The Wabash Courier, Volume 3, Number 19, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 8 January 1835 — Page 3
-.'
•J
Washington.
from
Correspondence of the Baltimore Patriot. •_
That Benton has not kwt his voice nor the use of his limbs during the summer, he gave us ample demonstration to-day, for my ears ached after some of his howling was over, aud as for Calhoun, and 1 resIon, if,they are disposed to peril their lives within reach of his fists, the more fools ate they, for I see that Sh*p!ey has moved off find taken a front sent, where there is no danger of having his branes knocked out by Benton's gesliculnlions. Benton muot have studied oratoiy, 1 atn sure, at the falls of St. Anthony up the Mississippi, where he and the torrent tried the game of acting, which could out-roar the other. The wisesl.lhiHg 1 ever knew Duffie to do, was to leave off th-ashing when he was sure that Benton had taken it up.
This Bill, the subject of discussion fon, meets with serious opposition by Mr. Tyler,as it did from his ite colleague Gov. Tiizewi'll, Benton also attacked it, but he confessed that he had not studied it,and that he knew but little about it. But his opposition is not a matter of surprise, lie opposes every thing except the Cumberland road, which leads to Missourijand as he is incapable of studying a question in order to form an opinion upon it, studying as he always does to fortify an opinion previously formed, the more he studies .hi?, the more he will oppose it. Pieston gave it an unexpected and a warm support, confessing that he had begun the examination of its merits, with the strongest prejudices against it, but had been unwillingly convinced th«it the claimants had a just claim, to which Congress had long been deaf. Shnploy also gave it an earnest support, so that it will not bo a party question, whatever may be the result, notwithstanding, 1 believe, some votes will be guided by party prejudice. It is probable lhat the bill will pass the Senate, lis fate is more doubtful in the House, where
Western and Southern votes are stronger Ihsin Hi the Senate that represents lh»' St„tes—votes which hive less interest in this question than the commercial Slates.
Do you see the rigmarole of John Dicloton" in the Globe.? 1 piesume that this incense burnt under the nose of General Jackton is from llichard Rush. I hope our presses, if they notice this dis eusting flattery of a President in power, -will pass lightly over Richard Rush, We must not fo"get what he was. Unfortunately his brain is injured. Universal report says tlmt he is mad. Insanity has assailed him as it ha» assayed many other minds. The misfortune then we must remember, whenever we 6peak of the errors of the man. But the amusing part of the matter is, that the Globe publishes, and
President Jackson wallows down these effusions of a diseased biain, just as if they came from a man in his full senses! I he Globe heads the article with a flourish, and the President reads with delight, what-—-if it does not come from a tenant of an asylum, then an insane asylum is*' cheated of its legal claims. Poor RichHr l—poer Richard Rush!
The Globe, you see, is also bitterly complaining of the Senatorial Committees. The difficulty is with Isaac Hill. The trouble comes from him. The fact is, no Senator of eithdiparty would vote to put Isaac upon any^Bmmittee, because Isaac out of the Sews, on Committees, is not just such a companion as even a Jacksonjnan seeks—and the conscquence was, that Isaac, by mutual consent as it were, was let'l off all the Committees. If Isaac thinks it grievous, he mu»t behave better.
I«ast summer, in New Hampshire, in one of his written dinner sprcchrs* which he was, 1 presume, unexpectedly called upon to make, he stated, that he had rather associate with Stale
Prison
"PP«P
ect*".'
and M.
1
Wasqinotok,' DEC. 17,1834.
A debate of very lively interest sprang up in'ithe Senate to-day upon the Bill to appropriate fire millions of dollars to the Claimants upon France for French spoliations and depradalions upon American Commerce prior to 1800, which our goverument in the treaty of 1800 with Buonaparte surrendered as an offset for his surrender of our g'uarrantee of Guadaloupe and Martinique to theFrench in the Treaty of Alliance-between theU. States and France. Webster gave us some of hi» pure logic for the claimants: Tyler, a little of his easy and pleasant declamation against their claims: Preston some of the flashes of his eloquence in their behalf: Sht pley a little oi his old voice, but a sensible voice to-day, on the same side: and Benton on the other side some ol his last winter voice,a voice so very obstreperous, thst he always puts me in mind of the perverted pronunciation of the school-boy orator: ••O, Roarer, now fair darter of thedarn. 4i {Aurora, note, fair daughter qf the dawn.)
convicts, than with
Clayton, Clay, and Poindexter, and now if his friends here freed him from this bad pa re an a in a not surprised however at Isaac's remark.
A man is known by the company he selects, at well as the company he keeps and if Clayton were to give me such scathing as he once gave Isaac, 1 am quite ure, the very sight of him, would ever qtnake me ache*
mo* Tat a*T. wTttUMnen. The news from France is interesting announces that the Lecislalive Cham-
It announces that the Lecislalive Chamber® hud been summoned by the King to nimble on the 1st of December, which is nearly a month earlier than the day to which thev stood adjourned. As the President's Message cannot have reached Paris until some three or four weeks after the meeting of the Chambers, it is not beyond hop® that the appropriation to fu iii the treaty with the United States will have been made before the arrival of the *sagv The character of the new Mio istrr may be presumed to favor tqch a hope, some of its members, we have reason to believe, are waim friends of our country. General good feel ing« we ran count upon without hesitation
i\ i- -i" tA
Bressox,the
db
^ivisostoji
new Minister of
Foreign Affairs, not only resided a const5 3 a
most respected families. As we have a! ready bad occasion to intimate, however, the&e gentlemen will not be therefore at all less Pilous Frenchmen, in case of serious collision between the United States and France. -i
It is slated that tfie earlier assembling of the Chambers was yielded by the King to the urgent solicitations of our Minister Mr. 1
We should not be sur
prised to find-that Mr. I« had received a private intimation of the menacing language which the Message would hold towards France, and, therefore, as the only chance of obtaining payment, exerted himself to procure an earlier convocation of the Chambers, in the hope of getting the appropriation passed before the arrival of the Message should postpone, if not totally defeat, the measure. Should Mr.
ivingston
have succeeded, as we
most ardently hope he may, he will have added, to his title* to public respect for the good he ha? done, an unquestionable claim to the gratitude of his country for the evils which he will have averted from it.'.'' -u-
From the Philadelphia Commercial Intelligence.
If a war with Frtmce phould be the result of the late rash step pursued by the President under the influence of his lust for glory, it will be pronounced by every reflecting man of the age who regards the cultivation of peace as a christian duty, as one of the most v&anton acts of recklessness, that was efer committed by a nation, Towards prance, there has always existed amongst the majority of our people, a feeling of kiifdness and good will, and we do not beliyve that until the message of the President appeired, there was an individual in ifie country^ who considered a war necessary or expedient. Those who are old enough to recollect the continued and multiplied complaints we had prior to 1812 against the British, for iheir capture of our property, for the impressment of our seaman, and for their unwarrantable assertion of maritime rules not justified by upon him? the laws of nations, cannot fail to call to mind, bow slow in its progress was the spirit of revenge. Year after year rolled away, and so pacific was the American character, although the question at issue involved not only a large amount of property, but the very liberty of American citizens, that no resort was had to measures of force, until all hopes had failed, and until the cup of patience bad beep grained to the last dregs.
How different is now the case with France? A treaty had just b«n concluded by which an indemnity for spoliations under Napoleon, had been stipulated to be paid,and by which commercial icgu'lations had been adopted advantageous to botlv countries, but because a delay in the fulfilment of the treaty, discreditable if you please, to the defaulter, but not in the slightest degree derogatory to Uie honor of the other party, has taken place, all at once, a forced attempt is made to stir up an excitement, the tendency of which is to rob the claimants, who are our own citizens, of the vesttd rights they, possess under the treaty, and to apply a sponge, the sponge of the cannon, which is the worst of all, to wipe off a debt which by prudence and forbearance could not fail to be recovered.
But this is not all. The industrious pursuits of thirteen millions of people are to be disturbed their capital and labor, are to be turned into new channels a public debt is to be created in order to afford a living for thousands of idlers and political adventurers, and after the expenditure of hundred millions of dollar?, perhaps the loss of fifty millions by captures, and a great distruction of human life, and above all of public and private morals, the nation will again have to go through the painful ordeal'of settling down upon peaceful pursuits, which can never take place, without a wide spread ruin througliout the whole country.
The disasters which would inevitably result from such a war, it would require columns to depicit. And after they |^jd «ill been passed through, we should not have one single solacing reflection to compensate for so much folly and madness, unless it could be found in the fact that we had expended our treasure and spilt our blood in order toenable Gen. Jackson to go down to his grave, upon the verge of which he stands, with a few more blood stained laurels on his head.
rROM TUB BOSTON ATLAS. COMPARISONS ARE ODIOUS. A mm who goeth a warfare on his own charges i« apt to count its cost if at the expense of a nation, that is altogether another thing.
The naval force of the united olatcs consists of six ships of the line, and seven partly finished frigates, which can be completed at the expense of little napre than a million and a half of dollars five ships of the line, two frigates, and six sloops of war in ordinar), which will require over one million three- hundred thousand dollars to be put in sailing condition and of one ship of the line, four frigates, eight sloops of war, and six schooners in commission— making in all, built and unbuilt, twelve ships of the line, thirteen frigates, fourteen sloops of war and six schooners. Our naval force, consisting of officers of all ranks, seamen and boys, amounts to 6,073, and the marine corps, und»vr its new "organization. will consist of 1283, making a to lal of 7355.
The naval force of France, afloat in 1833, consis-ted of 33 ships of the line,39 frigates, 17 corvettes, 9 adfice boats, 54 brigs, 8 bomb ships, 6 gun brigs, 18 gElliotts and cutters, 36 flotilla-boats, I# steam ships, 5*2 sloo}»w transports and yachts in all 089 war vessels of various descriptions.
-j:.'
It would be.unjust, horvever, not lo state our offset to all this aaval force, in the
2$
**4
A a tvi huv#sil I nnrl Jark the Giant Killer are forgotten.
f3.
superhuman proVess of Admiral Jaclcson —whose immense victories by land and
and Jack the Giant Killer are forgotten If, however, the "greatest conqueror of this or any other ago," as Cobbet and the Globe style him, should see fit to invade France, march to Paris, hang l^uis Pliillippe, decimate the Chamber of Deputies, and plant the ensign of bis party—the unclean animal of the Jews—on theTuillerjeg—[]g will only have to put to the rout a little army of 409,399 men. This it is obvious may be easily effected, with Bertton for minister of war. and Isaac Hill for the generalissimo of his majesty's forces.
On the whole, therefore, nothing but a new flood of
olohy
can be anticipated
ftom this new exploit and the sooner our country is hurried into this war the better.
FROM THE O. 8. TfcLEGRAPtU •»,
MR.
TIPTON.
As a matter of course, Mr. Tipton is abused by the Globe. He could not expect anv thing else, when he ventured to call in question the infallibility of the Executive. The honorable Senator mu!t have known too well the course heretofore pursued by the Government official, not to feel certain lhat its filth would be poured upon him, the moment he differed, without having a gracious permission to differ, from the august chief who rules the paity with a rod of iron or of gold. lie prelers,however, to have poured upon him the filth of the Government organ, to abandoning the. interests of his constituents.
It would seem, from the course of the Globe, that there is a standing order to its editor, that however pure and honest a public man may be to-day, yet if to-mor-row he calls in question the infallibility of the Executive, or the purity, honesty and patriotism of the .Kitchen Cabinet, he is to be denounced, and the basest motives attributed to every subsequent act of his life. This is the reform and purification of the press, which was so profusely promised,
But what are Mr. Tipton's sin9, that have thus brought the Kitchen Cabinet
IJe has called in question the propriety of an act of the President! This is no doubt a most heinous offence in the eyes of tha^ sacred body, and if they were as powerful as they hope to be under the reign of Martin the 1st, they would inflict a little roasting & toasting on the honorable Senator. As it is, they can only pour their slush upon him. A" little Jilthy to* be sure, but by no means killing-
In the next place, the editor of theGlobe inust 'acquire character for truth and ve r.icity, &c.'
Here, we confess, Mr. Tipton does seem a little censurable. How could we think of making so cruel a requisition? IfSenators'ever joked in the Senate, we should think this was a 'jocose sarcasm,1 on the part of Mr. Tipton.
But Mr. Tipton once an Indlftn Agent—and has lands obtaincdjrom Indians by treaties! We conftss we do not see the crime here. Was it in Mr. Tipton's being an Agent? or in his buying lands? or in the lands being obtained bytreaties?
We would ask the Glo"be if it never heard of General Jackson's being an Agent to form treaties with the Indians? and, moreover, of his making a treaty, in which twenty thousand acres were given to him?
But fne crowning sin of Mr. Tipton is, that he has lands in the neighborhood of the Wabash, and that he is interested in the river being cloared oet,
The inference is therefore drawn by the Globe, that Mr. Tipton is acting un*orlhIv in his station, in urging a public measure, very desirable to the State, because he himself may be. benefited by it. v\ dare say that Mr. Tipton does expect to be benefited by it, as does more or less every member of Congress from the Slate. But what then? Is a Senator^ora Representative to cease to urge a measure, desirable to the State, because he may incidentally be benefited by it?
What a nice sense of political morality lias all at once descended upon the Kitchen and its scullions!
THE CONVENT RIOTERS
When the verdict of acquital was, rendered in the case of Buzzell,the crowd in the Court Hall broke into indecent applause. Scarce had the verdict been uttered before a man leaped upou his horse, e»Hopped to Boston and shouted exultingly through the streets "acquitted! acquitted!
General endeavoured in
ses on account of the pultltc ftclingi 1? SCO V«l this possible? can it be th .t so enlightened and
umoraV
The Attorney uencr*. I Al„ hand .. vain to procure an adjournment of the w-
a commu" ty as that ot
Boston and its vicinity should be found thus interested in the.fate of the ruffian rioters, who, trampling upon the majesty of the law, and forgetful of the dictate? of humanity, fired a religious house above the heads of its inmates—shrinking and inoffensive females, innocent, gentle and lovely beings against whom malice itself, it might be supposed, could
not
cherish an
ungentle thought. Is it possible that anv respectable portion of the public, m%sud religious prejudices, could league with this lawless and savage band, and sanction theirunholy violence,could watch over their trial, anxious for some plan by which they might escape the merited lash of the iaw, and shout forth their joyarce in the temple of jnstice, when their vish was gratified'
The beginning of this matter
was most disgraceful to the American character, hat "it strikes us that the end is still more so.
W« and*r«tail from a source entitled to the highest confidence, that the President has cx pressed objection to the treaty recently made
Gen. Marshall with the Miami Indians. It will be unfortunate for Indiana if ttli treaty Is not confirmed. It it very important that the Indian title to lands within her jurisdiction should he speedily extinguished.—Plough Bog,
1
"Then is tha maker of mousetraps an engineer." So wrote an oM English satirist—we forget wbonrw-as quoted by the elder d'Isrseli and if he had seen what we did yesterday, he might have vrittenso without any satire. Mr. JosErn
Vermont.tA
Hamilton
of this city has indented a Rat trap—and it will do just as well for mice—which we take it will do the business for those ravenous rascals. It »sa»s we verily believe, the ntplus ultra in that department of "Civil Engineering," and the ingenious contriver wilU we doqht not, live under the lasting execration of the cat family throughout Christendom for there will be no further use for their services. "Othello's occupation's gone," We have seen numerous machines constructed for the purpose of inveigling rats and mice to their own destruction, but nothing equal to this. We cannot describe it, for we are not "up to trap," bqt it is just the thing, we can assure
uall
concerned and
wc advise every body to buy ope. It costs but a dollar, and must, without doubt, clear any man or woman's premises of that most troublesome vermin in a few days. The entrance into it is through a sheet iron door, which revolves instantaneously upon touching a spring at Jhe threshold, and brushes the villian inside before he can think "Jack Robinson." We have said that it operates by a spring, and it captures ten rats at one winding up. in short, it is the very paragon of Rat iraps.WV. Y. Cour.
writer in a paper re
marks that her local situation shows her to have been destined by nature to secure the residence of civil liberty, and the habits of her people demonstrated the fact, She is far removed from the seaboard and is not exposed-to invasion from that quarter.-— Her mountains are her battlements, and their air too pure to be contaminated by the breath of a tyrant. She is the Switzerland of the United States, and if civil liberty shall take her flight from other parts of our beloved country, many she find a resting place among, the green4iiUs of Vermont to remain forevpr.
Pretty much Scattered.—At a late examination in this city, the prisoner, a female, being asked by the magistrate if she had any family connexions »nd -where they were, replied,'My daughter's in Albany, my son's in New Orleans, my mother's in Irrfand, my punt's in JSngland, my un cle's in Scotland, my brother's in the East Indies, my sister's in the West, my nephew's at the Cape of Good Hope, and my husband's gone to the devil, I believe: for he died drunk in the cholera time, and so we're pretty much scattered#. Y. paper.
School Books.
LARGE'assortment of School Books, ineluding the most approved kinds, just recad at the Terre Hfiute BoekSt?re.
Sept. 19-7 tf
aUEENSWARE. Casks Queenswure (assorted) just received and for sale, low for cash, or on short credit, by Br \KE 4 GROVERMAN.
March 8—34 tf*.^ «,
FUR, SE.1L .IAD MOROCCO CAPS
ASIJEJH.Y
rrf%U|0K"T^»cticlet/or men au^
toys—flat,round and acorn tops—lately received and for tale by ccivea au LINTON, BLAK PA ALL.
Oct 19 lOtf
TO REJYT*
good Brick dwelling house apd App{lo or chard. Apply to April 17—39—tf
It. S.
Louisville, Oct 1—Sm2
MOCABE.'
To Country Iflcrcliants. A PfDERSON, BELL & CO. are now receiving and opening an unusually largeand well selected stock of FALL AND WINTBh GOODS. AND HARDWARE, which tWoffer low for cash, or to punctual men on
F.atisfac
tory terms. P. S. Ginseng, Flax aad Tow Linen, Feathfi and Ragt, received in exchange for Goods.
To Blacksmiths.
E
have on hand two Blacksmith's Bel! ows of good quality, which we will sell low for cash, or on short credit.
LINTON, BLAKE & BALL.
Sept. 4—5tf.
NOTICE.
AKEN up, by Cornelius Sullivan, of Lost Creek Township, Vigo county, one Brown Filley, 134 hands hii^h, a star in her forehead, and both hind feet whjle, supposed to be 3 years old last spring. Appraised to $30, by Louis Shull and Calvin U»ys. 1 certify the jbove to be a true copy f,om
Jan I—18
3t
terre haute public school.
ran HIS School will re-commence on Monday JL next. JOHN BUOWN Nov. 20--12
Fllp
«r.
31
Printing' and Cap Paper.
UST received and for sale a lot of Printing paper, Mammoth and Iroperial.The presets of the neighboring Counties can be furnished by
LINTONf BL-iKE & BALL.
gepternper 18—8tf
FOR RENT.
WO Store Rooms, well calculated for busi the Court F. Cruft
ness, immediately fronting
House, now in the occupancy of Ksq. Enquire
VERMAN.
& qRO
Dec. 1G-23U"
SALT! SALT!! SALT'!! barrels Zanesville Salt, (superior to Kanawha,) just received and for sale low for cash, by
BLAKE & GROVERMAN
June 26»-4-6tf
FL.OUR.
efejffc barrels of Snper fine Flour, just rece i* ed, and for sale, by
May 22, 44tf
BLAKE k. GROVERMAW.
Just Received,
Per Steamboat SYLPH, and for sale.
1
half pip«» American brandy 3 do Cogniac do 10 casks of sweet Malaga Wine 5 do Teneriffe do 1 do Port (very s^»erior
30 boxes bunch Raisins 20 kegs do do 1 barrel Pepper 1 do Alspic*
May 8—42—if
yp*"afHR!Ai!
S^E^A"?™R
To those who have seen Sir Will
iam, it is unnecessary to saj that he is a horse of fine action while it is confidently asserted that his pedigree will exhibit him as a thorough bred and uncorrupted descendant of the Ok Archy line. Pedigreeherealter. ?.
Oct 16-10lf ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.
ADMINISTRATION
S. B. GOOKI.VS, 5. rr. KDMWp.s,
Nov. 2V-13wa
SALE OF LAND.
ljf pursuance of a decree made at the last Pro-, JL bate Court, of Vigo County, Ind. 1 will expose to tbebighest bider, on Saturday, the 20th day of December next, on the premises, said County .between the hours of 10 o'clock, A. M. and 4, IV M. qf said day, the west half gf the north east quarter, section No 17, town 11.north range 8, west, situated in said County, and containing 80 acres. The terms will be fifty dollars in tiand the balance in six months the purchaser to give bpnd with approved security.
LEVLY JPOOLLEJt,
Administrator of E Woullen, dtc*d. Nov 27-13w3
SOO laborers Wanted Imnieditelv.
JAM
directed by the Superindant of the Cumberland Road to employ 20Q good laboring hands, 50 on the 11th mile 40 on the 13lh 58 on the 14th 20 on the 15th 20 qn the 16th and 20 on the 20 mile of the road ia Illinois. Seventy cents per day will be given fof each laborer, payable at the end of e^ch month JSach person will have to provide au axe and a mattock, aud also a spade or shovel, and their own board,
The" tools cau be procured on \he section-
THO. T. weathers.
S
SiiperinteDdant 2d section U. R. 111.
Oct 16 lOtf
Mustard Seed Wanted. R. THOMAS E. WILSON will give $3 I*-*- per bushel for all clean mustard see, that may be delfar?!) Store,Main street. Louisville, Ky«
Julv 17—52—8w
NEW GOODS.
THEundersigued
has lately received a pew and
well selected stock of DUY GOODS,suitable to the present and approaching snaSon. Being determined to sell for cash, am| cash only, his former customers and the public generally, are invited to call aqd examine his goods previous to purchasing elsewhere. Fresh Hyson, Young Hyson,Gunpowder & Imperial leas.
WM. W. WILLIAMS.
N. B. All notes now due, aud acoaunts of longer standing than six months, must be settled by the first day of January next, otherwise they lyill bo handed to an officer for collection
Nov. 20--12 fit
COTTON YARN.
-g O BALES, just received, per steamej JL #»Sylph, an4 for sale at the factory prices with the addition of freight only, by
June 19—48 J. C. & W.E ARLY.
TWO
6
Joiirneymep Fanning Mill makers Wm. are good workmen, to whom good encouragement will be given, A'so, an apprentice.
packages Queensware '20 boxes Glussware 20 kegs Tobacco (first quality) 40,000 Spanish and half Spanish Cigars 40 reams cap and letter Paper 1-2 barrej Cloves [fresh)
Rice $rjd ground Ginger, Arc! .EL-M^S & GrRQVEJRMAN. May-8-42tf
W A N E
Flaxseed,Feathers & Beesyrax,
IIORW.
which the highest price will be given by M. SEDAM, opposite i*nd north of the Court Mouse,
Oct 9—8t3
NO 1 ICE.
THE
partnership heretofore existing nnder the firm of CIJAS. JAS. HAYNES, was dissolved gfl tho 30th June last, by mutual consent. Persons owing any thing to the late firm are requested to pay tle same to James Havnes, who is authorized to settle all accounts.
F. R- Hknnbtt for U. 4 J. IIAYNES. July 17 52tf
NOTICE.
ffflUE undersigned have taken jout letters of
JL
ndministsation on the estate of John T^orl* ton, dee'd. Inte of Clay County, Indiana. All persons indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment, and those having claims against tl)e s&me, will present them duly authenticated within 1
ii
Nov. 27-13*»3
groceries,
1
QUEENS WARE, HARDWARE, BOOTS & SHOES,
MEN & BO\S
CAPS,-
BRUSHES, BOOKS, and PATENT MEDICIXFsS.
C. ROSE
AS just received, direct from New York, a very large and general assortment of—
Dry-Goods, nardwarc3 an| GROCERIES, -Which he is now opening at the corner room in the ne» brick building on the public square—all of which will be sold |ow for cash, at wholesale or retail.
Not
30—l2tf
rryp. LE.4THER.
A
BL.VKE $. GROVERMAN
GUOD Wpply of McMurran'f best soal and upper Leather, at Yard prices, for sale by upper ljeai I
Dee 4-14tf
plp?pf'
WILLIAM
will stand the fall s^son (no« commenced) at Mr. Redfortl'S stable, I mile north of Terre Hnute, and will be let to mares at $10 tha
E.OUISVIIXK ADTERTISfiMEMTS. NEW GOODS.
H*
of the E«uteof jas.
Bradt, late of Vigo County, deceased, baring been granted to the undersigned, tho»e indebted to said estate will please make payment immediatelj, and tbo*e haying claims wi'l present them proper!J authenticate*}, for payment, within one year from this -date, b$ estate is probably solvent.
CHAMBERS & GARVIN LOUISVILLE, KY. 'C
AVE just received and are now openingaf very extensive and well selected assortment of rail and Winter Goods. Consisting of
English, India, *1 DRY GOODS, French antf ^Pomestic
ALSO*
Hardware A- utlery. Gun ppwder Imperial I TEAS.
Ginger, Indigo, Alum,
To which they would invite th« *ttenti°rf their Indiana and Illinois friends auji dealer* generally, to give them a oall.
September, 4-5tf The Wabash Mercury (Latayatte) will publish bove tilt the 1st January, 1835.
BOOTS & SHOES.
THE
subscriber
is
WILLIAM
HORACE BLJNJtf,
Terre IJnuto, Nov. 20—12 3t
JN STORE,
A
do do Seal do' do do Comippo do women's Heel, Lasting? do do Spring dp
Louisville, March 29—-37—ly
J. STIVERS,
-Wholesale and Retail
Hoot and Slipe Store,
JIAIN, QNE DOOR FROM FOURTH STREET,,
LOUISVILLE, KY.
June 18—49tf
Hats, Boots, and Sltocs. H. CAREY,
early opposite to Anderson, Dell Ci» Main Street, 'y LOUISVILLE, KY.
ISof
Oct2-8tf
ipontbs for settlement
The estate is probably solvent. AGNUS THORLTON, Adm'x. ROBERT THORLTON, Admr.
NEW STORE
IN TERRE HAUTE.
HE subscriber has opened a Store in Second near Ohio street, (West sixle of Court House square,) where he offers fo sale for CASH, a good assortment of
Hoots
TJIE
3009 3000 1000 2000
BROWN
If, A. STEEL
yiSth month, llth, 1834.-r-15
3tf
NEW STORE.
BAfcU
.1
r'
Hyson and J\ Young Ilvson, I• Jndigo, Madder, Pepprr, Spice,
t-
now receiving his Spnpjj
supply of UOTS & SHOES, which lie, will sell on the most accommodating
term®*
Hisstock will be large and well assorted. I ho following (to which lie would invit? will comprise apart 2 000 pair men's Calf Pum^s 2000 **2 000 000 2,000 500 2,000 1,000 1,500 -if 1,000
&"Vf
llo do ^Leather flo jjj do men's Kip Brogan# do do Calf do do Boys and Misses do Uoois.
5
J. STIVERS, Main SirePt^
1 door We*t of Fourth Street, upper side^ow^^, isville, Ky. .,'^4' March 15-35 tf
A
Z~~ FRESH AND CHOICE
DRUGS AND MEDICINES
if
Street:
F. PETTET, Market LQUISV1LLE, KY.
Has n?w on hapd an extensive assortment of ge-j nuine DRUGS AND MEDICINES. Also-n SHOP FURNITURE, SURGICAL INSTRU MENTS} VIALS, etc. all which are offeree} at the lowest city prices. 0^7- Country dealers and Physicians are invited to call and examine for thcinselyes. Or* ders sent frojn the country will be faithlnlly pen ted, both as regards qu»lity and pricos.
STEWART 4- PO WELL A
Successors of HY.
E.
$
THOMAS At Lo.)
Ilardware Mcrcliants, :'4 Main," oe»r Wall Street, LOUX VILLE, KY. il 4—42—tf
Apri
JLauisyiUc Wire factory, *iJ' FOR MAKINO
-!v
ROLLING AND STANDING SCR£EX§ For Merchant
RiddlesSievesqniRiddlesfor
A,
an^i screens fanning
MILLS for Me&\,Grain, Seed, Flour, Powder, &c. ft,o. WIK E, for Cellar Windows, Sa/os, Milk Houses, &c. Sold wholesale and relail, as low as any Factory in the United States, on 4tb.street, between Maiaj and Mj»rket*H?e{rt, fsowtsviHe, Ky
J. BROMWELL,JK
Louisville. Ky. Dep. 19—23—lyr. N. B.—All orders thankfully received and punctually attended to.
j®1*
4
NOW opening hi? Fall and Winter suppl*
Bootsij Shoes & Hat«
to which he invites tho attention of his country friends, with the assurance that his stock and pri-..^, ces will be found extreipely satisfactory. All orders filled with promptitude and fidelity. *.
r4
Sc $hocs» '4
subscriber is now receiving a' very litrge supply of the above articles, being 600 cates well u«sorted, comprising every article in the •hoe line. Country merchants are invited to cail aud examine the stock, of which the following will make a part: 5000 pair men's fine kip pegged lined and bound Broga.ns 5000 pair men's thick do Brogaos 2000 do do thick Boo£»
do boy's Ilrogans do womeir1* leather shoes do do do boots do do* morocco shoes The above will be sold unusuully ch^ap for. cash or to punctija) elastomers.
7ri Hr4
J. STIVERS^,
Main si. 1 faorfoom 4th, Louisville,Kg. 0 Oct 9—8tf
J.i*t KcceivcU, ....
and bleached Shirtings, Casinetts, Flannels, Blue mid Green Cloths, Jeans,| Cotton Yarns, Boots, Shoes, Hat*, Caps, ready made Clothing, Tea, Coffee, Sngar, Tar, Salt, Foreign and Domestic Liquors, Hardware^ Queensware, 4'C. At redded prices, by
Nov 20— 3f
v*- '3
M. W. SEDAM.
West of and adjoining the Office of the Wabash Courier. Aug. 7-3tf
STOP HQRSE! STOP TIIIEF! DISAPPEARED from the comooiu in this village,or. the last day of the races, llth of October last, a dark bay MARK, 8 years old, |3! !& Uihands high,*mftin, ^til, legs and hoofs black, int«rferef'^rl^f» her Mnvlfeet, and is a natoral trotte^. bat a very small speck of white on her (of^pad,and a white strip in one nostril. Whoever will return said mare to the fu^scrihef Terre Haute, shall receive a reward of $ 10 or if stolen, fo* thief and mare $20 JpHN BROWN^*
STAKKN lTP,byGalien M. Brown Vf Vermillion c«uoty, Vermillion 7 township, Indiana, an estraj
MARK,
supposed'lo bo six years,
old next spring, with neither marks or branili perceivable. Ap-
raised lo $?, by Edward Marlon ones. A Irtie copy from my {''•t«yS00*'-.
THOMAS F. Lfe.A£», J. P.
Kev 22—1$
yhj
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