Vincennes Gazette, Volume 10, Number 16, Vincennes, Knox County, 26 September 1840 — Page 2
; iMy ;u:ici;i;i!ii is capable ot indicting. Km. purely, the manliness of trie Ameri in cliai a ni is superior to this' Surely, no American citizen will tot I hiniscii ' hainod to the wheel? of nuy party, nnr hound to follow it rjffrrnst his .-(.ns.-: nrc.
3 and his s'..n--.(; of the interest cl' the country. Kcsohiti j-i and dee-.io'i ought to dissipate -n.-!i restraints, and to h'.ive men iee atorire to act upon their own convictions. Utile? thi, can he d.-ne, party has ontjiL-d upon us a mi.-er.ihie tsiavrry, lv t-ompclliiiy us to aetngainst our consciences on questions of the grcattbt importance. The other cause hi the constant cry that the party of the administration is the true democratic party, or the more popular party in the government, and in the countty. The filsity of this claim has not been F'lfiiciently exposed.. It should have been 'lif t, ami should be now met, not only by denied, but by proof. If they mean the row democracy, the cry against credit, gainst industry, against Uhcr, against a man's right to leave hid own earnings to his own children whv. then doubtless. tncy re ii o - - m 1 1. ; sort of democracy i.i'ii ? . i j t l. :'!':. ;Ci',.CV they mean ;i m ieiiii dhcri; ac i - th'! Il'uJ UIUil 1 1 r ; p.co o! Uie c:ii:it. then i liiink to it. the argpowei ' tei!:f)hc f-vi.:.raioii of I 1 i.tit-.itiuji and l!:': i oil fit f 1 : II': I o,,iu f . t;.- v h .V lit mentation of f rat i'. iri !': the turret::)' currency of til (JoVi-l-!! ami !iv-;n the a ni-oti.e J.jmocratic pring of a large miiirirdt ? is uie cm o' t 'i ri- I, ri:n i-i i . . . t e 3 s e a .cm acralic pl'illOiph 7 Let us ei.tieat honest men not to take nan.es for things, nor pretences for proof.-. If Democracy, in any constitutional sense, belongs to our adversaries, let them show their title, and produce their evidence.the question to t xam ia!( liiirciit wtill-Kiuar.irir TiOt citizens i - i ;uppo;-t oi re. i asure, v:.ic;: r.i asures, w:.k;s in conciiisccsi th v d:s?apt'..i :r authors pour lorth 'IV. r ti.j ie. dt iion o: - i ' ( ;;:'.v-t:;i:.--''u.-5 vi tuc county ot ara-ti-i' i. in tak its.! leae t-f you. I cannot hut it:.ii..u yuu how (!is?i;;:rui;:ed a place your eour.ty occupies in i',e country. 1 cannot I. tlu l.i.-iory ot ignorant, thai in ti.o miust ot vou arj many '.it t!ns mo it. merit, whoaw in t ! i i neighborhood the triumpli cf Republican arms, in the surrender eif Gen. Iargoy uc. I cannot tiouht, that a fervent s punt oi patriotism l.-urnr1 in their breasts and in the breasts ed' their children. They helped to save thcircuuutrv amid; the storms of war, they will help to save it. I am fuilv persuaded, in the present severe ciil crisis. I How-citizen?, I verily believe it is true, that of all that u e iLii to us trorn t!;c ivevoiuion, nmeu i.ti'is are itn tis. test.-. If th.ere be i: the existing coniving a lie volutionar)' .cer, cr soldier, ho has joined in the a'tackd upon Gen. Harrison's muitary character I have not met with him'. It is not. then fore, in the comity of Sai "Oft.., i ; . a k a cause t-ujtai.'.eJ t. .. such mean; i: J : L i -1.. o prevail i e!;-.w-cit:zcn.a. t.'ie great rjuestton is ;nw before the country. If with the cxt;uier.ce of the p.-'at, the Am-.'rican people think proper to confirm power in the Kinds which no. 7 he'd if, and thereby Mtii ;:on the leading policy of the adminatration. it v. ill be your duty and mine to jw witii submi.ssion to the public will; ut for myself, I s.ballnot believe it possi'.e for me to be of service to the country, n any department of public life. I shall 00k on with no less love of country than :vcr, but of fearful forebodings of what nay be near at hand. J5uts fellow-citizens, I do not at all exicct that tC3ult. I fully believe that hange is coming. !f we all do our duty vc sh til restore the Ciovernment to its ormer policy, and the country to its forner prosperity. And let us here, to-day, odlow-citiens. give and take pledges that 1 ill: I the jireat controversy be ended, our i;ne, our ta! ;:t:?. our efforts, are all due. .nd sh.II be faithfully given to om coir.NRV. From trie Indiana Journal. Ilurc F.vn.i.n. Ia., Aug. 25, 13 P. Jlf- v rs. Douglass, an l Norl In the "pirit of '(, loth of thi: instant, I see tated. that the organ cf the Van Iiuien Central committee at Indianapolis, pubis'ncd en the fth of this month, a foul, ualicious, and ridiculous slander on the r.friotic Harrison, in the f jllovittg words: "It is all folly to r up pore that Ilarrinn'n popnlarity ca::?cd ilo-.vard's defeat, 'lie people of Indiana r.rc, we hope, too irluoug to support a worn-out debauchee, .filthy, drunken, old, half-witted, pe'.ti ;at cow erd, in the nape cf (iener?! larrison." Now, sirs, an excellent Preacher of the iOpel, of Sullivan county, that has al:ay5 been on the Jackson and Van liuren ide of politics, this day informed me that I could establish that such a filthy atick was made on Harrison by that committee (I just having read the pararnph -) him) he would quit it immediately. I avo pledged myself, that you rvero genrnien of too high standing, to condecend to state a known falsehood, and I one that the certificate of one or more or.ppicuou.T characters of year town will ppcar in an early number of the ''7fS, or private letter to me. For my part I ould recommend the paper. If Mr. dake, Mr. Drown. Mr. Palmer, and Mr. 'nin, stand endorsers for that beauty of illingFgalr, let them have all the honor, r I assure you it is a rare piece, and caldated for the furtherance of the whig mse, with every honorable and reflecting oldVours with respect
ATI ijUAV, yETTIinER I'.), 18-10. The Union f the WUigs for the sake of the Union." NOMINATION I1Y THE WHIG NATIONAL CONVENTION. FOR PRESIDENT, WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON OF OHIO. F Hi I C 1M R E S 1 1) E N T. JOHN TYLER of viuh: ima; (J-VSX TllUV,. -Mr. Pi.M.r.r.Tov, of Ohio, !.-.?eiI m t!ic ( ..nveiitjo:i, that it was the wish of (o-t:er.'il J I Am: mux, if elected to the Presidency, t . iv. o.iiv o.n Ti:i;!. thi:i: v.'jjit; DrCTi:iNK.fMc .- ;. ;' Ttri:i thc r:!i; ' f the I'ulih: sir-i::.-i!.--t!,(. .;. '- of th- J'uU-c Money and the Xi.-i, rt:t iS.n-hftU l;phr(:uv. harlnur. l ' r e.si i ) e r; ti a i , i: le c t( ) r s. S r NATO it t A L , 1 1 ) . ATI A N ! i ; A KT V, c f Fay 1 1 tc. JO-i;Pif (i. M A Kil A LL, of J.-l7eron. r.r.i'iti;si:xTATivn, Di. jri;: v i aym:, r f Harrison. 1!. V. MM! ,; pso v, of l.aVTCIlCC. J.isr:r:i :.. vaarr, cf J-i;ers..in. ja::es it. cuavln?, cf KIpIcy. CALi.ii r . f ! i re. of Faytttc. w:r. i:::::o!N of Daitholonicw. 7ta 'n Me . L Im . . n.i:, JOM J. i a c ' f: ties Tippecanoe T:o will ip.e'-t next, at the Town II?.!!. A jcsier.d ntteii. lance is rcju. sto.l. If there be any jer.-sous who are desirous todis :u..5 the merits and claims of ?.I irtia Van liuren, auh a c y;ri'c:0(r 'y invited to nttoiid. " T;z .-.; ?.- r.'. t he J, n,r the .-irhv r-f We have partial returns from the State of Maine. A whig representative to Congress in the Cumberland district, is elected in place of Smith, loeofoeo. Hardly a doubt remains bat that Maine will give her vot'j for Old Tip at the coming election. A nuv life of Van liuren has recently been prepared by Moses Dawson, of Cincinnati, to answer th.; purposes of the powers that be. Holland's lif.' of Van liuren, ireparcd for !ie campaign 1 o of ble 1-1 then and pronounced unexceptio: will tot answer the faithful in 1 V. 'lli e sapdicad (jf tl,e South-Wcatorn Sentinel has taken occasion to say in his wisdom that we are in '-a terrible pucker about the Secretary of this State.'' Being in a pucker'' about any thing, very often implies anger, occasioned by a diseonifi;ure in argument, and the development of awful facts. We sta'ed nothing but incontrovertible truths, in relation to the certificate ef Secretary Drown; and we defy the wisacre of the Sentinel, to gainsay one expression we then made. 'You can't come it.' (llavo you built a house on that lot the Locos gave you, Jake?) apman of the abash Enquirer, in his last budget of filth says, "unless our delinquent subscribers immediately pay up we shall stop the psper" Then you will certainly stop it. The people are not disposed to pay for any thing which is given to them,particularly"a thing so filthy as the Enquirer. We will be very sorry when he stop3 s pink of decency. Wonder if any of 1 f the miner scuilions oi the party nave learned to crow? If not. we will have to put up with the "cackling hen" cf the South-Western Sentinel. The Indiana Democrat of a late date, says that a letter has just been received at Indianapolis from Col. Johnson, in which he states that owing to his engagements in Ohio, it will be out of his- power to be at Lafayette on the 12th i.ist., but that if life be spared he will be at Cotinersville on Monday the 15th of October, at Indianapolis the Mth of October, at Crawfordsville on the loth of October, and at Lafayette 0:1 the 17th of October. Col. Johnson, as deservedly hih as he stands with the American people, cannot by this cKetionecring scheme, prop up the fallen fortunes of Martin Van Duren. me q " Wc? perceive by the last Evansvilie Journal that iho Whigs of Vanderburgh county are about making arrangements to give a free barbaeuc at Evansvilie about the middle of October. Go ahead success att nd vou.
Two Literary men. Gen. Jackson used to spell Congress with a K: John Cain noio spells Cabbage with a A'. We attribute it to their Irish pronunciation. A Frenchman named I3ey, committed suicide in the jail of this place on Sunday last. Verdict of the Coroner's inquest, 'Death caused by cutting his own throat.'
The remains of &n individual were found on Tuesday last five miles below town. From the appearance of the bones and other circumstances, it is supposed the body had been lying there nearly two ycarj. A breastpin, knife, pocket-book, and a pair of spectacles, were found near the remains. Coroner's verdict 'Death from some cause unknown.' The Guernsey (Ohio) Times of the 1 9th inst. in speaking of the immense gathering of the people at Dayton, says; Tlte largest Meeting yet. The meet, ng at Dayton on the 10th went ahead of any thing of the kind ever held in the UStates. The number of persons present have been variously estimated at from T.o.OOO to ICO, 000!!! Boys doyou hear that? General Harrison was there and addressed the mighty crowd in a speech of the highest interest. Ex-Governor MctcaSf, of Kentucky, presided. VINCENNES TIPPECANOE CLUB, Town Hale, Sep. li, 1810. On motion it was Jii'scli'cd, That the several Tippecanoe Clubs m Knox county, m this tState, am in the State of Illinois, be invited to join thn society in Uic celebration of the f.-i! October, in V incomes-. In pursuance cf the above resolution. the Tcar.oo Club in Knox county et a: t in the .Vu.'r;; oi Indiana and I.iinois nre re?pectU lly invited to join the Yin cotmes tion in Tip pee: om iiu o in toe ce.enra1 1 1 .i ii mcenncs on ttie C:h October I" I '. SAMUEL IHLL.'mV. Vm. .R McCord, -Sec. pro tun. ViEEii':aiic. Vih 3 liii t ? i C til, The citizens of Knox county, Indiana. the old neighbors of Gen. IJairison, are making preparations to give a free barbacuc on the ."th day of October. tV-ir.g the annivcisary of the Battle of the Thames. This expression of high regard entertained for Gen. Harrison, by those who have so long known him, both in peace and in war, is a most relinking commentary em the falsehoods daily uttered and publisher ! by the hired minions of the present administration. If he was, indeed, the advocate of laws so utterly repugnant to every principle of the republican party, would the freemen of Indiana be lcund manifesting their enthusiasm, daily exhibited in their efforts to do honor to their old and tried, friend? These expressions of gratitude for a pubii benefactor, are the spontaneous effusions of men too brave to be the slaves of party reckless ol their country's good and it is not confined to particular daces but is felt an;! exhibited daily in ad parts of the Union. We wish that those of our feilow-eiti-zcr.s, who have a doubt as to the charac ter of Gen. Harrison, would, on that occasion, visit the beautiful village of Vincenncs the classic ground of the West, and enquire of those who Lavo known him for forty years. Wc assure them they will be greeted with a cordial welcome, while the place and the occasion will fill them (if they are not dead to every sense of pridej with overwhelming emotions. The celebration is to be held in the grove where Gen. Harrison attempted a treaty with the fierce and bloody Tecumseh, who had been seduced by the gold of the enemies of our country. To this event, followed in rapid succession, the victories of Tippecanoe, Fort Meigs. and the Thames, under the cemmand of Gen. Harrison, which freed our western frontier from the honors of war. Another succession of victories are being rapidly won under his banner, which will rid our country of the gold bought slaves of power who have exerted a more fatal influence over the prosperity of the west, than the enemies who were defeated by our victorious arms. Ml. Carmel Hcgis'cr. A voice of '?G. The Newburg Gazette contains the following eloquent letter from IJf njamin Eaton, one of the Life Guards of (Jen. Washington: To the descendents of Revolutionary Soldiers. An old soldier of the Continental army asks, for the last time, to speak to his countrymen. During the suffering service of the devolution, I was in sixteen engagements, and was one of the little band who volunteered under Sullivan to destroy "the Six Nations of Indians." I was one of that small company selected as the Life Guard of George Washington but two of us arc now living. 1 W33 at the tough siege of Yorktown, at Valley Forge. Monmouth, and thirteen oilier battles, and saw Cornwallis surrender to our old General. My service ceased -ii 1 r ti l - t 11 only www too war. Alter alltins narosnip and suiitrinrr, in the street when I go out in my old age to see the happiness I have helped to give you, I am pointed at as a BRITISH TORY; yes, a British Tory! I have said nothing when I have been told so, but have silently thought that my old General never would have picked a Tory to form one of his Life Guard, nor would a Tory have suffered whatl have suffered foryou. This abuse has been shamefully heaped upon one of
your old toldiers because he is what he was when the war broke out, and what Washington told ue we must always be when he shook hands widi us as we a!' ururp CninC hnmp T X-n I Whirr in tho
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aim jjii vuc nun. ji3 a iiig i cmisitu ui us vi i.t inne.. i uuui ine uoaj jj.sfor the whole weir, was in favor with the through." He then went on to ftatc the other whigs of Thomas JefTeison, went'arrangerncr.t of the battle. He remarked with the party for James Madison, was in 'that when he communicated to Gen. II.
favor of the last war, and to be consistent in my last vote, must give it for General II?.rrison. He is a brave man, and was never known wherever he has been to take a penny from his neighbor or the Government that was not fairly his. We have trod the same ground fighting for liberty. His father (he was one of the Revolution) 6igned our Independence roll, and then we all went out together to fight for it, and we proved it was true. It really appears to me that this cannot be the same Government that our old soldiers helped Washington to put up here. We fought to have a geivernment as different from any in Europe as we could make it. Well, we done it, and until lately things have gone on smoothly and Europe was beginning to get ashamed cf the way .she made slaves of her subject by making them work and toil for seven poor cents a day with a standing army over them to force them to it. But our President now tells tlv people that things have Cone wrong :-;u the whl W ::-. and that there are twenty-three miscraV; merits in Europe, where the I eoverns wear erowns, the rich purple, ami toe r peoj le rags, that we mu.-t f ishioa af.er them if we want to be h:-.ppy and prosperous! We had English laws here once and they were the best in Europe, but we could'nt stand them, and wc put them under our feet. We used to work for mere nothing then, and wc cannot do it again. v o ra mg tor a Jew cents a Gay rna Gay tio for slaves, but not for freemen, whose liberty cet more blood than liber'' ever cost before; why, the very thing that started the o.a war was trie standing army that the King kept quartered on us; we told him that we wanted no soldiers over x:s in time of peace, but he refused to mind us and I saw Lord Cornwallis surrender a part of tham to h'ytest George Washington. Our President now proposes to have a stanJii'g force what for? Be wan Jefferson never asked for armed men to re-elect him or elevate his successor. Madison asked for them only in the time of the late war. and warned the people when he ic!t his oihee to he eareJ.;: ton ut keeping soldie rs in time of peace. Oar streets are filled with idle men who were active laborers once when employment I v v.-35 t be had. The men of enterprise who once employed them have been ruin ed by the Government. And now but unemployed laborers are told by the Goveminent that when they go to work again they must do it fo: a few cents a d ly that labor must be as cheap here as it is anion? the slaves of Cuba or the slaves of urop?. Ambition and ignorance on the part of our government have shut up our shop? am; stores, scniord our ships, ::!!cu our street? with idleness and given no en- . . . ! r 11. couragement to ine i.irmcr as ne j cutis at Ins Lrrain. Arc not these things so? 1 on know they are, and I have no motive in saving whit may be falre I am too far advanced for office or any thinar but death it will soon be here. ?Iy little pen sion, and I thank you for it, will soon stop and I go home with the rest of the Life Guards. There is one remedy on ly for the safety of the country I have served. Put other men to stand at the tiller and round the cables, and you will soon be back on the old Constitutional track. Gen. Harrison is honest, he never deceived you and he never lost a bat tle, and the People won t let him lose this. Accept my advice and you will have my blessing my advice is that you will become the GLift yards of the country, and my blessing is that your old age will have less fears for liberty than mine. BENJAMIN EATON, One cf the tivo surviving Life Guards of George f I ashington. Newburgh, N. Y. Aug. 18, 11-10. .MM 0 O Ql'". Colonol Johnson Again On the 28th ult. the Vice President came into Cincinnati, and at the court house there, in company with Dr. Duncan and others of his party, addressed the people. In the course of his remarks, he came to the battle of the Thames, during which, according to the Gazette: 'He hoped his fellow-citizens would expect nothing from him but what a man of honor could say. He joined the main army at Detroit, with a battalion of a thousand Kentuckians. He had thorough ly drilled his men to a method of charging by alternate columns, suited to a desperate fight. In the pursuit of Proctor he rode in advance, because his men were mount ed. The British were discovered in bat tle array, and he immediately sent word to Gen." Harrison that they had treed the boys. Gen. Harrison came up and after free conversation with his officers, decided on the order of battle. "And now," said the Colonel, 'it has been said by some that General Harrison is a coward." At this announcement every ear was strained to hear t!r3 conclusion of the sentenceand every eye hearted with intense expecta tion, ''but I s(vo nothing ichich showed him to be more of a coward than I myself teas." A shout instantly arose from those who could appreciate the Colonel's honesty, and the bravery of Gen. Harrison. But the woful countenances of the leading democrats who surrounded the Colonel, were apparent even by the light of the lamps. Duncan was peifectly chapfallen, and hung his head as though fairly jout - Duncaned. He looked as panic struck
as though he had caught a glimpse of a redcoat ox a tomahawk. Even audible expressions of disapprobation began to issue from the crowd, insomuch that the f'f lnnol O'.rinl tn l! i!o hi X." r '.'llli! Tl.l Cflid
i. r.;...,.K. ...til of . the peculiar manner in which he had drilled his men and the probable success if he would permit him to chargs the British line, that the General hesitated a moment, and then said emphatically 'charge.' lie then found a place where he could cross the swamp, in obedience to Gen. H'a first orders, to attack the Indians. He crossed with half his men, and left the other half under command of his brother Jaraes, to charge the line of the British. Here again the Colonel administered another nauseous dose to the slanderers of Harrison, and asserted tl at uhe saw nothing but u-.'i'tl he approved of in the arrangenrit of Gey. II. up to the lime -when he pcrnii'fr him to charge as he desired;" an;i he had just informed us that he wa unable to see any further cf him. or the army, after he crossed the swamp to engage the Indians. He did not sec the General from the time he crossed the swamp, until the close of the battle, when' the General bent over him as belay wounded, and told him in accents of kinde.es-, that 'Tecumseh was killed, and Proctor defeated." The Colonel said in conclusion, that he believed the British were defeated by the attack of his brother James Johnson alonn, without the aid of the infantry; but declared repeatedly, that what occurred after he crossed the swamp, he knows only from repoit. and that if other fcntlemen who were cve-witnesses testi "3 tied, we must believe them. During this lelation, Duncan frequently whispered in the Colonel's ear, apparent Iy under a state ol lngo e: c;tement; ano well mitrht he be excited, well mignt lie -- to ' tremble, to hear the li direct given tj the tlanderous charge of cowardice, he has on every occasion dealt out r.gaiust Gen Harrison. Important to sufi-r.tu.u? from thk toothache:. Ata mectim! of the L nidon Medical Society, Dr. Blake stated "that he was able to cure the most desperate tootbacho (unless the disease was connee ted with rheumatism) by the application of the followingrcmcdy to the decayed tooth: Alum reduced to an impalpable powder. 1 two drachms: nitrous spirit of tether, seven drachms. Mix. and apply them to the tooth. o4r2?. ?Ti&L yj5r-. OBITUARY. DIED, in this town on the 2 hi instant, James Ii. McCall. Esq., lone- a much respected and valuable citizen of this county, tiis remains were followed to the crave by many sympathizing friends. IJAMv A'OTICE. Office Stath Bank eF Indiana, ? Yinccnnes, Sep. 20, ISiO' 3 JOTICE is hereby civen that the an X. '4 -A nual mectin" of the Stock-holders in this Bank, to elect Director to serve the er.ruing year, will be held at the Banking House, on Saturday, the eT.st of October next, between the hours of 10 o'clock A. M. and G o'clock P. M. JOHN ROSS, Cashier. Sep. 2o, 1810 nlilwS ISay' Vilv lAtiinivnt. 4 NEW supply of this justly celehrated and never failing cure for the piles, just received and for sale by J. n. COLWELL & Co. Druggists, opposite Greenhow Sc Boyle's Sjp. 3- lc49 nlGw3. DISSOLUTION. nJlIIE partnership heretofore existing between David S. Bonner and Robert N. Caman was this day dissolved by limitation. Those indebted to the firm are requested to settle as soon as possible with R. N. Caman. I). S. BONNER, R. N. CARNAN. Vincennes, Sep. 18th, 1M0 nliwl. THE undersigned having purchased the interest of D. S. Bonner in the establishment, will continue the business at the old stand, where lie will be pleased to accommodate the former customers of the house, and the public generally. R. N. CARNAN. CABINET FURNITURE. On Water sired, between Buf scron and liroad-li-ny rfrccl.. f31HE subscriber respectfully informs his friends and the public generally, that he is now manufacturing every variety of splendid furniture, which the public may need, at the lowest prices for cash, or such articles of produce as are used in a family. ' Orders from the country shall receive prompt attention. The nublic are invi'ed to call and examine for themselves. CHARLES P. HYLER. Sept. 25. 18 10 niotf. N. B. Coffins made at the shortest notice. 1 Bhls Taaucr's OIL, of a superior quality, just received ana lor sale by II. E. PECK. 1-iarnct ft. opposite Clark's Hotel. Sep. 25, 1810 nlCtf. CASH FOR WHEAT. f W'ILL give the highest market price -in Cash for wheat delivered at my mill. J. L. COLMAN. June 12, 1810 1-tf.
A I iei i ia ist I'M t or's JVo t ice. gHE under.-incd Ins taken out letters of u!8 ministration on the estate of (Jeorgo dny. Into oi (Jilson county, Indiann, derea?ei!. All
tho.-,e i:ne'ottl to saij rstatc, will coiqj forwiri and make imaichutc payment, and nil thofolinv- . . . -- . , ,1 , ing ( laims ngiinst sau of ate, will present them. le-jilly aiitlientirnted, foi settlement. E.NOUII WALTERS, A Jin. fop. lS10-riiGw3 7 vvyv :nd Itonv Ziniii.i lit. most valuable remedies cv.t discovered for the cure of sprains, bruises, cuts or wouiuls, corks, chaifl'j or galls, film in the eye, and every external complaint to which horses are liable. uZ3L2't1t Gardner's and ewes' celebrated Liniments for the cure of rheumatism, ring worm, tetter, ague in the face, painful tumors, burns or sc-ilds, Ac. tVc Tor sale by J. U. COL WELL & Co. Druht9. opposite Greenhow Jf Uoyle's, Vincenncs, sept. 25, 1810 nlGw3. POUT WINK fWlHE subscribers have on hand a superior article of Port Wine, which i warranted to be genuine, and was purchased expressly for sickness. Also, an excellent artiele of Madeira Wine. For sale by J. B. COLWELL& Co. Druggists, Sep. 20, P 10 nl0v3. The old Cash System still!! All the Lottery tickets sold by J. M. Clarke are authorized by the State of Virginia, and drawn publicly tinder tha superintendance of Commissioners apappointcd for that purpose. The old cash system has been adopted, and will be persevered in by me to the exclusion of all Real Estate Lotteries, and prizes cashable on demand. VIRGINIA STATE LOTTERY. ClassD. Draws at Wheeling Friday. October lflth, 1810. U & , O O ; 3 0 Prizis of si, 000. 1 prize of $30,000 1 " " 10,000 1 " 0,000 1 " 2,w20 1 " each, 1 . 00 Besides others of $"00, s,3 H), .'00, &c. Tickets only SlO; Halves Quarters S2 ." 0. VIRGINIA STATE LOTTERY. Class No. f, draws at Wheeling, Friday, October 2 SM, 1810. " 40, & ; 70 prizi's oJ'SS.OOO each. 1 Prizo of f 10,000 I 1 prize of 10.000 00 5,000 00 1 ' G,000 1 1 " 3.000 1 r.o 1.000 100 Whole Tickets SlO; halves tors : TO. 1,910 00 quarVIRGINIA STATE LOTTERY. Clas E, draws at Wheeling, Friday, October 30th, 1 10. 50 prizes of 1,000 each. 1 Prize 1 of 35,295 C.000 2.500 1,000 1 prizo of I " 10 30 " 12,000 3.8H5 1,500 1,200 G 50 Besides 50 of $ V0, 200, &e. &c. Tickets i!0, Halves and (Quarters in proportion. Address your orders to J. M. CLARKE, Wheeling, Agent for the Manager. STAVE OF INDIANA. Knox County, Knox Probate Court August Term, 1840. Andrew TurceH, Jr., anJ" William McCorJ.Cxrs.of I Alex. U. Scott, deceased, j Andrew P. S"otb and Sal Iy Ann Scott, heirs of A- I lexenJcr I). Scott, dec'd.J' TMfOW at this term came tho said Andrew 4J Puree II , sen., and illinm McCord, Kxccutors as afuresaid, of Alexander U. Scott, deceased, and filed an inventory and appraisement of the real estate of said deceased remaining unsold, and likewise Clod their memorial suggesting th.it the personal estate and the real estate heretofore sold under the direction of the Will of said deceased is insufficient f)r the payment of his debts, and rays an order for tho sale of the real cstai,' and also that the funds arising from the sale of certain other real estate of said deceased heretofore sold by order of this court l.y Andrew Purcell, sen., as guardian of the said Andrew P. Scott and Sally Ann .Scott, te suhjcctel to the j3y. meat of the debts of said deceased, or eo much thereof as may be necessary after the funds arising from the sale of tho real estate now inventoried and filed in this court, bo expended in discharge of said debt of said deceased: Whcreup. on. it is ordered that said Andrew P. Scott and Sally Ami Scott, heirs of said Alexander I). Scott, deceased, who arc not residents of the State of Indiana, he notified by three successive puhlication in the Vincennes Saturday Gaictt, a public newspaper printed in Vincennes, that they he and appear in said Court, on the second day of tho next November Term of this Court and shew cause if any they can.why such real estate shall not no sold, and also w hy the funds arising from tho sale of certain other real estate of said deccasci, heretofore sold hy order of this court by Andrew Purcell, guardian of said Andrew P. Scott and Sally Ann Scott, sh ill not be subjected to the payment of the iM-ta of said dece'sd, or so much there of as m iy be necessary .after the funds ariinc; from the sale of the real cta!v now inventoried and filed in tVs court, le expended i.i discharge f said dehts of said deceased, and made assetts m tho hands of said executors for the iischargo of the debts, demands, or payments of said Alexander D. Stott, deceased, and this cause continued WM. R. McCOKD, Cik, VmccnncF, srp. 12, IS 10 -n!4 w3,
