mm flourish, as long as the present ceneration of men shall remain ; and their children will, in after years, call up the warm recollections which their fathers entertained of the virtue and integrity, tho exemplary life and christian chnracter of Benja min bwAN. Vt. Mercury, Massachusetts 4ni r)rTir-r Ar,nrA,.rr i. the Boston Post, the result is as follows, Parmen ter4972; Brooks 4432; Scattering 529. At the) ' previous election, there were 731 scattering votes.. The New York election 1ms the Administration. Maioritv for Vnri fnr TVTnv. or, 1059. Whole number of votes, 41,231. The Treatv betwppn Fnn -,i tvt . l-. been ratified by the latter. Wool. Boston prices. Prim Snvn,. ces, lb. washed, 57 a 62 ; American full "blood, washed, 52 a 55 ; do 3-4 do. 47 a 50 ; do 1-2 do. 12 a 45; 1-4 and common, do. 37 a 40 ; Superf. Northern, pulled lamb, 52 a 55 ; No. 1, do. do. 47, a 50 ; No. 2, do. do. 30 a 35. Sales of Wool are generally made on a credit of 6 months, and the above quotations are the credit prices. NOTICES Sixth Anniversary OF THE AMERICAN ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIE TY. The sixth anniversary .w ill be held, ivith Divine permission, in the city of New York, on Tuesday, the 7th day of May next. The public exercises will be in Broadway Tabernacle, and commence at ten o'clock, A. M. An abstract of the Annual Report will be read, and several addresses deliv ered by brethren from different parts of the Union. A meeting for business will be held in the Lecture Room of the Tabernacle, in the afternoon, after the public meeting, and be continued, probably, for one or two subsequent days. All the auxiliaries are requested to send dele gates, and members of Anti-Slavery Societies, throughout the country, are invited to attend the anniversary. Josiipa Leavitt, Committee Lewis Tappan, of La Roy Scndeklanp, ) Arrangements. N. B. Editors friendly to the cause of human rights, are respectfully requested to give the abova notice an insertion in their respective papers. BRIGHTON MARKET. Reported for the Yankee Farmer. Monday', April 15, 1839. At market 315 Beef Cattle, 14 yoke Working Oxen, 19 Cows and Calves, 625 Sheep, and 1750 Swine. Prices. Beef Cattle. First quality, $8,75 lo $9; second quality, 7,50 to $8 J third quality $7, tO $7,25. Working Oxen. $110, $ 115, $118, $ 125, $1,50. Cows and Calves. $36, $40, $45 and $50. Sheep. $4,25, $4,50 $5 to $6,50. MARRIAGES. In Bethel, Mr Hiram Twitchel lo Miss Alice C. Child. In Burlington, Mr Ira Blin to Miss Sophia E. Fisk. In Colchester, Mr Freeman Button to Miss Catherine Weeks. DEATHS, In this village, April 18, Chester York, aged 21 years, son of Mr. Parker York. At Waterloo, S. C, Joseph E. Chnpin, of Burlington. . In West Hartford, on the 26th inst. of consumption, Ruth P., daughter of Stephen S. and Caroline Downer, aged 3 years. In Monkton, Vt. March 21, Mrs. Susanna Shattuck, aged 72, the wife of Nathaniel Shattuck. In Monkton, Olive Alexander, 79. In Underbill, I.u cint B., wife of Deacon E. Frink, and daughter of Capt. E. Birge, 31. In Williston, Mrs. Mary Wakefield, wife of Mr. Simeon Wakefield, 57. In Bridgewaler, Mrs. Pris cilla Thomson, widow of the late Noah Thomson, Esq., formerly of Halifax, Mass., 89. In Hartford, Mr. Olivor Dutton, 73. In Hillsborough, N. II. on the 1st inst., the Hon. Ben jamin Pierce, in the 83d year of his age. In Wilmington, Del., Hezekiah Niles, lato of Baltimore. As the editor and proprietor of Nile's Register, the de ceased entitled himself to the gratitude of his countrymen in furnishing the best record extant of passing events of national or local importance. Notice. CW. STORRS having received into co-partnership JAMES R. and GEORGE LANGDON, will con tinue business at the Langdon store recently occupied by Baylies & S-roRns, under the firm of STORRS & LANGDONS. And the patronage of their friends and the public generally, is respectfully solicited. C. W. STORRS, JAMES R. LANGDON, GEORTJE LANGDON. Montpelier, April 1. 1839. JOUi T. ItllLLEK, ARCHITECT & HOUSE CARPENTER, BARRE STREET, Montpelier, Vt. JCyAll orders promptly attended to. 12:tf New Arrangement! f BHE Subscriber having taken as partner his son, WI1. JtL MAM P. BADGER, in the business heretofore con ducted by himself, the business will hereafter be done un der the firm of J. E. BADGER & SON. J. E. BADGER. Montpelior, Feb. 7, 1839. 6:tf HAT, CAP ANDFTIU STORE, STATE St., MONTPELIER, Vt. J. L BADGER & SON, Dealers iu ATS, CAPS, STOCKS, I-TR3, SUSPENDERS. Gloves, Hosiery, &c. &c, would return their thanks to the citizens of Montpelier and viciiiitv for their liberal patronage heretofore extended to Iheir establishment, nd solicit a continuance of the same. . N. B. Merchants supplied with Hats of all kinds at city wholesale prices. February 7, 1838. :tl Notice. rjlHOSE indebted to J. fc. IiAUGI'.K, by note or account, .ML of over six months standing, are requested to rail and adjust the sums immediately. J, E, BADGER. 1 ehrunry 7, l;w. ti:tf TEMPERANCE HOUSE, PUREE DOORS WEST OF THE POST-OFFICE, Bl" A. CARTER. Jan. 5, 1839, ;(t