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MIC VERMONT TELEGRAPH VOL. X). o. on - Continued from first page. that only which the senator himself will acknowledge to be wrong, 'at -all time?, and under all circumstances. Becaase he alrniUr, that if it was an original question whether slaves should be introduced among us, but few citizens would be found to agree to it, and none more opposed to it than himself. The argument i3. that the evil of slavery is incurable; that the attempt to eradicate it would commence a struggle which would exterminate one race or the other. What a lamentable picture of our Government, so often pro nounced the best unon earth ! The sepds of disease, which were interwoven into its first existence, have now become so incorporated into its frame, that thev can not be extracted without dissolving the whole fabric; that we must endure the evil without hope and without complaint. Our very natures must be changed before we can be brought tamely to submit to this doctrine. ihe evil will be remedied; and, to use the language of Jefferson again, this people will yet be free.'- The senator finds consolation, however in the midst of this, existing evil, in eolm and caste. The black race (says he,) is trie strong ground'ot slavery in our coun trv. Yes. it is color, not right and ins tice, that is to continue fotever slavcrv in our country. It is prejudice against color - . . which is tne strong ground of the slave hotder'i hope. Is that Dreiudice founded in nature, or is it tho effect of base and sordid interest 1 Let the mixed race which we see here, from black to almost perfect white, springing from white fathers, an swer this question. Slavery has no just foundation in color; it rests exclusively upon usurpation, tyranny, oppressive fraud, and force. These were its parents in every age and country of the world. The senator says, the next or greater difficulty to emancipation, is the amount of property it would take from the own ers. All ideas of right and wrong are confounded in these words: emancipate property, emancipate a horse, or an ox, would not only be an unmeaning but a ludicrous expression. To emancipate, is to set free from slavery. To emancipate, is to set free a man, not property. The senator estimates the number of slaves men now held in bondage at three mill ions, in the United States. Is this state ment made here by the same voice which was heard in this capitol in favor of the liberties of Greece, and for the emancipa tion of our South American brethren from political thraldom It is. And has all its fervor in favor of liberty been ex. hausted upon foreign countries, so as not to leave a single whisper in favor of thr millions of men in our country, row groaning unaer tne most galling oppress ion the world ever saw 1 No, Sir. Sor- :. . i . I uiu interest ruies me nour. JVien are made property, and paper is made money; and the senator, no doubt, sees in thf two particular institutions a power-which. united, win do able to accomplish all his wishes. He informs us that some .have computed the slaves to be worth the average omount of $500 each. He will estimate within bounds at $400 each. Making the amount $ 1,200,000,000 worth of slave property. I heard this state ment, Mr. President, with emotions of the deepest feeling. By what rule of polit ical or commercial arithmetic does the senator calculate the" amount of property in human beings? Can it be fancy. or fact, that I hear such calculation, that the peopln of the United States own 81,200, 000,000 (double the , amount of all the specie in the world) worth of property in human flesh And this property is own ed, the gentleman informs us, by all classes of society, forming part of all our contracts within our own country and in Europe., I should have been glad, Sir, to have been spared the hearing of a dec laration of 'this kind, especially fiojp the high source and,the place from which it has emanated. Hut the assertion ha goife forth that we have 81,200,000,000 worth of slave property. at the South; and can any man to close his understanding here as not plainly- to perceive t hit the power of this yast amount of property at the South is now uniting itself to the banking power of ihe North, in order to govern the destinies of this country Six hundred millions of banking capital is to be brought into this coalition, and the slave power and the bank power are thus to unite in order to break down the present administration. There can be no mistake, as I believe, in this matter. The aristocracy of the North, who, by the power of a corrupt banking system, and the aristocracy of the South,-by the power of the slave system, both fastening upon the labor of others, are now about to unite, in order to make the reign of each per petual. Is there an independent Ameri can to be found, who will become the recreant slave to such an unholy combiu mtion? Is this another compromise to lunter.the liberties of tho country for per sonal aggrandizement? "Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God I" The senator further insists, that what the Uw makes property is property;" Th is is the predicate of the gentleman ; he has neither facts nor reason to prove -A ! :ase that negroes are property. I deny both the predicate and the argument. Suppose the Legislature 0f the senator's own State should pass a law declaring his wife, i hi.- children hi, friends-indeed, any white i citize n of Kentucky, property; and should thev be sold and transferred ai such, would the gent'eman fold his rms and say, Yes, they are property, for the law has made them such?' N0 Sir; he would denounce such la wx with more vehemence than he now denounces abolitionists, and would deny the authori ty of human legislation to accomplish an object so clearly beyond its power. Human laws, I contend, cannot 'make human beings, property, if human force can do it. If it is competent for our Le gislatures to make a black man property, it is competent lor them to make a white man the same; and the same objection exists to the power of the people in an their own government: they cannot make property of each other; and, in the language of the constitution of f j - - - ( can only originate m usurpation and tyranny." D.eadful ' indeed would be-the condition of this country, if these principles should not only be carried into the billct-box, but into the Presidential chair. The -idea that the abolitionists oughi to pay for the slaves if they are set free, and that they ought to thin Icof this, is addressed to their fears, and not to their judgment. There is no principle of morality or justice that should require them or our citizens o-en-erally to do so. To free a slave istotake from usurpation that which it has made property and given to another, and bestow it upon the rightful owner. It is not taking property from its true owner for public use. Men can do with their own as they please, to vary their peace if they wish, but cannot be compelled to do so. The gentleman repeats the assertion that has been repeated a thousand and one times, that abolitionists are retarding the emancipation of the slave.and have thrown it back fifty or a hundred years; that they have increased the rigors of slavery, and caused the master to treat his slaves with more severity. Slavery, then, is to cease at some period ; and because the abolition-' ists have said to the slaveholder, "Now is the accepted time," and because he thinks this an improper interference, and not haying the abolitionists in his pwer, he inflicts his vengeance on his unoffend ing slave. The moral of this story is, the slaveholder will exercise more cruel ty, becanse he is desired to show mercy. 1 do not envy the senator the full benefit of his argument. It is no doubt a true picture of the feelings & prindiples which slavery engenders in the breast of the master. It is in perfect keeping with the threat we almost daily hear, that if peti tioners, do not cease their efforts in the exercise of their constitutional rights, oth ers will dissolve the Union. These, however, ought all to be esteemed idle assertions and idle threats. The senator tells us that the conse quencesarising from the freedom of slaves, would be to reduce the wages of the white laborer. He has furnished us with nei ther data nor fact upon which this opinion can rest. He however wou Id d ra'w a I ine, on one side of which he would place the slave labor, and on the other side free white labor; and looking over the whole, as a general system, both would appeal1 on a perfect equality. -I have observed, tor some years past, that the Southern slaveholder has insisted that his labors are, in point of integrity, morality, use fulness and comfort, equal to the laboring population of the North. , Thus endeav oring to raise the slave in public estima tion lo an equality with the free white laborer of the North. While, on the oth- er band, the Northern- aristocrat has. the same manner, viz. by comparison. Pn in deavored to reduce his laborers to the moral and political condition of the slaves of the South. It is for the free white American citizens to determine whether they will permit such degrading compar isons longer to exist. Already has this spirit broken forth in denunciation of the right of universal suffrage.- Will free white laboring citizens take warning be fore it is too late ? The last, the great, the crying sin of abo litionists, in the eyes of the'Snaior, is that they are opposed to colonization, and in favor of amalgamation,. It is not necessi-" ry now to enter into any of the benefit and advantages of colonization : the Sn. tor-has pronounced it the noble&t scheme ever devised by man; he says it is powi-r- lui but harmless. 1 have no knowledge of any benefits resulting from the scheme to euner ra;e. 1 have not a doubt as to the real object intended by its founders ; it did not arise from principles of human ity and benevolence towards the colored race, out a desire to. remove the free of tnat race beyond the United States, in or der to perpetuate and make slavery more secure. The Senator further makes the broad charge, that abolitionists wish to en force the unnatural system of amalgama tion.. We deny the fact, and call on the Senator for proof. The citizens of the free States", the petitioners against slavery, the abolitionists of the free States, in favor of amalgamation! No sir! If you want evidence of the fact, and reasoning in sup port of amalgamation, must fook into the slave States; it is there "it spreads-and flourishes from slave mothers, and pre sents all possible colors and' complexions, from the jet black African, to the scarcely to be distinguished white person. Does any one heed proof of this fact ? Let him take but a few' turns through the streets of your capital, and observe those whom he shall meet, and he shall be perfectly satisfied. -Amalgamation indeed! The charge is made with a very bad grace on the present' occasion. No sir; it is the negro womtn, it is the slavt and the con taminating influence of slavery.that is the mother of amalgamation.. Does the gen tleman want facts on this subject? -Let him look at the colored race in the free States: it is a rare occurrence there. A colony of blacks, some three or four hun dred, were settled, some fifteen or twenty years since, in the county of Brown, a few miles distant from my former residence in Ohio, and I was told by a person living near them, a country merchant with whom they dealt, when conversing with him on rt Tery suJectt he informed rhe he knew of but one instance of a mulatto child be ing bom among them for the last fifteen years; and I venture the assertion, had uis same colony been - settled in a sLve & ate. the cases of a like kind would have bce.i far more numerous. I repeat again in the words of Dr. Channing, it is a slave country that reeks with licentiousness of tais k nJ, and for proof I refer Jo the op inions of Judge Harper, of North Caroli nat i his defence of southern slavery.! The Senator, as . if fearing that he had made his charge too broad, and mio-ht fail in nroof to sustain it. sppm t ' iv oiuu short, and make the inqury, where is the process of amalgamation to be?in: h hd I " W I w - l-A V neara oi no mstace oltne kind against ab olitionists; they, (the abolitionists,) would begin it with the laboring class; and if I understand the senator correctly, that ab olitionism, by throwing together the white and the black laborers, would naturally produce this . result. Sir, 1 regret, I de plore, that such a charge should be' made against the laboring class--that class which tills the ground, and in obedient to the decree of their Maker, eat their bread in the sweat of their face that class, as Mr. Jefferson says, if God has a cho sen people on earth, they are those who thus labor, ihis charge is calculated lor enect, to induce the laboring class to believe that if emancipation takes place they will be, in the free States, reduced to tne same condition as the colored laborer The reverse of that is the truth of the case! It is the slaveholder now. he whn Wl.-c upon labor as only fit for a servib race, it is him and his kindred spirits who live upon the labor of others, endeavoring to reduce the white laborer to the condition of the slave. ; They do not yet claim him as property, but they would exclude him FlTrMTI til) n irl!.lr,nli' , T .1 I ! nr . ot the country, It is further said, that if u. jjjiHiijjuuuu iu me puoiic crlairs' ine negroes were tree, the black would ri val the white laborer in the free States. I cannot believe it, while so many facts exist to prove the contrary. Negroes, like the white race, but with stronger feelings, are attached to the place of their birth, and the home of their youth; and ihe climate of the South is congenial to their natures, more than that of the North. If emancipation should take place at the South, and the negro be' freed from the fear of being made merchandize, they would remove from the free States of the North & West, and immediately return to that country, because it is the home of their friends and fathers. Already in Oh:o, as fir as my knowledge extends has free white labor, (emignn's,) from foreign countries, engrossed almnct ,1(;ra iy.au Situations in Which ma - nr fmnL moor is found. But, sir, this plea of ne cessity and convenience is the plea of ty rants. Has not the free black person the same right to the use of his hands as the white person ; the same right to contract and labor for what nrice he nleasps2 II" i , . - "ilV. Would the gentleman extend the power of the Government to the regulation of the productive industry of the country? This was his former theory, but put down enectually. by the public voice. Taking advantage of the prejudice against labor, the attempt is now being made to begin this same system, by first operating on the poor black laborer. For shamel let us cease from attempts of this kind. The senator informs that the question was asked fifty years ago that is now ask ed, can the negro be Continued forever in bondage? Yes; and it', will continue to be asked, in still louder and louder tones. But, says the Senator, we are yet a pros perous and hsppy nation. Pray, sir, in what part of your country do you find this prosperity and happiness In the slave States? Nnf nn Thc m - - - ahwc till 15 weakness, gloom, and despair, while in the free States, all is light, business, and activity. What has created the astonish ing difference between the gentleman's State and minebetween Kentucky and Ohio? Slavery, the withering curse of slavery is upon Kentucky, while Ohio is free. Kentuckythe garden of the West, almost the land of promise, possessing aU the natural advantages, and more thin is possessed by Ohio, is vastly behind in yujjuuuion ana weann. oir, 1 can see from the windows of my upper chamber, inthe city of Cincinnati, landsfa Kentuck- population and wealth. Sir, I y, .which, I am told, can be 'purchased from ten to fifty dollars per acre, while lands of the same quality, under the same improvements, and the same distance from me in Ohio, would probably sell from one to five hundred dollars per acre. I was told by a' friend a few days before I left home, who had former! v" resided in the county of Bourbon, Kentnckv a most excellent county of lands adjoining, I be lieve the county in which the Senator re sides that the white population of that county was more than faur hundred less than it was five. years since : Will the Senato; contend, after a knowledge of these facts, that slavery in this country has been the cause ofour prosperity and happiness? i,u tanuoi. is because slavery h- as oeen exemued and driven . from a lar rrn piupjiuun oi our country, that we are a prosperous and happy people. But its late attempts to-"force its influence and power intothefree States. deprive our citizens of their unquestionable rights, , has been the moving cause of all the liots, burnings and murders that have taken place on ac count of abolitionism; and it has, in some degree, even in the free States, caos-d mourning, lementation, and woe. RP move slavery, and the whoJe country will recover its natural vigor, and our peace and future prosperity will be placed on a more extensive, safe, and sure found ation." li is a waste of time to answer the allegation, that the emancipation of the negro race, would induce them to make war on the white race. Every fiCt in the history of emancipation proves the re verse; and he that will believe those facts, has darkened his own understanding that the light of reason can make no impress Ton : he appeals to interest, not to truth for inforraatidn on thw subject. We do not fcar his errorsj while we are lft ffee to combat them. The Senator implores us to cease all commotion on this subject Are we to surrender all our righls and privile country. ing po Are we to cease all' exertions for our own safely, and submit in quiet to the rule of this power? Is the calm of despotism to S 4 44 reio-n over thi3 land, and tne voice oliree- men to beno more heard ? This sacrifice is required of us, in order to sustain slavery. Freemen, will you maeiif win you shut your ears and your sympathies, and withhold from the poor, tarnished, slave, a morsel of bread? Can vou thus act, and expect the blessings of heaven upon your country? I beseech you to consid er for yourselves. Mr. President, I have been compelled to enter iuto this discussion from the coursopursued by the Senate on the reso lution I submitted a few days since. The cry of Abolitionist has been raised against ine. If those resolutions are Abolition ism, then am I an Abolitionist from the sole of my feet to the crown of my head. If to maintain the rights of the States, the security of the citizen from violence and outrage, if to preserve the supremacy of the laws, it . insisting on the right of pe tition, as a medium through which every person subject to the laws has an undoubt ed right to approach the constitutional au thorities of the country, be the doctrines of Abolitionists, it finds a response in ev ery beating palse in my veins. Neither power, nor favor, nor want, nor misery, shall deter me from its support while the vital current continues to flow. Condemned at home for my opposition to slavery, alone and single handed here, well may I feel tremor and emotion in bearing this lion of slavery in his very den, and upon his own ground. I should shrink, sir, at once from this fearful and unequal contest, was I not thoroughly convinced that I am sustained by the pow er of truth and the best interests of the country. I listened to the Senator from Kentuck y with undivided attention. I .was disap pointed, sadly disappointed. I had heard of the Senator's tact in making comprom ises and agreements on this floor, and though opposed in principle to all such See inside. MISCELLANEOUS Surgical Operation. We copied from a Baltimore paper, some time ago, an account of the extirpa tion of a monstrous tumor, in the perform ance of which it was necessary to remove the lower- jaw of the patient. Although such narratives, in detail, properly belong to the medical and surgical publications, we hold that brief notices of them in journals of more general character are likely to be useful, inasmuch as they con vey cheering intelligence to the afflicted who seldom or never read nrnf;.,i books or periodicals, and many of whom, but for information picked up in a news paper, might live and die in ignorance of the fact that science afforded relief. For this reason we willingly give place to the subjoined notice of anoperation, re cently performed in this city by Dr. Ho mer Bostwick. - Surgical Operation. W. R, 28 years of age, .vas suffering from a large tumor on the upper and inner part of the right thih. He said the stvplh'nrr hA originated m a slight injury which he hnd received from the accidental discharge of a gun. The wad Jing struck him on The in ner side of the thigh, giving him severe pain, which, continued about twenty min nutes, and in a few days afterward, a small lump, about the size of a chesnut, was per ceived, and continued to increase until it was as large as the head of a child of six or eight years old. The accid. nt occur red on the 10.h of July, 1832. There was not much pain in the tnmnr ov uurino- rnmv nnH A , general health ofths natient u-n v4i.ili!j . vvr. i pr i - c and he was aJvisrl tn hnw ik, . .... . me tuiuar re moved, to which. nfW "fa-1- 1-.,., sented. He however observed that he uiu noi inmu he could stand mnch cutting. i ne operation was performed on the fi ay oi-tebruary, in the presence of iJ.-s. Caldwell, Judson and P. S. White all of this city. An eliptical incision was made over tho tumor, through' the'skin, which was dissected efffrom lhe sac, and then by a careful dissection tho f 11 mnp iv?i. separated entirely from the muscles of the thigh and removed without difficulty Only one artery, a branch of the profunda femoris, required the ligature. The wound was secured by the interrupted suture and adhesive straps-then simply dressed and healed in the. usual manner. Thetu rnor weighed three pounds and fbur oun ces He bore the operation extremely we.l, notwithstanding his previous apnre hension N. Y. Sjec. - ' PL ASTER. ' Tr fRkshgko6nd. WOVA Scotia & -Western Plaster r ground. & warrant .il nf k c . quality, constantly on hand and for sale oy me drandon Iron Company. Mach 12, 1839.- POTASH KRTTT.PS GALLOJS Potash Kettles, made iroin l'lo- irnn n en Qf cn p wuou oaiarons, for saJe by the . drandon Iron CWanv. March 1, 1839. A REMEDY FOR " Rheumatism! mHE excruciatibgpain-the decrepitude and deformity, ad the premature old use which are the usual attendants of this disorder are suffered by many from a despair of cu . disappomtmentintheefBcacy of the numerouo pretended antidotes used, to Effect fhis SS? But those who have made a fair trial of pUT08e' DR JEBB'S CELEBRATED LINIMEVT even ,n cases of long standmg, and of the 'most evere character, have received certain relief 1x3 many have been cured in a few day,, some m 2i l?nuJ number, of persoi.s in Boston and vi cinity, who were formerly afflicted with the Rheu matism, have ve.y full trifled. CrtiS ffes.- all the official Stations of the are in the possession of the Proprietor, proving iD0 i n a . . i i i .f.L- i l-ij i the most thorough and surorisinpr rnrpa h.r a Q . It P fl r f ' v. . . oi mis poweriui lMiitneni, in cases w-iipn.ni... c intr mo nonns ni inn sifiveiiinu- . r . . . o - .aua i v i. wer, without a single struggle: aDDroved applications had utterly f.iui tuA pproved applications nan utterly failed. The Liniment is also used with success lor bruise?, sprains, numbness, stiffness of the joints, chil- Diains, &.c. Pi ice 50 cents a bottle. DUMFRIES' E TT E W ATEH! For sore or inflamed Eyes, gives immM- ease and relief. On recent sore eves, the effect is roost salutary. Where the complaint has been of years standing, and in some exceed in' bad c. .1 . . . . . . 3 Bes, me most unexpected ana desirable relief ha been found in the use of this Eyb Water af ter every other remedy had failed. Manv xr- sons who have used it, pronounce it the bet prep aration for these complaints they haye ever met with, especially in eases of soreness or inflama tion of Ion standins:. Price 25 cents a bottle. None genuine? unless signed on the outside printed wrapper by the sole prnprtttor, T. KID. DkK, immediate successor to the late Dr. W. T. Conway. For sate at hw Counting Room, over No. 99, Court-street, near Concert Hall, Boston, and also, by'hi? special appointmenl, by AI. W"! dirchakd, a i. button, lirandon vt. List of Letters. EMAIN1NG in the Post Office at Brandon, April 1, 1839 ivnurews uoilin Ames Noah B. Anderson Stephen Bump Cyrus Barnes Luna Mrs mcvoiiam iu Merriam David Jr. Mclntire M. A. Miss Newton Rufus Powell Davi I Burd-Wolcott Richardson Worthy Buckland Jane MissRuss-il Cynthia Mrs. Boyden Filetus . Rogers Jeremiah 2J Clifford Simeon' W.Ruggles W. Miss Cheney Ephraim Jr.Stephens Josiah H. Cary John Sumner Henry A Darling Justus Stephens Abraham Durkee William Stearns Anthony F. Durkee Harriet Mrs.Smith Esther A Miss Edminster John Sprague N. T. Experience John Til ton G. W. 2 Farrington Gilman Tasker Paul Jr. 2 Farrington Benj. G.Thomas Zebinx Fiske Marcia Miss Tannine RitnVlr Fiske E J ward Fuller Jonathan Flint Nathan 2d Griffin Michael Gibbs 0,'iver A. Washburn Ijorenzo Wheeler William Winslow S. T. Mrs. Walker George Wriffht Almond Gordan A. M. MissWells Sally Ann nyau Justus W hillock Cvrus Henderson J. B. Hitchcock Dan Henry John June Stephen B. Lashon Peter Leavitt J. G. Lindsly Erastus Locke'Albert Wairen David Goshk N. Allen Noah Belknap William Brown Levi Cowen James Stickney Jonas R. Washburn E. Jr. ' Edward Jackson. P. M. IVZorison's Pills, TKR the Vegetable Hygean Universal MJ? Medicine of the British College of Health, London, imported by Dr. Geo Taylor 6-1-2 Wall street New York sole agent in the U. S. for raid College' can be had of the following persons ; eV ery packet sold in Vermont will be sign ed in writing by Pangborn & Brinsmaid. Jewellers of Burlington; Vt , State Ao-e.its also by the Sub-Agents selling them ; if not so signed do not buy them. For sale bv Ira Button, Brandon. Hiram L. Chenev, Rutland. J. Pir,e& Co.,FcVy Point, Manchester. Joel Day, Royalton. James II . Mu rdoc kt Woodstoc k. - Andrew Dawson, South Hero. E. P. Walton & Sons, MontpeMer. Perry Marsh, C. & J. W. Baxter, Derbv Line. t',PM rse&s- LvmanCraftsbarv. Klijih Cleveland, Coventry. , " S ibin Kellam, Irasburgh. Amasa Paine, Lowell.0 Otis L. Kelton, Montgomery. . O. A. 'Keith, Sheldon. lAivid Lyman, St. Albans. JnoKelsey, Dmville. Win. Pierce, Lyndon. Jonas Flint, StJohn'sbury. r osier jrrowj Uhelsea. N. C. God Jard, Windsor. M. S. Buckland, Bellows Falls: J. SteeneBraltleboro'. - J. Higar, Midlleburv. W E. Greene, Vergennes. J. W. Remington, Johnson. Alfred Hartwell, Keesville, N. Y. Richd Cotrill, Plattsburjrh, N. Y. Ldmuni Lyman, North Ferrisburgh. Jas. Hull, Orwell. , : J. Frost & Co., Bridport. n dm B-,By anton, Essex, N. Y. C. B. Hitch, Westport, N. Y. Maynard Kidd.r, Moriah, N. Y, ?rTK rrfVery Packethe genuine is signed by Pangborn & Brinsmaid. Dr GEO. TAYLOR, 6 1-2 Wall st. . Leb-. : -..U.S. AscnL- P. FREEMAX, & C07. NO. 3, WILLIAM ST. NEW-YORK", A RE receiving per late arrivals, a su-f-. Perir assortment, among which are Black and Colore Figured and Plain Italian Pon d Sole and Gros drNan!cs- Plain - Figured, and Embroidered Safins : tsombazines: f!r,m,.s! r!rdnr..rf tzuu' 00 5al,n? l' 'gurrd fc PI lain Blue B'nelr Silt -VilrPt. Dress Shawls; Zephyr Handkerchiefs & Scarfs; Merino, Chenille, and Brochi onawls. Superior assortment Cap, Bonnet, Plain Tfcla ani Satin Ribbons; Silk, Lace, 55? ?i ?,ove3; English 'and Saxony lhread Edgings and Lace; Usle Inseri njgs. and Edgings; Blond; Wash Blond, j Pround- Figured and Plain; Black and I White; Black BrusseU; Black Lace Veils, With everv variptir of T ara in ii,a J - J MSK , eghorn. Florence, and Tuscan. fnghsh& American Straw. Sat- W & Fancv Bonnets: ArtifirUI Flowers: Country Merchants "are resnertfnlltr in vited to call and examine.- 2G-fiw TIP ALU, V J U il . iTTBTfTn . . ruFer 10 instruct manl,,.,, . been S5. l He , ana fJOW - . Li J--8- AlORlSQx, Cent.' (not a Dctx the P-pleV Verrontn enabled to obUm agin, io it, ' y havc l A little more ORlGIXAL prB,rV The medicine made at ihn n . . Health London, under thf j;?"1 "h Co,,tt Morison, tLe Hvgeist. Mho n? care.lJa work its - noUrst entitf0riht RESISTLESS Way Against the combined opposition of who were interrt ; i 1 ALL tt u..j j orpine the U,,8r0ra.n.ce w,t!l regard to dik -u iu an new anu Dctter ways to cure Lv VEGETABLE MEDICINES Wlu-h cure quicker and more effectually a, not leave the atient, reduced ad broke d ' CONSTITUTION. But on the contrary with more vi0r . ! .trenglh. and better health. Iu a wo7d .V ' rent of Life, relieved of the load of vice,? $ ors. (effectually eradicated by Mori:n-,vH cine) flows buoyant on its way, di;Ti-iIJT 'r I urabltf sensations which ate aUne n -d GOOD HEALTH. The call for this medicibe is eojitlantlu i;- f uc uu.amm , as ii conilUUeu lO do Vit BASH.Y COCNTEHrElTED. A CffLt "4 i: riires lute hppn ft.oiA.I I I.;. r - ni'llIU d lew 1 MONTHS PAST IN VERMONT 1 t - And fiom lime to time so7,e of i;lf.,n. I' made publ.c allbough ihey are not .a:,j : 2roce the goodness of Mcrison's ' . HYGE1AN UNIVERSAL JlED'ClNr I AU that is needed is, to let the peoc be I that they can get the genuine article, which tk ; are sure of getting in Vermout and in Fd " Clinton, Franklin and St Liwrci.ce fcrJ N. Y., if ihey will buy only of the rt-uW tiset Eub-Agents and see that Uie la b;.' signed in writing by Pangborn & R.:inu (no o hers are genuine,) Jeweller, of lia :Q ton Vt., who are State Agents and to wl.o-.,. plicat.on niut t e made f.r -Aencu s ai.i ;,,.' I cine. The following is an extra t frc n a V- -ieci ived by Mdil, -hkh in repaid to the f tion expiesstri by all who have tcd t:i:s t,t 1 cine since its introduction agaiu amontu the ianuace of all the sub-jfrents in ili s of all who have communicated uiih us ujt-s -J BUJJTTVi . February 12,1 ?39. Messrs. PaDffborn & DnnmaiJ. Gentlmen, with rcypect to the med cinccli' British College of Health London, imjIfu; : Gto. Taylor, the General Agmt, 1 can n i t during the past year lhoe ei?c-ns hIioLv?; chased of me your Agent, have iu cvty n stance, no fir as has come to my know We. i e. pifectly salisfied on tri-1 that the I'iUs we t ;' genuine Alor ssjn's Pills, (same as weie loiv a lew years ago before Ihey w ere iouMc-:f. and have a!so found them In an tor e v , i eonable expectation as Medicine. Very V: in- tances of cures and relief might be nic;:U but Ibis i.KiM to me superfluous, ll.cie l .a ly a neighborhood in t!i country nlierw traor.!inary efficacy is not to be met with. I just mention one f recent occurrence. A gentlemen informs me that hi son 13 vv of age was UWen ill with a yiolent r vta i com.ianied wilh I DELIRIUM The 20th of January last, l.e gave his son Sh son b Pill anJ relied on them wholly as ts c.neinthe cit:e. lie Fever ihourh x ' veie, virulent and dangerous wa tubJutd -about hve days and the boy Fperdiiy u u-. J: be icami , IdUJCr IS mill inccf I ,,! Ia,. it 4 j --...j auu saiKij irea id mh jj.isvt t aole medicine, w'nhont as may m curing Fever, ntin Ihe constitute i j LIFE, j And I liope that a steady and Petseve,i,c r. -A the Hycisls will yet couvh.ee t!ie ucIJ i for their good." We thought that we should nr-t pu'.li I, ;a i papers ' j ii,Cfcnciuuea to comply tvit!i Ki'ic Hou .of some fri-ds, lo die 'cause cf ili-t ? wi ose opimons we re-n ct, say I :A I P.. i I . .... uespuirmg invalid, wl o he l. t,! every inin8 els . m vain nay be inc. Aionson d medicine, which lias in THOUSANDS OF CASKS Cured when almost t' t aflord rehef. - We gi herf a vrry b.f of.Cliefby Mor.son's Ilygtiau vL m t.4 -j ocuic i-asc oi j . DUOrSY & KUKUMATIrM. A gentlemea of this town rlln.'lin-!ca. ) I ' A rwMt. J : .... --Mu.euisoases.n,. haJ becomj a c e m r vtry lieipjessone tco, his tegs which nnera ple:c wren, d.cl.arg d a grer.t qu.inti y of 'is yery d y: were urawn and bent uj ! his body, U could r ot feed InWil. ecu!, : im himself In bed. could not at ei J (j t ie ordinary calls of nalure. without a -i-t - U was thought he would not hold ou' lot. r in tins deplorable condition, vne of our o! :i ' an 1 best bytlcia!is recominei.ded him tu V t Monson s Pills, telling him he thought t.:f j ou'i t help him S IF.AXY THING WOULD." j He, not without may objectrons, (harin; "-ur mngs in vai:.,) consented to te he scut for two 1 PacJtagei, and tefo.c u lo used a ONE DOLLAR PACKAGt, And a box or Povdrs which cost 25 c-.-i.t3.fc came to Ihe" v llage d.ivi..g h s ow n tou - ' called to the agenis' tore to ti l! a s'ory ! tude for tiie gteat rclief had pii..ie:e " USinff 3IOI1SOII Pil'a His tegs hej'cd q ' J nave since been and he sajs he lias not felt so well for vear. Another cure cf CONSUMPTION BV MORISOX'S Til IS . A entlernan in Washington Co. who 1 ad sick lor tboutayear and a half and hid U1 gradually consuin n awav wi:h what was nounced by physicians . and otoers lo be li e con sumption, accompanied wilh a cough ; af er trj ins many things without relief was i-ersiuJcJ fJ a person who was himself cured of the . . CONSUMPTION By MorisrtnVpjlu',; rto com&ience taking in less time than be had been runninj tfowR. h lib this terrible k ...inrrd t j health and, is again able to labor at bis cccu--:o coousinesi; he tay "Worison's Pills 4efl me." SICK IICAD ACIIES. Where, the persons had been aniicted with it fc days, weks, and years, almost all of the tiine. were subject to it two or three times per wet, have in numerous instances., been alao&t fow1 curca oy using A orison's Hi Is. pcrseveiirp'J jupwii cucrjr recurrence- ol tr.e d sease os mfcrmed by. molts who have tried them. Now to e s with. w mho w are to be cured, not to go to a drueeist for ibis vt&' cine, they do not have the fenuins Pill : only of our advertised sub-Agents, and ttl the packets are signed in writing by Pxc & Briitsmaid who are State AgmU. . . GEO. TAYLOB. 6 1-2 WaU at New York, U. S. Agent JOB PRINTING, Neatly executed at this Offic