The Western Register and Terre-Haute advertiser, Volume 5, Number 32, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 1 November 1828 — Page 2

Foreign A'eivs. C* tl, From th* Boston Patriot, Oct 3.

LATEST EUROPEAN INTELLI GKNCE. By tlie arrival at New York of the packet ship FluriJa, in SO .l»y»»ro'.. LverpooU we l^ve Lund™ dates Au» !i|. and Liverpool to Sept.

™OnS,"e 2Sth August Parliament was nromgued to Oct. SOth, when i. isesp"^'

1

to be prorogued to smm

(lav between llir'n and 26 th Nu veinner, tlien to iiieet tor -despatch

Anlnlprovcd state "l weather li'ad aliaveti ihe alarm aboftt the crops. and prices of bread stutls were rather on the decline.

Science and philosophy have just lost Doctor Gall. That illustrious oUysiciati died latterly, after ft long and severe illness, at Montiogue,

Nothing definitive is received from the Russian head quarters, ex cent that there had been several day* hard fighting before Sbumla, which still held out. The Jurki.h bulle tins represent their own arms to have been successful in the same aftairs in which the Russians claim decisive victories.

It is said that the object of the emper or Nicholas in proceeding to O tien,a, wheie he arrived Aug. 8th, to meet Lord Heytsbury and othe. diplomatic characters, to form a Confess on the subject of Turkey, or in other word?, they are to try by re monstrance or persuasion to induce Nichuias to relax his purpose of desrroying the Turkish power fcu-

*\dmira! Grcig, with his fleet, had arrived at Fuvarna, whence it was to proceed to invent Varna

The report of tne capture of Erzerum appears to be unfounded. The dates liom Constantinople are to July 29 lb, at which time the counsels of the Sublime Porte were said to he still f»r war. (iixcce —Considerable speculation had been exited by the sudden deprjrture of Admirals Cedrmgton and l)e Ri^ny from Corfu, with a considernMe°naval force, towards the close ot ii 1 v. The French expedition to the Morea wa*- expected to arrive there the latter end of August. l. object is stated by Gen. Mai son. in his proclamation, to be to put 'end to the oppression of a cele•b ited people L- The Ulands ot Sepineza, near Mo'ion, are apposed rendezvous, in case of its being dispersed by any Accident. i'he French troops it is said will tTieet with some resistance. Six thousand Turkish troops are said to occupy Rubtta and the Acropolis Tatras.Coron, Modon and Nuvarin .are garrisoned by l'urk«*.

Lord Cochrane left Paris on Sunday for Marseilles, accompanied bj "Mr. George Cochrane —At Marseilles' his lordship will embark for Greece on board the Mercury armed steam vessel, carrying two 74 pounders. It. is supposed that he is now in the employ of the F.ench.

Ilas itiand Turkey —No official inform iiit»n bad been 'received in London from the head quarters of the •Kus«ian anny, since Aug. 25—

Meantime despatches h^d been re*o»ivid at the foreign office, the conents of which had not tianspired clown to the evening of August ^SOth, and a hundred rumours were afloat, most of which were of a char•actcr unfavorable to the Russian "am:1*.

On the 2eth of July, an attack nvas made upon the Turks before fchumla, headed by the emperor «3NicMlas in person. Alter a good -le»l of hard fighting, the Russian •bulletin says, being repulsed on evv, suie, the Turks withdrew under .the walls of Shumla A*ter this the 4-mperor left the army for Odessa. .On the same day, there was some

t,f

Varna, the 'i'urks having

^anacked the right wing of the Russian cny hefcieging that place —In the Russian account, it {s^tafed^tliat .•tt.e I uiks were driven into the,fortlirss in great disorder, arid with rr.ucti lo*s.f Hut it is added, as they t-i'ad taken in front of Lieutenant--cVneral Uszakcw, a favorable posi1'on tlie latter would not expose his corps to danger, and he retired behind the village of Diewent to join the fii at brigade of the 10th division

infantry, under Adjutant General IVMikeudroh", as that brigade was on its march to reinforce the ^corpa be-

Varna."—Courier.

The report that the Russians have .-roceiveda severe check at Shumla appears to have obtained general cieditj and the assertion that Government has advices of this event i? reiterated with increased confidence.

It ia .x:ii!« that alter sev, ral days se vcre fighting, the Russian* were com ))flkd° to «&ti hack, with a loss of 'jO,(JOO men it killed' arid woundeu *L-'Jl}ie Standard,

Xlie iman papers w.ould per gUii'Je us that laifec estimates have

Sff S I*

Ven formed of the stren»ft oT Turkish army: that instead ot GO .000 heir infantrv i» 200,000 .trong,hat they haie 30.000 cavalry—and (jiat in Shumla alone, there are 5CO oieces of cannon. Hence»the necessity of stiong reinforcements tor the Ku'sian army. 'l'hese account, uake us resrct that ofcciai intelli senccis not dispatched mure frequentlv&s|.eedily— Courier Aug-0

Silistria was invested by tlie Kus.ian ciivision under Geu Xloth, July 21. -t*

London, Sunday, Aug. SI.—To the ^reat surprise and disappointment If the public, another week has passwithout bringing any intelligence of the battle which was expected to be sanguinary and decisive ot the late of Turkey. We can account tor this delay only on the supposition that the Russians find the lurks too formidable to be attacked tor had the Russians met with any success they would have been active in circulating the news, and had they met with any severe check the Ausrians would have circulated it ti them. The last bulletin is dated the 28th ot July from the camp round Shumla, and as the army broke up from before liazargik on the loth Ju |y, it had been twelve days in making so short a progress. There is a report that Varna has been captured, but we do not think it.

[From the JV Y. American

The arrival ot the Florida, las? evening, gives us our London papers to Slst Aug. inclusive, and Liv prpool of 1st September. Ihe tm important items of intelligence, an that as yet there is no certainty any battle having been fought a Scoumla, and that the harvest hoti in En«land and France would b» well got in, and produce a good av erage crop

As to the hostilities between the Russions and Turks, there were rumors of hard fighting tor nine days, and much loss sustained, and no progress made by the Hussions. We think it can hardly be doubted tha' the Russians had met with desperate resistance Despatches of a late date vcre received in London on the 29th but on the SOth their contents had not vet transpired. The Courier o« ihe 30 h, in the evening^ says, relation to them— *,

Ihe substance of the despatches brought by Mr. Clewi from lierlin, which he left on the "2nd, has not yet transpired And heuce, we are unable to contradict or confirm the reports in general circulation yesterday evening, of several days hard fighting before Choumla. l'he report at Berlin was, that no decisive advantage had been obtained by the Russians, because no additional bulletin had been published in 'he Berlin State Gazette,

It way be that the despatches do not relate so much to military operations, as to correspondence or ex planations between the European cabinets.

Doubtless4 the despatches related to some important matter# connect ed with the military operations of the contending powers. Meantime while all were on tiptoe tor news, the French and English papers art speculating largely on the probabUconsecjuences ot the Russian inva sien, and the Courier seems very anxious to persuade its readers, that there is nothing to be feared from the ambition of Nicholas, -in allusion to whom it thus speaks: "Can he be so addicted to a servile imitation of the ofd conquerers and their mad schemes, as to think that addition to his empire can increase his strength? Or is it impossible or improbable that another ambition should fill his mind—that ot affording, if not the first, the mosl conspicuous example ot a sovereign, to whom the confidence of others became the most effectual of obligations, and who would derive nothing from conquest but his share of a gen eral benefit? The restoration of Constantinople to the Greeks, suys a political writer, under the guarantee oi all Europe tor their independence and neutrality, as possessors of an important naval pass, trom which the military ships ol all nations should be excluded, or nearly so, offers itself as a solution ot the main difficulties, which are foreseen, when the present campaign is thought ot. The possibility of such a conclusion ot a long apprehended contest, and touch considered danger has doubt» less been looked at by the greater power?.,- but we have no special information upon the subject, nor uiti•cial authority lor this suggestion."

The intimation in this paragraph, that Constantinople may again becouic the capital of the Greeks un tier tlie guarantee ot Europe, is important and significant

It seems quite certain that the Turkish forces are more numerous ihan the estimates of them, by the difference ol 200,QUO miaul.y, intead of 00,000— £0,000 cavaliy instead of 10,000—and at Choumla,

aldffe, 500 pieces of cannon. furce, with thes'ai daid of the prophet unfurled fatalism to jack them. ,nd the Houria standing ready to revive into Paiadnc those who fall in battle will make a d^parate light ^tiil v-e believe the Russian must Succeed. Pending the preparation* required lor the attack on bnumla, the Emperor had suddenly gone back to Odessa, ... ...

Of the harvest. Bell a Weekly Messenger of the 31st August, thus peaks:—

"The fine weather whica 1,* now

trailing

districts cuncur in the same

tone with those from the agricultural

calls torth gratitude trom an |1jc|l

l'

ceases We refer to another article in the 5 V* reicr iu auuiiiv

same paper, concerning the means ot

The only objection to this is, that i' :s contrary to the Commercial Cou vention between the two countries, which guarantees equality of duties 10 the shipping of both countries.

FROM GREECE.

We learn, by way of Corfu, that he Sultan has given positive orders to Ibrahim Facha, not by any means leave the Morea. Intelligence has also been received at Cortu, July 23, that 25 vessels trom Alexandria la«ien with provisions, and having troops on board had entered the port of Navarino. It is added that Ibrahim Pacha has sent troops into the interior ot the Morea to cut the corn and carry oft all the cattle, and hat these troops have spread devastation in every direction, and massacred some Greeks. As soon as this news arrived, the English and French admirals proceeded to Navarino with all the vessels under their command. Valley Bey, an Albanese Captain, having placed himselt at the head of 8000 men marched upon Ar. ia & after an assault of several hours f.owk that fortress, and made the Bey prisoner. He then sent his brother, a man -of great courage, at the head if one thousand men, to Reschid Pacha's camp, to demand ot him 6000 purses (about a million of Turkish piasters) threatning in case of refusal, to sell Arta to the Greeks as well as Prevessa, of which he was abouf to take possession. In fact he did march on Prevessa, and make him self master of it. He is now waiting (o know the result of his coinmuni ation to Reschid Pacha.—llaltimore Patriot. ?, n'

Beacon Office,

Jyorfolk, Oct ber o, 1828. A gentleman who came passenger in the ship Helvetius, Capt. Taylor which arrived in Hampton Roads, yesterday, in the short passage ol 36 days from Nieu Diep, (Holland,) oforin8 that a sanguinary battle was fought at Shumla (date not precisely reuiembered) between the Rusian & Turkish armies, in which the Russians tost 20,000 men, in killed, ounded and prisoners, and so formidable were the Turks, that it was

ments ot 100,000 to ensure their pas sage through the Balkan Mountains The Russians, however were still ad vancing.

on, Com. Creighton, sloop of war Kie, and schooner Sliaik, in search ot the Buenos Ayiean squadron, under command of Com Foinian, which have been at anchor for some time in Fort Pond Bay, Long-Island. On ascertaining that they had left our coast, the cutter sailed this morning '.ojoin Gorn. Creighton, oft* Montagu and inform him ol their departure— when the Hudson, it is expected, will proceed on her way to the Brazils, and the Erie and 8hark return to New York The bailing of the lludsoii, Erie and Shark from NewYork, in pursuit of this squadron, was, we Uarn, in consequence of ur dera from the Navy Department, owing to representations having been made to our government by the British and Spanish Ministers, that Com Forman was violating our neutiality, by enlisting men and receiving on board muni nuns of war, while at anchor in our waters.

••m*.

.ri.A

This president —E\ery citizen wh«has any knowledge at all of our pub iic servants, is acquainted with Hit remarkably laborious habits ot the

gu was# a9

enjoy has given actvvity to every ,required by a resolution of dates, are elected.4 and the repoits trom^ aH Uit

vjuh"* VOO

Conjrrcgg

,LV

to

Iiiivauiv nviv «'v ».— ISUUe, lliey UIU IIUI tnivi till. ....Vlouud expedient to order reinforce-

a

tx

rilOM OUR CORRESPONDENT,

OJJice of the Mercury. Newport, 6»ept SO $ The revenue cutter Active, Ca

hoone, arrived here yesterday from but we must make that trinmph so New-Yoik. Capt. C. sailed from N. signal and decisive, that it may long V. in co. with the S. frigate Hud- remain a lesson to future demagogues

frigate

U* Bo-t Pat.

A gentleman of New-York lias deposited $1.^00 to the credit of the Ex President Monroe *l'or the payment of interest on the ooilgage§ on his estate. f*-" T-*

President. Me i3 perhaps the rarli est riser in Washington, and applies hi in «e If to the various duties of hi.* office,'with an asviduity which is iday an election took ,• without example, perhaps in any pub- Members of the Mu

researcjl an

ex

parts of the country—that every ,writer8__anx}ous to complete the re- 291 votes. ihing is proceeding in a way which before the*close of the session,

)e

IAUA

III

I

or

i. .i. rvf thie r.nnn- in «nmnlotinii retaliating the Taritt of this coun try, which is written in justification of the principle ot the Tariff, while it suggests the expedient ot retaliating its effects, upon this countiy, by imposing upon American shipping, in English ports, an extra tonnage duty

a

until the eleventh hour but as

ffin nflrt fn ori Aiira tKoir n!iu. .. /«an far as vigilance and industry can make amends for delay, they wilt atone for it Our triumph in this state is past all hazard or doubt although the extent of that triumph depends greatly upon the unwearied vigilance, and unremitting assiduity.

4

We ought not to be, and we must cattu. jot be, satisfied with a bare triumph: '""•""j ......

it which no •nemb ol the I (•spect that tliey win t!,i Icct at least twenty.5,jx

lie man, since the time of President for the Stale of Marv'aVV^ Washington—We recollect learning county being entitled to V,!,

the fact, when he was preparing hit bers and the cities

tucmv.1, cities of At! extremely elaborate leport on the, Baltimore to two each. intricate subject of weights and mea- In Baltimore city, MesfrgV

Secretary of hon and Stuart, the Jackson

make,—a work which,] McMahon's majority overT

comprehensive- nan, is 373 votes,

torted the praise of English Bteuart's majoi

urose during nearly the whole win- Yesterday was a proud day "Ll pied fnendsottl.e Administration jA, timore for, although we hav

Ui UBC U"111 ter at three o'clock, and occuj

ler al inrec

m8e

|f

tiuviv, —r*

three hours before day

every morning, in completing elected our candidates,

the task assigned to him. He ac- gained a signal victory^Ucha, complished it, and the report, com- tory as will make our triui^ prising between two and three hun- this electoral district in dred octavo pages, was sent in be- next, morally certain. It „J fore Congress adjourned. We men- recoliectcd, that at the last Pres^ ion the incident merely to illustrate tial election, the Jackson ticket! the habits of the President, and show (airied nine hundred majority,

how necessary some relaxation must G968, the whole number of vote be to a man of sixty, when the heats given. Now they have on/y thr of our long Southern Summers add hundred and seventy siz mjmtu.^ their enfeebling effect to that ot con- of eight ihousand Una hundred utant labor. Without such relaxa- eleven, the average number of vo tion, and the renovation of a few given. This electoral district) week.3 annually spent in the bracing composed of the cities of Baltimosea air of his -native climate, his and Annapolis, and Anne Arunde health would sutler, if his life were not endangered by it. He, there fore, almost every summer, makes a visit to Massachusetts ot some weeks which he spends quietly amongst his kindred and friends, and returns to the seat ot Government, prepared for the labors ol the Winter. It.ia has been thought so reasonable, indeed necessary an indulgence^ tor which he has the example of all his predecessors, that it is rarely that it has been the subject of remark or censure, except Jby the vulgar and ignorant The President's recent journey has, however, been made the occasion for an indecency, which we think deserves to be held up to general reprobation. The New-York Enquirer of the 22nd ult: exceeding the license it enjoys, ot being almost as scurrilous as it pleases, has published, editorially, an advertisement, of which the following is the begin ning: ••4.500 dollars reward.—Ran away from the Ciiy ot Washington, John

Quincy Mums, President of the "United Slates. He was last seen in Massachusetts on Horseback," &c. Ike.

We should suppose that political opposition would hardly justify such language, in the opinion of the most heated partisan. '1 he Uichmond Enquirer too, the drivelling circulator of the decencies of its New York namesake, talks of "the electioneering journey of the President.""

j,

J\'at. Intelligencer.

3

^"New York

Up and doing.—It

rejoices us to know, and to be able to assure our friends, that in all parts of this state, the friends of the present Administration are thoroughly organized, aud zealously, actively and efficiently engaged in the good work. 'In some parts of the state, it is true, they did not enter the vine-

1827,

signal and decisive, that it may long $1,200,000 of. jn 1850-— remain a lesson to tuture demagogues cent, stock, re

and unprincipled politicians—teach- being the bna yesters? mg them the utter folly and the ut- Canals inTr0»r ~Dercent

ter hopelessness of attempting to taken at Astor, lead the people of this great state company iormea ,. into a pelpable abandonment not on- Prime, W a* ,j g. ly of principle but of their own in- Buckner, an terests, for the sake of assisting to Philadelphia to elevate to power a few restless COACH. ,. and ambitious political aspirants. #^iloiv-cit'ie We do not say to our triend»—continue to bestir yourselves and make on the %,»»«••«

sure of twenty electors for they are inga cuach

sure already: but we|io spy to them town and ^cvv-JlM —leave no houest means unemploy- alari^ the

—ira»c nu uiHicai Iiitmu nnen

ed, to make sure of twenty-si.# elec- they shou.i tors, by the vote of the people thus they are app ».j V.. r»tr.u

ed, to make sure of twenty-six' elec- they shou.i PP natai"6W

able exertions—with such exertions run he drawn

as toehcrojtcs themselves are making broad, in behalf oi theif sinking and despe- hones com'"

rate caure—-there is no difficulty in the bag^aJS

dvxnji thi$y for vviili the exception ot on uMi

.1 u#iil llti iattAlVih

the ihirAf the seventh} and the twelfth distiicti-— which ctioose live elecun —they have not another or sale tiis*

rict in the state. Tliis alone showa ^ate «t

ihat it is very possible to elect by thf.j and ivi» pointers people twenty nine electors lor Mr timiiiKi iv

Adhiu&. aud when so much can be '»j»erations,

Adams, aud when so much can Ue Tl'uuv'"l

be done, it burely is not looking for lent to j, ,oo much—especially with Ihe spli-V^Lle

1,3 ll)

[From the AHVLANi) hLKirrfe

c?

J,lte

of HA,

1

tifi

0

aP0lb2,

majority owrTier^j

a

.,,™, .-t.

Average

votes.

wished to present it, he

majority

Jackson

We

0Dt,

county, and it is pretty certain tha Annapolis and Anne Arundel wj| give the Administiation a majorit abundantly sufficient to offset tki small Jackson majority in the citv 0 Baltimore besides, the Administra tion party will at least gain

150

4

in

Baltimore in November. The Administration increase since the last Presidential election, is 963 that0 the Jackson party 440. Thus ai. all our assertions that great aud io), portant changes were taking placeirv favoj 01 the Administration fulljYeH ified. •. yii t* t'Sr

Ji sign in Monroe County, Id In the Bioomington Republican&. Indiana Gazette, »f November Sd, 1827, edited by Geo J. B. L#ire we find under the head of **Jact«oa in Indiana," the following statemecta "At our Regimental muster here, (in Bioomington) 011 Thursday list, the ?ote of 4he regiment mi taken, on the Presidential election. Tt» citizens generally, were invited t* to form with the uiilitia, cumbering in all upwards of one thousand 8 were counted fur Atliros, and balance A*LL for Jackson Saturday last, (4th October, 1828) the regimental Truster for Monrd Countv, again took place in Bioomington", aud an elect»jnoo dential question was again had. regiment was drawn land in solid column, and

,nor®

that the vote would be taken,» which a bis dram was promised voter,"and Col. L« «he o,iina,UH..«, er raving speech. But it wu do. Out of 515 persons 200 stood as a firm phalan* administration. M««y«f/1"'"' of the adniinistratioB in not present ami 4 of the voters ot the coun years of age, were not 1

only 28 votes outot

8

he

Monroe for AJamS) an goodly number ,1 Truly the Jackson cau.t is ing the wrong way in A

ns

iJfr-

P. S. Monroe has been ed as one of the

stron°

in our state lor Jackson.^ jolirnil.

OHIO CANAL ^f^per

conl

plete]l'e

ated

are a

ttiflf aid-Mr. Adams, in our elector- is calculated toi^ and i»^ al college, twenty-eight. With suit- two regu ai

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winch

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bv

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about 4'-

in

aciii»c

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es the whole mac. a roller to Uutie" aM

road over which

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