Vincennes Gazette, Volume 9, Number 43, Vincennes, Knox County, 21 March 1840 — Page 2
Saturday, IMahcii 21, 1810.
The Vnicn cf the Whigs for the sake of th Union." NOMINATION BY THE WHIG NATIONAL CONVENTION. FOR PRESIDENT, WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON OF OHIO. FOR VICE-PRESIDENT. JOHN TYLER OF VIRGINIA. fr-eONE TERM. Mr. PnnitTox, of Ohio, stated in the Convention, that it was the wish of General il.Mimsox, if elected to the Presidency, to nerve onlv ONE TERM. TRUE WHIG DOCTRINE. " One Prcsi dentir.l Term the Integrity of the Public ftrvanis the safety of the Public Money and the general good of the People. uov. Harbour. TOP GOVERNOR, Samuel Hi ggcr, of Rush County KOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR, Saillliel Hall, of Gibson County PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS. " SENATORIAL, JONATHAN McCARTV, of Fayette. BOSEPII G. MARSHALL, of Jefferson. REPRESENTATIVE, 1st District, Jony w. tatxe, of Harrison, 2d 3d 4 th Gth 7th I. w. THOMrso.t, of Lawrence, v o 8 e r m L. white, of Jefferson. JAMES n. cnATtss, of Ripley. CAiEn b.smith, cf Fayette. xvm. HEitoc, c.f Bartholomew, nrsnr s. iiys, of Montgomery. do. do. do. do. Whig Committee of Correspondence of Kuoz countySamuel Hill, Hiram Decker,!!. 1 Cad aingion, George R. Gibson, H'm. Ft McCord, Albert G. Sloo. The Circuit Court for Knj.x county, will commence its session on MonJay n?xtt and continue two week. We understand there is a lage amount ol lisincss before it. $CTEit!argcd and Improved. The Sun, cur cr-ueraporary, friend Stout, in his old days, shows signs of getting upon the travel-fast system, and gives indubi table evidence ol being determined to giv mis age oi improvement a race lor it. We doubt not, from the start he has made that he will ere long catch up with it, and we hope, lead the van, outstripping all o those who have hitherto looked down up on him, as it will be teaching tham a pro per lesson, do on old friend wa wish you all the success in the worid. We hope your next move will unfold a m.im moth, and that the ff'esttm Sun may she its influence far and wide, in every ihm cave politics, they are ctlcrte desunt. Ths Y abash has fallen, within a few days, so that boats, except of the very lightest draught, cannot pass the Rapids. Copying by mcau of Electricity. vonsiueranie interest has been excited lately amon? the scientific, by a newly discovered process of copying works of art, upon copper, by voltaic electricity. Vy this discovery, electricity will be cm ployed for practical and useful purposes. It H said a new species of flax ha? been discovered growing spontaneously, in the country adja?ent to the Rocky mountains, similar in many respects, to the common flax, and perennial in its growth. It needs no pulling as the common, but may be mowed each season. jL.x-oena:or l'oinuexter, nas oen ap pointed to revise the Statutes of Missis einpi. Mississippi Banks. The returns of the Mississippi Hanks, as reported by the Hank Commissioners of that State, show an aggragate capital of $14.773, 9J8 paid in; notes and hills discounted, $8,753,09 1; suspended debt, .$7,12-1,128, specie $10'. 91; circulation, $4,073.532. Total re sources, including suspended debt, $28, 0S6,09I; total liabilities $28.389,077. Liabilities of Director., $4,052,852. Ohio Hanks. The total amount of specie in the Ohio Hanks on the 31st of December last, was $752,447; circulation, $4,607,128; deposites, $2,017,361; notes and bills discounted, $13,41 1,087; capital $10,507,521. The Ohio Statesman, a rabid loco foco paper, is nigh about run stark mad since the GREAT Convention at Columbus. It is paid for doing the dirty work of the party, and of course we could expect no better, than, that it should tell all Forts of falsehoods concerning it. Better lcl-it-be Can't come it your own party will not believe the Convention was made un of "Abolitionists, Bankers, Office Holders, Merchants, Lawyers; Doctors, Speculators, Loafers, Loungcrs,Gror-'sccxs, Sec. fcc." We place a part of the Statesman's enumeration in italics, as that part which belongs, by title, exclusively to its own partyIndiana. X cute Yankee has caught a Van Buren man in the "Hoosier State," and is taking :um round as a show. A Itvy a sight, a;;d "children half price." It is said to be a. first rate speculation. Boston Transcript. A maxim in business is, that "opposition is the life of trade," but the above naaed Yankee need not be the lrat a!-
armed for faar of it. Not in the least, since Van Buren men are getting as scarce
as hen's teeth. New Jersey. The Administration msjoiity in the House of Representatives have given the lo co foco pretenders from this State, seats in their body as the legal representatives ot the people. Several ot the members of the House refused to vote, allcdging the proceeding to ho such a gross outrage upon the people ot that state, as nicy must protest against. We have no more to say upon the su!j'ct it is too disgustingWe coincide with the following sugges tion, as being both appropriate, and un der all the circumstances, requisite. The Conventions come too near to each other for such persons to attend all as may wish to do so. We commend it to the consid eration cf the Whirs of Kr.ox in their C3 meeting on the 11th proximo. " Young Men's Convention. The last Spirit of 7G suggested the policy of postponing the meet ing of the Young Men's Harrison f5tate Conven tion, from the 29th of May to the 4th of July. i are decidedly in favor of the postponment, and hope it may bs made. The day and the died of 1776, arc peculiarly adapted to an association with the consecrated field of Tippecanoe' an 3 the people's, cause. As the day is the Nation's iubilce, it will also, as well as tfie place, induce thousands to attend that prohaUy otherwise would not. Let the ptess rpeak out, and decide the matter. If the time should be postponed, Ohio's Twenty-second will be eclipsed by Indiana's Fourth." There is a loco foco sheet issued from Paoli, under the cognomen of tli3 True American which is a perfect libel upon the name from first to last. We copy one of its paragraphs: The whig papers are endeavoring to create a sympathy for Gen. Harrison, among the jcople, by telling them he is so poor, that he has to live in a log cabin. If it is so, it certainly .oes not speaK very well ot mm as a caretu! nvmager of bis aifiirs. It u only iatenlel for an electioneering hobb". It is r cll known that lie owns one of the finest farms in Ohio, and hold ttie oiu .'? oi Licrk ol 11 amnion county, which is worth from five to six t'.jusand dollars a year. B it if he manures his own a.Tairs so badlv. ho'.v will he manng? the peoples?' What must be thought of an individual who would pen su- h a paragraph and put it forth to the world? It evinces both contemn'thle irnrrance and a foibserviency to political partiznnship that even passes the Indianapolis Democrat. It is a well known fact that Gen. Harrison is a poor nun. We do not mean that he is a beggar, but a man, who, when all the high and responsible situations he has held, and the vast amount of money that has pased through his hands, with out one dollar of it sticking to them, but on the contrary, only growing poorer in the very road lint the Vanites grow rich, is" taken into consideration, has still to labor with his own honest hands for a subsist! nee. It i3 false that he hold the office of county Clerk. He did, but long since resigned it nor was it ever worth more ihan one third of tho sum stated by the unscrupulous editor of the True American. It is the grand object of the Vanites to throw odium upon Gen. Harrison because he does not, like Martin the First, ride in his English carriage, with hired laekies at his back, and scorn the poor and humble. Gen. Harrison has a heart ever open to all his kind, and were his income lifty thousand a year, it would only enlarge his field of labor, for he would act up to the dictates or bis gen erous heart, ard spend it doing good to his fellow man. Such has been and such always will be Gen. Harrison. There will be a semi-annual meeting of trie 1 rustees of the incennes university on the first Monday in April, (next Mon day week) at the ofhee of the Secretary, at T o clock. P. M. JOSEPH SOMES, Scc'i. Harrison IFhig. Gentlemen having above paner, will Piospectuses of the ilease return them to the publisher be tween the 1st and Gth of April, or forward a list of the names that may be attached to each, with directions, as the editors now think of anticipating the day of publ ication one week, issuing the first num ber upon the lb.n instead ol the 23d of April, as stated in the proposals. T. II. CAVANAUGH & Co Publishers Tiom the Baltimore American, March 9. Arriral of the Great Western Forty-fire days later from England The steam ship Great Western arrived at New York on Saturday, at half an hour past noon, having left Bristol on the 20th Feb. "N e copy the following summary ol intelligence from this very ate arrival. The duty on Wheat is now 21s 8d per quarter, ana on i" lour liis i-4ii per rel nor is there at present any indica-j tion of a change. The latter part of last month the most of the American Flour then in the market was disposed of at 29ii I per bbl. in bond since when the price I has fluctuated between 29s Gd and 3.1s I Go, and u is now rather dull at 30s per bbl. The future course of tha Corn j markets must depend mainly on the pros-l w
pects for the next crop?. Iducehis wages down to the rate of about The Tobacco market continues on thelR'i cents per day, and then very compla-
declinc and prices are in a great measure! nominal. BROWN, SHIPLEY, & Co. Money matters are slowly revivinginterest is reduced to 5 per cent circu lation is increased. The sales of cotton in Liverpool, on the liJth 1 eb. amounted to 2,.r00 bags, chiefly American. In Manchester, 14th Feb., prices of not
vuuuii were as iow as tney were sixit-iass
. . - i . i . i i
months ago. 'cient to detect the conflict of this hard
The Newport Chartists. Frost, Wil
liams and Jones have been found guiltv and sentenced to transportation or labor in the hulks, at the Queen's pleasure. They reached the hulks :it Portsmouth, Feb 14. The packet ship Havre was burnt off the coast of Cork, Feb. 10th she bad 1504 bales of cotton on board. Twenty souls were saved the rest lost. She was from New Orleans. The Duke of Wellington has had two or three alarming fits of illness so much so as to be considered hopeless. Daily bulletins are issued from Apsley House. The steam ship Liveipool arrived out safely Jan. Olh. Parliament met Jan. 10th, and was still fitting on the 19di Feb. The latest dates from China, in Liverpool, on the 10th February, were up to Nov. 2'. st, from Singapoie. Prince Albert was appointed Field Marshall of the British army. His commission was dated Feb. 10, 1810. India. The fighting here between the British and natives waxes hotter and hot ter. The British stormed Khalat Nov. loth, took it, killed Mehtab Khan, the chief, all of whose principal Sirdar were killed or taken, aud hundreds of ofer prisoners. The Queen held a court at Buckingham Palace Feb. 18th, and received the addresses of both houses of Parliament to Victoria and Albert, to which th.?y both briefly replied, and promised to fulfill the favorable hopes expressed fiom their union. Marriage of the Queen to Prince .11 itert. Qieen ictoria was mirneu 10 Prince Albert Feb. lOih. The follow ing are some of the particulars. iriitchall, Feb. ( Arrival rf his Royal Highness Prince Albert. At half nasi twelve precisely, the drums and trumpets sounding along the passers leading to the chapel announced the approach of tli 3 procession of the royal bridegroom. I he entrance r.f the Prince, after the music had ocaed, was the signal for the whole assemblage rising he came up the body of the chapel, nrcotnpanied right and left by his Serene Highness the Duke of Saxe Coburg, his father, and his brother the hereditary duke. Arrival cf the British Qu en. Tho Ujren s arrival was announced by the band, Sec, ptaying the National Anthem. During the interval between the commencement of the music and her Majes ty's arrival, the Prince frequently looked bick to the chapel entrance to watch the approach ot his angel bride. Her Majesty on her entering the chap cl was received by all within its walls standing. Her Majesty having advanced to the haut pas, took her Feat on the fald-stool to the left band of the bridegroom, ami the service commenced, 'he Archbishop of Canterbury leaving his seat and advancing to the front of the altar railing, with the book from which lie read the service in his hands. Of the ceremony itself it is onlv necessary to say tint it tli fie red in nothing, except the exalted rank of the principal personages, from tnat used at the marri age of any of her M pjsly's ftibjorts. To the Editors of the Louisville Journal. Washington, March 5, I8'.0. Gentlemen: Abuse of power or vio lation of law by the present party in power has become general, and instances of it occur so frequently, that it is to he (eated the people will believe the record r . i .8 . oi mem to ue tne ncmious creations o partizans, merely to alarm their fears stimulate their zeal, or inflame their pa3 sion. against the executive authority o the country. Before the nation has had time to recov er from the astonishment induced by the perpctiation of some enormity by same member of the dominant party, its sensi bililies are shocked by the record of another new act of corruption or crime. The plunder of the public treasury is followed by a violation of the elective franchise, and an indignity offered to the Governor of a State is soon succeeded bv an indiscriminate attack on the credit and commerce of all the States. We now hear Senators boldly propose a system of legislation the ellect of which they boastfully declare will be "greatly to diminish the price of labor." It is gravely proposed by a cours of legislation to reduce this young and vigorous republic to the decrepitude of age, visibl" in the overgrown population of the nations of Europe. The Cantons of Switzerland, the Electorates of Germa ny, and the Principalities of Italy, are soberly pictured to the people by the Pre bar-Moeui as in moueis lor tne nnanciai ar rangement and commercial policy of this Jour vigorous and enterprising Republic. I he people of America, in the enfhusias m of offended pride, should repel the contrast, and scorn the association, as an insult lo their national character. ihe honest and industrious laborer should learn to know who it is that ishes by a course of legislation to re centiy tell him that the ten cents is as much as fifty cents. His coffee; his tenrftuul bis sugar, his linen, and the cloth he wears, are all to be introduced from a country over which our laws cannot onerate therefore he must pay as much for wnai is imported alter his wao-es have oeen reiiuced, as he does now and of course it is idle to tell him, that he is not injured by ths reduction. If I do mistake the character of our laboring iney nave intelligence sum .1 i ,,.
monev scheme with their true interests," and firmness enough to resist it. I
But I have wandered from mv first' purpose, which was to expose a new outrage committed by one of the party, The clerk of the hcuse of representa - liroe maflp a rrn 1 ran t ttritVi T.qnrrlrao f.ir
furnishing all the stationary needed bv ' er if this Congress suouui adjourn to mor- nuotu me oniy man at me i..pnthat house. Now the clerk not only had 'row? WhatThopes are held out to the drrnrns of a re-election, no right to make this contract, but, in' People? Suppose that the administra-i To thi we may appropriately :M the doing so, l.c violated an express law of tion should complete all their unfinished following paragraph from the .Washmgr.nn.jroe. Thf flml.- rf ii.o u..:i nq'iuihP. whom would it benefit? Fin-: ton correspondence of the New ork
well as the clerk of the senate formerly possessed this right. But to prevent the very abuse practised by the present clerk, a joint resolution was passed, which took away that power. I he two clerks are authorized to purchase stationary, but not by contract. Accordingly the clerk of the senate purchases the paper, &r., for the use of the senate from the same person of whom Langtree gets his. In I DO the instance of paper, it is said, that the senate is furnished with paper at four dollars and a half a ream, and that the house fias tr pay for the same paper five dollars nnd a half a ream. The extra dollar on the paper is given to Langtree, ostensibly as profit but really that he may be able to carry on the Democratic Review, a party magazine, established in this city, in the success of which the President is said to feel especbd interest. It is just as proper that the clerk of the house should purchase his paper from the manufacturer, ns it is that th? clerk of the senate sould do so and by so doing it is alleged that the paving t the country would he ten or fifteen thousand dollars per session. I understand tiiat the committee on accounts (a majority of which happens fortunately lo oe whig-.) has suspended so much of h'3 account, as exceed? the fair market price of similar articles, until it can ba investigated, and action bad on it by tho house. Mr. Langtree is not a stationer, bookseller, or paper manufacturer, nnd there could have been no molive save the one I have su'jgted, whv this contract should have h-rcn given to fiitn. Thus it is, that one abue succeeds another, each more bold and reckless than the one that preceded it; until the admin istration has established for itself an infamous immortality, based on the magnitude and multitude of its own acts r.n 1 abandoned profligacy. We have heard ilohargd on th-? Po.-l master General that he permitted a rmn to go to Kentucky for the avowed purpose of conducting a party press, while he is an office holder, receiving his regular pay of fourteen hundred dollars per year, for t'.e performance of duties at Washington city, which he hires a substitute to render for him at a compensation of forty dollars per month. This charge stands itncnnii adicted, because its i ruth can be established beyond the possibility f doubt. We now heboid Ut3 party on the floor of the hcuse of representative,' after having violated the representative right of New Jersey, and grossly insulted the State in the person of her chief rrnrrisli'fte, and by discrediting l ie great seal of the commonwealth we .re farther to witness another outrage of justice, decency and law, in the acta of a tii.hfass majority determined to force on tiiat State a representation not hers and whose vote. it is known will be in opposition to their wishes and interests. Violating all propriety, law or precedent, they will give the seats to those, who have a plurality of votes when it has been openly avowed that the investi gation ol the committee thus far has ?e thus far has , til have already been shown that illegal votes detected to vitiate or destroy the title of -iwo of the Van Buren claimants. These two men, therefore, cannot, by any equitable right, claim seats in congress they never had a right to a seat yet it is resolved, in spite of law, lo give these men power to participate in the legislation of the country. And while I am writing, Mr. Medell of Ohio, who lias the floor, is denouncing the Governor of New Jersey, aud ing him with the perpetration of a fraud on the Hou-se, because he did not furnish commissions to men, who it has nowbeen proved never were legally elected The Clerks in the War Department are employed, as I have been informed, iii overhauling the correspondence during ihe last war to see if something cannot be found against Gen. Harrison, which will injure his standing with the people. Ifl nothing can be found, something will be manufactured for the occasion. Sensible of guilt, thc executive dreads
, i i . . -ii, J , ' ' c"u" u,,l,itor8 of the su d Edv llie nermil whe.l lis nets will hp nrnncnrll.rr,!, ,-,,1 f.iUC.I -I. r.i. . i . u
tMil ir nnnt lr)itMoa nl (ha nrM.iPAn( An ' . . , , -i ,1 nmv IrnitlMco nl I ,a ni.rl ' "n"""' , .. , I proaun ui uiai pcnou which u oegins to believe cannot much longer be postponed. Conscious crime is usually accompanied hy cowardice it dreads detection! WHAT HAS CONGRESS DONE? Congress has now been in session about three months, and what has it done for the relief of the country? In both branches of the Federal legislature the administra- J tion lias commanded a liberal majority and is therefore justly held responsible alike lor its action and omission lo act But when we look at the records of a three months session, what single meas ure do we find that has been commenced carried through that boby, with a view to the exigencies of the people and the limes? Mr. Blair has been elected prin ter and this comprises ths whole history. New Jersey still remains a dis franchised and dishonored State. The! Su'o- J reasury bill, which was so urgently oy pressed by Mr. Van Uuren, "in spite oN the lamentations of the people" lingers
in the House of Representatives, and ujsome raore promising candidate, is pri-
HKeiy to linger mere, until tne aaiTiinistra-J vateiy discussed, erea among the Mcredj tion shall recover its courage, or com? in-'legions. Mr, Buchanan, ieing that Penn-(
to" the possession of a little money to put into its safes and strong boxes. !
But what will Congress Co: What is proposed by the Executive? v hat will the attempted by the administration to 1 satisfy the demands of the country? In ivhol raannnt Willi Id the community stiffish the wrong and outrage upon iNF.w Jersey; nve the Sub-Tresrury bill the ignature of the President; pass Mr. CalIllOt'N ; s bill lor tue piunuer oi ine m.m-
tie States, adopt Mr. Grundy' report for there will be no doubt ot the issue. in the depreciation of State credit; give Mr. Virginia, I learn that Mr. Rives Got. Bentox the free introduction of salt; give. Barber, and ether eminent men. will tiavMr. WooPBtT.Y authority to borrow 'el throughout the old Dominion on a fri$").000,0"0 for the use of the Treasury; 'sade in favor of the country and Cointipass the resolution of Mr. Buchanan; union. Able and eloquent men in .her conumate Mr. Poinsett's scheme for the Slates, South and West, will address the establishment of a standing army; give ! people, in the course of the summer, on the the sanction of Government to the cm-' dreadful condition of the. country. We ployment of bloodhounds in Florida; do see land, there is no doubt of it. We all this, and ibis we believe covers the en-; have rumors here that some of your ullr tire policy of the administration, nnd then ! loco focos have an idea of nominating Col. dismiss Congress to render to their on-1 R't,-h:nd M. Johnson as a candidite for stituenls an account of their doing". Vv ill. the Presidency against Gen. Harrison t!ioe ronsMtUc'nts be content with this . believing that he would be a strong! r candistory of their stewardship. date against the old Chief than Mr. Van In truth nothing has been accomplish- j Burrn. 1 am not sure but they are right ed. nothing has been nronosed by admin- as lo his s'.rennth. Still no candidate can
i'tration that is cither intended or calculated to alleviate t he distresses or quiet & ' the discontent of die People. Its whole policy lias been a series of shallow and shabby electioneering expedients, indicating neither statesmanship nor patriotism, n?ither love of country nor capacity to legislate for its advantag'i. The opposition i powerless. It can accomplish nothing for the relief of ine People, a long as it is den by the weighed down ;nd overriuadministr.nion majorities in both branches of I'm Federal legi-!atur?, Where then shall the Peopl a look lor tlic remedy of the evils under which they now gr-an? To a change of rulers. This is now their onlv hope. They r?e t!ict from the present dvnaty they have nothing to expect. Comr whit come may, thev know that there en inot he a more f-eblo ;o;d imbecile 'muiiti .tion, and that there cannot be greater uepresMon or embarrassment riron? all th': erc-at interests of thr? land. Commerce otic i!tnre manufacture. the m':c-ii-ioirj arts prostrate; real estate pacsin? rapi'iiy at the most depreciated prices into ths huud opulent mortgagees -md hard money men: and all this the necessary and foretold result of the abandonment by the Federal administration of its legitimate, acknowledged, ccn-titutional authoiity! Who believes that ihe electors of this "nuoiic will submit in patience to the continuance of this state of things? Who doubts that they are ripe for the change of a dynasty. whose policy is marked by such calamitous results. It is the conditio:"! of .he country it is ihe severe pressure of tue times it is the admitted truth that ihe administiation is not adequate to the exigencies of the period no less than the resistless and overwhelming popularity of General Harrison, that pemiades us, end that must oersmde every man who studies the signs of ths times, that the days of the present Federal dvna tv are numbered. No i administration could stand agaic.it the j accumulated evils th.l now preas upon ' this devoted country. No tafant, no wealth, no corruption, could sustain the! inevitable odium that attaches to such a state ol tinners as exists at the nrecent day because the impression is as umver - i i -i i , , sal as ,t ,s to b attributed ma.;-ly to the
weakness of the corruption of government, cation of a ropy of this order in ihe Vinreni."The ruin or prosperity of a stqte," say s j (i.-itte. a we.-':.!y newspaper of general eirculi"JfNltrs, "depends so inue,!i upon t!ie ad-,tbn, printed an 1 j.-ahlished in Vrnrennes, in l! r "ministration of government, that to l?e county of N'-irj, and ftnte of Imhann. far thr.-.?
"acquainled with the merit of a ministry, "we need only observe the condition ok "the people. If we see them obedient "to the laws, prosperous in their indus"try, united at home, an respected abroad "we nny reasor.nhly presume '.heir affairs "are cooducied by int'o oi experience, "abilities and virtue. If, on the contrary, ! "we see a universal spirit of distrust and! "dissstisfaction, a rapid decay of trade, r . ,i c i - . "dissension m all nat a nf I ip pmnirn on.t I -a total loss of respect in the eyes of for- - "-- I ' ... . 1 L . 1 , UIIU "eic-n oowers. w;e mav nrmmnnro. ivith. ! "out hesitation that the Government ofi "that country is weak, histracted and "corrupt." Courier and Enouire.r. ! - Tkrror in the Camp. The followinrr ' oaraaranh from tiiat sterling . New York Commercial, ia a short but lirran i ft nndfaithfo' sUil, .... 1 vuj.m.v. ...iu . ..i.iiii. Mvuu-n oi oie present f ..Ki: C- . 1 . . . f I.!' r . I -i - . . uw lo puunc iceimg among tne Iriends
ot tne administration at Wash nrrton e iv ,ri. .!. . . n . i in'; rtuimniiuaiioM ai vasiiingion city.
I nil. IIIIUU3I"1"!. "IIH DUtl 'CSS,
Hundreds of letters from the seat of GovJu'i!1 1,0 ne th henefit of tho insolvent act. eminent coroborate the account here nVfn. and lhis ca,1!C continued to the next term of this
ernment coroborate the account here "iven: Louisville Journal. ' Louisville Journal. We have private advices from Wash ington cl the most gratifying import for me true mends ol the country. The popular indications in favor of Gen Harri son have shuck thc cohorts of the admit.istralion with a paralysis added to which are the wails of distress raised from every portion ot tiic Union, and the receioto some eight or ten thousand letters pour iu- in upon wia memuers d3i!y, ultorinc '--uiiipiauit, cursing ihe adm n iraiion, and demanding a reform. These . a things the administrate n. cannot ntnnd I here are indeed indications almost of a breaking up. Tho sub-Treasurv bill is dead. It may indeed bs revived for the sake of appearances in the House, but no hopes of its passage are longer entertiinpd the few friends it has left. Farther still, tho exnedienov of droDDinr Mr Van Buren, and endeavoring to rallv tinrm
nylvania is lost, begins to draw oft, an slyly and saicasucally asks Itow l,oi. lieu
ton is advancing in ins nam m"v schemes. Three weeks ago, Buchanan was supporting Benton's visionary notions Now ho speaks of him as n monomaniac unon the subieet. The President U " 1 . f. ar-m -t a btar: J We hear of gatherings every where for General Harrison tne ball is rolling wim great rapiuuy, uu uj w ... - come near Gen. Harrison. trr"-Mr. Prolntt. the whig mcmb' r frcm Indiana, was predicting the other day in the house of representatives, to somo his Tory colleagues, the rcitilt of the next presidential election. He told them hi prophecies had always come to pa lor 'he was not only a I'mynt, but son of a Pmfpit, Lnu. Jour. the APRIL i:Li:cTio.x. For Constable. II. V. NORTON. LEVI COR NOV ER. WILLIAM GREEN. THOMAS W ELTON. E. M. JONES. DANL. P. WILLIAM LEMUEL WILLIAM M'DONALD. G RNER, GARDNER. .STEW ART. lo. . Wni'i.OS'V &L 5 tt, ll:Mr-nS!.. WhetTr.-. Ib. I MAMMOTH 1 'jTDUW. ?:5.Jin. 2.-).:cn, I Oio. f!.'t.0:jo. ALLWAMM.'l LOTTLRY; A. tlr.nTs at .!i":ani1rii, April I'oh I.x-iO.
i Pii.of 5vr!'(i i I'm of f:..oci 1 ito 2.r,.ii.'0 I d- 1.000 l .! 15 one. : ,! v,.iti'j I ! . io.oou ;o th 'o oo i J) ti.oon 20 tin i.?:o 1 !j 00 0 d- !..')(' 1 7.0-10 f)0 ,!. l.o;. 1 l.i COOty j 50 .1 70
Priz-- of 5500. . A c. - C" tickets with the 1ft CJ s. ench fto '.' i.l .-.nii 3d, ern-h ;tuu ?d r.;x 1th. enrh :oy Hi. r vol I I i (Ir ian utimiK Co with the I with the ' Tirke's i-' A i-n !i:'citt- ,! lO. Halve- Qu.uters :. f 20 whole tickets will co.-t f'iSO halves !o 110 quarters Jo 70 I). !S. CJRKdOKV A Co. Wheeling, Vn. 'TA'1X K INDIANA, MIHOX CO UN TV '. In the flih0)i Circuit Court, March 'Firm, IS 10 Lolly Crawf'iri! s V'-. (. In Chancery. ?. "i'-hoh Kernel. Si. 1 aPPl';in'' '''" the snenh s return to t.-e '? , "V T.Y V e vmmm , t,.,t ounl. it is ordereii that notice of ihe iiemlenrv of this hiJ in thc said MendJ, bv -in... pi., irvm-iy, H ICIIST SMTV ( IV S IMlllTO Mxt tf-r-r of ihi (Jnui!, ;uul that he v a-' :isv,. r. or ik inor l the o.in.il iinniit's ! if! of ot,i; otherwisi- the matters an. things therein contained, ui'l he taken ;is corifesseJ, anil a decree entered acconJingly. nnJ this caue continued to ih 'next term of thi; Court C. jj 3 'test J. R. MOXT(JOMEKY, (TL. Princtton, M:tr.! 19th I R 10 13-2t. it.tp p,vmi. , STATK OF INDIANA, GIBSON COI'NTY: r . S3. 1,. . . . . n ' . , . Tf . VI' i i.- .. .- . T,- Jeim, ipiu. ' f His Creditor?. C Petition of Insolveii.-T. TVW nt this time comes the suhl F.dwi., Pin. J 1 ney and files his petition, prainj relief as on ,n:!0Vt,nl chfor, and slso files his sehednM iin'' h0Iu.u ordered, that notice of the fiiine Tt'r .TCVW"-ll-ion ?iv" .the CTcd.....c, puoucaoon oi . 1 H C 1IICC a copv of th s order in the Vincennes CJactte for .. 1 "c IUl.CH lies Via7.( lie, IOf three weeks bucccsmvcIv. nt lest sinv r .l .. - . r J - fore the next term of thi Conn th, v,'.,: U iopy a?l.-t J. R. .MONTGOMERY. CTk. Princeton, March I'Jth 1310 13-2t. M K I 0 V A Ii xlT I T I ; E . R. T. 1 THOMPSON, having Mf ly located himself in Knox county, tenders his services to the citizens thereof. From eighteen year's experience in the prartim of Mvdicine. (confined exclusively to this climate,) he flatters himself ho shall be able to givn satisfaction. His charges will be in accordance with the custom of the physicians of Vincennes. March 7th," 1810 42.3t. t JS or ICE!! XUU3UUO nitp consuntly on hami B Whiskey by the barrel or eiillon: also Fl cur oy tne barrel or retail. IT. D. VHEELnR. Vincennes, March, 8, 1639 41-tf-(ZD.
QILVER WAllZ neatly er.gzwi, by a. washbur::. vir;fenn?o March 5th, I 1 A 41-tf.
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