Evansville Daily Journal, Volume 1, Number 151, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 16 October 1848 — Page 2
DAILY JOURNAL. PRINTED ASO PUBLISHED BT WM. H. CHANDLER & CO.
TUT FOR rJRESlDEXT: GEN. ZACHARY TAYLOR, Of Louisiana. ' ! H FOR VICE r ' REM D EXT: MILLARD FILLMORE, Of New York. r WHIG ELECTORAL TICKET. FOR THE STATE AT LARGE: JOSEPH G. "MARSHALL, of Jefferson.' UODLUVE S. ORTH, of Teppecanoe. DISTRICT ELFXTORS: lt IHt. James E. Bltthe, of Vanderburg. 'H Jon S. Davis, of Floyd. 3d MiLTos Gregg, of Dearborn. 4th " David P. IIolloway, of Wavxe, Lth Thomas D. Waltoo of Hancock. 6th ' Lovell II. Rousseau, of Greene, 7ih " Howard W. McGcauhey, ol Park. 8tb " James F. Simt, of Clinton. 9th " Dasiel D. Pratt, o! Ca. 4 lüth 41 David Kilgorf., of Delaware. CITY OF EVANSVILLEj MOXDAY MORXLXG, OCT. IG. (Q-The Democrat U 4dowuon the Telegraph" again, and hits it as hard a lick as Jim "Wool ever did in his s peeches about town. The Democrat is firmly of the opinion that "the telegraph u an infernal lie, and has "the documents to prove itw notwithstanding the ditor publishes the reports received by it, sets up late at night in order to get them, and travels to the office half a dozen times a day for them. Smart chap, that, to pay anybody for lyingjwhen he is so well up to it himself! Uueer, ain't it? A Democratic Elector's Abuse of the Sec psd Regiment. The following letter Jrom Mr. Newland, a citizen ol Indianapolis, now travelling in Illinois, which we copy from the Slate J Journal, will show in what manner the leaders of thrJLocofoco parly speak of the Second Regiment, out of the State. TheRe ports of Gens. Wool, Lane and Col. Davis, upon which Gen.'Taylor founded his.report, Tema in on file in the War Department uncor rected, anJ)a-.a matter of j courseGen. Taylor cannot correct his report. Why is it that these subordinate officers have not corrected their Reportsjiti accordance with the finding of the Court of Inquiry? They are all democrats. Do thej wish to prevent Gen. Tajlor making the -orrection with a view of rendering him un popular'in'thisStatc? Shiibyville, III., Oct. 2. 1S43. Mr. J. D. D Li ee La: Sir: Yesterday 1 met with Captain H. M. Vanderer, cne of the Cass Presidential Electors for this State, and who belonged to Col. John J. Hardin's staff at the Battle of Buena Vista. In the speaking of the Battle and the part the different Regiments took in it, 1 asked htm if he was in a situation that he could observe the Second Indiana Regiment, and the part they took in the action. His answer was, "Yes;" that he "saic them vhen they ßedfrom the field? in rather an exulting way, knowing me to be an lndianian. 1 then asked him if he thought General Taylor had done them injustice in his official report. No," was the response, "be had not spoken of themhalf so bad as their conduct deserved." "And," said he, "the feeling was so strong against them in the army, that we were willing to see them hung up by the neck." As this bounds so very different from the way the Democratic Electors of our State . speak of this transaction and General Taylor's report of it, 1 thought you and the volunteers themselves should be'in possession of the fact; pot that I believe that the Second Regiment have been or ought to be disgraced by this transaction, but merely want to show how Democratic Electors fcpeak of them where it does not answer party purposes to speak otherwise. Enclosed is Dr. Henry's statement, corroborating the above. He is the Taylor Elector for the Springfield District. Respectfully yours, ctcc, J. H. B. NOWLAND. I was present and heard the conversation al lowed to by Mr. Nowland. The answer of Capt. Vanderer was substantially and literally as slated in the foregoing letter by Mr. Nowland. CapL Vandever had made the tame atatemeni to me vhn speaking of the conduct of that Regiment at Buena Vista. A. G.HENRY. SrosTASEOca Combustion I The Petersburg Intelligencer, publishes letters from two old Democrats, declaring their intention to vote for G -neral Ta ylor. One is from Robert Harrison, of Prince George's county, Va., who has all his life supported the Democratic ticket in that State. Thar.uthor of the letter is Gen. T. J. Green, of Texas. : The Intelligencer ays He was for some time a prisoner in the castle of Perote, and his interesting account of the tragical Mier expedition, is familiar to us all. Gen. Green has heretofore acted with the Democratic party, and is, he tells us, now a moderate democrat; but prefer- Gen. Taylor, a moderate Whig, to Gen. Os, au .iWa and destructive Locoloco.'
THE ONE MAN POWER. Locofocoism,saya that excellent print.the N.
American, boasts that it is the party ol progress, and, in some respects, we are dispos ed to concede its claims to the distinction. But what has been the character of that prog- .. r .n; ressf lias it oeen a progress 01 intelligence, virtue, law and public morals? Has it been a heartful progt ess bjr which the blessings of good government have been wisely defused, and the admonitions of wisdom, derived from Washington and the early fathers of the Republic, have been observed and cherished as political land-marks and beacon lights? Truth answers, i0. ine progress nas ueeu uu.vardi; and the usurpation of power on one hand, and the surrender of it on the other executive encroachment and legislative servili ty have marked the various degrees of advancement which this party has made in its march towards the principles or practices of absolute authority. Twenty years ago, this system began, under a President, who came in to office flushed with a great popular triumph, and who aimed to make his wilt the sovereign law. What h5 attempted at that time, was justly regarded as a monstrous assumption of power; but the abuses of the Executive Department since then, have made his outrageous acts appear as very virtuous, particularly when placed by the side of the high-handed usurpa tions of Mr. Polk. The Constitution is practically, a dead letter; for the legislative functions have been almost wholly absorbed by the overwhelming influ ence of the President, which , has gradually been increasing, until it has now become ; su preme and paramount to any and all others. The Executive has assumed to himself the right of making war of levying taxes of collect ing armies--and of appropriating the public revenues. All these acts are in open ' contravention of the Constitution; and yet they are not only approved, by a party which falsely professes to be the party of popular progress When other means have failed to seduce or In timidate Congress, the veto a conservative el ement designed to be used only in defence of the Executive, or in cases of inconsiderate or unconstitutional legislation has been resort ed to, in order to defeat the popular will and to maintain the Executive supremacy. This power has been exercised in a manner to render Congress either entirely nugatory, or the slates of a despotic President. It has been flaunted in the face of a Tote, largely exceed ing two-thirds of the popular branch; it has been applied to private claims, which have vainly entreated the justice of Government for forty years; and it has been used to lerve the basest purposes of faction and party. We have reached a period when the great question at state is, whether the people or the President shall, henceforth, constitute the government whether Congress or the Executive shall make the laws. This issue was triad in other days, and when a similar effort at consolidation was attempted. On that occasion Mr. Jefferson wrote to Lafajette as follows: ' "The Tories are for strengthening trie Executive and General Government; the IVAigs cAeruth the Representative branch, and the rights reserved to the States, as the bulwark against consolidation, which must immediately generate monarchy. And although thisdirision excites, as yet no warmth, jet that it exists, is well understood, and will be a principle of voting at the ensuing election, with the reflecting men of both parties." The Wh igs of 1348 are now contending for the great cause maintained.by their forefathers They still "cherish the representative branch;' and, in this contest, they mean to inscribe it as their motto, against "Executive Progressive," which figures as the only fixed "principle of Locofocoism, Wc are against a power which has been converted into a sceptre more potent than that of absolute despotism, and in fa vor of the restoration of those popular rights which have been shamefully spurned and tram pled upon by our Democratic rulers. Axecdote. The following anecdote of General Taylor is related br the Staunton, Va. Spectator. It is perfectly characteristic of the man: " The old Hero was asked on one occasion by a lady, what he meant, in saying he was not an ultra Whig? His reply was "Madam 1 have been called upon to pass through three wars since I joined the army. In the war of 1S12, 1 saw both parties represented on the battle-field, and even in my little command at Fort Harrison.they stood shoulder to shoulder. 1 saw the Whig and Democrat lie down in the swamps of Florida, and in the morning rise up to their posts of duty; and again I saw them rise not up, but together lie in ; the embrace of death! .1 have seen the Whig and Democrat again, side by side, on the banks of the Rio Grande. I saw them both stand to gether at the cannon's mouth at Monterey - and again on the bloody field of Buena Vista and both looked up to the same star-spangled banner. The Whig and Democrat spread the same tent upon the sand banks at Vera Cruz, and together marched to the Halls of theMontezumasal their country's rail. And, at last, I have seen the Whig and Democrat returning home, with constitutions broken and health impaired, to pie-and seeing these things, could not find if in my heart to proscribe men Let our opponents, men, twit as mucn as ...... . they please in regard to the "No-Party-ism" of our candidate.' We like him all the better for what they so much dislike. He is an honest man, and a good Whig, zealously devoted to the preservation of the checks and balances of the Constitution, and he will give Ma pure id-
iniitraiion ff Ihr Government.
Hos. Rurus Choate's Speech. Gen. Tay
lor is designated by the government official pa per (says the Louisville Journal) as "the ,vould-be civilian, the candidate inexpenenced, uninformed, wholly incompetent, inconsis tent in his pledges, unsettled in his opinions, insignificant in the avowed course of his future Presidential action, .no political history, with no political guarantee, every body's representative, and truly representing nobody." From this sketch of man whose position in history will be among the great names of the republic, who is beloved by his countrymen and respected abroad wheresoever the fame of his deeds has reached from this sketch, drawn by the official pen from an official point of view, we turn to another which the reader will probably find more truthful and better done. e quote from a recent speech by that eloquent son of old Massachusetts, Hon. Rufus Choate: Sir. to say that Gen. Zachary Taylor is a great and patriotic man is to say nothing. Martin Van Buren might say that of him, and he has said as much again as that of him in a resolution which I have in my pocket. I beliefe, upon all the evidence to which I have had access, that he possesses in an extraordinary decree, the basis of all administrative tal ent, of exactly the kind you seek in the Presidential chair. I believe from all the evidence to which 1 have had access, that he is thorough and quick in his discernment of men, reading character accurately, candidly, and instaneously. I believe that be possesses in an extraordinary degree sense, judgment, solid andstrong qualities of mind, of the old Roger Sherman and George Washington model. 1 understand him to be a thorough man of business, in the bestand largest acceptance of the term administering a large estate and a great fortune with as much ability as a Florida or Mexican campaign. Again, irom nis you in up from the time betook up arms in the ser vice of his country be has bad an 'unequivocal proof of a superior character, in the confi dence he inspires and the profound defence he receives, without exacting it, from every numan beins who comes within his reach. Add to that the kindness of his heart kind as Nel son's, kind as woman's and that tolerant humanity, and honest? incorruptible, which he who knows would think no more of assailin than of Duttinz himself within the ranze ofal the bittlemeuts of Monterey or the whirlpools of the Gulf; and the world may look npou him and say here is a man: I hear it asked whether he has the requisite degree of political information and experience in public affairs. Sir, I cannot help believing that Gen. Zacharv Taylor is destined, in the hands of Providence, to illustrate the truth of that remark of that treat observer, Edmund Burke: "1 have many times taken notice tha men not professionally trained in the details of public office, yet, when called into great stations, have, by the mere force of simple dis cretion, conducted the a flairs of na'ions with distinguished felicity and glory." I expect the illustration of that r?mark In the eight vears or the four vears administration of Gen. Tavlnr. All his life Ions he has served his countrv in a department of the general govern ment. enlar?rin2 and elevating him above the influences of mee politics. All his life Ion now, from his youih to somewhat middle age the riner time of men s life, he has been an observer of the fortunes, the policy, and the in terests, of the eeneral government. All hi life lona he has been an eaual associate with those grat scenes; in all his inltrvalsof leis ure. in his winter eveninss. his fur'oughs, ht: retirements from the sharper serviced of the camp, he has been an observer, a student, ant . ' . aal a thinker upon the great national interests o the land. He has learned them, sir, as Juliu Coesar learned astronomy, in the camp. For all these reason, 1 observe in him ex actly the ability you expect from the Chief Magistrate of the land. .He is not to conduct our diplomatic correspondence withall the world, ne is noi 10 seme mauers 01 international jurisprudence, he is to execute, firmly, humanely, and steadily, the laws of the land which Congress prescribes. He is to appoint honest and incorruptible men to public otuce; he is to hold a steady hand between this nation and foreign nations, observing honorable peace, and avoiding entangling alliances with all. In all this I may be permitted to say I hope without extravagance that I have the honor to regard him this day, in comparison withany public American, pre-eminently qualified "for the station to which we call him. I, at least, would rather give the flag of my country into the hands of a man that carried it among the living and the dead up the steeps of Monterey, and agaiust the tremendous odds at Buena Vista, than intrust it to that man of Kinderhook. who carried out that radiant standard and laid it at the foot of the English throne. Cass a "Bolter.'" The power of "regular nominations has been a potent spell in the hands of Locofocoism, and many persons who despise Cass have, been brought to his support siwplv because he is the regular Baltimore nominee. But it seems that the Hon. John M. Niks, of Connecticut, in a recent speech at Hartford, disclosed a fact which throws a new light on the peculiar character of .the "great Michigauder,' and bhowa that he was willing. four years ago, to bolt from the Baltimore nom ination and accent ont? Ill opposition to it. 4 Senator Niles thus tells the story: Previous to the Baltimore Convention of '44 when so many States had declared for Van liu ren that his nomination was deemed certain, DuffGreen conceived the project of calling a convention, to meet on the 4th ot July, to nom inate an independent candidate. Jle addressed a letter to Gen. Cass, inquiring w hether he would permit his name to to be tore such a couvention as a candidate. iow, tnoun uei Cass would probably consider resistance to regular uomiuation an offence little bbortof treason, be had no such reverence for them at that time. He - prolet&ed but little acquaintance with the state of public sentiment, as he had recently returned from France thought the people weregovenifd too much-was modest in his thoughts of the Presidency but concluded by acquiescing in the use of his name before such a convention. It so happened that Geu. Gieen had not steam enough to get up a J convention, and ihe project fell through.
Akdrew Stewart, or Pa. This man repre
sents the same district that - VSpoony! Ogle" did. ' He is one of the most accomplishedlliars in the United States he can beat Ogle all too smash. His falsehoods are choice tood for the edera! press. The Journal of to-dar publishes Iiis last ful mi nation. It is the basest of the se- . t e - jr e i nes a tissue 01 laisenooas irom iruai uegiumg to end. Democrat: Have you got "the documents to prove" hat? -if m' let us see them, otherwise cease toraakea f'spoonyof yourself., ' We did not expect the dose would please any locofoco stomach in this quarter, when we administered it, but it is useless to get mad and call "Mr. Stewart hard names about the matter. J ou know what he says of Cass's peculation is true and the people know it is true, else you would pu t yourself and everybody else to the troubuof proving it false? ViBGisiA Skies Bright! The Richmond Whig publishes a letter giving an account of a great.Taylor meeting in Lexington, Virginia, at which four or five thousand persons were present, who were addressed by Hon. Wm. C. Rives and other distinguished speakers, which concludes with the following cheering assur ances r ' ' Sav to our' friends that, though all the time sanguine, I am now convinced of the invinci bility of old Kougnaud Keady. rrom luriner west we have the most cheering accounts. I write In haste and while the committee of the convention is acting around me. Below the mountains, all that is required of us is to hold on to our vote '41, and old Virginia isreueeind. Mark this prophecy. ,. ;) From, the State Journal. ' : ! PRINTER'S TAYLOR SONG. " BY B. E. H. LEVERING. . AiR"Hunteisef Kentucky." Ye Printers of the Franklin stamp, And Guttenber decension, I know your very hearts will jump , When General Zack I mention.. Ye love the "sAoofi-irort" trade, And those who well pursue it. You love superior might displayed, And those who nobly show it. O. Zack Taylor, i . The glory pf the nation. Ye boldly rushed to "cAasc" the foe, To make the "rsr impreasion;" And "prcas'd" him hard to let him know A "proof of printer's fashion. On the Rio Grande, by Taylor led, Uprose your " of glory, To give another ypagc1 of deeds To shine in future story. O, Zack Taylor, The glory ot the nation. if Throughout the southern warye shone, The glorious "taM" while "rolling;" "Imprinting" on ?om"vorkn when done, ' An 'imprenn wUJe controlling. Your noble "toss" beheld with pride' His "copy' how you followed. While "buttered forms" on every side Told how ihe greasers behowed. O. Zack Taylor. . . j5' , Tbc glory of ihe nation. What can't those do with eword and pen,' Or vote, when Zack's commanding, - Who like the famous Dutchman's hen, Can faHy"8tt a atandingr Ye patriot printers of the land, The matchlefcs cause eai--ltig. Your "lines displaf with heart and hand, To give the foes a dressing. O, Zack Taylor, ' .::-. The glory of the nation. Awar wifli "rat" in public Tanks, Such rn,, aä Ca8 and Butler, ' ' 'm Who grab tu' "quoins- from our "6an7.'" As greedy as a ulJer' Away with such, and knock to "pi : Those "lvprs"ot every evil ' Who "blac'r out am in "oßce high, As "black' n."Prinu'' devil." , 0, Zack Tavlor, The glory of the nt' t-'on. Hurrah for Zack, whose "case" i good, . Aud "out of sorts' is never; Whose manly "form" has nobly st.ood His country's champion ever. ; Huzza for Zack, whose lparalleV ....: We rarely can discover, And let the next November tell That C of has gone to clover! O, Zack Taylor, The glory of the nation. American Hotel, Lancaster, 0. . TO the qualified Voter of Vanderburgh County State of Indiana.- You wilt take no ice that an Klection will be held by the qualified Voters of said County at the n?ual places of holding elections in said County, on the 7th day of November A. L)M 184, to elect twelve Klectors of' President and Vice President of the United States, as prescribed by law. W itnesu my hand this 12th day ol October A. P., ms.i . JOHN KCHOLS, a. V. C. j oct 14 diw tc. DISSOLUTION". THE Copartnership heretofore existing between James White and S. C. Johnson in the Livery Stable business, is this day dissolved by mutual consent. ThowJ indebted to the late firm are rvqueated to make payment to Jamei White, who will liqui date alt claims against said firm oct7-3t. JAMES WHITE. Ö. C. JOHNSON. A CAIII. THE undersigned having purchased the interest U S. C. Johnson in the Livery Stable, tenders his services to the public and solicits a continuation ol" favors. His stable is at the old stand on Vine street, btlwetn the Johnson House and the river, where he can at all times be found, ready to wait upon the public, lie intends to keep good stock, and his charge shall be in accordance with the times. oci7-tf. f. JA.ME8 WHITE. PETER SCOTT, House nnd SI km Painter. HAS opened a shop in Evansville, at the Cichang Hote I, where he is prepared to do all kinds o I loose, Sigu, and carriage fainting-, of the lowest rates He respectfully requests a share at public patronage. jy 2'J-tt. I ET ER SCOTT, Fainter, Exchange Hotel. jyim
' v ' Fron the Pitttbirg GÄ iette. r ulr. past iuninicr (lo4i wrbeen a very remarksL bleone. Frequent anJheavyrioffcllcmedby :. i i -.. l'j.i iT . : . i uncus; ana long conunuea dp&i, uuu ine eneui, in me first place, to promote a rapid proirth cfsaeclnt vegetation, and in the second, to-produce a rapid de V. 1 V 1.V UUlt . J 111 I . ."V ... ... rmna and spreading ricknera, mea and death. in y'"& which had heretolore been rerf.arkoMe for their salubrity. on which the grass was unusually heavy, rotted to the ground and was not lit to be cut.,. Inlndiana and Illinois, thesickness was sogenernW thai there was not enough well ; per sons to attend upon the sick, whose suiii rings were prctracted by a want of proper remedies, ns well as of go-id nursing. Much ol this T- i .' i , ' , J r t-unenn2 nngiu nave neen prevemea, una c cry iamily kept on lutnd a supply ol imdicines suited to coun IViacl 1K lllivkB ui una iiiiu?iua, niiu niiu.li luv a tuiospbere at certain times is surcharged. In nddi tion to Quinine, (which is ii such general use as to need no comment,) we would fctronly urge every family to keep on hand one or more boxes of "Da M 'Lane's Liver Fills." These Pills are the prescription of an cnünentrijeician in Monongahala Co Virginia, and were used by him in his private practice as a remedy in billions complaints, for years before he thought of oüering them to the public. Such, however, was the success to the fills, and so great ths number of persons bcuefitedby them, that the making of the quantity requi--i a s-v uift-tt-ttar lliA i nKii i n r m anfl lwnrnn til int-r lere materially with the lime requirtxi to attend to his practice. To prevent tljs he has made arrangements with the houe of J. Kidd & Co. No. 60 Wood Street, Pittsburg, Fa. to prepare and en J 'them, where the genuine may be procured at all limes and in any reoson&ble quantity. 1 hese rills are not recouauentieu as a panacea lor 'all the ills that flesh is heir to." but in all affections of the Liver and in all bilious complaints, they stand without a rival. All who nave ever uteu thcui, give them the preference over all other Fill.-, ond cannot t ersuated to exchange thwe which they find f xperit nee to be mild, aft, and tctualjor any other, even though they may iiervrar coated ,or so tiraitic as to go "through by day li"ht. Prepared tor the proprietor by J. fei iJ i v wncio sale Druggist, No. 60 W ood Street, Fittilureh, 1 e. whom all arders Irom a distance must be liirccted.to Sold also by our Agents ai d the principal Drugispt throughout tne umiea ciaiesaua vaaaua. IQr .N. B. Purchasers ill p'taselie particular and inquire for "J)r. M'LnMt'i Jjret iV,'.' i there are other Pills puriwting to U; "Liver Fit'.!," now b for t he pu hi ic. uee ;-w j Sold Wholesale & Retail by ' CRAUrmRDLT.LL Main ht. Kvnupviilc, Ind. HEMORRHOIDS 015 PILLS, INTERNAL OR EXTLRXAL, rLKM ANL.NTl.V CVRtP BY Dr. Upham's Vegetable Electuary. Ah Inltrmd Remtdy, vhuh if mtedartnrdin.tu tTtttion, a curtor Hje it gvartiittfi. SYMPTOMS or TUE. DISEASE. . common consequence ef this affection is a kind, of tenesmus, or beariugdouu wvisatiou, a it is. A familiarly called; there is also beat,, ienuu aud. throbbing in the part, varying turn a' luodtraus iugree of ttiese sensations to the moslexcrucintiiig s jir lering; these are caused by tk gnat tluw ot tdoud to the parts. Sometimes the inne?cualof the Uwelprotrudes at every evacuation, taming what is calWL Prolapsus, or falling of the bowels; tnis is the Uter t of long continued irritation and weukues of that organ. 1 some instances the patient experience ner vous pains, w hich are indiscriUuLle mvl known only to Iii untrer, which commence jiuinediati ly alter an evacuation, and coniiuiu troui thirty minutes to several hours; these i sen -nt ions ars very annoying and sometimes very districting. Tkis ifisease, whi'ii of long continuance, is attended by pain and weakness in the back, irritation ol the kidneys and bladder, and other organs in the vicinity, pain and numbness in the legs aud feet, a sense of straitneiM obtit theclita-t, and unnatural fulness of the abdominal viscera, accompanied with palpitation ot the henri aud oppression. Individuals somit it ue? i.ru-iK-r, previous to an attack of the PiU, symptoms d noting great tlcrangeim-iit in the circulation; thcre ls a sn.- ol weight and prrssurein the ulxloiin , with a (teculiar fueling ot 'uneasiness in t) lMwel, eonsiipntion or prriiia'uni, attended with pain in Ihe back und loins, nausea, and sllit pains in the st mach, pale countenance , t-oiitisl seusatkms in t lie itenri, weariness, and irritable and discontented state oltho mind, nuit a setisv.of tulnessaud o;prwsiun in the region ot tike stotntch. '1 ho circulation oil tlR-bUiia is I'tfhle, nnd the cum-iitnf blood dc-Ufinincd iuwani and downward. r ' ' ft"All the alvi; disenws tnd ron?jlniiit?, DR. rPHAMV VEtiETAULL ELEC 1 L'AR V nut rf. Irctttall, and therelore pu vents Piles. ' t KlIAl) Tllb TLSTIMONY.. . . Hri-sA., J)ttinibcr 11, (icNTS 1 have used Dr. Upham's Vegetable 1'jlo Electuary w hich I purchased t you, aiKl Hud it on ol' the btt TV-dinner in tue for the PüVst and al?o tor all biliiou ainrtioiis, arising from au impure siau ol the system .-' ) . V.urs, &r , E. A COLE, Marble Dealer. t'. S. Marshall's OmrE. ' Ntw Yc rk, DecemUr f, ly 17. ) Messrs. Gentlemen t-l!inlerstanding that you are the general agcuts lor the sale or L'iha:a's Vegetable Electuary, for the cure of Piles, 1 have- deemed it my duty to volunteer a recommendation in In-half of that invaluable medicine I hnve been alMicted for many years with pi lis. and have tried various remedies, but with no beneficial fleets indeed, 1 began to consider tny case entirely hopeless. Uut about the 1st of Septemlier last prevailed upon by a frit-ndi to make a trial of the abuve named medicine. 1 took his advice and rejoice to say 1 am not oidy relieved. Luff na 1 Ktiv irfHtlv otirHl. 1 niiMit nriiKlt v I recommend it to all who may have the misfortune to in- i .:.t. i. . : i.l. ...... .i: . 'Hf ainicieu witn uiai aunujiu aim uiuignuus uaea.. . ' .,. ... ' very rcppcctluiiy, your oocueni prrvoni, ' LLY MUORE. ' REM RlIAJ1'E CURE OK riLES-TIIIRTV hU l,Ul YEARS STANDlNtl. - Movf Wawusutov, Berkshire Co 1 1 , . Ma esachusetts, Nov. 1CSI7. , j t.,- tTnviii m ktllENsnAw Gents : For thir ty years I have beeu' afilictitl with pili-s, gercral debility and inflammati) ra"finP lu!1K,r? odLPr"lLsusot the bow els, and w hch bad re listed all the medical treatment Dr. Cliapnin and others could giro. The last three years ol thaX.time my suflenngs dtfv description, lwasconlirco Jo ted, unable to heir myselt, and at last tjivenup vy j m friends i:: despair ot ever "intr iny healtbr in lact for three days before I commenced L'sing Dr. Upham . Electuary, 1 was entirely sprechletV and my burial clothes were made. Rut under Providence, ond the. useol Dr. Upham's Electuary, though, an old max, I have the tdcat-ure of suiting the Fact to the public that my health is now go-xl, and hope to live inauy . years, if it is God's will, to make know n the virtues of Dr. Upbam's Electuary, and to recommend it to my attlicted tellow creatures. It nelpeil mc be ?ona all expectations of all that knew my case, and I can t only say to others that it is in my opinion, the best medicine in tlie w orld for Files, or any other disease of the bowels; and if they will use it according to he directions, I w ill myself warrant a cure in every case. Yours, w ith the utmost expression of thunktulnew, CORNELIUS srUR. EöKiTovr, Berk Co". Mass., Nov. 29, 1817. '' The above certificate tells a simple and truthful storv of suffering and relief, ot which, as physician , and witness in the cac, 1 chctrlully endorse. DR. CHAPMAN. NoTirx. The genuine Upham's Electuary has hi written signature, thusj(ötr A. Upham, M. D.) The hand is alone done with a pen. Price ftl a Box. JO-Sold wholesale and retail by KETCHUM it HENSHAW, 121 Fulton street. N. Y., and by Druggists generally throughout the United States and Canauas. iy 12. A. C. HALLOCK, Ag't for Evansville la. 100 arret Kerthawn Salt for sale by dec21-tf JOHNSHANKLIN.
