Evansville Daily Journal, Volume 1, Number 76, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 22 July 1848 — Page 2

EVANSV1LLE DAILY JOURNAL PRINTED ASD PUBLISHED ET WM. II. CHANDLER & CO.

FOi? VRESIDEXT: GEN. ZACHARY TAYLOR, Or Louisiana FOÄ VICE PRESIDENT : MILLARD FILLMORE, Of New York. FOR REPRESENTATIVE, NATHAN ROWLEY. WHIG ELECTORAL TICKET. FOR THE STATE AT LA ROC . JOSEPH CS. MARSHALL, of Jefferson. GODLUVE S. ORTH, of.Teppecanoe. DISTRICT ELECTORS ; lit 3d 4th 5th rth 7th 8th 9th 10th Dit. Joiix Pitches, of Fxy. - John S. Davis, of Floyd. ' MiLTu.f Oreü, of Dearborn. David P. Hoi.i.owat, of Wayxe, " Thomas D. Walpool, of Hancock. ' Iaiveu. H. Rocsseac, of Ureene, Edward W. MjlOuauhly, ol Park. " James F. Scit, of Clinton. Da.iiel D. Pkatt, ol Ca. . , u David Kilgoke, of Delaware. - CITY OF EVANSVILLGi SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 22. CCT'Tbe Princeton Clarion, speaking of Daniel Webster says: "His personal influence may not be half so tremendous as his f ederal doctrines. After that we must certainl y set the Clarion down as one of the bright ones. He is a pret ty fellow, truly,, to prate ahout "federal doc trinet" while supporting a rank federalist for the Presidency one Qf the black-cockade sort one who gloried m wearing the badge of that party and in abusing Mr. Jefferson, until he found it convenient for the sake of office to cut the one and support the other. Federal ist Cass will not thank his party press for con tinually affording the Whigs the opportunity of casting his former opinions and practices in his teeth. The zeal which begins with hypocracy must conclude in treachery; at first it deceives, at last it betrays. Princeton Clarion. The people will see to it that they are not "betrayed" by Cass. He and his party are attempting to deceive the people of this Union by the publication of four or five editions of his life, which differ one from the other to suit the different portions of the country: But it wont all do. The North has cast him off for his "hypocrisy ,aud the West for his "treachery," to her interest; and the South is well aware that if he will "deceive" one section he will "betray' all, and it drops him too. "Poor old C-ass let him die." Loco Reasos. Locofocos tell the whigs that Gen. Taylor isn't a whig, and they should not support him; to keep their own party from toting for him. they swear he is a whig of the most ultra kind. The Court or Inqcirt. The Washington correspondent of the Baltimore Sun writes un der dates of the 14th: The court of inquiry .upon Gen. Scott met this mornineand adjourned, on account of the non-attendance of the member in the place of Gen. Cushing. The court is held in the build ing of Corcoran &Riggs, opposite the Treasu ry, anu is open to uie puouc. fjCpThe Washington correspondent of the Baltimore Patriot savs that John Van Buren has written to a prominent Loco foe o in Con cress asking why Gen. Cass will distract the Democratic parly by persisting in being a can didate. CC-flt is said that there are sixty-five Locofoco papers which refuse to support "Old Cir cumstances." Thirty-nine of this number are located in New York. CCj-The Paris papers of the 9th ult., no tices the rumor that an American squadron is expected soon to be upon the coast of France, and of Europe; and they are congratu lating themselves, and the people upon the beautiful sights of seeing the ships of the two great republics salute each other, and give and receive the hand of fellowship; and comment upon the remarks of some of the English journals looking askance at this proposed greeting of two sister republics upon ocean. the Iscome or the Bedford Fanilt, A corres pondent of Duglas Jerrold's paper gives the following statement of the income of the Duke of Bedford, Lord John Russell a brother, den ved from confiscated church property conferred upon John Russell, the founder of the family by Henry VIII. Dunkswell Abbey, 19,000; Tavistock, 57 712-Mountgrace Priory, .13,000; Castle livmel, JCIOT; Woburn' Abbey. 27,000; MelcMmrn Preceptory, 13 000; Thornby Abbey 25,C50; Covent Garden, 0,0OO; 5t. IVran. in Cornwall, and the property of the Dominican Friarsat Exeter, probably 1000. To these must be added Beaulieu, 20,000. Total 199,203.

(CJ-The following excellent article, which we copy from the North American, is recommended to the careful perusal of our readers: The Free Trade Humbug. When is this miserable illusion of Free Trade to end? It is true that England when her harvest failed,

and she could not supply her wants from the Baltic and the Black Sea did temporarily open her porta to our American flour and corn. But was that free trade? No! No sooner did that season of scarcity pass by, than her wise Sir Robert, forget ting all the sycophancy of our Sir Robert, applied the screw again revived his famous sliding scale and so effectually drove ourbreadstuffs from her market, that the export of 1847 was not one-tenth part of the amount shipped by us in '46 and now, in '48 threatens to shrink to one tylhe of last yeor tenth; in spile of our daft' Sir Robert's prom ised grand total for the millenium of nine hundred millions per annum. Again Great Britain condescends to admit our cotton duty free, while declaring "that to put arms in the hands of the Southern slave is fair business transaction" see Frazer's Mag.) but she does this only when our better fabrics threaten to drive ber coarse goods out of many foreign markets, protesting all the time, most virtuously against using the "blood stained products of the guilty South" and spending millions for the avowed purpose "o crushing the Southern staple" by and through the "free labor produce' of her ryot slaves o Hindostan, or her convict slaves of New South Wales. True she will receive our spirits and tobacco at 1200 percent, duty. This is Free Trade with a vengeance! But as if to put our supple Sir Robert to shame, the true Sir Robert issued an order "commanding the Lord Cham berlain to announce to the ladies who shal attend the drawingroom, and shall be honored with an invitation to Buckingham Palace tha her Majesty, ever desirous of giving encourage ment to the trade and industry of the United Kingdom, and particularly at this time of com mercial depression would wish to see them in dresses of British manufacture." As the Queen had expressed tud same wish the previous month, this reiteration can only be regarded in the light of a royal order. We can hardly be lieve that a Democratic American Ambassador though representing a British free-trade admin ist ration at Washingtou, could tamely submit to his lady appearing at court, clad in British costume, at H. B. Majesty's command. As lit tie can we conceive one of our Eastern mer chants after paying a discriminating duty o 300 per cent, on his cottons at .Calcutta rel ishing such a comment on our Sir Robeil's doctrine of free trade as to find his wife excluded from court, unless rustling in British silks---on compulsion. "Yet such; after ruthlessly sacrifi cing the iron, woolen, and cotton manufac tures of our country on the altar of this Mo loch of free-trade, robbing, orr operatives of bread, and our farmers of the British markets promised to them by elevating Polk and Datlasto power, are the sad truths forced upon us as bitter coinmeiits on the celebrated Kane letter, which will, ere long shroud the furriaces, forges and factories of Pennsylvania. We commend our reäders to an attentive perusal of Mr. Nile's speech in the United States Sen ate, in which the speaker, warning his brother Locofocos of the coming evils of the British Tariff, admits that the balance of trade against us in 1813 will be at least 642,003,000. But Mr. Niles warns in vain a Senate so hopeless ly inimical to home industry and national independence. There, party rules, and the coun try is forgoten Locofocoism has a poweiful majority, and the republic noue; here we find may politicians, few statesmen lost great men and perverted patriots of the Goldsmith school, who bold the interests of faction supe rior even to those of mankind a Senate with an impracticable Locofoco free trade majority! With no hope, then, of relief from our own uovernmen wim no demand abroad lor our breadstuffs with our ports filled with the emigrating labor of Europe, anxious for employment it requires no prophet to fortell the result. Our manufactories closed our specie drained to pay for foreign fabrics inferior to our own our farmers without a foreign mar ket, and their home market paralyzed- in the midst of a teeming harvest our honest and high-minded merchants ruined by the villanies of foreign agents (who deem ingenious frauds on the custom houses of all rival manufacturnations perfectly innocent, if necessary to their success) ruijiarfd repudiation must again stalk through our land. Shall we, then tamely submit to witness these inevitable conse queucesof the iniquitous policy of Polk, Dal las and Walker? The remedy is in our own hands. Popular calamity and popular pros perity are alike ordained, in America, by the popular plaesure. If the people of the Unite ! States choose, they can at once escape all these thickening evils of free trade. If they will it, they can, in a moment, change they can utterly annihilate the free trade majority in the Senate. Our great periodical, quadrennial revolution of the Presidential election is now coming on. A number of new Senators are to be chosen by Legislatures not yet elected, A whole House of Representatives is to be elected. A President and Vice President are to be elected. Why do we not say Protection to American Labor U also to be elected? If the people will it, they can have it. Ominous. rSi nee the Taylor nomination, the editor of the Hamilton, Ohio, Intelligencer, ays: Our press and types can be bought, but we cannot. Princeton Clarion. But you can be bought, press and types, body and soul. Like your leader, office wjl) purchase you or spy of your clan,

CQ" We copy from the Louisville Journal

of Thursday the followingbeautiful transaction of the locofoco candidate' for the Presidency t and call the attention: of .the reader to It is no doubt every word truth: A FlS AKC1AL OfERATION Of GfiS. CASS Extraobdisarv Develofemejit Look at this. In 1836, Lewis Cass, Henry Hubbatd, Fran cis O.J. Smith Francis Markoe, jr., and Ramsay McIIenry, all then at Washington city, formed themselves into an association under the title of the "Western Land Association' for the purpose of speculating in Western lands. One of the Association certificates of stock has been sent to us. It is as fol lows: WESTERN LAND ASSOCIATION. Be it known, that Lewis Cass, Henry Hub bard. Francis O. J. Smith. Frances Markoe, jr. and Ramsay McHenry, on the 28lh day of April, A.;D. 1836, entered into an association, with the combined capital of $220,000. for the purchase and sale of Public Lands, in certain Western Stetes and Territories of the Union ac cording to certain articles of agreement bear ins said date, and signed by said parties; and that is proprietor of .thousand dollars of said capital, whereof the segregate sum specified in the un derwritten certificate has been paid: the said thousand dollars being a portion of the camtal originally assumed to said in said articles of agreement, and subject to a deduction of one third part of the profits accruing thereon, and the payment of a proportional fraction of the necessary expenses of the con stituted Agent of said .Association, and to no tber deduction. Be it known, also, that said stock is transfer able in whole, or in parts not less than one thou sand dollari.by an assignment of this certificate by said or his Attorney, and record thereof being made by the Secretary in the transfer book ol the Association. Washington City, 1836. President. Secretary. This Association for purposes of land specu la t ion was formed when Lewis Cass was Secre tary of War under Mr. Van Buren. Cass him self, the chief of the speculators, paid in 820,000, aud others paid in $100,000, makings to tal of $120,000. The contemplated capital of $220,000 was not obtained. The plan of the association was to enter lands in the West and hold them up for a vast increase of value. Cass beiug Secretary of War and, in virtue of bis official station, having .important advantages over private iudividuals, the Association gave him the control of the whole business. He ap pointed the agent 4to make entries of land se lectinghis own agent and agreeing to be respon sible for his acts. Theagent went to the West and made purchases, all under Cass's direction and the latter, directly, and through bis agent continued to have the management of the lands. After several years delay, the members of the Association begau to have strong suspicions that there was little or no probability of their ever getting anything for their-money. All their applications to Cass for information were of no avail. Nothinz satisfactory could be learned. After a consultation with each other they appointed the Hon, Henry Hubbard, one of their number, and then or since U. S. Sena tor from New Hampshire, to look after their interests and ascertain if Cass and his agent bad dealt by them fairly and honestly. Mr Hubbard opened a correspondence with Cass but, failing in every effort to get any satisfac tion from him, hh wrote a final letter inform ing the Aon. Secretary of War that he was a rascal, and the Hon. Secretary was quiet and silent under the charge. Mr. Hubbard chorged him with swindling his associates, and the Hon. Secretary, instead of exhibiting resentment or attempting to prove his innocence, admitted by his silence the justice of the accusation, and even to, this day the Associa tion has not been able to get anyting out of him.; We are authorised to make this statement by a member of the Association, a gentleman who paid $10,000 into the hands of Cass or his agent and has never received anything weatever in considerrtion of his money. Our informant requests us, if the villainy is denied, to call on the Hon. Henry Habbard for a statement of the truth to demand of him a publication of the letters that passed between him and Cass particularly the letter to the Hon. Secretary of War, charging him with villainy in all its forms. We shall enclose a copy of this paper to Gen. Cass, and, if he hrs anything to say, let him speak out or authortze some of his organs to speak out for him. Mr. Hubbard, the pub lic are aware, is a prominent Locofoco and was the man that nominated Mr. Polk in the Baltimore convention four years ago. It was bad enough in all conscience for the head of the War Department to become a member of an association for speculating in lands to use the advantages of his high office one. of the very highest in the Government, for monopolising lands, through the use of an immense capital, to the great disadvantage and detriment of the poor emigrant. Such an operation on tire part of a Secretary of War would have been in the extremest degree censurable even if there had been nothing dishonest or unfair in his treatment of his associates; but if it is a fact, as charged, that, to the monstrous impropriety and shamelessness of entering into such a speculation, the Secretary added the crime of cheating or overreaching his associates, he deserves an immortality of infamy. The man who, as Secretary of War, speculated so extensively in Western lauds, and who by that and other means, has accumulated property to the amount of a million of dollars, is now a candidate for the Presidency. If, with a high office and a salary of $6,000, he could Operate thus largely as a land-speculator, what might he not be expected to do with a still higher office and a salary of $25,000? If no

sense of property could restrain him from con-

n(.c i;n-h;m.irr;th aerret association for the monopoly of public lands when he was a 0 member of the Cabinet, what could be relied on o retain him from a similar proceeding if he were President? Look at this thing, fellow-citizens. hlg: and Democrats, and decide for yourselves in' your own honest minds if this land-speculating Secretary of War, whether guilty or not guilty of the crime, laid to his charge by the Hon. Henry Hubbard and bis other associates, of defrauding and swindling them, is the man whom you will elevate to the Presidency. From the Madison Banner GOV. WHITCOMB'S SPEECHES. The Drotraeted declamation of Mr. Diane v at the democratic mass meeting on Friday af ternoon, left to the Governor of Indiana but a small fragment of the afternoon for the dis charge of his stump speaking fuuetions. He bad but a lew moments to speak. I he steam cars bad just brought bim to that party gather ing, and the steamboat was even then near at band that was to hurry our Governor to anoth er Dartv rallv at Risins Sun. Would that the magnetic telegraph could snatch up bis excellency bodily, and flash bim about the Stale, t . c- . .. dropping him down wherever a few dozens of his locofoco brethreu meet in coun cil. ' But in the brief time allowed to bis Excel lency; he felt it to be at once his privilege and his duty, as Governor of the State to welcome home the soldiers of the 4th Re ei ment Indiana Volunteers (a few of whom, attracted by the bell and bellow of the city marshal, were in attendance.) and to thank them for redeeming the State from the reproach cast upon the 2nd regiment. How singularly inappropriate this sounds r .L- 1 e r . t cumingirom me inouin oi uov. niicomo. Does he recollect anything about a secret con clave of military politicians that met in the spring of 1846, in Kent's back room in New Albany, the object of which was to secure to the Locofocos any glory that the Indiana troops might win in the Mexican war? A conclave of politico-military jugglers, devising how they might best toss locofocos into the saddles of the field offices. And does he recollect that he, Gov. Jim. Whitcomb was the master spirit of that conclave? And does he remember the thanks he received from the volunteer privates lor thus making them and their cause subser vient to his base party intrigue? Does he re-5?ll0-fine,AlMcd f.lons 5 !TS" he passed, and how his excellency was threat coed by them with immersion in the Ohio nr er for bis conduct in that particular? If it bad occurred to bim that the election of Colonel BowVs was a part of the same system of in-! trigue, aud that if party politics lud ben banished from the camp, Indiana might have worn the greenest laurels of that campaign he might with more propriety have thanked the 4th regiment for pouring out their blood to redeem the character of the State from the consequences of his political intrigues. Governor Whitcomb told the volunteers that in his opinion it was the knapsack and not the epaulet that won the battle; that Gen. Taylor with his $7,000 a year got too much Buena Vista glory, at the expense of the volunteer with his $7 a mouth. . The dead bodies of the soldiers went into the ditch covered with blood, while the fame of the General went to the skies covered with glory. The whole of this portion of the Gov's, was an artful attempt to excite the jealousy and prejudice of the volunteers against Gen. Taylor. It breathed a spirit of insubordination that would soon prove - fatal to all military enterprise. Who does not know that without the knapsack the epaulet is powerless in battle? And even that old fool, (as Mr. Disney discribed him) General Taylor, would perliapsadum uiah w mi uuunng dui nis epauieis anu "old whitey," he could not well have won the field of Buena Vista. And on the other hand nobody knows better than the volunteers present on that occasion, bow vitally essential are military discipline and subordination to success in military operations. They would call that man a fool, be he Governor or private citizen, that would turn loose each knapsack in an army of 5,000 in battle, to fight "on its own hook." For the safety of their own lives and for the glory of their country's arms they would demaud military subordination, and a General competent to lead them. And when they have such a General as the one Whitcqmb deftmes, they will follow him in war and love him in peace. The volunteers for whose benefit that hum bug speech was intended seemed to appreciate the singularity of the Speaker's position. They saw the Governor of the Commonwealth coming out from the capitol and running round the State in the capacity of a cunning demagogue and partisan leader. They saw the Exothcio commander in chief of the militia of Indiana endeavoring to prejudice the soldier against the general, and insidiously preaching doctrines of insubordination. They testified lheextenl of the obligations they fell under to his Excellency, by huzzaing for Taylor, and shoutiug "mileage." The Governorlike the person that preceded him, was of opinion that Gen. Taylor was too ignorant to be fit for the Presidency, and he repeated the assertion that the Whig party was destitute of political principles. All the questions growing out of the war, the veto power that it is said he has' exercised a little himself andsall the other questions upon which the opinions of the parlies are divided, received the go-by. But the boat coming in sight the Governor cut short his speech and hurried off to preach democracy to the citizens of Ohio county. He bolted throughjthe rtowd to the river with the Courier fluttering at hU heels, and this closed the great democratic mass meeting. On Saturday evening his Excellency returned from Rising Sun where in the meantime be had let off a stump speech, and again the stentorian bellowing of our city marshal announced that eaity candle-light his Excellency would hustle down a little more locofoco thunder from a beef bench in the lower market house. The volunteers were particularly invited to be present. At the appointed hour a tolerably large number of Democrats and au equally large number of Whigs were in attendance. Again His Excellency felt it his duty as thiel magistrate of the State to bid the returned Volunteers welcome home. That it was believed he had done on Friday. But a fond mother will kiss the returned wanderer once, and not content with that she M ill fly back and repeal the embrace of maternal affection. Oh how the Governor "loved those brave boys he had parted with at New Albany,' and he must repeat the words of Welcome. When such irrepressible love for the Volunteers was swelling up from the Governor's affectionate heart, how cruel it was in those soldiers toauspect that His Excellency was trving

to humbug them, and to Tociferate such words

S mileage, soil soap, inimu.muiic, huzza for Taylor." ice. This speech was but a dish-water dilution of uis speech of Friday, and fell far short of that effort in every respect. His manifest object in these speeches is to poison the minds of the 1 t ivra rw 4 K.t! a A I rA nT f Its) t t rSV tYlflV of f v l0 their respective homes over the State reports and prejudices unfavorable .to General Taylor. On Friday this demagogue policy was somewhat concealed by captivating eloquence; but bis speech on Saturday night. was by many democrats acknowledged to be a failure. It was a labored, up-hill performance. The charm of eloquence had vanished, and a most con temptible bumbussery. that even ixcotoco moaesiy would wi&n to Keep conceaiea, sioua forth in "model artist nudity. A LOOKEK-Ü-N. OCrTruly, there roust be fine sporting in South Africa, as well as rare sportsmen.who start out upon shooting excursions of eleven months, to the Mountains of the Moon, or some such unknown places, among wild elephants, lions, hippopotami. Commend us to M. Ruallyn Cumnvng, who has bagged a ship-full of wild beasts, among the rest, the panthers and crocodiles who carried off his best dogs, as well as the lion who carried off "his best wagon dtifer.11 Sporting Exploit of a Highlander. -The Cape Frontier Timesjf Feb. 22,thus alludes to the sporting exploits of Mr. Ruallyn Cu raining, 2d son of Sir Wm. Gordon Cumming. Baronet, of Altyre, who. a few years since was reckoned the foremost sportsman in the north ot Scotland. "We have been favored with tome interesting intelligence relative lo the late trip into the interior, of that well known and intripid sportsman and traveller, Mr. R. R. Cumming, formerly of the C. M. R., who is now on his way from Bloemfon. tein to Colesberg, after an extremely hazard. ous and fatiguing expedition of 11 month?. In this journey it is said he has penetrated many hundred miles beyond the highest point reached by any white man. He shot 43 elephants 3 of which only were females. Manv of the miles carried tusks of enormous size, measuring 7 feet in length, and sometimes weithin? 109 lbs. each. Sixir hippopotamithe finest troop lo which they belonged having been singled out for slauclibelonged having been singled out for slaugl ter. Such is the abundance of (his game that with his rifle he might have killed 200 of them. The rhinoceros, bufltlo, camelleopard, elaud, gemsbok, roan, antelope, Waterhuck, hartebeest, sasaby, black and blue wildebeest, koodoo, pillah, zebra, rietbok, kilpppringer, &c, were found by him in such abundance, that he rarely expended his ammunition upon them, except when in want of the flesh, or to get their heads as specimens to grace his collection of sporting troplie, which is described as being now so extensive as almost to require a small ship lo send them home. He is said lo have discovered an entirely new sort of antelope, unknown not only to science but even to the m native inoes living upon me irop:cs. it is a very beauiify species; and, with much lime, and difficulty, he procured 22 speci mens, both male and female. His. losses. have, unfortunately, counterbalanced the excellencVof his short. He has lost all hi.4 horses (15) all his oxen (30,) and all hi dogs V40) and his best wagon-driver. Iii. horses were killed either by lions or horse' sickness, and the fly called txetse. All hi oxen were killed by this insect. His dog were killed some by lynns, some by the panther, crockodile, and by different kinds ol game. The wagon-driver was carried off on a dark and cloudy evening by a monster lion, which Mr. Cumming shot nxt day. Cheap Pleascrfs. Did you ever study the cheapness of some pleasures? D you know how little it takes to make a multitude hippy? Such trifles as a penny, a word, or a smile, do the work. There are two or three boys passing along Give them each a cltesnut, and how smilling ihey look! They will not be cross for some time. A poor widow lives in a neighborhood who is ihe mother of half a dor en children; send ihem half a peck of sweet apples, and they will all be happy. A child has lost its arrow the world tohiin and he mourns sadly; help him find it, or make him another, and how quickly will the sanshiue play upn his sober face. A boy has as much as he can do to pile up a load of wood, assist him a few moments, or speak a pleasant word lo bim, and he forgets his toil and works away without minding it. Your npprrntice has' broken a mug, or cut the vest too large or slightly injured a piece of work; ray, You scoundrel,1 and he feels miserable; but remark, 'I am sorry, and he will try todo belter. You employ a man pay him cheerfully," and speak a pleasant word to him, and he leaves your house with a contented heart, to light up his own hearth with smiles and gladness. As you pass along the street, you meet a familiar say, 'Good morning,' as though you felt happy, and it will work admirably in the heart of your neighbor. Pleasure is cheap who will not bestow illiberally? If there are smiles, sunshine and flowers all about us, let us not grasp item with a miser's fist, and lock them up io our hearts. No. IUther let us take ihem and. scatter them about us, in the cot of the widow, among the groups of children in the crowded mart, where men of business congregate, in our families and every where. We can make the wretched happy; the dis contented cheerful; the afflicted resigned; it exceedingly cheap rate. Who will refuse to do it? We are autWized and requeste- to announce MICHAEL P. JON Erf as a Candidate lor County Commissioner lor District No. 1. Vanderburgh County. ftSrWe authorised nnd !cqirtrd to announce WM. II. WALKER as a candidal lor Count Auditor. PANT STUFFS. UST received brown and bleached Linen Drills, Cotton Cashimers, Cottonades, Dentin blue Drills, &c., suitable for men's Summer wear, mar 23. , M W FOSTER,

T ANTEDl wish to hire by the rhohth a good

V V industrious ooy. idoth yrar ui ego, a v.. man who speaks English will be preferred. Apply won to "julyWj WM. M.-WALKER. FOR ST. LOUIS. V Regular Wednesday Packet.1 ATLANTIS, S. S. Paxox, Master, will leave Evans-; ville for the above and intermediate landings every Wednesday, at 6 o'clock A. M. For freizht or passage apply on board or to HAK RKfOTDX, HANNAH & CO. jy NOTICE. : " NOTICE is hereby given t'iat I have taken out letters of administration on the estate of Will iam Dean, Sr., and person indebted to the estate will make payment to the undersigned, and those having claims against the estate will present them properly authenticated for payment; Estate is solvent. jy22 WILLIAM DEAN Jr. AdtnV. State of Indiana Warrick County, s. s. In the Warrick Circuit Court for October Term 1848. Thon.MJ.Drackenride, J .,n Chancery.BiU of Albert E. Lindlcy. Foreclosure. THE said Thomas J. Brackenridge having on the 15th day of July 1843, riled bisbill of complaint against raid Albert E. Lindley, in the above entitled suit in the office of the Clerk of the Wav ick Circuit Court; alsoan affidavit of a disinterested person, show . ing that8aid Albert E. Lindley is not a resident of the State of Indiana. Therefore the said Albert E. Lind . ley is hereby notified of the filing of said bill tint the same is pending in said court, and that unless he ap pears and pleads, or answers said bill on or belore tue calling of the cause at the next term of said court, to be held at the Court House in Boonville on the second Monday in October next; the same will be taken as mi itit eiegani, losi-runmag unuiu contesseu, and determined accordingly. J.WAlTB.MQ)ItE,Ci'k James J. Thorktojc, Sol. for Comply 17 . State of Indiana Warrick County, s.' s. In the Warrick Circuit Court for October Terra 1S13. Elizabeth A. Will'ianu, J Libel for Divorce. John H. Williams. rpil U said Elizabeth A. Williams bavins on the 15 JL day of July 1848. filed her bill of complaint against said John H. Williams in the above entitled suit in the office of the Clerk of said Warrick Circuit Court; also an affidavit of a disinterest! rjerson. showing that said John If. Williams is not a?eJent of the State of Indiana. Therefore the said John IL Williama ia hereby notified of the filing of said jwtition tor a divorce, that the 6a me is pending in. sakl coart, and that unless he appears to, or answers said bill of complaint on or before the calling of the ciuw at the next term of said court to be held at the Court House in Uoonville, on the second Monday in October next, the same will be heard and determined in his absence. J. W A IT B. MOORE, Ct'k Jaxls J. Thor.vtox, PIt'ff solicitor. JyJW. 5 T 75 CENTS. Dr. Champion's Vegetable Ague ITIedlcliic ! A S AFE and warranted Cure for Fevers of every description. " Also, Dr. Champion's Vegetable Anti-Dillious, Anti-Dyspeptic, Purifying ami Cathartic Pills, possesxing tour important combined properties for the core of Diseases, carefully and correctly combined, one article to nstiht the erlect of another lor the benefit of the Health of Mankind. These pills contain the tour leading properties for the cure of diseases. There is no chronic anection in which the Liver, the Stomach, the Bowe'.s or the blood is not concerned. Therefore, these pill are carefully and correctly prepared, to meet those several indications. In all liilious Complaints they cure by acting upon the liver, and carrying off the redundant, or excessive bile: and at the same lime exciting the liver into full action. . In dyspepsia, they carry off the accumulated mass of acidity, and correct the stomach and digestive organs. It is a fact well known and jgenerally acknowledged, that a great Cart of chrome d iseaes depends upon impurity of the lood. Tliese pills possess the power of purifying the blood, even in the most obstinate caxes of scrofula or flaccid temperament; and as a cathartic, they net gen, tly upon the bowels, removing atl nnhealthjr accumnlations. They are mild in their nature,' and may be used with perfect safety in all ages, from infancy to old aee. for sale by , Dr. Thoa Newman, Ml Vernon Ia. I. B. llnllock, Princeton Ia. W. J. Whiiitiif, Cynihinnna Ia. W. B. Dimick, Boonville la. Dr. Joseph Sower, Vincennes la . jy 21-3 m w. . . 79 CENTS. A SAFE and warranted eure lor Chili und Fever in all its complicated forms. Dr. Champion' Vegetable Ague Medicines. For sale by C. UtJLL, and WM. M. WOOLSJSY. Also Dr. Champion Vegetable Anti-Bilious, Anti-Dyspeptic Puritying and Cathartic Pills. jy 21-3 m d. State of Indiana Vanderburgh County V njljirtkiirrrfi f !irtf!iit f Tfiiirf in v..liikn Jul. 9ll IrijM John Minn Mm, .ainuel urr. p i Daniel VooIey, Alanson Warner, and Conrad Baker, James G. Joues, Silas Stephens, Jane K. Scantlin, Jam vs. es Scan tlin, jr.. Kotiert M. In Chancery. t,. Stephens, Henry C Steph ens, Saieta Evans, John 1. hvans, Demte C'Lvans, 11. M. Evans Bern. S. Evans. Samuel Shannon,. Louisa Shannon, Martha Jones John Jone Jane King.Elijab King William King and Elizabeth J. Km it. I AND now at this time to wit, July 20, 143 come lite above named complainants by James K. Blylhe their solicitor, and file in th office of the clerk of the Vanderburgh Circuit Court their certain bill of complaint against the above named defendants, and it satisfactorily appearing bv the affidavit ol a disin terested person this day hied in the office of the clerk aforesaid that John Jones, Jane Kinz, Elijah Kin?, iiiiuui rkin, auu itjzaoeiu J. mng, nve oi inu above named are not residents of the Slate of In diana. Therefore notice is hercbv triven to the said John Jones, Jane King, Elijah Kins, William King, and 1. L'. -i . t .1 T i cuznuein j. rving inai unless wey appear mini pieaa to or answer the complainants said bill of complaint on or before the calling of the cause at the next term of said court, to be held at the Court Houe in Evaru ville on the fourth Monday in September fn xt, the same win be beard and determined in tiv-ir mnce; jy 21 SAM'L T. JENKlNS.U'k State or Indiana Warrick County, s. s.1 In the Wsrrick Circuit Court for October Term 1S12 Asa B. Bement, "J t. I RadIeyF.e1da finwancery. Calvin M. Williams. J riMlEsaid Asa B. Bement having ontlielStli da J ol July, 1818. paid his bill ol complaint t;ain S the said Kadlcy iFiclds, and Catvin M. William. u-V the above entitled suit in the office of the Clerk ot tbc W amck Circuit Court. Also an affidavit ol n disinterested person, sliowing that said Radle y Fields is not a resident ot the State of Indiana. "1 herefore the said Rad ley Fields is hereby notified oi the tlin of said bill; that the same is pending in said Court, and unless he appears and pleads to, or answers said bill on or before the calling of the cause at the iiejt term of said Court, to be held at the Court lia.-c in Boonville on the second Monday of October next, the same will be taken as confess!, and hell as tru. against him. J. W A IT B. MOUKE, Clerk. Baer &. Uakvix, Sol. furComult jy21-3 w. . . THE following described real estate has been levied on, and will be pold by me to satisfy a writ of FW!ri Faz-ian umiinat Hiram '.tuin.nim.Jnn f : o ... - - . vvtvu iniiia IflSUAil rtMt of f hf ntli nf fhflrlr sif lh VTn4l..a Circuit Court in favor ol the State Bank of Indiana, 1 win on caturuay tue lZtü day ol August A. D., 1848 at the dOor of'ttu flourt I Imua in rt r L-.n. - - - www.. ..vue-t, ... un vii J VI iiiour ville between the hours of 10 o'clock A. M and 6 o clock r . 31., of mkI day expose to sale at public auction, and outcry tim the rents, issues and profits for the tenn of seven years, to wit-- the West half of the South West quarter of section No 7, in Township No 5, Range 10 west in the County of Vanderburgh. And should no person offeror bid for said rents, issues and profits, a sum sufficient to satisfy said writ and costs; I will at the same time and place proceed to wU at public auction and outcry the fee simple of said above described premises to satisfy said writ, and inerest s and costs due thereon. ' jy 20 JOHN ECHOLS.S. V C.