Indiana American, Volume 8, Number 31, Brookville, Franklin County, 31 July 1840 — Page 1

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Ill C.F. CLARKSON. TERMS or THE AMERICAN. (-2 in advance , $2 90 in six months, or 13 it he expirauun oi mJ jck. - nu paper wm u ois lontinued antil all arrearages are paid, unless at he option of the editor. Ten per cent, interest :n k .it ... I. : - . .? .iiL. , r :n i ji annum win ia Luiignu uu ii .uwi ifJiiua, tam the expiration of tbe rear, until paid; and for ll Job-work and advertising wheo payment is de red beyond six months. - AovteTisitMESTs. Twelve lines, or less, will h inserted once nr tnree times, tor one dollar. a . . . a a Lad 25 cent will be charged for eacl addiUonat uertion. OX LOW SPIRITS. Low spirits is a certain state of the mind access pioied by indigestion, wherein the greatest evils ira apprehended upon tbe slightest grounds, and he worst consequences imagined. Ancient roeditil writers supposed this disease to be confined to those particular regions of the abdomen, technical. If caUed hypochondria, which are situated on the right or left side of that cavity, whence comes tbe aims hypochondriases. Symptoms. 1 he common corporeal systems are Situieacy in me stomacn or bowels, acrid eructa. lions, coativeness, spasmodic pains and often an utter inability of fixing the attention upon any sub ject of importance or engaging in any thing that dcmnas vigor or courage. Also languidness the mind becomes irritable, thoughtful, desponding, mewucuuij uiu wimwu, aocomDsiiiea ov a total derangement of the nervous system. Tbe mental feelings and peculiar train of ideas that haunt the imagination and overwhelm the judgment, exhibit u inhnits diversity, l be wisest and best of men are as open to this affliction as the weakest. : Causes. A sedentary life of any kind, especial ly severe study, protracted to a late bour in the light, and rarely relieved by social intercourse or exercise,. a dissolute habit, great excess in eating ana arioKingr, imoioaerate use or mercury, violent purgatives, the suppression of some habitual dis charge, (as the obstruction of the menses or more emportant organs within the abdomen is' frequent TRBATMKNT.-The principal objects of treatment are to remove indigestion, strengthen the body. and enliven the spirits, which may be promoted by exercise, early hours, regular meals, pleasant conrersation; the bowels f if costive) should be care. fully regulated by the occasional use of a mild aperient. We know nothing better adanted to this end. than Dr. Wm. Evans' Aperient Pills; being mild and certain in their operation. The bowels being nee cleansed his inestimable Camomile Pills, (which are tonic, anodyne, and anti-spasmodic) are u iiiiamuie remedy, and without dispute have proved a great blessing to the numerous public. gome pnysiciaas bare recommended a free use of mercury, but it should not be resorted to: in many cases it greatly aggravates the symptoms. I1IUHLY IMrUKTA NT. Nervous disease, liver comolaint. dvaoeiwU. bilious diseases, piles, consnnration. concrha. colds. pitting of blood, pain ia the chest and side, ulcers, fsmale weakness, mercuria diseases, and all ease of hypochondnacism, low spirits, palpitation of! (ne irewi, nervous irritability, nervsns weakness, flour albus, seminal weakness, indigestion, lose of appetite, neart barn, general debility, bodily weakness, chlorosis or green sickness, flatulency, hysterical faintings, hysterics, headaches, hiccup. bickhcb niwm mere, rneumatism, asthma, tic douureuxs.cramp, spasmodic affections, and those who are victims to fast most excrutiating disorder, C", will find relief from their sufferings by a curse of Dr. Wm. Evans' medicine. - Also, nausea, vomiting;, pains ia tbe side, limbs. nad, etomach or back, dimness or confusion of egbt, aoit.es ia the inside, alternate flushes of heat and dullness, tremors, watckings, agitation, exiety, bad dreams, spasms. PaiscrrAL Office. 100 Cditsih sr. Kwvr Tama;. The Followiso iRTEHxaTiRO and Astonish1x0 Facts, are anions the num roua Cures oerformed by the use of Dr. Wm. Evans Medicines. Principal Office, 100 Chatham street. New York. where the Doctor may be consulted, personally or jy letter, post paid from any part of the United cones, Ac. persons requiring medicines and ad vice, must enclose a Bank Note, or Order. CERTIFICATES. More Conclusive Proofs of the extraordinary afcacy 01 ur. w m. Evans' celebrated (Jamomile and Aperient Anti-Bilious Pills, ia aleviatios afflicted mankind. Mr. Robert Cameron. 101 Bowery. Disease. Chronic Dvsentarv. or Bloodv Flax. Symptoms, unusual flatulency ia tbe bowels, se vere griping, frequent incliaatioa to go to stool. tenesmus, loss of appetite, nausea, vomitin?. fre quency of pulse, and a frequent discbarge of a peculiarly foetid matter, nixed with blood, great debility, sense of burning heat, with sa intolerable earing down of tbe pans. Mr. Cameron ia enjoying perfect health, and returned his sincere thanks for tbe extraordinary benefit ha had reeeied." . . A STOMA. Three Fmu-.' Hi- J; . T. R nkorf Monroe, Schuylkill, afflicted with the above distressing malady. Symototna. mat lanmnr. flatn. wey, disturbed rest, aervoos bead-ache, difficulty of breathing, tightness and stricture across tbe oreast disxiness, nervous iritahility aad restlessess coald not lie in a horizontal position without " sensation or impending safbcation, palpiutioa we beart, distressing cough costiveaesa, paia of I e stomaca, drowsiness, great debility . aad den tiencj of the nervous energy. Ur. R. Mao roe gave up every thought of recovery, aad dire despair on ma countenance of every person interested ais existence or happinese, till bv accident be n ,n aWic PPr aota cures effected by Ur. Wm. Evane'Medicine ia his complaint, which sauced him to nurchtM a naekara nf tu pjiu vhich resulted incompletely removing every sympvi nis aisease. lie wishes to say bis motive nr this declaration is, that those afflicted with the wme or any symptoms similar to those from which ae it happily restored, may likewise leceive the e inestimable benefit. nuvEaCoan.aiRT; Ten Feara' Standing Mrs. Hannah Browne, wife of Joseph Browne, north Ja st. near Second etreet, WillUinsbargb, arreted for the last ten years with Liver Complaint, "wro 10 neaitb tbrough the treatment ofUr bvane. Symptoms; Habitual constipation e bowels, total lose of appetite, excruciating n of tbe epigastric region, great depression of languor and 01 iter symptoms of extreme de"""7. disturbed sleep, inordinate flow of the men ? Pain in the right aide, could not lie on her left without an aggravation of the pain, urine high Twa otner symptoms indicating great de v'nt of Us aaetions of the liver. . rs,Browna was attended by thma of the first k.. l1' reoefved no Teller from their medtjua fir. Brawae procured sosae of Dr. Wm niii' inatioaa. wbioheffsetaalry her ef the abjvt distrTr; symtoat

BROOKTILLE. FRANKLIN nniTrvrv s im

ttriK wi.:.v-j. . - .... . - wtuc, wuks it is 001 essential to intimae . - JOSEPH BROWNE. City and Count v of New Vr.rW mm Joseph Browne. Williamaknrivh 1siw T.I. -J being duly sworn, did depose and say that the facts in me witnin statement, to which he suoscrioea bis name, are just and true. JOSEPH BROWNE, Hlt.tbn.aA ttflkm Rnnl BrnMrnmrnm Sworn before me this 4th day of January, 1837. PETER PINCKNEY, Com of Deeds. Another recent teat of il nh,;rauj -t r .mt - - " . . - .wawi ra. brans HediiBM. ihimM, tv. ewrs ofaasTiRA. Mr. J. M'Kenxie. 178. Htanlnn street, was afflicted with the above complaint for 10 years, which incapaciUted him at intervals, for I.M porioc 01 six years, in attending to bis business. raiorco 10 pertect health under the salutary treat won 1 i ur. wm. cvaas. The Symptom were A sense of distension and oppression after eatinr. distressins naia in tliii nit .r .l . . . . " . r - ih siomacn, nausea, impaired appetite, giddi ness, palpitation of the heart, great debility and emaciation, depression of spirits, disturbed rest, BuoMsumes a eiuous vomiting and pain in tbe right iuv nu extreme oegree or languor and raininess; any enoeavor to pursue his business causing im mediate exhaustion and weariness. . Mr. MeKenzie u daily attending to kit butinen. nu none of toe above symptoms nave occurred iiree no useq tne medicine, tie is bow a strong uu uonuj an. ne resorted to myriads or rem ediee, but they were all ineffectual. He is willing to give any information to tbe afflicted resnec ting the inestimable benefit rendered to him by the nta of ftp. am p....i -.4:.:.. - - uiiiiT.u, mcuiviira Mustraordxnary and Remarkable Cure.rs. uary llillon, -W ilhamaburgb, : corner of rourtb and North , streets, completely restored to health by the treatment of Dr. Wm. Evans. 100 uneenut street. The symptoms of the distressing case were as follows: ToUl loss of appetite, palpitation of the beart, twitching of the tendons, wi spasmodic anection of the muscles, difficulty of KsdksiwBVaMM JJ:... I . .....uB, Siiuiueaa, languor, lassitude, great depression of spirits. wiLh a fear nf am ;m.j;.n evil, a sensation of fluttering in tha nit f th stomach, irregular transient naina in difterent parts, greet emaciation, with other symptoms of wAiicmc aeoiiity.. - , The above case was prononneed hopeless by three of the most eminent ohvaiciana. mnA tk ii;!.,,; of the patient awaited by her friends, which may -j n iiayaidus wno were in at tendance. She has given her cheerful permission to publish the above facta, and will also gladly give any information to any inquiring mind. :.. . 3XARY DILLON. Dyspepsia and HTrocHoiii.r)i Tntoro. ting case Mr. William Salmon, Green street, above third. Philadelphia, afflicted for several years with the following distressing symptoms; - Sickneea at tbe stomach, head-ache, disxiness, palpitation of the heart, impaired annetite and weakness of the extremities, emaciation and general debility, pisturbed rest, a sense of pressure and weight at tbe atomach after eatins. nis-btmare. wrest mental despondency, severe flying pains in the chest , back and sides, costivenem, a dislike for society, or conversation, involuntary aighing and weeping, languor and lassitude upon the least exercise. Mr. Salmon had applied to the most eminent physicians who considered it beyond the power of medicine to restore him to health; however as his sanction had reduced him to a eery deplorable condition, and having been recommended by a relative o.' his to make a trial of Dr. Wm. Evans med icine, be with difficulty repaired to the office and procured a packare. to which, ho ss va ha is indsbted for hie restoration to life, health and friends. He le now enjoying all the blessings of health. Persons desirous of further information, will be satisfied in every particular as to this astonishing case at Dr. Wm. Evaea medicine office, 100 Chatbam at tt. if. A severe case of Piles cured at 100 Chatham at Mr. Daniel Spanning of Shrewsbury, Eden Town, new jersey, was severely afflicted with Piles for WAT W more than -ai years. Had had recourse to medi cines of almost every description, also the advise of several eminent physicians, but never found the slightest relief from any source whatsoever until be called on Ur Evans, or 100 Chatham street. N Y aad procured some medicine from him, which be found immediate relief, aad subsequently a perfect cure. - - A letter from Mr Sheldon P Gilbert to Dr Wm Evans, proprietor of the celebrated Camomile Pills: Dear S:r Had the immortal Cowper known tbe medical qualities of the Camomile plant, he, as well as thooasnds since, (besides myself) would have experienced its wonderful effects on tha nervous system. . Tbe public utility of Cowper was blirbt ed ia the bud, through tbe natural effect of his ner vous debility upon the mental powers, which made it necessary for him to seek relief benes'.h tbe ru ral shade, but the calm retreat gave hi. physical nature no repose. If some ono then bad known the secret of concentrating the medical virtues of Camomile, tbe discoverer would have been immortalized with poetic seal as tbe benefactor of suffering men. 1 be above lines ware prompted from the effec I have experienced from Dr. Wm. Evans' Camo mil Pills. Yours, with esteem, SHELDON G. GILBERT. Durham, Greea county, NY. . Price 75 ceaU a nackam. which conUioa a bot tle of Camomile Pills aad a box of Aperient Pills. ut trm Evans tJamomile and Family Aperient riiia lor sale at hie principal ofnee. 100 ijaaUam st NY. . Principal fFeetena Office. 4? Green st Louisville. Ky, where Dr Evaaa celebrated medicine can be had wholesale aad retail, and southern aad western agents can be supplied. Jaotiob. Dt Wm Evans will not be rospoaihle for tbe reauineneea of the Casaomite Pills ualeea they era bought, of Jr Evaaa advettis agents. There w one agent ia every county pe Bay of none but areata, as many drarvests who are otherwise respectable, have imposed upon tbe invalid by celling a spurious article. FTbotesale druggists are not Dr. Evaaa' agents; therefore respectable dealers in the country ought not to got a spurioue article of them, but write for tha genu ine u tuu laatbam street, x , where tbe ruia are manufactured and told wholesale. General ITeetern Office, 47 Green at Louisville, Kyt Principal office of tha United States. 109. Chat. ban st New York. ' ." - - ' - Caotiom! Kntertd aecordinrlo act fOmsr to mid impoMttimn econarreOers, be we that the label tmprteue that it ha been entered, and be Mrswise particular m pnrckarinrJrom the JUraCseeiisteTAgeaU. ftOSee ether advert isemenu ia this - paper.

OCR COUNTRY OCR COUNTRY'S INTEREST AMD OUR

, , g,, isiq, VOI,.V,l,.We.at

POLITICAL. SENATOR PRESTON. There was last week, on Tuesday, an im mense ratherine of (ha Harrison, at Elizabeth town, New Jenej.who were addressed by Senator .Tallmage, Mr. Ketcham, of New York, and Senator Preston 01 cjooin ironna. Mr Preston succeeded MrKetchum, and bit appearance vrns the Mgnaiforn round of cheers that made the wc.x.n ring again, as we learn from the New "" nnitrirant y neir aiinr wa M edr Mr P. thus began . Fellow-citizens GentJtmen ofK. T.,. ej: I appeat before jou under so many disntftinfBIMa - 1 I a a .1. T8l 1 wnicn are obvious, and others I shall mention, 'that I thouM nnj uny ordinary- rirenmstanew, content myself with acknowledging, in brief but greatful ierma,mv deep sense of the kindness and cormy leaving the soil of New Jrrcffv vif limit r lieving my breast of the burden which oppres ses . i come from a recent rapid tour, nnt unaccompanied by labor. I have been up inn nAhiA - iiiiA.. - . i . . ... ..uuawn, hiiu, m me spirit of the r?" V ","u6eepeon its shores, and in Its Widn and il.sn v i i ... --- - " kcii cur o.ems of the progress, of iho iim ..j : :. -. mm.,mw ai riii- a iiai-a . . n k .1.1 I -; -.. IIKllll.uio progress, oi tbe princio lei for wluVh are conlending. Last night, too, in N. York. i eaaressed an assembly, only smaller than this because the inclemency of th afK, circumscribed it within! walls. Hence I apKrunore you worn down; and this is one if .c nisaavaniages to which I referred. I am a stranger too fGeneril -lo,;... "Wo, no, you are no stranger." I take back the word. crli.;m.f r- n . , - .... it a with energy; I am not a stranger to New Jerey . I have read you in your historv. I ham heard from the I'ids of mv own nrp,inr. t. - a J -wvetviCS TV uu stood shoulder to shoulder with yours on your nvn aA,l ofik. I i.i mm . w.., w, tllc ucroisn.anu me suRenngs of l j J ,u ,ron ine "3" mT boyhood, I Lave longed to tread th (..!. crated by so much gnllantry and endeared by so auiny associations. I nm, too, a citizen of the United States, and therefore no stranger: a Whig, and therefore jour brother. But under what circumstances do we meet! Uow shall I recur to the eallaut deeds of vnur ancestors, and reconcile your present position with the fact that scarce afield Km h.. 4rodden by the foot of Washington that not aycaroi grass out was wet with the blood oi your fathers that . Every sod beneath our feet Has been a soldier's sepulcre. How is it that the spirit of those daral.-i not roused you to unanimous onnnaitinn tn the outrages you have been made to suffer! What uid your ancestors fight for! Read the enumeration of the evils and wrones thev rose to avenge, and then ask yourselves if at. z A: ' a . i .. . uiose muicieu upon tou are lewr in mnnf or less .exasperating in character; and yet you are tame. You are excelled from thfTn.An and yet you endure. Fellow citi2ctis did 1 say! I am not your fellow-citizen. You are not citizens of the United Slates; you are not members of the great Union. You hnve been turned out of it; and a manufactory of repre sentatives has been setup at Wmhin.inn which turns out subjects as the machine turns uui icwpeiwy naits. .. f. 1 am aware that, in general, much allow, ance is to be made for what Is done at Washington, and that judgements are not hastily to be formed of pleasures there adopted; but the case with you is so flagrant ;you have been so contemptoufcly, and for base party purposes, driven out of the Union: that even I can ill suppress the indignation I feel, or accurately define the proper limit of opposition. But had it been my State instead of yours, had it been South Carolina instead of New Jen. I should have been at no loss, and, even now. i am uisposea to apply the anrunire of Lord Chatham, in reference to the American Colo nies, and say, were I a Jersevman. as 1 am a South Carolinian, while my rights as a member of this Union are violated,! would never lay down my arms, never, never, never. speak not of the arms of violence and blood, but the arms of tbe law and of tbe ballot box; and these arms you will not, I trust, lay down till jou have reconquered your position, gathered up the fragments ofyour broken seal, and knit them again together in beauty and Unity; till you have rescued your draggled flag from beneath tbe feet of the mercenaries, who have trampled on it, and borne it onward ia triumph even to the dome of the Capitol. The sympathies and heart of tbe nation are with you, and the very wrong you sufler have advanced the Whig cause. No where have I addressed any public meeting, where au allusion to the outrage upon your State did not bring forth the response, We will aid New Jersey. On, then; Whigs of New Jersey, on 1 say, but on whom ! (Several voices from the crowd exclaimed "the Tories.": Aye, aye, tbe Tories! the Tories! ' Now, as in the days of 76, the opposite of Whig is Tory, and it is the Tories you are to overthrow as your fathers did. Be earnest, then, in the contest. You have gallant leaders, and brother soldiers. There is Harry of the West, the annunciation of this name was ranturonslv cheered, the gallant, magnanimous Harry oft ute v esi, wearing nis oosom to every shall, intercepting from his party every poisoned arrow, scarred all over with wounds, received

uiaiiiy who wnicn i nave been welcomed by ft?U;i But,ih5re U wmelhing in my heart that 1 would fain sneak outiand whirh rrkM.

COOHTRt's FRIENDS.

in defence oi his friends, and of his and thi. principles. With laurelled brow, if not with the victor's chaplet, there is he, without envv. wuuvui rcpiumg, jicitung precedence to anomer, ana spreading out to William Henry a, viiiuii, VIUI IIIUI KITS n tw me urcczc, aua claims only toe honor o serving as a soldier under him. Where shall we bnd greater disinterestedness, more elori ous magnanimity! - - - There, too. is the graver and heaw arm) array of the East, led on bv Daniel Vh.i., r.i.! ' . . . . nms name again orougnt rorth loud cheering.! uic MMcuunion pnniaux oi old in serried order, and of overwhelming force. Thr iuo, is me empire JMare. with her gallant and eloquent ton who has this dv lii-.iuj a 1 al 1 m. . Another burst of cheering. There IS lour r !J I.i . " . . ' owu wrrviu sou eloquent son southard. inin cheers, a friendjbeloved, a statesman worthy mi pnusc, nnu wormy to lead the Whig iki nu ii i oo not now mention that name under which we all rally, it is only that I may introduce it more fitly hereafter. The cause, loo. is a holv ami Think you that any ordinary occasion ciuld have brought me from the sand banks and 111 tV. IA AWAfl wt.a ... a C9 . . 1 1. I a a vv ymm uiouuiu oarouna toaddress artew Jersey audience! It is a cause that appeals to us nil; that is second to none but the cause of God. It is the cause of the country,ofthe Constitution, of liberty. Time will not allow me to eo into an -ram. ination of thel lone, black catalorn nf which lies at the door of the Administration. huu wnicn an tneir trained bands are drilled and disciplined to defend. The battle wUI i i i ...... . oe nerce, but it will be decisive. We are-iu-ueeu, oui malitia. We are not ortranize.1 nor : j r i . . o. ------ p-iu. . vv e ognt on our own hook, not for Dread: bUt We Ueht far nur riakli c ... mcsiucs iot ine uoerty our ancestors transmM.' S.a,and for our property can we fail! They hae blighted our prospects, as though blasted bv the curse of lfMn They have touched with a paralysis every inic.wi, me yery demon ot destruction seems to preside over their councils. . Mr P. here. i some length, examined the effects of the expiriments of the Administration upon the industrrmanufoctures and mechanic arts of the country, and particularly of towns like Newark, which flourished in proportion to the general prosperity, and of which the adversity was ouly ka type of the adversity that had overtaken alt classes, both rich and poor, the manufacturer of carriages, and those who were wont to buy and ride ia them. Tbe Administration seemed to have reversed the order of Providence, which blessed tbe labor oi man, and arts as though impelled by the tci j ueuius ei desolation. Is this picture, said Mr P. .larbU .u. ded! Who is there amone von all that h-. escaped loss o suffering! (None, none, was ui cry.; jvea so, not one of you. Are there any manufacturers here! (Enough of them. for they have nothing to do at their factories.) Aye! enough, indeed; and your democratic friends, who profess so much affection for the hard-handed workman, are determined to giveyott lime enough to get your hands soft Are there laborers here ! Their eome. They have heretofore felt lightly the evils or mis-government, and they have too long supported those who, in striking at the employers, affected to be influenl hr MMMt for the poor laborer. But now the principle of the party is that the wages are too high, that the laborer must be made toworkcheapeiyind that the country can only prosper when t he rates of labor assimilate with those of ol der nations. But where, say we, is the example by which we are to be regulated, to what country do you design to point us for a model. Whv, say my colleague and Mr Walker of Missis sippi, to Cuba! Aye, to Cuba, the land oil tne inquisition and bt cents a day for labor. Unce liken our condition to that of Cuba, and the time may soon come when we shall be as productive as that J favored island of bloodhounds. If however, we decline the example of Cuba, and insist with nur Anglo-Saxon pattialit.es, that England, the land of our fia. then, of liberty, of law, and of Commere, affords better models and examples, thev exclaim,See these British Whigs! they want npe onion (.unions and precedents ana the, as an alternative, thev point us to China, as a hard-money cheap-labor country a ss country, indeed, where wages are 4 cts. a day. Bt this is Jan alternative which America will not be driven to; and this will be shown next November. No Presidential election has heretofore been gone into with wheat at SO tents a bushel, and cotton at 6 cents; and the disaster of the tiroes will re-act against those whose folly or whose wickedness has produced them. What a contrast, indeed. doea our position now present, with that beior us reign or expeuments began! Then, all was smiling, happy, prosperous industry. Now, care and suffering, and, bagard want. The stately palm-tree is withering, its branches dying, and its trunk blasted. We.feel that the worm is gnawing at its root, and that it must soon perish. You must iddIi ih. dy while there is yet time, dig tbe worm up, and crash it beneath your feet. -What, fellow-citizens, is the coo test! It is between the peonle and the aficc hoUenJed on by the chief oi2ceholdert, at Washingtcai a Clothed, fod. and tninel noma of iMl ries, with fortresses all through the land on i the sen-board in the shape ef Custom Houses,

.n2 ..I...-. :u,lu mcumnents ana. --.If la.ll .. . ""--"cull 1S-.:-,...;..ujprowiin. KhaaU seekinw libie evil one of old, whom thev ma. a.. " wnnm wwmma m j K J J wv.MVt, Chief Snoiler at V L: . "J the Urines are openly proclaimed, they fight for plunder, they fed no distress, LrxJZ . r , "-amogion, whose dorr- - They have monerlenouekl f-iu-th.M1.hta,. a-.''.." . I j a i . B uuoc gooo money, ted out to them quarterly-drawn frot TMaw i-L. r. a . .aw. couna m -J v i wi ii II Ulll Treasury, where it ia i . . frofti the i j. . i""";i "ner uavint? been first drawn from tonr umr.i s Their pockets are round and full, while are shrunk and lean ant'i:ni. i 3 . ,. . . " " Miitc ucea liter. 0T believe they, therefore, of the Ji.fr-.. IllZ prevails in the land. If the V.Z " one of them, tliat the price of hi, pnJTuce hardly repays the cost of orodnrfmn. u Z can only get half price, indeed, for his wheaT, uas pampereanireling replieshat such thinM win happen, and trust be Bllhm.tiail fa... ' admonishes him, that resignation is becoming to all mortals. But, if the farmer continue?, and asks his comforter if hi, ,a.ar, a rcdtleci in proportion to the fall of HGforbidhis repfo .... c o.m.nI9neo; it barely supports me now. And yet he can get twice a. much for his moaey as before. It i, easy enough, therefore, for him to bear the aflictiona f 3,community, and natural enough that h e should sustain a policy which fr.atches the dry crust from the hungry Hps of the laborer. .,iM ii,. it may feed the children of votir m,re aL Crat with pound cake. Well indeed mar lhresident, in his marble oataro. Afflict Isf Wiiel. T". "JS? wdl PM "Imj, nn e behold that Government n.I ;i. fl?, growing richer, while each of us is growiae poorer-their riches are derived from the op. pressionofthe people. They plunder, thit VZ!nH? hTe Um! "xr dispense in briber. VVhile you see your substance watting away, this Administration has receive.1 n,l . ' dered some 130 millions of dollars. This e normous sum has been sweated out of the blood of the hard hands of the country, to be lavished upon mercenaries, oaraaiiea m.j,.. about the palace. Thirty nine millions aonuny are paid to those who are waging this war against us. and who rt V -ai i and all of us. It is drawn from a soil already exhausted, and all for the benefit of a part on ly, and not 6f the whole. Our condition is worse than thai of the Israelites in the desret. ur wnea k raioeo manna and quailsUl could equally holdout their platters. But when the manna of Government falls here, it en. not into your platters. uo any or you catch a quail, or a flake of this manna! Oh! no. Or, if perchance a portion, however small, should fall to one of you, the officer through Whose criminal tnfi. delity such a boon should be vouchsafed to a vvnig wno was detected in allowing one of the proscribed to taste of this Government manna, would immediately be reported to his Chief, and handed over for trial for the crime of dealing with a Whig! ar.r. akin il was impossible, without n fee ingof burniug shame and indignation, to vert to this condition of things, or to reflect that such a coonlty as this should be thus dishonored under the Government of a popinjay, -" who had done nothiar. thought nofl,;n. ed nothing, for its benefit or renown. Some nft m7 excused to n gallant old soldier like Jackson; and even oppression theu have unu sometning reoeemmg; but, !o be wormed to death! Pshaw! It was not possible to think with patience of this great country's being trodden under foot by such men as Tan Buren, and Kendall, and Blair a corrupt Trio that makes the heart sick. The Hon. Senator from New York Us told you he was once a supporter of this Administration, and that ho felt called upon at an early period to denounce the mischiefs of their course, and how was he listened to! Mr. Van Buren heeded not, and resented tbe warnings of such a counsellor as JC P. 7afitarfge, and tingling his bell, forthwith the kitchen counsellors appeared, and he said to them pileously, "See what Mr. Tallmadge bay done,1! and Kendall replied, he would mark him and Blair said he would turn the waste-pipe of the kitchen on him, and smother him with filtb. Gentlemen, against all this we must act vigorously,we must act offensively. We have a cause and candidate that needs no . defence. Abandon therefore the defensive, and assault,assault continually. Assault them at all times, in all places. Press on ward you may gain little, but little by little you will gained what you gain you will. hold. Assault Mr. Van Buren, assault Kendall, assault Mr. Buchanan, assault the .- o&ceholders, (a voice from the crowd said, "and Garret WalL") Aye, assaalt Mr Wall if 1 may be permitted to My to you. (He is too insignificant said an another.) No, ho, gentleman; no one, nothing in such a cause is too insignificent. It is not the tempest that destroy the lofty tree, but tbe insect gnawing at it root. It is not I be flood . nor the 1 earth quake that desolates tbe wheat field, but the -saiUfw and the rust. lib at ivror to ascribe great cxBseuecee to grexj; entries, a fittte spewili kiat.Ua arby c;C?aUoo, and

tee menoest iterwtxt therefore the least powerfeti tbereCaja I say, act on the offensive, and aaaavajMUlt, assault. And thea gentlemen, as to n oomparisoa