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urea calculated" to mitiguto tho severity o( tho pres ent visitation. Further schemes sra announced as being In preparation, but wlint they aro the Priino .MiniHer has not yet deemed it necessary to ex plain. Probably they refer to somo political itteti tiflcaiion between tho institutions of England and Ireland.-" Ono thing is clear, that the church of Ireland is not to be interfered with. The state ment of Lord John Russell w.is most f ivortbly re ceived by tho House, and mora cspcciilly by tho Irish landlords, who are nut nnly to have twenty two years to repay, at a amill rale nf interest, whatever sums they fopire from the Uovcfnmfiit, but half, only, of ilte present expenso incurred in the proJuctire works is to bo borne by the nation generally. Tho noble lord concluded a very long nnd elo quent speech by proposing his motion, and sat down amid vociferous ami continued cheering. Sir R. Iiijtis and other members congratulated Lord Join. Russell on tho able manner in which he had brought forward tho ministerial scheme, and on the conciliatory spirit in which it had been received on both tides. After remarks from .several members, Lord J. Russell's motion was agreed (n. February 1st. The Parliamentary p-occcdiiigj bad exclusive reference to the state of Ireland. The measures of the Government were discussed at great length. The- urgency of tho crisis was ad mitted by all the speakers. Lord John Russell moved the order of the day for the second reading of the Laboring Poor (Ire land) Dill. Mr Williams moved, as an amendment, that tho second reading, and, indeed, all other stages of the Poor Relief (Ireland) Dill should have precedence, lie proposed this amendment, becauso lie wns con vinced that the Poor Relief (Ireland) Dill was the means by which the present calamities of Ireland would be removed at the least expense, and the re currence of similar calamities averted in future. The CortN Tiiadb in England. We copy tho folbwing report of llio etntcoftbe Corn Market from the Mark Lane Express of Feb. 1st : "No time has been lost in getting the Corn and Navigation Law Suspension bills through Parlio irrnt, these measures hating received the Royal i "cnt on Tuesday last. Whether the importations uf grain will be materially increased by the remis sion of the nl-nost nominal rates of duties previously levied on arrivals of foreign corn may be questioned; nt all events, no immediate increases in the supplies can ba caused thereby. Before it was known that Government intended to lake the steps they have, orders have been sent abroad to buy up all that could be procured ; and there purchases would, un der any cir'Jinut 'nets, have come forward. The wholo of the available stock at Baltic ports is a mere bagatelle in comparison with what will bo wanted to siipplr the immense deficiency of food in Ireland. The same may be said as regards tbo Mediterranean; and, though rather n large quanti ly of wheat is held at Odessa and the Danube, we shall have to outbid Franco and other countries, who arc looking to that quarter, as well as our selves, tor supplies, to secure any large quantity there. Our principal resource must, therefore, still be America ; and we can only repeat what we have on former occasions stated, viz., that we en tertain considerable misgivings as to her capabili ties to furnish adequate supplies in J season, when the yield of grain has been more or less deficient over a large portion of Europe. We are, conse nuentlv. inclined to view tho reaction which has taken place in the trade in grain during the weekJ now about to terminate, os likely to prove tempor ary, unless our own farmers -hold much heavier stocks than wo have reason to suppose. The anx iety to realize which holders of wheat and barley have all at once exhibited, has, as usual, been met bv increased caution on the part of merchants, millers and dealers, and a rather important fall has arrivals at that porrlrom America tut a been very abundant for soma days past; if, however, tho wants of Ireland are nearly as great as estimated by the President ofthe Hoard cl trade, the Liver pool warehouse will not long retain what has just been storeu. Wo have recently received a communication from a source wo believe worthy nf credit, relative to tne state Ol anairs in ino interior ui irciauu, which fully bears out the gloomy picture drawn by the different speakers in the House of Commons, when touching on the subject of Irish distress. From this statement it appears that the demand for meal of every description is so great that the power of manufacturing it has proved altogether inade quate; that the pour people constantly surround the different mills, and take away wheat, Indian corn and oatmeal, in small quantities of a few stones at a time, as fast as it can be made ; and our correspondent accounts for the accumulation of slocks at Dublin. Limerick, and other seaport towns, under such circumstances, by ihc difficulty cxisling-in procuring the means of conveyance; the boats, &c, usually employed in carrying goods into the interior, having proved wholly unequal to the purpose. All ,lhls appears, however, for the present, to have been Inst sight ot; and, as already remarked, a decided change has, during the week, taken place in the tone of the trade. At most of tho leading provincial markets a rather important decline has occurred." The London Times of Feb. 2d says' "Letters from Odessa speak of the continuance, ot purchase es in the grain markets on' account 6f Belgium, Franco and England, and tbo result has been in crensed firmness of prices. For delivery in June a great deal of business had been transacted. The last advices from England are stated to have exerted much influence on the general condition of tho market. - . 1 IRELAND." Condition or the Peom-h. There are again most distressing accounts from all tho Irish proyin ces of the nrofircss of famine. ' Even in the county of Mcath, adjacent to the i" i niiolitan county, deaths from starvation arc re- I at. I, Supplies of food, however, "were coining in. ..though to nothing at all like the extent ve ntured for immediate relief. The Irish papers stale that the miseries of the famine have suffered no abatement. The accounts are tho same from all nualers. Over-filled poor bouses, with, crowds .of applicants suing in vain for admission, mark the progress of tho now universal mi cry. As llie famine advances, property of every kind becomes insecure, and robberies, soma on very large scale, are frequent. Oases are almost every morning brought before the J)iblin Magis tratcs of persons Assailing bakers' men, and forci bly carrvlntr awav the contents of Iheir baskets, The non-tillage infatuation becomes more and more evident. Accounts irom ait parts 01 tne coun try describe, the same slate of uuintcllicent prefer ence for the easy pittance on public works over the belter wages ollered by the farmers. A writer in the Northern Whiz, who has trav elled through Ulster and Coimauslit, mentions that from the time ho entered the lalttr province, the least distressed in Ireland, tintill he left it, he did not tea a smile on the faco of a single man, Woman, or child, of peasant class; one general gloom pervaded all. Destitution is increasing in the counties uf Long, ford, Galway, Leitrim, and Kerry; while in Cork, Iiantry ia rivalling Skibbcreen in cxlrcma misery, .Some consolation, however, may be. derived from the continued falling of prices. It was generally believed that speculation had reached its highest limits, and that prices would recede in a few weeks to their average standard. M Dublin, Ucllast and Limerick, corn has decidcly declined ! wli'il in Atlilone and l-ongioru wheat has fallen (is an oals 2a per barrel, ,." To the horrors of famine I lie ilrfjai) of pestilence Is now superadded . Kclerring to llio extension ."low Jver," the Dublin Evening P.ost.of tho 23rd, contained the ''following very' alarmlngistaiciricnl: "We mentioned a week ur ten days, ago that a low and, as it would "tippea'r, contagious fever had shown itself in many places in the county of Cork. The poor people called it tho plague, and fled from the infected hovel, leaving the wretched inmates tb perish. Another journal says i "The progress of disor ganization in both Hidings ofTippcrary is of a fear ful character; In the North Riding tnn process servers attached to tho quarter session court hate been shot lately, and an officer of the Doard of Works fired at. The navigation of the Shannon is guarded by military. Several hundreds of starving creatures haro been refused admittance into the poor-house, it being completely fillnl, Plunder and devastation prevail everywhere, for the poor cannot procuro food, nor will tho rich farmers pay any rents. More police aro demanded everywhere. In the South Riding abovo ICO sheep have been carried olT from Slievcnamon, near Clunmcl ;, all provision carls moving without escorts aro plun dered ; twelve- escorts leave Clonmcl Arcekly ; six eave Uahir, taking abo.ve uUU tons nl Hour weekly In. Limerick for the west of Ireland ; no sheep or cattle can be left out in (ho field. Tho prico of food Is quite beyond the reach or the people, who under everything. 1 he poor-houses are lull to (location ; the turnips are exhausted ! meal and soup are distributed largely, but tho mass of desti tution is overwhelming. All the rulluns or tho country arc armed ; 100 more police voted for." FRANCE. The project of a law authorizing the frco impor tatinn nf corn into France, until the 31st of July next, was unanimously adopted by the Chamber of rcers on IheUilhult. t he jlomtcur contains a Royal ordinance, providing that India corn and buckwheat, either hi grain or reduced to flour, ex ported by land or sea, shall pay, down to the 91st July, 1847, the maximum of the duties imposed on those articles by tho law of tho 15th of April, 1B32. i he London I imes or the 2d nut. says : " The food question, which would appear to be gin to assume a less alarming character, continued to engross attention in Paris. Our private letters f Saturday expressed a hope, that we had seen the wo'rst of the crisis that is, so far as respected the supply and those of Sunday tend to confirm that expectation." Outrages continue to be perpetrated in various parts pf France, of which tho scarcity of food is the result or pretext. Jlctican iS'cvrs Direct. Wo are indebted to a friend for files of late Mex ican journals, the Locomotor and the Lndicador, of era Uruz, running Irom Ulst December toine loin antiary. Uesidcs their original matter, they em body copious extracts from the newspspers of the capital and of tho Departments details not found n the news brought us by the usual methods, ut whatever such they offer, we proceed to place be fore our readers abstracts or transitions, as either may seem preferable In its session of thc21th December, the Congress, by a vole of 73 to 2, passed a law, that members of Congress shall be incapable of any other public em ployment during the term for which they hare been elected and for one year afterwird. The Indicator of the 31st December replies as follows to a communication appearing in the Moni tor Ilrpublieano of the capital, and averring that ntngucs and .alarms were on loot at vera uruz, in regard to tho erection of a Dictatorship: That no such intrigues and no such alarms have any exist ence at Vera Uruz ; that ill-disposed persons have attcmped to create them but have been compelled to silence by the public indignation; and that these few plotters, disappointed in Vera Cruz, now hope, no doubt, to raise a disturbance elsewhere, by get' not been able lu:rii."iut. 1 lie lndicador then adds as follows': "The war absords all our atten tion ; and there is not a citizen who would not, deem it a crimo to countenance any thing that might lead to disturbance, which the public enemy is at hand to take advantage of it or to rejoice at it. It is only through this feeling that the falluro of the uovernmcnt to rorward tho supplies, flic, necessary to tne delence ol this place and ol the iaslle ol ban uan de Uloa, is deplored among us." The same Monitor expressed great dissatisfaction at what it considers the failure ot Santa Ana's plan or repelling our invasion, by withdrawing his de. fensive force from the frontiers, and letting us ad vance into the interior, until to extricate our. selves from a hostile population and superior forces become impossible. Now, It says, the Americans have got.through this system, unresisted possessions oi large icrninriest anil wsieau ui pusmng un iiuu the interior, aro sitting down to secure their con quest. Tho Monitor thinks that the Congress ought to call Santa Ana to a severe account for is unpropitious event. Tho Diario del Gobicrno of the 30th Decem ber gives a letter from Acspulco, of Ih 15 lb De cember, which savs they havo intelligence there direct from Moncray the California and the port of San 1'rancisco, to the following effect; 1 hat, since the late expulsion of the Americans from Ciudad de los Angeles, they rallied a force of 400 men, and returned to attack it; but thrt at San Pedro, three leguca from Los Angeles, they were encountered by tho Jalilorniaus, and driven back to tne coast with considerable loss. It is probable that the news of this unexpected resistance of tho Califor- mans has led lo a proposal of about the 'same date, n ine Mexican uongress, in ratso a epeciai luuu ui i- r. 1 :i I r tall a million to aid the JNcw Mexicans and taiiior- nians in (heir efforts, to' expel the. invaders from those territories. The quarrel which had sprung up between Santa Ana and the authorities of the stale of Zacatecas, concerning an order issued by the former about the time, when the Uongress was assembling, to estab lish martial, law through i&acalecas, has been brought before the Concress. and quilcd by the de' cisjon that the step was warranted, both by the gravity or the conjuncture and the temporary pow ers which Santa Ana was then legally exercising, The papers contain notices of various voluntary ..Til .-i e.i n - e couiriDuuons to tne expenses oi me war. i wu ui these merit particular attention. In Vera Cruz a number of private individuals were called on to as sist in furnishing clothes for the soldiery, and they at once subscribed lor one hundred and ninety- tliree full suits; in I'uebla, another body of persons has given the example of a sort or contribution still more likely to be effectual. They have each taxing himself In proportion to his means raised present sum of four hundred and thirty-nine dollars, antr engage lo contribute, as long as tne war snail last, a monthly amount of one hundred and thirty seven dollars. Under date of January 14th; the Locomotor gives a view of the new plan of operations for which Gen era) Scott is sent out. New Leon and Tamaulipas are, it sat a, to be left to an army of occupation only, and the main forces, with as many fresh ones os can be raised, are to be sent tb the attack of Vera Cruz. Our Government, it says, is confident of success there, with a force of 25,000 men ; and expects after taking Vera 'Cruz and its castle, to marh upon the city of Mexico, The attack, it adds, may be expected within from forty to sixty days of that date. It exhorts the' Government to assemble an army of observation there. At the entrance nfa new year, ono of tho Mexi can journals, (llio llfgcntrauor Itejniblicani,) re views the comparative condition of that country, at tho beginning of 1810 nnd 1817. It says, "A rear sirico this nation presented a spectacle the saddest. such ns seemed to promiiY nothing' but its speedy ruin, It had sutiertw a revolution ending in Hom ing but the illusion of all the public hope; and the army ossemu.eu to protect me inicgriiy oi my n tional territory Jiad shamefully lurried, its faco from tho enemy, in order to aid in enslaving ns at homr,"&c. Proceeding thus in its nictnrq of the bopclcssatalo ol things'a year since, It next comes to the present. "The year lr?47 opens, then, with better auspices, The nation is governed by the constilutional forms for the restoration of which it had long sighed; it is free; the stales liavo resum ed Iheir sovereignty and independence; are reor ganizing Iheir internal administration; are raising and arming their militia ; are casting about for the means of replenishing iheir treasuries J are endeav oring to find farther financial aids for the General Government itself in the war which it Js waging, and arcprenarin-r all the elements of national de fence which can be devised. At the' beginning of io4U we, could see nothing but omens or calamity and dissolution; at that of 1817 only signs of re generation and of recovery greet us." Mexico, in short, has derived from this war only renewed union, a reanimated public, order, a freer Government. We wish nil the world could say as much. Extract from Senator Cumin's Speech: Wc give place to the following eloquent an ef fective extract from the concluding portion r the Speech of "Tost Corwin" or Ohio, dclifrcd in the U, S. Senate On tho I lib inst., the tlirto mil lion bribery bill being then under consideration, What is tho territory, Mr President, which you pronos? to wrest from Mexico 1 It is Consecrated to the heart or the Mexican by many well-fought battle with his old Castilian master. His Hunker Hills and Saratogas and Yorktownf aro thcro! Tho Mexican can say, "Thero I fled for liberty 1 and shall I surrender thai consecrated home of my affections to tho Anglo-Saxon btvaderst What do they want with it. They haw Texas already. They have possessed themsilvea of tho territory between the Nueces and tin Rio Grande. What else do Ihcy want T To what shall I point my children as memorials of that independence which I bequeath to them, when those battle fields shall have passed from my possession!" Oh 1 hid one come and demanded Hunker Hill of the people of Massachusetts had England's Lion, rampant on his field of gold, ever showed himself there, is there a man over 13 or under 90 who would not have been thero to meet him is thero a river on this Continent that would not have run red with blood is there a field of conflict but would havo been filled high with the unburied bones of slaughtered Americans, before these consecrat ed battle fields of liberty should have been wrested from us 7 Uut this samo American goes on into a sister Republic and says to poor, weak Mexico, "Give up your territory you are unworthy to pos sess it I have gal one half already all I ask of you is to give up the other I" Oh I England might as well, in the circumitances I havo described, have come and demanded of us, "Give up the Atlantic slope give up this trifling territory from llio Alle ghany Mountains to the sea; it is only from Maine to St. Mary's only about one-third of your Re public, and we have the least interesting portion of it." What would be tho response 1 Why, they would say, must we give this up lo John Hull 7 Why I "lie wants room! the benalor irom Michigan says he must have this. Why. my wor thy Christian brother, on what principle of justice? l want room i ' (A laugh. j Why, with twenty millions of people you have only about a hundred millions of acres of land, in viting settlement by every conceivable argument bring Ihcm down to a quarter of a dollar an acre, and allowing every man to squat where he pleases. Uut the Senator from Michigan says wc will be two hundred millions in a few years, and we want room. If I wcro a Mexican I would tell you "Have you not room In your own country lo bury IDUMlcad men! If you come, into mine wc. will Why, says the Chairman of this Committeo ofj i-orcign ikciaiion, ii is tne most reasonable i.u.0 in the world 1 We ought lo have the Day of San Francisco. Why t Becauso it Is the best harbor in the Pacific I It has been my fortune, Mr Presi dent, to have practised a good deal in criminal Courts in the course of my life, but 1 never yet beard a thief, arraigned for stealing a horse, plead that it waa the best horse that he could find in the country I Wo want California. What for T Why, says the Senator Irom Michigan, wc will have it, and the Senator from South Carolina with a very mistaken view, I think, alike or duty and or policy says, yoa can't keep our people from going in thero. I don't desiro to prevent them. Let them go and seek their happiness in whatever country or clime it pleases them. All I ask is that they go there on their own re sponsibility, and not require of me to convey their bagle banner into whaleter held ot plunder they may choose to enter, irr their foreign marauding expeditions. This, sir, has been the plea of every robber chief from the limo of Nimrod to the pres ent day. I dare say that Tamerlane wanted room. Baiazct was a centlcman also just like your Anglo- Saxon Christian. He wanted room 1 Alexander wanted room when be went to that very place where but recently Britain has fought a battle on tho ground on which he found himself engaged with lite elephants on his Asiatic fue, when away from his Macedonian empire, in these distant lands, bo sought for room. Thero was a California away out there he wanted. He got it. Many a Mon terey he had to storm. He had quite as much history as you will ever get. Why. says the Senator from Michigan tho other day, Europe, had quilo forgotten us, until these bat tles waked them up 1 (A laugh.) I wonder1 if the President of tho United Stales, educated as he is in all military anil civic pursuits, ever read that max. im or the man who wrote first about law Monies. quieu " llappy is that pation whose annals, are written in sand 1" The Senator from Michigan bad a different view of this. He thlqks that a na tion is not distinguished until it is distinguished, in war. He fears that the slumbering faculties of old Europe have not been able to ascertain that there are twenty millions of Anglo Saxons here, makinr railroads and canals, and speeding all the arts of peace to the utmost accomplishment oi the most re fined civilization I They do not know it I And what is the wonderful expedient which this Demo cratic method of making history would adopt in or der to make ua known t Shooting Mexican wo men l I read in your battle of Monterey, that a poor lit llo girl, witli the benevolence of an angei In her bosom, and the robust courage of a hero in her heart, was busily engaged during Ibe bloody con flict, amid the crash of falling houses and the shrieks of war, in moistening tho parched lips o the dvincr soldiers oh cither side, when suddenly as an American officer looked upon her, a cannon ban atruck ner aim mew ner to atoms un t we are known in Eurppol How we are recognized among tho Christian nations of the world I This ia a consummation that makes me think that the Millennial Glory has just dawned upon the bloody nems ot Monterey. i negiory oi your great Amer ican Republic shall live to tho latest syllablo of re. corded time I You have stormed llio Bishop's n.l l .1... .M l . i -t ! t ami.?, anu siiut a,i liniment Vllgngru in, glv ing water lo the dying soldiers in the held ! l his was to tret room I i hero lies your ac knowledged county, on the other side of tho Rocky Mountains, so far remote from the habitable pans of your country that you have ' actually lo hire a regiment 10 carry the mail to I no snores ot tho 1 oc lfict Ami you want room I You make the hv pocritieul pretence that there is a bursting popula. lion, teeming with energy and enterprise and life, which wants room 1 You will impose "no lies like that upon us. WliyABball.wo be so silly as to at tempt to Imposq upon tho world this, falso pre- iy,l)o we';not know, Mr, 'President, that of old It was urged a lio could notlivo long? But at last there shall nothing abide but truth, and that what ever you or 1 may say to-day, when we snail hare gone down to our graves, with the expectation, liko Ike foolish bird, which, when pursued, hide its foolish bead in the sand and supposes its uor fool ish body Is not seen when wc have crawled Ipto llio grave,' believing thai by this falsehood wc hare impusoJ upon Ibis world, all will be discovered and made hare to every body ; and mankind, instead uf believing us, that wo sought room Tor a growing population, will say that we endeavored, under that hypocritical pretence, to obtain land he did not want, by iniquity and force. The Hon. Senator then proceeded, in a most eloquent manner, lo depict the awful consequences which must inevitably fullow from the indulgence nl a lust for additional territory by an appeal to the history oflbo past. Ho referred, in the most for cible manner, lo tho extreme danger which accom panied the agitation of tho great question which sa seriously divides the North and South, and (Hen concluded by beseeching Senators at once to pause. to arrest the progress of .the war, and, instead of acting towards Mexico in tho barbarian spirit or a darker ago, which looked upon revengo as a virtue, and forgiveness of injuries as a crime, to treat her in the upright and magnanimous spirit of a Chris tian people. Treat her that War. said be. and mr life for it, twepty suns shall not rise and set before tho foundations or a solid and substantial peaco will bo laid, impending calamities be arrested, and atl be well with the republic. KB IV II AM PS II IRE. wma xoAiiXATwm. ron auvxrtsoH, ANTHOJVY COIiBY, or sxn-tosDos. roft member, or cosanris, Hlit No. 3. JAMES WILSON, Kmc. rOR COUSSKLtOO, JAflED rERKIiSS,CfariMrc. rort srsAVORs, Diil. No, 8. HE.NflYS TUOOtt. ' No. 0. NATHANIEL KISOSDUKT. COUH TV OFFlOEllS-ClittMre County. 11AIITON 8KIN.NEP-, Itteiittr ot Unit. rillNEHAS UANUEItBON, County Treasurer. AARON IMIOWLAND.5 DANIEL W, FARRAR, J.f CHARLES CONVERSE, Road Commissioners. CO" The Washlngton.Correspondentof the Boston Alias thus speaks of the recent speech of one of oar representatives, the Hon. Solomon root, or Ilulland: 'The East was nobly sustained bv Mr Fool of Vl. in a sprrch on the war. It deserves the highest praise for ita ability, its pungent sarcasm, its candor and ' tis eloquence. I com menu it to tne prrw, anu to ine country, as one of the very best ellbrts ot tho session lo conceded, by the most cultivated Intellects in Con gress.' Itluk Laiej rf Ohio. A bill psisM ttio Home or Retire tnub'vet orCWo.on Ihc 4tb iniL, repealinr tiic mucx laws, by a vols of 34 to 30. This was strictly pirly vote. Tho Whigs voUng;yM, snd Ibe Locofocos Ry. Win. P. Hill, son or Istie Hill, has purchased the Portsmouth Gazette, and Hi!. Patriot tstoheiliscon ItnucJ, or merged with the old Patriot. Vn'Utd Statti Senotir nm Kentucky The Lee inHtuft? fifihif tat hii it list mitte choice ot a Sen i tor To Con grrtf. On the SOtfa ballot, Judge J. It Uadr rtrood, Whlf, vuohown, A'tw York Cmnol Frawt, Some UrfHit; eridcncri tT fraud in the managerornl or ibe new xora isinti iunu hart beri) laid before the Legblnture of that HuK, Thr I m. . Vl . - I 1..4 tVun iLjr fl" WOUOn pajJC-IS JI aaa a, uini, i.aiv anvu iw WOOL. There hare tn do lot of Wool of nr ton- iderable qaanutv, received Troai lb country, aod the mar ae continues to be verr poorlr aopptied with the article ; atnau aavanceoTcr ine price ouoiea in our ui repot! s been ftbuined. Jlr tbr arrival of the fteamer CamWii mi Bite moon, wc nave id following aavicra oi umloj; nan mtraeioi we ain tniL t ine monin oi January coin. meoccd with a more animated demand for foreign Wools, and during the first two weeki a fair amount ol buaineaa waa done, and prieea allowed soma tendency to advance Since thai lime, however, the market has been quiet, and but era seem to act with treat caution, feeling alarmed at the title of the Provision market and the unfavorable turn or the foreign exehanrea. Prieea. notwithstanding, con tinue firm, and the imnresaion it eenetal that the wltl not be lower. but, on the contrary, aome improvement roav be e i pec ted bv and bye in tertain descriptions, particularly fine colonial, the stocks of which are becoming reduced. ut cuppim iur aiQuic iiiomua to come win oe very in fling. This will have a corresponding eflcct on other fine nvscnpiiont mcrenaa Dcen itir eeinana lor uruica States, chiefly the lower and middle qualities, and we are giaa 10 nonce inti uiese wools are geiung inio more gener al use, and are gaining favor with our manufacturers, beinfl found well adapted for certain purposes Common Wool" nave been in rather llmileq request, and notwithstanding thelowness of stocks, prices have not partaken of any ad. vance. uohoa Kniner. In this town. Feb. 18. bv Uev. J. II. Willis. Mr Frederic r Bawyer, la Alits bo nice u rooks, both or 11, At.Weit llratl eboro. Feb. IBth. bv Ira Adams.' Esa 1 Mr Silaa Whitiear, of Northfield, Mass.. to Miss JEraatyann. Moncuce, oi u UDiiiirrium. Henry Sturterant, printer, lo Mia Susan M. Farntwortl both of Keene. in fc.eene.-reo. I0,ty uev. , . uaralow, Mr ueorj In W nc teeter, bv Uev. J. W. Ford. Mr Noah well.oi Iltrdwick. Maaa.. lo Miss Calhiiiue T. Aleiander. of rforinneia, juass. Id, Woodtock,on llie i7Ui instu, by llev. Mr Wright, nir sareeant iv.iiQwaro.oi uarre.ana Ante cmuv Jv fjarlcton. of W. jn axouni iiouy, nv uev. J. viemeni, nir merrttt II Dlekerman. to Miss Kluibelli F. Allen, both ofM. Also, by Ihe same, Mr James O. tipeneer, of Piiuford, to Inahis town, on the 17lh iml.. of ntralvsis. Mrs Culoe IUves, wiaow ui ine isie uuineriora ijayes, agra p. Dunns'. Ions' life, llie deceased has anitaineu its vartooi reUtionf with great fidelity and, alllio the summons which called her Ironi ns uuiies was most sudden and unexpected to her friends, still, they feel tb. comforting .Muraocejil found her prepared. Mrs II. coold count as her descendants, It children. 47 grand children and 35 grest grand children In all 03, in liuiilora, on me Din mil., alter sliort illness of two widow Annallamll- leste notice. V llie fill of a tre. . 'Jin 13, llev. Humphrey Harris,' tged 60) formerly of Oration, In Kvden, t eu, 17, air Bsrouel 11, Warden. ad0 In Westmoreland, Jin. CJlli. Elitibeth U. nits of Abel B. Cole, aged 33. , In Mancliciter, leth nil., Molly Broilh, sged 100 "years and i diva one of the piothers of the revolution. In Winchester, rcb. Mill. Joseph L. Hunt, Em , aire) 7. In Montprlirr, Col, Jonathsn V. Miller, (of spojdeiy) ieeu uti. ui. itwurr Timed ureece, in ner we revolution, u n.inw.., rev. uui, oi cnmuuipiion, 011.1 Dlrlll wile of Joshua T. Binevr. srred 47 Teiri. At Mew York, )3lh mil. ul'lothmuution of the tones. Dr Alex. r,aou, ireu , mown as tne 'Living skeleton and a brother or the celebrated Calvin E3on. In Granville, Ohio, on Tuesdiy evening, Feb. 2J, after very briefillnea, Mri Julia A., wife of Junes W Foidick, ndonly daughter or II. W. ind M. Ol.T.ll.ol Bunderlind Mm., aged '-H veirs. . It would be difficult lo conceive of a moro afflictive l'rov. idence than tint wbich'ti irinonnri-d ia theie few wordi The light of the doiiieitie circle his been suddruly estin ffuiihed. and darkness and driolilion now fill lhOse lieSrli whleh but vetterdav were the abodrs of hippineis the uur ett ind sweetest'lbst eirlli can boast, Tok ofthe om whioh relatives hsve sustained would be lo spesk uf that wniou woras cannot express, t he language oi sii.ir ftesri like David's, cm bnlv be-exorcised bv silence t "I ws dumb, beciuie Thou didst it." So unusuil wis the sym. pithy felt irl the cominunitv where this event tnniuirrd that durinir Ihe funeral everr ntice of business wis closed, ind the inhibilsnli lu'a Lody' followed the remains of Ihe departed tn ihe house sppniuled fur all living. "Bh-iicd ire Ihcy lint mourn, (or they thill be comforted. ' ; days, widow Eleanor l'(itlp,jtd 7lj, In Marlboro, Jan. 31, ofervupf lis, ton. aced SO. Printers in Mats, p! Killed in Wiorbcndon, Mass.. I IF ARM FOR SAliE. T ILL bfl ftolJ at Puhtic Jluctiont if not T f nreviousK dimmed of at nrlvate sale. on the prcmlin in tho town ol Uovtr, Co. of Windham. Vt . on n'tdnttdnn. the I7M ilay of March next, at one o'clock, V, M., thai Well known Kirm, called the Simpson Karnes Farm, beln; ile Karm on which John Esmrs now jives, snd u? lonftinr, to Ihehfirsof iheafiiresald Simpson, decearrd. Said l'n rn is situated atiol one mile easterly of the renlra ofsaiJ Dover, oo the road leading to Rrattleho tn, rnntalning about Ortd lltmdrtd and I'ifly Jlcrit if choice I.nndt with llie buildings thereon, well dlvid M Into wood, mowing, pasture and tillage land. Any Vine wiihlns l.i porrliae a l'orm of lite description, ufin A,i WmII ni.i in tot thn ..! naM unnoticed. For further particulars, enqiilieol Oenham or.'iiin Eanies nf Dover, or of Gen. Pardon T. Kimball or lrayelteville. I erma easy anu inoiie Known oi saw. DAVID KICK, Attorney lor the lleirs. liarre, Mass., Feb. 22, Ipj7. 3w87 WAKTJ3D, BY the subscribers from the ISlh'rtfMarch, 10 I'xierienced TAlLOacss Oisls. Also, II) (Stats to lesm the Irsde. CHASE fcCRANDAM., UMt lluitding, 8 tlvon touth of the Post Offer. Uratilrboro, Feb. S3, 1347. S7 II ARB WARE GOODS. JUST received by'WILLISTON &. TYLEIl, .Mill Saws, Si rul to, Circular Saws, Carpenters henrh Plane.. Heads, flows. .Match Planes. Chisels. Plane Irons, Try Squares, Spirit Levels, Adz, Halt A. et, (traces and Ditts, Files, Wood Screws, Ufd Screws, I aclis, Urdu's, balehea, lxirki, Castors, Olujl Ilaudlei, Curry Cumin, Tape Measures, Drushr-, Mnrncen and Bindina; Skins, Patent Leather, Saddlery, Uoach Lace, Knives and f orks. Ten Knives, mass and IrooCaodlesticks. Ill Cords, He., tic. Feb. . 27 AUGERS .aJS'JD J31TTS. Kff quarters Bncll's Augers uUU 400 do Aurer Bills, lor sate hv WILLlSTON & TYLKK, Feb. 23. 37 SUGARS, tfC. PIMMRN. Orleans Sugar, Brown Havana, do., Molawert, Kaisins. Firrs, Sniees. Winter' Strain- rd and rcfiaed Lamp Oil, juu received and for sale bv WILLISTON &. TYLEIl. Feb. !J. 57 COPARTNERSHIP. mllK subscribers have formed a J. under ihe firm nf BULLOCK If STECX, lor the manufacture of Tin.Copper and Sheet Iron U (e. wIlliam bollock; V. C. 6TEKN. West Brattle boro, Jan. 3rd, 1847. 37 m, COPPER AXD SHEET IROX WARE. rrrllK subscribers have on hand a variety of Ti, JL Copper md Sheet Iron Wart. Stove Pipe, Sap I'lns, 4-c, constantly on nana or msnuiactareii in or der. BULLOCK fc STEEN West Bratlleboro, Feb. 20. 8rrt7, WANTED,. X PEDDLERS, lo peddle Tio Ware. Peddlers BUDDlird on the best terms. BULLOCK & STEEN. West Urattleboro, Feb. 31. Bw37 TTTEIIDS GRASS 4 CLOVElt SEED, jost re- JLJL . ceived and for ealc by WHEELER & PHATT. Feb. 1i, 47. 8w27 ContmiMsioncrs' IVoticc. WE the subscribers, Meg appoihted by Ihe Hon. the Probate Court tor ihe district of Weslmio- alerr Comuiissioners to receive, examine and adjoal nil claims and demands of all persons against Ibe estate oi DJimiZL. HDD Y, JR.. late of Jamaica, in aaid district, deceased, teprescuted nsolventaand all claims and demands exhibited hi otT- tne nusines ol our appointment, at llie late dwelling houwr of aaid deceased. In .aid Jamaleo, onh.l..t Tuesday of March and April next, from nine i)!til four o'clock on cachol said (lays. PLINV UAItllOWS. t -oms. Jamaica. Jan 7. 1847. 27 YET ANOTIlElt. From theutqoelninna Itegiter. Allhoush the oublid hive been often iianoied noon b patent medicines, yet occinonilly a realty uiefut and bene ficial medicine Is despised, neglected, merely because found in bid compiny. 1 am led lo ibese remarks by a conversation with a friend a few diysiinee. Bbe bad been Qlicted forKvcnl years with doxsse ofthe helrt. wl;li mo apparently orougni ner neir IM grave. Une T our most ikilfol phvsicians wis eillrd. win prononnoed her uukim mcnriuie. An auverinemeniol lir Jayne Cx peetoraMt In the Register, ciugbt the eye of her friends, &. m bottle ot it wu immediitelv procured at iteollv &. Miteb- elt,s, in Montrose, llefore she had taken It two diys, there wu in appireui improvement, cne us not taaen two bottles as vet. but her health bas been neirlv restored. 1 hive 'no perionil motive for recommending this medi cine, but merely itite Uiis fid, hoping that it may meet mo mDiiami wiio ira iiporiog unocr .llUllltr awelies, uiiv uirj m.j n.ewiie piruie oi in inenis. A FiuiiDTo HcaiisiTV 7th mo. 5lh, 1840. Sold by DUTTON & CLAItK, Bratlleboro. 97 IT is now about ten .years since this medicine has been introduced to the public, and it stands unri valled in ita effects, bearing the test ol the severe scru tiny of .all classes both IrleoJIand unfriendly. It is but for one purpose for the use of Mothers, who have to pass through a tea of affliction In giving birth to mankind, not to be described. It is to you we make an apieal. It is for your especial and general good thai you should make use ofonebottleoftheMOTHEIl'S IIEL1EF before confinement, then you can approach the parturient chamber without feeling as If you were going1 to the chamber of death. You par resl,assur rd it will still all febrile and nervous' aUcctions. It smooths and shields from irritation, and, by ita peculiar Rropertics, it destroys the cause or hemorrhage or in animation that no often attends and follows tbe hour of parturition, It causes sweet and natural rest, and at last facilitates Ihe birth, so that Mothers have not tn pass through such excrutiating pain and distress. The Mother's Itelief may be depended upon in all cases of.lhrealenlng abortion, where it is possible to be pre vented t in case of spasms, tec,, causing flequent alarm, from two to three doses will give immediate relief. As the subject is ono (hat cannot with propriety ba (ullv discussed in this public manner, wo invite all who (eel interested to call on our agents (most .of the.rca pcctabledruggisla in the United States,) or on the man- uior.iuier, anu iney will uo lurniaiicu wan a paropuiei in whicli they will find all the facta to form a correct opinion of its merits, and also theoiiinionofmanvnhv. uicians ol eminence, and of persons who have become acquainted witn ita oenenciai ciiccts. AataTS ron WIKDIUM COOJITrl BUTTON & CLjJftJf.iJratlleboroi II. E. Baker, Fayeltevillet Thomas Cook Jr., W.Townahend; Hi ram 8. Cuttliirjr. Griwn stiver! Hitchcock. & Blanch- ard, W. Halifax; A. T. 4 L. W, Chitdii Jacksonville! no, uiigvn oinililp iiuiiiigiuu, , i Ganllou to l'm-ciiuscrs. We learn that spurious articles of Mblher'a Ilelio are put up by C. I, r!- J, II, Coleman, of Iiu(la!o,onc Dr. Bmllli, ofNew York; also, Comstock, of N. Y.t his Ixitllea ami cut, with the directions that are pasted nn the bottle, are nearly a tmrfrct facsimile to outs. He once was an agent of ours, and has the genuine pamphlets: consequently It Is Well calculated to deceive the public. Aik Tor iJorlAofic's Mother's Itelicl. None is genuine unless our signatures aro found with in tho wreath ol the direction that ia Dsaled on the hot. tie, signed with our nwu hand, and over llio neck ol Ihe boille isa fac simile of our hand writing, also. John Landon."' Faclnrv .PuintA Vi.l i.-Afreni ilr the Stale nf Vermont. , Order aihlressed to' hint .will meet rvitli prompt attention. . . f 33 G, A, IJAU 1 1IOL1UK, XfADIKS FAIlt ! ! THE Ladles of the Bratllchord East Sorretr, will IioU a FAItt at Wanisstliul Ilalli W Wtdnei dm,the third daj of March mil, when will be ofler. ed for s.i'e s vMiely nt both fancy and useltil articlrs, Thcrcwitl be a Post Office connected, where all per sons' ileirroui, tan lo acronn3dslci n vh letters front their frrVudshi any part ofthe UnhnI SfatfS'. The Cehlraled Bhfity diet CM, will eaterfain the edrajiiny wllli mme nf their choicest music Ite frnhments of atl hind, will be provided, among whicli "will be-a loaf of. cake aonloialnB a Gold Jting. All persomrin ihi, as welatho adjoining towns, are most rcspetlfulty invited roaltsnil. DoorsoperevSiJo'clockvP. 81-CO- Admlltancev lt!l dciuV Ilrsttlcboro, Feb. 16, M47t 3tf Teachers Institute. rplIE snbserirx-r will open Teechers' Institute at X Putney, nn Monday, 25nd of March next,lo con. tinue four vrwkji. Thecourieof .todies, Instruction anrf ferirares, tvilf be adapted to- tkoce who intend lo Inert' District Schools. Tie books recommended lor Ihe seflnnli of the county, will be used M text iMioki in the InaTttute. Jler. A. Foeter, II W. Keyea, Esq., and JererMatv i Ityan, IV., un a cemmiUeelo whom application ma be niade for board, and who will interest ihemselvea in the Institute. Tho tuition for the term, two dollars. ADDISON BBOWN, Co. Suet, of Schools. nrattleboto.reHi IDih, 1817. 20 Palm Leaf Hafe. T WOULD tc, jar to all per ions who hire leave" to braid Tor me, that I want my Hats ihe I Oth of" March; and lo ttioeenbo are lavmg aside bjal that they intend bruulnj fur tne, for the narpoee of b'ra'dl Ing'for raih, runst'Upecl to aottlt tlieir acroaats with cish or hits at oashfiitjceii.. S.-lLmCIIAUDSON. Feb. 3, 1847- 16- Townshend Academy.. THE Sprinff Term In this Inititutiorr will' com mence on VVednrsday, March Sd. Students arn requested to be- present1 at tl opening of the term if, iioesible, so astu onirr lhedaM whenther are (orni ed. JOHN WOIIERTS, Secretary. Feb. 16. Jw36- PA SMART,. ACTIVE tftangmem to-work; in a OyJ llfick Tard to commence nnJie middlc-of-lpil,. lo whom goodi woges will be gireir- Kor furiber particufara inquire of the subscriber in. Fitchburg. WASniJUflN W.WOODWAItDU Fitchburg, rcUSlh, 1947. 35' 3AKG-AI1TG Li THE unJersigneJ t.tfrinf pcrchiued et ShorifPa sale, a htrge-asid vnloabte siockof'Cood, embrcs ing al the Taaielies usnally kept in a common country store, will aeU Uietsmeat cost for civil or approved )otes. Whoever' tnohes to buy at great bargains,, let them call ac the old. itanl ol Harris & Smith in the villigo of WiUuirtflon, and'lhoy will leconvinced-lhat-we can not only. mcnu'se.lioi cor. UOirAClISMITH W;lmingl0D,EDb12.'13-l7. B6 Y0UN&JIEV LOOIiAT TIllS WANTUO iramciliatelyn tut or txsrlte young men nr good tharacrer and address, lo engagev as agents for a nrmonthl maguine pphlishcd in. this town by Ihe auhaeriber. Full psilrexlatsoriho busioosa) Jts-prcGts, SCc., witl' be given on personal tppijcatronal ihe office of pub lication, or by addressing (lost pa id) the publisher and .proprietor. S. A. WHITNEY, 135 Mam Street, Wowcster, Mass. Feb. II, 134T. " 26 J f ENTEIU1HISING YOUNG MEN, that can. 1-J furnish !hcim-lrrilh'good and satiable horses and produce aatisfactcry recommendations .for their' KMuti! mualri""'' ct? Bnd employment v , , StoiwetoB. Mas. Minor neeit ootsplyt, Feb. 15, 1947. 4wC' Mataal KchcSL Life Insurance Compnj OFFICE, No. iV Walt Strut, New Tort. DenJ.C. MUler, Sec'r. nobt.Ilattcrsoii, Trei't. Whole Mnoonlof premiums paid into June lit 181G $174,413,la Whole numbelol policies lisoed lo Be.L Istt, 1640,2374. I As the sofijcot of fife Insurince Is daily beaopMng-morv popolsr thmughost the country, Ih. undersigned Invite, tho attention. f ihe poblio-te the idvintageooSered by thi. Coropioy, aonGdeol lint if otTer. ugreiliadaoniMuU u anv other now In-pperaliho, I'smphreU containing a foil detail pf like plsn laid down by tho Cbmpsny rniy Ke had at any tim. Imurinte wilt bo f fleeted on iwuad, heillby llvei, tcnj unoont notex' ceejli.gsfcrjoo at oa nikifor one-yrir, Mirn.ycira, or for F. I. JfESSESDEf, Ag't-raVDiittleSore an vicinity. Jo L. Diemmir, Exitmniag I'fiyiioiin. 44 50 Pedlers Wanted, tt the Otilt Sttmd rfcntlg! occupied ty . OSGOOBK& WIIsKY, rrrvtracpma3 aayostp "QyOa. To whom goojagea wfitl be rid.irai!plicaliOp,bo madesoon. , The subscribers have now on bandia. very large as aoitmnofi Tin Ware and VaakiMMYodoBSi A fcrgef assortment than ever beSire ofTeed In tha County of Wiodhani, which.lhey wjll duiiiose ofon as, reasonable terras B any one can possibly do, taking, the sataa pay, Petllt.-t who are' mtendisg to buy their Goods will, ilo ivfliito give aaacall. . W. L..&G. It WILE Y Saiton'k ntver, Feb, 4, 1847. isaii. Jl Fact Worth Knowing. A geatleman ora erofolous bibit,beeime arTecled' with. Ulcent'wn.ol tho Throat and Norei and a disagreeibl. and. troublesome diwsse .1 the skin, Indeed bii whole systern bore lbs mar, orbauig aatoriled with diseiio. Ona hand, snd wrist were ao mntb ifftctrd that he hail luit the us or tbo hindrevery pirt Uiog covered wlUitleej),pilntoI,.ajii offensive Vloerviit his hand and wriit Were is hollow and,poroa.a. honfy-comb. It wis.itil.is augaof h'u complaint, when heillh ippeirtd. iassitabla fron loath.. aome dlseiBe.thsl he commenced the use ot Jhipu!31bnh tin, ind having liken. lUboUlas. is now perfMtlr eured. 4 Pullia Ledgtr This Atarraciveoperstes tarovgh the elrcolilion- ind pu. fifiei the blood ind tndicites diMs'sea from the system, wherever loeiCed ; and Ih. ammefoua cures it-hai performr. ed In disenae ofthe ikln,eaner,crorula,gpiu-c,livereoafc. pliint, dyipepsm, Bod other ehronic diaeisoa, U truly aito lihing, rteavred c-Iy by Dr D. Jiyne, no 3 South. Third Bt , Phili. Sold by Dutlan Cfarfc, ISrmttltlora. J6 GREAT IJ AUGAINS ABE going ofT ilaily, as we nili sal) our stock of Dfy Goods lor two or three weeks to come for the original coil. No humbug I Persons wishing to purchase will fim decided bargains, and will be sold for Cath as above-by TOWNSLEY & SONS. Feb, 8. S5 I RY GOODS fTIIIlS dayscerivrd.by 4, Drslirebom, b. JO, '47. A.E.pWlK;i.k.t iMl " V Polaiocs AVanleil,. ASH, ami the highest price. tiaki fiii a few 'buslieU .Vy Lmr FmoxR mtaloca'.'hV ' ' J sw" WlMj&VQNTVU,