. r A T *1 — TAM\ s . - j :! N _ _ Dettotai to acncral Nuteittlynce, antritoium 33otttio, Aar catttcr, Vileratito, art o, Zz2ettccot3fsrBcttitul'e,Ptlltlltielltent, tiel% _ _ Patal. 'T.Saa - 2 4) E3co. e3E3. . ; TIVDORE H, CREMER, CO a' 1.4.111 'rho “Jouax.n." will he published every Wed ntday morning, at $2 00 a year, if paid hi advance, aq!if not paid within six months, $2 60. Yo subscription received for a shorter period than eh months, nor any paper discontinued till all or rtarages ore paid. n ktivertiseinenla not exceeding one square, will be interted three times for $1 00, and for every subse quent insertion emits. If no definite orders are givrn as to the time an advertisement is to be continu ediit will be kept in till ordered out, and charged ac cordingly. 11- --rTO F.ow important it is that you commence vithout loss of time with 131(ANDRETH i!ILLS. They mildly but surely rt move all inpurities from the blood, and no case of gekness can effect the human frame, that these celebrated Pills down relieve as much is medicine can do. Corns and COUGHS ire more benefiitted by the Brandreth Pills than by Lozenges and Candies. Very will, perhaps, as palliatives, but worth nothing As Qt•nrcATons Of diseases from the human -ystem. The Brandreth Pills cure, they do iot merely relieve, they cure. Diseases, .vhether chronic or recent, infectious or oth ,rwise, will certainly be cured by the use of these all-suffrient Pills. CURE OF A CANCEROUS SORE, SING SING, January 21, 1843. ))11. - BsNJAnttN liR ANDRE:TR: Honored Sir,— Owing to you a debt of gratitude that mo fney cannot pay. 1 4111 induced to make a public acknowledgment of the benefit my wife has derived front your invaluable Pills. About three years this winter she was taken with a pain .in her itch, winch soon became very touch inflamed, and swollen, so mlch that we became much* alarmed, and sent TM- the doctor. During hit attendance the pain and swelling increased to an alarming degree, and in three weeks from its first commencing it become a running sore. She could get no rest at night the pain was so great. Our first doctor attended her for six months, and she received no benefit what ever, the pain growing worse and the sore larger all the time. He said if it was healed up it would be her death, but he appeared to be at a loss how to proceed, and my p.a. j wire still continued to suffer he most terrible tortures. We ther.dore sought other aid, in a li,itannical doctor, who said when lie first saw it that he could soon cure the sore and give her ease at once. To our surprise Be gave her no relief, and acknowledged that it quite baffled all his saill. 'Thus we felt tatter lotting tried during one whole year the experiettee of two celebrated physicions in vain, in absolute despair. My poor wife's constitution rapidly foiling in the prime of her years from her continued suffering. Under these circumstances we concluded that we would try your Universal Vegetable Pills, determined to fairly test their curative effects. To my wife's great comfort the first few doses afforded great re lief of the pain. Within one week to the astonishment of ourselves and every one who knew the case, the swelling and the Intl, mation began to cease so that she felt quite easy, and would sleep eoinfortable, and sir, after six weeks' use she was able to go thro' the house and again attend to the manage ment of her family, which she had not done for nearly fourteen months. In a little over two months from the time she first commen ced the use of your invaluable Pills her ancle was quite sound, and her health better than it had been in quite a number of years be fore. I send you this statement atter two years test of the cure, considering it only an act ofjustice to you and the public et large, \ We are with much gratitude, Very respectfully, TIMOTHY & ELIZA A. LITTLE. PS.—The Botanical Doctor pronounced the sore cancerous, and finally said no goal could be done, unless Me whole of the flesh was cut oil' and the bone scraped.• Thank a kind Providence, this made us resort to your Pills, which saved us from all further mis ery, and for which we hope to be thankful. I'. &B. A. L. Dr. Brandreth's Pills are for sale by the following Agents in Huntingdon county. Thomas Read, Hutmgdon, Win. Stewart, Huntingdon. A. & N. Cresswell, Petersburg. Mary W. Neff, Alexandria. Joseph Patton, Jr. Dancansviile. Hartman & Smith, Manor Hill. S. Miles Greco & Barree Forge, Thomas Owens, Birmingham. A. Patterson, Williamsburg. Peter Good, Ir. Canoe Creek. John Lutz, Shtrleysburg. Observe etch of Dr. Bredreth's Agents have an engraved certificate of Agency.— Examine this and you will ilia. the NEW LADLES upon the certificate corresponding with those on the Boxes, none other are gen uine. .... B. BRANDRE'III, M. 1), Plfil'a. Office S. North Bth St.—ly. Snydees Pegetable Concrete. lip do certify that my wife was afflicted for some time with a very severe cough, with a pain in the breast, and after many other remedies had failed I was induced t.• procure a bottle of J. Snyder's Vegetable Concrete, and she was perfectly restored bi the use of part of a bottle full. HUGH KELLEY, For sale by Jacob Snyder, Hollidaysburg. Jan. 18, 1843, NOTICE. ALL persons who know themselves debted to the subscriber for subscrip tion, advertising or job work, are requested to make payment immediately, if not aooner, as I expect to leave these " diggins" in a short time. E. V. EVERHART, Huntingdon, August 9, 1843. CE) -- cit"•!::01 - ,=2 ea, .12.'"C:34 POMTP.7. The Printer's Prayer. On ! thou Great Head of earth and Heaven! Who dolt the howling tempest ride, Thy will the holy Rule has given— Be thou the Printer's friendly Guide. When eve thy azure Book expands, He sees the starry Letter bright, The Work of thy eternal hands; Great sovereign of etherial light. With Heaven's aulgent Type, serene, The beauteous rainbow's cheering ray, Imprint upon his soul the scene, That opens in celestial day. And when his earthly mouldering Farm Is Locked up in death's cold icy Clime, Oh ! save his spirit from the storm That hurls the vicious from thy face. And oh! when thy last trump shall sound, And bid the slumbering dust arise; Muy he ho in the Columns found, That form the Pages of the skies. Se Kind to :Mach Other. BY CBMILES SWAIN, Be kind to each other! The night's coming on, When friend and when brother Perchance may be gone! Then 'midAt onr dejection, flow sweet to have earned The blest recollection Of kindness—rdurned! When day !lath departed, And Memory keeps Her ‘viitch, broken fleartcd, Where all she loved sleeps! Let falsehood assail not, Nor envy disprove— Let trifles prevail not Against those we love! Nor change with tamorrow, Should fortune take wing, But. the deeper the sorrow, The closer still cling! Oh, be kind to each other, The night's coming on, When friend and when brother Perchance may be gone! From the 1V o, Orkrt. PIC(IyI{7I, Werry Childish. "My love you're werry cluldioh"—" What! You cruel thing to say so ; And knowing what I suffer, too, It's always—every day so. If husbands only had to go Thro' half what their poor wives have; They wouldn't—that I'd have 'cm know Such comfortable lives have." " Childish ! 'fore we was married, if You only heard me sighin', You used to fuss about as if You thought I was a dyin'; Oh, who would have a family I Let me go back to mother, Jane, the cologne—there hand the child— Good gracious there's the other." a Well, but, my love"—"l'm not your lover "But, dearest only hear me;" a I won't but two years married, too! You brute, you, don't roam near me ;" "I only said"—" don't talk"—" I wi//," "I'm punished tar my sins; I say you're merry childish—ven You COWS it twice with twins !" STRAWS. VIICIZMLLAII2O9I3. Tun REFonmze.—An ignorant fellow being about to be married, resolved to make himself per fect in the response of the service, but by mistake got by heart the office of baptism for riper years—so when ho was asked in the church " Wilt thou have this woman," &c., he answered, "I renounce them all." The clergyman said, " I think you aro a fool ;" to which he replied, " All this I steadfastly believe." How TO c / NTO Time ts.—Always keep a sharp look out after your neighbor's concerns; knowl edge you know is power. Get upon your parish committees ; if a party question should arise, never mind which side you take, it will show your impar tiality—besides it will let you into the secrets of each. Always speak your mind boldly—no matter where, or who hears you. Do not fear to be bail for poor Bob—'tis only a trifle. Take an active part in all popular elections—and if these do not succeed, go to law with some of your neighbors. IMPORTANT A et. lc s.—The N. H. Telegraph says A gentleman who has occasion to walk with two ladies and one umbrella, should always go in the middle himself—that secures a dry coat to him self, and is showing no partiality to either of the ladies." .111 L• A Clergyman in England, not km 143 Vol. 2, the following text Wilt thou gc, to the Gent le with me at Kumeth Gilead." '' Collector of r phasic. with which the question wa f last war. H induced a brave soldier to suppose Con he very cordially answered--. 4 Wh.„ , bull.41:110:11, t you are all cowards, I'll go for one." "My name is Norvel!" said a runaway youth who was playing that character in a small theatre at Annapolis, some few years since. " You lie you dog!" said an officer in the crowd—« your name is Bill Brown, and you owes Mrs. Kitipper three dol lars and a half for board, washing and lodging—and here's a writ, co come along my darling." t c7" •;t , iff • pif;:' 4 H • , V r THE HUNTINGDON JOURNAL "One country, one constitution, one destiny." ~~~~~~~ c~3o~~ Wednesday morning, Oct. 4, 1843. V. B. PA LIVER, Esq. (Nb. 50, Pine street below Third, Philadelphia) is authorized is act as AgentAr this paper, to procure subscriptions and advertisements. Alcillalltncoszsas From the President of the delegate Convention of the 16th of August 1843, to the Democratic Harrison voters of Huntingdon county. FELLOW CITIZENS The period is fast approach ing when you will again be called upon to exercise the higl rest privilege of freeman, in the choice of ru lers and representatives, in the councils of the Nation and State;—n right which arbitriiry and despotic their vote:, for mon of moral worth, whose churn law denies to the people in every 13:Itia11 and govern- lee is a guarantee that they will carry out those mca went in the world except our own happy republic. sures of retain] that will secure theirrights end pro- How invaluable, then, is the right, and how well thiiir in tyre:its, by securing to labor its just reward; should we consider its exercise, and act out our par; hy protecting the industry of our own Farming, honestly and conscientiously, by casting our votes :11;inufa,:uring and Mechanical interests, each of fur honest and deserving toen—men who are endued which are dependent on the other, and cannot be with sound moral and political principles, nod who, successlUlly prosecuted without the mental prosper regardless of party subservency, will efficiently aid ity of the whole. Therefore vote for no man who in carrying out the measures of reform that will best is even suspected of being unfriendly to a Tariff of promote the interest of the whole people, and secure i duties on foreign products; nor for any man belong the permanency of our republican government, as ing to the sell:styled Democratic party ; nor any well as the rights of the people in the representative_ fragment of it. A large majority of that party more department of our political fabric.- These are con- signiiicantly known by the name of Lecofeco, are siderations that every mat: should put tolihnself, and avowedly hostile to a Tariff, and desire to reduce duly weigh, and act conscientiously in the exercise ! the free a'rsr of this country down to the condition of his int aluable right. It is now more titan sixty of the ?aver labor of Eu'rope. Vote for no man years that we have as a Nation.existedhe the Ll.ujow!, ie. at invorable to a sound National currency of the'Statea.tiador the Federal Oonstitntion ; Excho,F,, that will enable the Int -1 however perfect that instrument is, and however ; ding well it may be adapted to promote the equal rights on business without loss, rad pay till tad other great of the people, and secure our permanent existence as interests for their industry. Vote fur no man that a great Nation of freemen, it is evident that the is opposed to the distribution of the proceeds of the seeds ,f dissolution are sown far and wide, and that Public Lands among the States, to which they our splendid form of government, is as fast hastening I rightfully belong; that we may be relieved from bur to ruin, as it did to distinction as the cradle of civil thencome taxation and redeem the prostrate faith of and religious liberty in its pahniest days; and that ; our beloved Commonwealth. Vote for no man that Constitution, the wonder and admiration of the nee gives countenance in any way to an increase ofE xe -the pride of freemen and patriots—is disregarded cutive Power, usurpation or tyrany, by sustaining a and trampled upon by them in power; whose duty veto on any othergrounds than plainly constitutional. it is to protect it, preserve its provisions unimpaired, Otherwise your representatives may as well remain at and obey its requiSitions. But they have perverted home, and rather should they than appear in our it to their own ambitious and wicked purposes, to ! Legislative Halls to sanction and record the will of the moloch of party, and under the venerated name the Executive. Vote for no man that will not effi of Democrats they are sapping the very foundations dainty aid its restoring our violated Constitution of civil liberty—tighting for Power and Spoils, re- and mangled laws to their former beauty and use garilless of the means they use in obtaining them. ' fulness as they existed in the days of Jefferson, Such will ever be the case so long as the people :Y.,xlison, and Monroe. Vote for no man that will confer political trusts on those who are unworthy in any way give countenance to dishonesty, permits and are destitute of correct moral principles. They tion or fraud in the disbursement of the Public Democratic !!--do they endeavor to perserve the I money, and who will not endeavor to ferret out all co-ordinate departments of our government within public delimiters, and bring them to deserved pun their legitimate sphere, and prevent an extension of ishment. Vote for no man who will not aid in the Executive authority. Ham tire legislative or bringisag, to merited punishment all those corrupt Democratic branch retained its independence and i officers of our State government who were engaged character; or rather, has not that department surren- in the iniquitous /umbering transactions, and tam dered and yielded its independence in obedience to pering with the Legislature in 1840 and since.— the Executive will, and instead of sustaining the Vote for no man favorable to a Sub Treasury Sys independence and dignity of their own body—faith- tau, by which the Purse of the nation is put into fully serving the people and protecting their rights, 1 tire hands of ono man, the President, who has by have they not basely lent themselves subservient authority of the Constitution the command of the tools to increase the Executive powers; thus betray- armed forces of the United States, and thus unite ing the people under the specious name of Demo,' the purse with a sword, and endanger the liberties ! racy, to the one an power; and forging for us chains of your country by aiding its building up a power of Tyrany and despotism under the influence of at equal to any of the Despotisms of the old world. nano they are wholly undeserving to bear. But it Vote for no man in favor of the o ten cents a day" is the common practice of villians to cover their de- !system of labor; or that labor be reduced to the signs by the assumption of a popular name, and by standard of prices throughout the world—which is plausible pretences. the doctrine of the Loco Foes party slid the senti- The amuse want of moral rectitude and sound • anent of their leader Buchanan—thus enabling the principles effects the same results in our State gov- rich to become richer, and disabling the poor from =meat, and in all its subordinate branches. We ever becoming rich or improving their condition by see the most worthless of our citizens exhaulted to honest industry. Vote for no man who is not in the highest honors in the State and all places of favor of selling the Canals and Railroads of the Commonwealth—the fruitful source of corruption, honor and profit, filled with the same base and polluted wretches, alike destitute of virtue and prin- peculation, and Plunder ciple. Hence the loss of confidence its our public If you cast your votes as hereinbefore advised, agents; our blighted public faith; the bankruptcy of , you will vote the entire Whig ticket—every man our venerated commonwealth; the rubbery and pion- of whom is worthy your suffrage and confidence, dering of the people ; and the universal distress that possessing elkaraeters of high moral worth and sound prevatles our whole country,--whilst those vont- political principles. They ore its favor of a Tariff cious Democratic public agents, aro tikttening on the to protect your industry ; a National Currency to spoils wrung from the hard earnings of the people. facilitate exchanges, .d reward industry ; a tlistri- And it' an attempt be made to stay the hand ofplutt- ' tuition of the proceeds of the Public Domain, to der or bring the offending Democrat to justice, the lighten the burthen of taxation, and preserve the whole host of Little Democrats fly to the rescue of public faith. They arc in favor of restraining and the great; and in the all potent name of Democracy hmiting the Veto power, in order that the people, they white-wash the uffettaler ; earls OHO in his turn throatgla their representatives, may have due weight claiming to have beveled loudest and longest in the in making laws for their own benefit. They are in name of Democracy. Such is the condition of , favor of restoring the Constitution to its original things in Old Pennsylvania in the year 1849. I construction by sages and statesmen dent (brined it, Is there any thing here to astonish us'! No, and believe its ample provisions contain authority nothing ! We cannot expect things to be other- Ito carry into effect all the power, essential to a per wise; nor slued we expect it se long , the people feet government in spite of modern wise men or entrust the publie business into tile minute of ilis- i l,eco Foes abstractionists. They, being honest honest men—men destitute of individual merit, who themselves, are unwilling to bestow public trust to are immoral in their liccs, dishonest in their practi- dishonest and incompetent men, that the public rev cos, demagogues in polities, unit intidels in religion, enue may be economically appropriated mid honest and are ripe for any game however desperate.-- !ly disbursed. They are opposed to the Sub 'Tres, Polities with such is regarded as a game, and those who are nu most alert at deception and the most proficient in perfidy and low cunning, are regarded Its the el. ,rest and wisest men. And if any does seem at times to have some qualms of conscience at the enormity of others, and becomes refractory, the whole kennel is let loose upon him, and if the magical word 4 , Democrat" does not prevail in reclaiming him he is formally kicked out of the party as un worthy to associate with Democrats. O Democracy, Democracy ! the crimes perpetra ted in thy name, once honored and venerated name, but now ihe very name carries with it the association of every thing corrupt and dishonest. Any government to be respected must be admin istered in good faith; its practices must correspond with its prAlssed principles, and those principles must be bared on a high moral tone of virtuous action. By the neglect of these, especially in a Democratic, form of government, such as ours we become liable to the reproaches of the enemies cf republican governments; and even our people have their confaienee shaken in its efficiency. How then are we to preserve our republiciut institutions so as to secure their respect and the confidence of our own people, and evidence to the world that men are capable of self-government? The answer is plain and The people must do it themselves—they must rightly esercise their right of poling, and cast sury System, or any system of managing, the Public revenue that would tend to an increase of the Ex ecutive powers, or endanger our liberties. 'Phey are opposed to Buchanan's "ten cent per day" system for labor, and its favor of labor having its just reward, and being duly protected. They are in favor of disposing Of the Public Works of the State, for the best prices that can be obtained, that the public debt now he lElllllllOlOa. Such are a few of the reasons in favor of support ing the Whig candidates. It is also highly impor tant to elect honest Commissioners to manage our Public Improvements. The Whig candidates for Canal Commissioners are selected for their high moral worth, and business talents. They are all new men, and worthy of your support. October 4, 1843. .. TO BE REMEMBERED At the i'olls! KEEP IT BEFORE THE PEOPLE: That JAMES CLAIM, Jussa MILLER and War. 13. nos r., the Locofoco candidates for Canal Commis sioners, are all OLD OFFICE-HOLDERS, who have participated in and connived at the gross ex travagance and corruption which has marked the course of that party for years. KEEP IT BEFORE THE PEOPLE: That in the Ist year of Gov. Porter's administration, when JAMES CLAIM eras Prethlent of the Board ,f Canal Commissioners, awl Wm - . 13. FosTen was Engineer on the North Branch .Division, THE Pe aLic Dear or THE ST ATE AV OS INCREASED tewAtins or Ten Millions or nonars 1 KEEP IT •!;EPORE TIIE PEOPLE : That i during the same year the expenditures on the fin ished lines of the public Improvements ,Terehyl the revenue THREE HUNDRED AND SIXTY THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED AND NINE ' TY-FIVE DOLLARS ; whilst the the year before the same lines yielded a revenue over and above all expenses, THREE HUNDRED Asa FIFTY'. I I , FOUR THOUSAND ONE HUNDRED AND i 1 EIGHTY DOLLARS!! and the State lost thus, , 1 through the dishonesty or boa management of the - I officero on the public Wodoi, during this one year, q 0v ftrwtomphfrpittrperriiitt, whilst Wm. B. FOSTER was Engineer on the North Branch Division, the iao , t shameful abuses were practiced on that line of the public works ; such as under-estimating the Whig contractors, with the avowed purpose of breaking them up and driving them off the lines, and making the most extrava gant estimates for the Locofoco contractors, AS A REWARD eon THEIR. PAUTT SEUVICVS KEEP IT BEFORE THE PEOPLE : That JESSE MILLER has been constantly in public oilier foreightecn or twenty years, and has always been AN ULTRA PIOT? MAN, willing and ready to go any length to carry u party measure, whaly re gardless of the Pratte IN TEnr.sirs ! KEEP IT BEFORE THE PEOPLE: That J ESSE Mo.min was Auditor in the Treasury De partment under Martin Van Buren, when MIL LIONS OF DOLLARS were stolen front the pub lic revenues by the corrupt and dishonest public officers under that administration. KEEP IT BEFORE THE PEOPLE: That such is the character of the LOC OrOCO CANDID., I: S con CANAL. COM MI SSION EDS ; and if they are eke. led, the sumo disgraceful system of Locoloco ex travagance, corruption, favoriteism, fraud, peculation and plunder, will be continued upon the public weeks whirls has been practiced for years past. KEEP IT BEFORE THE PEOPLE : That WILLIAM TwEcn, BENJAMIN WEAVED and Sim- Box Genvonn, are NEW MEN, fresh from the ranks of the people, who have not been corrupted by the power of party patronage, but are honest en pable and filithful men, in whose hands the Public Works will be conducted with economy, prudence and skill, and FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE STATE AND NOT OF A PARTY ! KEEP IT BEFORE THE PEOPLE That if the tax-payers of Pennsylvania wish to imtitute REAL REFORM ON THE Pc n Lse IMPROYEM ENTS, they must keep them out of the hands of OLD LOCO. COCO OM U FAIOLDEUS, and place them in the hands of NEW is I,r, who arc honest and capable—such I menus TWEED, WEAVER and GUILFORD. Who is Jesse Miller ? The Perry Freemampublished in Bloomfield, the residence of Jesse Miller, thus answers the question: 4 , What has he been .40 qffiee-holder sines ever he attainid his period of up warda of twenty years. He appears to lute been born for office. lie has all his MI, limo totaled from one ollire to another. He PVVII managed his card so well as to bold office under ( -- •John Tyler for about a year and a half. He now wishes to ro tate from First Auditors's office under John Tyler into the Canal Commissioner's oilier. How mod est ! Will the people reward his modesty I \lie shall see." The Warren (N. X.) Murder. The trial of Carter Mr the atmeimm murder of a whole flintily, has at last closed, and the result is the aequillal of the prisoner,—the jury having been absent an hour and a half. The evidence adduced was entirely circumstantial, and though in some points it bozo strongly ugabist him, the chain was not complete enutigh to warrant his contiction. c i :j - The Military Encamp:llNa at Hollidaysburg i ly replied, that if they comes oil' on the 13th or October, to coutilete six ; Pn eo:, it! T,1,,, a days. Twenty co:, ure a ped %%Rh , — •nact)lacE) Without The Locefoco organ of got its cue correctly, as i Porter," the editor veal; the following terms; " B. Fthaer, Jr., , some length of time, is w county and State; unit esteemed and respected. and is about to return, to dunce." If the editor of "Th that the leaders of his pr that Mr. Poster was to be , candidate exclusively-4 of "Bradford county, and —he would not, we fiat as one who had "resided' ty, nor spoken of hint a, Trial of Jacob Shipman, the mu adelphia aril New York, the latter place on the 131 zled the funds of the Uni, care, to deliver in Philad $15,007 10 in gold coin Mr. Whiting, the District on the tort of the prose( Shipman had been from the Banks to carry gold t there to be rceoined, for entrusted to him in Apri tint he should be able to formed by the prisoner it. • ion we have not vet heart t9,the previous good elm ted their belief of hia lit 0, - :) - • Since the above Shipman has been lulu intention to appropriate was not conceived until adelphia, and that he w the indictment. The g will be brought to Pli otilmee,by the Union I ton; in the above case. CciafeLsic This yuung rogue an•li fiend ill the whole I pirlicolarly interesting short. He merely states ted the forgeries. He is In his case the evil etree men us Edwards and AI fully visible. He seems. and the success with IV It is said of him, that Clapp at Boston, he attn sion of his intlentity; bit longer available, he hold said, " Yes, I am Saund He tells the story of his r ccedings in New York, great joyo.ncss. Lefavor In the last Enquirer AMOS LEFAVOIZ, of spring convicted of sedt ucns,—had also been poison to her with a me learn that the infamous three year's servitude in The Brndfur sentence upon by the court to k say why sentence shot addressed the court at le hours, in which he coin] self. made a brutal attetr Woodburn ; added inn Meted upon the fatuity, new trial. It is proper refused, and he is ❑ow tiary. Truly • the way —Columbia Mujuirer. TituE Ile.tn•rmi N'V pers say that :titer the • tinscolehainta Rail Um, made for splints to bind fevers, to the honor of t' came prompt as the der cupiod, in the shape o supporters of their eon m4lical gentlemen wet effectual aid to the ve moval to the eta which Ott Won t N Uncertain. env When pain Indai A miniAturing a We are int:twit, when the Acting I Northern tour, of ono of the Ttailrwut to convey the rehnioh on the groun, of Pro,ilent