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I REST IN HEAVEN. BY J. H. BI5ICHT. Should sorrow o'er my brow 1(9 darkened shadow fling, And hopes that cheer the now, Die in the early spring. Should pleasure at its birlH Fade like the hues of even, Turn thou away from earth-r- Thcre's rest for thee jn IJeayen. If ever life shall ccra ' To llie a toilsome way, And gladnets cease to beam, ' Upon its clcuded day; If, like the wearied dove. O'er shoreless ocean driven, Raise thou thine eye tbove There' rest fj'i thee in Heaven. JJul O! if always flowers Throughout thy pathway bloom, And gaily pass the hours Uiidimw'd by earthly gloom; Still let not every thought To this poor world be given, Not always be forgot, Thy belter rest in heaven. When sickness pale thy cheek, And dims thy iustricus eye, And pulses low and weak Tell of a lime to die Sweet hope shall whisper ther, "Though thou from c-rlli be liven, There'sbliss beyond thy ken There's rest for the in Heaven!" LMJ'J-'l I'j'i'LJ,"-' '."'"IMS 'J!H.lg AN EXTRACT. Froma Vindication cf Ikt Rights - of Man. BT T. FISK. One cf the mrs! stupor drus obsta r es in ihe way ot cur calk nil pro press, is cur blind vrne.atir.ii for an cif nt usage?, r.iiltquated, long estab lished custom?. Prescription rulfs m with n rod cf iron e worship saoctifinii ignorance if it be but enis led over vuih the hoar of ape?, with the blind idolatry and revert pre of a credulous i-hild. It is something at which posterity will marvel, that n people calling themselves free could vcarso long, without effect and with . out shame, these badges of nncient vas;;Iage end g.-Iling servitude. "It is this which Ins raised up in this country an implied obligation at-war with cur express duty, it is a crovel . iug homage, exhorted from iml ecility to support usurper! power; it is the - prop of eypry tottering ihror.e; it has sealed the lips and f-tie '-f millions; his consigned the laboring classes t.- inferiority; trrmsmi'.fd, unsubdued. through countless generations, the colonics as we ever vre.ro. We nre controlled by English fss'iio-s, En glish habits and customs, English lit erature, English laws, and, to a con siderahlt extent, by English religion. The marks of servility acd varcalnoe nre seen wheievr-r we turn our eyco. Oosolet form?, hoary prejudices, po litical abnn,in.i'icns. an J iiatinnal ab surdities, derived fmm unsi niirs of i .'norance and Larba'ism. bind our freest thoughts and p-ilsy our Ik 1 Irs: exertions. We have no national lit- er.Vure .ve have no healthy public opinion; we hive no mind we can call our own; and more than nil, we have r.o codn of laws, but continue to borrow the nncirnt decisions ol Wet.tinir.ist.er II.i'l, and restitute hem the governing principles of A-rr.c.-ican co irU: thus tacitly acknowl edging t'.ir.t we are ir.cnpibie of fri jrsiing a rode for furselves. We are otiiy rrtroiradin, faliins; br.ck in'.o a I worse t-ian colonial dependence or fmUl bondage. fountnings of truth have been pallo- tne last twe ve mom " I irom u,:"r0Mitnncii. mi..; ed tfd hv human craft, iin streams of knowledge. we now drmK the subtle" poison. Our whole system of education is radically defective- nnsuited to the a?c behind the sp'r itof the times, and opposed to the genius of our republican institutions Shall we then waste our time in fm mincr ar'loeies for our ignorance, or in devis'ng disguises to conceal it in stead of adopting mei ns to remote the evil at once and U-rever. Our public institutions, with wt few ev prions, ore meie nurseries of sectnrisj), pride and ind.-Vnce. The great princip'fs of Amciiran Liber ty, o! Equal Laws and Kq'::il Rights, are r.irely heard discussed within our college walls. This is one reason why a majority ofgraduates. of pro fessional men. are opposed to these prirn'ip'e. So Ion? as the f.ieu'.iy i f our Vnlveisitrcs sh.-'ll he c.mp' srd. as at pres?nt, almost exclusively of inestr THE CONTRIBUTORS Arc numerous embracing Trofcs sional and Amateur Writers of the first distinction. Great expenses is incurred and greit pains are taken to secure an abundant supply of inter esting and instructive matter. ll'sutar ViTiUiouiors Va. Th Climax of Cheapness! THE BOSTON NOTION OR UNIVERSAL FAMILY JOURXJL, Onljr$l per year, WHEN TAXES IS CLUBS Of TEN ! i the first of January, 1 844, the price of the Boston Notion was Mnn!vf.ir anti republicans, so long will reaHiinaatid" wide spreading m-mop- ,ihly engines be i.-idel againFt oly-iss:ret-hir.gfo:lhi'3 counilers the right of the many, ..end for the urns to rrosD all that is woitli po?. session of li'e, liberty, r.nd luuivpn !r.rn!nes. f.ci'islnlive p-vcr, ia- jtc.vl of s'niolding rv.i p'--te-:t'n the, rights of all, fxcrc'5 s it3 ingenuity n robbing the many, accoiding to ! ,to fill the colTers of a few. Op prt ssion is now veiled under sppcious 'iisuises and consecrated naoies, & the peo !e submit to the most odious and r.ruel exnetioas, without seem ir.g to c.-mp'-phend the heartless ty rmny with which they ore burden ed. We allow ourselves to be flit terfo, drceived. and then plundered. Hive ve not the wisdom to appreci ate our blofsings, the virtue to enjoy "them, or the courage to protect them! Must lie fruits ol libeitv, like the apples of Sodom, turn to ashes in our urnsp? Whyis all thisT 1 ha an swer is reodv. We hoard our liberty as the miser does h!sco!d-it is not al lowed to be used, improved, strength ened, atu increased. We venertte it, it is true, we rejoice in it: it is our pride and our glory, hut we do not cultivate r, it is not prunad of its ex crescences, weeded of in parasites ,its parched roots are un watered, its drooping foliage unchcered by eve ning c ire. or morning toil. It was planted in tea's and blood, but since then it hi.s been left to itself. We depend entirely upon its hardy vigor to buljett the s'orm. We cem to forget thr.t eve;i more danger is to be apprehended fmm the twining ivy. tin a from the '..mpest's blast or the iih'.iiin" stroke. Glorious as is our system of gov ernments, it is far from being perfect. Our patriotic fathers !a:d the founda tion bror.i and deep with Hercuir- an vigor they rnis?d those pondeious f x fusii e navanispe n a p" i rr.edy "' :t.V."..i.g uc-; lat.il virus of politicl corrup'ion; it makes the faults cf our predecessors , colunn that tiwer so sublimely in to be more holy than our rectitude it has forbidden inv?stigition, check ed discovery, discouraged enterprise, and defied the mediation of rensun and common sene. Thus we hi.llow f.neient custom!, worship nvulJeiing. institutions, and hiiv abandon out country to it? de:!cy, tainted with the; leprosies of ancient barbarism & fetid European depravity." What has the past left us hut her rtr.s cud her torn':?, that so much ti ne is was ted in tuuJ wither literature, whe-e tlieir unparnilelid grandeur: "they C'.inpleted cnouk'li to demonstrate t!ie pnssibdi'y of t!e task and insure the perfection of the rJesn. when .lentil overtook them, leaving it for us to f niih. Wher they left it, there it yet rer.niris; !dly waiting for some p-ttri"U 2enerat:on to raise it to its destined height, while haply the mtss and ivy leaf will stand for tti mscrip tion. and time, the destroyer, will I oiUtiio the builder's hand." When ,''littz I 131; i:t fti.u lli.illlk 'J I do we fliil in ler ancient rfcor.i ! their ormipotance and lay the ctovrr. libertv lo etru'ate, virtue to admire. ; ir.g stor.a of r'orv and jov! frw. To remedy f,''t, lilts mor.ftr'.-us and crying evil, the Democracy of the land should es tablish institutions moulded and gov erned by their own great principles of liberty and equality; they are bound by all the laws ot justice and patriotism to niihdraw their support from these hot beds of sanctified ig nomnce, these nurseries of an arro gant nrristocrr cy, end to give to their national literatuie a republican tone. Instead of this the enemies of freedom 'aiake our books, think the thoughts, and breathe the feeliugs. which made our mind's daily bread, comnmv, nurture, and impulse, from the first consciousness in youth to the decrepitude or age." England performs the mighty labor, to a very gr:at extent, o lhm!in and writing for this vst nation of freemen. Her aristocra'ictd expositions of the the ory of government, mingling with her poetry, eloquence, history anu fiction, are poisoning her IHcraturo its very source; and is there no dan cer of contageon to bo apprenend- ed! May not the serpent be hidden among the flowers of her rhetoric, the poison exhale from their fra grance and balm? Whit do we find among her historians, poets, philoso phers, statesman, th.i it calculated to keep alive that keen, rearching. eag'e eyed jealotiy, so indispensably neressary to maintain cur rich's and preserve our privileges! The.e are xception gleri us exceptions to be sure but even these, zo few and far between, ot ly the mora fu'ly jus tify the opinions that English litem toie, h h. v.!:oU, U intended to per-pelu-ite the odious aristocratic fic tions ofthe past; to impress the mon strous and blasphemous falsehood, that the few are privileged to prey upon the masses from generation; that the duty of the working classes, the producers of wea'th, is to labor hard for the benefit ol indolent na bobs who never earned n dollar in their lives; lo sow that others may reap; that no intensity of misery, no extremity of want, is to influence ihem to demand higher wages oi cheaper food but thai to pay rent', taxes and tithes, is Iho whole du'.y of man. Judu'e B. Tucker, ) C. B. llavden, I Nassus. Authored oi 'the ( Vow " "nrelension." &C SiC J E. V. Author of theorize iale.' Va. Lieut. M. F. Mar.rv, V. S. N. " Washington. W. Gihiiore Si;. EE. D. ) g Geo. Frederick Holmes, ' Mrs. J. T. W,r:him:ton, N. York E. 11. Ha!-, Illinois. W. W. Andre.v, IT S Consul, Malta. II. B. IErs Philadelphia. Ameiieiis fjojth. Occasional Contributors. Pre.. Thomas U. Dew, ) Prof. Gee. Tucker, J. B. V. "AUh-cf ilia lit-tor;- Adventure," &:, l.uci.-.n Minor, W.B., LT.S. Charge Italv, ' W. M. B.,U. S. Charge 's. A Dr. S. H. Dickson, E. D. Ju.keU. M.Charlton, A. B. Moek, L. C Ciot, Ohio, And rmipy others, in the South and in nearly every state in the Union; some whose veils we would gladly remove. The contents will he exceedingly vaiied, embracing reviews, tales, pc ems. essays, travels, sketches, biog raphy, history, popular sciences, pa pers on the Navv, Army, and other national interest, literary intelligence loreign and domestic, and notices of new works. Selections of merit will rceanallv be inserted The leading principle is the pro motion of a pyre .:ive Literature, fihJ of a devoted National Spirit. nh this view the following premt j urns ore onered: ) Va. Va. j S.C. Georgia. Alabama. or wisdom to instruct? Sh.iil wc continue biin.llv to cony after her re volting degredntior:, end finally be Ar.ctlier ,v:!. The great objects of education are in this country al most wholly neg'ected and misunder- coir.e the itiysirs mocKery of the sror.il. I allude here more rtarticu whole earth or shall we srrjrn these' larlv to the health of the body and 3, throw o-T this sicken-; the purity of ignoble fetter3, purity of the mind. The ancients iug superstition, ad inarch fea:!e,lv i understood the intimate connection or. lo the goal ol intellectual an J pi 1 w hit: lilical salvoiiori? In Ejropc rcvo'u-! their h exists between the two: hence untirinz attention to thu devel. tioa has fo lov.ed revolution : emn'res , Pji.ent not only of the mental, but .have cunl; li'cs pebbles in z po.-l; ; also ol the corporeal powers. The chsiges uniiombered have tnken phi s'cal education of their children place, and'yet all this has profiled , w'es commenced almost ct the verv the world but little. Her pop::!a- hour of U: th. Bat the moderns seem tion continuo their same dull, ca;c to h.ve forgotten that pupils have bo- less weary rouna; per "vcneraUie oies 10 ue oi-cipimcu, or morals, or customs," her "established ir;s:i:ij- indeed Bny other ficulty, save that tjons, hear l.w marks or re ion n a.oi memory. I he result is a wan midst ol? these changes in the ti-ia of dieek and premature tomb. The time. Things as thet v. ere, she habits of indusiry, economy, and mo seerns to consider ti e acme of per-' rality, nre neglected, nnd the tu fecticn; thinss thet should be, an "dent emerges from - his cloister, at- unpardonable crime. She has neg-' most as ignorant of men and ofthe iected all her golden opportunities for system under which he is to live, as if national improvement. fihrtil we he lintl been groping all his hle-ttme continue to emulate her example? ; among shadows. Shall we continue our idolatrous re- j I cannot dwell upon the enormous verencs fiT sy stcais leady to tumble evils cf a national ignorance ihe in pieces from the wehj'-.t cf their .deep reproach wiih which -it covers own rottenness, and be consigned to ,'us the dangers it threatens or the merited oblivion, or shall we ciil;.t j burdens it en'ails. . I need not speak all our energies to perfect the plorj. ! here of the hideous amount of pau ous work our fathers s nobly be-' peritm and crime it has caused of gun? j prisons peopled, and the land impc- We have beat our spears into pu , verified. I pause not to desoribe ninghooks war, wiih its red arm of , the numberless evils and nameless desolation, has shrunk away to its tufife'rings it lias produced, it is enough caves of blood; but is thegieat workjfo know that mora than two millions cf the Be volution accomplished; is'of free white children are growing our emancipation perfect and com- j up in our land as ignorant as Hotten plete? We have left the service of i tots of all that ennobles, refines, and tyranny, but the king's livery is yet (exalts the human mind; while a ma discernible n the garments of'.vhich ! joriiy of those who are educated m-.' we arc so proud." la all things ex- jbibe, to a very great extent, tals! cept the mare name, England or-i knowledge, which is worse even, if ern uj iti'!; we are almost os much 'possible, than ignorance itscWt fiej T II K S O V T 11 Eli N LITERAItV .Mr.PSI.XGKIt. "The Blackwood of America." a year in advance. B. B. MINOR, Editor & Proprietot 5 Assisted by Af.ericus Scuth. On the 1st of January next (1845,) the Southern Literary Messenger commences its Eleventh Volume and the patronage of the publi: is respec tfully solicited for it. The present Editor has now conducted it for more than a year, and the encouragement he has received leads him to expect a large increase of subscriptions. As the work has been sustained, under no ordinary disadvantages, for so long a time, it is entitled to the liber al support of every fiiend of letters, lis reliance for patronage will be up on the interest nnd justice of the public and its own literary merits. Escnewing all humbugs and extrinsic flourishes, it will depend for its suc cess upon its contcnti and character alone. It is emphatically a Southern work, and appeals expressly to the South, whese character and interest, litera ry and social, it aims to uhnold and promote. In the South, there ore thousands, who can er.sily afford it, and they ore particalaily urged to come forward and assist in interest ing its circulation.- The Messenger hai now been es tablished more (hart ten ycars.during which it liasovorcomo many & great obstacles; and attaiued a wide circu lation and a very high character. The efforts of the ptesident Editor will be strenuously pirected, not on ly to tin) preservation of its ancient fame, but also to its constant im provement. In this, the flattering testimonial he has received daring For tho best paper on the present state of American letter, tl e pros pect and means of their improve ment, - SOOO The best review of tho works of some Native prose writer, 35 00 The best review of the works ol some Native Poet, S5 00 The best original tale, 35 00 The best original Poem, 33 00 Their publkntion to commence with n new volume on i the unsucl cessful articles to be at (he disposal of tho Editor. M-iny Improvements will be intro duced with a new volume, and the style rendered still more excellent. As it osnires to be the Literary organ of the South anil H'est, it is expect ed that they, and ihe North & East also, will liberally encourage it as such. It congratulates the Heft on the succesof their Naval Deport; a work of its own creation. The Messenger contains on an ar erage sixty four pages, a number, sti teen pages more than most of the $3 Magazines twice as much as some f( them; and is publi-hed monthly, at ,J5 per annum. The volume, one year contains 7G5 Super Royal Oeta vo pages, at three charters of a cent per page. Five copies for twenty odars. o reduced to onlv One Dollar per an num, when taken in Clubs of Ten. Four copies, 5 per annum 1 copy .$'2 per annum. The cash in ell cases to accompany the order. This very great reduction from the former price of the Notion makes it emphatically the cheapest paper published in the world! Its Mammoth Dimensions taken into consideration renders it nne hundred percent, cheapter than its cotemporaries. the New World and Brother Johnathan, and fifty per rent, cheaper than any of the Dollar Weekly s! Nothing but an extraor dinary large edition say 20 to 30, 000 warrants this extraordinary cheapness. The Notion is printed cn extra fine paper, nnd in supenor style, and con tinues the same wide range of litera ry novelties and general newsas here tofore. Novels, Tales, Romances, Scientific and Religious matter Ag riculture, Oddities and Fun for the Million Splendid Illustrations en graved expressly for the paper Con gressional Reports and the General Aews of the Dar continues to torm the general weekly ingredients of its columns. There is each week some thin7 in it to suit every taste; nnd nothing of an objectionable charac ter will ever he allowed to tarnish its columns. It is in all respects the most valuable and unexceptional Family Newspaper ia the United States!! The first number tinder tbi new arrangement was published on Satur day, Jan. C, 1844, and in that num ber was commenced a Laughter moving Novel, being a humorous com panion to Valentine Vox; which work alone rendered the Boston Notion when h was first established the most in the United S:aU i entitled NOTICE To Slave Owner! ""w THE highest cash prices will b" paid for male or female slaves bs. ' t ween the age of fifteen and thirtr,' by applying t Thomas E. Wells, ' Auburn, Mo. For further particu lars apply to ." N P Minor, Bowling Green, Moi John Sneathen. Troy, u Draper, . Ixuisiana, May 10th, 1845, tf-M - Wool Carding! RSfMC ftibieriber thankful foe th liberal id nalrnnige heretofore extended him. would respectfully in form hit old cottomtn, and the public peiiersllj, that hit Dchin having rune through a thorough repair, j now read j to enmmene operation; and at he intends eiirR it tit pertonal attention, he f'elt tatiffied in being able to render tea. erril tatitfaetinn to all who mar fnvoor Uoi with a call". Kit pricet lire at lo at any other machine ia the neiyhboiliood. Alt kindt of merchantable pndure tukeo at rash price?, of I will late ti.H .VI R TIX ST A LEV. MAY He'd, 1?43. 4r-IS RPIHE tnbfcriher wivbet to inform tie'. ... , t 1 4. 1 I aaa cititeot oi DowiiD-ure ouw tmujiy, that he hat commenced the above btitinen in tliit place. All work entrusted to kit care tball be done ia neat and fashionable ttjle. Prod nee tnken in payment of work t caih pricei. Work will be done at r. tooable pricei, and warranted to Ct. C. A. J.WOMACK. Jtfarch 6th, 1845, Sw8 1 ui popular wcvMy in il This new novel ii er SS. STATE OF MISSOURI, County of Tike. To Hubert Builriilqe, Jamc Iiurb rllge. Pntsri Mitts, John Burb ridge, William Burbri'ge, and the heirs of Fully Jackson, de ceased : TAKE NOTICE: That ot the en suing term of tho county com t for Pike countv, to be begun and held at the court houso, in Bowling Green, in said county, on tho first Monday in June next, or as soon thereafter as hearing can be had, I shall make application lo said court for an or der for the partition and division of the Slaves belonging to the Eestate of Roland Burbridge, deceased, late of said county; and if partition can not be made in kind, for an order of sale of said slaves. WAl. K. BURBRIDGE, in his own right, nnd as guardian of John Q. Burbridge. April 5th, 1815. 8wl0 SYLVESTER SOUND, The Somnambulist, By the author of "Valentine Vox, the Ventriloquist." The chle:s each week ore embl!ihcd with highly finished illustration rr present ing the humorous scenes in the wotk. The author in hij preface says: 'The character of the work will be essentially humorous; but as the thrill ing as well as the laughter moving scenes a Somnambulist may create are innumerable, the object propst-d is to excite alternately the deepest in (crest and the most joyous mirth, hv the portrayal of the extraordinary po itions in which a man who nets up on his dreams may be pinrtd, hnd the highly ridiculous terror he may in pire." From the chapters we have published of this novel, we ore satis fied it will be more popular than was "Vakntine Vox." It is now in course of poublication in L ndon, nnd we have made arrangement to receive the different numbers in advance of all other, so the public may rrst as sured that we shall not be forestalled by any other paper in its public: ti--n- Another new feature of the No: ion is the publication occasionally of a number of humorous rut af'f r the style of the london Punch. These will all be engraved in the finest style, and will never be offensive in their character. With these increased imi;rovc- mcnts and attracrions, and the very great reduction in prices, being one half, we again launch the Boston No tion upon the sea of Popular Favor, and feel assured it will quickly ar rive at the harbor of Triumphant Suc cess. (r Orders should be addressed to the undersigned. Postmasters re mitting us an order for Ten copies yhnll be entitled to an extra copy for tlieir own use. Back numbers of the Notion from the commencement of "Sylvester Sound," will to fui nished to all new subscribers. GEORGE ROBERTS. Publisher Boston Notion, No 3 and 5, State St., Boston. PROPOSALS a For publishing, in the city of Wajh. mgton, a new daily, semi weekly, 1 and weekly, Democratic Repulli can paper to be entitled? THE CONSTELLATION. BT JESSE X. TOW, & CO. The first number ol rur new pj. per will be issued on the first cf .Miy next, with nn entire new dres new type, fine white pnper, with othtr important alterations nnd in proxc ir.ents. The pnper will be uevotrd to a fearless expo it im cf detm crrti.i principles; wiil ;ea;ous!j end u eniittingly efpvse e?.ch nntJ erprT effort to rTabir!i a man r.io'h mon archy bank Rnd mischievous e-rpo-rations on I consolidations of v.rn'ih, which subvert the rights of tie po l'!f ard undermine the pil'ars of th republic; it wi'l oppose an cpprfsho and anti republican tsrilT sstc- , tl. assumption t f the Stale debt t tl. cenerai goverr.menr, ar.i an ester federal principfes whirh hs.ve sr. in. evitaole tendency t de.is'roy tub lie prosperity as wel! as iridividuil r.rV SUCil pi:', !'.'. .i;c tr.rl.an,;. THE ittOROVGIt BRED JACK Duncan. HAVING purchased a large and thorough bred Jack Tor the purpone of improv ing the atock in Executor's Notice. "JVyoTlCE itberebr riwj that therm aVQi deraigneri hat taken oat letter! Terta meutarr on tho ettate of William, Brice, decerned, late of P.ke County Missouri, bearing date the Iflth day of April, 1915. All pertnn., therefore, in debted to the e.tnte of taid deceased, are re ihi. ..i;.. r .k. i-.-i. breedera are reenectfullr renu.sled to ll ! c"'u immediato pajment ; ami iiu uimint lor iiitmteirea. happiness. Ag..int a!! ai celi-ston we shall ir.. i.ncrm;Toiiii.ir.z vrar. The FARnr nd t!:e Mi ciuxtc, v.'.a produce all t'e real capital ofthe m tin, wi'l find id curprrersn tT. vfringrhompion of their imhVn d lo rights: the long cherished ri"ineip'a of the editors nre too well known t. the public to require any pledge up. r.n this point. To the rrvsceUarew Jepnrtmerif. particular attention will he devoted: the ladies will a!w.-y find in rur co lumns cho'ae s Vc-ti-n from t! e cr.rnt litfra'ure of the day. cs wrl! a orii.in:i! cor.tributi- ri fr.im the most ti!entd writers of ihc1? our countiy cn fcoast. . genera! summary f foreign ana do mestic news will be furnished. The conductors have alresdv le cured the aid anil co-operation of large rcmber ofthe most disting' ih fo literary and political writer of the day ; arrangements will also la mnue. n! the earliest period pos to embellish our columns by the ec3 tributions of correspondents from -broad. Wi h this biief and imperfect outline of cur plan, we very resprct ftilly submit our claims t. tin extrn- sne patronnce to the consideration of a trenerons bnb'ir. THKOPHILUSFlSK. JESSE E. DOW. I Editors. vance. W .4 lis will atand the tnnuinir . at mi farm, four mileaaouth eaat of Bowling-Green. For further partieulara, tee band billa in due time, JOHN SOUTH. FburT,l 5th. 1845. Notice. ALL those having demands against the Estate 01 William II. Tinsley, deceased, are hereby 'requested to pre sent their claims at the next county court, as their is a probability that they nay be settled immediately. CIIAS. BACON, AcVr. all pertont harinp clairna agninttaaid ettate are rrqar.ted to exhibit them properly au thenticated, within one rear from the date of taid letter, or thej inajr be precluded from hating any benefit of taid ettate, and if taid claimt are not pretexted within three yean, they will be foreier barred JOIINSPKNCER A. SAM TEL BRICE. I 1 ' April 10th 145. "12 Spanish anrt Itlele Secars, ANUFACTUREQand constantly LTX on hand and for sale at St. Louis prices, by J. 'lander, Louisiana, Pike county, Mo. December 14th, 1844. 5 TERMS: Daily p:vcr by the year, in ad 10 00 for less than a year. Si rcr month. Semi-Weekly paper by the year, ia advance ' 5 09 w for les than a year, 50 cts. per month. Weekly paper by the year. . . 2 CO " for six "months. .... 1 00 Subscriptions to the Daily for Icjs than two, to the Semi-Weeklv for less than four, or to the Weekly for loss than six, months, will not be re ceived. If not paid w ithin the year.-the D.iilev paper will be $12, the Semi Weekly $6, and the Weekly $2 50 a year. Subscribers may discontinue their papers nt Rny time by paying for the time they have received 'them rr . NOT WITHOUT. T'iose who subscribe for a year. nnd do not, at the time of subscrib-" ins, order a discontinuance at the en3 of it, will be considered subscribers until they order the paper to be dis- P, rouiuiiiecn