f J2vans' Camomile Pills Q) TflHE camomile flower, (or as it is otTi y- cially called, Antukmis vocilis, or . hamoemtlum. from the . Greek words, Ta mat, on the ground, and JSldun, an ap ple; because it grows on the ground, and smells like an annle.1 is of a dull white color, of fragrant odor, and of a bitter ar- jomatic taste. I Camomile is a mild tonic, in small da ises acceptable and corroborant to the letomach. h is especially applicable to jthat condition of general debility, with 1 1 ... ...i .1. ..r. i HanguiQ appeine, winru uneu auenus con valescence from idiopathic fevers. ' To the JVervous and Debilitated, 1 nr. Evans' Tonic Pii!s. Thft llOVV.5tof...H,o, 'J.-fv-alfvufiYh'e- i-trfts n hke ProPortin Court Orders and Ju dicial advertisements 25 per cent, higher. Al- jtvertisements must be marked the number of in sertions required, or they will be continued until ' otherwise ordered and charged accordingly. I Letters addressed to the Kditor must be post paid or they may not be attended to. Doctor Wiss. KVA'' SOOT! UNO SYRUP For children Teething, PREPARED BY HIMSELF. To Mothers and Xurses. HE passage of the Teeth through the gums produces troublesome and dan gerous symptoms. It is known uy moth ers that there is great irritation in the mouth and gums during this process. The gums swell, the secretion of saliva is in Creased, the child is seized with frequent end sudden fiis of crying, watchings, start ng in the sleep, and spasms of peculiai fiarts, the child shrieks with extreme vio ence, and thrusts its fingers into its mouth. If these precursory symptoms are not spee cJily alleviated, spasmodic convulsions uni versally supervene, and soon cause the dissolution of the infant. If mothers who jiave their little babes nfilicted with these distressing symptoms, would apply Dr William Evans's Celebrated Soothing Syrup, which has preserved hundreds of infants when thought past recovery, from being suddenly attacked with that lalal malady, convulsions. 1 This infallible remedy has preserved hundreds of Children, when thought past recovery, from convulsions. As soon as I the Syrup is rubbed on the gums, the child -will recover. This preparation is so in nocent, so efficacious, and so pleasant, that no child will refuse to let its gums be rubbed with it. When infants are at the "age of four months, though there is no ap pearance of teeth, one bottle of the Syrup should be used on the gums, to open the pores. Parents should never be without the Syrup in the nursery where 'there are young children; for if a child wakes in the night with pain in the gums, the Syrup immediaiely gives ease by open ing the pores and healing the gums; there by preventing Convulsions, Fevers, &c. i To the Agent of Dr. Evans1 Soothing Syrup: Dear Sir The great benefit a Horded to my suitering imam uy your Soothing Syrup, in a case of protracted land painful dentition, must convince every feeling parent how essential an early ap plication of such an invaluable mediciue is to relieve infant misery and torture. My infant, while teething, experienced such acute sufferings, that it was attacked with convulsions, and my wife and family sup posed that death would soon release ihe babe from anguish till we procured a hot tie of your Syrup; which as soon as ap plied to the gums a wonderful change was produced, and after a few applications the child displayed obvious relief, and by con tinuing in its use. I am glad to inform you, the child has completely recovered, and no recurrence of that awful complaint has since occurred; the teeth are emana ting daily and the child enjoys perfect health. I giveyou my cheerful permission to make this acknowledgment public, and will gladly give any information on this circumstance. When children begin to be in pain with their teeth, shooting in their gums, put a little of the Syrup in a tea-spoon, and "with the finger let the child's gums he rubbed for two or three minutes, three times a day. It must not be put to the breast immediately, for the milk would take the syrup off too soon. When the teeth are just coming through their gums, mothers should immediately apply the sy PJ it will prevent the children having a ever, and undergoing that painful opera tion of lancing the gums, which always makes the tooth much harder to come through, and sometimes causes death. Beware of Coiiailcricits. e Caution. Be particular in pureha "ng to obtain it aV 100 Chatham St., Pew York, or from the , ! REGULAR AGENTS. ! J. M. Redmond, ) Geo. Howard, Tarboro'. I , M- Russel, Elizabeth City. I January, 1840. J BY AUTHORITY". LWS OF THE UNITED STATES PASSED AT THE FIRST SESSION OF TIIF. T WENT!"-SIXTH CONGUESS. Punuc- No. 12. AN ACT supplemental to the act entitled "An act to grant pre-emption rights to settlers on the public lands," approved June twenty second, eighteen hundred and thirty-eight. Be if enacted by the Renal? and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That in all cases where a settler on the public-lands may reside, or have his dwelling house upon one quarter section, and culti vate land on another and different quarter section, such settler may make his election under the act to which this is a supplement, to enter either of said quarter sections, or legal sub-divisions of each, so as not to ex ceed one quarter section in all. Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, That in all cases where an individual may have made an improvement on the public land, and had afterward leased or rented such improvement to another person, who was in possession of the same on the twenty second of June, eighteen hundred and thir ty eight, and for the period of four months next preceding,or when the lessor and les see, together, occupied such improvement during dd four months, the person who made such improvement, and so rented or leased the same, shall be entitled to the right of pre cmption, notwithstanding he may hf.vc been out of possession of his im provement during said four months, or any part thereof. Sec. 3. And be it further enacted. That every settler on the public lands, which were not surveyed at the passage of the act to which this is a supplement, and who, since the survey of such public lands has been ascertained to have resided at the date of said act, and for four months preceding, on a sixteenth section, set apart for the support of schools in any township, shall bo entitled to enter at the minimum price any other quarter section of the pub lic lands lying in the same land district, to which no o-ther person has the right of pre-emption, on making satisfactory proof of his or her residence as aforesaid on such sixteenth section, before the rcgiter and receiver of the land olficc of said dis trict. Sec. 4. And be it further enacted. That every person who may have been a settler, within the meaning of the act to which this is a supplement, on any public land before its selection by any State for the purposes of a seminary of learning, under any act of Congress authorizing such se lection, on satisfactory proof of the facts bctorc the register and receiver of the dis trict in which his improvements were sit uated, shall he permitted to enter at the minimum price, any other quarter section lying in the same land district, to which no other person has the right of pre-emption. Sec 5. And be it further enacted, t nat the "Act to grant pre-emption rights io settlers on the public lands7 approved June twenty-second, "eighteen .hundred and thirty-eight be, and the same is hereby, continued in full force till the twenty-second day of June, eighteen hundred and loity-two; and the right of pre-emption, under its provisions, shall be, and hereby is, extended to .ill settlers on the public lands at the date of this act, with the same exceptions, whether general or special, and subject to all the limitations and conditions contained 1n the above recited act, and with the explanatory provisions of the preceding sections of this act, and nothing in the last proviso of the act of the twentv-second of June, eighteen hundred and thirty-eight, shall be so construed as to defeat any right oi pre-emption accruing under said act, or under this act, or under any preceding act ofCongrcss, nor shall said prc-emntion claims be defeated bv anv rnntino-nnt Choctaw location U. M. T. HUNTER. 'ptf.f 'be, lbiiW CoV.p-famts, weak , is, mat nave been dislocated, broken, uwerwise injured, in almost every when applied to corns on the feet it effected an entire cure, is positively the best remedy, if t)0. My used, for sprains, chilblains, poi scalds, bnrns, sore lips, chapped or Alked hands, cutaneous eruptions, or !ed faces, that is known. For places idby the harness or saddle, sprained qdders, scratches, &tc. on horses, there ft; composition that exceeds this. Tharranted genuine. For sale by ka. ': GEO. UOlVAliD. irboro' July 30. Tarhorough, (Edgecombe County , Ai'.C.J tcr any vacant, unappropriated, and unoccu pied quarter section of land in the Batesville land diitnct, in the State of Arkansas, at one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre, in lieu of the land be now resides on, it being part of the sixteenth section of township MgMenn, range thirteen west, in the coun ty of Izard, of said State. Approved, June 1st, 1S40. From the Washington Republican. Our readers will find, on reference to the proceedings of a public meeting, held on Tuesday evening, the 2d inst. published below, that HENRY I. TOOLE, Esq., has been selected as the Republican candi date in this county, for a seat in our next Legislature. We congratulate, not only our political friends, but the great mass of in telligence throughout the county, . Mr. Toole's acceptance of the nomination; and feel assured that a more able or zaa" .s supporter of Constitutional and Southern rights could not have been selected. His intimate acquaintance with political history, undoubted talents, together with his legal attainments and experience, qualify him in a peculiar manner to perform the duties ol legislator. As to the political tenets cherished by him, we recognise as pre eminent a love ol Constitutional liberty; a sincere regard for the reserved rights of me ruaius; ;m aumuieu auacumeni io sou thern institutions; a watchful eye to the ap proach of federalism in any disguise: and an honest and warm devotion to the inter cuts of his native State. PUBLIC MEETING. At a Republican meeting, held at the Court house, in the town of Washington, on the Evening of Tuesday, June 2d, 1840, Urn. William A. Blount was chosen to pre side and Geo. Houston appointed Secretary. 1 he objects ci the meeting were to nomin ate a candidate for the Senatorial district composed of Beaufort and Hyde; and also to nominate a candidate in Beaufort, for the Commons, for scats in our next Le gislature. Delegates from Beaufort" were also to be appointed to attend the State Convention to be held in Raleigh, on the 9th of July next, for the purpose of Selec ting some suitable gentleman to be suppor ted for Vice "resident, on the Van Buren ticket. On motion of H. I. Toole, Esq., a com mittee of thirteen (from Beaufort & Hyde,) was instituted, by general nomination, for the purpose of nominating to the meeting a Senatorial candidate. Members of the Committee. J. W. Latham, Henry Harding, Wm'. C. Copeland, Lodovvick Redditr, John W.Williams, Henry Hodges, Jos. Satchwell, John Bell, (4th,) Noah Gaskill, Wm. H. Oden, Charles Wallace, Richard Respess, Samuel Dowty. The committee having retired, Mr. Toole addressed the meeting on political subjects; but more particularly touching the principles which divide parties in the pres ent day showing the analogy between the Harrison and federal parties. Mr. T. was interrupted by the return of the com mittee, who reported the following reso lutions, which were adopted by the mee- ing. Resolved, That the high character for in tegrity and large experience of SAMUEL CLARK, Sen., together with the facts that he for many years served the people of Hyde County as Sherill and as mem her of the Legislature, and resides in the vicinity of, and possesses considerable tree hold interests in, that county; and may, therefore, be presumed to possess an inti mate knowledge of the wants and interests of both counties, recommend him as an eminently proper person to represent the Senatorial district of Beaufort and Hyde, in the next Legislature, therefore. Resolved, That this meeting do unani mously nominate him as a candidate. The committee having performed the duly assigned, the members from Hyde were discharged, and those Irom Beaulort were reorganized for the purpose of nom inating to the meeting a candidate in the Commons. The committee having retired, Mr. Toole resumed his remarks, and reviewed the civil and military character of Wm. H. Harrison, the Federal candidate lor tne Presidency. When he had concluded, the mmittce, having returned reponea to b meeting ihe name of Henry I. Toole, ;q., and recommended him as a suitable 4 talented gentleman, deserving Re G publican suffrages. The following preamble ,0jjl resolution were adopted by the com r a luttee: ,QJVhereas, Inasmuch as the County of p gaufort is divided ny two parties, both ia unerous and respectable, and in such'ca- JOSI 11 seems fa'r !nat eack Party should be LAV,resentec' y one memDers, espe- jjQ.lly as it will avoid much party excite YYjjjnt and'strife: and inasmuch as there is AK"IW before the people of this county but J Mi ' Saturday, July isw one candidate ndmina'ed by the whig par ty, this meeting deems it proper to pre sent but one candidate in the Commons; trusting that a reciprocal spirit will be ma nifested by the other party. Resolved That this meeting do unani mously nominate I1ENUY 1. TOOLE Eq., as a proper candidate in the Com mons. Mr. Toole returned thanks for the no mination, but respectfully declined ac cepting it. On motion, the name of Mr Toole was added to the committee, which committee again retired, when Gen. Blount was called on to address the meeting. His address was interrupted by the return o.r the committee, who reported a resolution to adhere to the original no mination, and to make no other. Mr. Toole stated brielly his reasons for having declin ed the nomination. He, however, in con sequence of the flattering manner in which it was urged upon him, did not feel himsell at liberty to decline any longer. H'.s ac ceptance was warmly received, and the nomination unanimously confirmed by the meeting. ben. Blount then resumed his re arks, which were unavoidably curtailed inconse quence of the lateness otthe hour. On motion, it was resolved thai thetmair nominate four gentlemen, as Delegates from the County of Beaufort, to attend th State Convention. Whereupon Messrs. George Houston, Henry I. Toole, Joseph Satchwcll and Thomas Barrow were nom inated, and the nominations confirmed. . . Resolved, That the Editors of. the Wash ington Republican and Tarboro Press be requested to publish the minutes of thi meeting. Thanks being returned to the Chairman and Secretary for the performance of their duty, the meeting adj'ourned. WILL A. BLOUNT, Chm'n. Geo. Houston, Sec'y. From the Globe. THE VICE PRESIDENCY. Nashville, Muy 27, 1S40. Dear Sir: The National Democratic Con vention lately held at Baltimore, after nominating with perfect unanimity the present Chief Magistrate, for re-election to the station which he has filled with so much honor to himself and advantage to the country, having declined making a nomination for the Vice Presidency, it be comes proper, in my judgment, that I should distinctly declare the position which I occupy before the country, in reference to the use which has been made of my name in connection with that office. Having been unexpectedly placed in nomination by a portion of my Republican fellow-citizens, in some of the States, it was my unalterable determination, oft en expressed to my friends, from the day that my name first appeared in con nection with the Vice Presidency, to be governed by the wishes of the majority of the political party, to which I have been ardently attached during my whole life, whenever the preference of that majority should be ascertained in any satisfactory mode; and in no possible contingency to yield my own consent to the use of my name as a candidate by a minority of my own political friends. j If, as was at one time anticipated, a full convention of the Democratic party repre senting all the States, had assembled and made a nomination that would have been conclusive, none would have been more cheerful to abide by the nomination thus made, or to give to the nominee (had the choice fallen upon another; a more cordial & hearty support, than myself. It appears, however, that several of the States were unrepresented in the Convention, and the selection of the Democratic candidate for the Vice Presidency was left open for the separate action ol the Republican party of the several States. I entirely concur with the convention, in the hone exnressed bv that bodv. that "before the flection shall take place," the "opinions" of the Republican party "shall become so concentrated, as to secure the choice of a Vice President by the electoral colleges." In times like these, when powerful combinations of various sectional interests, are r H. . ;-'in extraordinary concert with our old ' .ppor. .is, the federalists, and their allies the Abolitionists, against the cherished principles of our Republican in stitutions, personal & sectional preferences, between men of the same political princi ples, are of no importance. Ihe ancient enemies of our long cherished principles, with their new recruits and reinforcements. are to be met. The pillars, upon which per manently rest our national independence, and our beautiful fabric of separate State sovereignties, are to be defended. And a these considerations are, in my judgment, infinitely more important to the country than the elevation of any individual citizen to this, or any other office, I trust I may be permitted to express my sincere desire, should the"-further use of my name, in roLxrijfo 7. connection with the Vice Presidency, be ' found to interjiose the slightest obstacle to the entire and cordial union of the De mocratic party, that it may be prompt ly wilhdraion by my friends from before the public. I can have no desire to be a party to a contest in which I may be thrown into apparent collision with political friends whom I esteem, and with whom I have acted for a long series of years, & especial ly if such a position sh.ill have a tendency to weaken the sympathies and energies of the whole Republican pn ty, and hazard the safety and continued ascendancy of their cardinal principles. The present slrugglc is a fierce one, and it becomes the duty of every Republican to defend his post mmfully. If, in my public career, I have heretofore evinced any becoming ardor and zeal in the m;in tcnance of our principles, that ardor is unabated, that zeal is undiminished; and altho' my position may be that of an indi vidual citizen in the ranks of my party, I shall be found faithfully acting with my political friends, and, upon all suitable and proper occasions, resolutely exercising my rights as a freeman, in maintaining the Republican principles of our fathers, and carrying them successfully through the "ordeal of the popular suffrage." I am, with high regard, Your obedient servant, JAMES K. POLK. Hon. Felix Grundy, Washington City. From the Richmond Enquirer. Fincaste, May 25th, IS40. . In your paper of the 2-id instant, just received, I find that the Whigs have been representing Gen. Jackson as having de serted Mr. Van Buren and declared in fa vor of Gen. Harrison. In order to correct somewhat similar misrepresentations, circulated to some extent in Botetourt, previous to our late election, 1 wrote to the old Hero, requesting his permission to contradict them, and 1 hereto annex a copy of his reply for publication; which I think, is quite conclusive, as to his opinion of Mr. . Van Buren and the leading policy of his administration. In haste, Very respectfully, your ob't. serv't., JAMES McDOWELL, ofFincastk.. (A Copy.) "Hermitage, March 10 th, 1840. "My Dear Sir: Your letter of the 2Gth ult. has been received and is now before me. I am not astonished to learn from it, that the Rivcs Conservatives' should de ny the authenticity of my letter, written in answer to one received from Moses Daw son, Esq., and published by him in the latter part of the year, 1837, or the first of the year 1838, approving the financial po licy of President Van Buren, as set forth in his message to the extra session of Con gress in September, 1S37, of separating the Government from all Banks. It appears that the Rives Conservatives, the Abolitionists and Federalists, have combined to obtain the reins of Govern ment in their own hands, by a continued system of deceiving the people by false hood and slander of the basest kind, forget ting that the American people are an en lightened and virtuous people, capable of self government, who may by the false hoods oi designing demagogues and poli ticians, be led astray for a moment; but the second thought always h.s dis pelled, and ever will dispel from their . minds the gross deceptions that have been attempted to be practised upon them by these political demagogues, who think the people are incapable of self-government, and, to save the people from themselves, wish to rule vain thoughts! which have heretofore disappointed the opposition, and I trust ever will, and must, so long as thevirtue of the people soars above the corruptinginfluencc of the money I ower, which has, for a long time, been corrupting the morals of the world. But truth is mighty, and will prevail; and the virtueof the people will perpetuate our glo rious Union and happy Republican system against all the corrupting influence of the combined money power and modern paper credit syslem, and will support the Ad ministration in separating the Government from all Banks, and restoring the Federal Government to the express limits of the Constitution and Independence, as contem plated by the sages who framed it. You are authorized to say, to all my Republican friends, that I am the, author " of the letter addressed to Moses Dawson, Esq., in reply to one from him in the latter part of the ) car 1S37, or the first part of the year 1S38, and published by Mr. Dawson in his p iper, approving of Mr. Van Buren's recommendation of a divorce of the Government from all banks or bank ing corporations. You are at liberty to use this letter as your prudence nay dictate, and 1 am, with great respect. . Your most ob't serv't., "ANDREW JACKSON. "James McDowell, Esq."