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Guernsey Jeffersonian from Washington, Ohio • Page 2

Location:
Washington, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Stcaiusbip Important Commercial Intelligence--Ad- I i nance in the iirice of Cotton--Tfcmen-1 cn a great utimberTif wounds, and it was evident lhal HI the course- uf that dreadful nigbj, in the inids-t of that horrible durkness, a h-id occurred, of i Mieso iho in.t:k*. A a luindn'd bodies have been la- nance in theiricf of Cotton trrmen- i CI and i i are m.i dous Sales-- Itoniilc liuichcry in tin-re i we a heen a to it-iu-li. Ivjjlit i i i i i i i pensheii. The she i i i i i 11 i In the Cli.im'.irr IVers, on the 1 I i i 1'iiiKV ot re If red 10 i i die.ii! ul i i i he sai, 1 i i i i i nit in the i i i i a i cl "in, being pienicd- steamship a i a a a i Judkins, arrived at Boston on al- ternuon, the a i i i-h-ri pass Bge of She sailed Liverpool on 'be I Thf i i is i a lira com mt-rcial point ot i There been a itecnicd i i ul couquereil and in cotton. '1 he s-a'es been Iie tuid called upon the Mm dously large, the one i a say i a the higher.

i i MalerncM true, oi The corn trade exhibited an improve- a i a a Son It did not tncnt in consequence tho va- ii 0 published account: 1 nable state i weather. American stocks were improving. Money in London was plentiful, nnd the market in a healthy stale. There lias been another decline in iron, end ihe tendency was but said a those he had received were so contradictory that he had thought it his i to demand luriher information on the SUbjOCI. lie added that the Government highly dij-approved of what hid been done, and The from Algiers gives an 0 effect lo Mar- account ol the massacre ot a thousand At- abs by the French.

The i ot ihe Dahro, where the A i a had telusjc, i was the scene of this, all nr. Hi-re ihey were hemmed in, i ed, and the i a i burnl and surt'icaled in their place Uge. lit: IJtighead. The Count de the word "disapproved" a in the a i iso'-ili then added, lhal if the ex esrion not Mifficienily strocjr, he nn i a i in adding ihat he deplo ibe The conversation man of gome sixteen years! He had nothing else to offer, and positively told the gentleman she might remain with him i the debt was paid! Difficult as it would appear to be, we i believe these (acts; these are the people wh taU i the i States. Sixty liioUfand such troops, i sixty thousand Banks of England to back them, could reach the Mississippi; and yet, with a the number, they talk of taking possession ol Washington.

The above are all the items of the least i a we have been enabled to glean from our mtorman's. I' we can believe the Mexican stories, 30,000 men are to advance upon the llio Grande; but these stones must he taken, not with but pounds of allowance. We full well that many of the more influential men in Mexico would not hesitate a moment about plunging the country in a war, with or without foreign a nee, for the sake of the opportunity it would afford to slip tome of the money raised for its support into their own pockets; but whether these political gamblers are to prevail, is a question. A few weeks or months will tell the story. French papers contain i rou(1( i made upon ular? of an i i i i i i in C.ttalonia.

Some (jj lan cr a a very a i ene. nf the small round i been called ot men to army. From the O. i a Aug, I rvcws rrom Iflcxico. March of the Second i i ul i dragoons.

to i i i in a dreadful condiii-m. The Paris dates are to ihe I of ly, the great topic of i i i i been (Jui. i took up i ol the i A M. i i tor Texas from N-UcliHoches on famous appeal to the to h.st FnJay. The Chroni- the laws in force a a i ot i s.as a are 10 be a i at Loyola, M.

Rossi was sent to Home to tj.m A i de liex-ir; and we re- persuade ihe 1'ope to a Jesuits a a a more a or a i from France, and save the location could hardly be found. We ment the scandal of being obliged to would i a a good horse to see JIB! them. In this M. Rossi succeeded, ili 0 i Ciofii's band in ad- nnd all their communities are to be bro- a ride past Flores's Rancho on the ken up, ilie greater portion of order- a a and afterwards enter the old Oregon. a of the i at Washington, "Noah's we notice, predict un early and amicable set- of the Oregon question; we con less we do not see BO clearly how this liien desirable result is to be brought about.

tear it will be found impossible for i party to yield what i be required by the other. war should come from it, however, we are sure it i be no fauli of ours. Mr. Buchflnnan, our present able Sec- a of State, may be said to be the personal representative of ihe great business interests of the second State in the Union. Such interests i not be exposed to tho chances of a i if war can honorably avoided.

Mr. Buchannan's long senatorial career affords abundant evidence that he as thoroughly comprehends the right and great political inte ed 10 leave tho Kingdom, r.nd their hou- and their property disposed of. This is i i a great i over reliifious The dates from i a are lo the romantic of San Antonia. Will not be excitement among the Mex- icr.n pordcn of a i of a place i a lias stood some sieves i i last ion a a i a The Diet was in set-sum been a a in possession of the Tex- at Zurich, a i been opened i a i a r.nd their own people? We sh.t!! speech recommending peace and i for un a of their i No motion or discussion of importance i had been made. 13).

the a i a jes'crday oftheschoon- A I er ICq-niy, a a i i Irom a a The Berlin papers are of ihe 18th i a we have d.Ues Irom that city to the i i of Among her passengers Tho new religion of Range is a i i a 1 heodoie A. a one ul the Tex its way in some and i i mn Mier prisoners. He was badly woun- checks in others. Ilonge himself denies ed in the he. id at a desperate and that he is about to be married 'o a weal- a i a fight, and, alter i man) thy young lady.

Ilis admirers have pre in Mexican hospitals, has finally sentea him i a complimentary address ami a gold pen. Horrible Tragedy in Algiers. The rests of his country, involved in this Oregon question, as that he will be ready to defend them at all hazards. Indeed, we considered it a very circum stance, a a gentlemen of Mr. Buchanan's intents, purity, and ele- a i of character, and well-tried patriotism, is now at the head oi our foreign affairs.

It is a guarantee that peace i be preserved, if it he consistent with our a i a honor and paramount political i or that a war, if it should come, i be placed on such grounds as to unite in its support the patriotic sentiments ol the entire for like causes produce like effects. It a tariff on English cotton or wollen cloth reduces the price of ihe home-made article, why not a duty on foreign wool re duce the price of the domestic article? It is evidently true that it would. The reduction in the price of ibis article, then, is the legitimate effect of (be tariff, and should create no uneasiness in the minds ol the believers in the doctrine of protection; for if their theory is correct, this reduction, as also of every other arlici.e upon which a duty is exacted by government, might be as certainly calculated upon as the changes of the seasons. We are apprehensive, howevar, that the wool-growers are becoming skeptical as to the soundness of this doctrine. They find that, while their receipts during the past earJuve fallen off about Zb per lo he store have increased in ttriNHpjfPproporlion.

They find that, while the price of weollen goods has not varied essentially, they cannot obtain the old price for wool at the manufactory. They find that cotton goods of all descriptions have risen. This is conclusive evidence to them, that while the tariff has advanced ihe price of manufactured articles, it has had the contrary effect with wool; that the whig rule of 'high tariff, low prices 11 does not work both ways, and is a humbug. If we were called upon to explain the cause of the depression in the wool market at this time, we should say it is because their is evidently a large supply in the country than is needed tor immediate consumption. A scarcity, and not the tariff, was the cause of the rise last year.

One-hall of the wool used in the eastern factories is brought into the country under a duty of tbree-eighihs per merely nominal tax. And th's is the protection which our blessed tariff affords to wool-growers. (N. Standard. reached his native land in safety.

By i a i a we received no papers, a we learn that there are but last accounts fro Algiers i i i i .000 or GOO badly fed troops in the neigh gence ol one of the most atrocious and borhood ol ftlatamoras--discontented lel- diaholical cases ol massacre a ever would run away at once if they curred in the history of any age or na-- I knew where to go. Their Commander, lion. It recorded in the Gen. Garcia, received an order a short Parisian ihe 18th of June, time since to build a in the neighbor- the expedition an i veil before the grotto, hojd, i afford protection to ot'Dahara, in i i A i a had a i city. He picked out a soft From the Cincinnati Enquirer, Proscription.

The Washington Union, in the course of a reply to the charge of "proscription" made against the administration, asserts that its proscription has been by no means as extensive as the proscription by the whigs 1841, nor ihe tithe of what it would have been, if we may credit their own orators, had they again succee ded to power in 1845. The tion, 1 so much talked of, cannot have been very bloody which has left in office so large a portion of vvhigs. As an illustration of the point, it gives the removals el postmasters for the four refuge. Two of hillocks (mamttous,) where the digging was easy, and set his 0 nths ending the 30ih June 1845, as are i by a sort ot a a a en but it is slated that a ves- nearly 100 metres in breadth, i i can approach itlim three hundred ees a ver-deep ravine. This a is cal- a wr.riout being seen, and throw led ihe Cantera.

It forms one of a i bombs i tl.e fortification i doomsday, gest grottos of the Dahara, and since i i the a rifK. 'i his thins ol se- time of ihe Turks, the A a i a here found a refuge against a -The a i a on one side has two a ces, placed one a the other. On the other side there are only very a fissures. i lectiug a i for a fortress, because it happens to be easy digging, we believe to be a new i ir. i i a science.

One i i has recently a el ed by land Irom the i of Mexico to i us that the i a Col. I'ehssier up his column in in man) parts as as the i front of the large openings. A hot fire a a openly, and i the usual raised from the openings, i was by a fusilad ihe tioops, that was less effective a it would otherwise have been from the darkness ol the place. During this time the troops were busy gathering bundles of wood, ness commenced, thrown into the and heaping up stubble and otherjrubbish. Col.

Pehssier intended nothing less a to smoke and burn the thousand Arabs whom he supposed to be blocked up in these subterranean caveins. The busi- The combustibles was ravine. Fire was to them, fire was kept up i evening. This occurred on the ISth ot June. On the morning of the 10th, the Arab? ventured to come out ol the They came to hear the propositions of the Colonel.

They were made to pass thru 11 the camp, they could see the im- bombast and fanfaronade, of invading I'ex as and the United Scales at once. The a i is looked upon as one of the easiest and simplest tilings imaginable-to advance arid a i clean as they go, as far as Washington city, is deemed mere bolyday work. It would be advisable to bring able engineers along i them, as many oi the rivers between the Rio Grande and ihe Potomac are difficult lo cross, to say nothing of o(her obstacles. I he facts are, that the Mexicans look for great assistance from a i a i in a war i the United States, and perhaps with some show ol reas-on; but even i i expectation, i i in their vapora- tmg gasconade. Our i i states that General Paredes was at San I.uis Potosi when he came and had in the rieighbor- roense heaps a their destruc hood of 5,000 troops i him.

These tion, the lighted torches, tc. They re- tolerably well uniformed, and the turned to (heir cavern, there to perish horses ot the a a were in fair condi i i i wives, i i and I i i ij A a i i at Monterey, our property. The condition? made by Col. i a heard a Pareo'es was on his Pefissier were so severe a could a rcli lowards a place, lie has al- Dot lislen to them. Then the fire com a been i a a brave inenced.

It lasted the whole day from oilicer, and is said to be now more addicl- 2 o'clock, and was continued to i a ever, the night. The soldiers were kept to i detestable i by gangs, and i wns, assure a i lor amidst the heart-rending cries and sounds which arose Irom the interior. For a long time the fiie rose in a d'u We column at the two a to the cavern, but on ihe 20th only remained a mass ol a i charcoal, and all sounds from the mit-rioi had ceased. It was decided the a should be entered. A thousand persons were accumulated in this horrible peon, from i there was no i.s^ue.-- At ihe boliom dead bodies were found standing, the faces of the victims being pressed against the figures of tho rock, in the fruitless hope of getting a mouthful of oir to breathe.

About seventy sons who were still living, expired as soon aa they were brought into the open Olhers died Irom being cniched by pieces of rock, which were detached by beat. Gen. A i a who is i a i in bad health, is has about 3.000 hall-siarve'd soldiers i They are montly a a but i horses are represented as mere skeletons, not a i li id any other food a grass for some and a being indifferent in ihe i A i a can hardly obtain mi.ncv from the govcrnn.ent lo provmon even for himself and to straits 11 he i i tin; poor soldiers are obliged to pick up f-canty subsistence as best they can -Two anecdotes have been told us, which f-how the wretched condition of ihe Mexi can a and (he extreme poverty ol the officers of the army. One of the a a sold his only blanket to an American for a i value. The purcha ser not i it, but i i him ihe money, us he stated a he was absolute ly in want of the necessaries of life.

-A fficcr asked a a for the loan of (en dollars; en being ques- contrasted i i the removals made in the same period ending on the 30th June 1841. I selects the two States in which the present and former Postmaster General reside, for this comparison as being perfectly fair, and sufficiently extensive tor the purpose: For four months ending June 30, 1841, the number of postmasters removed in New York amounted to Removals in Tennessee, same period, Total For four months ending 30, 1845, the number of postmasters removed in N. York amounted to In Tennessee, same period Total 307 11 318 41 3 44 A great number were found i slab? tinned as to what security he could give, of yalagans upon their bodies. Some had offered his wife, a and wo- The Tariff and By a reference to the price current in the newspapers, it will be seen that the price of wool has fallen some thirty per cent, i i the past year. This great a i off in the price of one of our staple articles of production, has created great uneasines among our whig friends, if may judge by the language of their journals, and they are exceedingly puzzled to account for it.

They cannot see how the price of this article should decline so much under the benign operation of the blessed tariff, which they last year so a i a called upon the wool-growers to sustain as their only hope ofsalva- 1100 and prosperity. It is a problem i they cannot solve--a deep mystery which they cannot unfold. It, however, we hark a little, and consult i arguments and evidence contained in the Whig organs directly bearing upon the case, we shall find a solution of this myster), which, if not entirely satisfactory to us, (as we do not pretend it is,) must, we think, be conclusive evidence lo the minds of our whig friends, and serve to show them that what now appears a mystery, is really no mystery at all. It is one of the well-established doc- i i of the protectionists, a a tariff upon any articles of production, whether of the field or the loom, reduces the price thereof. The great high priest of protection, Horace Greely, has iterated and re iterated this doctrine on all occasions when discussing the tariff question.

It is one of his favorite hobbies, and is used to convince the farmers that they are not taxed by a tariff for the benefit of (he manufacturer; but, on the contrary, they are directly benefited by a reduction in tho price of all manufactured articles a pay a duty at the customhouse. Now, if the whig theory of protection be true, the "mysiery" is solved at once; Important Treasury Circular. The Secretary of Treasury has issued an important circular in relation to the revenue laws, arising out of the annexation of Texas, to prevent frauds on the Government. The Union are two modes in which it is designed to defraud the fust by direct importations from foreign ports into Texas; the second, by exportations from our own puns into Texas, with the privilege of the draw-back ot the duty. Should these speculations be carried into effect, the Biost serious consequence might follow, by so dimini-hing the revenue, as to defeat or impair the efforts of this administration to pay off the national Their success might injuriously affect the contemplated reduction of thu duties, by leaving the Government without an adequate revenue to meet the expenditures; and lastly, it might overwhelm i ruin many of our manufactures, by the inundation of foreign goods free of duty.

The Xenia Tradgedy. The Xenia Thomas Jefferson of yesterday, August 7th, has the following: FOUR PERSONS morn mg, just as our paper was going to press. Sheriff Lewis and a number of our citizens who went in pursuit on Monday re' turned with four prisoners. Whether they are guilty of the robbery, murder and arson, that was committed in this place on Sunday morning last, is uncertain. They passed through Xenia on Saturday in the afternoon in two wagons purporting lo purchase feathers.

On Saturday night the wagons etood about ten miles south-west of Xenia at a tavern, or the first wagons were taken awav and others left in their stead, as a noise was heard during the night. One of our citizens, Mr. Isaac Blessing, started in pursuit on Sunday morning, nnd alter gelling close on to them, sent back for assistance. The sheriff and those ihat accompanied him started on Monday morning. Mr.

Blessing continued the pursuit without delay, and overhauled them at New Hope, in Brown county, about sixty miles Irom Xenia. Nothing was found in their possession that would identify them as the robbers, although they may have been concerned in it. Mr. Blessings is deserving of the thanks and rewards of his fellow citizens for his energy and perseverance in pursuit of the prisoners. Ha was one of the individuals that pursued Hamilton, the person that robbed Mr.

Smailey's tailoring establishment last winter. We find the following in the tame pa. AKREST ON citizens have been diligently on the alert ever since the fatal tragedy was committed. A suspicious individual that passed through here on the morning of the fire, was arrested on his arrival at Cincinnati in consequence of ihe many contradictory stones that ho told. On searching him two fine gold watches were found and a considerable a i of jewelry.

He also had half a dozen silver spoons in hi? possession, some large ones nnd small, broken to pieces, with a crucible to melt ihem in. (Je is no doubt a i i but probably had nothing to do the Xenia tragedy. He is confined in Xenia jail for the present, and may be wanting! somewhere else, before long. A negro was also taken up, examined and dis-' charged. the above was in type, persons have arrived Trom Deleware, who recognized one of the wa'ches as having been stolen in that place.

The other watch, it is believed, was stolen in Circleville, and iho spoons in the neighborhood of Columbus. Extract of a loHfer to Editor of Kentucky Election. Lexington, (Ky.) August 4, 1845. DEAR MR: The elections commenced to-day, and, if 1 am not much deceived, the democratic party i achieve a most glorious victoiy. Whiggery is decidei'lv on the wane; and I um confident a T.

F. Marshall i be elected over the Hon. G. Davis by a handsome majority, 'Ihe polls closed to-day; Dauver Mai shall D.ivis 407; in Georgetown, Scott Marshall 255, D.tvis 'I'M. I i ihe whigs calculated on beating us from tiOO lo 8UO votes.

have two precincts, (both ot which are whig,) and Davis 'a majority in the county, to night, cannot be more than one hundred; and we now confidently believe we cannot lose more than from two to two hundred and fifty Scott, the democratic party calculate un getting 350 majority. We have now no doubt it will go over 400, as there ure three precincts all (largely democratic-none of the balance of the counties heard irom. Mr. Clay took his stand in the court- bouse yard, to give hit countenance to adherents, but it would not do; his iron hand had been too long upon them, and may have broken their chamy, and renounced whiggory for ever. From the signs of the times, 1 am inclined to be- heve that we i get eight of our Congressmen nut of ten, MX; i Tib- bat la, Marshall, a in the Louisville district, Martin in Mc- Creve, in Green's, Stone, and Boyd.

We have a good chance to K-clecl Cii'dwell, and will make a close race in Gnder's You will see we are in high i i and as the vvhigs are like rats deserting a finking ship, we aro rising in energy, resolve to conquer our enemies. Another Beautiful Feature. Mr. Ford, one of the master i i ol whiggery in the last Legislature, proposed the following as an additional section to the Tax law "That each bog over the age of six months, owned by any person, and exceeding the number of twelve, shall be, by the assessors, placed on the list at one dollar, and each sheep over the age one year, and exceeding the fof forty, shall be placed on ihe list al fifty cents." Exempting B.ink stock from tax.illon and i i it up on pigs and bogs and sheep whiggery all over! And there are thousands of farmers who i commit i i a suicide i a zeal am i almost to m--ane a i by voting for puch pariiz.ins ul i coining election! Do not such a deserve to be ground bv and robbed by paper Enq. A fc I-' i 1 THOUSAND CASES Of obstinate Pulmonary Complaintt cured in one year! I A I A OF WII.P CHERRY, Great AMLKICAN REMEDY for Lung Complaints, and all Affections of the Respiratory Organs.

We do not wish to trifle with the or health of the afflicted, and we sincerely ourselves make no assertions as to the virtues of i medicine, and to hold out no hopes to suflerhg a i which facts will not warrant. We ask ihe a i of the candid to few considerations. a in every part of works, has left nJclible a of adaption and design. 'The i i of the a i a and vegetables of the i is such a tliev could not the cold of the frigid zone, and vice versa. In regard to disease and its cure, the adapt i is more or less i i The Moss of Iceland, the will Cherry and Pines of a i (and '-Dr.

Wo- TAR'S BALSAM" is i chemical ex tract from these,) have long been celebrated tor a i i a in cold climates. I most i i i medical men ha averred ihat a turniahes in every medicines for its own peculiar diseases. CONSUMPTION in its confirmed and incipient stages Cui'iiiis, A i CROUP and Livta A I form by far the most latal class of diseases to land. Yet even these i ma) be cured by means ul the simple yet pow- remediL-s a above) a i ato a i i by a i Providence, vvhur- those- a a i a i A A I I 1 Balaam of Wild Ckerry, A A TKHJ I A NT! Cure Follows In it.i Omciird Victorious Career! The Ohio Eagle says is to be ihe whig candidate for the i a --It adds: The Dorr Associlion of Mt. Knox county, lately held a meeting to, celebrate Governor Dorr's i a i from the bastile ot Rhode Island.

C. Mc- Nuliy, aided by a few- deluded friends and a mimmerof whigs. a to ad dress the association, which of course created quite a "breeze." Tlie association thereupon adjourned, and addressed ihose remaining, and that he had done i i he would not do again, if placed in the t-ame tion. This evinced a degree ol iccklesp hardihood scarcely credible, and i destroy all a for his fate. Here's a chance for Texas.

The Trustees ol the Texian i a i and Laud Company a i for on their tract, offer to give i i i three hundred and i and each single man cue i ond i on the pa) men ot lor on the ioriner and on the hitler. Oregon. The Washington Union, speaking of articles in the "London Foreign Quarterly" and 'Edinhiug view," on the Oregon question a simply allude to the i of the two Quarterlies, leaving it to i to ravel the true position of the question. In any event, we repeat our abiding confidence that the administration will "assert and maintain our rights (o the Oregon Territory, and 'hat they i preserve and uphold the sacred honor ol their country." a th, 1845. W.

Win i MO Dear i A a ou are the regular authorized agent in Da) uni, fur the sale of "Dr. Wistar's Balsam of i Liiem," 1 I a this method ol a i a s-latenu'in ol a to you I i may be i the. in relerence lo an almost i a cure, in my case by means ot the above INV A I I A i A A Language (ails to describe the salutary ef- lecis it produced, and the great benefit I der i Irom its use. The citizens of Dayton and vicinity, well recollei.t a on 8th A ugust lasi, I received seiious i I the explosion of a a A portion of its enterep my side and breast; and all probabili- some a or i ol the ram-rod I'daSed the "plura," and iierced the Lungs A the lapse of a six weeks, I was a a un dulrc'si'ig cough and a nolcnt pauiii my right sulr. ten days alter this, in intaruryiin, of Coughing, suddenly an i i an 1 a a i a i ot very i i i mailer, ith blood, was dis a ol i i found passage 'ougli i opi i i i i uiiiul.

From i opening i i i i i i a a i of air, sup- poscd to i-fsiic i the During all lime my were nlmostintolcrable. i i i i a i pajd the strict- a i i i i i in i power i i i ill i i i duild a the seal nf distress, after the hud become iijjerltJ. a i i du- i i i i I at flu siciaiis. Il i I I I ,1 .1 i i i i a in- if tin i i i i a i pl.ici i i i i i i i my life in a tune, was in the i degree At i i i a stage, a was des- a to i i i an a i Physician ot a a as he was a a a i i my i a i ha a a i be done bv medical aid, il the i i i i itsell was not 8uf- 10 disease. saw SIAMESE TWINS.

Lately Arrived Fire at Newport, K. I. The Ocean House, a new and very large Hotel, at Newport, R. was burn ed down on Sunday, the fire taking in the cook house. The building was wood, no water was at the fire spread with immense rapidity.

Ihe building was entirely destroyed. It was valued at $36, 000, on which there was insurance 10 the amount of $18,000. The i was worth 25,000, and about two thirds of it was In vain with lavish kindness, The acts of Time are strewn, Some citizens in their a a How wood and stone. UST as we were, friends, enemies, ond 1 have commenced Watch and Clock repairing business, in the town of Washington, just two doors cast of Be) mer's Hotel and doors west of Craig, Clark store. Do you a your watches to keep i Ho you a your Silver work a a lo Clocks that have become tired in the service of time, a i if so please give me a call.

"A tree is i a by the fruit bears." Please don't a a silk purse out of the organ ol hearing, of the feme- nine gender, of the bristled Tribe. i and Ladies, please call at the Washington Saloon, where you i find the undersigned ever ready to accommodate all. G. W. CURTIS.

July 31, 1845. Court of Com. Picas, Guernsey Co O. James Worth, 1 ANCERY. A 8 i Petition for Divorce.

Amanda Worth The above named Deft, will take notice that the above named Pltff. heretofore to-wit, on Ihe 28th Hay ol July, 1845, filed his petition in the oflice ine Clerk of said court, for paid county, in the state of Ohio, setting forth other a the Pltff. and Deft, had been a married; that the Deft, wilfully absented herself, i cause, that she was guilty of gross neglect of ana of crime of a nnd praying among other things, that eaid court a said marriage contract, and grant a decree of divorce; and thatsaio Deli, be foiever barred of dower in the lands of which said petition, will be heard at the next term of said court. E. A.

BRATTON, A for pet'r. July 31,1845. 6w. Mv i now despaired of my recovery, and I had no a of hope to survive many daya. a at i I one of UK i ily Medical 1 or -Treatise on Coutumption of the 1 As I had heard of dying men "catching at straws," felt i doing so the consent of my Plnsicians, 1 sent to you for a of the mudicme described i "WisTAii's HAI.SAM OF Wir.o CHERRY," i i me almost immcd ately.

A her ui used siimr live or six boltlss, f'jtf coi citd as to be up and about My cough and my restored to a a stato-- from the healing and balnily injliu 7irr, and powerful medicinal virtues is- TAR'J, Were it not from the external injury I received in my shoulder and arm by the explosion, I feel a 1 might have been i at my a i is blacksmitli- ing,) i has By exposure, I have since taken several severe, colds, and my only remedy has been 'THK A I A A I now most cordially recom- genuine Balsam to all who are alllicted i Coughs, or Lung Complaints. I consider it an i a a medicine --a real blessing to the world. Any person desiring I i a i may call on me at any time. Yours CHRISTOPHER R.SMYTH. City of Dayton, Montgomery State of Ohio.

Subscribed and sworn to, before me, of the Peace, this I Ith day of 1845. FOWLER. estimony nf three highly creditable aft- sensnf Dayton, in. confirmation of Ihc We, the undersigned, being intimately ac- a i i Mr Smith, and having seen and watched over him frequently during his late illness, do not hesitate to say that foregoing is by no means an exaggerated statement, but is entitled to full crniit. (Signed) A.

L. STOUT, J. II. DODSON, EN SMITH. fttp-The irue nnd genuine Bnbom of Cherry," is sold at established agencies in all parts of the United States.

Sold in i i a i on the corner of Fourth and Walnut Streets, by A A Gen'l. Agents for the Western States. For sale by F. A Washington, J. G.

ME rCALF, Cambridge, J. HARE, Fatrview. April 17,1845..

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