The Western Register and Terre-Haute advertiser, Volume 5, Number 14, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 28 June 1828 — Page 3
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•n^R telegraphic despatch, fro:n ordering/the French Garriso pi'noeluna and St. Sebastian .Qf'uate those places immediate!.
return
to France.
in oD9
4j
'"orders have been transmitted ii,bonforthe evacuation ot the fort: the Tagiw, occupied by Bntis,
and
for the return to Englant
ships stationed in the river. --Jy. Y. American
•lkgistm~
-miRE-HAUTE:
7s\«rfr«o"% Jw* 28, 1828*
'Treceived information hy the last
rnail from several parts of this j.
.regional District, that a report is nteiwivelv circulated, that when in Vioccnn"' a short time ago I "gave opinion that Bcwn would
outrun
vote? at
fVoni 2000 to 3000
the coming election," I do
,,t thi»k it necessary to contradict report to prevent its having: an the election. It
rjfect upon tne eieui.un. is too
absurd
think
€r
to gain credit.—But it is due
to myself and my friends, to say that never ?ay
in
outrun
," Jt?
A*
Vincennes, nor any
where else, that it was my opinion
that
Blalce would succeed in this contest. —And I am at this time more con-1
think* I can rely upon and it is my firm belief that Mr Blake will succuudbya larger majority than has fver been given to any candidate in ihisDi^ict. I am willing that this opinion should be remembered and its correctness be tested by the result.
fi
!0
Boon would outrun Blake from i000to 5000 votes, nor that he would j^0.jI# Blake in Fountain County, in
him at all—nor did 1 ever ]S2G, twenty votes were not given in
so. But on the contrary it ov- Fountain, but in Wabash, now War-
r„Q
tn
me gentlemen relafye to -lh=
strensth of the Presidential parties
One of the gentle-
in this District. men with whom I was conversing claimed a majority for Jackson, I replied (in substance for cannot give the precise words) that from late iu«ilications I thought it possible, but that I believed that it would be more than balanced in the third district. It was then said by one gentleman thai there would be a majority ot tjvo or three thousand votes to this opinion I did not asspnt nor, do I recollect that I expressed myself to the contrary—for 1 was willing to close a debate which abounded more in dogmatical assertions, than argument
A. KINNEY.
A CARD.
Mr Ratliff Boon. for Congress.)—Sin I have been inbrined, that in your electioneering
I tour
^*^8, you named «ne as the per-
iiisea ,l9nl?UUiah
thl
UUtll°r
llls
nifti j]iP. ir my iiii •,4telrlurnifched hy Col. Bonn:] bun Editvr.
a
L.v
lect'«n
\hatti
*L#^
nan, Clerk of the Cia0P3.it Court, ir ul For the county aforesaid, do ccrij'u, that at the annual election helt •i (he (ijlVvjrcnt townships in th :ounty aforesaid, on the first Morilay of August instant, Thomas Hake received three hundred anti rty four votes, for Congress, Rat iff Boon received 208 votes for Ciin ress, and L. S. Shuler received 16 voti'S lor Congress.
In testimony -.vhercof, I have here unto set my hand, and the seal ol our aid Circuit Court, this 26th day ol August, 182G.—-Signed an duplicate.
orij
WM. W.WICK
't* ,• v-N to the voters of the first con •GUESSIONAL DIS I HIC'i
I .. I 2 .. 17
ai
were not returned, by any officer authoriy.ed by the law regyjaupg g^£,r" i-
has been my opinion that Mr. ren County, and that those 2« votes
i.•
"•'s
ect
on
firmed in this opinion than I have Independent of these 20 voles, thus teen at any time before this have given, anil thus returned according to[eiv been in several countics, and to the first and regular certificate of Vive information flora olhera that! «'e C.rtK of Sulu.an'coumy, daled ^einronnc
I very'cheerfully comply with this request. Mr Colman's Card should have appeared in the Register of iaft week, but by an accident it did not come to hand in time. Mr. Boon does not ssy th «t th£ last certificate was untrue—but the first was ^rtgus far.11 If the secon«l certificate contained the truth, (wlrch he does not
?oit the terrk hautk kegisteii. Jeriy,) would he claim his seat in Congress when by his own showing Mr Blake had a majority of votes (Candidate excluding the 20 of which he complains from Wabash—It he wouid not, he would not complain of his
up the Wabash, when in Foun-(
TainCounty,
you stated that you had Se^,nS
teen fftirW elected at the last Congres- republicanism of Mr. Bonn When •,(nal election, that you had been de- he cannot go to Congress by the will framled f-ut of your ».cat by double jlls constitue.ns he would creep in [erhfica^, and in conversation af- through
iv€(l by me, Col. Boon deprived of their choice and Mr 'Wd.y'm"
U,e
C0'
rse
reply innnu-
ot
August, inst.
|W H. Blake received three $ J*.
an''
lorty-Ztco votes, that li.
i^t ul,aHi«-r»*ceivetl
16
votes'
t!pS!imonJr whercof,
sa|d
an(l
!nr ii '»oon received 208 votes to the 20th ConI'
have .here-
of' ^and, and afliscd the
Court, at Merow, the
ay°l
August, 1826. S. COLMAN. LUrk. w/ '*i
CnS! of Indiana. SulliWUnly ss J.
..
This, then, is the
a
St it(
whom you charged with having! jMrautled you. mistake the eye of this consistent "ow call on you to sustain vour gentleman, is a fraud By his code, l^ye: if you do not, 1 shall take it would be perfectly honest and honmeasures as I may think most
ora
we
°l
80 wc!I
S. COLMAN.
^fero nJunc 12, 1 f)2S.
mistake of some of the
/officer5i
And
ta
to correct tins
take hi* seat in Congress
knowing that the people had u.ssigned another to that post* it i*
well understood that Mr. Blalte was fairly elected in November I8C24,
the same day that the abovp and by a mistake hte faileil to obtain to Cul. iioou from Mr. Col- his certificate. Thus the people were "a,|i wa-j rtc»-" 'rrivevl
UI-J
uialte ofhin right. A.,«l Mr. Boon,
notice was set veil udoii ,t the Wl«»ini reidv jni.nu-i',y his conduct, very modestly says
you were once wronged out ot your election and it is very hard that I
A Copy -.e,„y*~Y cannot perve you the same way. And
In an a
,°Unty
88
l'
Samuel i:ol- it is worthy of remark that the -0
'e Circuit (iourt, ol votes are not complained ol becausc I ^^•r.ty ar.iresaid, do ccrlfy, thai
held in said
1 Mond
t[ wCre nol
bounty
^hf given by le»a,t vo-
tcrs—but the clerk did noi return them until he had received a communication from Y\ m. W Wick, &c- 1 his shows that independent of the two votes, stil! Mr Blake was elected.
/Tappiness.—That a4l who are happy, ate equally ha^py is not .trtye. A peasant and a philosopher may be equally satisfied, hut not equally h?ppy. flappiness consists in thi multiplicity of agreeable consciousnesses. A peasant has not capacity for hav-
1, Samuel Col wig equal h^pp njsg with a ^hilosu-
"iwf?^ 4i*k •11,1
F%Vow Citizens— By the certificate promise: but all the fond hope^ ..... TJ I C' ..n HA «ll nfOt of William B. White, Clerk of Foun tain County, it appears that of th 22 5 votes said to have been given to NI O S of Fayette township, aged
Au ugtj lg2Gj a|ui wluch
the only certificate known to the law, I had a majority of ojie vote over C^ol Blake. Biit by a subsequent certifi cate of the Clerk ot Sullivan Counts, dated the 2Gth August, sixteen days after hi first certificate, ttco adiditional votes were giveuJto Colonel
20ir |arvoles froin
,s
Blake, and the majority of o?ie} is
It may not be improper to add turned in his favor. thattvheu in Vinccnnes about a it appears by Mr hite's certifiTionth ago I had a conversation with cate, that the gentleman who was the
,u Clerk Fountain, did not ceruty the
Wabuh coun-
un»j| |)e ha(, wflv,,Uco.»mu
nication from Win. W Wick, &e. 1 Vours respectfullv, U. BOON.
Vincennes, June 19, 1828. The Kditor of the Terre-Haufe Rpi»iter, i1* respectfully requested to vopy the above and foregoicg, atn! ob'.iiie, R. B.
poer, .,— iiy illustrated by the Rev. Mr. Ro-.-•rt Browrt, at Utrecht.-—" A' smai .'•Irinking glass and a large one," said he, "may be equally full, but a iarg: •ne hnhls'ipore than the small."
a
S. COLV1AN.CM,,, ___
State of Indiana. to wit :—I, William VV. Wick, Secretary of State for tffc StaU' aforesaid, certify, thai the furegoin": are faithfully transcrib-
,jnai documents on
file in my office. In testimony whereof I have here unto set my hand, and affixed the •»eal of State, this 21st day of March, til the year of our Lord, 182* ol the State, the lltli, and of the United States, the 3.1st —Done at Indian apolis. the day and year aloreeaid.
tred He was a soldier bf the
dJ^CU
1
1
on the 17th inst. JR N O A IT S of this county aged 21 years, as he was on his return from New-Orleans Mr \\ratkins was a young man of of
bis friends are no more! On the21st inst.Mr 1IE
ti i\ to In All l\ t' If! J* chols was formerly from the state of N,ew-York He has left a numerous circle ofiriends and acquaintances to whom he was
deservedly dearOn the 27 th inst. CA A IS E youngest daughter of Abraham A. Markle, of Otter Creek
Electors of
Fur dnvevntr,
HrtRHlN fi MOORE. '-JAMliS R\Y. For Lieutenant Governor*
Mli/iON \PP. iABKL C. PEPPi-.R. For Congress, TIIOMA-j il. BliAlvE. RA I'l.lKF BOON. or the Counties of Sullivan, Vigo, md Clay-
i'Mit
v'
For the JS^nnte
W IF,LI AM LIN TON. O N W I S |'or igo t.'ounty tieprrspntulivc. NATHA IKL 11UN 11N^TON
For Coroner,
ELIJ AH FlLL t'SON, Jr. For sheriff. f' TtKNRY AIjLKN.
For li:\rrison I ownship,^ b\ir Justices of th* Vcace.' JAMK^ WAS,-ON, JOHN BRI 1 TON, JOHN DAVLY. JOHN II A r-.ON.
JJIlJWJWpiMII'.,!**''
TQTFR *'i.
•"-v-lf
4»
This question was very lap- made war against me—-eapfurcu nr\f arried off'my children, and contsi es to hold them in durance—she re. fuses to ratify a peace between u^. *nd is contentious and quarrelsome she has prejudiced the communif against me, and is still striving to extend her influence to my injury.
Johnson.
DIED
At his residence in Parke county, —, on the 3d inst.' ED W A BROCKI/A r, have ca^ed me to judge it necessary
--year
A
good health until about a before his death, when he had ^n attack of ward,, the palsy which finally terminated his life.
His affairs tovvard the close of his life were not so prosperous as his earlier days. But that spirit which leil hiinto the field of danger in the hour of his country's need, would not stoop to seek nor receive the as
Indiana.
Of Presidents Vice President U. S. Jigreed upon by Ihe Conventions met at Indianapolis, Jan. 18«8
FOR J. ADAMS, and RICliAKD RUSH,
Joseph ORii,of Putnan-. county, John Watts, of Dearborn, Joseph Bartholomew of Clarke, ls/v*c Montgomery of Gibson. \maziah Morgan, ol Rush.
.'/FOR Gen. JACKSON", an^J CALHOUN. A IX E S O O O E S S E 1 1 N A A oj A ^oii) Hoss SMILET. of Union, -m.WILLIAM LOWE, OJ Monroe^
A ID O
f** n—-i--—
iiv fiaa a JUIMIW* -, |yviovna 11 v«n itiuning
Revolution and has through life well advances to her, in money, meat or sustained tW character of the citi- clothing, as I am determined, hereatzen Mr. Brbckway possessed an ter, not to. honor Her bills, pay her excellent constitution and enjoyed draughts, or in any way liquidate
not stoop to seeic nor receive u,e expose to public sale, as the sistance of that country in the time of his own, though it was most justly due!
Near Princeton, in this state
-r
August Election.
1
JOHN W. O BORN. JOSUPJI DICKON,
LrbT HKCL1Yi: 1) BI
?R:bS. M'Cabc,)l
S
JhOM JS'li iy-0IIIE.'LYS, 5 *2 A O O S O I S It
which he will sell low for CASH.
June 17th, 1828. 14tf—
To t(iQ Public,
WHEN, in the course of human events, it so happens, as to make it absolutely necessary, that the Holy Bands of Matrimony should be dissolved between those whoih God hath joined together by the ties ot wedlock, a decent respect lor the opinions of mankind, require!* ot the partv who ''bursts the bands," to promulgate to the \^orld,sorne of the many causes which lied to this lata! catas trophe
1
CYNTJI^ ULANCHARO. my connubial rib, separated herself from me, her Iqgal protector,about the Is! of April last, without any just cause She rebelled against my authority she enlisted in her behalf against «t a host uf allies aud fricuds—she has
'iqu-'spr
-, *¥.*
The above, together with many other causes fhat might be enumerated,
to warn all persons from making any
any of her contracts from this for
HIRAM BLANCHARD.
June 23,18?8. 14—3w
SHEIIIFF'S SALE.
virtue of an execution to me di rected &f delivered ffom the office of the Clerlf of the Yigo Circuit Court,
law directs, at the Court House door in the Town of IJerre-Haute, County of Yigo, Indiana, on the'21st day of July next, between the hours of ten o'clock A. M. ant\. two o'clock P. RX. the following described tract of land, to wit:—Eighteen acres, beginning at the South West corner of Sec- No. 12, T. 13, N of Range No 9,W and running from thence North onp hundred and six &. two thirds rods from thence East twepty-seven rods from thence South one hundred and six and two thirds rods and from thence West twenty-seveh rods to the place of beginning, as the property of Thomas Chenoweth to satisfy William Barns.
HENRY ALLEN, Sh'ff.
June 27th, 1828 143\v.
Land Agency.
J.L'tlE Subscriber, having for some years acted as an agent for several of the principal noil-resident landholders in this section of country, and this kind of business having increased with him annually, so as, at present, to require particular attention, will hereafter accept the AGENCY of any business relating t« LANDS, situated in either of the counties bordering the WABASH North of Vincennes. Ia.
JAMES FARRINGTON. Terre^-Haute, Dec. 6th, 1827. 37tf
Thomas H. Blake
AND
E. M. Huntington
will hereafter
PRACTICE LAW
In partnership They, ot one ofthem will attend the courts of the first judicial circuit, and th« supreme Court
Their office is in Terre-Haute, at the corner opposite Judge Deming. August 31st, 1827.-——24tt
Amory Kinney
•AND
E. A. Hannegan
Having uoited in the
Practice of Law
Pender their services to the citizen^ of the First Judicial District of Indiana, as Practitioners in the Circuit Courts of the several counties, arid the neighboring counties in Illi
nois.
They will also attend to any
business in the Supreme and Dis trict Courts of the State —One or both may generally be found at the Office of said'Kinney.
March 27, 1828. ltf
WIP
By Jesse MTntire, i» Washington Township, Clay County,....Indiana, one •_ '**.
Dark Bay Horse.
four years old this spring, fourteen hands high, with a star and snip \r his forehead, both hind feet white no other marlts or brands pcrceiva ble_ Appraised to thirty George VV
Gladwell
20
j?-
and Peter Bar-
net, this 10th day of May 1828 Taken up before me. FKARCK JOJJES.J.p, ll*3t.
C&lf-Skjgs
cts. per lb. will be ^H^en fo dried veal-^kins, wpighing six Ibj
and under. For green do lQcts^ And l6cta. for dried weighing eight .lbs.
calf-skin -1 vt
For «reen do 8cts. .A liberal price will al^p b? give for gpod
Deer'.Skinsh "Enquire at th Jegister Office. ^February|j25, lB-8.
'.V
S A O l.\DT.ty..~ E II I I O N LOUS'fr, -S^| Yermillion Circuit Court,
April Terai, 182r,.'
JebeccaPatton,") "f* vis: ^petition for divorce David Patton.
I'HE complainant by James
Farringt^n, h«r council, having tiled her petition—and* it appearing to the satisfaction of Ihe court, that the fendant is not fin inhabitant of the
state *It is, ordered that unless he be and appetar at th«e next term this court to answer the said petit $, the matters and things1 therein contained will be taken as confessed, an the court decree in his' ahsenc And it is ordered that a copy of this order be published in the Western Register, a public paper prialei^ at Terr'e-Haute, for four weeks suc»' cessitely,and that this cause be continued to the next term of this. court.
Patent Cast Iron 1
THIi suSscri^er has now on harid for sale, a large supply of IVoods Patent ast Iron Ploughs* trfrni' No I, to No. 4, which will be sold1 on accommodating terms.
Three years experience in ihisj section'of country has pToved -thfe'st* Ploughs to be a useful and -vuluahle article, atid in every point of viewsuperior to the wrought li on -Plough*
Farmer# afe respectfully invited to call and examine for themselves Ploughs of either number (complete.ly finished) can be had at all times at this place and all orders from a distance will be promptly attended to. A supply of these Ploughs will he kept at different towns on ihe Wabash, and at such other places as ihey may be called for.
ALSO, ,,
Just opened at the Corner of 1st an(fc Ohio streets, in the store room belonging to D. Deming, an
ASSORTMENT OF
GOODS,
Consisting of Dry Goods, Hard ware, & Groceries? fyc dfc. whichi will be sold on reasonable terms
Pork, Corn, VVhiskey, and most^ kinds of Merchantable produce wilt be received in payment.
For Oliver Rose,
F. King.
Terre-Haute, May 30,1829. 10—tf.
Paper Manufactory:
THE subscriber takes this method to give general notice that his
ier.
May 23.
Mill,
Pap,$r
in the neighborhood of MadTson, is now in complete operation, and that he is prepared for making Letter^ Writing, Printing and Wrapping Paper of every description, and he flatters himself, from the particular care which he has tak«n in the selection of his workmen, that (fie pamper will not be inferior to any that ia ,nade in the western country.
Orders for any quantity of paper shall be immediately attended to at the lowest prices tor Vvhich it caiA he purchased in Cincinnati. Cash will be given for all kihds of RAGS, \nd also for coarse TOW, delivered ,-ither at the MILL or at the store if Messrs. L. & N. LODGE, in Madison, who are appointed agents or the above establishment, and at vhich place there will constantly bfc kept a supply of all kinds of pa-f
JOHN SHEETS.
TIVO JOUHJVEYMKX
O I N E S
'that are "good workmen—also*
An Apprentice,
To whom liberal wages ivill begwen, II. BLINN. Terre-Haute, May 23, l828,--9t^
R. S. M'Cabe
Is daily manufacturing
r'the latest I'athion, and of the best
materials,
(her
which he will Sell Iomt
ir Cash, Fur, LainVs-Wbal, or such
produce as will suit. HATS made to order on the jortest notice.
Tcrre Haute, May 15, 1828—8jf
Country Sugar, -WANTED
In payment of Subscription to Register.
I
1
A Copy, Attest. S. B. GARDNER, cleric/ 114ws.
&
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