Clay's s Bargain with Adams. icolartiliv FROM tan i'AGE.3 • µWaserawrox, Jan. 2b,1826. "Dear sir :—I take r up_iny g pen to inform you of one of the most disgraceful transactions that ever emitted• with infamy the republican ranks. 'Weald you believe that men professing denwen z eY Pallid be found base enough to lay the axe at the very root of the teee of liberty Yet. stomp as it is, it is not less true: To giie you a full historyofthistransaction would far exceed the limits of a letter. I shall, there fore, at once proceed to give rim abrief account of such a bargain ss can only be equalled by the famous Burr conspiracy •of ISOFor some time past the - friends of (lay have hinted that they, like the Swiss, would fight for those who would pay best. Overtures were said-te hive been made by the friends of Adatns to the friends of Clay, offering him the appointment of Secretary of State for his aid to elect Adams. And the friends of Clay gave this information to the friends of Jackson, and hinted that if the friends of Jackson road offer the same price, they would 'lose with them. But none of the fnends of Jackson would descend to 'such mean barter and sale. It was not believed by any of the friends of Jackson that this contract would be ratified by the members from the states why have voted for Mr. I was or opinion, when I fast lieardnf this transaction, that men professing any honorable principle could not, nor would not be transferred like the planter does his negroes, or the farmer his team and horses. No alarm wars, axciisd—we believed the republic was safe. The nation having de livered Jackson into the hands of Congress, backed by a large majority of their votes, there was, en my mind,no doubt that congress would respond to the will of the nation, by electing the individual they had declared to be their choice. Contrary to this expectation, it is now ascertained to a certainty that Henry Clay has transferred his interest to John Quincy Adams. Ass consideration of this abandonment of duty to his constituents, it is said and believed, should this unholy coalition prevail, Clay is to be appointed Secrdary of State. I have no fears on my mind—l am clearly of opinion we •shalldefeat every combination. The force of public opinion must prevail, or theme is an end to LIBTATT:' Ir. Clay's Card. It was impossible for Mr. Clay to remain silent under a public accusation like this. The , notice which he chose to take of it was every way character istic of the man. On Monday, Jan. 31-. 1825, he sent the Nationakintelligen cer, the following card: . "A Csan.—l have seen, without any other emotion than that of ineffable contempt, the abuse, which has been poured upon me by a scurrilous paper, iasueri in this city, and .by other kindred prints and persons; in regard to the Presidential - election. The editor of one of those prints, ushered forth in Philadelphia,! called the Columbian Observer, for which I do not subscribe, and which.' have not ordered, has had the impudence to transmit to me. his vile paper of the 25th instant. In that num ber is insetted a letter purpOrting to have been written from this city, an the 28th inst., by a *member of the House of Representatives, be longing to the Pennsylvania delegation. " ; I believe it to be a forgery; but if it be genuine, Imams= the member wnorssa as wit a5,.. , A BASE AND INFAMOUS CAL UMNIATOR, A DASTARD AND A LIAR, and The dare unveil himsdf and avow his name, I WILL HOLD 111111 RESPONSI BLE, as here admit rayed/ to be TO ALL VIZ LAWS WHICH OOVENN AND DIGTLATZ THZ CONDUCT or XZN or Rosen. . 21st rannary,l22s." H. CLAY. • Mr. Kremer's Card, In response to Mr. Clay's card, the 'Hon. George Kremer, of the Pennsyl vania delegation, avowed himself as the author of the letter to the Columbian Observer. His card was published in' the National Intelligencer, on the 3d of February, es follows : - AivoTass-CAno.---Geerge Kremer, of the House of Representatives, tenders his respects to the honorable " H. Clay," and informs him by a reference to the editor of the, Columbian Observer, he may ascertain the name of the writer of a letter of the 25th nit., which, it seems has afforded so much concern to " Clay." In the mean time, George Kremer - bolds him- self ready to prove to the 'satisfaction of Imre.* judiced minds, enough to satisfy them of the statements which are contained in that% letter, to the extent that they concern the course of "H.. Clay.". Being a •Representative of the people, he will not fear to " cry aloud and spare not, when their rights and privileges are at stake."- Clay's Appeal to the .Iloau. Did Mr. Clay abide by his own card? Did he attempt to call Mr. Kremer to that account which be had said he wo'd? Did he continue to think that his duel ling pistols Were the best means by which he could establish his innocence? No. A House of Representatives was . then in session, of which Mr. Clay was speaker—a house which was pre pared to make Mr. Adams President— s Rouse which, did make Mr. Adams President on the ensuing 9th of Febru sly, and' which, on the 21st of Februa ry, by a vote of more than two tootle, appointed Gales Sr. Seaton, the•editors of the National Intelligencer, and the friends of Mr. Clay, to be their print ers. This was the tribunal to which Mr. Clay• chose now to carry the affair. After the morning business was trans acted, on the 3d of February,,,Mr. Clay rose from his place in the 'Speaker's chair, and called the attention of the House to the note of. Mr. Kremer, in the morning's Intelligencer, and' after - some grave observations about the se rious character of the 'charges which bad been made egitinst him, he demand . ed with the earnest air of offended in ,nocence that the House should appoint a committee to investigate the truth of those eberges. - That is. be asked the House to whit him;ihrough the repots of a partizau . committee. ears Meads ends aa A etamosietee was moved tor, to,wbieli should be referred Mr. Clay's appeal. sod Mr. Kremer's letter. . A minority, of the Rouse resisted the appointment of such a conunittes, on the potted that the Roues would there by erect itself into a tribunal Unknown' to the constitution, and dangerous 'to the freedom of the press;' that. the af fair between Mr. Kremer and Mr. Clay was purely a personal matter • that Mr.`Clay himself had contemplated it as a personal matter, and had declared in his card that he would hold the wri ter of the letter, a , whoever hemightbe, responsible, not to the House .over which he presided, but to the laws of HOSOF! ; that there had been - no breach of the privileges of the Houie, or, if, there had , been; as was said" by. Mr. McDuffie, of South Carolina. -it was not by Mr. Kremer's letter, but by the card of Mr. Clay, which was a public challenge, by the Speaker, to a mem ber of the House. When the minority saw that. Mr. Clay's friends had determined to ap point a committee, in order, if' possible, to prevent its proceeding from being Mere mockery, they moved that the corommittee, should be instructed to inquire into the truth of each specific charge in Kremer's letter, and ehOuld be authorized to send for persona and papers. The friends of Clay showed that they: were opposed to 'a thorn'-in vestigation, by refusing to adopt this proposition. They simply referred the matter to a partizan committee, without authority and without instruc tions, and at full liberty to pursue such course as should seem to them most likely ,to. promote the interests of Mr. Clay. ' , ' Mr. Kremer, of course, refused to appear before this one-sided commit tee. The committee so reported, and the House let the matter drop. The Consummation. The election came on, on the 9th of February, twelve days after Mr. ISTe mer's letter was published in the Ca lumbian Observer ; and, precisely as that letter had predicted, Mr, Clay and his friends gave their votes to Mr. Ad ams. To use'again the eloquent lan guage of another, he broke the, Cripple cord of honor, principle, and duty.— Ile abandoned his principles, deceived Ohio, betrayed Kentucky; and sold the West to her ancient enemy. He voted for one whom be denounced as one of the basest of his race, a dangerous pol itician, and a -vindictive man. He vo ted for one, of the cabinet, whom it was 'avowed to be thefirst object of his friends to defeat. He voted for one whom he had taught Kentucky to hate, and against one whom she bad called on him, almost by acclamation, to sup port. In the election by the House, Mr. Adams, in addition to the votes of the seven-Stateawhich had originally sup ported him, received the votes of Mary land; Kentucky, Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, Missouri and Louisiania. The votes of the last five of these States were in the hands of Mr. Clay, because they were represented in the , House by his personal friends. Illinois had but one Representative ; Missouri but one; and, of the Lonisiania delegation, but two out of the three were friendly to Clay. Thus is happened that FOUR MEN, following the dictates of Henry Clay, disposed of the votes of THREE STATES, which, in the election by the House, balanced the votes of the great States of Pennsylvania, Virginia and' North Carolina, each of which voted against Mr. Adams. Truly did Mr. Kremer announce 4 , that men pro fessing democracy, could be found base enough to lay the axe at the very root of the tree of liberty !" As - soon as Mr. Adams was inaugur ated, he appointed Clay his Secretary Of State, and thus was completed every reenisition of the foul bargain with which he stood charged. Proceeding of the Senate on Clay's itemi sation. The appointment of Mr. Clay was not confirmed by tae Senate without a strenuous opposition on r the part of those Senators Who best understood the means by which that appointment had been obtained. The followiog is an extract from a speech made upon that aecason by Gov. Branch of North Carolina :—See Niles'„Register, vol: 33, p. 22. • "Has it come to this, that nothing but proof positive of corruption will justify the Senate in arresting an appointment! If so, we are more degenerate than I had imagined. What are the facts of this case, as generally admitted to be true, to which we are not at liberty to turn ft deaf earl We see two political opponents, neither having confidence in the other, at a crit ical- moment, when the loaves and fishes am to be divided. the one, in opposition to the well ascertained wishes of the people of his state, AY into each. other's arms and cordially em , brace, Without aught appearing to the world of reconciliation and adjustment of former differ ences. By which means and by which alone the one is enabled to grasp the Presidential chair, in violation of the sovereignty of the pea pie, with a salary of 1625,000 per year, and the Senate of the United States is called upon to aid this President, thus msde,,to confer on the other State department, with sidle", of saooo, and thereby making him heir apparent to the Presidency." The vote - upon the confirmation stood 27 for it, to 14 against it. This was an opposition. at that time. entire ly unprecedented:in the case of' a cabb net appointmeot, Many democratavo -ted tor the cotfirmation, because they WM* 4o+rous litivoid the least appear ance of Tamioua opposition to the new sdainistration; but among those who feltoonstraiied to vote against it, worn 'the' venerable Nathaniel Macon, of North Caroliaa; Col. Hope, of South Carolina; Jackson, of Tooneesoe Gov. Tazewell. of V.illinith and GeiY• tranchfof North-Carolina., Clefs_ earliest'oense. The excuse Which Clay. first laid be fore the public; for his' bold and sheltie less coalition with Adams, app eared in the form of a letter to one of his friends in Virginia. This letter was written twelve days before the election, but was not published until idler the election.— By a singular coincidence, it is dated on the very day on 'which the publication of Mr. Kremer's letter first published the coalition to the world' It has every appearance of having been written, just after the bargain was concluded, and While Clay was yet agitated by those fears likely to beset_a man about to en ter upon a dark career of treachery and allame. We give the letter entire, as found in the 27th volume of Niles' Re gister, at the - 886th page : "Wainmerron, 28th Jan., 1825. "My dear sir—My positionsin regard to the Presidential contest is highly critical, and such as to leave me no path on which I' an move without censure. I have pursued, in regard to it, the rule which I always observe in the die- charge of my duty : . I have interrogated my :conscience as to what I ought to do, and that faithful guide tells me that I ought vote for Mr. Adams. I shall fulfil its in junctions. Mr. Crawford's state of health, and the circumstances. under which he presents himself to the house, appear to me to be con clusive against him. Asa friend of liberty and the permanence of our free institutions, I can not consent at this early stage of their existence by contributing to the election of a military cheiflain, to give the' strongest guaranty that this' epublic will march in the fatal road which had conducted every other republic to ruin.— I owe to our friendship this frank exposition, of my intentions. I am, and shall continue to be assailed by all the abuse which partizan zeal, malignity 'and rivalry can invent. I shall view, without emotien, these effusions of ma lice, and remain unshaken in my my purpose. Whatis a public man worth, if he will not ex pose Idinself, on fit occasions, for the good of his country ? As to the result of the election, I cannot speak with absolute certainty ; but there is eve ry reason to believe that we shall avoid the dangerous precedent to which I allude. Be pleased to give my respects to Mr —, and believe me always your cordial friend. H. CLAY. The honorable P. Brooks." Yes, it is ;here shown that Clay al ready felt the premonitory admonitions of conscious guilt. He anticipates the indignation of an insulted people, and he calls the assaults which he so naturally expected, the "effusions of malice."— He Adds, ,that he " shall view " these effusions " without emotion ;" yet as we have, only. three days after viting this letter, on the 41st of the month, he sent a card to the National Intelligencer, la den with the emotions of a bully and a duellist 1 Clay's horror of Military Chieftain. The sole season which he assigns to Judge Brooke, for his contemplated vote is, that Jackson was a "'military chief tain in this early state of its existence." W,hat miserable hypocrisy, and ohl wretched folly was this ? Had Mr. Clay, in this moment of madness, for gotten the immortal name of Washing. ton ? Did he imagine that the American people had ceased to remember that it that it was a brave and successful " mi litaiy chieftain•" who had been their first President ? Did he vainly hope that he could make any free born citi zen believe that it was a stain upon a man's character, and _a disqualification for office, that he had perilled his life in defence of his country, and had led bis countrymen to victory and to glory ? Clay's allusion to his andante. Mr. Clay pretends to the Judge Brooke that he had " interrogated his con science " as to what he " ought to do," and that, that told him he " ought to vote for Wt. Adams." Did it all tell, him, that he ought to set the will of the the people at defiance, ?abandon his re publican associations, give the lie to all his past professions, strike hands with his bitter enemy, and betray the west to an apostate eastern federalist, who had offered to barter 4s dearest interest to the British d This tale about his con science was monstrous for belief, even at that day ; and certainly, it will do at this day, to talk about the conscience of that man who penned the challenge that brought the lamented Cilley to an un timely grave. Clay's pretended patriotism. Affecting a spirit of self sacrifice, of whichle has never yet given a single example; Mr. Clay ,asps, .« what is a public man worth, if he will not expose himself on fit occasions, for the , good of his country V' 'When, we ask, has Mr. Clay ever exposed himself for the good of /his country? Had he, like Andrew Jackson, bared his breast to the deadly battle field ? Had he ventured his for tune ? Had he submitted to the least degree of privation and hardship ? No, his life had been whiled away, amid the luxuries of office. He had - ever reclin ed -Upon the silken couch of political power, and the ver act which he was then endeavoring to. excuse, , was but a, selfish attempt to trim his sails, s od as to catch the breeze which might waft him onward to the goat of his ambition. Clay's Address to his continents. The awakening wrath of au offended people, beginning to. press-heavily upon him. Clay eavr fit, on this 26th March, 1825, to issue, in his own defence, an " Address. to his cOnstituente." ' The address occupies 16 printed columns of Niles' Register. In all the wordy length of this slabsrgipdormrneM, strange as it may appear, he gives but two reasons for his vote against Jackson : Ist, that Jackson, 1131 ainire military chieftain, wainafinavemitatentinailebtittelbei Various. 'nitric' atnand:conitilez OA* of the office - of Chief ''Magaitratii la his competitor;" and 24, that, by voilegfor Adams, he would conform 'to the Wishes of the Ohio delegation. The first rea son given in the letter to Brooke : the . last, though it was all he hail been able to add ~,to his .defence, in the space of two months, is too palpably Woe to have the weight of a-feather in Mr. C.'s favor, for, as wall we have before shown. Mi. Clay's friends in Ohio, in the ad dress of their State . Convention, in July, 1824, had .solemnly declared that the election of Mr. Adams was the "event which it was the first object of the friends of Mr Clay .PR:gPENT.'!-- Any man who knows John Stone, John C. Wright. Joseph ranee and Morde cai Bartley, the men who were then the leaders of "the Ohio delegation,". knows that Clay never conformed- to their wishls, but that they conformed to the wishes of Clay. If the wings of this day can believe that Henry Clay followed the lead of John Sloane, upon the most important question be was ever celled upon ,to decide, and that, in viola tion of the instructions, almost unani mously given him by the Legislature of Kentucky, it is plain That they must be lieve Sloane the greater man of the two. and.we would humbly advise them,fin that case, to drop Clay and take up Sloane as the candidate under whom they will meet defeat in the ensuing election., Thi object of thecoatitton• Even of there was not one particle of pdsitive testimony upon the subject, it would still remain as clear as the noon day sun, that Mr. Clay made Adams President for the sake of obtaining the office of Secretary of State, and securing the succession to theeresidency. The ease proves itself. " Am I asked for the proof?" said Mr. McDuffie, in the House . of Representatives. "I answer, that if circumstantial evidence be not re 'ected as inadmissible, it is full and stis- factory. Hear it ! He gives the vote of his State in opposition to his own principles--against the will of that State —and thereby make's the President;— and then has the frontless, shameless audacity, to set public opinion at defi ance, by instantly obi openly receiving, as the highest reward of his treachery to the people, and to his own principles, the highest office that President could confer. upon him ! Can any thing be more plain ? - It is the commofrcase, of a sale in the market overt; and none but a man of most consumate boldness and effrontery could hold up his head in so ciety after such a transaction." Them is abundant evidence, however, of the most positive character, to show why the vote of Kentucky was given to Adams. Gen. Metcalf, one of the members from Kentucky, when he returned to his constituency, after the election, .stated as an excuse for voting for Adams, ••We could not possibly get Clay into the ca binet without voting for and electing Adams." Francis Johnson, another Kentucky. member, said, after his return from Washington, "that he voted for Adams to get Clay made Secretary of State." David Trimble, another. Kentucky member, apologized for his vote b) say ing, " We ascertained that Adams would make Clay Secretary of State, and Jack son would not." " David White, another of the Me. , gation, declared " I voted for Adams to promote Cla i 's future prospects for the Presidency . John J. Crittenden, the same who is now in the Senate of the United States, was then, as now, probably the most in timate of Clay's friends. The following is an,extract from a letter, from Crittent den to David White at ashington, da ted "FRANKFORT, Jan. 19, 1825." Extrad. 'Under all present circumstan ces, my first wish in regard to this subject (and it is one dictated both by personal partialities and considerations of the public good,) would be that JACKSON should be President, and Clay his Secretary of/State: and I really do be lieve that the common good is more concerned in Clay's being Secretary of State, than it is in the question whether Jackson or Adams should be President.' ' We append another extract from this same letter, to show the political mor- als of that time, as Well as the slavish devotion to the interests of Mr: which was then inculcated upon the Kentucky members. “ I voted for him, [Calhoun,] it, is true, as Vice President, but I did it because I thought he was the abler man. If I had thought Clay's interest would have been advanced a hair's breadth by voting against Calhoun, it would have been done.” This letter was published ►n the Ken tucky papers in 1828, and its authenti city has never been denied. When it was written. Crittenden had not vet earned that Jackson had refused to liar gain for the Presidency, and he there tore expressed his honest preferences for Jackson as President. The line of "Sate Precedents." But Mr. Clay has indiscreetly given us evidence upon this subject, from his own pen. - • In his letter to Judge Brooke, he says there is every reason to believe that we shall avoid the dangerous pre cedent to which I allude That 'lire cedent" ,was ,the election of Andiew Jackson..'; In his address to his coUstituents, or March 20th, 1825, he says : ' , ln his [us Imam Emma Its than that ......1 nt. k ibe OVIIIWIMLY WITIVIIISZAIII4 As in the first place , fwe would prevent an inundation we mast ove ell obsttuctions. to the free diseharge of superabundant waters. So, in the second' pla if we. would prevent iglld cure disease , we m open and keep open, all tbe.Nateral Drains o 1110104; WILIGWeII ISDTIN *cornets ems, Of The North iimeriecoe College -of Heal h, will be found oneof dm hest if not the very RUT ISIDICINZ Ili TOE WORLD , for carrying out this beautiful and simple the*. ry ; because they.conipletely cfrmaetke Stomach and Bowels from all Billiass Humes and oth er impurity, and at the sate time promote a healthy discharge him the Lungs, Skin, and Kidneys; consequently, as all the Natural Drains are opened, Disease of every name is literally driven from the Body. a:r Caution—As the great popularity aria consequent great demand for Wright's vegetable Pills has raised up a host of counter feiters, country agents and storekeepers will be on their guard against the many imposters who are travelling about the country selling to the unsuspecting a spurious article forthe genuine.- It should be remembered that all authorized agents are provided a Certificate of Agency, signed by Wirramc WRIGHT Vice President of the N. A. College of Ikea. Consequent ly, those who offer Indian Vegetable Pills. and cannot show a Certificate. as above described, will be known as imposters. The following highly respectable Store keeper° have been appointed Agents for the sale of WEIGHT'S INDIAN' VEGETABLE PILLS, and of whom it is confaientlr t ,believed 'the ge nuine medicine can with certainty be obtained: BRADFORD COUNTY, PA. • .D.& E. D. Montanyei Towanda. D.Brink, P.M., Hornbrook. S. W.& D.P. POLO eroy, Troy. Lyman Duffey, Smithfield, . . & C. Warford, Monroetin. Wm. Gibson, Ulster. Ulysses Moody, Asylum. John Horton Jr.. Tarrytown. Coryell & Gee, Burlington corners. Benjamin Coolhaugh, Canton. L. 8. Ellsworth & Co., Athens. Allen & Storrs, Sheshequin. Guy Tracy, Milan. " A. ft. Soper, Columbia Flatts. Offices devoted exclusively to the sale of the medicine wholesale and retail, 228 Greenwich street, New York, No. 198 Tremont street, Boston, and 169 Race street, Philadelphia. Bat/faux OF etwarreararrs.--The public are respectfully informed that medicine purport. ing to be Indian Pills, made by one V. 0. ,Falek, are not the genuine Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills. The only security against imposition is to purchase from the regular advertised agents, and in all cases be particular to ask for IVrighes Indian Vegetate Pills. [not6m. SADDLE AND HARNESS ~~~ ~~ ELHAVrallf SMITH SOJr, lIAVE commenced the manufacture of Saddles, Bridles, Harness, .&c., &c., in the borough of Towanda, in. the building for. merly occupied by S. Hathaway, two doors west of I. H. Stephene - tavern, where they will keep constantly on hand, and manufacture to order, Elastic FPO, Common and Quitted gta)r:lo. , S3D Carpet Bags, Trunks, Valises, s•c. c. and Military Work Harness, Bridies, Collars, Ca? Wage Trimming done to order. Mattrasses, Pew and Chair Cushions made on shynotice and reasonable terms. Thesubscribers hope by doing their work t well, and by a strict attention to business, to merit' share of public patronage. ELKANAH SMITH de SON. Towanda, May 14, 1844. It CALL FROM THE YANKEE SHOP. Upon all whom it may interest. TMB subscriber is very much in watt of .., money and does not feel dispesea tohave his own property sacrificed to accommodate those who .are indebted to him, that have rea sonable time to pay, coriseqUently if they will call and settle their acts, however small they may be, they will . oblige him - very muelk and save cost withot respect to persons. D. C., 1 0A1.1.. Towanda, March 4th, 1644. 1. f" .. WI the matter of application o At. a Court i Stephen Krumand others to of Common be incorporated under the style, Pleas of name or title of thei" Free-Will Brad. , Co., Baptist Society "of Troy. , Sep. . '44. Notice is hereby given. that Stephen Krum, Oliver Calkins, Gardner Seaman, Roswell Dun. bar and others on the 9th of May 1844,,present ad to the said court an instrument in , writing, and the objects, articles and condition therein set forth and contained appearing to them law ful and not injurious to the commniiity, direct ed the said writing to be filed, and that notice be given in one newspaper printed in said tounty of Bradford, for at lent three weeksbe fori the hest court of Common Pleas of said. county; setting forth,ftbat an application has been made to said court to grant such an incor poration according 93 the act'of Assembly in such case made and provided. ; A. CHUBBOOK, Prothoni#ary. - Prothonotary". Office; _. Towanda, June 10, 1844, 5 . . BABID & SHERWOOD, , • a).U I WiZr if*W, BAIRD & J. SHERWOOD have i e opened an office - in Troy,Brad. Co. Pa. an will attend to all business of said Office, in the line of their prole ssiOn its copartners. , J. 811X11111 , 00D will attend putictually at saidolEce in Troy, and E. W. Baron may be consulted skint time in relation to Tt4 business of. the firm, at his ttlfice io. TAWandlk - BOOT & SHOtIVIAtIN ...0 1 my own hoof faint! PHI of t3Mm i• ~:~ • vos ciiist uflounding WOD. body—if the, baturai oat- OTEPHEN - HATHAW AY kron a , ,public generally that he is still pl., to manufacture, of the tett ' intuit , . and in most substantial and elegant manner, sa seditious of Boots and Shoes. - Morocco. Calf and Coarse - Boots and 84 Ladielf - sboes urd gaiters t youth's do. All work made by me wilLbe trin alk i be ;Tell made. Call and try. Country Produce !sign In payment for ro Towanda,. February 21th, 1844. ass affording a 06 are in, Chairs and Bedsteads , 'RE oub l ifo r , au to manursti. km? Oahe/id s e stand: do ki n a, Ea `w ood , int. Also, stn 'Ts biz*, tap I no of cloy d ei trey. !all OT TURNING done to order. Count", p_. `lx° TOMKINS & i t iA r . wr Towanda, November 10t11. 1841 WA 51.3%2422422 - BOOT & SHOrtikatil WILCOX & SAGE - bare themselves in 'the Boot' and hvi l ug business, in the borough of 'TosrrA, door west of the Claremontilouse, rah a share of public patronage. They it* a cared selection of stock, and by cot, the interests of their castomirs,toagi e , and durable work as can bo manbArtai l this portion of the country. They keep constantly on hand, lad ad i nufacture to order, morocco, calf sad boots and shoes; Lidies' Gaiters, &al slips; children's do, ; gent's gaitnsaadr &c., &c. JOHN W, WILE PHILANDER SAO Towandi, May 6, 1844. SADDLE, HARNESS ir., .UMUMZ. 4M/IVIPAOttCI2Z:b WEE SUBSCRIBER respect* his old friends and the public that he is now carrying on the ebore in all its various branches, in the tat}, the building occupied by B. Thom33,en shop, on Main street, nearly opposite Me store, where he will be happy to old and new customers. SADDLES, BRIDLES, ' MARTINGALS, J COLLARS, WHIPS &C , &C. Of the latest fashion and best materithi made to order on moderate terms for rein) Most kinds of country produce will licl in exchange for work: HARNESS, April 17, 1844 A Speciallrociamatioe 4 1.9 0. UALSTED, as in duty' • returns his sincere thanks to that have layered him with their potronsgei time past, and assure all who may freln terest in the information, thathe still writ' at the old stand, ready to digitise to Ott all manners, kinds and conditions of et tiortaries, Groceries, Cigars. 4c. dr., usual liberal prices, and most seconamti terms, to wit—For cash only. To the. Thirsty, he would Is!, is SI WATER is unrivalled. &mil het it 4 rious other beverages are constsntil on ti To the Hungry. be It proclaimed established alsl ARK ET in the baseman establishment, where FRESH /Rai rious kinds, will be kept constarktd' Towanda, May 6. 1844. Go Executor's Notice, ALL PERS NS indebted to dui GEORGE BOWES, laud% deceased, are hereby notified to watch. payment ; and all persons hating , at against said estate, are requested to them to the subscriber, legtdly authentic settlement without delay: , NOAH C. BOWEN,Z H. B. BOWEN, 5 Warren, April 26,1844. .11C i 4101p 'irlll.4o lo p A LL persons indebted to the acted ) Ak.. Burris, late of Towanda, decd.,' tined to pay' , the same to the s ubscriber , having charges, will also present theial Mumma, duty authenticated. LUCY BURNS, Admini Towanda, May 28, 1844. The Bradford Rgo, ttZliaMa 8 Two dollars and fifty cents per soul sive of postage. Fifty cents data within the year ; and for cob sclo wince, ONE. DOLLAR will be declined. ,Subscribere .at liberty to discent time by paying irrearages. Advertisements, not exceeairg $ 0 sated for fifty cents; every 00 tion twenty-five cents. &liberal 4 0 to yearly 'advertisers. Twelve lines or less make a sql ol Job Printing, of every desCripos!l expeditiously executed, on new ssdo type. -Cletters on business pretsWo,, tea. must come free of postage,ta to ' tion. • AGENTS. , The following gentlethen are ro: receive subscriptions for the Er AN . and to receipt for payments therefor. "C.ll. RVMICE, Esq.. ......... . J. R. CoaLsAtion, ............. Col. W. V. •BawroN, ...... .... • E. AsPariwatt., .......... • ...... J. E. GOODlllcn, .............. B. CootisArell, . ............... ADDISON ArKsaw, .......... •• • .D. Joimsox... ... : .... . ... ...": A. M. C 05;........ •. .. CARPET VALICFS, TRUNKS, JERE CC' E, 9, 000rmIcit f. 112 00l