The Western Register and Terre-Haute advertiser, Volume 4, Number 52, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 22 March 1828 — Page 1

Wi&Ki

VEi

Western

rl&f "ii

OSBORN

,C'p5,J N"

-*4«» •v.-*-

UaltE-HAtTT^ I „.. ^pd at Tc

at •lcrre-Hiuite, Vigo Saturdays, at two dollars

Is P1'U!"

ICo °'i \(\yM in adduce two

l,,:n

CE

*i?6?

„tS, if P»W

'?er cents, if paid when l»lf completed. or, ni!

lP

ifnaidwhpn lifty-tvvo

1,0

j'nve been furnished*

•unless at the option of the ^",ie flail arriurnges are paid. to notiVy a discontimiof each volume will ai-1 rp.l a new ens:cement. ^^M.hsBMENTS, will

t-nic.'i.VaslV to***1

IfOibpiC'1

11

be

al 0n

iV

)(n—Samuel

d0,,"![

three W

f'

eeks, and

f! pnts per square for each l^Xn. All Advertisei"1"?''wl be continued until they inputs wni L-o paid i°r-

a, ,,

Table orFi^'ire

will be work, $:

St accompany all adver-

incr -q'lare-

^'jf the following gentlemen will I „,t is agents for the Re lP--wiLy stall be liberally remu ^ratc't for

a

services they may

'rwon—D- Patton «»q. "*•.* l,r9ne—Messrs CoPett & Hill, 17,r-ce'k—James Ghesniit. iie^rna-Jo.-eph VI. Hayes esq ockville—WaUice Rea esq. Hy V«Vs Mills—F Dickson Jr. •tbrdsville—Isaac Elston. lAttica— Win Crumpton. ITi^vette—Reuben K- l«ey, esq. Pill-col TI.OS. Smith. ,Wiile-Wm Kil^ore.

Coluian esq.' "yy

Carlisle—Dr Job M. Baker. finccuues—W m. Mseure, fashin^ton—Seth Roddick esq. Covington—W m. W bite, esq

Groeerie.fl

Has jii31 received from

LOUISVILLE,

A

Handsome Supply

ov

Fresh Groceries*

fWhichwili be sulci at the lowest cash or A S S iv IN S Tcr.-e-lIautP, Dec. 1'2, 18^7—58if

WANTED^"

HiSSER, [if SOLUS (Sf IlARLr. Wiieai. Rye. Beef hides, I'tf»the: s, linsies. Beeswax, Ginseng and Picons, Fb.x-eeil, Venison ilams ai Whiskey, or CASH in payment for

s,,,: GOODS'.'*

They would respectfully inform fer casto.nerj, and the public, tiiaf have on hand an exten.sjve asJrtment of ,/

Av

Land

-l-

ISRCilANDiZE

bein anxious to accommodate "liznUimea" invite them to call, limine and purchase Rood bar[ims. 29-1

NOTICE,

rilL ^ubscrDor tenders his serrc®3 to the citi'/.^r.s ol (he First Juflr«ial District of Indiana, as an

Allos ruy at Law

is oilicR is immpd'.itt'ly above the p-ore ol ljiuiner, Reynolds &. Eariy. KD. \. Ii ANN KG AN.

JAOILRIRY 4, LP/28.

4

Agency.

'IK Subscriber, having for pome pitj act'.Ml as an a^ent for several the priacipil non-resident Innd|Ji,lers in this scction of country, this kind o! bu^infss having iol^sed with him annually, so as, at Ment, to veijuire particular at|^°v',^''1 bereafter acccpt the

\Tf illTE

V* any business relating -VNDS situated in ei'her »f th* Nhe ps birdfrio» tlu*. VV AllAiaii pcrienced workmen, he °rth of \mcennes. la.

MMKS FAIIRINGTON.,» Dec.^th, 18f27. 3 7

x4rrt-Hautc,

teamster

From one third, to one half of the purchase money will be espected in Dand, and the balance 111 twelve months, to bs secured by lien upon the property.

For information as to the Lots in ferre-Haute, inquire of James Far ington, Esq.

DIANA M. BULLITT, Adm\x of Thomas Baiiilt, dee'd. SAMUEL GU ATIliMKY^ Jgent Jnr Henry Aticiusou uiut Mary

A. Atkinson Feb. 9. I8i8.~4S-8tv

Removal.

Has removed his

ST

^5

rw»

Thomas* 1L Blake

AND

E. M: iliintingion

irill hereafter

PRACTICE ut

In partnership They, or one of'them will attend the courts of the lirst judicial circuit, and the supreme Court

Their office is in Terre-Ilaute, at the corner opposite Judge Deming. August 31st 1827- 24tl

Valuable liecu Estate

vFor

PURSUANTlo an act of the Legislature of the State of Indiana, the undersigned will on the f'irst jilonday of vipinl nc.vt offer FOR SALE at PUBLIC VENDUE, in the town of ME ROM. in the County of Sullivan the following

VALUABLE TRACTS OF

situated in the said county of Sullivan, to wit: S VV. qr of Sec. No. l,in T. No. 8

N. No 11 W. S E. qr of Sec. No. 2, T. 8 N. R. No. II W. W 4 of Sec No. 36, T. 9, N. R. 11 sE. 4 Sec. No. 17, T. 7 N. R. 10 W.

W. qr. of Sec. No 8, T. 7 N. JO W. r-v E. 4 Sec No. 24, in T. 8 N. R.

These lands were purchased at the Public Land Sales in the year 1816,

Will be offered in the town ofTER-RE-IIAUTE. 00 the Second Manlay (fJprti, ^being court day) the following lots it) saitktown, viz:—

OUT LOTS,

^Nos. 67, 7i, 33, 34, 55, and 47V IN LOIS Nos. 53_, 70, 118,

JtuDllC lja.HU Oalcb 111 luv jcai aod at that time were considered the gog"1,0 furnish a portrait ojJ" iirst choice ia the country Persons iU!NCV ADA MS, Esq. tvh.ch will who may wish to receive information be published about two mouths hence, as to the quality and situation of with a Biography I he contents ol these lands, are relerred to Mr Sam uel Cohnan, of Merom—the tracts will be offered in quarter sections. —ALSO—

V200

and 201.

By reference to the Map ol the town, it will be seen that the lb Lois are well situated as to business, and the Out Lots present some of the most desirable situations tor private residences adjacent to the town

TO 1IIS NEW,^

BRICK IIOtfSE,

Fronting the public square at the corner of Ohio and Market Sticets, where he will take pleasure in waiting upon all those who m«iy please to fiivor him with a call.

Terre-Haute, Feb. 25, l828.-49tf

.NOTICE.-

"Tfie Hobscriber hereby informs the public generally that he has taken the

Blacksmith's Shop

belonging to Wm I'. Dexter, where intends to carry on the Blackmithirig bu»in-39 in its various aruhen Having employed exintemis his

he

\V!

I

hi in •^ess efti thb rn

5f'

BEANS

•VVr^D VT THIS Ql'h

he d«ne in the best man

po1"bleq

,od^te"term6,and

un wU] be made to accommodate work is done, or when th ,i.n vy.w uevi received ol him.

T. Holers,

Depcmber 1,1828.-4J—1(,

«r

ww^y-Muuwy

No "du'pe to party tool of power"—Nor siave to Millions of aa hour."

TEItR E-U AU TE, VIGO COUNTY, INDIANA MARCiI £3,

3

O W E S OF

4

LITERATURE

WIT AND

EMBELLISHED WITH *f

SFLEJVDlD

EJYGJiA VIN GS.-

The first No of the New Series of this popular work is just published, and contains an excellent likeness ot Major bencraL Andrew Jackson an engraving giving a S. W view ot th Bank if Pennsylvania, in South Second street and also, a Sea Sccne^ the Destruction oj the Kent fiast In* diaman besides two cuts ol th$ School oj Flora, and the admired air sung by Mr Horn, at his late viiii to ^Philadelphia, entitled "J*et w4 haste to Reicin Grove" set to muJ sic.

The CASKET is a monthly publication, comprising about 48 largo octavo pages in each No. and was commenced two years ago, since which it has increased so extensively that an addition ot live thousand copies is now regularly printed oil The embellishments this year will consist of principally American sub jects, and be engraved expressly for the work No expense or exertions have been spared by the publishers to merit the patronage of a liberal public. The Engraver has been en

i- the present number are as follows: Biography of Major Gen. Andrew Jackson, with a portrait by Lougu* ere ^Frederick Lorenza, a tale—«/\orai The Vacation—Boy-,Cernetry ol

Pere La Chaise Beautiful Extract —The dying American tar—Boston Bard The musings of a soiit&ry hour—J B. S \Sary Scaton—Ida Saturday niglit—Tasquin iht Church Yard he wounded^soldier 1 he sword —Mt*s Lungaon 1 he wages of sin rhe discarded lcVer/ io Salvia—Mary Musings Ue Indian Summer— Or. M'Henry I he Bank of Pennsylvania—with an eigravmg Destruction ot the Kent E^51 Lidiaman—with a?! engraving A sketcli offh'e life of 1 homas Addii Lininet

B. S-: M10 Cat—J li. a. iiie otiicer, wife, and the iss Geitnido human lite Columbus Relics of R-cuard ?li. Small leet jTbe bot tie conjurer Exile of Scio juheerfulness oi Sextons Erin i^a Vourneen

T, Moore he death watch, 'io Genviexe, ).iic Humorist he School ot i« iora- Two enghvtngs.

JPOv. Tu lr Oiden times—•!' J. Lines—Lattra I "lie farewell— Florence Stanzas—Lilla Sonnet to

J. .5. D. to the Laure)—Ig-

nalius To lmogine-— Ivanhoc io some friends in atiiiction Lines inscribed to a friend—Ida Extract from an unpublished poem—Selim To an absentee—Lucy Religioo— Miijord Hard To lmogine—Jiosdhel Lines- Lilla "Let us haste to Kelvin Grove'*—as sung by Mr. Hum—set to music The Puz/.Jer I

Terms, $2 .*}) per annum, in vance. Subscriptions received at the olfice of the Saturday Evening Po No. I Chesnut Street, opposite Post Office A KIN SON & ALEXANDER, publishers.

Notice, -4

The subscriber hereby informs old cqstomers and the pablic geo ally, that he hqs now,pu haud 4

Good Assortment

OF 'i 1

Harness9

.. "i

&c. &c.

Which he will exchange for ^VHISKKY, FLOUR. BEEF-CAT I Lb, TALLOW, IHUE^. BKKS-,VVAX, COUNTRY LINKN, LEATHER

of e.ery ^scripti.n.

Terre^Haute,

o-ta tf December 10,

FB AT HE LIB,

&c. He will also continue to manu-

Tir QT

WILLIAM PIIOBST.

.Bnuiijijjfii.i.i.ur

Twentieth Congress.

FIRST SESSIONS

,^7"

|/. of RE PRESENT ATI Vh S-

DUTIES ON IMPORTS. .• January 31, 1828. Mr. Mallavy, from the Committee on Manufactures, made the following

REPORT

[Accompanied by a Bill (No. 132) alteration of the several Acts imposing Duties on Imports."] The Committee on Manufactures, to which have been referred the numerous petitions and memariyls qn the subject of further protecting duties upon importst reports

THAT they commenced their examination of tli£ various subjects referred to them, immediately after the appointment of the Committee was announced to the House that they sought in vain, from the documents referred to them, for information sufficiently specific, upon the subjects emUraced in those documents, to enable them to determine the effect of the existing laws upon the various interests upon which they were intended to operate or to measure the additional protection which the complaining interests required, or iheir present condition would warrant the committee in recommending. Under this absence or accurate information, and constantly busied in searching the voluminous Kxecutive Reports from the Treasury Department, and other State Papers, from which i9 to be learned the situation of our foreign trade, and the character and amount of our foreign importations, and in obtaining from that Department the returns of that trade, for the last year, the committee waited until the petitions and memorials upon which most dependence seemed to be placed by the friends of the protecting system, had reached their hands^ through the only authorized channel, co warrant the,|r acting upon them, and until about the 28th of December last past, when, still finding themselves unsupplied with the precise (acts upon which alone they- vere willing to act upon the important and highly responsible subjects Cftminitted to their charge, thej came to the resolution of submitting their difficulties to the House, and asking the power to send for persons and pa pets, which would enable theni to determine, with precision and certainty, the true condition of those inter.'»ts, arid more especially ot those manufacturing interests which had preferred their claims for protection to the National Legislature.

This resolution was presented to tie House on the lirst day of its session, after the committee adopted it, and, on its passage, no time was lost in learning the names of wjtnes yes for whom it should, in the opinion of the committee, be desirable to send, and despatching summonses by mail- to be served.

This labor being performed, the committee at once began their ex aminations of such witnesses, members of the House and others, as were within their reach, and believed to be possessed of valuable and practical information upon any of the subjects before them. The examination of these witnesses was not completed, when the arrival »f 9ome, attending under summonses, was announced. An application was then immediately made to the House for leave to sit during the hours of session of the House and nearly every day since that leave was granted, has been entirely occupied, to the almost total neglect of other public and private duties, in the laborious examination of witnesses, pursuant to the resolution

authority to send lor ainl ex na*

10

under

glVi

4

which th«

committee were acting. It but iusticc hereto remark, that the on [dual expectation of the coinmittee, under the resolution ottered by them to the House, was to have m*de an expeditious inquiry into the situation of one or two manutactunn« inrather to enable them to determine what farther protection tljese interests really required, than with the espectatipn, witb" the ,nmted time which they had allowed to themselves for the purpose, of being able to collect and report to the House,

portaiit branches ol our liKh.^Xn i-crease hianulactyres, so digested and arranged as to be of any essential service to the House or to:the public, as a source of correct inform^tiop upon these complicated subjects. _1 he amendment, .however, whicji was made to the resolution by thi» House, so as to itive to the committee the

persons upon oath, in relation to ths. -i. present condition of our manufac-^ tures, and to report the minutes ot, such examination to this House," it will readily be seen, added greatly) to the labor which the committer had proposed (or themselves as, by that amendment, it was made the duty of the committee, should they?-* think proper to examine witnesses,**/ to take their testimony in detail, and-', in such order as to render it at least passably intelligible to the use. This additional labor was in no other way exceptionable to the mittee than as it rendered sun what doubtful their ability to give-, their report to the House within thu time within which they had sig:ii'i?u that it would be received Ru%r even under this apprehersi»nx sogH, desirous vpre the committee oi itfull dgyelnpement of facts, that tl.ep amended resolution tnst their appro-: bation, and they entered upon uieir" duties, determined, if possible, to? realize the expectations of the Houie? so far at least as regarded a report within the time they had indicated.

They have examined little shore of! thirty witnesses, and the testimony of each, nastily written out by way? of question and answer, and annex- -. ed to this report, will show wiwit^. facts have been collected by the ex-. amination, as well as the extent of the labor which the committee hava^ performed. gThe testimony of cii witness, after it was taken, has oeerii carefully read over with him, and?' so corrected as to meet tiie full assent of the witness as to its accuracy.

The leading subjects presented^-* to the committee for additional pro-' tection, are irou and several in an u-^ factures of it, wool ani^ its fabrics, hemp and some of the manufactures I from it, flax and its manufactures,! domestic distilled spirits from grain,» particular descriptions of glass, and fine and printed cottons, Upon all these subjects, witnesses have been examined, and their testimon erewith reported, comprises ih^ evi». dence, upon each subject, winch the

committee have taken under the resolution of the House, and embodies most of the information upon which they have acted in determining thef~-^ features of the bill which they havg agreed upon.

The examinations of witnesses by the committee were not closed until Saturday night last, and Monday of «. the present week was entirely occu- .y pied in correcting and arranging the y. testimony taken, and which had not beeu corrected, thus leaving but iwo days to them to digest their br!, and ^'y prepare this hasty report. Under tiiese circumstances, it cannot oe ^xpected that a minute examination of the various subjects included i« the bill prepared by the committee, will oe gone into much les* that a discussion of the great question involved in the system ot extending protection to the languishing interests of the country, by an iucrease of |t duties upon imports, will be attempted. The former would be a task requiring time and care, comoined with extensive research and the latterj, even if time were allowed to the £y committee, is a subject much better y, suited to a discussion in this House, than in the report of one ol its cou mittees .. .•

The coppmitteej therefore^ do no^ y: attempt to go into the reasons whic.i have coverned them, but merely to give concise history of their d^

After examining all the witpessef who had ^tended pursuant tu suiumonses, up to SiWrdijr n'gh la$t,

and

also

Jl

4^'

the manufacturer^ andvs

.oilier., »P

to

,ime",h,ad'

to the kHowledge ofthe cetnmirttee, arrived in P1?*

of giving

forthe

t/i

Pu,T03e

the committee informa^ioat

upon any «f

the

8ubJect8

Monday

before th^rn,

and after haying spent the day, op

of tiie preseut we?_k, in (he

correction

very

hasty jirrangj -,

ment of the testimony tafcen, tiy committee proceeded to consider am arrange the terms and provisions ofL the bill they should report, and a rer\ ferenceto it*8 •Iia^e ^or the detailed "atfon to Wl»t b»»« been their conclusion8*

The first .. is found in th» considering the importance III., tlioarticle, as one of both nation^

which will

naratiyely very light K4 An increase* fvnon iron jn bars, n^t manulactur-? cU,in whole, or in pa/t, by rolling,'^ oJ'froio $0tents upon Impounds, toione cent per pounji} upon irop^ iuWr^ inanulacturfd ip whole or fhy Jri by rolling," per toy-of. 2^40 pounds $ aAd jpi^ it^(«^

•u ft 4 I

4.

(t

1

II

!l

if

IV