The Western Register and Terre-Haute advertiser, Volume 5, Number 26, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 20 September 1828 — Page 4

'-J—

A.i

TVhorn

f,

1

4

•Hi

1

•V* *5« 4v

TiONJL

N O N 1 I O N S

TOLI II ESI DLNT-J

JOHN Q. ADAMS

Of Massachusetts^

TVhom

I a

ir

JEFFERSON,

1 85,

in

FF.RSOV, was elevated by the ballots of the Senate to thirty of the most important committees Who was chairman of the committee raised on Mr. Jeflersou's Message on -the Burr Cons-piracy, and a member of all the other committees in relation thereto Whom MADISON, in 1809*, commissioned Minister to Russia, appoin- ,•« ted first to negotiate the Treaty of tihenf, and subsequently Minister to Croat Britain

Whom

.\

Twe Millions to work«'of public improvement and" national deifence, has Paid More than Thirty-

Three Mitlicjis of the Public Debt,

VICL PRESIDENT,

RICHARD 11USII,

,• Of Pennsylvania.

TVHDM \DISON, in 1814, appointed Attorney General of the United States ^V«.v Whom

MOXROE,

in 1817, appointed

Minister to Great Britain Whom Adas. in 1825, appointed Secretary of the Treasuryand Who has proved himself to be the able and fearless advocate of the reat interests of'Domestic Iudusliv and Internal Improvement.

Indiana Electors.

JOSE I'll OR fly Of Put narn County OILY WATTS, "tyr Of rear'torn County 'JOSEPH HJJii THO LOME W.

A

Of Clarke County

JSAAQ

O N O E

Qj Qibson County

... Of.TrtCnesseef*

?4'TO

an executive trust in Florida in word, there are one hundred men •4ii Albanjarlc Qoiuity .better qnaliliy'?.. :-fd (cf^lke IVt-fcide-ncy-,—See Gov.

4

Col£j

1 9 1

I-1

»nsr

in 1794, ap­

pointed ft! mister to the Netherlands, and in 1796, Minister to Portugal, and considered the "most valuable public character we had abroad

&

session of Congress, and ffius established a precedent and principle, upon which Indiana obtaine a similar grant for the W abash ^anal. ,,„JV

S

esteerti-

ed so high!}' that he-'said to Mr. Gerry—41 congratulate your country on their prospects in this young man iVho, in I SOS, while a member of the Senate of Massachusetts, was elected to the Senate of the United States over Timothy Pickering ho, on the 2lst February, 180ft, introduced the first resolution ever presented to Congress in favor of the new established policy of lur temal Improvement Who, during the Presidency of

had

JEF

!s

MOMIOE

placed first in his

Cabinet which selection General Jackson declared to be the best possible ,/ Whom ', in 1824, elevated to the highest-station in the world Whose Administration, though asmailed from the beginning oy an

Opposition unexampled for its bitterness and profligacy, has been singularly prosperous j^id who in less than four years, besides defraying the expenses of government, (gred arid extrava gant! as they are said to be by his opponents,) and besides applying

From the

tWe

A N

Of Hush County.

ILLINOIS ELECTORS. F.LHAfl

I E 8

1

SAMUEL WnOMPSONy iJEOtiGE W'K'Hli. 'i-

O & S O A E

.• -*FOH XV.ESIDKNT, R'.

Andrew Jackson,

1

^Je/Terscm expressed hi3 o-(Hf-iion of rts^follows: •.'•ihe zeal #ivhich has been displayod in tavor «f making Jackson presideut,, has m^de me doubt of the duration of republic he docs1 not possess the temper, th? acquiresnents, the assiil:iity, the physical qualifications for :i he pilice—be iias bee'.u in various ?Hv»l oljlices, and made a figure in inon*e—-s»ud he has completely failed and shown himself inoompetent,

I tter, J\'ov 1827.

Who opposed a vote of thanks to WASHINGTON on his retirement ,, Yroin olfice. «(Thesupporters of the Hero of New-

Orleans holdfulelity to hhnf under ,-lall {lirctiiyjstanceKy as paramouivt to feveK^Uiftr consLderation.,

W

Jy*CE

FRESIOENY,'-

JoW'VC. Calhoun,

Of

South- arolincti

T"bo bvhin casting vote, blotted out the best provisions of the TARIFF iii 1024-^5 and defeated a ^rant of land to tlie state of llli ^uois which uas obtained in despite as truly a farmer opposition at the next enau-lson.^—JilbAnji ^hr

tetfniiib

4 :1

ELECTORS.

E N A E S a

a

Vioss

of Jackson

of Unirm

W a

Lotm of Monroe

a

of Warrick

ILLINOIS ELECTORS. William JYabb John Ewing

&

John Houston.

The men who attempted lo assassinate Hr Armstrong, in Bedford county Tennessee, justify themselves for the brutal attack on him, upon the round that it was supposed that he press, a communication, in which it was said he meant to charge the fatherof two of them with having been a tory

This justification ap

pears to be quite satisfactory to the Editor of the Nashville Republican, a paper devoted to Gen. Jackson. Here then, we find ^he official organ of Gen Jackson justifying and sane ttoning one oft|ie grossest violations of personal right ever perpetrated in this, or any other country upon the mere supposition, that an injury was contemplated to be inflicted But this is of apiece tvith most of the vindications set up by the party We would respectfully ask, if it was Tight to inflict personal violence updn Dr. Armstrong merely becauseit was sup posed that he intended to assail the fame of a deceased pferson—we say we would ask, what should be "done to Gen Jackson, who has actually slandered the memory of the ReV'd. Mr. Harris, a minister of the Gospel whom he, himself had illegally caused to be executed? This question, will find its way to the good sense of all candid and impartial men.—Mc~ rylander

S

Philadelphia Gazelle

It is proper that the people in the middle and eastern states should be made acquainted with the spirit that actuates the'politicians of the south We hoid it unjust "to attempt hiding the evil that is sc- evident in Georgia and South Carolina.2 If the measures of government are to be met with threats of dissolution, it becomes the friends of order to take from these turbulent men the means of injury—take it decidedly, but consti tutionally. Do not let them have that sway in the nation, which the election of Gen Jackson would en sure to them—as power in their hands must be highly dangerous We ask the attention of readers to the following paragraphs:

were tenfold more insulted,

more disgraced and contemned, by the majority of Congress, than our forefathers were bj the ministers of Great Britain, at the breaking nut of the revolutionary war.'*—M* Duffies t-. a?', Speech: '4The memorable scenes of our revolution have again to be acted ver."—Milledgevillc Journal

There is no mistaking the tenor of the above extracts They s-eak treason as plainly as words can utter it Let those who mls»akingly adopt the leading opinions of surli men, ponder upon the consequences of their indiscretron. -These are the advocates o£ Gen Jackson's election and if, out of office they utter such disgraceful sentiments^ what may we not look for when thty shall bccomc flushed with power?

Names—The Heroites hare picked up new "name for their Idol, which thoy no doubt hope will decoy many gulls into their snares He-is no longer "a patriot of the Revolution," a *'Hero of two wars," or even the "Hero of New-Orleans No: he is now nothing but plain Farmer Jackson.

A fine firmer lie who xva3 bred a lawyer, and who' has not done a day's work on a farm for the last fifty yeai s, indeed if he ever did A fine far mer with his hundreds of negro slaves to toil for him, and his overseers and task-masters to flog them if they are idle. A fine farmer who •'seldom goes abroad except in his ceaeh and attended bv a retinue of servants and outriders We" think our real farmers', our-hardy yeomanry who- eat ).he bread of their own toil, will not fail to perceive the imposition which is attempted to be palmed upow them, and the-gross insult which is offered to their understandings, when their sympathies and their support are asked for sweh a man, on the ground of his being a farmer Old Georjge the Third, of England, who actually had a farm in the vicinity of tondori 'which he often visited, the culture and manage ment of which he superintended and the produce of which he actually had regularly brought into the city and sold from his own market cuirls, was as truly a farmer as Andrew Jack

"Honor and gratitude to the mar, who has filled the measures vl his

•R^I^AS'JKFFEOSON. The above which has been going the rounds of the Jackson papers oi twelve months is a forgery has been repeatedly proved to bfe so, arid those ho publish must know it to be an entire perversion ot fttr. Jelfcrsoi? sentiment. Mr. Jefferson's toast, at the* Lynchburg dinner, was— 5• "ilonor and gratitude

,"

Or might as icsll' make

y\

1

«COA*TS' ON WRONG." ^A respectable citiren of Ross county, in a conversation on the Presidential question, informed us among other things, thai he had heard some of his neighbors observe, ol !ace/'that they hadput on their coats vrongsidc oat, in "reference tj th* present great political questioh, and that they were determined to change them "—meaning that 'they had M«»retofore supported the causeofthr Hero, and were now about'to trans^ 'er their feeliiigs and sufi'iages to th? \dministra'tion 'These honest citu ^eus are hot the only'ones- who have worn their coats wr^ng. Thousands of others are in the same unbecom? ing predicament. The fiero, evetii in this respect, not only wears hicoat wrong side out," but chooses one, we presume, rT foreign manufacture.-—

Nat

I

Lpt!ers from Utica of the 12th insi. (the day of the. meeting of the young men's convention) stale thu. upwards of three hundrttd delegates 11aI arrived, and it was supposed the whole number, when all assembled, would not (all short of four hundred

It was confidently stated there that Mr Granger had declined the anti mason nomination.—[_«.V. V.Amer,

The yeomanry of Kentucky have a second time, in the language of Gen. Jackson ^ingtoriou^ljj"1 deser led the Hero of New Orleans WUat ingratitude! and what a .sign!! -".T Buffalo Emi.orium.'-'J

O

The people of Louisiana have not forgotten the conduct of Gen. Jack son -when in power They declare by -4heir suffrages the intention to withhold from him in future, Ihe poto cr to trample upon their liberties and the Constitution—a good sign

The Washington (Pa.) Reporter says, "The Jackson elector oi this county in 18^4, is now for the ada

Nelson Patterson, secretary the, wlifte washing coran ittiee of Nashville, has be^dettcted in forgeries to the amount often th'ctisand _dol-

iurs:

on. -r%

iiiiiftfitfitfi jflggftf'

/f

TO

THOSE

who have 'filled the measure of THEIR country's glory."' Th6 reader will perceive that tnis is very different from that given by the Jackson papers —Mr. Jeflerson made no particular allusion •to the man

but included him, probably, a

inong ''those who had filled the measures of their country's glory.'' Neither did 'Mr. Jefferson allude "to the man" as a 6aadidate for the Presidency, for at thattim'e, he, Jackson, had not bfeen thought'of for that distinction: nor had he himself an opportunity1 to "laugh heartily at the dea of his being candidate for the presi' dencij -When Mr. Jefferson Contemplated^Jackson as a candidate for the Chuff Magistracy of the United States, we are informed by Mr Gilfaiter, the editor of tli6 Charlott^ ville Advocate, and a warin friend of Jackson, that he, IVTr Jefferson said:

&

tnused with the playTul manner in wji'ich the Hartford Mercury tortures the veteran of the Ricliiuinid Liiquirer in the annexed critique

Eiv.

The Richmond Enquirer give* the following portrait of Genera! Jackson—-and we invite ourjankee farmers to note particularly, thi* picture of the Tennessee Farmer, as it may be of iibportant service to (hem, in preparing tor the fall ,attl» Shows and Fairs.—Here it is."

A straw hat covers those white locks bleached by the midnight dew in the field—a coat of plain homespun made on his farm, is substituted for the uniform, gorget and golden cpauletts. He carries in his hand a smalf pruning knife, with which he trims his young trees and bushes he watches his reapers in the fieldhe s6es his cattle

3

,t

•ite. 'V

Three of the standing committee appointed by the Harn.4iur Jack »un Convention, have turned fioni tire hero!

4 1

An administration convention has been held in Alabama, and an electoral ticket nominated.

Unless, says ?be Philadelphia Aura, the milk of human kindness h^ tally turned and cuidled by Hcrwitiige rcnutt, the reader wsilbea-

fed

fireside

W\9

a

of a Cork a Soldier

Sailor

a

a President oj Jhidrew

Moose, as

oii

^Baltimore Pat.

Jiparty divided against itself The JaUaomaWin ilVtsbu^g a its vicih itv, having disagreed amongst themselves respecting a suitable candidate lor Congress are resorting to ou rag^ The portion friendly to domestic industry, Irave discarded Mr. STEVKNSO N, their late Representative, on account of his known oppositio to that interst, and nominated Judgr WILKINS tlie other part ai'nere tr Stfvenson, The Wilkins party were about to establish a press for issuing a paper when their Jackson opponent's, under cover of the night entered the crffice, broke dov»n*the matter preparred for the paper, scattered the types, displaced every thing within their reach, and carried oft'the manuscripts,-—"^// for Jackson ai Jrquirer vv-

6

foddered

and foddered

his Iambs' shearfcd and petin'd—and lie sees his cider pressed —his cows milk'd and churn d~ and his hay

rak into

mows—his oat» and

wheat thrash'd—his fruits gather'd —and when the

44

aves all this trouble, and sees Ins negroes thum his vtry cows and that tooj after they Have tern tnilk'd ^He sees his cider prets lhis too, i3 a newvoperaiiuh—perhaps tu save casks. Most probably, by this tneahs he is enabled [Of'Ss not more wonderful than ina«y miracles his worshipers ascribe to him,] to press ahog*li«ftd into a barrel. [By-the by«, apple's do not grow in Tennessee, at least not iu quantities for naking icider, anil this accouuts for tn'fe General's pressing his cider^, •vhich we suppose he does after it arrives from Ohio, from whence Nashr ville & its neighborhood is supplied

Mc sees his hay rjk into [_h uses a patent i*uke] h?s oats an "Wheat thrash'd—[tiie General's farm is a cotton plantation.^ rjid wnen the curfew tolls the knell ot parting day, he repairs to his fire•iide,1' &.C, '"•**.Yes reader, after vvaiching "the reapers in the field, seeing his hay raked into moirs. Irs ats and wheat tiirash'd "lat/ on a summers daythe

BY Thomas

&

curlew tolls the

knell of parting day," he repairs to

and is surrounded by Ikis

friends and neighbors, and the evening closes in rational and iinprovirig converse. This is the picture ol the Tennessee Farmer—it is the picture of Andrew Jacksen. as he now is

Hi watches his reapers in the field !"—The Generafs reapers, ydu will recollect, are all slaves. We •nentiou this as an apology for this modern Cincinnatus watching his reaper^." t* TIe*sces his cattle jed

.!"

How extravagant to

feed £$ fodder all in one day.

kinbs sheared and penned lhi^. rennessee Farmer inu^t be a rai**econoiuist to shear lambs that are so tender as Require to be penned His negroes heads would yieid a much •jetter crop He sees"-his cows milk'd and ckwnC.d"\. 'l^ere'd farmfor you!

,|f

Oh ye people of Goshen, how are ye behind hand While ye are obliged to watch the rising ot the cream —while your wives and daughters n-e'obliged to scour their pails and pans, gather the cream* and churu by manuel labor, (unless you chance to churn by water er by dog power) tiie General by some hocus-pocus

Tennessee Ear­

ner, at 8* b'clock P. M. repairs to his fireside—Wliew—we are in a perspiration at.'the very thought of it.

The Tennessee,Farmer's ways are not as other nien's ways," and tlie Tennessee Farmer'' i^ not like other farmers, btit a cold blooded

man.

Upwards of a month has now e!aps-( ed since the election, aud we have no official information as to the result. An official statement ot the votes for governor and lieut governor, in Kentucky, has boon receive ed at this place a week or two since. In that state it is made the duty of. the sheriff of each county (o attend at the seat of government and compai the Votes, in this state the returns are directed to the speaker of the house of representatives, and the mail is depended upon* for a sale conveyance—l^speriohce has told us that this is a very unsafe method. When Gov ltay was first elected, on comparing fhe votes, the returns from heveral coiinties were missing. No sevious difficulty occurred at that time, yet in closelv contested elections much trouble might be occasioned'. aiid the slate put to a far greater expehse tlian the ffees that would he allowed tbe sheriffs or otii er officers, for attending and comparing the v^tes. ^Ve would remark (hat the mail is not depended upon to convey the returns of the elect.on for president and vice president, yet the communication from the different states to Vashington is far more certain than from the various counties in a state.— Indianapolis Gazeite•

BLANK .VOTE BOOKS foi sale at this Office.

.f'4:

wiimk

A'-V. 1J

W. T.

about live mil^s S "aV^0n» fordsvilie in Aiont^otJe'v

•oiu Cku

'y .-cuntv

'v Brtv 1

iorse. '5

supposed to he 7 years o!/} il,-out 14 hands hi»h

racks, has :i small tar h«ad, his ne-.u- lur.d f00t .V|'S.

O WU«

lcr«'

hair done by a saddie-no uthe,rmarL Appraised (0

brands by E. Thompson and l\ before i^e this 2Cth d, LODF)

:(|ii

Ha in

of J.

M. CURRi-. j,

25*3t

-NOT'.CH

given that the eata fee!

Is hereby

James Alclii^rdij, late uf ParU_ County, j. believed to be insolvent, arni

advance on cost.

4k

His

that

settlement of it will ba claimed such.

Septernbei^I3tlf,

"CASH-

ai

rJGl'11'

1

HE Subscriber has opened

E

ViWj

in tbe corner of the YTbite Houseoccupied by Mr Francis And opposite to tha stores of JbSIS' Lintons, and lJouner, Reynolds Early: which will be sold at

a small

B. M'C-ALL.

Terre-Haute, Spt 4 18^8

—4f9

AT the Steam Boat landing, atIht Village

of

Eugeni',

ty,

Vermiliun'cciE-

Indiana,

tivo

lar^e

RceVIioak.

These BOATS were built cith most durable materials, and in t»c most substantial maimer. One of them carries 3a tons, the otli'-rCC. They are.both well avianted to the

Wabash Trade, 1

drawing but little -.vater. in proportion to their size respectively. They are both partly new. They will be sold on ressonable terms, and oa liberal credit.

For further particulars

THOSE

apply (o

Messrs. ColSetts of Eugene. S* R1CHAKD Uli'KERSON. LEONARD COLMAN.

Eugene. Aug 30, 1828

Public

INHERE

fi

tc»

WILL RE SOLDAL

'-V Public

'endue,

at the. house of atr.es Brooks in Culisle, Sullivan county, One set of Hatter's fools i'M*-

niture. I/ats, il'at cites On Saturday, the fourth

h-

d:uj

clock,tA. M.

cj

1 j'

her next, sale to comaita^

111

ALSO

At the Itouse of John Jackson,/in Uiley Town,hip, Vi-o One Saddle and Bridie,^ '{Portmanteau and I

Two W alches,

v. Pw Hats. urJ other«! ,OnSatU'day,thellth^vnU«' tqber next. Sale to coiinnc-ce o*c!oek, A. JSI. ., v,

O N JACK 0,Jr.Aon of Caleb Pcdd:co:mh^cu' Sept "f, IS-3 ---43vv

TERRE41AS^

interested in the

flaute RACE"")

1•

have

agreeu

first day's race shall be^e i-, and repeat, for a purse Oi

Eiehtij Dolhtn.

Tl\f seconil dav'ii i-lcL

(,v0

and in all oil." 'fMt: (•...ed by the us.*! liac«3 to coniu.fiu. day of October.

QJJN

A large quantity HI

J#

1

et'

repeat, for the entrance the- first and second third days race one pde for a handsome „rn)F

4

SADDLE and f.p!Free for any llorse, (iiit ding. The winning 'or~

sE

day not to be entered on or the wiuning horse of

uA

4 i2

on the Hind llo.*«.'»c' fir age

yt

f.

of tp?

U'l

lGtfc

Kegs of a 1 Mzes—!^rJ"y fl W M. .,, May 16,

ACCOU-*

S

jS

reasonable tfim»^ produce as wiU

thc'^