TEfiMS OP PUBLICATION'. g 3 00 per annum; in advance—or 82 SO. if not paid within the year. Nosubscriptlari taken for a leas term than, six months, apd no discimtiiiiiance. permitted until all arrearages are paid. A' failure to notify a discontinuance at ihe expiration of a term, will , considered anew engagement, .. . Advertisements—sl 00 , per' square, for the three first insertions,'and twenty, live 'cents, for cvery subsequent one* . DR. HUNT’S ;r- ,*l"^“' . BOTANIC PILLS, INTERESTING & APPLICABLE TO THE AFFLICTED WITH' V Diseases of the or Serves; Such a Dyspepsia, cithcr.Chfonicor Casual, mr der theworst symptoms of restlessness; Low ness of Spirits, and General Emaciation; (Ton sumption,-whether of the Lungsor Liver; Liv er Affections; Jaundice,-both Biliary Sc Spas -mOdic; Cosliveness; Worms of every variety; HlicunifUisim whether Acute or. Chronic; to ' gcther.with Gout, Scrofula, Pains in the Mead, Bank,- Limbs, and'Side, Typhus Fever, Scar let Fever, Putrid Sore Throat, Fever & Ague, : Spasmodic Palpitation of the Heat t and Artc ries, Nervouslrritahility, Nervous Weakness, Hysterics; Tic Douloureux, Cramps, Female Obstructions, Heartburn,,Headache,.Qotigh the Common or Humid, and the Dry op the Whooping; Asthma, Gravely and Dropsy, . The Blood lids'hitherto been' considered~bv *Empincs T and others, as the great regulator of the human system, .and such i? the devoted ol tlie adherents to tliat erroneous doctrine, that they content themselves with tlic simpie.posses sion of this fallacious opinion, without eiiqiliriug' lilt» the primary .sources'from whence bile, Health, and Vigor emanate, ami, vice versa\ , pain, sickness, disease and death. Not so with Iht. Hunt, whose extensive research andprac tical eKperieiice*so eminently qualify him for the _ profession of which he has been one of the most useful members. He contends—and a moment's w flection will convince any reasoning mind of the correctness of his views— that the stomach, liv er," and the associated organs are the primary and great regulators of health, and that the Ijlood in very many instances is dependent on these or • gans. and tint unless ,mt*.difcine reaches THE. HOOT OF THE DISEASE, the superficial anodynes usually prescribed, *sei\ve but iis foils to, cover the ravages of deep-rooted maladies Under these coiiviciions.m the expense ofycais 'dfVbiseopplioatiohVtbe'docinr has'di sen very dv.* metlii’.iue vvlinse searching powers aye irresbli hie, and in prescribing, ills with a knowledge t>f itsJieJng.a - riuHcid,cm;c in the various discuses yvyJt.iX applied iii the most ''^cnucaf^ases/fj’u t Tiecfoes nbtprciendlo ascribe to " . ■ HUNT’S BOTANIC -PILLS a supernatural agency;although from positive proofs within the knowledge of hundreds lie is pivpared to shew, that when every other earth ly reinedv hvis lu-eneiven up, HUNT.S BOTANIC PILLS _ have never been kimwu to f.iilin effecting two \"ery gratifying results, that .of raising from the lied of sickness and disease those who have test ed' thcn~rfficac,yb and thus amply re warding Ur. Hunt for Ids long and anxious stuclyToUUaiU this perfection in the Hkai.lnG Art. The extraordinary success which lias attend-, ml tlie tise. of Hunt’s Botanic Pills, is tlie best criterion of their superior virtues. They, have been the means of raising a host of languishing patients from the bed of affliction, as it is dparfy evinced in the _ following . CERTIFICATES. FEVER AND AGUE CURED, !To Dr. Hunt, bear Sir—B.*Heving it a fluty 1 owe you as a practitioner, as well as those who may Ik* similarly aftioted, 1 take pleasure in acknow ledging the benefit Phare derived from the.use ot yuur valuable medicine, - « After much suffering from Fever *md Ague, du ring the spring.nnd fail, fur the last four years, and the pecuniary, injuries attendant on the in disposition of one on whose exertions a large fa mily was dependant'for suppmt, and haying without success jested tin* skill of many medical. advices, at an expense I could not well afford. I t the fall of 1838, 'findingthe premonitory symp toms of the disease approaching, I was induced by a friemf who had tried vmir medicine, to pur chase a package of your U.Manic Pills, and how have the happiness to inform you—and through you, those who may he similarly aflßicted~thHl ihev counteracted the disease, nor.havife 1 been troubled with it since and my confidence, con tinues to uphold-me belief that your Bo tanic Pills are the most safe, t)ie cheapest, most efficacious, nml radical cure for that distressing clneas** Fever and Ague All I can for the pre sent offer you for,the bUssing you have been in strumental in conferring on me, is my assurance P. MoMcCOHMICK. Newark, K. J., July 31, 1839. .. Dyspepsia, or Indigestion, Effectually Cured . -Mr.'Wnv.-Tuckev, having-lately heenrestdr cd to h s ; iun'l state of, health,, through the effica cy of Dr, Hunt's Botanic Pitts % thinks it at) iu the disease under whicirhVKad so loiig suffered^ • The symptoms were a painful obstruction, .with Hcdo V ■' : v r ;\vn,i,iAM -tucker, -jßeteare of Coiinierfei's. ' j ;pur > to see that the lahel ofthitfinedicinecontalna a'no tice of its entry accordingioActoJ Congers). — Ahd;be likewise particular in obtaining .them.at: 100 Chatham st,, Ne'w York,, or.fronV the 'regu ■ lar agents, '"* ■ HAtaitToN. & GiiiEß, Carlisle; -. •" *. •;-I)R;-\VM;EVANS’ •’ • * ' v . '7 ■ Wilis'pills.' - Spinning of Shrewsbury, , afflicted v,7 with:Piles;for:mnre‘th’4rt'2o, year's;-. 'Had'had fe ; course tn every description, also the advice htseverahemminent Physicians, slightest reUef .from any on Dr.. Evans. "“ and pcociiyed some* medicine from hini..'fronV which lie found i rhmediate i'el|ef/ .Bod' subsequently a perfect i •••.'■ ■: . h -' • fft( a l >ell'f*t,l',^dir,ihe'.contain3!ino :■ A'i'l'He nt 100Chathahyst,,Ne>y.yor!t; rotfromthereEo - a ■, Sliicriltti BY G. SANDERSON & E. CORN MAN. J - Whole No. 1321. DU. GOODE’S CELEBRATED PEnALfi PILLS. These Pills are strongly recommended to the notice of tile ladies as a sate and efficient remedy in.iemoviiig those complaints peculiar to their sex, from want of exercise, or general Debility of the system. Obstructions, Suppressions, and Irregularity of the Menses*; at* the same time strengthening, cleansing, and giving tope to the Stomach am) Bowels, and producing a new and healthy action throughout the system generally. They create Appetite, cot rect Indigestion, re*, move Giddiness, amlNervous Headache,, and are eminently useful in those flatulent complaints which’distress Females so much at the “Turn of Lif^Js. ** 'They obviate enstiveness,and conn teracf all Hysterical and Nervous Affections, likewise afford soothing and relief in Fluor Albus, or Whites, and In the most obsti nate cases of Chlorosis, or Green Sickness, they invariably, restore the pallid, ahd delicate female to health and vigor., , These Pills have gained the sanction and ap probation, ot the most eminent Physicians in.the. United States, and many mothers can likewise testify to their extraordinary e.fiicacy. To mar ried females, whose expectations of th’e.tender est pledges of connubial happiness have been defeated, these Pills'tivay be'lruly esteemed a blissful boon- They soon renovate all function al debility, and if.taken (according to directions,) obviate all morbid action. They dispel that ful some. and disagreeable sensation common to fe males at each monthly return, likewise the at tendant pains in the back, /side,, or • loins;-' they generally counteract the nausea, vomiting, and .other nervous affections in.chlorosis, or green sickness, in a few days, (and if continued accor rling to directions,) soon effect a'perfe.ct cure.— Nothing is so sienatly efficacious in reerniting the p vllid- and sirkiy female t who has beon,durinvr‘ lo vbfe irregular and sensitive) as the FEMALE PILLS, . ■ ■ . V Beware of Counterfeits, ' CC/’Cantion. —He particular in purchasing'to ,set* that the label of tins Medicine contains a nor. tievnf iis entry according to' jict of Congress;— And he likewise parlicular-in-obCaining them at idb Cbatliaai st., NbwVY’ork, or from, tlie regu- I ic agents, . V H AMILTON & OKIEU, Carlisle: DU. WM. EVANS’ SOOTHING SYRUP, FOR CHILDREN TEETHING . To Mothers and Nurses . - The passage of the teeth through the gums produces troublesome and dangcrous'symptoms. It is known by mothers that there is great irri tation in the mouth and gums during this pro cess. Tlie gums swell, the secretion of the saliva is increased, the child is seized with fnquent and sudden tits of crying, watching, starting in its sleep, .ambspaMiiscf peculiar parts;,the child shrieks 1 with-exlreme violence, and thuists its fingers into its mouth. If these precursory symp toms are alleviated, spasmodic con vulsions "universally supervene, ami soon cause ihe dissolution of the infant. If mothers who have their little babes r.fflicted with these dis tressing symptoms would apply the celebrated Ameiican S’>mhii)g Symp, which has presen t d hundreds of infantswhen thought pajil recovery, from be,ing suddenly attacked with that fatal malady convulsions. Tjiis infallible remedy has preserved hundreds when thought past recovery, from convulsions. As snon us the Svrup is rubbed on the gums, the child will recover. This preparation Is so inno cent, so efficacious, and so pleasant, that n" child will nfuse to let its gums he rubbed with it.— ntMhe age of four months, though there is no’uppearauce of teeth, one bot tle of the syrup should be used on the gums to open the poi es. Parentis should never he with out the syrup in the nursery where there are voung children, for if a child wakes in the night with pain in the gums, the-Syrup immediately gives ease, hy opening the pores and healing tlie gums; thereby preventing Coirvulsions, Fevers, &c. •y ßeware of Covnterfeils. (n^’Cfpition.—Be particular hi purchasing to see that the label of this medirim,*contains a no tice of its entry according to Act of Congress. — Ami be likewise particular in obtaining th< m 100 Chatham st., New York; or from the regu,- Ur agents. Hamilton & Grier, Carlisle. dr; WM. EVANS’ Camomile & iMpericnt JPills. —Another "Vdry~(in'ere-'cnse''of-pnfammniory Rheumatism cured by Dr, JE-vans*. Medicine.— Mr. John-A. Carroll, of the county of Wes‘ches : ter, town of North Castle, New York, had been severely afflicted withinflammatory iheufnatirsni for fourteen modths with violent pains ini hU limbs, great heat, excessive thirst, dryness of skin;,limbs much swollen, was hoi able, without assistance/ to-turn in . beA fnrVixweeKs.: Had .trj^Lv^rimtaJ-emr.die&.to rjio_effecb--.-Wjis.advl?o eh by a friend of his in procure someofDv.-W. Evans’ medicines of. 100 Chatham street, N. y„ which_ Ive •Immediately sent forj and after tHkipg the first .dose foutid great .in continiw ing its use nr.cnrding-to the directions for/ ten days, was perfectly .cured; .Allows me to refer, any person to him for the truth of the ulyive statement, ■ ’ Beiuarcnf Count etfeils. ‘ particular in purchasing, to see thar the label,of this medicine rontainsa ho. tire of Gentry accordiiig tqArt of-Congress, And he jikewise partichlar In obtaining them at; 100 Chatham jit.. New .York, .or froyi the regu lar ageiils, . •- .. v ’ HAMtLTON & GrUER/Cnrlißlc. 7: ■ pf/ v io, 1839. f .;. BARON YON HUTCHELER •S-SSm-.PIL'LB. These Pills are composed of'Herbs,- ,■which' cxeita specific actiom upon the beat t, give nth impulse or 'strength to:lhe;nrteriaJ system: the blond is quickcm’dnrd equalizetl in its circtihi.; tioijs tlirmighall the vessels,' whether of the skin, the parts situated internully r or th’e extrcniities, and' as nil. the secretions of thh bndyave drawn front the blond, there is a cnnseqtient'inrrense of every .'secretion, and a quickened action of.thi% absorbent and exhaleiit, or discharging, vessels. Any riutrhid actidnWhich may have taken place' lacnrrecVedjYa)l .dbBtractious: : are removed,- the blood ispurißed.and -lliehbdy, resumes a health fukstateyw^^yi'.-y^v'-^^ J<.'Betoaie of Cdunter/eits. ; (Ej’C.aulioa,—lie particularhltr iiurchnsimr. to see thajt the bdn-l.nf tbisinedioine contains ano tice iyf ft* to dct of Cqngress.~ Amibe likewise p-irtirnl.ir in olitidning them ;o 100 Chatham st., New VoVky dr front thc regu hir agents, i;.V 1. ■ ■: Hamilton ■& Grier, Carlisle. ; Of wltnm may heltad, ' h, Dr. H'mi '-Tivtirts': Camomile If jljierieht Pillar. Do.tSaothinff Syrup. - , y nr..llunta.Bolamcp ; ilh, Dr.Odotley/FenialePillt: DOi PIIU. •<._!, ’, October lOj 1839, v r--, ; -:->o THE LITTLE FOOT. ' • By MISS H. P. GOULD. My boy, as gently bn my breast, From infant sport thou sink’st to rest, And on my hand I feel tjieo put- 1 In playful dreams, thy little foot. The 'thrilling:touch sets every string Of my fullheart a quivering! For ah! I think what chart can show The Ways through which this foot must go. Its print will bo, in childhood’s hours. Traced in the garden round the flowers; But youth will bid it leap the rills— Bathe v in the dews,of distant Roam o’er the vales, and venture out f When riper years would pause and doiibt; Nor brave the pass, nor try, the brink, ’ Where youth’s unguarded foot may sink. But what, when manhood tints thy.chccks, 'Will he.the ways thy fool may scckl Is it to lightly pace the deck! To helpless slip from off the wrockl Or wander o’er a foreigrt shore, Returning to thy homo no more, Until the bosom now thy pillow, Is low and cold beneath the willow! . ■'Or is it for llio batllo plain? v^Bcsidothe siayerjmd the slain, ; ; v.:^, .Till there its, final step be taken? * 'There sleep thino'cyes, no more,to waken? Is it to glory ,or to shanic, V To sully or to gild thy name, Y ; •Is it to happiness or to vq& This littlo foot is madc_to-go?_ - . But wheresoe’er its lines may fall, Whether in a cottage or a hall; Oh! may it ever shun' the ground Whero’cgHU foot hath not been found. Who on his hath shed A living light t jhat all. may tread; 1 Upon his earthly 'step, and none E’er dash the foot against the stone.' ■ Yet if thy way is mark’d by fativ As guilty, dark and desolate— If thou must float by vice and crimo A wreck upon the stream of timc, a Oh! father than bejiold that day, I’d know this foot in lightsome play, Would bound with guiltless infant glee Upon the clod that shelters me. MISCELLANEOUS, From the Southern Rose. •Wiefortune find. Exile Enno bled. :ln~lT937~^tnle~I l allcyranxl; was in' Bos*; lon, —one day whilst crossing the market place ho was-compelled to stop, by a long row of wagons all loaded with vegetables.— The wily courtier generally so dead to emo tion, could nut look with a kind of pleasure at these wagoners, who, by the by* were young and pretty country women. Sudden ly the vehicles came to a stand, and the eyes of M. do Talleyrand chanced to rest upon one of the young women who appeared more lovely .Ilian the others. An exclamation es caped from his lips —it attracted the atteii-' tion of the'fair one; whese country dressand large hat bespoke daily visits >to the market, as she beheld the astonished Talleyrand, whom she- recognized immediately,pburst out laughing. ■ “What! is it "Yes indeed, it is I. But you, what ore you doing here?” “I,” said the young woman, ing fnr my turn to pass on ’ • * lam going to sell niy greens and vegetables at the market;’’ At this moment the wagons began-to move . along: she of the straw hat aphlWd the whit to- her horse,' told M. de Talleyrand the: name <>f the village where she whs living, re qucstcdhim earnestly to come and see heiy disappeared,' and left him as rivettcd on-the s'pot by this strange apparition. I , Whp'.was'.lbjS young, market: woman?— Madame la Comtesse de la Tour-du-Pin, (Madcmoisillc de Dillon*) the-most. elegant among the ladies of. the Court of Louis the sixteenth. King of France, and whose’mpral and intellectual worth had shone: with so dazzlitlg.h.lustre in the society of her. nu* merous IViends and admirers.' ’ At the time when the French nobility emigrated,' she was lively,•endowed with the most remark,- ablejlaJents, and like all the ladies who held a rank at the.courf, had only time to attend to such duties to her high, fash ionable and courtly life. ":" " ' ; - Let any One ' fancy the'sufferings and gdny ofthatwoman, bbrti in-tlie lap OfwOalth; and who had breathed nothing buf peTfumeV under . the gilded -ceiling of the Royal Pajacc of'Versailles, when all; at onte ahe found, herself-surrounded with blood and massa cres, artd ’ saw every.'kind' .of danger beset ting her young and beloved husband,, and her infant cliildf- t-. > .They succeeded: in flying from France.—; It was their good fortune to escape from the bloody jand where: Itobespierre and his' As- Bbciates-wereibUsylnt’ thework of degtns-- Alas! in those titnes of tefror.the pooriddU (Iran themselves abandoned .with jojt the pa teriial rOoPfurnohidingplnce a-' gainst the Vigilant eye of ivlio thirstdd/fordnnoccnt-blnod;-' j*. ; 'The fugitives landed iti America; andfiret went to Bostonji where’tteyjjjbiind a retreat. fashionable lady, infancy ; by j - *Sho retumbd to Franosmtidbr the Cqnaolaterl b'OThußbaridiyas Peif^bripepartiaemt. "ODR COUNTRY RIOiSt OK WRONO.” Carlisle, JPa. Thursday November 31, 1839. DY MADAME d’aBIUETES. •pup” exclaimed she. **l am wait* £-:u. : -r. / v,--•. loud and continued, praises of her beauty- and talents/)- ■ . , Mans, de.la Tour-dii-Fin was extravd gantlyfond of hiawiff. At the Court of France he Had seen her,, with the'proud eyq of a husband, the object of admirationj- in;- deed her conduct had always been virtuous and exemplary; but, now in a foreign land, & among unsophisticated republicans, (1793) what was the use of.courtly refinements? - A thorough knowledge of ‘La Bonne Fermcre’ of Parmentier.seemed to him far preferable to a rondeau of dementi,! or "La Coquette! of Hcrman.§ Happy as she was in seeing her escape, from all the perils he had dreaded on her own account, still'he could not but deplore -the-future-lot of the wife of his bosom;— However, with the. foresight of a good father and kind husband, he iterved himself against despair and exerted himself to render their condition’ less miserable than -that of many emigrants who were starving when the little money they had brought over with them was exhausted. N°t a_word of English did he know, but bis wife spoke it fluently and ad mirably well-. ; They boarded at Mrs, Muller’s a Igood natured notable woman, who on every occa sion evinced the greatest respect and admi ration for her fair boarder; yet M. de Ju' Tour-du-Pin was in .constant dread least the conversation of that good, plain and well meaning ’woman might be the cause of great" ennui to' his lady. What-a contrast With the society of suck gentlemen asM. de Tal leyrand, and the high-minded and polished nobility of Frantic! Whenever he was think ing of this sad transaction (particularly when absent from his wife, and tilling the garden' of the-cottage which they were going to- in habit) he felt such pangs, and heart-throb-' bings as to. inakc him apprehensive on liis return to Mrs. Muller to meet the looks of his beloved wife, whom, he expected to see bathedjin tears. Meanwhile.his good host ess, would, give him a hearty shake of -the hand, and repent to him, “Happy husband! Happy husband.” ■ > - : .At last came the day when'the fugitive family left the boarding house of Mrs. Mul ler, to go. and inhabit their little, cottage, when they were to be at least exempt from want,'with an only servant, a negro and kind of Jack-of-all trades, j.‘iz: gardner, footman and cook.. The last function M.de la Tour-du-Pin dreaded most of all to sec him undertake. - - -—‘ It was.iilmrtst dinner time. The poorem igrant went into his little garden to gather some fruits., and tarried as long as. possible. On his return home, his wife was, absent, looking for her, he entered the kitchen,, and saw a young country-woman, who, with Iter back to the door was kneading the (lough; her. arms of a snowy whiteness, were bare to the elbows. M. de la Tour-du-Pin started; the.young woman turned round; It was his beloved wifewho had changed.her muslins and silk fur a .country dress? not as fur a fancy ball, but to play the part of a real far mer’s wife. At the sight of her husband her xheekscriinsoned,-and.she-jolnedJierhands in a supplicating manner. ‘Oh! my love,.’ said she, ‘do not laugh at me.. * , » • 1 am as expert as Mrs. Muller. , Too full of emotion to speak, he clasped her to his bosom,, and kissed her .fervently. From his inquiries he learned that when he thought her given; up to de'spair she had em ployed her time more usefully for theii fu ture happiness. She had taken lessons from Mrs. Muller and her servants —and after sis months had become skilful , in the culinary art; a thorough housekeeper, diScovcririg.her angelic-nature and.admirable fortitude. ‘•‘Dearest’,” continued she, “if .you‘•knew how easy it is, We,.in a moment, under stand. what.it would cost country.women one or two years. Now we sliall be happy—you will no lflnger be afraid of enn\ji forme, nor Iwill glye you many proofs,” said she, look ing with arbewitching smile at him. , ‘Conic, come, you promised us a- sallad, and lam going to bak;e for to-morrow, the oven, is hot. To-day thfcbread of the town will do—but oh ! henceforward leave it to me.” . • ,ji ' From that moment, Madame de la Tour-, 1 feept'KSfTwo^ JiFPmkcjpTlier^w.oro ed ingoing; hcreclf to Boston, ,16 sell her vegetables and' cream cheese. It was on such au emrul in town that.M.deTalley rahd-met her. The day after-he went to pay her a visit and met her in the 'poultry yard, surrouh'ded:by a host of fowls, hungry chick ens and pigeons.. Truly might have said, of her i. .;"V'. i "i “Aux posits des oiseaux lu dorincs la pature, > Et ta bentos’ etend sur.tbuto la nature.’’ From the, linflodg’d birds receive their food, •• . ° Arid all that live Know well that thori art good. She was : all,that she had promised to be. Besides.her health,'had been so ben'efitted that she peemed less . fatigued by the house work than if she had attended the-balls of a, winter; : -Heivbeaaty,!|VvhichhadbeA lies,. was .dazzling-in her cottgge|Sp .the new iworld.L.M^ : ■ deed do '- jmu I am delighted to hearit." 1 : Ar^Olri® where proud' of her personal attractions. •; :At thattmoinent the black.servant bolted into^^hi^'^raWing room, : holding in his hand hisjabket with a long rent in, tliehack.— him jacket torn; please mend him.” She. immediately took ■ a needle, repaired .Gutlali’s jacket, ami continuedtheconvcr* autionwitVcharming. simplicity. , .... Tins'Utile adventure left a’deep impress -Talleyrandv-who used to relate it with that tone of voice pe culiar to his narrationsV’ . r ' rr~~ i?-,- #■ fSho was an excellent jarfcnhe^.aniplajbd admirablyTrinthePiaript- ’ , • - , } . ; -'jA«»lebratrfliBamEo^. ( , t iPrpfeßsoirefmosle'tp.to thotHaeotf..., l**air,* cncllior 1 [AT TWO DOLLARS PER ANNUM.. Now Series—Vol. No. 23. From'Mr. Stephen’s now ‘lncident of Travel.’ The Battle ol Oroltow. . . The battle of Grokow, the greatest-iivEu ropesince" that of Waterloo, .was fought on the twenty-fifth of FtUruary, 1831, and the place where I lifood commanded a view' °f the whole ground. The Russian army was under the command of Dicbifach, and con sisted of one hundred and forty-two thousand infantry, forty thousand cavalry, and three hundred and twelvepieces of cannon,” This enormous force-was arranged in two lines of combitants'and a third in reserve—llS' left] wing, between Wavie ; and the marshes of the Vistula, consisted of four divisions of infantry of forty-seven thousand men, three of cavalry of ten thousands five hundred, and ’one hundred and eighty pieces of cannon; the right consisted of three and a half divi sions of infantry of thirty-one thousand men, four divisions of cavalry of fifteen thousand seven bundled and fifty men, and fifty-two pieces of cannon. Upon the borders of the great forest opposite the Forest of Elders, conspicuous from where I stood, was placed the reserve,.commanded by the,Grand Duke Constantine, Against tins,immense army the Pules opposed less than fifty thousand men and a hundred pieces of ’cannon, under the command of General Skrzynccki. - At break of day the whole force of the Russian right wing,. With _ a terrible fire Of jfifty pieces of artillery, and colums Of infan try, charged the Polish left with the deter.; miiiatipn qf carrying it by a single and over powering effort. The Poles, with six thou sand five hundred men and twelve pieces of artillery, not yielding a foot of ground, and knowing they could hope -forum succor, re sisted tliis attack for scveral hours, until the Russians- slackened their fire; About ten o’clock the plain was.suddciiTy.cbvered with -the Russian forces issuing from (he cover of the'forest, seeiningsorie undivided niass-of troops; Two hundred pieces of cannon, posted on a single line, commenced a fire which made the earth tremble, and-was more terrible than the oldest officer, many of whom had fought at Marengo and Austerliz, had ever beheld. The Russians now made an attack on the right wing—but foiled in this as upon the left, Dicbitsch directed the strength of. his army against (he Forest of Elders, hoping to divide the Poles intb lwo parts. .One hundred and twenty pieces of Cannon were brought to bear on this one point; and 50 battalions, incessantly pushed to the aitack.keptup'a scene of. massacre unhcaid of in the annuls of war. A Polish officer who was in the battle told me that the small streams which intersected the for est wereso choked with dead that tlie infan try inarched directly over their bodies. — The heroic Poles, with twelve battalions, for j four hours defended the forest against the I tremendous attack, r Nine times they were driven but," and nine tirires",'by a series of admirably executed manoeuvres, they repul sed the Russians with immense loss. , Bat teries, now qpneentrated" in one point, were in a moment huraiedto another, and the ar tillery advanced to the charge like cavalry, soiiietinio9-within-a-hundi’ed-feet-oP-tlie-eiie iny’s columns,, and there opened a murder ous fire of grape. . k - ‘ At tinee o’clock,- the generals* many, of whom were wounded.-arid the most of whom hail tiiciriiorscs shot under them, and fought ] on foot at the hend'of their divisions, resol j ved bn a rotrogade, movement, so as'to draw j the Russians on the open plain,- Diebitsch, ■ supposing it to be a flight, looked over to : the city and exclaimed,; "Well; then, it appears that after this'bloody day, I shall fake tea in-the Belvidere. Palace.” The Russian troops debouched fi-om;the~foTcst. A cloud of Russian cavalry, with several regiments of heavy cuirassiers at their head advanced to the attack., ’Col; Picntka", who i had kept up ah.unremitting fire from his i battery for five hours, 'seated with perfect iTOngiroid" dptmia 1 remained to' give' another.effective fire, then [ left at , foil gallop a post which he had. so | long occupied under.the terrible fire'of (he ] enemy’s artillery. This rapid movement of his battery aniniateif the Russian .forces.— The ;: cava fry; advanced on a trot upon (he ling of a battery of;rockets;; :A terrible'dis horses, galled': to madness by tile flakes; of fire, became wholly ungoverlVable, ajid broke htyay.ispreadihg.disbrdehin every.direction; the whole body 'swept helplessly along the i fire-of (tie Polish infantry; arid in a few min j rites was so completely annihilated that, of a regiriientbf .curirassiers who bore inscribed on their helmets the ‘'iiivinciblcs,” riof a manescaped! --The wreck of the routed cav alry, pursued by the lancers carried, along in its niglit.the columns of infantry.- A gen eral retreat commenced, and the city of Po land fdfeyer, reached the walls of Warsaw to cheer the hearts of its arixious inhabitants. ,So terrible was the fire bf that day. (hat iri: killed or wounded finder. hiin;Twd thinds.of 'the officers, and perhaps the soldiers . had their clothes pierced with; balls, -brim more tlian a. tenth part- of the army wcrc wounded. Thirty thousand Russians and-teii thousand Poles were left on the. field bfpattle; rank' upon ■ rank'lay prostrate on the .carlli,. a'nd; -the Forest of-EUlers was so strewed with dead bodies that It received; front that day the name of the “Fotescbfthe dead.” The Czar heard with 4isriiay' i .mnd all Europe >ith, astonishirieril;-that this trrisscr of; the Balken Had ijcen foiled' unilei' the'walls of Warsaw; y ! - : . All day my companion : said, fhes cannon jiding waa' terrible; (JroWds; 6f: citizens, «f, both sexes arid all.ages, v.were- assembled on thobpo't-where We stood; earnestly watching fhe progress of: the-battle, sharing in.all; its j vicissitudes in the highest state of excitement i aavithe ’clearing up of. volunins lof; smoke showed when the Russians or Poles had Arid; arid he described fha entiTpf tlibfcmhnnf. of the Polish army Into AVarsaw as sublime 'and torribleptheir hair and ftces;weiy;be > grimedwith powdef ; AGENTS-.' ; Jonw-MoonE, E«q. Newvitle Joseph M. Means, Esq. HnpewcJJ township. John Wunderlich, Ran. Shipperitbiirg. Wicliam M. Materr, Esq. Lee’s pi Hoads, John MEHAEFY.Uickiniion townshipr* John Clendenib, Jr. Esq.. Ho'Kesiiiwn.' . . - George F. Cain, Esq. Mech'anirsburg.j. , Frederick Wonderlich, '.: ~ do; . James Ei.liott, Esq. Springfield. t Daniel, Krysher, Esq. eimrchtnwh. ' Jacob LoNgnkcker, Esq. Wormlcysliurq. George Cedar Spring, Allen ip. shattered and broken, and all.eveh dying men vvere singing patriotic songs; and when the-fourth regiment,' among ..whom .was a brother of my companion, and who had. par ticularly distinguished himself ip the battle, crossed the bridge and filed slowly through the streets, their lances shivered against the cuirasses of the guards, their hemlets broken, their' faces black and spotted with blood, some erect, some tottering, and some barely able to sustain 'themselves on the saddle.— Above the stern ’ chorus of patriotic songs rose the distracted criesjif mothers, wives, daughters and lovers, seeking'among this' broken band for forms dearer than life, many of whoin were then;sleeping on the battle field. My companion told me that he was then a lad of seventeen, and had begged with tear_s;to,be allowed to accompany his brother; but liis-widowcd mother distorted from him a promise that he would'not attempt it. All'day he stood with his mother on the very:.spot where we did, his hand .in hers,, winch’ she grasped convulsively, -as every peal of the cannon seemed the knell of her son’; and when the lancers passed she sprang from his side as she recognized in the droo ping figure of an officer, with.his-spcar bro ken in his hand, the figure of her gallant boy. He was then reeling onj his saddle his eye was glazed and vacant, and .ho died that night in her arm's. - ’ ■JOSEPH KltNEirS DEFALCATION. ' We have repeatedly adverted to the un deniiible fact that the Ex-Governor, of, this State, now in his retirement on a'farm in Cumberland County, purchased sine'e his ejection from chair, is hy his own admission, taken in connection with ■other documentary evidence, a defaulter to .the .Commonwealth in the-enormous. SIXTY-FOUR.THOUSANDTWOHUN- , DRED~AND FIFTY DOLLARS!!! We have published andre-published the evidence upon which'this imputation against the late Executive is", predicated,' and challenged, those, who may be supposed to feel an in terest in the posthumous fame of the ex-ad ministration, tnadduce any fact or testimony: that may be in their possession, in order to explain the. mystery of these transactions, anil save their ex-patron from the stain .which otherwise attaches' to him.—Alien from. Us is the disposition to pursue Joseph. Jiitncr into the sanctity of his retirement. As a private citizen we wisli him the enjoyment of every temporal blessing, and it is only because-the whole Commonwealth-—every - (ax-payer within her extended limits—is ■ , immediately interested in the explanation . demanded, that we have been induced to in sist upon its being given us by the adherents of.lhe late executive. We again adduce (ho .evidence upon which wowest lhe f imputation, that Joseph Hither, Ex-Goveihor of this' Commonwealth, now a resident of ■Cumber land County, is a DEFAULTER to’ the State, in the sum of SIXTY-FOUR THOU SAND TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY DOLLARS! and renew our call upon his" adherents to proffer the .demanded cxplan"a-- •tion. —Wlmt-6ayest-tliou r -Joseph,-gHilty-or not guilty?- ' , In his last message communicated to the .. legislature of this State, bearing date De cember 27, 1838, Gov.'-RithccremSrks:— “The whole work (the repairof the Hunt ingdon breach,) wil I"Cost,, whop completed, three hundred and eighty thousand/ldbllar.', of which THREE HUNDRED & THIRTY THOUSAND DOLLARS H AVE BEEN RECEIVED from the BahV of-thc Unitcd States; arid FIFTY TIIOUSANftfDQLi LARS, from the Harrisberg “This sum "of three thousand dollars, which Gov. Ritner thus publicly acknowledges to hare RECEIVED, he expresses (he hope in the same message," - will be promptly ,rc-pald to thc banks by le gislative provision! ' : ■ - -Now mark', ‘how-plain-a taleshaH-put-biiji-r- - downF' James Steel, of thobbrbugh of Huh fing'don, was appointed by C,Snal ; - ’ ’ Commissioners, , disbursing., officer.;on the - break, to pay out the Cbrnmoniyealth’S mo neys tb those legally upon du-, ly. emnly'attcstcdibcfQrc the Auditor General;. lnvcstigrtUoitdind-stTHunttngdoity-r — on the lOthdf'August last, Mr. Steel says: ... "liras the disbursing officer on the canal.).., , from Huntingdon to HolUdaysbuVg. appoint- 4 cd by the late bbardVof canal commissioners. The object as 1 understand-it; in my appoint vnent by the Canal Cbtnmiesioners.wa st o . payout the : money ori duly.ccrtified'vouch ers. All the moneys I received on atcount of this break, I received oh warrants drawn by Gov. Ritner, on the U. States, chdllar risburg Hanks, eicept fourteen' thousand., Gon. Three hundred 'and fifteen . thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars, tV '■ Meomii^J!u~breatcf> scdt’ by Stcel . can be rOad ilyc al.cu.l ate d The bßlahce).remaiuing; ; " rules -V Werciterateour inquiry, tliricc'rhiiJe'xind' stilliihnnsiccrci?, what'has becbnie^.iPgj^.' sixty-four tliousand dollars? -■‘Hither. chived” i it—Steel, the swears, that he.diiFnbf disbnrsew.tr _ Shall 1 Joseph i. .Rilpcrr. the,,.'‘honest Washingfauii'.- county,Jfitrmef,'*) iigalsri wvnttctvlown «**., -' /ixtif/pr.,'jiT’li