Evansville Journal, Volume 10, Number 10, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 1 February 1844 — Page 3
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THE JOURNAL. , STATE ELECTORS. Henry 8 Lane, of Montgomery; Joseph G. Marshall, ol Jrferaon. DISTRICT ELECTORS. 1 John A. Brackenridge, of Warrick; 9 James Collins, of Floyd: S. John A. Matson, of Franklin; Samuel W. Parker of Fayette; 8. Hush O'Neal of Marion; 6 George G. Dunn, of Lawrence; 7. It, W. Thompson, of Vigo; 8. William Homes, of Crrull; 9. John F. Biddle, ol Cass: 10 Lewis 8. Thompson, of Allen.
f -CONTINGENT STATE ELECTORS
J axes Karriden, ot Wayne; Saxcel Jitdau, of Knox; DISTRICT ELECTORS! 1. William Jones, of Spencer; 2. W. T. T. Orro, of Jackson; JJ. Dr. Boweks, of R;pley; . 4. John Yaryan, of Union i -"5. Tho's. VV.Walpole, of Hancock; 6. John S. Watts, of Monroe; 7. Dr. CowGiLL, of Putuam ; 8. Sahfobd C. Cox, of Tippecanoe ; 9. John S- Patteksos, of Cass; 10. N. B. Hawkijss, of Jay.
Address of the Youug Men.
T. J. Babnett, Esq., pn behalf of the committee appointed for that purpose, reported to the Convention the following Address:
FeUow-CUhens The Young Whigs of
Indiana, as you are aware, the more efficiently to aid in the important presidential canvass upon which the country is about entering, have adopted a distinct organization, as collateral and auxiliary to the main organization ot their party. They have held primary meetings and a State convention, and " have appointed this committee, on their behalf, to address their brethren in the good cause. In the prosecution of this task, Young Whigs of Indiana, the committee deem it unnecessary to discuss principles in detail
and this for the reason that these have been
amply set forth in the co-temparaneous ad
dress of our elder brethren, whose conven
tion has just transpired.
"In a hurried manner, therefore, and as an especial appeal to those whose principles
and views are fixed, we shall, without strict reference to the order ot our sentences, p e-
eentsuch general views and facts and incen-
t'ves to exertion as most strongly present
themselves to our minds.
" We cherish as our life-blood the cardinal
measures ofthe Whig pirty, and not with
the least fervor the establishment of a settled revenue policy, affording ample protection
to the agricultural, mechanical, laboring and
steady wind, constantly, at J perseveringly
to push onward to - the climax of national
prosperity every interest, embarked, as pre
cious freight, in the noble vessel which their
hands had builded amid the perils of a terrible revolution, and which overshadowed by
the stripes and stars that now flow above it, they launched upon the sea, and followed with their tears, their prayers, their hopes and dying benedictions. Nor do we for an
instant imagine that those venerable men, if
they look down from heaven, their dwelling place, upon the present condition of our no
ble heritage, ca n regard with complacency the revolting dogmas of the leaders of an existing political pirty whose fundamental creed it is that our Constitution is inert as the stone: that its massive stiucture is but the cold, heartless granite, cbisselled in beautiful sculptural proportion, wherein are witnessed ail the ligaments of life, perfect arterial perfection, living vital functions nobility and power of muscle, but yet the mere granite, the mere sculpture," which, if used at all, shall be but as the pedestal to uphold a virtual throne, as an onument for a kiugly palace, or as an avalanche to be toppled down upon, that it may crush the advancing genious of our country! We cherish not such a belief; but on the contrary ,we
do- know, that to animate with a breathing
ife every function of that noble proportion;
to give impulse to its heart, healthful circulation to its arterial system and full develope-
ment and exercise to its muscular, power, is truly to interpret the wisdom truly to enforce
the provisions, truly to render useful and to return an acceptable gratitude for the bless
ed gift of our glorious constitution.
And herein, need it be said, is the divid
ing line between ourselves and our political
adversaries not between ourselves and the
people, when rightly informed but the line between us and those designing leaders,who,
wiser and purer than Washington, more vir
tuous thau Madison, sager than Franklin,
more politically experienced than Monroe,
and high above the volume of light which the
Judiciary have irradiate.!, have, (the better
to suit their own dishonest purpose.) professedly discoved that the essence of our politi
cal orgau'z itiou, that Democracy is summed
up in narrowing down the opsrations of
commerce, the enterprises of sk ; II, the products of agriculture, the toil of manufacturers aud the wages of labor to a hard money
currency; that if is democratic to devise sys
tems of protection for the pauper labor of a
foreign soil, and to refuse them to the sturdy enterprise of our own! That it is demo
cratic to reject the tittled rights of au in
debted people to a common fund, and to force
them to the alternative of direct taxation, or
the debasing crime of repudiation! That it
I is democratic to nurse au executive despot
j) j Manufacturing interests of our people the ju, which, armed with the bolt of the veto
it.'
A
i , i ;
building up of a settled national curency,
regulated by the will and authority of the nation, which shall guard our industry and commerce against monetary fluctuations, which shall protect them from the crushing march of a contracted hard-money medium
that, reducing every interest to its own narrow circle, must entail bankruptcy, reduce property, destroy credit and beggar labor: a
policy that shall finally secure peace to the
disturbed avecuesof trade, and substituting
.'permanent fiscal legislation by the general
government, for the shifting experiments of
demao-02u.es and the uncertain action of
OC State Legislatures shall, by its effects, once
more assure us that ihe pec pie have not on
ly the right to expect such important aid from their rulers, but that the monarchical
edict once announced from the-Executi ve seat
that the government and the people, be.ng
isolated in interest shall be divorced hi prac
tice, has been buried beneath the feet of indignant freemen forever It is our polttica creed,inthisrespect,that the government w.n
devised for the whole people: Toattheillus
trious men whose wisdom gave to us our in
valuable Constitution, as with the eye of
pbrophecy, saw down the vista of tim to the
period, when, as by an enchanters magic
the fo test sliould become the city; when
the mighty rivers of our country, bearing ou " their bosom the canoe of the red man and the
- rude barges of our forefathers, should heave
proudly beneath nobler fabrics; when the sites of rude lorts and dwellings should be
" come the loundationa for mighty manufacto
ries, tributaries to commerce, and alive with
honest and well paid American operatives
when the thick wilderness, the scenes theu
but of border strife and eminent peril, should groan with ample crops, and be tenanted in peace by a great, a virtuous, prosperous,fee
and greatiul yeomany; and that while the
venerable men, in the generous contempla
tion of such great results, felt more than re
paid for the hazards, in which they were the
- actors, which had laid their foundation, ye
that the crowning consolation of- all o'.heis
them was the joyful reflection that ffiey wei
leaving behiud them, to those generations s
blessed ot God, a volume of laws whose w;
dom and universality should be sufficient t
take hold of, uphold and hand down forever rrirv interest of the American people: laws
j .
power, shall defy the will of the peopled re
presentatives, and which, taking hold of the ermine of the judiciary, shall make it the
pander of party prostitution. A despotism
liat, stalking into the presence of the co-or
dinate branches ot the government, usurps
their functions and creates them but the echo
of its will; that, marching through the ave
nues of patronage, shoots down virtue, as a
py, and ennobles aud fortifies political vice;
that, timid of the power of the ballot box, seeks to surround it by a garrison of corrupt officials, that, professing republicanism, asks
to enforce a lineal dyuasty in the executive chair, and which, looking abroad over this great, ih's wide, this glorious nation; looking
abroad over this race of noble, intelligent, enterprisieg, brave, industrious,' progressive
people, sees uothing iu either which may
noi he sacrificed to ihefeubde impose? of
mere corrupt, pol.tical ambition! Sees uoth-
iug in either but private political chances! Sees nothing in either that may not be fired
with a midnight torch and consumed, if, iu the contusion which shall ensue, au organ
ized band may steal into political station!
Need we say to you, young men, whose
eyes have been open to the practice of the leaders of the adverse party, and whose ears
yet retain their political theori es, need we
siy to you that the pictutejust sketched is
a faithful po:trait ofthat political pestilence which designing men have laced up and varn shed aud labelled constitutional democracy, and which, even now, is presumptuously presented as such by them to the country? Your memories must be short, indeed, if the retrospect of dominant modern democracy shall not group in your mind the executive
contempt of Congress, and the executive despotism over the cabinet ; executive disdain for the judicia.y; Executive patronage
with a single eye to partizan availability: ex
ecutive wiukms at oartizan robberka of the
treasury; executive profligacy in public ex
peadiiures; executive contemp for the p -ul:r will; cxecii.ivc determiiiiiion to foicu
. "In. spi e of lamentations in Con? cssorelsiw .e.e'1 .1 tu tiii h eiil fnc .1 ci;euio for -.'in' lei iuio.s in power . tue c;i.s; ot abject misery among the p" pie; . eem !ve p.ojecis
embracing mo vas. iaea of a &; nJ;ng At my; in s'.iort au execu ive governtuei.: merely and pu ely iai .1 sie.o 1 by aa 1 for t!ia hen-
every other consideration, disordered the currency, crushed the business, defied the suffrage, and oppressed the people, and, finally, staked its desperate fortunes upon a last struggle which arrayed the officeholders, office-seekers and a subsidized press on the one band, and the people, heralded by the good Harrision on the other a struggle fought nobly and terminated gloriously the last campaign of the Hero who never lost a battle. . . 1 r '-- And while these, their acts, now history,
are the living witnesses of the fidelity of our
portrait of modern democracy, point not
their political dogmas to the desecration of
the constitution which we have denounced?
Opposed to home protection, falsely, and the better to delude the people, they plead the
constitution! lusisting upon the Sub-treas
ury, they falsely plead in its behalf the Constitution! Wiesting fiom the States the public lands and forcing our burdened people lu the resort of direct taxation, or dishonor, they falsely pie id the Coustitutiou! In
voking the omnipotence of the veto power, they presumptuously shelter themselves with
the cry of Constitution! The foes of cred
it, of commerce and of the advance of the age, the unblushing cry with them still is
Constitution! Pushing forward before the
people for the third time, a candidate for the
highest office, who having been well tried, has been justly spurneJ from station, their
untrue defence is that he, of all others,is the
especial friend of the Constitution! And the
moral portrait of this "democracy1' is yet be
hind. Desbendiug to the most dangeous arts
of demagogueisms, under the guise of dem ocracymd exclusive friendship for its follow
ers, many of these leaders seek to upturn
our social dependencies to cultivate preju
dice among the poor against the rich among
tlve dissolute against the moral among the
foieign born against the native among the
irreligious against the religious to array
country against towns. Iu short, (with a few
honorable exceptions,) the pirty tactics of
of their leaders seem lobe a rash resort to iiiy and every temporary shif, 'ho matter
what its consequences in the end, which can
array enough of piss'ua or of prejudice to
foist them into momentary power. And who
liasuotdeploied deeply deplored, the na
tional, the social, the individual effects which
these incessant and corrupting agitations have entailed upon the country!
Fellow-Whigs, warm aa has been our lan
guage, you, to whom this Address is especi
ally directed, feel, for you have experienced,
the force of the truths that we have uttered. You feel and you know that cloaked with a specious and falsely assumed name, and under the profession of holy devotion to the constitution, the virtuous mass of the American people have been honestly deluded into the support of men whose political practices and dogmas merit the reprehension here bestowed npon them. You know that the public confidence has been thus abused, and that
thus it is again sought to be won, again to
be outraged. You know that thousands of
our citizens, whose pursuits forbid theirscru-
tiny into the motives of public men, have honestly ministered to ends and been deceived into the support of individuals at which and from whom, with fuller, light, they would have recoiled with horror. Our duty your duty then is a plain one it coiisists in a few words SPREAD LIGHT BEFORE THE PEOPLE! Go among the honest yoemanry of Indiana, at the fiieside, in the field, at
the Couvemiou, the township meeting, in political associatioa3, from the public stand, and through the press; go among young men
like yourselves go as the organs of the older and more experienced set calmly anJ
earnestly about the tas't of selectili" and sp.eadiug political light among the people. Form a caaiu of organized actiou throughout ludiaua which, starting from the centre shall exteud to its remotest borders; awl let every man among you thiow what fght he possesses upou the hedeous features of that political pestilence which stalks abroad, deceiv
ing behind the mask of democracy. Let
the light burn, until its united rays shall
shine with such volume upon the many de
formities of that arch political deceived
that the old, the middled aged, and the
young nay, that our very children may
catch so full a view of it as forever hereafter to be able, let it assume what new guise it may,' to recognize its cloven foot; to re
member its depraved features, and to cry out
against its advauce with that startling shriek which escapes men on the bold or disguised approach of a well known and dreaded
euemy. This result once accomplished and the dan
ger is over forever; and the observance of a few practical rules, rigidly adlieared to, cannot fiil of the accotnpiishmen. Firs;, let us beseech you 1.1 it you cher.s'i an.l establVi prampx and t'nroug'i organization. Next, lii it you bestir you!si;U-s, though at some expanse of moiiey an.l eifort, to procure and disseminate, early an-.I thoroughlyjStioh political !iu''3 -is the public documents and press fti' ii:s!i ;o ihe coirmy. A; id here letnomin siayJ aloof from the irnt. essioii that his infla-
supercede necessity for his own exertions.
This mistake is a common and fatal one. The humblest man has his sphere of influence,
aud no duty which belongs to man individually to execute, is discharged by a lazy dependence upon the efforts of others. Each one of
you should regard himself as a committee of
vigilance, ororganization,and as au important
engipe to the success of the common cause.
And thus having calmly and wisely effeeted
organization, prudently following it up, with
an omnipresent sense of the importance of in
dividual exertion in this work casting sway, as too contempable to be entertained, all
jaundiced feelings of rivalry movjug with
equal zeal in the lead or in the column, suc
cess is ours, it must be ours,for truth is with us. It is but tor us to unfold the pigc of our political history to revive before the people
the lessons of their owu exporience to meet the advetsaty through the nress.on the snunn
whenever and wherever the public ear is
challenged to boldly compare profess'ons
with practices theories with observation-
sophistry with honest plain sense, and to strip,
with a firm hand, the false disguise from his limbs, and all that we contend for is safe iu the hands of our virtuous people. We have
but to write upon our hearts and to live up
to it in our daily intercourse early organi
zation thorough organization persevering personal influence and wide dissemination of political truths aud victory is certain, It has thus been won aud it can thus
be won again.
The great contest of 1S40 teaches but one
lesson the triumph of truth, because truth was every where diffused. There was then
no stint of exertion or of necessary means to
prosecute the campaign; nor was there, in
he glorious end, any siint of triumph.
Young Whigs of Indiana, a field of noble! exertiou is bcfoie you; a feaiful responsibility rests with you. You have been the living witnesses of much that appaals to your hearts and you are the sicred depositaries of the p itriotic exhortations of your ancestors, j Your lot has been cast iu a Republican land, and as yet the Geuius of Liberty presides over and defends it. One by one the links which lock you to the fathers of the revolution have been sundered. One by one have
those venerable men gone down to the grave, and a few years only will have swept byyuid upon you alone will devolve the destiuies
of this great Republic. If you have learned
the lest-on which every American youth should learn, it remains not now to teach you that, next to your God, your country claims your undivided services. It is this axiom impressed upon your hearts, and acted out in your lives, and enforced by you upou your descendants that constitutes ihe sole reliance of those, now passing away, that this beautiful fabric of a free government shall exisit while time endures. Survey
your country its length its breadth its immense interest its glorious institutions
f j . 1 :t 1 1 j : . .
that treason might accomplish a resistance
to the will of that people whose organized
and desperate partisauismhad been too feeble to withstand! Such factional fury and governmental corruption breathe nothing of the
golden age of the republic! And yet such as this is the path in which the leaders ofthe mode rn democracy have trod, and in which they seek again to tread. Contrast, then, young Whigs ofludiana, contrast before your associates and the people and in your own
minds ihe p ure with the impure the example aud teachings of those whom the world
venerates, with the practices aud aims of
the designing men whom you oppose. And white this retrospect occupies your min is, let not the more grateful side of the
p cture be overlooked. Fail uot toremember those who uever faulteied in bold defence of
p pular rights, nor in earnest warnings, and solemn predictions. We cannot forget if we
would, we would not forget if we could the bright siJi of ibis melancholy p'cture. When a purely military sp?rit svep: over the land, there were those who, at its threshold, dared to oppose its progress and to invoke the solemn judgement of the country, by the lights of experieuce,-to contemplate its probable results. When that spirit, too formidable for reason, had vented itself in an excess of gratitude, and its v'ol laid hinds on our civil institutions, there were those who with boldness and firmness, with exhortations and prophecy sent forth the voice of patriotic resistance. TVl.";n persecution attended their efforts, and when failing in their designs,those gallant spirits reaped only the whirlwind and s orrn of popular frenzy as the reward of their exertions, nothing daunted by the opposing
foice of numbers they still clong to the pi I1 irs of the Constitution. TVhen this danger assumed a moie formidable shape aud the man
tle of an incumbent was cast by the people
about a meritless successor, this noble band,
relying more implicitly than ever upon the ultimate triumph of truth, lelaxing uo effort
redoubled their energies. When,at length, the sun had struggled through the darkuess,
aud ineus' eye3 became op3ued,and looking
about them they appreciated the terrible ful
filment of the prophecies which so solemnly
hid been uttered when the eye res.ed up
on common wreck bfcommon interests and
men, fully aroused, tan shuddering from the further danger, this noble band, The Whig Partv of tub Cocntby now lesiing upon
the sure foundation of popular strengiLytbrowing aside all personal predelictions, scatter ed private ambitions to the winds, and rear
ed high above all the banners ofthe country!
The acknowledged leader of these firm pa
triots was Hexry Clay of Keutucky. Early among our friends, sticking closer than a
brother when numbers deserted us, cheering
us on to battle, rallying us in defeat, and lead
ing us to triumph, his was uot the nature to
suffer the thought of his personal advance
ts advancing progress its height above the j ment to hazard, even by conjecture, the
whose effect should be, as on ample and ! efit of ihe executive, wiiicii, swallowing up enco weighs nothing or that other efforts will
thrones of nations, if you would catch a new
fervor with which to set out in the labor of
patriotism, so fast devolving intirely upon yourselves. The history and the example of our revolutionary fathers fix the limits of your political action. To these, as the mariner to the compass, will you turn your eyes for light and guidance. Their examples and teachings are deeply fixed upon your minds, aud you, of all others, can well compare the shifting political events since that period, andfrom their pure light direct your own and footsteps of others. You have read of and witnessed strange departures from the precedents which they ettublished' It was not the spirit of those ancestors that contemned the authority of Congress, and first rude
ly shocked the monetary system of the uatiouIt was not the spirit of those ancestoss
which swept over the people when their hon
est but misjudged devotion to a mm. consolidated in one arm the checked and balanced powers of the Constitution! It was not
the spirit of those ancestors that, running riot 111 executive wantonness, spurned the wis
dom ofthe judiciary; that distributed office
as spoils; that encouraged the embezzlements of the public treasury, thar created change,
experiment, partisan rancor, private and public confusion, where honesty, economy and stability before prevailed. It was not that
spirit which, mocking the popular complaint.
persisted iu ruinous executive extremes,and returned for answer,wheu the miseries of the people spoke iu thuuder tones for relief, that
the yeomanry of Americaexpected too much
from their rulers! It was not that spirit wnich covered with calumnies the illustrious hero of North Bend, a sou of a s'guer of our declaration of independence, and whose chief sin it was, that h iving nbbly seivdd his country in the field, and having purely adminislered her civic officers, he consented, at the
inipu:chased solicitation of a griteiiil constituency, to lead ou the people iu the greal struggle for a restoration ofthe pihny days of the republic. Nor was it that spirit which afier a luajoiity ofthe American people hid spoken their verdict ou men aud measures iu terms more decisive than o::r , hisUny had hitherto recomed it was uot the spirit ol our noble ancestors which meanly conscu;-
crowning glory of the country. Bv a char-
acteristic act of self-devotion he yielded our
citidance to another one" fit indeed to re-
cei ve the trust. And when treason (which
the strongest may in vain seek to defy) for
the first time reared its" loathsome head in
executive station, He was still equal to the
contest. And now battling beneath his banner,
the flag of our fathers we go forth to
perfect the work so nobly begun to secure
beyond the reach of treason, the fruit olthe
political revolution of 1840. Opposed to this noble champion,as the re
presentative of their principles, our adver
saries piesent the name and principles of
Martin Van Bnren. A name linked with no
personal weight of character, distinguished
by no honorable service, he stands opposed
to him, who, a poor orphan boy, now links
his reputation with the greatest and best o
men in history or on the wot Id's stage. Whose
name is embalmed in the hearts of the South
American patriots; for his eloqueut voice
cheered them on in their struggle for liberty
Whose memory is cherished by the chival
ious Greeks, for the remembrance of his fer
vid appeals in their behalf is among them as
household words. Whose trumpet-notes roused the country to arms against the ag
gressions of Great Britain, and whose wis
dom concluded an honorable peace. Whose
fame will be cherished as the great pacifica
tor whilst the memory of thecouflicts ofNu
lification and of the fearful Missouri struggle
shall last among men, and whose renowu as
a Statesman, aud Orator fills the civilized
woi Id. This uame is opposed to the came 0;
Martin Van Buren ; and the groat ineasu res
the mau who stands the acknowledged father.
of the American System the champion of the rights of the Slates to their share of the public domain, and the advocate of a sound
national cutrency the great measures of
this great man sAuud eppsed to. those, of the hero of ihe Sub-Treasury ;the opponent of the land fuud; the ad'vocato of the wanton use of the veto powei ; tli3 projector of a standing army ; the individual who, solemuly condemn
ed, is again ushered before the same people,
who denounced him, and, without recalling a single one of the odious political heresies
(' which were buried with hiiu by the voles 01
the nation who daringly insults the peoptir by attempts to force a reversal of their deliberate verdict the man, in short, whose en J and aim is the advancement of himself by trick and fraud and whose character, from first to last is but the breath of political caucusses, Need we appeal to the oung men of Indiana to know which of these characters most challenges their admiration and example ? . Young Whig of Indiana, twice have the cohorts of Martin Van Buren been driven from . the borders. Your fathers and brothers resisted their advances when die banner ofthe Hero of the Herimitage waved over them; and again were they signally defealed,thoug:i fortified by place and power, when led by our
ancient commander, and on our old battle-
fields, the Hoosier "m'litia, in 1810, rose Uji to do fight with the palace troops. Tub
blast fbom the bugle once more summons
us to action against the same political foe.
Above the adversary's legions waves the
same banner trampled then beneath your
feet; the same 8ive in this that ice oiace.-
ness of its folds is rendered yet darker by -
he sombre hues ol treason! Our flag is
the same as pure and as bright as the Hero of North Bend bequeathed it to us; "not a
stripe polluted nor a star erased,'1 And
though he who led us on to triumph beneath it now Sleeps the sleep of death, yet
lis memory the dearer because shining -
above the cloud of calumny stilllives, and
his mantle has fallen upon a leader worthy ? to be his successor. The valley ofthe Mis
sissippi still furnishes the champion of our.
forces, and the monument erected to hita whose parting blessing was with us, rises from a mound in our midst, The liv:ngand; the dead alike appsal for exertion in the coming contest, and to you, young spirits of
udiana, is the call most loudly spuken. Else
where has this appeal been answered with" ,
a shout that has come over us as a regenerating and reinvigorating spell. Tennessee,
Ohio, Georgia, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania,
North Carolina and Miryland are the campgrounds of our victorious allies, and the em
blem of triumph waves there, ere the contest has fairly begun. The young Whigs of the
North and East send their notes of challenge
over the mountains. A banner, the work -ofthe fair hands ofthe beautiful women of
Biltimore, supported by a staff cut from the
woodlands of Ashland by the hand of Henry Clay, is the prize to be won by these young ' men who, proportion to ihe distance rom
that city shall send the largest comparative delegation to the Convention of Ratification.
The South has thrown back the gauntletKentucky is eager for the honor, and our sister Ohio is girding up her energies tor the
race. Young men of Indiana, roll back upon your brethren of the East, the North, South, and of the adjoining States the tide of generous emulation which gushes from their midst! Throw a brand from the fire on your altar which shall bid their's to bura
yet more brightly. Soldiers of 1840, awake
the remembrance of that campaign in the
conflict of 1844.'" All your former laurels
are at stake. The same foe whose threata
of defiance and whose columnies upon yourselves and your old commander yet live ia your memories, insultingly defy you again
by attempt to set aside your most deliberate verdict. And again, as in the onset of that memorable year, again are heard the clarion notes. Again are the clans gathering, in : highland, and far and near come up, as tho ' "
roar of waters, the old tidings of eager pre
paration. The sons of Indiana cannot be recreants in the coming war. The spirits who lead the van beneath the departed Har- " rison, will be foremost now to protect . his memory and his principles from the last invasion of his caluminators!
Chequered Store no more. have nixved our stock of Groceriei
in, &.C0, w hers w hope oar lornrw,.. P.osi, aud all who wantto Buy ClieapwiU give u a. call, fur we are determined to sell Cheap nd lor ready pay. ALUS & HOWES, January '43-tf. '
aaJfc BAGS RIO COFFEE. &9 60 HOG3SUG4R.
Just received and fur sale by Mv '43. BEMENT &. VEILS.
COTTON YARN. iMfe Boxes Cotton Yam, received end fr tW sale at reduced pricea by May 6 - A. LAUGHL1N Si. Co.
BbU. and 30 half BbU. Prime Tn-
easee TAR, in eood ahipptng or-
Ur. Juat received and lor bate terry low oy May 4, '43. E.S.BABCOCK.
r:
8000 BD8UBL8 OATS w--" V7j,ich e wtit pav t urn- BEIMSiNT Si, WLLt-
we wilt oa
August 3rd, 1343
mi. J. A.UUOVLS. H" ESfEUTFULLY offers uia prefeonal it5&, vices i the citizens f EvaMvitte aud lis vicinity. Office on Main Street, opposite tfca Ctisquered Store. Residence on Locust Street, l. i - . . 3 . 1. 5
. 1.1 i 1 "
FOR NEW ORLEANS. EVANSVILLE AND NEW ORLEANS PACKET. f 1 tHE fast runinii" Sifimu Boat CALEDONIA Captain TltORNBUGII. will rt, a fiP"l Evnnaville li N-w Orleans tinrit!; the scusdi:, ud will Uuve tiite place ( Niw Or!f3 " KruUy llm l9iii -January without tail. I Irrisihl and iin9as;e i'"ly to. " . E. A tiOUBET Mai" Sire i. J i. 4 h,'4i. -
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