VoL. VI, No. 6.] 1M,7.110 OF Tilt HUNTINGDON JOURNAL. The ,, JOURNAL" will be published every Wednes.lay morning, at two dollars a year, of i:)tid IN ADVANCE, and if not paid with in six months, two dollars and a half. Every person who obtains five subscribers, and forwards price of subscription, shall be iurnished with a sixth copy gratuitously for me.year. . . . _ - _ Nu subscription received for a less period than six in mths, nor any paper discontitaled until all arrewrages are paid. irr \ II communications must be addressed to the F.' litar , PJS'r PAID, or they will not be attended to. - - Advettisem,nt9 not exceeding one square, will be inserted three times for one dollar, and for every subsequent insertion, twenty live cents per square will be chlrged. If no definite orders are given as to the time an advertlsement is to he continued, it will be kept in till ordered out, and charged accor d itigly. AG ENTS. liantingdon Jurnal. Daniel Teague, Orbisonia; David Blair, Eau Shade Gap; Benjamin Lease, Shirleys bare; Mel Smith. Esq. Chilcottstogun; Jas. Entriken, jr. Ceffee Run; Hugh Madden, Springfield; Dr. S. S. Dewey, Bir mingham; James Morrow, Union Furnace ; John Skier, Warrior Mark; James Davis, Esq. West township ; D. -H. Moore, Esq. Frankstown; Eph. Galbreath, Esq. Holli daysburg; Henry Neff, Alexandria; Aaron Burns, Williamsburg; A. J. Stewart, Water Street; Win. Reed, Esq. Morris township; Soloman Hamer. Airs Mill; James Dysart, Muth Spruce Creek; Win. Murray, Esq. Graysville; John Crum, Manor Hill; Jas. E. Stewart, Sinking Valley; L. C. Kessler, Mill Creek. TREATMENT' The principal objects to be kept In view are Ist, to free the stomach and intestines from offending materials. 2d, to improve the tone of the digestive organs and energy of the system in removing noxious matters from the atolls:tell, and obviating costiveness. Violent drastic purgatives should be avoided %tad those aperients should be used which act gently, and rather by soliciting the per•- istalic motions of the intestines to their regu larity of health, than by irritating them to a laborious excitement. k'here is no medicine better adapted to the completion of this than Dar. U. P. HARLICR'S GERMAN APERIENT PILLS. To improve the functions of the de bilitatedorgans and invigorate the system generally, 110 medieine has ever been so prominently efficacious as DR. Harlich's (:oinpoand Conic Strengthening Pills, whose salutary influence in restoring the digestive nrgans - to a healthy action, and re-establish ing health and vigor in enfeebled and dys potic constitutions; have gained the implicit confidence of the must eminent physicians, and unprecidented public testimony. Re member De. Harlich's Compound Tonic Strengthening Pills, thay are put up in small packets with full directions. Principal office for the United States, is Nn. 19 North Eighth street Philadelphia where all communications must be addres, Ned. Also for sale at the store of Jacob Miller who is agent for Huntingdon County. RICHES NOT HEALTH. Those who enjoy Health, must certainly feel blessed when they compare themselves to those sufferers that have been afflicted for years with various diseases which the hu - frian family are all subject to be troubled with.— Diseases present themselves in various forms and from various circumstanc,s, which, in the commencement, may all be checked by the use of Dr. 0. P. Huai' 's Compound Strengthening and German Aperient Pills, —such as Dyspepsia, Liver Complaints, Pain in the Side, Rheumatism, General De bility, Female Diseases, and all Diseases to which humantr nature is subject, where tit Stom.tch is a ected. Directions for using these Medicines always accompany them. These Medicines can be taken with perfect safety by the most delicate Female, as they are mild in their operation and pleasant in their effects. Principal Office for the United States, No. N orth Eighth Stret , Also for sale at the store of Jacob Miller, Huntingdon, Pa. LIVER COMPL4INT Cured by the use of Dr Harlich's Compound Strengthening and German Aparient Pills Mr. Win. Richard, Pittsburg, Pa. entirely cured of the above distressing disease: His soinptoms were, pain and weight in the left side, loss of appetite, vomiting, acrid eructa Lions, a distention of the stomach, sick headache, furred tongue, countenance chang ed to a eitron color, difficulty of breathing, disturbed rest, attended with a cough, great debility, with othersymtoms indicating great derangement of the functiens of the liver. Mr. Richard Lad the advice of several phy sicians, but received no relief, until using Dr Harlich's medicine, which terminated in ef fecting a perfect cure. Principal offica, 19 North Eight stree Philadelphia. [don Pa For sale at Jacob Miller's store Huntin CAUSE OF DYSPEPSI4. This disease often originates from a hab, of overloading or distending the stomach by excessive eating or drinking, or very protrac ted periods of fasting, an indolent or seden tary life, in which no exercise is afforded to the muscular fibres or mental faculties, fear grief. and deep anxiety, taken too frequent ly strong purgingmedicines, dysentery, mis carriages, intermittent and syasmodic affec tions of the stomach and bowels; the mo. summon of the latter causes are late hour susii tke too frequent as. of spirituosliquor jo - uRNAL• - t HUNTING TrNTERESTING CURE PERFOIv 4.11. MED BY Da. SWAYNE'S COM. POUND SYRUP OF PRUNES; VIRGIN lANA, oa WILD CHERRY. Having made use of this invaluable Syrup in my fam ily, which entirely cured my child. The symptoms were Wheezing and choking of Flegm, difficulty of Breathing. attended with constant cough, Spasms, Convulsions, &c. of which I oad given up all hopes of its recrvery, until I was advised to make trial of this invaluable medicine. After seeing ;Ate wonderful effects it had upon my child, I concluded to make the same trial upon my self, which entirely relieved me of a cough that I was afflicted with for many years Any persons wishing to see me can call at my,house in Beach street. above the marker: Kensington, Phila. JOHN WILLCOX OBSERVE—TiIe only place where thismed eine can be obtained, is at Jacob Miller's store HuutinEdm. RHEUMATISM, Entirely cured by the use of Dr. 0. P. Harlich's Compound Strengthening and Ger man Aperient Pills. Mr. Solomon Wilson, of Chester co. Pa., afflicted for two years with the above dis tressing disease, of which he had to use his crutches fur 18 months, his symptoms were excruciating pain in all his Joists, especially n his hip, Shoulders and ancles, pain increas ng al ways towards eyeing attended with heat. Mr. Wilson, was at one time not able to move his limbs on account of the Pain be ing so great; he being advised by •a friend of his to procure Dr. Harlich's pill of which he sent to the agent in West Chester and pro cored som; on using the medicine the third day the pain disappeared end his strength increasing fast, and in three weeks was able to attend to his business, which he had not done for 18 months; for the benefit of 'tilers afflicted, he wishes those lines pu dished that they may be relieved, and lir en joy the pleasures of a healthy life. Principle office, 19th North 8t Street, Philadelphia. ALSO—For sale at the Store of J cob Mil ler, Huntingdon, Pa. DR. JAYN E' S EXPEC7'OII AIV 7 We consider it a duty to call public atten tention to this admirable Keperation for Pulmonary Diseases— Especially Coughs Colds,Consumptions, Spitting blood, Asth ma, roncial Affections, 'looping Cough,& It is used and very highly. approved by peel sons of the first respectability, but we fee confident in saying that a trial of its efficacy will be its best reccommendation. ....... DR. JONATHAN GOING, PRESIDENT OF THE GRANVILLE (~, L LEGE, Ohio (late of New York), in a letter to Dr. Jayne clu ed New York, December. 1836. says:— He was laboring under a revere cold, cough and hoarseness, and that his difficulty o breathing was so great that he felt hirosel 'in imminent danger of immendiate suffoca ' tion, but was perfectly cured by using the Expectorant. "—Mrs. Delks, of Salem, N.J. was cured of Asthma of twenty years stand ing, by using two bottles of this medicine Mts. Ward, also of Salem, was cured of the same complaint by one bottle. Ayoungla dy, also of Salem, who was believed by her friends to be far gone with consumption rya perfectly restored by three bottles.—Dr. Hamilton of St. James, South Carolina, was greatly affected by a cough, hoarseness and soreness of the lungs, and on using a bottle of this medicine found permanent relief. Mr. Nicholas Harris, sen., one of the Dea cons of the First Baptist Church in this city, has been perfectly cured by it—after having suffered fur stxty years with Cough, Asth ma, and Spitting of Blood, which no remedy before could relieve. The Rev. C. C. P. Crosby, writes as fol lows: New York, June 15,1838. To Dr. Jayne:—Dear Sir,—l have made use of your Expectorant, personally and in my family for the last six years, with great benefit. Indeed I may consider my life pro longed by the use of this valuable medicine, under the blessing of God, for several years. I may say almost as much in the case of my wife, and also of the Rev. Mr. Tonsod, of he Island of Jamaica. For all cases of cough, tfflamation of the chest, lungs, and throat, I o most unhesitatingly recommend this as the est medicine I have ever tried. My earnest wish is, that others afflicted as I have been, may experience the same relief,iwhich I am persuaded they will by using your Expecto anrt. C. C. P. CROSBY. The following Certificate is from a practi sing PHYSICIAN and a much respected Clergyman of the Methodist society—da ted Modest Town, Va. Augnst 27, 1838. Dr. JAYNE, Dear have been using your Expectorant extensively in my practice for the last three months, and for all attacks of Colds, Coughs, Inflamation of the Lungs, Consumption, Asthma, Pains and weakness of the Breast, it is decidedly the best medi cine I have ever tried. Very respectfully yours, R. W. WILLIAMS. Dr. Jayne's Office is No. 20 South Third street. Phillkdelphia, where all orders will be promptly attended to. Fold itlsO by JACOB MILLER, agent Huntingdon, Pa.—Price el. MEAD THIS!: DR. SW AYN E'S COM 414 POUND SYRUP of PRUNES VIR GINIAN A, or WILD CHERRY: This is de cidedly one of the best remedies for Coughs and COlds now in use: it allays irritation of the Lungs, to isens the cough, causing the plegm to raise free and easy; in Asthma. Pulmonary Consumption, Recent or Chron ic Coughs, Wheezing & Choking of Phlegm Hoarseness, Difficulty of breathing, Croup, npitting of Blood, &c. This Syrup is will a.mted to effect a permanent cure, it takes nncording to directions which accompany the t ittles. Per sale mitt at heel, Mill is stile "ONE COUNTRY, ORE CONSTITUTION, ONE DESTINY." A. W. BENEDICT PUBLASHER AND PROPRIETOR MISCELLANY, The Betrothed One. A TRIIR STORY FROM LIFII. BY CHARLES HOLDEN, It was Washington Irving, I think, who termed that fatal disease, Consumption, a syren. I t is a most true remark. Co, sumption is a syren that is frequently tri• unipliant in deception, until the last day t,f its victim's life. Who has nut, in this era and place of the destroyer, had some relative or friend prostrated by its pore'? ' It is the scourge or our land, and its vic tims are full of the loveliest and most gentle of the earth. How this insidious disease baffles the skill of the physician, and tampers with the hopes of near relatives and endeared friends! At one time flushing the cheek with the hue of health—anon clothing the brow of its vi;:tini with the pallor of death! 1 recollect an affecting instance of con sumption, that occurred in this city, and within my own observation. The victim was a yontli—at the time he was brought down from his pinacle of hope by the in satiate archer, he was hardly twenty years of age. lle was pour—of humble origii. —of limited prospects. lie had tried one trade, but it did not agree with his poor health—another with the stole re stilt. The pour lad seemed marked, from ear ly youth, fur trials, and they soon cao.e thick upon him. His Was a consumptive family. It was one of those families that seem to die, one after another, at about equal intervals and of the same disease. The reader mayhap, has observed such. One would fall—the outbrcaking of the first deep grief would become soothed into a quiet melancholy—his vacant place would be come familiar to the eye—the grass would begin to wave luxuriantly over his grave --the headstone would be reared, and could be contemplated with outward com posure by the survivors of the broken eir cle;—wheit anon the hectic spot is on the cheek of one of the mom tiers; an iucami tious exposure—a gentle shower—the damping of the feet/—one of these is the ostensible cause; pain in the side ensues, soon the hereditary symptoms become more apparent—the victim rapidly fal ters—is sick unto death—the earth is res moved beside the former grave—another mound appears—the bereaved are again in weeds and tears; and so through a fami running quietly, as though the put ting oft' this "mortal coil" were hut as the change of scene and air to others of a stronger constitution—and all over! The lad of whom I write was of a con sumptive family. Some of them had al ready passed away. And when he was taken ill, it was a common but unkind re- mark that was made—he will die of con sumption, as have those of his family be fore him! It was tint so with his mother. She • upheld his spirits with an unshrin king heart, though severely did the incip ient symptoms lacerate her feelings, such a similitude did they bear to those manifested in them that hail fallen. • But the most touching observation to the feeling heart; was the "bow ot prom ise" that had been obscured, and was ul timately broken by this fearful disease, between a lad and a young woman to whom he had plighted his faith. They had dreamed of lung years of earth and happiness—but as the dreamer awakes to find that the chimeras of his sleeping moments are baseless—so awoke they, at length, to the stern realities and desti vies of human life. I had heard something of the ardor and singleness of purpose of W 0111411 1 .3 heart— where she resigned it in its richness— and how her empire where she reigned pre.eminent, and shone an angel, was a sick chamber. I had seen something ofl it. In this young woman—such was my situation-1 saw it fully developed; and! with such beauty and simplicity, that her' heart must have been the abode of deep unquenchable purity and heroism, or she must have faltered and failed amid her trials. I have a high, a most exalted opin ion of woman's patient, inexhaustible en durance of affliction. Take her away from scenes of misery--let her have no cause of anxiety and watching—allot to her only the ord wary duties of life— and it seems to you that a single wave of dis quietude would unfit her for usefulness. So feminine—so fragile— how, it occurs to you, can she endure an additional bur then! But when the blow does come, I who attends the sacrifice .with most tio. shrinking heroism? Man? Proud ethel tic man? No. Woman! weak, depen dent, tender woman--upon whom it were feared the winds of heaver. might blow too roughly—she holds her tireless •vatch amid the scenes of sorrow—wo man is preeminent here, here she shows her excel:once sad endurance. While 'EDNESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1841 man flags and falls asleep with weariness, she glides about, night alter night, now refreshing the parched lips of the suffer-' cc with a cooling draught—now smooth ing his pillow, that his aching head, if it were possible might rest easier, anon hushing every sound that his unquiet sleep may not be broken! In all this world of selfishness and suffering, what contemplation is more ennobling to fe male characte.., than that when she is ex erting her l.oly ministrations about the I beu-side of suffering humanity. And this was the character of the young woman, between whom and the Consumptive there had grown up a warm affection. FF siting in the humblest paths of life, she evinced the excelhencies of, heart which would have ennobled a we. man in her proudest estate. It was near ly two years from the time the youth first became unabled to be abroad all day until the curtain fell upon the last scene of the tragedy. As soon as he became so helpless as to need the soothing, hand at night,though lie was well attended by his mother, the devoted girl was not at ease till she could administer that soothing herself, She must support herself with her own hands; for this is tritely one of the 'simple animals of the pour.' During t h e day she plied her needle for her live- I Wined; at night she was a tender and careful nurse, if need there was. At length his disease became more in veie,ite, and he required constant atten ;wn, by night mid by day. Then it was thai liis motile girl, after the application to h,:r task by day, would watch close be side his bed-side during the night, catch ing at intervals a little rest, and again re turn. exhausted with sorrow by the obser vation of his sufferings and by the unre mitt,tl vigils, to her daily toil. My situation was such, I knew much that transpired within the sick chamber of that youth. It was a part of the gt eat d ramma, and I studied it. It was a pic ture of what all must come to, and though painful to gaze upon, I would not shrink from it. Man must die, it were well for him to ponder the great truth. Let him look the attendants full in the tace; the sick ehamt,er, the coffin, the hearse, the likless clay, and let him listen to the wails of the mourners. It is an important art of the drama, and he is unwise who avoids its representation, and can only look 3 t health, and listen to the voice of pleasure. Ile will cower when the strug g/e shall come : as does timid woman be fore the vivid lightning's Hash. NlThen this youth learned that hernnst die, for he admitted the tearlul truth at length, although it seemed hard, with earth and sky as when he revelled upon and beneath them in the full health of his boyhood, at twenty, to lie down, with out a pang at the heart, and acknowledge there was no hope! Olen these oppres sive feelings came upon him, then would this devoted girl throw out all her arts to lift his spirit above the earth. She would talk with him, read to him, when the cloud lay most heavily, she would dispel it by singing plaintive airs to him; and when the hoarse wave of death seemed to break in upon his mil, awl .io-imagina tion he fancied he the earth grate upon his coffin, she would pray with him; until the soothing spirit of religion would subdue the wave of despair that had o• verwhelmed him. They were both young; it ivas therefore the more rare and affectiog to hear, some times the one and sometimes the other, as they sent up their artless petitions to heaven. But why lengthen, out T,a sad but true tale! The Consumptive grew gradually but surely worse. Ile lingered till one hope after another was wrested from his feeble grasp. Ile lingered on till all hope was gone; till the relentless disease drove him from the pleasant sunshine a bout his own door step to the window of his room; from that to the easy chair; from that to his bed, never more to rise! But no event save death, could wrest her from his bed side. She wasted to a shad ow; still her daily walk was to the place of her labor; her leisure moments at his side. Comforts from her scanty earn• ings, she procured him with a liberal hand. Who can appraise such devotion and love. The hour at length came. He died! 1 , In the graveyard yonder you may not di,ainguish his grave, for it is of marked with the show attendant on the resting place of the rich. But in the hearts of, those who loved him while living, and sorrowed for him when dead, his memo ry is enshrined; and the radiance of their pure affection and devotion still :plays a round the hearts of those who saw his man ifestations. To them it is left to pity, and such affection, such self-denial, suet ennobling devotion to suffering humanity is more worthy an imperishable monu ment, than the most heroic deeds that were ever .lone by the most chivalric wo ' man of whom fame is clamorous! A Melting Story. No other class of men in any country possess that facetious aptness of inflicting a good-humored revenge which seems to be innate with a Green Mountain boy.-- Impose upon or injure a Vermonter, and he will seem the drollest and best-natured fellow you ever knew in all your life, un til suddenly he pounces upon you with some cunningly-devised offset for your duplicity; and even while he makes his victim smart to the cure, there is that manly open-heartedness about him which infuses balm even while the wound is opening, and renders it quite impossible that you should hate him, however severe may have been the punishment he dealt out to you. These boys of the Green Mountains seem to possess a natural fac ' ulty of extracting fun from every vicissi tude and accident that the changing hours can bring; even what are bitter vexations to others, these happy fellows treat in a manner so peculiar as to completely alter their former character, and make them seem to us agreeable, or at least endiirs. ble which was before in the highest de gree offensive. Another man will repay an aggravation or an insult by instantly returning injury, cutting the acquaintance and shutting his heart forever against the offender; but a Vermonter, with a smile upon his face, will amuse himself while obtaining a far keener revenge,' cracking a joke in conclusion, and making his former enemy forgive hint and even love him af• ter chastisement. One winter evening, a country store keeper in the Mountain State was about' closing his doors for the night, and while standing in the snow outside putting up his window shutters, he saw through the' glass a lounging, worthless fellow within, grab a pound ot fresh butter from the shell and hastily conceal it in his hat. The act was no sooner detected than the revenge was hit upon, and a very few momenta found the Green Mountain store keeper at once indulging his appetite for ton to the fullest extent, and paying off the thief with a facetious sort of torture, fur which he might have gained a premium from the old inquisition. "I say, Seth t" said the store keeper, coming in and closing the door alter 111111, slapping his hands over his shoulders and stamping the snow off his shoes. Seth had his band upon the door, his hat upon his head, and the roll of new butter in his hut, anxious to make his exit as soon as possible. .1 say, Seth, sit down; I reckon, now, on such an e•tar•nal night as this, a little something warm wouldn't hurt a fellow; come and sit down." Seth lelt very uncertain; he had the butter, and was exceedingly anxious to be off, but the temptation of "something warm" sadly interfered with his resolu tion to go. This hesitation, however, was soon settled by the right owner of the butter taking Seth by the shoulders and planting him in a seat close to the stove, where he was in such a manner cornered in by barrels and. boxes, that while the country grocer sat before him there was no possibility of his getting out, and right in this very place sure enough the store keeper sat down. "Seth, we'll have a little warm Santa Cruz," said the Green Mountain grocer, as he opened the stove door, and stuffed in as many sticks as the space would ad. mit. "Without it you'd freeze going home such a night as this." Seth already felt the butter settling down closer to his hair, and jumped up, declaring he must go. "Not till you have something warm, Seth ; come, I've got a story to tell you, too; sit down, now ;" and Seth was again pushed into his seat by his cunning tor mentor. "Oh! it's darn'd hot here," said the petty thief, again attempting to rise. "Set down—don't be in such a plaguey hurry," retorted the grocer, pushing him back in his ceair. ..But I've got the cows to fodder, and some wood to split, and I must be spin," continued the persecuted chap. ..But you mustn't tear yourself away, Seth, in this manner. Set down ; let the cows take care of themselves, and keep yourself cool; you appear to be fidgetty," said the roguish grocer, with a wicked leer. The next thing was the production of two smoking glasses of hot rum toddy, the very sight ot which, in Seth's present sit• nation, would have made the hair stand erect upon his bead, had it not been well oiled and kept down by the butter. "Seth, I'll give you a toast now, and you can butter it yourself," said the grocer, yet with an air of such consummate sim plicity that poor Seth still believed him sell unsuspected. "Seth, here's—here's a Christmas goose--(it was about ,Christ mas time) —here's a Christmas goose, well ' roasted and boated, eh? I tell you, Seth, it's the greatest eating in creation. And Seth, don't you ever use hog's fat or corn. won cooking batter to baste with; fresh [WitioLE No. 266. pound butter just the same as you see on that shelf yonder, is the only proper thing in natur to baste a goose with—come, take your butter—l mean, Seth, take your tod• dy." Poor Seth now began to smoke as welt as to melt, and hie mouth was as her:neti. tally sealed up as though he had been horn dumb. Streak after streak of the butter came pouring from under his hat, and his handkerchief was already soaked with the greasy overflow. Talking away, as if nothing was the matter, the grocer kept stuffing the wood into the stove, while poor Seth sat bolt upright, with his back against the counter, and his knees almost touching the red-hot furnace be fore him. "Darnatioo cold night this," said the grocer "Why, Seth, you seem to perspire as it you was warm! Why don't you take your hat off? Here, let me put your hat away!" . . _ "No!" exclaimed poor Seth at last, with a spasmodic efort to get his tongue loose, and clapping both hands upon his hat, "No! .1 moat go; let me out; I aiot well ; let me go!" A greasy cataract was now pouring down the poor fellow's face and neck, and soaking into his clothes,aad trickling down his body into his very boots, so that he was litterally in a per fect bath of oil. "Well, good night, Seth," said the hu morous Vermonter, "if you will go ;" ad ding as Seth got out into the road,"neigh bor' I reckon the fun I've had out of you is worth a amputee, so I shan't charge you for that pound of butler!"--New Ors leans Picayune. BURNING OF TUN CAROLINE, M ESSAG E OP THE PRESIDENT OF TIIE UNITED STATES, % TRANSMITTING Correspondence in relation to the burning of the Caroline. To the House of Represetatieca of the United Slates: I herewith transmit to the House . of Representatives a report of the Secretary of State, with accompanying papers, in answer to their resolution of the 21st. in stant. M. VAN BUREN , Washington, D(c. 28, 1840. DEPARTMENT OP STATE, Washington, Dec. 28, 1840 The Senate to whom has been referred the resolution Qf the House of Represen tatives, dated the 21st inst., requesting the President to communicate to the House (if not, in his opinion, incompatible with the public interest) all the correspondence between this Government and that of Great Britain, or the officers or agents of either, or the officers and agents of this Government with the President or any of its departments, which has not heretofore, been communicated to that House, on the subject of the outrage of the burning the Caroline on the Niagara frontier; and whether there is any prospect of compen sation being made to the owner of said boat for the loss thereof ; and also wheth er any communications have been made to this Government in reg ard to the at, rest of - McLeod, by the authorities of the State at New York, for being con cerned in said outrage; and, if so, that he communicate a copy thereof to that House:" has the honor to report to the President, in answer to that resolution. thefollowingpapers.... Respectltilly submitted : JOIN FORSYTH. To the PRESIDENT of the United States, Mr. S:evenßon to. Mr. Forsyth, [Extract.] Legation of the Unifel SlateA London, July 2, 1839. • • • a a I regret to say that no answer has yet been given to my note in the case of the• 'Caroline.' 1 have not deemed it proper. under the circumstances, to dress the subject, without further instructions from your department. If it is the wish of the Government that I should do so, 1 pray to be informed of it, and the degree of ur gency that I am to adopt. Mr. Foray'k to Mr. Stevenson. [Extract.] Department of Slate, Washington, Sept. 11,1833 • • a • • • With reference to the closing paragraph of your communication to the department dated the 2d of last, [No. 74,] it is pro. per to inform you that ne instruction, are again required fur again bringing fort
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