Vincennes Gazette, Volume 3, Number 21, Vincennes, Knox County, 2 November 1833 — Page 1
vor,iizf 3.
IYBI.1jXJ1i NOVEMBER 2, 1833. JVVMBEU Z
THE Xottinvham Pudding. Peal six good mon sen?e nf every individual in society. VINC2JNNBS GAZBTTE lapples, take out the core with thp point of; lr is one which concerns every man's
i a email knife, "ran appie corer n you irea( What members oi me. community
Ihave or.p. Iut be sure to leave the apple ; will he pinners hv the substitution of a
whole, fill up wheie you took the core 'currency or worthies paper trash tor that
Ifrom with sugar, place theta into a piejof the Hank of the United States, its jdjeh, an-.l pour over them a nice light bat- tranche, and the other Banks which are
iter, prepared as tor batter pudding and ; kept in a'state of solvency by its means? itake an hour in a moderate oven. will the planter or the farmer gain by it?
For hi crop he mu?t receive this paper.
Will be Published every 5'a.'urrfiy,
Terms i 50, ifpnnl during tho year. ?i 0, if paid ,,, advance" S i 00, it nut paid during the year S 25, for six mouth?.
PapTS discontinued only at the option of the j
rnujuMi r wniie arrearage-, are due
Fur Makins Jelly Those who would 'with which he can huv nothing, after he
(Advertisements makin2 one square or Ir? make fin jelly, should always avoid hoil- , has got it, but a n sacrifice ot no mean wilt he insert, d ilu e times t..r oun dollar, and jntr the juice of tjie fruit, when it is de-it- portion of its nominal amount Will the twirrtv-fiv-ecentsf.ir every suWqiient insertion ; ai,je to )aXC tj)e artjce when made ietain (radfman, or he that bins and sells at in rf , r,u !, .mu. i , " family, will be received in payment for mi!.- prepared . Alter the juice is pressed earns his bread by the sweat ot his brow.
erripti ii3, at the market price, delivered in Vin- from the fruit, and the pioper quai.tny of the working-man in every branch ot n
cennes.
win; AT. Wheat it is perhaps generally known, is not anative of America; by the dtscoverv of this continent maiz or Irifiian corn was given to Europe; by the same event wheat was heie introduced. The first wheat sown in America, was three or four kernels found in so:ne lire, by a ngro attached to the armv cd Cortes, and consequently nbou 15'Jlt. A Spanish laity earned it from Mexico to Piu, and at Quto the earl liea vessel is still thown m which the precious seed was brought from Europe. From this small beginning it has spread over the American comment, and i? the most extendi vely diffused and wide
ly cultivated of the cereal plant on the
surface d the globe
parts cf the wnild. wheat will noi yrow
except on ancUvatiouol Irom lourt" ix thousand fed above the level of the sea,
111 . 1 . ' . . I . . - - . . . . I
suar added to it, let it be Heated until dustrv? Have the beauties oi ine ragthe sugar is dissolved; after this is effect- system alrear!) faded from memory?1 It ed. no further heat is r quired ; is by w ay of novelty that tve long for the return of the era of Owl-Creek Banks, and
Vxen in Italy 1 l.Avillis, in one of ,,;x aml.H-quarter-cent notes, instead of his late letter? from Europe, nbsei ve that ;8oIVent bank and silverroin? What mothe grey oxen of Italy are quite a differ jtive. in rrference either to his own interent i are tiom ours, beinsr much lighter j 0"r tl1 ,),'.,, ,,f ,P country, can any hn j and quicker, and in a sn. ill vrhir le. w ill ' psf ,r,.,n have for desiring a return of those trot off five or six miles an hair as freely , jHrj(,u Un)es when every barber's shop asthe noise The are exceedingly beau rt6iie, prnrnissorv notes, with which, in tiful. 't'he hide is vpij fine, of a soft,te nPX, vdlage" a trlaes of cider or a squirrel grey , and as sip k and polished 'it,,j;irf, f gingerbread might perhaps be often as that of a well groomed courser 1 ,.ii chased, a? a great favor.at a discount of
Uiih their large bright intelligent eves?. j-f, ,iercent? Of those times when any
lowed a paper money, or had been sup. T( A GOOD WIFE UNHAPPY posed to have allowed the States to make We apprehend that there are many busit indirectly, by the creation of S( host of! bands who will read the following with u
high lifted beads and opfn nostiils, they are among the best looking animals in the world, when in motion
Mr
man j uinying from Maine to New Or leans must provide himself, for hi- trav elliog expenses, with as many different sorts of money he was to pass through
countries, or be subject to he shaved, eve-
R'j e Cherries A second growth
l, i r I l' rs iit'f2iutfklxich iriibiu mnnl it I i i . i .. u : - i'.. .-...
b the equinoctial 11 'J" ' ...i;,ry liniP ne nau 10 pay laitr, -i rui a
1 - " " ..' -- " r " I Ulr a l u poll Mir- uau , it I n iihs ui in-m iru which there is a second crop of ripe cher-jlo fifty and even seve.dv-tive cents in eve
Mr flyers yesterday I-1 1 a tew ot i rv iioilar?
our happy and prosperous country.
oniv ieouiMOH a r w i l y , n it c i t- , , , : s ' , , ' .i flavor and richness of a brst ciop
Troy Dudgct
i les
dinD r liui M(. :i nnr nflu P T'bev u i rP
i i . .i : . .ii.u. .1 c-,. v...- ...v. v. . ... ,
wime me mw. m,. tuj;,, " ' M "Marire red and fully ripe, bavin" all the
roots can fb d moisture and aliment. The abundant produce of wheat in the equi noctial regions favorable to it growth, is such as would I'tonifh a t'airner in the most ftvore I sections of our northern
clime. s w 1 1 1 be seen from the statement
. Ctrns. A piece of tobacco, moistened with water, and bound upon the corn, acts as an effectual cure We have tried it
f n ft l..ii.,rt it . . ,i , i . n t . rvi rttitrxt it f A irt'l H t' I . I tl t T i
., . i ,,, i i i. ii cw n..M.j1iiri.Utu.u.uU,.riIie mf11 l,x tianfire or fc.ii rone lor
f V , I 1, r,hprf ha5,0nn(l lhe rP,ie'- ,f rie back, there is, ,f we are not mis of a adi-bd. wtio as-uied IS. iron Hum- .. i i :.. .1 .1. 1 .1 . - ' '
11, .! ,1 i -ri t . if jn at rami im ii -im . Hiiiicieii , lu ii u on iie "rrii, "ul j toi men, a di lerence between cur hnlof tn.-it bp tiad taKen at random t-im a. .-.. . 1 ' .
r-i.i ,f fort. nini. hp fn i e u,. am. ue a i Mvurun, OJ ; mmipy and transferable money
; . ' . i ' . " f - l1 tfnm corns in six months. (h;M, exMS at anv cmmercil V()n n
inai eacn sce i n K ui iiouu' en inuii ioj. rf r .i , civ. wl cpn Sp,nt,: .1,11,, Bn,t w )eC i United States At Venice, the agio.
that '.lie number ol grains in the ears frequently exceed 100. or 120, am! the average amount appeared to be S?0. some even exhibited 1C0. In that country, the
From the JS'alinual Inltlliencer.
we have at tins moment a currency moie remarkable for ils easiness of conversa tion from paper into gold and silver from old and silver to paper, than ha ever
before existed in any country on the Earth, of the same extent. In the most esteem
ed Ranks in Europe, even at Amsteidam,
centu-
in
rent
greater
the
or
diffeience between current money and
transferable money, amounts, at Btk, to thirty per cent Not less than this was
Tin: II A Mi til FSTIOW NO. VI.
'Now go some, and pull down the Sa the agio in this country, seventeen years i "v.i ..r it T .
nrdinorv 1,;, t b r Vf'St ! 4ft fori- anfllVm; UUa'.MDU.f.HIIMJ.Ui-U... l-.v.. ng. w.. ..v ........r.ii in piocut
somefa'vored situa..on? rqnd 55 or GO for1 with 'hem all?1 Such is lhe language pur Bnnk nt the United States was ir.coipo f In Western New Yoik which may i l)V ,he Reat bonnei of human nature into rate d and went into operation, we were be oWered one of the best wheat di, 'be m a,. h of the upstart Cade who, hav- paying, in this ven citv , at the rate of tr.cts in the United States, ue have found !in V h,,m8eU at lhe bv U ' ? rM,ff ,hke or llie conver- , . , l t fn . , mn, begins his career as usurper over he sion of pood Southern and Western bank by caretul exammation. that few wheat i"' 1 . , , 7 i i ti i J. , f , ,. n tf ., 1 rea m o Enp and. bv hallowing on bis tol- note into liankable money, such as we tdants can be found in the most favorable; rrtU" ' - , . ... .. i t . ,, , ,. ilowers, ravenous tor plunder, to seed for could pav our paper maker with, or ena vears producing fifteen stilus, and the! , 1 . . ' ' , ,. J , i wherever money oi good- were to be ble those in our employ to procure the
lf HUH I I" Mil Ul 'l 1'iri.r itlll nui - - ,i I I f II Q
rOUo'l llIM uilal'ill Mifl i i uiiipnicu .vain. liuit iriiii'v.
exc?ed from fivp to seven. We have re
- - . iV..m it.o lnuil niirtpti ol ll. Snoilpra iidsps. in anv amount, tor hp dnvpriimpiit
and best pais we could any where foil. " " , - J . ' . X . : . ' . . ' " I " . . , . V . ..
.- i i . . I . i , . nains! l ne lianii or me unnen jimci iviumui i nai "tj , aim ui anno?! no exofiist: and we found the be-t to equal 90 to 1 II .C . . i ii it v- i i i f .i . V .i , , ., ,i . , i Down wph the Bank' Up with King V e-, for indivnlu ils. tor the notes of the Uesne s in the ear: Hip white limr, howev- . ,r . . ... IT , c, .
Valuable IIUV. I IU1 J A' ivsej, .IUU tX Iig iui i''iiin mi v 'until ui'iica jvu inaj any
wnere procure uiaiis, payaote in any pari
to this incident thecrv that has burst forth, Money is transferred, for mercantile pur
the h t the
r r. which i- probab! qui most
wheat, w ill not inordinary ca-e average 40: but the number of e ns will be greater than in any other kin I in the number of kernel, the red chaff exceeds the flint. Thus it would seem, that were other cirrv ct'inrcii rnti-i I ihp K
toSrow wheat loan extent, which would Editor of the Richmond Loquirer, in
Congress!
This i, in substance, the cry of the .of the country which will eomtnand. where Cabal -The Democracy of the country' j payable, a hundred dollars in gold ami demand that the Bank be put down, say I silver for a hundred dollars in paper; and
the Regency, through their organ, the Al j for this accommodation you pay perhaps
bany Argus. Dcfendacst Carthago! echoes j
prevent its profitable production in the Dorth. Wheat in the South American equatorial prov inces, an i in Mexico, becomes of no value ween kept over the year, and though of an excellent qualilv when new, it i only in such a state, that it can enter into competition with our nor . .1 .i
tnern riour in any quarter, uur southern i
states labor under the same difficulties in pnme degree , and the flour of the western Mates which finds its principal market at New Orleans, if stored for the summer goon become bitter and unpalatable, while no such result in ordinar) cases, need be apprehended at Albany or New Yoik. It is from the temperate region? of our country arid the globe, then, that an adequate supply of this valuable grain must always be derived, and those 6tores found, to guard against thoe temperary failures, which are always liable elsewhere to recur. Genesee Fanner.
TO MAKi: A FA K. HER. The ceiebiated Marshall -aid that "attendance and attention will make any man a farmer." lie was brought up to commerce, and did not give any attention to farming until a mature period of life. He then took a worn out farm of 300 acies near London In three months he dismis ed hit bailiff, ami perfumed, by the aid of study and piactice. the duties of his office himself . He kept minutes of hi operations, and published those trom 1744 to 1777. He was acknowledged to be supeii ip M- rontemporate tanners. Arthur Young, loo, was brought up to commerce iM: ! 'iinn, of hi? View ot the Agriculture
of Middlesex, says one of the be?t farmers iu that country was a retired tailor. The reason why those have been brought up to other professions often make excelleut farmers is, that they have a real tas-te for .tgi p uiuii and enter with a zeal to which those who have been brought up to it from infancy are strangeis Bankwelladvice to young farrneis was, "to see uhat others are doing," or, in other words, to read what others are doing. A". Y. FanntT.
the learned lingo which he sr delights in
Lt it be. 'levelled to the ground, and not otie stone of the building left!' says a third oigan, whose Editor is not afraid to speak in bis mother tongue w hat he is not ashamed in his heart to wish. This last is the very man 'that Shakspue drew; but
the same spirit animates them all. Of such materials is composed the factious
combination who by false, representations of the Bank and insolent slanders against Congress and the Press, are endeavoring to cheat and deceive Gen Jackson, and to excite those who call themselves his party to such a frenzv of folly, as may in duce them to justify him in opposing the
Veto to the willot the People, expressed by their Representatives. The persons who compose this Cabal are either bent upon the ruin of thir country , to gratity their own greediness & giovelling ambition ; or, in their blind rage againt the Bank, because it would not be coriupted by them, would wreak their vengeance upon institutions, the value and importance of which they do not understand Too long have t!ie?e conspirators against the public peace and welfare been met with beseeching phrases, that they would forbear. It is time, high time, that they were encountered with other weapons, it public opinion has no power over them, IK them feel the force of public iudigaalion. Richly do they deserve it. In our last number we showed that the breakiug up of the pieseut National Bank would involve the nation in is retrievable
embanassments, inducing loss of public credit with a train ot disastrous conse
quences such as no lover of hi3 country can contemplate without alaim and dis
may. II such, politically and practically con. sidere i, would lie the consequence fo ike U overtime ntt the destruction of the Bank, and tlie. cou-equenl banishment of gold and silver Irani circulating, let u briefly inquue how the ficoftE would be affectei by i fie measure. , This inquiry addresses itself to (he cota-
half of one per cent, instead of twenty
per cent, as formerly. What is it that has
banks it would never have been ratified
no, not by a single State in the Union The adoption of the constitution, followed by the erection of the first bank of the United States, lestored the currency, received confidence between man and man, which had ceased to exist, and in consequence instantaneously re-invigorated public credit. The public securities, which had been previously as low in the market as eight for one, soon rose to par, and a bundled dollars of paper became worth a hundred dollars in gold or silver. The miserably selfish counsels of one or two great Slates (which wer t then littering. local banks at every fitting of their Legislatures, in broods of from five to lit" ty at a time) caused the old Bank to go down Two y ears had not elapsed before public credit was so low that the Govern merit could with difficulty borrow money at a loss of thirty or forty dollars in the hundred; and, with millions and millions of surplus revenue in the vaults of the local banks, could not command a dollar to pay the interest on the public debt. The whole amount of the surplus or more than twenty mill ons of dollars in the Tieasury was'unavail able fund,' scattered amongst a hundred Banks, and unavailable it would have remained to this day but for the reest ibljihment of a Bank of the United Stabs, through whose care, labor, and good management, the unavailed funds were so far made available, that the actual loss io the Government from this source was not rnu'd) more than a million and a quarter of dollars A degraded currency, we repeat, may exist of necessity But what shall we say of wilful debasement of the currency ! In a private individual, it is a felony at law; in a legislator, it is tyranny over the people Its effects are invariable It pampers usuiere, extortioners, and such like: it defenders a general propensity to engage in M'hcma and speculations for
political power and public spoils. A ruined or degraded currency invariably rxpel, a sound one. Good men, with the best intentions, acting upon plausible theo ries, have sometime?, as well as tyrants,
involved their countries in ruin by tampermg w;th the currency. Lycurgus, because of the scarcity id gold and silver, etab-li-hrnent an iron money: by doing which he not onlv drove away the precious metals, but put an end to all trade and com merce f I is money was ridiculed by the other States of Greece; much as we may
suppose if the paper reign again returns,
six and ten cent due-bills such a abounded in apart of this country in 181516. would be ridiculed if offered in payment
at the Bank counters of Boston or New
York
A wilful debasement of the currency,
then, is either the work of wickedness or
folly.
The currency will become deranged,
and, of course, debased, by the destruction of the Bank of the U S This is a matter put beyond doubt by the experi ence of the past Those who have entered into a combination to put down the Bank either are aware of the certainty of this result, or, in pursuit of selii-ii or corrupt end9 of their own, are reckless of
blush.
See. her as seldom as possible. If she is warm hearted and cheerful in temper; r f, after a day's or week's absence, she fleets you with a smiling face, and in an affectionate manner be sure to look coldly upon her, and answer her with monosyllables. If she force back her tears, and is resolved to look cheerful, sit down and gape in her presence till she is fully convinced of your indifference. Never think you have any thing to do to make her happy; but that her happiness is to flow from gratifying your caprices; and when she has done all a woman can do, be sure you do not appear gratified. Never take an interest in any of her pursuits; and if she asks your advice, make her feel that s-he is troublesome and impertinent. If she attempts (o rally you good humoredly, on any of your peculiarities, never join in the laugh , but frown her into silence. If he has faults, (which without doubt she will have, and perhaps may be ignorant of.) never attempt with kindness to correct them, but continually obtrude upon her cars, -'what a good wife Mr Smith has.'' '-How happy Mr Smith is with his wife" "That any man .v.-uld be happy with such a wife " In r o;,a ny never seem to know you have a wife; treat all her remarks with nnhfleiei re, and be very affable and romplai-ant vtlh every other ladj If you follow tn-se directions, you may be certain of an obc uient and a heart broken wife
SLEEPING PREACHER. A little girl of r leven or twelve year8 of age has created some talk among the people of New Haven for several weeks, n account of her propensity to sleep Dr Giillith has taken an oppoitunily to be present at one of her lectures, and pub-li-bes the particulars in detail Her language of exhortation is really astonishing
for one so young; and the curious would like to know if siie exhibits as much p. vver of mind when awake After closing her sersom she repeated a hymn, and reclined, appearing utterly exhausted and remained
quiet still, as she appeared to suppose, the
hymn was sung. She rose and pronounred the benediction in a deeply impressive manner. Soon after she closed, she aivoke wi'h a kind of convulsion, and was very much astonished to find so many persons arou d her, and wished to know the cause; and when she was told there had been a meeting, she was much grieved and mortified that the should have been asleep all tho time. She lias been kept ignorant of the fact that she herself was the preacher. Boston Traveller.
wrought their great good? The Bank ofi what may be the consequences. In eiththe United States What do then deHiveier ca-e, are thev not enemies to the pub-
j . . .
at the bands of an outraged and incensed
people, who are deliberately contriving and plotting the downfal of (he chicT instrument in the unexampled commercial prosperity of this People? Who are they? What do they want? They are the
Spoilkks; and they want to All their pockets at the expense of general distress and suffering That is what they are af ter And the question which the People have now and very speedily to determine is, whether they will tamely become si ives of the ragbarons, as we have heard the paper-bankers called, to enrich a few desperate speculators in stocks, to make the fortunes of some few corrupt S' hem"rs of a new Bank, or to fatten the vultures which will again, as heretofore, swarm around the carcass of the public credit? Now is the lime. A few months hence, if they slumber longer, they may, on waking, find themselves in chains. The currency of the country may some times be of an arbitrary character from necessity; that is, to supply the want of better So in the early hisloiy of our country, in one part of il, (Maryland, and perhaps Virginia,) tobacco was recogniz ed as a currency, being a legal tender, at a certain rate per lb or hundred. Tax. es collected and tines levied, in this staple product of the country, being then almost its only commercial medium. In the east ern settlements, also, atone time, grain and other agiicultural products formed, at rates fixed by law, the medium of exchange. But it would be thought mad ness past medicine, in any Fmaucial Mm ister of the United States now to propose, instead of gold and silver, to establish tobacco as the legal currency. So when the present civistmition was formed, there wa9 a currency, if a thing can be called current that would not circulate. This currency, however, was a curse to the people, and the bane of National prosper ity. To get rid of it was one nf the main object? of the people in forming a new Constitution. If that constitution had al-
tic peace: But a much severer judgment awaits th'se who, to accomplish their own ends, thus, reckless of consequences to thcr Country and to lhe People, rely on the Presidential Veto for the accomplishment of their purpose, in contempt and defiance of the public will. Congress, as well as the People, are oppo-cd to the great pohtico'Stork-jobbing schemes of the Cabal; and to Congress is all legislative power in the General Government confided by the Constitution. Hut the Ca'.el urn dertake to influence the President to put his Veto upon Congress'. Such an exercise of power would be, in its effect, an assumption of the prerogative of regulating the currency ot the country: a prerogative which the King of England would at no time within the last century have dar
ed to exercise; and by the exercise of
which, if the w ill of the people should be counteracted in the case before us, their most incontrovertible rights are - usurped. In conclusion, as many of our readers as differ in opinion from us on this subject we pray to excuse the arguments we have thought it a duty to address to them upon tt Let them, if they can reconcile it in their own consciences, fall in with the Albany Regency in their cry of Uojlh -uiih the Bank! But, if they will calmly consider that the only argument by which lhat cry is sustained consists of gross cab urnnies and denunciations of Congress and and the Press, they must consider, that in joining in the chorus, they sanction two others sentiments, abhorrent to the mind of every intelligent fieeman, viz: Down with Congress! Down vvrni the Press!
If men of genius were to express their own opinions of their woi ks, they would prove the severest critics Boilean once said, "Of all criticisms; those winch hurt me the most, are such as my own judg ment make outiry own work?."
Choosing to be hanged rather than married It was foimerly a law in Germany, that a female condemned tocapital punish ment should be saved if any man would marry her. A young girl of Vienna was on the point of being executed, when her youth and beauty made a great impression upon the heart of one of the spectators, who was a Neapolitan; a middle aged man, but exceedingly ugly. Struck with her charms, he determined to save her, and running immediately to the place of execution, declared his intention to marry the girl, and demanded her pardon according to the custom of the country. The pardon was granted on coeuition that the girl was not averse to the match. The Neapolitan then gallantly told the female that he was a gentleman of some property, and that he wished he was a King, that he might offer her a stronger proof of his attachment. 4,Alas! Sir," replied the girl, "I am fully sensible of your affection and generosity, but 1 am not mistress over my own heart, and I catnot belie my sentiments. Unfortuantely they contiol my fate; and 1 prefer lhe death with which I am threatened, to marry ing such an ugly fellow as you " The Neapolitan retired in confusion, and the wo man directed the executioner to do bis office
Aery Writing Pajcr. Writing paper hasjust been introduced, which, by meari3 of a chemical preparation it undergoes, has the s-ingular property of becoming black whenever it is touched with any fluid. It is only necessary, therefore, to write on this paper dipped in clean water, to produce a distinct and legible communis cation.
Superior intelligence of thz Dog and F!e phanl The dog is the only brute animal that dreams, and he and the elephant tho only quadrupeds that understand looks. The elephant is the only animal thnt, be sidesman, feels sorrow; the dog the only quadruped that has been brought to speak. Leibnitz bears witness to a hound in Savoy, that could speak distinctly thirty words Made Gaz.
Romantic The following is the copy of an adverti-ement in a Philadelphia paper. "If Oscar really wishes to see Adala, fche is to be fouud m Fourth, below Liberty street ' Orange and Jlyrfle Tree. In tlio cardan of Scliwezwigen, in (iermany, tlicre are -t 5 oiano trees between 200 auJ b'00 years old : alid my;Uo trtes 6 in diameter.
