Evansville Journal, Volume 12, Number 43, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 26 November 1846 — Page 4

QCj We commend to the attentive perusal, and calm consideration of every man who loves his country more than his party, the following eloquent extract from the reply

ol the venerable Judge Ogden Edwards f New York, to the committee of the Native American party, upon his nomination as the candidate of that party for Governor: "Party has become paramount to cou ntry ; nnd the public welfare is immolated upon the altar of selfishness instead of seeking the public welfare, a large portion ol our leading men are seeking, under the most plausible professions, their own exclusive welfare. A servile devotion to the views of demagogues has become the test ot patriotism. Parties rise and sink, and their course is only markby their desolating efiects. Talents and moral worth are proscribed, and have retired in disgust from the contest; whilst the only results consequent upon the altercations, are that one set of men fatten upon the spoils of the public instead of another. Aud these are the fruits of those blessed privileges, for which our revolutionary sires perilled their lives and their fortunes. This state of things must be brought to an end, or the country is ruined. The country will look in vain to regularly organized and disciplined party leaders for relief. The people must arise in their might, aud extricate themselves from the serpentine party folds which envolpe lliem. The truly disinterested and patriotic must lorget and forgive, and view every one who will co-operate as a brother. In this way and this way only, can the country be disen thralled, and placed upon that elevated ground where our Revolutionary farihe s left it It is a glorious undertaking it is a second war of independenceonly with this difference that we are defrauded of our rights, by those who are embossed amongst us, instead of being oppressed by foreign iuvaders. Such are their arrangement, and potent is their organization, that they have obtained the absolute mastery of the country. Every voice is drowned which does not echo their mandates and the still small voice of reason is not beared amid their raging tumults Political hacks have become so numerous that their name is Legion, and Turkey was never more absolutely governed by Janissaries, than this country is by - them. To this 1 trace the cause of all our evils, and to the remedying of this evil 1 am willing to devote myself. . I am aware that I shall be promptly met with the objection, that this is impracticable. ill ft r a alar Iriinna Irion tin is kiita loan r iv. i iiiing i nun u u iiuvu u s t 11 cn. . complished. In the land in which we live, three millions of people extricated the country from the fangs of the most potent monarch on earth. Is it therefore too much to hope, that their sons can preserve the liberties which were bequeathed to them by ther farthers? is only for the honest men to will it, and it is done. It requires nothing but moral courage. Let every honost citizen come to a firm determination that he will go for "His Country, his whole Country and nothing but his Country.'''' Let him work vp his courage to the sticking point and looking his political drill sear sent steadily in the face, say to him: "Sir, hate a Country to serve; and a soul to save; and I will abide your biddings no longer.'1'' MEXICAN HIGHWAYMEN. Robbers in Mexico are what pedlars used to be in England; they keep up the life in the villages, plunder wherever they can, cheat where they cannot plunder, ride stout horses and lead, on the whole, a varied, aud sometimes a gay life. One of the American travellers saw at one of the villages where the stage changed horses, a dashing and picturesque figuro gaudily dressed, who rode by on a handsome horse richly caparisoned. On inquiring if the coachman knew him, the answer was that he knew him perfectly well, and that he was the captain of a band of robbers who had plundered the stage several times since '.he whip and reins had been in his hands. On the American urging the question why he had not brought the robber . to punishment, the answer was, "that he would be surse to be shot by some of the band the next lime he passed the road;'1 the honor of Mexicau thieves being peculiarly nice upon this poiut. It appeared that the dashing horseman had gone through the village on a reconnoissance but probably not liking the obvious preparations of the travellers, had postponed the capture. ' The mode of managing things in this som nolent country is remarkable for its tranquility. The American who narrates the circumstance had taken with him from. Vera Cruz four dragoons: but on accidentally in quirinson the road into the state of their arms, he found that but one carbine had a lock in fighting order, and even that one was not loaded; on which he dismissed the guard and trusted to his companions, who were all well armed. The Mexican travellers, taking the matter in another way, never carry arms but prepare a small purse "to be robbed of,'' of which they are robbed accordingly. A few miles Irom Perote the road winds round a high hill, and the passengers generally get out and walk. The Americans on this occasion had left their arms in the carriage, but their more prudent chief immediately ordered .them to carry thern in their hands, and in the course of the ascent they pounced upon a group of ruffians whom the driver pronounced to be robbers; and who but for their arms would probably have attacked them. In less than a month after this, five or six Americans having left their arms in the stage at this spot were attaked and stripped of every cent belonging to them. It must be owned that this country has fine advantages for the gentlemen of the road. The highway between Ver Cruz and Mexico is the great conduit ol life in this country. Nearly all the commerce goes by that way, and ninety out of every hundred travellers pass by the same route. The chief portion of the road is through an absolute desert. It frequently winds up the sides of the mouu- ' tains, and then is bordered by forests of ev ergreens, forming a capital shelter for the laud pirate, the whole being a combination ol Hounslowheath and Shooter's Hilt on a grand scale, and making highway robbery nol merely a showy but a sale Fpeculation, the gaming table being the chief recruiting office of the whole haltallion of Mercury. The statistics of gaming might borrow a

chapter from Mexico. The passion for play is public, universal, and unbounded. It is probably even superior lo the passion for pulque. Every one plays, and plays for all he is worth in the world, and olten more. But he has his resource the road. A man who has lost bis last dollar, but who is determined to play on till he dies, lays himself uuder strong temptations of coveting his neighbor's goodi. The hour when the stages pass is known to every one; the points of the road where they must go slowly up the hill, are familiar to all highway recollections. Associates are expediously found an.ong the loiterers, who after their own ruin, sit around the room watching the luck of others. The band is formed in a moment; they take the road without delay, post themselves in the evergreens, enjoy the finest imaginable pros peel, and breathe the most refreshing air, until the creaking of the coach wheels puts them on the alert. They then exhibit their weapons the passengers produce their little putses, the stage is robbed of everything portable, or convertable into cash, the band return to the gaming table, fling out their coin, and play till they are either rich or turned once more. Some time after an adventure, such as we have described, the stage was robbed near Puebla by a gang, nil of whom had the appearance of gentlemen. When the opera

tion of rifling every body and everything was completed, one of the robbers observed "ilm they must not be looked on as professional thieves, for they were gentlemen; but having been unfortunate at play, they were forced to put the company lo this inconvenience, for which they requested their particu lar pardon. An instance o! this order occurring in the instance ot a public personage, some years before, long excited remarkable interest. The Swiss consul had been assassinated at noonday. A carriage had driven up to bis door, out of which three men came, one in the dress of a priest. On the doors being opened they seized and gagged the porter, rushed into the apartment where the consul was sitting, murdered and robbed him, and then retreated. - None knew whence they came or whither they went; but the murdered man in his dying struggle had torn a button off the coat of one of the robbers, which they found in his hand. A soldier was shortly after seen with more money than he could account for. Suspicion naturally fell upon him, his quarters were searched, and one of his coats was found with the button torn off. He was convicted but relied on a pardon through the Colonel Yanez, chief aide-de-camp of the President Santa Anna, who was his accomplice in the transaction. On being brought out for execution and placed on the fatal bench where criminals are strangled, he cried out, "Slop I will acknowledge my accomplices;" and he pronounced the name of the Colonel. Search was immediately made in the house of Yan ez, and a letter in cipher was found connecting him with this and other robberies. This letter was lft in the hands of one of the judges. He was offered a'large sum of mon ey to destroy it, but refused. In a few days after he was found dead, as was supposed by poison. I he paper was then trausterred to another judge, who was offered the same bribe, and who promised to destroy it; but on confering with his priest, though he took the money, he shrank from the actual de struction of the document, and kept it in si lence. Yanez was brought to trial, and be lieving that the paper was no longer in ex tstence, treated the subject with contempt. I lie paper was produced, and the aide-de-camp was condemned and executed. Blackwood. .Tue Panther. The Peoria Register, a paper which frequently instructs and amunes its readers with anecdotes connected with the settlement of the Western county, furu ishes the following sketch, which it says was related by a gentleman of great respeciibili ty living near the spot where the circumslace occured . In the latter part of that bloody tragedy, which spread dismay throughout this pan o the State, there were about nine hundred In dians encamped on the Illinois river, oppo site to the present town site of De Salle, composed principally of the Iroquois tribe They had always maintained a friendly in tercourse with the whites in the vicinity and manifested a great partiality for one in par ticular. This was "Old Myers,1 a perfect prototype of Cooper's trapper. This State was the fifth in which he had erected his hut in advance of a while population. He had of course acquired more of the habits of the Indians than of civilized men, and was fa miliarly known among them "The Paulher" a title which he had acquired from them by a daring exploit in killing an animal by that name, when leading them in one of their wild hunts. At the period referred to, these Indians rallied under the Black Hawk stand ard, and were committing many depredations upon the settlers in the vicinity. When repulsed they did not hesitate to murder their former friends and companions. About the cabin of the Panther, neaily a hundred settlers had come in for the safety of their wives and children placing them under his protection. But among the victims of savage barbarity, there happened lobe a brother-in-law of the Panther, with his wife and three children. Here they committed an unpardonable outrage upon the family of their ancient friend and demi-savage. - When ihe sad tidings of their cruel fate had reached the garrison, the Panther was seen clothing himself in battle array. With his rifle, his tomahawk, and scalping knife, in open day, he silently bent his way to the Indian quarters, about- one mile distant. Fearlessly he marched into the midstof the savage band, levelled his rifle at the head chief present, and deliberately killed him on the spot. He then severed the lifeless head from the trunk and held it up by the hair before the awe struck multitude exclaiming. "You have murdered my brother, his wife, and their little ones, and now 1 have killed your chief. I am now even with you; but," lie adiled, "every one ot you inai is (band here to-morrow morning at sunrise is a dead Indian." All this was accomplished, bv the Panther without the least molestation I'hev knew that he would take ven - geance for their deed of blood, and silently acknowledged me justice oi ine uarmg act.i

He then bore off the head in triumph to his cabin.--The next morning not an Indian could be found in all that region. They left forever their homes and their dead, and that part of the Slate has not been molested by them since. A few weeks since this veteran of eighty winters sold his cabin, caparisoned with the same hunting-shirt and weapons which he wore when he killed the chief, started for Missouri. After travelling a few rods, he returned and asked permission to give his "Grand yelV The gentlemen to whom he had sold the land, "giving his assent, he gave a long, loud, and shrill whoop, that made the welkin ring for miles around. "Now," said he, "my blessing is on the land and on you your ground will always yield an abundance, you will always prosper." Again he took up his march for a new home in the wilderness, where he could enjoy the happiness of solitude undisturbed by social ties.

Sword for Gen. Taylor. The State of Louisiana after the great battles of the 8th and Oth of May, voted to present a sword to Gen. Taylor. It has been made in New York, and the description of it is given in the New York Tribune: The scabbard is made of the finest metal with richly engraved and wrought ornaments. On two divisions of the front side are scenes of the battles of Palo Alto and Resaca de a Palma . The shiled presents the following inscnption: "Presented by the State of Louisiana lo Gen. Z. Taylor, in testimony of the high opinion held by the people of this State of the skill, conduct and judgement shown by inn during his military life; but particularly during the battles of of Palo Alto on the 8th and Ravina c ela Palma on the Oth of May, 1840." Surmounting the battle scenes appears the coat of arms of Louisiana, and in the centre of the scabbard the American eagle richly engraved. The grasp is composed of alternate mother of pearl and gold facets, richly engraved and studded, and protected by a massive gold chain. The head represents a revolutionary cap aud plums, sui mounted by a precious cairnghorn stone. Gen. Taylor' s conduct towards Gen. Worth at Monterey, considering the peculiar cir cumstances in which the latter was placed, will be perhaps as much appreciated by the high minded as the management of tho whole affair ot the three days will be esteemed by men of military judgement. The subject is alluded to in something of an off-handed way by a Washington correspondent of tho New York Herald: When a good soldier commits a blunder, it is right to give him a chance to redeem the faux pas. This was the plau of Napo leon, who was said to have been something of a corporal in his day. lhis is the plan of old Zach Taylor, the honest, straight-forward true aud steady old fellow as he is. Why, sir, it does a man's heart good to read of the ce ''opportunity " given to Worth at Monte rey, iayioraua worm oau messea it ana tramped it, and bivoucked among the everglades and the Seminoles. The old comman der knew what Worth was worth. He knew his man. He knew that the stuff was in him the presence of mind the sagacious obseivation the cool disposition of orders the steady bravery of the veteran. It was really the generous confidence of the de- . i nr . i . . t seeming man mat reinstated worm to the full approbation of his country. It's all right now, and if there is a soldier who would die in the trenches to save "old Zack" from a scar, or who would roll away a fizzing bomshell to prevent its exploding at his feet, it is ihe tried and trusty Worth. Under the favor ot his commander he is restored lo the universal confidence and the approbation of history. The cloud is gone the shadow of gloom is dissipated the ugly dream that haunted him is past, and "Richard ii himself again." To our mind, there is not a prettier incident in all the campaign than this. Eminently honorable and chivalric as has been the deportment of every officer and soldier (with scarce an exception) of the army, we like this "opportunity" given lo Worth, and the way in which he "embraced it," better than anything that has been done, because it is so conspicuously creditable to the discrimination of old Zick, Ihe bravery of Worth, and the glory of our arms. Elector or Hesse Cass el. All who have heard of those hireling soldiers, the Hessians, and of the part which they took in the revolutionary war, will be interested in the following notice, by a Fiench writer, of that very singular personage, the old Elector of Hesse-Cassel. The gravity of the German people and the austere sang-froid of his subjects (says the writer) were shocked by Hie lightness of his character, his frivolous tastes and the ardor of his passions, which not even the weight of years could temper. The good Hessians were particularly offended that he should have united himself in marriage with a simple baroness, and she, forsooth, a divorced baroness. More passionate in love than were the knights of chivalry, the ardent Elector did not hesitate to do what the late King of Holland, following his example, has just done he sacrificed his throne to love arid after having resigned his crown to his son, he philosophically quit his estates, carrying away with him nothing but his night-cap and his purse, which contained the sufficiently rouud sum of three hundred million!. With the greatest possible skill, the Elector never could have saved so much from the simple administration of the governmental finances. He had acquired his riches by a bold speculation. During the American war, he sold his subjects to England, who enrolled them under her flag and sent them to fight against American independence. After having made his fortune in his slave-trade , of his white subjects the Elector, troubled by the cannon of Jean and seeing the French armies ap proaching, trembled for the fate of his crowns. No! knowing how to save them, the idea occurred to him to emrustNhem to the keeping of a petty Jewish banker, who was vegetating in Frankfort on-the-Maine. l With this money the petty binker, whose ! name was Rothschild created the formidable uousc, mui ui mc Mtrm umc governs me

thrones to his brothers, so the founder of the Rothschild dynasty has divided Europe among his sons; having given Austria to one; England to another; to this, Paris; to that, Naples; and to the eldest, Frankfort, which is the capital of their sovereign fortune. And this fortune, this power, this great name, are indebted for extence solely to the fact, that an Elector of Hesse bethought himself long ago of selling his subjects to the English.

A Fke Portrait. The National Intelligencer in a notice ol the-American Review for October, renders this high but well de served tribute to one of the great leaders of the Whig party, the gallant Cnttenaen. Prefixed to this number of the Whig Review comes an effiigy ot oaeof the ornaments of the party the fervid, noble, able Crittenden; a true man, amidst all the decay of honor; a gallant man, when chivalry has sunk into only the ianfarnade of what is knightly; a statesman, wanting nothing but ambition enough to make him bestir himself. As a patriot, no man is less foward to assume that much abused name; which yet his very adversaries would be laughed to scorn by the uuiversal confidence if they denied him. For no man has ever among, in the midst of the fiercest partisan strife, dealt sharper strokes when the blood was up; and the very enemies whom his burst of battle has left bleeding and overthrown behind it, follow him through the fight with admiring eyes. It is, indeed, his happiness to reach, without effort or art by the mere gift of Nature, an eloquence as powerful as it is beautiful; and while, in de bate a merciless slaughter of every thing that comes in his way, yet never excite a rancor. fSo man ts so careless ol reputation, its arts, or its fruits; and yet few are so sure to ac quire it. No man thinks less of winning pop ularity, and yet the unsought anection of es teem of evey body follow him wherever he goes. Deplorable Picture. Extract of a letter irom county itoscommon, in Ireland, to a citizen of Washington, dated Oct. 30, 184G. "Never had we such accounts to send as in this present year. Ireland is visited from north to south, from east to west, with a most dreadful famine; the poor are living in many parts on cabbages and salt, and many of them dying on the highroads. In the fields, aud in the towns, of Irish cholera and various other complaints, in consequence of such food, and very many have not even much of that sort, bad as it is. The potatoes in toto perished; indeed they are totally extinct in Ireland. 1 had myself two acres of the finest seed in the country and the most promising appearance, and in two nights the blight visted them and they were reduced to snuff. I will not get one stone of potatoes in the whole field. Such is the state all over the country ; hundreds of acres rotted in twenty-four hours. The poor (that is, five-sixths of the whole population) are living as above on bad vegetables or Indian meal, to which there was in the begining the greatest possible objection, but hunger and the want of better overcame every reluctance. For the last month there was no importation of Indian meal, and the people congregate in hundreds and thousands, break into mills and bakers' shops, and force away all the meal and bread they can lay hold of the military and police are called out to protect the property of those persons, and in many places lives were lost; the unfortnnate people fired at and stabbed by the military. Such is the awful and deplorable stale of this your native country. God only knows when this awful and appalling state of things will cease. Life and proper ty at stake. "Will you write to me and inform me what prospects there are of getting a sufficient supply of Indian meal or potatoes from the United States? Was the harvest of this year in America abundant or defective? I have seen in a Washington paper that in 1815 the official returns of the Indian meal was fifty-two millions of quaiters, and this year's crop would exceed it eighteen millions. This if true, is consoling; as if that be so, we may hope for a sufficient supply from your present country. "I am astonished that the Americans mixed with Irish as :hey are, never manifested the least sympathy for us in our present deplorable condition, more especially as in India the Irish entered into the matter very cordially, and made up a considerable sum in Calcutta, say 11,000, towards the relief of the poor Irish, which was remitted lo Dublin, and they are still adding to it their contributions monthly many, very many a poor man was relieved from the Calcutta fund. Strive to gel up a similar fund and assist is here, as the Indian meal I am iufortn ed is sold there for five shillings the hundred. I have two thousand paupers, who have not a morsel or means lo purchase a stone of meal, crowding in on me weekly. I had to sell my cows, except one, to purchase food for them, only giving them one meal in the day to keep life in them.' WOOLSEY'S FLUID EXTRACT OF SARSAPARILLA. THIS valuable medicine is prepared by the undersigned, in the form of a fluid extract and carefully compounaea wiia me proper in oredients. The best imported Sarsaparilla is used in the preparation of this extract, and itsstrength fully equal to that of any other. It is a safe remedy and may be relied on, in all those diseases for which it is peculiarly auapieu,asprescriDea by skilful Physicians. For sale at the New Drug Store. Main street Evansville, at one half the usual price by fmay 29,'45-tf.j WM. M. WOOLSEY. WIJSX received pr steamer Sam Seay 36 boxes JAMES-RIVER TOBACCO, ol the following Brands, viz: 5 Boxes Burton's 5 Lump; 5 " Ualsey's 5 do; 5 " Lobby's 5 do; 10 " Murrels 12 do: 5 " Colegate's 5 do; 6 " Thos. Nector's superior lb. lump. rj- This added lo our old stock of Tobacco. makes the assortment one ol the best and cheapest ever oflered in Evansville. Our Wabash friends are respectfully requested to call and examine OUT Stock Of Tobacco, as well as all kinds of Groceries in general, and we hope they, after the examination of our Groceries and prices, will find it to their aduantaae to save the expense, trouble, and loss of time lo go to Louisville or Cincinnati. March 5, tf. ALLIS & HOWES.

WESMMB" PAMGEAI

THE G11E.1T REMEDY; APPROVED BY THE FACULTY, For Coughs,- Colds, Asthma, Bronchitis, Consumption, and oil other affections ot the Bronchial tubes. - REPARED entirely from the Ginseng and warranted to contain no preparrtiou ot An timony, Mercury or Opium. Mere than 2000 bottles have been sold in tbe city of Cincinnati, alone, within two months, and in no case has it failed to give entire satisfaction. The Ginseng Panacea is now ordered by Physicians of the first respectability, in their regular practice, and its claim to be considered the only article ever discovered capable ot speedily anil permanently allay ing bronchial irritation, which is the sole cause ot cough, asthma, bronchitis, and according to Dr. Eberle who but expresses the ' opinion ot all tbe first authorities in Europe and America, of two. thirds of all the cases usually regarded as true tuberculous consumption must be considered as forever settled. We select the following names from a long catalogue of persons who have felt its healing influence on their own persons, or seen it in their families. Many of whom are well known to the citizens of Evansville as business men of the first standing and integrity who would not for a moment lend their names or influence to extend the reputation of any article unless from a perfect conviction of its utility: - . Nat. .Noble, Canal Collector's office. M. GnrnKiE, Holmes' paper store, Alain, near Fifth. W- Storms, Firm, J. F. Duir & Co. Dr. Cosser, 14th st. between Vine and Race. J . Jones, Assist. Clerk Ham . Co. Sup. Court. G. V. Phillips, Wholesale Grocer, Main st. Wm. Pabvin, Firm, Johnson &. Parvin. Broadway, near Yeatman. G. W. Coffin, Brass and Bell founder, 2d st. Vanduzen, At Hope's warehouse, Sycamore st. J. H. Trainor, Surgeon Dentist. E. Mcdge, Firm, Mudge & Clawson, beadstead manufacturers. Biogar. Sec. Equitable Ins. Com. Capt. Blasiifokd, At Cin. Hotel. " Stone. Calhoun, Walnut st. S. Hill, Tobacconist, Main st. near Front. Rev. J. Clark, Mt. Healthy. C. Jeffeies, Lumber merchant. R. A. Holden, Main, near Front. Myers, Type founder. Vine St. between Fift and Sixth. E, A. W headon, Firm, Wheadon &. Biinn, Auctioneers. Kerman, Firm, Finkbine & Herman, Main st. A. F. Benjamin, Inspector of lace goods, 3d el. A. Newell, Tanner and Currier Congress st. Hamilton Lyon, Finisher, Front st. VV, Johnson, Carpenter, 3d street, between Sycamore and Broadway. Capt. Adams, Columbus House. T. S. Buti.eb, Main, between 5th and 6th. McDermot, Firm, Williams McDermot, Main st. Dr. Drake, Foot of High st. Persons at all interested can obtain a pamphlet gratis of Mr. Woolsey containing the commercial, medical, botanical history of the Gin seng with the use made of it by the Chinese, compiled from the most indubitable authority Sold by W. M. WOOLSEY, Druggist, Main St. Evansville, Ind. Sept 3, 184b. Price on 50 cents per bottle. T. SALTER, proprietor, Cincinnati. GREAT DISCOVERY. AGUE AND FEVER. Cured in less than 24 hours, or money returned. BULL'S CELEBkATED HONEY-COATED Vegetable Tonic Pills. AFURBLV VEGETABLE PREPARATION TBE BEST remedy not- in use for the certain and permanent cure of the above diseases. These Pills are as pleasant to the tate as sugHj balls. (tfr Prepared jnly by JOHN BULL, sole proprietor, and sold, wholesale aud retail by BULL & ALDEN, wholesale Druggists, 81 Fourth St., Louisville, Ky. This valua ble medicine is offered to the pub. lie as one of the most sure and certain remedies ever discovered - for the permanent cure of AGUE and FEVER, in any of its various forms. It possesses many advantages over most of the tonics which now flood the country, the principal of which are: 1st, It is a more certain remedy, as one dose seldom fails to make a sure and lasting cure. 2d. It contaius nothing deleterious or poisonous to the system, consequent, ly it may be taken without a fear of any of the bad effects which attend the use of most of the tonics of the present day. 3d. It is more con. venient for transportation, and not liable to loss from freezing, breaking, leakage, and other accidents which attend the liquid bottles. 4th. It is more convenient and pleasant to take, aud its not so nauseating. 5th. It increases the appetite and braces the whole general system. Aud, lastly, it is offered much cheaper that any other tonic now in use, which places in within the reach of everyone, so that the poor man is enabled to save his doctor's bill, and es cape days and j erliapa weeks of sickness. The proprietor has received, and is daily receiving numerous certificates and testimonials of the efficacy of this Tunic; but, knowing as ho does the imposition wlncu lias been practised upon tee public in the way of false certificates in bringing a medicine ot this kind into notice, he will only insert one received Irom one of our oldest and most respectable citizens, to whom any one may reier it they doubt the efficacy of this medicine: CERTIFICATE. Mr. Bull having requested me to state what 1 know in relation to the efficacy of this Tonic Pill, in the cure of the Ague and Fever, I will say that 1 never used them myself, but received a couple of boxes from Mr, Wm. T. Spurrier, as a donation to a poor family, and they speedily cured eleven out of thirteen, end the only remaining two were very . small children, unble to swallow pills. This was a large afflicted family and connexions from St. Louis on their way to Tennessee. J. H. OVERSTREET. The pills 1 gave Mr. Overstreet were made by John Bull. WM. T. SPURRIER. Louisville, May I, 1846. N. B. None are genuine without the -written signature, on each direction, of John Bull. Qj- Sold wholesale and retail by JOHN BULL & CO. Sold by W. Sc. C. BELL, Main 6t. Eransville, Ind. August 27, 1846. IJGI,S. fresh Mackinaw Pickerel, a first 5 rale ariicle for family use. just recivrd and fur sale low by . BABCOCK, BROTHERS, aug tl. Water street. i

-'OCTfc " IsW AIM MfW fJI mm 'S.ZJ

HOUSE'S INDIAN TONIC. A SAFE AXD SURE CURE FOR CHILLS OR AGUE AND FEVER, In the unprecedented time of Five Hours. The attention of the public is called to this great remdey for Chills or Aguejand Fever, and in . doing so, the Proprietor deems it proper to make m the following declarations, the teutu of which, he desires the people to test by trial, and ha wilt cheerfully abide their decision, viz: 1st. The article is pleasant and convenient to toke. 2no. It will cure every case, if the directions are observed. 3rd. It will leave no injurious effect in tbe system; on the contrary, it imparts strength to the constitution. 4th. It is purely vegetable, and refined from all gross particles I which render other preparations so muddy and . disagreeable to the taste. 5th, It will curs with perfect certainty in five hours. Certificates on the wrapper around ths bottle, of cures from six months to ten years' standing. - , ' , Prepared and sold, wholesale and retail, by GEO. VV, HOUSE, Nashville. Tenn., and by WM. M. WOOLSEY, Druggist. may 7.'46-6m. Evansville, Ind. . VAUGHN'S Vegetable Eltlirontriptic Mixture. A cure lor Dropsy, Gravel, diseases of the Urinary Organs, Kidneys, Liver, Lungs, &c . Incipient Consumption, Female Irregularities, diseases of the Spine, Sick Headache, all Biliaus Disorders, all Eruptive diseases. Scrofula, Salt Rheum. &c. And in fact any complaint ' which can be reached through the blood will be speedily acted upon and cured by this ariicle. In the Northhrn sections of the United States this Medicine has established a reputation unequalled by any article ever presented to the world. It has made cures in many and various' complaints which are set fourth in a pamphlet which is furnished gratis to all who may please to call on the agency in this city . To ail laboring under a debilitated system whatever may be the cause, a thirty ounce bow lie of this Medicine will be certain to effect relief; and iu most instances a twelve ounce bottle. " PRICE-12 oz bottle $1. 30 oz $2. Merchants from e broad who deal in this line will find the article packed lor forwarding by . LEVI &. BIRGE General Agents Corner Walnut and 3rd sis Cincinnati H. Agents for Indiana E. P. Spurrier, Evansville; James G. Hardy, Covington; J. W. L. Motlock. Danville. July23-6mo "Fever and Agiie," and "Bo wand's Improved Tonic Mixtures." "THE BANE AND THE ANTIDOTE. 'I hereby certily, that several persons under Medical Treatment for Intermittent Fever, tor Fever and Ague) within my observation and direction, have been cured by the use of "ROWAND'S IMPROVED TONIC MIXT URL" after every preparation of Peruvian Bark, (Quinine) ic. &.., had been in vain!! NATHANIEL P. CAUSIN,;M. D., Washington city, District Columbia. -Thousands of like certificates have from time to time been published. - 1,500000, cases of Fever & Ague! have been cured by ROVVAND'S "IMPROVED" TONIC MIXTURE!!! Within 15 Tears!!! However startling this statement may at first appear, yet the fact may be demonstrated by the single rule of three, for we estimate by relcrence to the Manufactory Book that Five Hundred Thousand Bottles have been made &. distributed over the country during that period! Well, it is well known to the Agents, especially in the Western States.tbat whole familiies of 5 or 6 persons have been cured by one single bottle! Iu a vast majority of instances one bottle has cured 1, 2, 3 and 4 persons! The axerage here would give three cases to every bottle! amounting to ihe astounding number of 1,500,000 cases of this hated complaiut cured by this inestimable remedy !i! Now, common sense dictates the propriety of resorting at once to this old favorite, welltried and sterling remedy, and of avoiding all vulgar and insignificant mixtures. RICH'D RALEIGH, Agents in Evansville. Inveirtor and Proprietor Dr. Jobs R. Rowand, Philadelphia; Graduate ol the University of Pennsylvania. july 30. '46. Ojr-No Cure no Pay.Q Cave & Slia tier's Tonic Mixture. A certain and speedy cure for Fever Sf Ague p'tVHE extensive prevalence in this country Jy of that trouble disease. Fever and Ague and the vast amount ol suffering end distress which it has occasioned, has naturnlly led to the adoption of many compounds for its mitigation and relief. Among the numerous remedies Cor this disease none will be found to effect a cure mote speedily than the Tonie Mixture prepared by the subscriber. The ingredienis of this Tonic sre of a highly saluatory character, efiiicacious in their immediate action upon tbe digestive organs, and entirely liarmltes as regards subsequent effects upon the system, when tbe disease is removed the Tonic Mixture being a gentle aperient, invariably carries offall obstructions in the bowels, and restore tone and vigor to the stomach . This Medicine is confidently recommended as certain remedy for FEVER AND AGUE and deranged digeative organs, without the slightest probability of evea a remote deleterious effect. . - . Forsaleby ju!y6.234. W. C. BELL. ; EVANSVILLE WHOLESALE AND RETAIL 1EATII Ell STOKE, BV DECKER t KRAMER. rniHE subscribers have the pleasure of anM. nouncing to the surrounding country lo Saddlers, Shoemakers, fitc, that they have now in successful operation, a TANNERY, adjoining Evansville nnder tbe superintendance of competent workmen,- from which they are constantly receiving at their depot on Main street between First and Second, all kinds of Leather, such as Sole, Harness, Bridle, Skirting, Coarse Upper, Kip, Calf Skins' and Linings. They also manufacture Glue and Curled IIair,Slioemalker's Findings, Lasts, Pegs.Thread and all other articles used by the craft. They have also in store and lor sale an assortment of Groceries Liquors, and Queensware, jy 7,-ify. DECKER & KRAMER.' GEORGE B. WALKER, Physician Si. Surjreon. OrncR corneb of Vine anb First Streets, julj 16 it. EVANSVILLE.

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