The Western Register and Terre-Haute advertiser, Volume 5, Number 28, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 4 October 1828 — Page 2

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aod was th.-n non-suited. Farmer Jicksnn had always considered tha t'u- seven too, was a majority of th* wtmle twenty four, and that the faro ia as much his at this time as if Jia received the unanimous terdn of the Jury. The arguments pro and con are something like these Farmer Jackson thinks he ought to have had it for wages, and that h«: never was paid enough. The Jun thought he had no title to it, and that he had been pretty well paid Farm er Jackson thiuks'that the Jury ought to hive thought as he did. 1 ne Jun think that they hare the right to think for themselves: hut Farmer Jackson's lawyers at Albany, say that the only law they knew which ought to govern the case, was laid down by Baron Steuben, the mtirnin* of the battle of Monmouth. A Colonel of one of the Regiments had changed the position of hi® line. Ba Ton Steuben observed it as he rode along, and asked who had ordered it to be done. VVhy," said the Colo Bel, "I thought, sir—-—" thought, sir? replied the Baron,

44What

&

the d—' put it into your

head that you had any right here to think for your self?"

Jackson's style Royal—In a letter iiddressed to Judge Fromentin, dated Pensacola, September S, 1821, Gen .Jackson wrote thus— •'Recollect the admonition/gave you, when before we, on the 24th 4'ultimo, and attend to it: or you "will be treated and punished* as you deserve."

T! is audacious language was use to a Judge of the United States- If General Jackson was thus arbitrary and imperious when only Governor of a teritory, what would he hp it ne were chosen President of the United States?' fTe The People.

Aot dead but speechless—The Jackson papers are busy re-publish ipg a paragraph cautioning their partisans against a report that is to be circulated on the eve of the election, General Jackson is dead."— This rumor the opposition call44 hei lwh." So far, the project is hellish," for the plot originated in their own papers. We challenge the whole pack,and the Tell-lie to boot, to produce such a paragraph from any of the Administration prints. This rumor is about oa a par with the story hatched up by the Jackson fact'on that the hero was born of a mulatto, in order to get it copied into the Administration papers.—But the thing did not tike: the pistol misled fire. lb

Foreign jXews.

It was generally believed that Ibrahim Pacha would shortly evacuate the 3jlorea.:" '^It wa9 rumored that the Porte had agreed to accept of the mediation of 3?ranee and England.

The French Chamber of Peers have terminated the deliberations on the project of law respecting the journal. The censorship, the monopoly ofjour«Hals, and a law of tendencies (as to lib el,)

have

alljbeen.done away The

French nation is not divided by unequal Iaws^ and the people, instead of quarrelling with each other, are united in rectifying the defect of their constitution.

Fro oa intelligence in the German^ papers, it appears that the evacuation of the Morea haB probably taken

fV.

A".

jace,or will take place immediateThe proposals for the evacuatioi were conveyed to the Lord high Commissioner at Corfu, by a deputy from Ibrahim Pacha, his relative and first General. The plague broken out in the whole camp of

Ibrahim Pacha, who fled for shelter i-vii board a vessel at Navarin. I

THE RUSSIANS ANI) TURKS. a The Russians give the following account of the result of their campaign, no doubt as a set off to the imputation of tardiness in their movements. The campaign commenced on the 7th May, and up to the 1st

July we have occupied Mol­

davia and (Vatlachia, passed the Danube at Issaktchi under the fire of the Turks, destroyed the^r flotilla on that river, advanced *Tt 'the right bank of that river to the wail of Trojan, taken seven fortrssses, namely, lasaktchi, Brahilow, Matchin, Hir aowa, Kustendtchi, Anapa, and lo--leza, and taken in those places, and in various actions with the enemy, above 800 cannon.

The Turkish decree, directing that all garrisons who surrendered should be put to death, has had a contrary effect to what was intended. The troops who had gallantly de-. fended B.ailow, hearing of the decree, and fearing it shobld be. put in force against them, have requested te b* allowed to remain prisoners of *Ar to Russia —The reauest, however, was rejected by the Russian command". AH account* agree that the Kugiian Army would be, in a

A

fHi

mm-a ,st

hort time, in possesion of all the orti along the Black'Sea. The Ru*ian General Paakewitch hail matfe -imself master of Bajasid, Kara, and \ckalzicken, in Asiatic Turkey

From the Uelfasl TVhtg. Russia and Turkey .—The Russians are proceeding slowly, buter fertivelv, to the accomplishment or

rheir

ultimate o"bject. Besides Rrai'o\v. the fortresses of Matchin, k.us "endzin, and Hirsowa, have (alien in succession. It is understood that they will cross the Balkan mount »ins by the most eastern pass, which is the easiest and most accessible ol fhe five, and possesses many advantages from its adjacency to the sea. They will thus avoid coming in con tact with the fortress of Shulma, and will be enabled to advance with greater rapidity towards Adrianople. This route the Russians, in former times, were not able to pursue, from their not having the com mand of the Black Sea and, therefore, being unable to obtain supplies from the fleet. The-superiority of their numbers will ©liable the Russians to leave in theYf rear a force sufficient to keep the Turkish army at Shulma in check. The fate of the Turkish Empire will, ip all probabil itv, be decided on th plains of Constantinople. The capture of that city is not oat of the bounds ot probability, and it will then be seen whether the Emperor Nicholas will '•xercise that moderation upon which our government professes so implicitly tore!/. 1 *n':

The London Times contain* an article from a newspaper published at Leeds, the very centre of the manufacturing district in England, attributing the momentary animation in the manufactories to the circumstance that great exportation* to this country were in progress in antici pation of the passage of our tariff law. After stating that the city of New-York and the other great depots of manufactures are quite overwhelmed with British goods," the Leeds editor proceeds thus

The severest stroke of all is the new American Tariff" the injurious consequences of which may be supposed to have begun to operate some months ago$ when the glut it has created is passed over, we may expect to see the manufacturers of the United States, flourish in uninterrupted prosperity, for they have only been kept in subjection for a long time past hy those immense sacrifi ce9 of British manufactures that have recently become too incidental to the trade to that quarter. We should resrret to see those manufactories once in unmolested enjoyment of the native market"

[Very caodest! John Bull would regret to see the Americans in possession of their own market! Let him regret!—for they will have it,

sooner or later. JVilts.

The British have mada peace with the Ashantees The African King deposited.4000ounce6 of gold with the British aad gave them twe hostages.

.4

'TERllE-H.tUTE:

SATURDAT, OCTOBER

fully—consider

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-According to the latest intelligence from Constantinople, brought hy the F'-ench papers of Monday, the Sultan began to feel his weak ness, ilnd to perceive the evil consequences of his obstinacy. Instead •if putting himself at'the head of the whole nation, as he had announced, and marching to meet the enemy if rhev dared to pats® the Danube, he had learned their arrival within 150 miles of his capitol, and yet lingered within its walls, tior even permitted the Grand Vizier to repair to the army collecting at Adrianople. We iay collecting, for it appears that no force existed at that place, no idea being entertained that the 'Balkan passes could be turned, and its security being considered insured by the position of what was denominated the main army at Shulma. The advance of the Emperor Nicholas along the coast, however, has rendered the army at Schumla totally unavailable to the defence of Adrianople, and yet it cannot be moved down from that post, as the approach ofG°neral Roth's division, from the Upper Djnube, and the march of other corps towards the Balkan de fi'es, compel the Turks to retain their station to prevent those defilea from being forced, and the junction of all the Russian corps in the plains, which extend almost uninterruptedly to Constantinople. Under these circumstances, an attempt is made by the Sultan, but too late to be successful, to assemble another army at Adrianople, to cover that city, and the direct road to the capital but Julias evidently no troops to spare. Detachments of twelve or fifteen hundred men arc sent, when formed or procured, to create an army at Adrianople, but the whole number assembled does not exceed 16,000 who, in case of attack, could oppose no resistance to the powerful array led on by the Russian Einperor.

4, 1828.

If such sentiments as the following will not open the eyes of the Northern people, the noon day sun would be invisible.—-In the name of all that is sacred to Americans I conjure readers to examine these toasts care

that they are not the

remarks of obscure individuals. liut they are sustained by McDuflie, Hamilton, Randolph, Rowan, Giles, Cooper, Calhoun and others, all supporters of Jackson, and leaders in his ranks. They demand no less than unconditional repeal of all laws for the protection of American industry —And they openly avow that it is "under the auspices of Jackson" that ihey expect to accomplish their objects- And is it possible that citizens of Indiana can so far Joose sight of their dearest interests as to aid them in these designs—a short since-Gen Jackson himself intimated that IIE was the instrument that was to bring this Government back to its original simplicity—and in some remarks upon it, I stated that his allusions were to the tariff See 28d no. of this vol. of the Register. We now see that his leading friends expressly state that it is for this purpose they support him —Let him that has eyes see: and the friends of the tariff in Indiana* who are supporting Jackson, because he is in favour of the ta-riff ask themselves if they have uot been duped, most gro»sly duped, j. -itJ-'

From the Nat Intelligencer, Jlug 9 THE CRISIS —The Augusta Chronicle furnishes ui with a glowing ac count of an "Anti-Tariff" meeting, very recently held at Edgefield, in the state of South Carolina There were present, it is said, three thousand persons, all (except four or five) dressed in ^Southern Homespun which may be a rare incident in Edgefield but which we have seen in the North State more than once in our own day, twenty years ago, when there was no excitement as Hie cause of it, nor any thing remarkable in the fact The occasion is said to have been solemn, and fhe incidents of the day inspiring We have no doubt that all this is true but to realize it all in all its exciting circumstances, one must have belonged to tfie class to whom Gen. Jackaon is said to have been referred by one of his ablest advocates, (Mr. Hamilton of South Carolina)—that is to say, a ^'Southern man, witii Southern feeling'" -l

Mr. McDuffie, who was present, delivered a speech, which is much applauded As it is to be published, we shall have an opportunity of judging of it from the report, which will probably give us a much better idea of it than is to|be gathered from the newspaper description. The following passage is marked by the narrator as a quotation, and we suppose is authentic: 'T [said he] am not one of those who have advised to measures of rashness, but I do not hesitate to say, that the charge of treason is much more applicable to those who are attempting to promote the views of our oppressors, by a hypocritical cant a bout the dissolution o/the Union, in tended to -ubserve the mere purposes of faction than the most rash and imprudent of those of our fellow-cit-izens, who, feeling the wrongs of South Carolina with a spirit that becomes her sons, are resolved to "vindicate her rights and preserve her liberty 4 .''J-'

It is very much in character for Mr McDuffie to throw himself thus in the breach to save his friends, but the attempt it appears to us, has been made in this instance with more chivalry than success How it can be treasonable or factious to depre cate a dissolution of the Union, if that be the meaning of the Orator, we cannot well make it out. *And. if Mr McD meant to deny the fact of the existence of projects hostile to the Union, it is sufficient for us to ap peal fron Mr. McDuffie to Governor Taylor, who, we suppose, will be higher authority with Mr. McD than the thousand evidences which might be produced from the public prints in his own State. He is not himself "one of those who have advised to measures of rashnessWe are glad that he is not one of them—but the very disclaimer is a distinct admission, by him, that there are such.

The resolutions/ which were of course unanimously adopted, are sufficiently violent, denouncing all le°jis lation for the protection of manufactures as "the very essence of Legislative Tyrranny There was a great dinner after the adjournment of the Meeting at which we remark, that, in one toast, Tariff is ascribed to an odious "mercenary spirit,"

r~

ant, In th« next,

of

a

tariff

f"

Coasted in the highest strains of eu logy, who was, up to the commencement of this Presidency, ostentatiously held up by his leading advocates as the firm friend of the manufactur inz interest. He Certainly was more

The following toast is another of the 'shameful attempts to overawe that independence in the press of South Carolina which has resisted the attempts to seduce or intimidate it: "The Press—May a judicious patronage induce it to speak the lan^u-tge of the iSouth The language which is here indirectly denounced as not being "the language of the South." is that which is hostile to the attempts against the Union, and exhorts topeaceful, constitutional and temperate measures, for a redress of grievances, real or supposed After this direct attempt against the free dom of the press, and what precedes it in the narration, Hie reader will hardly be surprised by the following sentiments, which succeeded it a mongr the recular toasts

.3g(

VAndrew Jackson—Under his auspices we hope to see the Constitution brought back to its original pu rity Music, Jackson's March "'Southern Excitement.—It can only be allayed by an unconditional repeal of the Tariff Music, The Campbells are Coming

1

John C. Calhoun is

man'than we are or ever

wer6j and yet is lauded to the skies as an opponent to the tariff, hilst we are attainted of something •ike high treason because we with the Governor of South Carolina, are oppo sed to pulling tbennion to pieces about a two-penny addition to the present tax on foreign woollen goods.

Next to the Toast in honor of Mr Calhoun, comes the following: "James Hamilton, Jun. 1 he Crisis demands him for our next Governor

So, then, there is 'a crisis,' Messrs Editors of the Enquirer—you who have inflicted injuries upon us for an intimation of that fact. There is a crisis and that crisis, we have other authority for saying, is indicated by movements hostile to the Union This crisis, too, demands Col Hamilton for a Governor —What sort of a crisis it may be which demands him for the next Gov ernorof the State, might be doubted, if we had no light to guide us to a conclusion Mr. Hamilton, not being able

10

accept the invitation to

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Huzza, then, for the General! "Under his auspices," the tariff is to be' unconditionally repealed!" The duties on imports are to be abolish ed! Down with the manufactures! Perish every thing but the shipping which is to carry the Southern products abroad and bring in foreign manufactures! This is what is meant by the restoration of the Constitution to "original purity

M—Oh.

Mr Van

Buren! Mr. Van Buren! How will you be able, now that the veil is cast aside, to justify that letter which you wrote to the Legislature of NewYork, in which, to propitiate the favor of the South, you gave in vour adhesion to the Restorers?- What will the people of New-York, whom you are endeavoring to wheedle into the support of Gen. Jackson, say to this open and undisguised avowal of the objects to be accomplished "un der his auspices?'—Can you any longer delude them or yourself? Do you not see that the policy thus to be established would impoverish threefourths of your constituents? "The Campbells are coming'" We think we hear you respoqd, the dr—* com ing!

As if the sentiments already given were not sufficiently plain and strong the following volunteer Toast of Mr McDuffie comes in to reinforce them: "The Stamp Act of 1765, and the Tariff of 1828—kindred acts of despotism? When our oppressors trace the parallel, let them remember that

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we are the descend *, cestry, and profit by the

a

publican principles s0 pHed? Up n.Jp

Ha

of history." ., ?^flJOni(i0l

lections so oddly

Kssoci

ri

ed, Republ.cn

farce S,^

e'e«

ble, and popular re

a

N

ssi00

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majority, heretofore tlJ

1

principle of free Kovemt*

1 Car(lii

likened to the submission*," ',1111 which the subjects of lhfl! voice whatever. This

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error of the iroon. *ei

Another

Her rights she mvst if she can, but if

,0a!t

"Sou1' CanrJ

ace*bl

not,

ier

chivalry Jwill then ton* to finA in the ditch of her W on the da,M «ho dread, SIS.

sons

Do the Editors of the Enquirer yet deny "the crisis')''^ we not meet with it every

he

there is no intension ,0

,he

the dinner which was extended to him, returning his thanks for the honor in a letter, transmits the following toast? 4South Carolina— when she commits treason, it will be the treaso a r^nfbeware." The 'tyrant' in this case, as we gather from the contest. is the Government of the United States, which now has good warning, from high authority, to 'beware This is no menace, of course, on the part oftbe honorable gentleman, but a mere cautionary suggestion. The crisis demands Mr Hamilton forixov-. INJUSTICE, from which it ernor of the State of South Carolina, and he. speaking for the £tate, bid the Government 'beware!'—and 'be ware'of what? Of-revolution We will just "hint one motion to Mr 'Ham ilton, and we do it in the spirit of kindness which we personally feel towards the marty good poin's which qualify his violence as a politician Nine times in ten, (we whisper to him^ the instigators of'revolution' are the first victims of its fury.—If he has no regard for his own safety, let him, we beg, look at home—to his family his consort—his cherub children— and ask himself what may be their fate in the event of a civil war, when 'the tyrant' is defied to arms

J'|

resi.j

/I

Editors of

Knqu.rer would make n,eir J* be .eve, what.. the ffleani N tollonmp toast., at this ,£ tnonious" dinner?

-The Cavalry of Sorth^ May they ever be ,n readiness to tect their noble state, and when cat

pro-

led on, to put to silence the framil of the tariff."

All under the "auspices"of' 1 drew Jackson!" Huzza!"TheCarA hells are coming!"

The following r-$olttimi um pns»ej| at an Anii-Tariff Jledin-in (WyrJ coitnty, Georgia

Resolved, That we disapprove of fhe re-election of PRESIDENT ADAMS—First, because he is an AD. VOCATE of this "AMERICAN SYSTKM'^JDF FAVORITISM 1 is apparent that, although an able statesmaa and enlightened man, he is unfortunately too apt to be influenced by popular motives, regardless of that sacred, that grand principle of''equal and exact justice to all," which renders him at times a loose and inconsistent politician. itesolved, That we approve of General Jackson.* we will unite in our utmost exertions to promote his election—as we consider him the best calculated to save our country from ail the horrors of discord, anarehy and ruin perhaps the only man who can disperse that darkening cloud of civil broil, which may be slow. Ifufc' surely rolling on, unless the Nor! recedes.

The Charleston Mercury (whose editor is a member of the legislature,) has contained many inflammatory essays, from one of vvhich the followifij is an extract:'

IVt do not wish disunion JV OW, {says one writer) 'If* w( canhm protection now and a wuriyfor 't he re of is I O O decision oh those who oppress its (ty theiariff] WHE

1 HER

WE SHALL

KExMAIX UNITED OR iNOr. "The crisis is by far the most inif portant one that has ever

tried

they do not. I, for one. my native glorious Mh

1

the-

institutions of our countrv I ^'^e. they will go through

it

safe. Bu

1

s^e' rf.

or wrong And regardless of ft a either may suggest, I shall no one of the first to sicken at "ft of blood

., |\P.

In the snme paper.

an0

r,

menter of disaffection argues "Answer me, what is the issue made up between our northern re a el Is it no

a

of life and dcatb-of liberty an very? Turn to oar own rewla (ion, for it must shame you, Back to the history of all Paj and tell me where and when people ever live, P^*dUberty, least pretentious to tivuiz who had been goaded by^suc and such wrongs,

an

i.yrrilad

to THE THE MUSKET to redress Again'says another writer"There is no course that iuce disunion

sooner

Ve mU5,

temporising policy.

"United States, to lay '•body, this simple alte

!0

pro-

that^»ni-

ceed upon t.e principle tea nority have a right to

cA€C^ saJr(

*ty. That they haf« a ngh Ja, when a

law

tends to our rum,

shall be inoperative on us {csetjd Another writer propos

deputation to

(t|ie

the

,Con£of.re that

|F

About the same time, *n, printed at^avauuah,^ "Strong manifestation-

the tariff,"and even ot (ion ACTIVELY TO

OK

"REPEAL THE TARIFt "COMPEL US TO IIV' says he, ''we are tur .rhu 'their doers, iiedjusticM "are unredressed, we ca rrjijiJlR '•with the Spartms, ien. 'ARMS were demanded, -take them"

S

themselve»»t

diate stop,

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'intenn'