Western Statesman, Volume 3, Number 34, Lawrenceburg, Dearborn County, 2 November 1832 — Page 1

JH.11 WHEITO LIBERT ITWELI TltBRE t8 JIT OVWTRY." VOL, III. LA WRENCEBURGH, INDIANA; FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 188! ti l

l'iil.TKI AM) rt Til.rsHFIi BY COltXF.Il OF HIGH AND SHORT STREETS.

T Kit MS : "T l i I Til H T 1 I v . . I I I I i i 1 f " T ' C- i nr. jmyable uiuiin the year, but may be .tisrbarge.i I i . . ... ' i " ! tf' ivivnip :! ot I WO UIIIjLAuSi in aavaiu niiir'.r. do'.e.yks c naymtait be delayed until tin' evi-iratioa t:it vpar. rhixL ' i n-ci-ivf tiicir paior, by private t mnt i'i potu.', u- it wiii he adilcd t thrii- submrip- , n .. H ip -r v,l! lii-iiicmumucl until all arrtRi-9c are i r,i.- 5t t:..' opnon of the Kiiitcr); nmi fail. ine. i iii-i'Y a Ii"i-iiii:miian!i" at the eml of the time ubil, misI lie en-iMvh'n a a m-w nii:nfi mfm, . Tti :-a t tiu: I-:Jitor must be pot pititl. V ; '1'i-rinor.tH oi"rti'(! n t the usual rate.

... ' ti.e l r.nnr y Kmmitibtirrh, Mil. recently 1 - - r1 !;ru i.ru Mitiiuorc on iiimr way to flu-. for tho rniiz- the i i .t !: r:i.i, il;it:!cr tner were coin jmn .)-: if attoniliu upon the sick dur j.rcviil. Mico of the cholera in that t itj. ; to a ?isti:u or ( ii.vnirv. li'.v joi' .! tin e on t!;y eiraiu! ! Jr : , iH.-i t'. is liivine ; V'.mil tl:at '.'.lis vnil'.l u!' bittr r!n E la ! nvro st.i-h beat tas thine! i'ii-.'i:i:rs- prorppts ;ih cliaritv cA i:u'. I It at tl:f fiiiiil lic.'irt that"? breaking, V:n uoinitic.i fj ii'.t up, .', ,,u p'-Mr a l.niir.y cordial lu '.ift 'iiKj! Iy--bi ttor cup ; Kcvivo tiie s.uil dt'j-pairiiii, With t:,c water-s glad of Ho;i:'. Mako th-y boo.:i fair, n pillow T r t'-c nni.isr.l ! , i !, ;: i l;-- pfi'' t!,r ;'n'.;iiinrss Of i.na i'.ii g !t. ad ; S--: s '"..ill tl'y bh-f0.1 .'piiit prove, 11. mad SVar.t's di'St'iti'd bed. lo i spi-r,! thy hravraiy tni'sion, i n tr.is bitit'i hour uf neod ! I'lo.: ;a iviil tin' hardnt-ii fallotv, ii' n i tLi t.rxiotis- J.trden . eiv! ; . .'r. ' t'l-ict t not in tay miiiisTy, 'J o s.nv tht: uho!eome seed ! t' d n-J. an 1 lic ing rhildhooil, .-Jod iniddlo nci', and jontli, Vi i;l In-a i upon tlu'ir utefiil be,-it 't'bi" n.i inory ot thy truth ; . .i.i (nt.-n b! ; tiie iiand l!;at made 'i'iifii bed of a..guis'a Miiuolii. 1n.l iicaven will niiie upon titer, .-i'iid spei'd thy v.-oik divine, . iii-i nerve tbic for thy purpose, . 'i.d blrjs thy heart bri-'yn. Ol that this wmld ol'bitteines?, !' i ! !,.: ,orb b.-arisa? thine! I ' i'w. 'X tr-vr i T r A T V f i J Gci.ins rushes like a whirlwind-'; Talent marches like cavalcade of hea- j v horses Cleverness skims like a ! swai'iow in a summer evening, with a rp fhrill note and a sudden turning, j Ti;e nun of "f-cius dwells with men! and witl? nature: the man of talent in! i.i.tudv"; but the clever man dances j l.nv. ihpfo and etervwhere likeu buttciilvin a hurricane, striking every ' thing and enjoying nothing, "but too i h.o'.it to be dashed to pieces. The men ; ol'falent will attack theories the clev-i er man assail the individual.and slander ; pi-;va(charnclcr,hut the man of genius dt-niieth both, he heeds none, he fears,01 : 1 tie, lives in -himself, shrouded in the i ..nft'ioust.ess'ofhis own strength he ; iiilcrl'ei-F with none, and walks forth an; i. .1 . , , 1 . . t it..... 1 1 " - ;t should a rOUOnOUS WOrm td - hi., path. he. may irend it under, i fn : should a cur snail at him he ttiav it; but he will not, cannot : .",! f ni10I. Clever! -tiac. tne privacy ol men wnfe vrrsrs. men o talent writei ;e, but the man of genius writes po1 ,'n jnifou's L-Z-. tires on poetry. lirjTAV I'lf ; ,Mj"" 1 :1 e he fibied renii of anfiuuitv, ; 11 r trends not the common hel ------ ri " Is ot . 1 . , 1,:.-, hut ppivadmc the painted imons; .f his creative gei. itr-, he fcoars at home i til (,:i tiie w till l- intl s hiari; niui utsi culling to t!ie sky-clad peak of some grey and rugged eminence, gives the plastic P'hv, i s f his mind to roam at ease. In ..1. i. ii . ii li'iwT d cxpresion, lofty diction ant!

iron, the Cincinnati Mirror. " " friends 0fIiberty-to ascnsecflhe dan-!, " or f Lond;n journals- So deliberate falsehood! There not an inA niinibcr of the Sistcrsf fharitv,attached i ., . , ., , , ' do they lall short of proving that it was stitution in the world conducted b men

uiti-iliiw it" ' loeuence, B'llwer is line- Horace Ilinney,. Tames Harper,John fi. at-I'lall-d. He ha'a fanciful imagination,! moiigh, William Heister, David Potts Ed ward 1 . . . , . , -ii 1:1 Darlinrton. William Clark. Charles A. Bar-

Wliirl:, it p, rn.itte.l lo wnliv, woum nut: Hi ilu.itino aiOillS Ol llie an Kmc utn firiif, would make the. rolling brook IK v language sneak, and sighs of sorrow ! 'ir-t from tiie marble monument of the; jrr iv Hi- writings abound in a deep

x.'jghi for 'in thoeofNcott, or of any! 'oie el-c. He can paint the gay beauo Oi 11,'r 11 111-. v- 1111 II ir; in ,11111 lies of a variegated landscape, can des- ' lilic the vast and rolling surges ot the ' a, and cause the majestic grandeur ofj

, ,. , . lilt' III VILlll", iHI' 'I' I" 'MllllWtlll - ,. ,t it. . . ...1... t. 11, ,-iinl J ' ' J

heaven's blue concave to h0 forgottr, . lo (Hsayovv thc genu". neness of a letter iind lo-l in the beauty, eloquence and) b . 1 Vn. Hihhnut v of the description. c des- Pushed 111 our paper, singned An iihest;ie victim of poverty with a'drcw Jackson';"' which we deny; and n.a-ter's hand and paints the subject ofj jfvvr lad we vould inform the gcntle-nulig.-nt irfue. till the haggard emblem rnan ,jVit we werr never "born to obey;" ;.f penury arises to the reader's i view, qniescently to a call, rmmnh-over the b ack deeds of g-uill, 1 . J . and ploudl ' stands against the opers- emanating from an individual so bw 'ion of nefarious power, in existence as himself. Seeing the

THE STATESMAN.

LAWRENCEBTOGH, INDIANA.? TUESDAY, OCT. 30, 1832. . .. . . . . . . uic u(ims. I (")n Alnrwl-.p nn-rf tha fT iI ana will be called upon to help decide , , . . , . , tlic aetiny ol these United Slates. x l i ill one g to his farm, one to his mer- , , chandise, and another to his work-shon and the let the business of the nation I ; sleep the fatal slumber of destruction! , u ill nothing short of the interposition ' I , 1T , . , ; Allnit niVillVll II ICIJU3- ; .' k 1 IC(1 Til rl W .1 Iv (ill I 111 I I I Ih'ltil S I 1 f f - . , . , ! I . j i. . i 1 , . . ., , . . . anJ animate tnem to meet the approach - i. ., , , it ,. , i ing.strucgle ? Have we nothincr to fear t , for the consequences that will unques tionably ensue if Andrew Jackson is again elected to the Chief Magistracy? Is he not now playing the Despot, tram pliug upon the wholesome usages f for"'

mcr administrations; violating the Con.lowin? extract of a leer from this in- ! stitution, and setting at naught the Su- i div,duaI ose name is familiar to all in I prcme Court ? "Would any other man I tl,is scction of ste, and which will

in the nation have dared to disregard ! j the mandate of the only Constitutional tribunal, to which fhP nPnr,l,rn r,Cr,rt for Buccor and safctv? We answer, no' , ' Had any other man gone the lengths I i " that Gen. Jackson has gone, diregarding the wishes of the people, spurning the laws, violating sacred promises, buying up the public presses, scattering over the land vehicles of detraction,and slandering the best men in the nation; playing the btaggarl and bully with his c ODstitutional advisers; making his will the only guide over thirteen millions who ought to be he happiest and freest people on earth; with sundry other "fantastic tricks before high heaven" long ere this, any other man would have j been torn from the palace, by an indigI r.ttt rind mn--H nKncA1 nnAnlj, l?.,f it is General Jackson that does all thee ....... U.IM 1 u .Wli;,u UlUtllll iiUL things; and having been a sccessful Ge ..... .. ' "anu , cun do no wronS Wlth man' 1'hisffe-j nerous and nohls sentiment lias been the ! instrument by which all other free gov-i ernmenl have been consigned to unmi-' . . , n ,, . , .. , 1 "P"'- Arc we des tmed , 10 ,ouow "'eirioots.eps, ana iuii a sa-; entice to military concupisence? Butj on this subject tea must curb our feel-. ings. j Not hcinsr willimr to rest under the . n n,., . u . : " , . ' ,ilst"uou Ctn 11 uir -"age o , mane ry no otner inaiviciual man the j gallant bestrider of the wodcn horse, j wlom ,ve have over and over again 1 0 ' : W1lll1t tr e-.lV" nut' ilimrr (Vir thi. rid. " " ' " ' J " i vancement of his cause, we insert the following, which sustains us in every . pojnt in what we said in reference to j 1 the Pennsylvania election, and gives; Mr. Culley's assertions the lie direct: 1 From the Torch Light and Public dvttrtiser. I Pennsylvania iscmancipated-dinenthrallrd I She has taken her stand f ir her country and ! lier country's ln.ttitntioii She has thrown oil . . . 1 1 the yoke ol Jncksoni.m. As lar as ascertaineu ; there have been SHVENTFIEN Anti-Jnckson 1 lilt 11101 1 1 vi v . . Q . v. ...tj . . . , j rneinbrr ecetcJ M0RK THAN members of Ongrois.and ONLY FIVE Jack- , THREE TO ONE AGAINST JACKSON ! j And only six to be beard from. The popular votes cast for the Anti-Jackson members will probably not fall short of TWENTY THOU SAND majority against Jackson. The following are the names of the Anti-Jacicson memi,er? r.i,,ctFa : : . ,.. nitz,(;i orj;e Chambers, David Mann, Thomas 1 M T. M'K'ennnn. Andrew Stewart. Harmer , Uennv .John Banks .Thomas II. Sill, Joel B ; Sulberland and llobert Ramsey the two last of whom are lnghamites. 17 The Ja kson members are D. Waponcr, it f:..- n a ., iu,: 1 Miller in- 1 in. ..1... r. The legislature wilV be decidedly Anti - boh. The forced Utter. Tha Palladium KaT, w ,iav fw;cc I)ecn called on

i letter published in the respectable lie-!

publican papers of the Union, we gave wi-.-' . i i i it place in our columns; since which tim . , , we nave received netween w and !Juu,,,als weekly, UUl IlrtVC IIOl Seen me : i. l.i.. 1 . .i nnrhenlicrtr iiniih(ol nr nn(,l,.tn,l k .r authen ticitv doubted or contradicted bv

any paper that has any claims to truth ;8elves lo t'-c viewe of lhe Albany moor decency. AVe have seen it contraJneLcha"Se"- , , , , , i he tune has arrived, however.when dieted by the Globe and Palladium, and j we owe it to tlli prCB!d(!nt ad Direr.

by them only; but we cannot place any

. sa nM,.,.;ees, and the authors of them, in their!

x . .. , hired like the "horrible accident" ma. i .1 T 1 forged, their assertions a are so many evi---v.. .uuiica nidi tus genuine, e would ln- ! ., , ,. A , , , i'ormthepubhcthatwhentheletterispro - ; , . , ' . . , ,r i t . t- ,,,, , , . reu to De a lorgery we win intorm them, jand make all due apology for having published it. HUT. A. W. ARRIXGTOX. We have been favored with the folDot be fortZclt V many so long as

! t,ie T'tal flame iIlumos t!ir ll0sc ofj Bank o ! claJ i he remembered by our!S52,00i.

l reaacrs' Inal aft0l,t " middle of April lTsf we nultlUiind u loitn r m s. - las" P l.cd a let cr Mr. Ar-, ringion s, .air.sea to the editor ot the Sentinel at Cincinnati, in which he informed the public that "another mind had burst the manacles of superstition." therefore it ie due to him.aiid his friends, to give the following, in which he attributes his conduct then to an error of the head, not of the heart. We understand that he has again mounted Z ion's wallExtract of a Letter -.critten lo Rev. Allen Wiley by Alfred H. Arl ington, dated, rkanss Tkmtory, 20th Aug.gIS32. "Dear Brother. I take my pen to ad - dressyou with emotions solemn as death, and awful as Ktcrnity. Since 1 last saw you, I have passed through scenes I heart-rending woe, which have no Para,1cl. except m the deep, dark, ctcri naf pains ol snints damned forever. 1 know that j ilavc injurcd t,ie causu of Religion , I have wounded the feelings of my best friends; I have stained the nnnor ofthe Church; and above all, 1 !lavo friIcified, of God afresh. Hut glory to God s grace cternallv. He has iiluminah,(J niy-intei,ect. lje lias 1 - ... restored me to his forfeited favour. "Brother A iley; the error which pro(l,,ced my fall was one of the head and not of the heart. But to you any apology is unnecessary. .. ' I have studied the evidences of Pve - "g,0 .vtr with the closest criticism ofj w,,,ch 1 arn caPable and with humble prayer; and 1 am more than ever coninccu inai iney arc invtnetote. 1 nave now agin given myself to God, and to a11 etern,i-v ' f .' u muuuu, utik nu; iwijuctin, jtoriodical has come to hand, containing, the Prize Tale by Miss Leslie, entitled, " Mrs. Washington F efts." Itcertain ly i, a finished production, and would well "beguile an idle hour." We would also recommend to the readers of lleht literature, the Cinci n- . f i.of ' o o i.i . j: 1. r il- 1 mci .uy pet lotncais 01 tue pregetu uay. MISBKPRCSCXTATION EXPOSED. In consequence of the many misre-i presentations which have been put in circulation, in relation to the course Col. Webb, the Editor of the N. Y. Courier and Enquirer, ha9 taken on the subject of the U. S. Bank, he has been induced to call on M. M. Noah, and I. G. Bennett, who have been associated with him in the editorial department of that paper, and who unhesitatingly say, that they have, at all times, considered him as a firm and undeviating friend and advocate of the j U. S. Bank. Mr. Webb has published the correspondence, which he prefaces with th folluwingremarks: The slaves of power tho bought and pensioned nress of a currupt and un principled party Amos Kendall &. Co. and their hirelings have been indus - trious in publishing to the world, that we were formerly opposed to the Ban! of the United States, and wrote a series of articles against its re-charter. We have heretofore inertly contradicted their assertions, believing that with the honest portion of the people, and more

particularly with those who knew us.

our iml)J declaration would go quite ' as far as the purchased statements of ' , ... V, , , r, . men, who like Camhreleng, Clayton, : Blair Kendall & Co. are notorious for i .1 . , .... j tlieir SUhSerVlCnCV to the man l)Om to I command,'' and who have sold them ' mm m n n i ' unit ivlin h-n crib-i (hum. ; tors of the Bank of the United States, true colors, and fix upon them once more' the often proved charge of wilful and j more worthy of the confidence of the public, than those who direct the affairs of United States Bank; nor is there one! whose officers have been so unscrupu- i lously assailed for the ilest of purposes j the preservation of officers which are j the price of Ingratitude and treachery, j Jn laying before our readers the following correspondence, which so completely refutes the idea of our having acted inconsistently in relntion to the Bank of the United States, wp. begleave to point out another falsehood which the poisoned press has put in circulation hs L the amount of our loans from the of the United States. Instead of 000 we never had but $35,000 from ..!.UIJ1. I c.i.),iana...i-.i. j ' -' i wmcu , at ttie exiiratiou of six months was re1 temnorarv j ,oan of ,5 wniru WAS pA; fl expiration of ninthj days. These, we ! solemnly aver, are the only loans we i have (!Ver na J irom t!ie 15ank, and on these we paid the customary interest of 6ix per cent. I hat those who are unacquainted with our business may judge how very much this accommodation was, compared with the expenditures of our establishment, we will add that the properties of our office cost us upwards of $"25,000, and our annual expenses, of which two-thirds are in ad vance of our collections, are $50,000. ; But we forbear further commentary on 'the subject. w I Gentlemen Priniprs I vow. ft wont j swear tho') but I swow. if enough to! make a cat laugh to see the masons and i;irL- lalL- lit .,..i;n .t r . ... .... -I . -it...,, 0 nurt i.itni ueo r.jmji c t u I. illiui 'the republican, party. By jingo! Who! be they? Well, we'll see. In the first! place,thcre''s the big landlords. In the next, the money changers. The next the office holders. Next, the federal ; mason. Next, Balaam's Asses. Audi then comes the calico-shirted. bosompinn'd, neck-stock'd, body-corseted, and j hand-,odov'd whole state, with hre nnrl j there an old republican sprinkled in j hke whortleberries in a bag-pudding to j give it color. By gosh, what a party! 1 they look like republicans don't the. But I rather guess that when election comes that the farmers and mechanics! all over the state, (but more particular ly out at the lakes,) will play 'em aj trick that will make 'em feel cheaper j than ever Roger R.cgcnt did when! irank irecmen cut im out from going Jonathan. Breakers Ahead. An English merchant was written to his fiiend in Boston, that Jackson has become a great ' iavorite wun me ljiignsn manuiactur- ; tTS gince the Veto Message. We shall favorite with the English manufactur be able, says the English, "to shut up j your mechanic shop .--You ozce us ff. j lccn m "'s ana you nave naming xo pa us with stocks, and these are now loo uncertain!'' "Your wool growers may kill their sheep and raise potatoes.''' "The Veto ensures their ruin and our success." .Vat. Int. A member of congress mistaking a black boy for his servant of tho hotel, ordered the fellow to take off his boots, which he did so effectually that the member never saw them again. The Missionaries. Where arc the Missionaries, that were lately employed in learning theCherokees to read and write? They are now in the Georgia penitentiary, in company with felons, and they themselves are treated as sach. Why were they put into prison? Because they would not swear to support the laws of Georgia ; or, in other words, because they would not join iu and help (gT-persecutc the Cherokee Indians. This was the heinous oflence with which they were charged,and for which they were doomed to four years hard j labor in the Penitentiary. One of these j Missionaries, Mr. Worcester, was a Post Master in the Cherokee National the time that he refused to take the persecutingoath, as such, being an officer of the United States Government, the Georgia guard dar not take him unless he was turned out of the Post Offieo. Application was made to

the executive department for his removal, and he was removed. The Georgia guard then look him he was tried and sentenced as before stated. Indiana Phenix.

President Jackson is styled the second IVahingtan. If the Farther ofhisCountry should rise from the dead, would he be willing to be called the firrt Jackson? jfationa! Gar. OT.l Shark Caughtl Two ladies accompaincd by a N. Hampshire backwodsman,were recently strolling aleng the beach at Hampton, N. II. when one of then described a flouncing iu the water, and directed to it the attention of the man of the hills. He, nothing daunted, rushed forward and entered iwtoa conflict with the animal who had been left among the shallows by the recession of the tide. Having the advantage of contending on his own element, the countryman grappled his adversary by the fail, and dragged him on shore. He proved to be a young shark, one fourth grown, and weighing sixty pounds! A plain question. If Washington was no'v living and sitting upon a bench with Gen. Jackson, fo decide a constitutional question, and they sliuuid disagree upon the meaning of a part of that instrument, whose opinion do you think, ought to be entitled to the most credit Suppose further, that that Supreme Court was to be in favor of Washington's view of tho question. "Which then would be entitled to the most confidence? Suppose further,that Hamilton, Madison, the Supreme Court if the United States, and tho Congress of the United States, were all to agree on confirming' Washington's opinion, which should be entitled to the most confidence? Phenix. "The. Cot out of the Bag." The New York Evening Post, a staunch Jackson paper, says, "lie-elect Gen. Jackson and the Tariff System mcst falt,." We fear there is too much truth in this remark. Wc do not entertain a doubt should he be re-elected. New Jersev. We have received verbal intelligence from the lower part of the State this morning, which leaves very little doubt that we shall have a majority of ten or twelve in joint meeting. All the counties below Trenton have elected our tickets.and Morris has done the same. From Monmouth, Susses, and Warren. we have no accounts; but if they go solid for Jackson,we still have the majority ih Old Essex will be from 1, '200. New Jersey is safe: she wili go for Clay and the Constitution in November, beyond a doubt. Commercial Advertiser. Col. R. M. Johnson made a long Speech at a recent Jackson meeting at Harrodsburg in Ky. in the course of which he admitted that the affairs of tho United States Bank had been well managed,and the bank was entirelv solvent: that the charges ofpartiality and corruption against it, were unfounded for he knew of his own knowledge the Bank had acted with equal favor to both parties; that it had been of much benefit to the country, and it would produce grenr distress to wind up its concerns at this time. Phil. D. Adv. Sigkb. Tha Fayotte County, Ind. Sentinel, of October 13, says: "We are pleased to announce to our friends abroad, that the Jackson strength of our Village has been reduced by renunciations, one half and the change throughout oui county are sufficient to give a decided majority adverse to Andrew Jackson . It will be recollected that this has baen one of the strongest Jackson counties in the State." New Jersev Election. Last week we gave the gratifying intelligence that Maryland had bolted outright from the ranks of the "roaring Lion." Now we have to say, New-Jersey ,another State, heretofore claimed by "the great Republican party" (which Martin Van Burcn carries fobbed in his breeches pocket,) has proved recreant tothcoffica holders, and shown a broad front in the ranks of good order and the Constitution. The Portland Daily Advertiser holds the following language of encouragement: "We can assuru our readers that after tkc gubernatorial election, n new opposition in the Maine nominal Jackson party will be found to Jackson. What do political fence men think of this? JYot so course. An Eastorn Editor says that his subscribers would make excellent wheel horses they hold bad so wall.