Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 11, Number 10, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 August 1851 — Page 4
INDIANA STATE SENTINEL.
The Bloomer. The saucy mud may ton ber head. When the ber butle hitches oa; Be nine to praie ta artless lay. The graceful girl with breechea ob. The petticoat no more shall float Oa limbs whose shape bewitches one; But in its place, with modest (race. Those limbs shall hold the oreeches ob. The bucks and beaua tarn np their ose. At cosily robes with patches on; But goodness me! what if they see Ssch beauty spot the breeches on. Ye muslin dresses, white and thin, With fairy finger'J stitches on, 1 fear your day haa passed away Since woman put the breeches on. Ah! weH-a day, the Bard may aay. Shall one bestow his kisses oa, A shameless maid who's al afraid To put a pair of breeches on! She'll make him feel from he ad to heel. Whatever else ha hitches on, Be has no right, by day or nipbt. To put a pair of breeches on! We always see the graces three Without a rag the witches oa. But O! Sal Zooks, how would It look Should each one put the breeches on' When woman'a wit is stirred bit. The first reform she pitches en. Is how she may, with least delay, Juat draw a pair of breeches on! Knirktriioeitr. From the New Orleans Delta. One Glass too Much or the Wife's NightCap. Mr. , who docsn t live more than a mile Irom the post office in this city, met some ' Northern friends with Southern principles' lhe other evening, ' and in extending to them the hospitalities of the j Crescent City,' visited so many of our princely saloons and ' marble halls,' imbibiuir spiritual consoUtion as thev journeyed, that when he left them at their hotel at the midnight hour, be felt, decidedly felt, ... ... ..a.. m a a f I that be had 'a brick in his hat.' Now, lie has a wile, an amiable, accomplished and beautiful lady, who loves him devoutly, and finds but one fault with him. That is his too frequent visit to the places where those 'bricks' are obtained.' After leaving his friends, Mr. paused a moment, took his bearings, and having shaped a course, on the principle that continual angles meet, made sail for home. In due course of time he arrived there, and was not very much astonished, but rather frightened to find his worthy lady sitting up for him. She always does. She smiled when he came in. That also, she always does. " How are you, dear E." she said "you staid out so late, that f feared vou had taken sick." "Hie ain't sick wife b-but don't you th-think ! W I I'm I'm a little t-tight?" Amy hut that is noth- - v vr. i ill j' i uu j 3 i J ing you have so many friends, o you say, you must join them in a glass once in a while!" " Wife, you're too good th-the truth is, I'm d d d-drunk!"" "Ob, no, indeed, my dear I'm sure that even another glass would 'nt hurt you. Now suppose you take a glass of Scotch ale wilh me, just as a nightcap, dear!" " You are too kind my d-dcar, by half; I know I'm d-drunk!" "Oh nt) only a julep too much love that's all!" 1 V 1 r l . ctifT 'nn " I CS JUICpa .lIC .1131CI 3 II in IX l. I' I j nmmm . " Well take a glass of ale at any rate it can I..,-. . I I , . .. I .-..tic.. ' uuii j , ucar, l .tili im i i iii. The ladv hattnncri to onen a buttle, ami as she placed two tumblers before her on the sideboard, she . mm m . i i t I ,1 ! put in one a very powerful emetic. Filling the glasses with the foaming ale, she banded one to her husband. Suspicion came cloudily upon Iii-, mind. She never before had been so kind when he was drunk. He looked at the glass, raised it to his lips, then hesitated. " Dear, w-won't you just taste mine, to make it sweet sweeter! " said he. "Certainly, love!" replied lhe' lady, taking a mouthful, which she was careful not to swallow. Suspicion vanished, and so did the ale, emetic and all, down the throat of the satisfied husband. After spitting out the taste, the lady finished her glass, but seemed in no hurry to retire. She fixed a foot-tub of water before an easy chair, as if she intended to bathe her beautiful little feet therein. But small as were those feet, there was not water enough in the tub to cover them. The husband bejran to feel, and he wanted to retire. " Wait only a few minutes, dear," said his loving spouse; "I want to read the news in this afternoon's Delta. I found it in your pocket." A few minutes more elapsed, and then and Uien oh ye rods and Dan o' the lake, what a time! The husband was placed in the easy chair. He began lo understand why the tub was there; he soon learned what ailed him. Suffice it to say, that when he arose from that chair, the 'brick' hail left his hat. It hasn't been there since. He says he'll never drink another julep; he cant' bear Scotch ale, but he is death on lemonade! He loves his wife betler than ever. Reader, this is a truthful story. Profit by its moral. Steadiness or Purpose. 1. It overcomes difficulties. Not with a rush and a shout, but one by one. They melt away betöre its incessant pressure, as icebergs benealh the steady radiance of the sun. 2. It gives one the strength of a happy conscience. A weather-cock of a man, whiffling- about wilh every breeze, cannot have true quietness of mir.d. Selfdissatisfaction worries and annoys him. Rut a cheerful vijror end energy grows out of an intelligent and unvacillating purpose. 3. It gives dicrnily and honor to character. Men cannot nut admire him that inarches steadily on through suiuhine and shade, calm and storm, smiles and frowns, glad of favor, but pressing on without it, thankful lor aid, but fixed on advancing al all events. uen men cut out lor themselves a cannot but be seen and honored. rj I a . .a character which 4. It gives success. In any enlerpri.se lhat is not downright madness, such a man must succeed. He has the chief element of a triumph over every difO culty, and if he is not an idiot he will do something in the world. He will not reach his ends M a leap. But be will reach them He moves not lapidly, but surely. When you want to lind him, by and by, you will know where to look at the topmost rounds of the ladder of success, and you will tint! him about there somewhere. Traveller. Measukikg Music by the Ream. The editor of the Brownsville Free Press, in speaking of the neatness and beauty ol the new I'resbyleria:. . htirch in that place, says: " There is connected with the church an excellent A m quire. It re-quires no ghost to tell us tliat the editor must hkxrt bad fools-cap "in his mind's eye" when lie wrote that paragraph. fA rich bachelor of New Jersey lately died, leaving by will several legacies, of from ten to twenty-five thousand dollars each, to ladies whom he had addressed, but who had rejected him. He said they had afterwards grown to be so ugly that he could not be sufficiently grateful. fjfIn England, Scotland, and Wales, there is but one voter to every seventeen inhabitants; in Ireland, to eighty. If you would look "aproce" in your old age, dtal " pine" in your youth (& Interest speaks all languages, and acts parts, even thai of disinterestedness. all 'If the harvest of a sinarle vr ah.M r.:i l 1 l. " .1 - . - a nwij ub wmasm tmattmn race would perish. f-Forty -five pounds of salt are "unieintd in dftsl poSMb of water of the Dead Sea. 05TThere tr moments when tise hesrt from sleep to feel itself alone in the dark. wakens
From the Illustrated New York News. What I hare seen in London. BT OUB TRAVELLING BDITOB. You have heard of begears boarding-houses in London, Let us enter one of them and note what occurs. The common room in which meals are taken,
ire lauen, The floor is about twenty or twenty -two teer by six is paved with broken stone and brickbats. A long narrow table almost touches the extremities of the room, and along each side, runs a wooden bench - - vz - . , roughly constructed, which i the only seat the place hained to the ta- ; affords. The knives and forks are ble. Strange implements they are, and a thief, one would think, must be reduced to shifts indeed, if m a a a a . . . a iney couiu oner mm a temptation. Aimuai ever- ; Almost every lorn nas lost one Ol us prongs, anu every kihic ms ; been notched and otherwise abused. The plaster has mostly fallen from the walls, the very laths are cut away, and the naked bricks and rude masonry are exposed. The ceiling is blackened with tobacco smoke of years, ascending every night from over an hundred pipes. The filth that is accumlated is seldom cleared away, but is swept into heaps in the corners, and remains there for weeks. A stench pervades the place, and a horrible moisture settles upon the walls. This room every night has the appearance of a market place, where beggars vend, and where beggars arc the purchasers. A dim light is suspended from the roof. The daily contributions of the charitable, in articles of food and clothing, are here disposed of: what one has, another lacks. Bread is at a discount, and meat is at a premium. Old coats, old boots and shoes, old hats and old gowns, are freely bartered for tobacco and gin. Old women from neighboring rag and clothes shops attentl to buy, and candle makers send their agents to collect mutton fat. A fiddler one of themselves paid for his services in tobacco and spirits, strikes up his merry music; dancing commenct s, and goes on till midnight, and sometime far into the morning. Under the sun or moon, save in such lodging-houses, such dancing and such dancers were never seen. Those who during the day have been lame, blind or paralysed, jig in turn, and shake their legs unto the jocund tunc, and where is there a blither party? I here may be aching hearts in May r air, or nelgrave Square, but here the rollicking god makes all his creatures happy. Burns has pictured the scene in his "Jolly Beggars," and he is the laureate of the night. Would vou know what kind of dormitories these people inhabit, come with me, and we will enter one, which will serve as a specimen of lhe rest l . i si t aaa f TM. Mind how you ascend the nckctty stairca;e The atmosphere is intolerably foul, and you i, confinement in such a den would cause your death. That the inhalations of such poisonous vapors as are constantly reeking from the floor, must matenall I tend to shorten life, there can be no dispute. Wei these are the beds. Heaps of straw, matted with long service, each with one sheet that is never washed, but, as you see, is almost as black as the hat which is on your head and a filthily foul rug, which serves as coverlid. The sleepers have no other covering in summer or winter. These beds change their occupants, perhaps, every night, for a beggar seldom sleeps two consecutive nights in the same place. Do not approach too near them, for they are alive with loathsome vermin 4 avta How many sleep in this room, at a time? There are twenty-five beds in a room, thirty feet by fourteen, and in each bed two, anl sometimes three are placed. When the landlord is doing a good business, he puis three lodgers in every bed. Seventy-five sleepers in that confined space! For such accommodations each ln'.gcr pays six cents per night, always in advance. I A this is quite a respectable lodging-house. There are four cent lodging-houses, with accommodations not near as good, where there is only straw, without ai.y covering, through all the seasons. And there are even three cent houses, where there is no straw, even, but only bare boards, rotting beneath a crustation oi curt ami mm, which is never washed oil. tr These are professed beggars, and although their sutlerings are at times great, they must not be classed with lhe ileservinsr ooor. You will see the latter lin I 1 I . .1 1 W 1 gering at ntgiit at me aoors 01 woruiiouses. 1 nave seen some two hundred of them, on a winter s evening, when the frost has sharply bound up lhe lakes in the parks and the fountains in Trafalgar Square, shivering in semi-nudity, on the bare and bitter pavement, waiting for admission. The houses of the rich, where lap-dogs were fed on hot ami savoury steaks, or on dantier poultry, were standing around, and the heavens were as brass to the wails of the j wretched crowd. I have fairly staggered at such . sights. I remember that on one occasion, a man 1 dropped dead in the street where I was, while on his way to the workhouse, and it was proved, on enquiry, that he fell from exhaustion, being starved to death. They sit antl lie before the workhouses, at such times, huddled almost upon one another, and forming such groups of hungry, squalid and degraded hnmanity as are not seen elsewhere by the Sun wherever any dialect of the old Saxon tongue is spoken. Old and vounrr, men, women, children, and i oabies, grovel on those bleak stones, till the stones I themselves seem hard-hearted for affording them j such deadly rest. Of the number that apply for adI mission to be turned out again the next morning ! perhaps one-half will be rejected, who must shelter themselves under Üie dry arches of the bridges, or creep into hidden doorways, up narrow alt vs, where the police are not likely to find them; if they were lounu, iney would be seized and taken uelore a magistrate to be punished for being homeless and without food. Many of them do not dread this punishment, but will seek to descrva it by more criminal conditions than enforced indigence, and helpless hunger. They will break street lamps and tradesmen's windows to gel a month's imprisonment, with food and rest and shelter for that period. Others, and the majority, have a prouder spirit. They will escape a prison by the help of God. Be the crime of starvation not theirs, but society's; they will make a clean end of it. Their number is very great. The re are fifty thousand of them, it is said, in London, who rise every morning without knowing where to procure a breakfast. God be wilh them. In the streets of London, I have seen women and children contending for Ihe possession of a bone thrown Irom the slash ot the kennel. I have seen a. . htlVS flr ,t and irnUo oa- rdl.rr lrr u r-rr.-t nf krn.l ,lr.,,, . i... .......... ... t i . . i .L.ki.. " a-rvan ; i i i n s- niv as a . a let V i i i . i i i t a i - i - i of this desperate poverty, led thither by children who have clamored at niv side for alms, and found such scenes as words arc inadequate to i have seen the living unable to rise, in tl express. 1 the same bed WU the dying and the dead I have known an instance where a ltvintc man, in stout, stronjr health. bating only the exhausting effects of privation anil sorrow, has been compelled to seek repose on the straw where lay the body of his dead wife, his chil dren occupying the floor, and there beinrr in Hip room neither chair in which he could seat himself, . fc - B nor tahlc on which he could stretch himself lor rest I have seen an infant crawl for nourishment to its dead mother's breast, and there was not in all the house the value of a cent to buy it food. I have seen a wife, following her husband tc the grave, drop in the road and die before medical assistance coiihi be procured. A post mortem examination proved that she died from hunger. Let no one say that there are charitable asvlums enough in London to supply all needs: there are not; or if there are, their doors er.i 1 appeal to all I V 1 - . .... . Knglishmcn who know anything about the workings I sT a I . y r a t r a of the Poor Law System in their country, whether I do not record the truth are closed in three cases out of five against the applicant. Charity in London is suspicious, and its reserve is chilling to the deserving poor, who are usually too proud to betrav uieir suuerings 10 strangers, or too mottest to solicit . alms with an open hand. They strive as long as they are able their history, if duly recorded, would swell the roll of martyrs. Foa the Amir as Colohies. The Colonization Society's bark Liberia Packet claared at this port to-day for the Maryland Colony in Africa. She had a full car- . go, and also the largest number of passengers she has , yet transported more offering than she could accommodate. A large party of emigrants arrived in the ' steamer from Norfolk this morning, who had engaged ; passage in the Liberia Packet. Among those who go out in her are Thomas Fuller and Benjamin Jenifer, two j colored ministers of lh Gospel from I orcbeater county, Md. Their object in visitint; Africa is to make an ex ploration of the country, and to secure the necessary arrangements for the reception of their families and friends, I for whom they intend returning in the fall. The Cambridge Democrat says that should their report prove fa vorable, enough free blaeka will emigrate from that oeigbtkorhood to (bond a colony. Baltimort Pat. UT Col. Powell, the Democratic candidate for Governor in Kentucky, is still confined to his room at Princeton. It is feared that he will not be able to get about again before the election.
The Democratic Party Its Position and Duty. The Democracy throughout the length and breadth of the Union, in their State, county, and town Cather
ine have now with ane voice as a party, expressed , their approval of the adoption of the compromise measures by the last Congress, and in s'rone terms indicat,.j a disposition to stand by them i i the political con- ' gci to COme, as by the most sacred interests of the
American Union. This powerful and united movement j whether it came under the treaty, or did not come under on the part of our Democratic statesmen and the Demo. j the treaty or whether it was supported by rightful or cratic massea, in the face of the popular cry and the j wrongful evidence. On these points we express no opinnopular current at both ends of the confederacy, is chai-i ion. We have not had acccass to any of the testimony
acteristic of the Democracy, and will surely meet its ' reward, l ime alter time, since tne adoption 01 tue Constitution, has the Republican party thus stepped suddenly forward into a decided position upon some new anJ 6ojMvA quc,tioo aml by main force maintained its rounj unti lhe mass 0f Bi parties were obliged to ! concede the wisdom, propriety, and patriotism ol its course. All men and all parties must honor our men j and our party for this promptness in its patriotism and believe that this characteristic Icaturc in its policy will account in a great measure for its success in every important crisis, and for the uni y. harmony, and strength of its national organization to-day. The obligations to which the party has time and time again pledged itself in National Convention at Baltimore, has impelled it to its present decided position. There has been crumbling nt the North, and open re bcllion at the South, but the masses of the Democracy j have yielded to a spirit of loyalty for their well-defined political creed, cast oft the armor ol opposition, and now . aa - i 1 1 stand prepared to meet their old compeers their fellow :
soldiers in hundreds of hard fought battles on the old sequent developments show, he was largely interested camp ground, and around the old council fires at Balti- in claims before the commissioner appointed to adjudimore. This is riuht politic patriotic. The " sober j cate the claims ol" American citizens ugainst the repub second thonght " has always brought the people to their j lie of Mexico, whi jh our government had, by UM treaty senses, and a close pursuit of the ancient landmarks of of Guadalupe Hidalgo, assumed to the amount of three
the republican organization has carried them through every difficulty, and brought all the turmoils and pains of politics to a happy issue. And those not of is and not for ns in this crisis, are acainst us. If their nerves have failed them in a time of trial if imaginary conscientious scruples have led them away after strange bed fellows and si ranne sods let the lines be drawn and the boundaries be well defined. Oil and watei will not mix. and adultery in any phase is an abomination. Names may be identical, for bodies of men as well as individual persons may steal the property of others; and organization may be identical, for the spies of the enemy may steal under the shadow of our banner in virtue of a thousand pretences; but nnity, safety, and success depend upon something more than identity of nime and organization. The riffht arm of our partv is its harmony in principle, interest, and pnrpoe. Such harmony is better than numbers better than gold; it is in itself impregnable strencth. Cut off and cast out, then, tha elements warring against ns around our own camp-fires. Let the party stand on its own ground, pure and nndefiled in its ancient profeosion and faith. Let the paths of sectional men and union men le apart. They in their leprosy survive only beneath the genial influence of onr shitde. Their power to injure lies only in their proximity to us, and onr power to triumph is ns sfjrfjfcf dependent on entire and permanent divorce from all association with them. Kenothaw Democrat. From the New York Journa' of Commerce. Abuse of Witnesses. There is probably no evil connected with the administration of law in our criminal courts which calls more loudly for redress than the severity and injustice visited upon the heads of innocent persons who are detained as witn sses: Our Grand Jury have several times called attention to the subject, but no measure of relief has yet been adopted. Men who are innocent of any fault hut that of having been involuntarily spectators of other men's crimes, are herded together in our prisons with common felons, living on the same fate, occupying similar cells, and in many cases suffering far more than those who arc to he brought to justice by their testimony. In stances are not rare where strangers, visiting the city tinon iii 'nill. have bsX-n seize.! upon by the police, be- . cause they happened to ue passing at the moment where some scene ol violence was enacted, and not being able lo give bail for their apnearanoe at Court as witnesses. have Iteen harried off to the lock up, there to languish in
solitude or foul society until the rJal culprits could be foVl' W"'S lawyers employed at such enormous outbrought to trial. X . l.was not 'or superior ability for the superior
It would be well, now that public attention has, by the action of the Grand Jury, been turned to this suhject, if the whole system of abuse of witnesses, now in vogue, could lie essentially modified. A person is dragged to Court against his will, to secure th punishment of a frequently, to give testimony - J n . J criminal, or perhaps, more in a civil suit. It would be natural to suppose that one who had thus been compelled at considerable personal inconvenience, to attend to a duty so onerous, would be , treated with at least ordinary civility am! respect. But this is not generally the case. After being sworn to tell test truth he is beset by several sharp practitioners who have made this a study, ami who use the most despotic 1 etlbrts to liefog his intellect, to confound his ideas, to perplex his memory, and, if possible to betray him into j unintentional error. If in such hands he becomes so worried as to utter seeming contradictions, he is lashed with- : out mercy as a perjurer. Or if, after spending all their impudence upon him after hrowlieating and torturing him to their hearts content the lawyers are unable to , piiz.lc him, and he still adheres to Iiis simple story matk the seeming aMllfflUtf with which he is asniled it iu ftcm nil in T ma advocate's anrmnent. How his motives are impeached, his character impeached O: blackened, his mot 0lt mend feelings ridiculed, until he seems a monster too rile to be believed.' We have known some estimable men of sensitive minds who have not recovered for weeks from an attack of this sort, made by a skillful speaker, without a shadow of excuse for it, save in his anxiety to sustain a sinking cause. If any one thitiks this picture overdrawn, lei him visit for a dav almost any one of our trial courts. i There are one or two where the judges occasionally interpose in favor of a respectable witness, but in most of them the lawyers hava free license to utter the most scandalous abuse withont cheek or hindrance. All this seems to ns to be wrong in principle, and productive of serious evil in practice. It heightens the difficulty 0f procuring the attendance of respect thle witnesses, as lew are willing to submit to such wholesale abuse. It lessens.the dignity of the judiciary, and tends to impair the force of any rebuke administered to wrong doini;, by bringing the innocent and guilty alike into condemnation. Plainly Statep. If to surrender fugitives from Inhnr is wrong, says the Detroit Free Press, it is the fault of the Constitution. We contend, in all faiiness, that the manner of surrender is a point of little consequence; tho juestion recurs, are you willing to do so on any conditions? The Constitution says you shall. Will you abide by its covenants; your covenants, for not a citizen exists who may deposit his vote in the ballot box who I ; I lOl a pfiriV 10 UIOSC COVenftntSf VY I vou lulhl them? That is, after all, tha only question. is, alter all, tha onlv question. Wo care not in what shape the law is framed, so that the actual covenants you nave entered into may lie fulfilled. We care not a rig for its name, but only for the fulfilment of the contract. The question of slavery or no slavery is not involved the rights of parties under a solemn ac. of Union, an aet in itself invisible, are the only inattTs submitted . Pennsylvania whiffs declare as i clearlv as language can convey ideas, that so far as the ! Pary ihm State is concerned, she will set aside ibese riffhts and po into a Presidential election upon such a terrible issue The country is fore warned, and it will le its fault if it is ii it fore armed Dayton Empire. The Two Bici.f.rs. Hon. John Biglcr, who is the Democratic candidate for Governor of California, is a brother of William Biglcr, the Democratic candidate for Governor of Pennsylvania. Evening Post. It is stated, as a further coincidence, that these brothers are both printers, havinff been thrown upon their resources while very young; that they were lioth editors oi icauuiK pnH.Ts in tne same time; mat tncy notn entered upon the profession and practice of the law toge ther; have together filled important civil offices, and are now candidates of their party for the same effice in remote Stales. In spite of their political predilections, they arc worthy gentlemen, whose example should not be lost upon their y.-ung countrymen. Albany Evening Journal. The Three Cent Piecks. In a letter from Wm. L. Hodge, Esq., Acting Secretary of the Treasury, to the Postmaster General, published in the Washington Republic, it is stated, that an arrangement has been made with Messrs. Adams !c Co. by which postmasters are to lie supplied with three cent. "pieces on remitting the amount to the United States Mint, at 1 .liladelphia, which thsy may require, within reasonable limits; and that such other arrangements are made and will be made for the distribution of ihis coin as will conduce to the public convenience. I ....... .! .1 I .1 Raktocl. Tha Springfield Register says that this wretched renegade, during his stay in Illinois last winter, was prepared, if invited, to make a speech, approving the Fugitive 8lave faw, and denouncing all who opposed it as Abolition agitatora. We have no doubt of the correctness of this statement. He was there soliciting a charter for the Central Railroad Company, since organized, and, like all of his tribe, was prepared to dispose of his opinions or principles to effect his object, ana pocket the money. ETFive banks are uw fully organized under the Free Bank law. They are stylad the Iron Bank, at Irr.nton. Merchant's Bank, of Maasilon, Springfield Bank, Pickawy Connty Bank, and Charnpaion County Bank. The caput pain in tna iron nana is w,wu; o tne others $25,000 each. Toledo Blade.
From the Washington Union. Mr. CorWin The Mexican Commission Ac.
The late proceedings relative to the Gardiner claim will ultimately bring to light many things whica the people have never dreat.ied of, but of which any attentive observer in Washington during the last two years must have seen abundant indications. We do net mean to say whether the Gardiner claim was just or unjust given either before the commission or before the grand jury 01 mis city, anu it is our nrm purpose never 10 niaav charges or express opinions withoutact to support .and sustain us. Admitting that the Gardiner claim was just, and that its justness was fully proved tnen il must uc conceded that great wronn, injustice, and mortification have been inflicted on individuals, tor tnnt we wouiu feel regret. But still we must say that the Gardiner claim will lead to developments which will be of great benefit to the public, by leading to a full appreciation on the part of the people of a system of abuse and corruption which has sprung up and been almost perfected in the last two years. We make these preliminary remarks to avoid misconstruction; for it is not our design to iavestigate the justier of the Gardiner claim, but to strike at a great and growing abuse winch, it not speedily corrected, must impose heavy burdens on the people Mr. Corwin, it is well known, was a member of the Senate when the olfice of Secretary of the Treasury was tendered to him bv Mr. Fillmore. At liiatlime, ns suband a quarter millions of dollars. This fact la.iked out after Mr. Corwin went into the Treasury. When itdid leak out his friends stated, truly no doubt , that he Would not go into the Cabinet, or could not afford to go into the Cabinet, and relinquish his interests in the claims before ihe hoard ol commissioners. It appear? that his interest in those claims was appruised by A! -. John Young and a Mr. Robert Corwin (it our memory is not at fault) at $100,000. The defenders of Mr. Corwin stale that he did not receive this amount, bill that fifteen pir cent. was deducted for contingencies, and seven per cent, for cash leaving to Mr. Corwin aliout $"30,000. Report now says that this amount was for his interest in the Gardiner claim. But thai is of no cousuquence. The true point at issue is this: A Senator of the United States, a servant ol the people and paid for 1 is services try the people receives a contingent lee, valued at one hundred thousand dollars, pending before a board of commissioners appointed by the drift of his own paity, and composed, of coure, of his party friends. We need not comment on the 15 per cent, deduction. Wc throw in the 7 per cnt. deduction, also, and state the cash viluc of Mr. Corwin's interest at about eighty thousand dollars the sum which he actually recwived according to whig accounts. Now, be it remembered that no great legal abdity was required Itefore the board. It did not sit like an open court to hear arguments. The parties had to present their claims and furnish evidence to supprttliem. Ihat evidence must, Irom the necessity of the case, come chiefly from Mexico. Then we ask what was Mr. Corwin paid for? What services could he render here in Washington a memlier of the Senate? He could properly do nothing more than examine the papers furnished bim, and suggest any deficiency in the proof they set forth of a just demand under lhe treaty. Thnt was all he could rightfully do. And now we submit it to the country to say whether e ghty, or seventy, or sixty, or even ten thousand dollars is not an extravagant fee for such service? Mr. Corwin has a reputation as a speech-maker and as an advocate ; but we have never heard that he was ever esteemed as an eminent lawyer in any other respect. There are lawyers in this city of equal learning with Mr. Corwin. We meet one almost daily of ten times the research, ability, and legal lame of Mr. Corwin. Yet any one of these mn would wo have no doubt, have givun advice as to the suflicienI PJ "I lhe evidence of any claim pending before the Mex tr. an lwka a-sl t . . m aa, U A. I .4 .11..-.. . ...... I, .1 - . .1 . . ican ooara lor a tnousanü dollars in casn, demanding a higher sum as a contingent fee the increase being commensurate w ith the uncertainty of the case. "Why, then. let us ask, were these men passet! over? And why were ability did nor exist. It was not for forensic talent for there was no fiirum in which it could be heard. Why, then, antl for what purpose, were whig senators employed and paitl a Ibrtnnc in fees? There is but one answer '. lD.ese ,""": Political ltitluence over political , mentis was the thing bought and the thing sold. A I wIhit nnn. m - . .... ..- ,,.. , . . . F I r. ...... ....I U '. ' ""ii II n9 IMC l Uli l U ' 1 . . I C3UI I , .11111 ..i.ij politicians ere paid high prices. A blind man can see. and a deaf man can hear, the secret porposes of the conspirators. Political position and political infiucnee were the thins paid for. Political po.-iiion and political influence were the things sold. Disguise is useles evaasion is without avail. The manner in which Mr. Corwin has been briu'lit forward in this behalf has induced us to speak of him alone. But if there be any truth in the rumors afloat, he ia not the only memlier of the -abinet who was at first, if not to the end, interested in claims before the Mexican commission. But of this point we are not sure and therefore wc pause for more direct information. Fur the present wc have accomiilished our n irpose : which is to attract the public attention to the enormous abuses ! ana un?UaiieU corruptions which must tlow Irom a syslem wm-'u permits oiiicers ol the national legislature to sell their political influence. The svstem is rrowin" daily; it must be abated. If not, the annual expenditure will in five years reach seventy millions or more. We have noticed that some of our exchanges said, when it was believed that the claims sold by Mr. Corwin did not turn out as profitable as was expected that, in that event, Mr. Corwin would feel bound to refund. We do not pretend to know on what authority that statement was made; but il" it was true, then Mr. Corwin's sale was a mere nominal sale, and he was as much interested in the Mexican claims after he went into the treasury as liefore. Hut we must draw to a close for the ; Pr?sent- We may have further remarks to make on this point as further developeinents may justify. Oration by C'npt. Isaiah Rynders. The Old Guard of New York celebrated the Fouith at the Gem Hotel, New York. Capt. Rynders was the orator, and his discourse, which occupies three columns of the N ew York Herald, is replete with sound ideas and forcible illustrations. On the subject of slavery, the Captain held luith as follows: The habiliments of slavery are yet worn by four-fifths of the human race, of all colors, and in nearly every country on the globe. The miseries of this servile condit:on of man, without any regard to color, are not seen iu the Uni'.cd States to that extent they are in other countries. Nominally it may be abolished in other countries, hut practically it exists in the most horrid condition. As a rccognixed institution in the Southern States, it has been turned upon them before the States had an independent existence. Having grown to such m.ipni. tudc, its abolition must of necessity be the work ol time, aitled by more favorable circumstances than are at present existing. Wisdom and justice must direct the movements ihat look to its abolition. The North has nothing to do with it. The institution is local, and the State power is the only agent that can net iu the matter. In a social point of view, tnv friends, I have had some experience of the institution of Southern slavery. I have lived in the several sections of the Union, and have had an opportunity of judging ol that social sympathy and connection between tho employer and employed, capital. st and laborer, master and slave. I am satisfied that thore is more friendly feeling, more social communion, more real sympathy existing between the master and slave, than there is between the rich capitalist of our northern and eastern cilies and the laborers they employ. I firmly believe there is more social equality i . t- r r . i . r.. 1 r j talists of the Ire States seldom associate wilh the labor'ii me firmer man net ween tue latter. l lie cant ers. I 'tre is no intermingling between the rich and the , poor. They appear, in fact, to be almost distinct racca j of men and women. The rich man may meditate an I attack upon the virtue of an industrious woman, and I have social intercourse that be may accomplish his baser j purposes, or he may, if he is a candidate for some lu- ( crative office, condescend to be very sociable with a poor man, jn-f about the tims ol an election ; but lor all the nobler objects of human sympathy and common improvement, they are strangers to each other the one is master, the other is slave. Late and Important from Mexico. We have received dates from Mexico to the 7th instant. The British Minister has advised the Mexican Government that decisive measures would probably be taken at once if the claims of English creditors were not settled before the next packet sailed. The French and Spanish Ministers said their Government would do likewise. The Danish brig Proper, with the Prussian Minister on board, was wrecked at Vera Cruz. All the paasen. gara were saved. Revolutions were starting up in all quarters of Mexico. A'. Y. Journal of Commerce. CoLoasn Emigration to Jamaca The Kingston j Journal, of the 11th, mentions the arrival there of many j colored emigrants from the States. It ia not stated for j what purpose, but we believe they have something to i uo witn couon cultivation, some gentlemen having reeently arrived from Georeia to investigate the eanabilie .c -i m j i ue 01 mo son lor mat nroauction. , LLr The editor of the Indianapolia Journal, feeling how unstable are all earthlv things, wants some one ; to preach him a sermon on "the intermeiT'ate state" of i the sonl alter death' Uall on Paraon Brownlow as soon 1 a the election is over Cin. Enq.
ad River and Lake Erie Railroad. SANDUSKY, TOLEDO, AND DETROIT.
SPBINGflELD AND DAYTON! CHANGE OF HOURS O N ami Aer Moivtav. April 2?. 161. snd until further notice. lHuuencer Tram will leave die Northern Depot. tprmc6;rd. at 7 o'clock, A. M . aud 1 o'clock, P. M . for Dayton, Stopping ai i HeriElere, K: Osboni. and KjieUly's. Ritariunr; will leave Daytou al 9 o'clock, A M and 3 o'clock. 15 mm P.M. The 0 o'clock, A. M.. Train, from Dayton, connects wilh Stanrlusky Train; and the 3 o'clock, IS mm. P. M . Tram, from Dayton, connects with the through Train to Detroit and Buffalo, aud also with the Xema and Cincinnati Train. Coachea run m roiiNCCUon wilh this Train to Charleston, in connecuon with lhe Columbus and Xema Railroad. Through in One Day, via Sandusky, r.nd by Steamer to TOLEDO I Passengers leaving; Dayton by the 8 o'clock. 50 min A. M.. Tr.iii, connects same evening with Steamer for Toledo; eouiiretiiij; ml Toledo with Michifrau southern Railroad, for all points in Northern Indiana and Michigan. Fare reduced From Dayton to Toledo, five ddlart. For information and Through Ticket. pleae apply at the Office in Daylou. opposite Swaynie Hotel, where Tickets can be obtained lor Toledo. Detroil. Cleveland aiai Buffalo. Morning Train, leaving Springfield at ? nVlack, passes F.uon at 7 o'clock, 20 mill Oshorn, 7 oVlock, 4S min and Kiieisly's, 8 o'clock. Returning, passe Kneisly's at 9 o'clock, 15 ram. tVborn 9 o'clock. 30 mm. and Enon. 9 o'clock, 50 min. Afternoon Tram, leaving Springfield at 1 o'elock. P. M., passes Knon al 1 o'clock, SO mm. (htboru, 1 o'clock, 45 mm and Kiteis. ly's at 2 o'clock. Returning, pnr-te neialy's. al 3 o'clock, 30 min. Oshorn, 3 o'clock, 45 mm. and Kihu at 4 o'clock. Fare from Dayton to Springfield, SO 75 Fare from Dh ton to I'rbuna. 12.) Fare from Dayton to South Charleston, 1 .25 Fare from Dayion to . -i Ljuert), 1 50 Fare from Dayton lo Belvirw, 4 25 Fare from Dayton to Sandusky City, 4.50 Fare from Davton lo Toledo, 5 no Pare from Daylou to Detroit. 5 50 Fare from Dayton to Cleveland, 5.50 Fare from Dayton to Buffalo 7.00 0Thrugh Ticket? to the above places, only obtained at die Daytou Other, mid on the Boats in retuniiur. may21-3n-w-dlaw K. F. OSHORN. Sop-rimendrnt. MITCHELL BROTHER, Wholrsa'r ami Retail Dealers iu P0MER0Y IRON. Warranted to be of a superior quality. NaiU. Steel. Springs, Axles, Anvils, Vices, Bellows. Wagon-boxes, flow. Steel and Cast Mould Hoard. Ac. Thev also keep on hand a larse variety of PARJXJR AND COOKING STOVES, Of !'" latest patterns, nnd of superior qualnv and fiiiUh. iVo. 3!ö. Mai St., IVesf Side, tkr.e Joors Mite Court, july7-r.raw CINCINNATI, O. PIPHER Sl SEICHRIST, Wholesale mid Retail Dealers iu SNUFF AND CIGAKS. North side, Washington street, opposite Stage Office, july7-wtf INDIANAPOLIS. IND PHYSOPATHIC MEDICAL COLLEGE, CXCIXXATI, OHIO. T HE Fa I and Winter session of this old Institution will com mence in i lie New Edifice, comer Fiftn st and Weslern Kow, on Hie hrsl Monday in .November, 1S5 1 , and continue sixteen weckt, six lectures per day. Tu ki ts to the full course ?60 00. Matriculation $5 00, Graduation fee S'JO.OO. TickcU to Commercial Hospital 8-5.00. FACl'I.TY. K. H. Stociwtu. M D . Prole-.anr of Anatomy and Physiology. J. A. I'uwtii M. D., Professor of Medical and Operative Surgery. K M. PxaaiTT. M D., Professor of Chemistry and Medical Jurisprudence. H. F. Johnson, M. D., Professor of Theory and Practice o.r Medicine. Jos Brown. M. D., Professor of Botany, Materia Medina, and Pharmacy R. C. Cabter. M. D . Professor of Obstetrics mid Diseases o Women an Children. ' E. H. STOc.WF.Lt.. M D.. Demonstrator. JOS BUOWN. M. D , Deaa of the Medirnl Facnh. Cincinnati, July 10, ls51. july5-öwtv) FARMS FOR SALE. The uiuler-ijiierl will sell three farms iu Hancock county ou accommodating terms. One of I6U acres, 40 acre improved. One of lull acres. 50 acres improved. One of eO acres. 45 acre. improved. Also 240 acre of ttuirnprovrcl land. Knquire of R. Is, Walpole, Esq., at liidirtiwpoli. or the snlxeri ber at Ureen6eld, Hancock co. THOMAS D. WA1.POUE july22-lmw nlPAH TUP T7?n7't P FiiniUVKS h... inl rer-iv. C i i... .i. .. : i j-'n - .( n.,. ,t 1., eonsis-.il of the Conen ss Boot for icniiemen. tl.c Congress Gaiter for ladies the Jen "l JmA Shoe for lathe., and everv variety of Ho..., Shoe. Slippers. amUJaHer. sui.alje to sdl aes, iizes, ami conditurn. He' !.as I. received lioth Beebe'a and li.rv' itvle of New York Haw. for Sprin- wear. Thee Hau arc pron-Weil by all, as being lhe bet. nearest, and mosi faslxonable Hal worn, H. slock of silk plush, cloth, and oil cloth Cap; plain silk, fur, and w.-ol Hat. is amoua the largest ,n .he city. He is now reccvuip a lartre qumnt.iy of Straw iooU. which v!l be sold at '.eeiuni.ti n.ic. . A!o. Trunk. Tarnet Bags. ail numerous ottirr articles, " loo lotlious to mention" .1 m.ittn ta ( s,n..U t.r.tfil n.-t m.i-lr - SJ ,.,! ka An.... himself that he can sell cheaper fur cash, than iuiv one in lhe Railroad City. Call and examine for yourself, at J. F. FAIRBANKS. SlG.V OP THI Hir. ItKK BotrT, Seii.iurl Building. maris JOHN OKANE A SONS' NEW BOOK STORE. WE announce to our frieisds, to Ifc .ksellors. Country Merchants, Teacher, Professional Gentlemen, nnrl ImmL Iniyers l' 1 1 ' ' i ' i that we have opened in India. inpo! s. Marion county, Indiana, a new Book Store. We are prrrwrt-d ut any tune lo supply the trade, in large or small quantities, with an entire new and fresii slock of Rxiks and Stationery. We keep always on limitl a larce ami complete as ortment of Miscellaneous. Theokiyk-al. 1 jiw Medical. Common School, and Classical Books; together wi1!. a tVill stock of Staple and Fancy Stationery. We are confident it would lie to the interest of Co-mtry Merchant and all others wishing lo purchase books to etc us a call. All orders thankfully received, and we assure Ühmc who send thai tkey will be filled promptly. Particular attention paid lo orders by mail or otherwise for quantities or single volumes Beeswax and Rags wanted. JOHN O'KANK V- ONS, may'klwtf s. 4 Norris Building, undrr Kid I'trllows Hall. to A CARD. Messrs. FIELD & SI.OAN take this ineSsssd of annouutiiiift to the community at large, that they are now prepared to receive orders for all kinds of Chairs having every (itoliiv, (including the Uet of power and inacl.iuerv.) liny ean and will manufacture as cheap as any establishment in the 1'nion. Hotels. Halls, Offices. Ac, furnished with a superior article of Arm-Cl.irs at prices to suit the age. All orders from a distance will meet with prompt aiteiiticu. Country dealers will le supplied at prices which will inure them a good profit. Room on Washington street, next door lo Buldle's Auction Room AH work warranted. N. B. The hiphest price will lie paitl fiw Poplnr. Walnut, aial Maple lumber, Hk-kory and Maple turning limlier. cVr julyia-wly G1 ROCERIES. V. C HA NN A & Co. offer lor sale, whole I" sale ami retail. 10 hhds eood, fair, and prime O. Sugrar; 25 bhls New Orleans and Saftar House Molasses; 75 Bags Rio Coffee; -i OOO Iba I' and Bar Lead; 40 Keij Deer ami Kentucky Kifle Powder; 50 Boxes 10 by 12 and 6 hy 10 Ola; 21. dozen I'ainietl Huckets: 15 Nests of I' -10 Imps Allspice; IS has; Pepper; 35 chests Teas; 8 boxes Starch; 7 bhls Caleraius: 'ill haps Shot; 19 kec Tobacco; 20,000 Cigars; 2,000 lb Cotton Yarn; 10 dozen leea. iters for Grocers; 25 cases Tumblers. Glass Jars, dee ; 10 hales Cotton Uatlinr;, Candle Wick, Ac: 20.000 Percussion Cap; 30 boxes Candles: 20 malls Cassia; 5 dozen Pine Wash Boards; 6 bbls Tar. 10 boxes Herring; 20 reams Paper: 2O0 I lis Indigo; 400 Ihr Madder; 800 lbs Aium; 30 IN Nutme.; 100 lbs Cloves; 300 lbs QatafSlj 1.000 lbs Bolomta Sausatres. Our terms are Cash, aud the prices bound to suit. aprra V. C HANNA St Co. (1 UN-POWDER ! GUN-POWDER ! ! -We are acents for the sale of Gun powder of the eelchmicd ' Hazard Powder Co' " manufacture, guar meed equal lo any Powder in the United Stales. WiUjoipply Cr.y dealers at reasonable rales, delivering the Powder upon short notice. We have erected a Magazine near the City limits and hall, at all times. !e fully supplied with all grade of Powder. All Powder sold hy us will lie guaranteed etjual to represent' ion, whi n otherwise, the money will be refunded. We now have in Magazine : 25 kegs Kentucky Rifle Powder, FFFa ; 20 half kegs do. do. do.; 20 quarter kec s do do. do ; 211 kegs fair Lawn Milks, FFFo , do.; 21! kegs Deer. do.; 10 kegs Austin King & Co.'s (It. ; 10 half ken dtf do.; 10 kegs Camion and Blasting, do.; Sunt nor Canister aial Sportme. do : BROWNING A MAYF.R North side, Washington Sireel, near Die Slate House. june.TO-w C1ANDLES. 25 l-.xcs summer mould candles; 25 Mxes star candles. Just n-ceived and fot sale by julyW BROWNING St MAYKEMACKERELs CODFISH, &C 3 casks codfiish; 3 casks salmon; 50 Isnxes herrine; 50 packages mackerel, No. 1, 8, and 3. in quarter half, and whole barrels, in prune order. For sale hv BROWNING & MAYER. jul29 TEAS. A large assortment of Fine Ter Hyson, Imperial, Gun Powder and Black. Young Jut received aud lor sale by ju!y20 BROWNING ft MAYER WOOL ! Wanted, 50 000 pounds of Washed Wool, of all grades, free from Burs, for winch the market rales will be paid. IN CASH. A deduction will lie made on all unwashed. Callat V. C. HANNA & CO'S. ma v 15 Sk PACKAGES No, t, fl, and 3 MACKEREI W tins dav received from the East, at 1850 catch, june4 V. c H I N N A Ar CO. rBjEAS. 90 chests aud half chest Imperial and Gunpowder. a prime article for retailing, received this dav, at jtm4 V C HANNA A CO SAmrnTES AND BRANDIES. Pure Port and Malaga Wine; V V 2 pipes Rot bell and Cogmac Brandy; Just received from Philadelphia, at V. C. HANNA ft CO. -OHEESE. 30 boxea received thi day at I w i iinin v V. C. HANNA V CO , ' " l'INDOW GLASS. -x 10 lo 12: 1-. Pittsburg city brand WW r or sale by W. W. ROBERTS, jnly2 Successor to Morrison A Allison I äw HE HEETLWOS.-2 bales ' Anchor' brand Pitubursh Sheetnur at eeuts, by Ml RPHF.Y, TEAL ft CO , Masonic Hall JulyP
GREAT VEGETABLE REMEDY t! DM. H. B. MYERS' EXTRACT OP SAKSAFA&ILLA, WILD CHERRY A5D DAKDELIOH For Purifyintf the Blood AU Disorders of the Kidneys And the cure of every disease arising from Impure Blood, Inac tivity of the absorbents, or disordered Digettioa; such aa Bilious Disease, Consumption. Dropsies, Gravel, Scrofula, Ship Fever, I.iver Complaints, Pevers, Female Complaints, Summer Complaints, Impotent y. Dyspepsia, Nervous Affections, General Debility, tfcc. This Extract is put up In large bottles containing twenty four ounces. It combine the properties of a Detergent, Diuretic and Tonic. Cures without purring, griping or sickening, and while it remove disease, cleanses, braces and strengthens lha
system. It is stronger, better and cheaper thau any other article in market a moat valuable family medicine, and a certain preventive of diaeasc, the bad effect of exposure, imprudent, or excess. PREPARED BY DR. H. B. MYER BUFFALO, H. T. For every d 'tseae trhich (At Extract professes ta cure, it contains ingredients chosen for their special adaption ta lit relief. This valuable medicinal preparation operatea aa an Alterative and Detergent, a Diuretic and Tonic, aud in proper cases as a Stomachic and ruimrnogue. It eases pain, pun urea rest, and relieves nervous affections. Generally expressed, it increases all the secretioaa aud excretions, and excites action in turn Clauds in a particular manuer. It is no simple or common "Extract of Saraaparilla," but a compound a combination ol many of the most potent vegetable remedial agent to form eack modifying the effects or the other, and increasing its beneftcia tendency, a remedy more powerful and healing in it action on the human frame, than any of them separately Kulirely vegetable, ant! formed with a basis of the beat specific Sarsapanlla, Wild Cherry ant' Dandelion it aits with tb ease of the mildes; restorative, yet produces results unreached by the most violent remedies. Possessing combined, all tb lauded virtues of the greatest cleansing medic in. H dds others, gently acting on the Kidneys, or bavins particular reletence to some internal organ thus at once eradicating the eietinguiscaie. cleansing every portion of the body, aud renovating and tefreshing the system. This Eytract acts directly and kindly upon the blood, wnicU it purifies and enriches promotes healthy secretions, restores digestion, and by its general influence favor every effort eff trf lure. It snpphc want or vital beat or nervous eneigy expel, nervona disease generally, and gives to the invalid lasting health, vigor aud sUcugtti. GKNKRAL DEBILITY AND ENTIRE PROSTKATION. Persous whose constitutions are broken down, weakened am debilitated, who have declined in mental aud nervous power lost flesh and muscular strength, and whose systems are generally diseased, cannot find a oetler or more pleasant remedy. Dr. Myers' Sarsaparille, Wild Cbeiry and Dandelion has perfexf control over the moat corrupt states ol the blood, even wheC that fluid is eutirely vitiated. CERTIFICATES OF DOCTORS. CONsl'MPTIOX. Dr. Myer is constantly receiving testimonials of the benefit rrce.v. ed from tle use ol Ins medicine; in fact, il only wauls lo be used lef satisfy any one of it healing virtues. The follow mi: leiterfiom Dr. Joiix Davis, a very respectable physician, and of large practice, speaks in the following manner: Dk Mvkk The nit die uc ordered came m hand safely 1 rnut say that the medieuie. so far as aaod, give good satisfaction. It is" my impression, ami that ol" others, that it will entirely supercede the use of Townsend's frai.. Mrs. Green, in my vicuiily, is using it. She has been tailoring under consumption for the last year, and with Ihe use of the different nostrums "f the day Even Cod Liver Oil has been ucd without any benefit: hut she does find beuent fromtha use of lhe Dandelion, Wild Cherry, aud Sarsaparilla. Truly yonra, JOHN DAVIS, M. D. Cuyahoga Fall, July 10, 1-30. From Doctor N. B Howard, of Lim, Ohio: Dr. Mvta Dear Sir: Thi is to certify that I have sold voor Extract of Dandelion, Wild Cherry, and Sarsapanlla for the last year, and it has given general satisfaction to all who have used iL N. B. HOWARD, M D. Lima, Ohio. August ISf. 1950. Frm Doctor Alfred Kcker. of Peru. Indiana: Du Mvta Dear Str: I do cenifV thai for the spare of one year, I have been acquainted wuh Ihe eflect of ynm Dandelion. Wild Cherry, mid Sarsapanlla. having sold some eighty to one hundred bottles, a al from general statement 1 find it to he the morn efficacious medicate of the kind I ever sold. A. KEISKR, M. D. Pt.ru. Indiana. July 27fA. l-'50. For sale. wlmlenlc and retail, by CRAIGHEAD A BROWNING. Agent. Indianapolis. niif-Jii-ve l or ihe Cat re of COUGHS, COLDS, HOARSENESS. BRONCHITIS, WHOOPING-COUGH. CROUP , ASTHMA and CONSUMPTION I "".) aiuni.ie It eineti) lor an usasss um ine ouiigi rMll trail aiu.ii.ir iU-me1y for all iitsvae ot (he Lüne and ! M I liroal. tia lieemiie ilie emel reliance of lhe altlieled a II is j ,hf iaMceru,ii ure known for Hie aU.vc complaints N nie t is a lwtrlul remedial ,.gc.,t , the most .lesperale ami mml lless c"? ,'- ' "l -'- " ""'' " ' ' "" meda:.i. for c,....Km coughs 1 "al u- ' ,,w ,!,t "I""1"" "f n,e" wll J tü " I wd- ll r l1 v" "I""10"4I r"m " : HiTCiic.- a. - . Jaioe .. Aycr-Sir: I have td y-nr " Cherry P. etond. in '" ' - " deepeated Broncliiii. i.ud a... saiisfi.d from its .emiet . eoiistilnl Inal it is an admirable compound lor .he rebel ' "-.I and tiroucmal dillieult.es. il my opo.mu as i ns iwI ci.aractt r can he of any service, you are al lilier.y to ue it a ou u""k P"1""KUWAHD HITCHCOCK. t.l.D, President of Amht isl College. From the M Iswdon Ijnicet:" ' Atkb's Cuebby Pectoral is one of the most valuable preparations that ha fallen under our maice. After a esrrful examination, we do not hesitate to say we have a large appret lain i ol" it snerits, ami the fastest confidence in its usefulness lor coughs and lang com plaints." Dr. Bbewsteb, of Windham Co., Conn., sends us the following testimony: Dr. J. C. Aver Dear Sir: I enclose yoo a certificate from Mrs. Catharine K. I'ady. a highly r?ieclahle lady of ihis village, wife of Mr. Kelh fatly. IVpun Sn rill. Windham Co.. Ciq.ncclieol The cure iu Iter case was very prompl. and has attracted general attention Ä W. A. BRF.WSTF.R, M D. West KiLZ.txr.LT. Ct., Sept SB. !M This mny fjrrtify that I was afflicted with a very severe cough in the winter of '?-&, which threatened lo terminate in Consumption I had tried mnnv medicine in vain, and va cured by the use of " Ayer'a Cherry Pectoral." CATHAR1NK k CADY. DIRF.CT EVIDENCE. Dr. J. C. Ayer, Iiwell Dear Sir: Feeling under obligations to you for the restoration of my health, I send you a report ot' inrrus, which you arc t liberty lo publish for the benefit of others. Lass, autumn I took a bad cold, accompanied bv a set i re cough, and made use of many medicines without ohtn.iuns; relief. I was obliged lo give up tms.nes. fietinrnlty raised hlooti. aial eou'tl get no slvep at night A friend gave me a bottle of your Chebkt Pf.ctobal. Ibe use of which I immediately commenced aecortfne in directions I have jul purchased the tilth bottle, and am nearly recovered. I now sleep well, my t ugh has ceased, and all hy the ue of your valuable inclicine. F. f TONF.. A. M ., Principal Ml. Hope Seminary. From Dr. Bryant, Druggi! and Postmaster, Chicopee Fails, Mass.: Dr. J C. Aver Dear Sir: Enclosed please fiiaj remittance for aft the Che ry Pectoral la.t sent me. I can unhesitatingly say. that no nieil.c. ne we sell give such sal if ret ion as yours does: nor have I ever seen a medic. ' which cured so many casas of Cough and l.unp Complaints. Our Physicians are using it extensively ia their practae. aud wilh the happiest eflect. Truly yours, D. M BRYANT. PRTiR! " BT i. C AYXB, CHEMIST. LOWML, SLSS. Sold in liki.ansxili hv jul24-w CRAICHF. D A BROWNING. Drupe - - rBHOSE WISHING in purchase Galling'. Pat. nt Premium" M Gram Drill, are requested to send their order immediately. The number manufactured this year is quite I imilcd. on account of its recent iutrnducliou, but will be pushed to meet order, if ',ot too lale. They may I had of the subscrilter at Indianapolis, of R. Stewart at Ma'tugan City; aial il.cn manufacture has recently been' commenced by Evan dt Morrison wf Chicago, 111., aial Beard tk Scncx of Richmond. IimI , where fanners ot Indiana aial Illinois can obtain them. The undersigned wishes to make arrangements wnlC those making Agricultural implements for ihcir inlroduct.oii ihrnugu out Indiana aial lllino . or to sell suitable uiannfactunnr districts. To litis Drill ma awarded the first (aial only) rfniir.m. a DqJoma ami medal, al the Ohio Stale Fair in Cseanber, last Wfeerevc ' it princitiies have been examined aud its working properT.es testes.' ' aial compared wilh other drills, its superior merit has been at oitec acaiiDwIctlgTu refer lo ihr t HiioSmiesmaii. lhe Wulf nt Pathfinder, lhe Summerset Post, the Massjllou News, and other newspapers of' Ohio last fall after the fair, aial after ils practical operation ia various parts of that State Also like expressions of i. . runny in the "N. Y. Tribune,"' 'Tie Sun," aud "Farmer aial Mechanic '' tjf New York on examination of the Drill at the American Institute last spring. The latter paper says: "In many respect this machine perfecdy accom, Wishes what has been aimed al by inventors of Drill machine for several years past It is so constructed that it cannot choke r clog either by the fiuilness of the grouialor seed." eve. The Patent principle of this machine admits of great variety of construe -1 1. nt Iu coulters may be set two or three times as far spart as the wheat rows are. aial iu any requisite form aial position with regard 1 to each other, ami is peculiarly adopted tolaiitrn Oats, Hariey. aial in fact, all kinds of grain or seeds iu drills and distributing the fine manures. The Drills on haial for lhe present season are of mode-rate sir, ptautiiir 5 row 9 inches apart, but the uninterrupted progress with which it can be worked, render it more speedy thau other wale machines. Price at Indianapoli 950. Communications addressed lothe undersigned will meet prompt alien' ion. jnlyl2-10w-w ROYAL MAYIIEW. "rWES AND LIQUORS.-5 half pipes Brandy; T 1 half pipe Holland Cm. 3 quarter casks Maderia Wine; 3 quarter cask Port Wine: 2 quarter cask Malaga Wine; 10 quarter cask Sweet Wine; 8 cask "Haut Santera'' White Wine 10 btils. American Brandy, 13 hMv American Gin; 3 Mils Jamaica Rum: 10 bbla. old Mononcahela. Bourbon and Rye Whisky; 20 bhl rectified Whisky; , 10 bbls. pure Spirit; 10 baskets superior Champagne Wine: S boxes "Buchanan1" Catawaba Wine: Some of lhe above Wines and Lsqnors warranted pure, for modi cal purposes. For sale al reasonable prices by juy BROtTNING & MUER WW T ESTERN RESERVE CHEESE 50 boles W R Ww 10 boxes F.ngbsh Iairy cheese, citra Jnst received lid ftH- sale by .lulySO BROWNING MAYER SOAP. 95 boxes common bar Soap, SS boxes fancy and shaving Soaps S boxea genuine old Castile Soap. For sals by BROWNING ft MAYER
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