Western Sun & General Advertiser, Volume 12, Number 15, Vincennes, Knox County, 12 May 1821 — Page 1

"EiiN SUN & GENERAL AD YERTIS El O 1 i:uau srour.j VLNCENNES, (INU.) SATURDAY, MAY 12, 1821. Vol. is. 1o. i 5.

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' iOi ! V 6Ut v; jEVEUAE A i) ir E ti VISE p i .Mi.ucil e very .Sk-5 zLr 2", at I ') i) J.,L V;l ) per annum, if pai .;i iv.i.i-e, of i WO l) )LLvKS cc J T V Ci.sr FS at v.vz en I of the year, fot w.;:j. a n te will b ; required. No si: MC'-ipti j;t z be withdrawn until xi a.v o. irage s ,u-o paid. .Iirs.i.itt3iz:is:srs conspicuously in-t,.?-;tc. .1 on the usual terms. A Ivcriiiia customer 1 ill note on ? Y:ir a I vcrtuemeats the number of urnes tiio;' wish tiiev.i inserted those sent wi'.'iout suh directions will te continued forbid, Sc must be ;vid tor accordingly. ' il)-OFFICE AIUXEV, K.:oi-;iVAaL-:; at terre haute. Spacie, Hank, (if the U. Stale:; and branches, I ae .irporatcd Banks of Boston, ( Mass.) Now York B.mk, In New-York, J j a LvihAt! a u C " m p r.n y , do.

f I V c r hMiit- fin.

Merchants' do. Union, do. Hank of Anicrica, do.

k of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. L) j. of North America, do. Do. of Philadelphia, do. Farmer's 5c Mechanic's Bank, Machacio's Bank of city Sc county, Commercial ban!; of Perm. do. Seiuiyihill ban'.;, do. Dank of Northern Liberties, do.

Unioti bank of Haitim n e, Baltimore,

ViVbr'unic s b vk, on. lMerr.hints' :-

VrankUn d er Ba'Airnorc. do. Civnmere'l i ,rmurr. i)ank do.

15 a

kkuiners' c:

. i e

it r " t .

iianN. oi : 1 :

i of ldli.!i K-

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do. do. do.

of C:dumKi ,

i:. oi Columbia.

Union oa;'.k of d jorctown, do. Parmer' U Met a-nic's bank, do. Patriotir. hank of Yashingtoiw dc. lknk tjf Va:-.i'v,rton, do. I) ,, of Metivpoiis. do. Union bank of Alerndtia, do. r.ank of Alcxrn-lrij, do. 1) . of lb 'to v. .. , do. Pare.ier' bank ( t Washington, do.

c Mechanic's bank ol lndir.na r vli;- n. Ind. )

Except Not- of a less uenomination .ban Ywc Dollars. A. Will I'LOCK, n- v- m. ( c o n n u z r n v.' J'- r. k i . y . ) -Torrc-Hautc, Sth cpt.

armer s

K) Stage- Notice. y Vhc U. 8. Mail Stai;c from rincenncs lo L'isriUc. rnr?.rwrj WILL commence KSKk itb rcKulur running on

the ?ta April, viic

St. Louis Cniun Line from Vinccnr.cs to St. I ouis, will aho Uart at the same time. '1 ravellers from Louisville to St. Louis, by this conveyirc vill be but five days on the roid. tiil pPvbPiup ions. Anril 1S-2L '-tf Bl. N Oft htUKb for sale t fU3 OfnCC.

$ Land OJftce Money. W Beet iver's Office at yincennea, 19 lh September, 182U. FT1HE Secretary of ttie Treasury haB directed that in addition to Specie & UilU of the Hank of the United States Mid Hranchas, the notes of the following banks be received in payment for Public Landssold in this District, viz : All the incorporated banks in the town cf Boston, In the cities of Philadelphia. NewYork and Richmond, (Va.) In the city of Baltimore (except the City bank of Baltimore,) In the District of Columbia (except the Merchants and Franklin Banks of Alexandria,) & the following specie paying banks in the state of Indiana, viz : The Farmer's and Mechanic's bank at Madison, Indiana. J. C. S. BAR R I SON, KJ3Y1XOLD- & BOKSiStt, H AVE just received from rhiladelJL Ji. and Baltimore, a large and ge neral assortment of seasonable carcfv.Piy selected, and purchased on the most advantageous terms by one of the firm ( a particular enumeration they deem superfluous) amonst their stock arc almost every article in demand of British, French, and India 331I.Y GOODS Aho a larcc supply of DOMESTIC COTTONS ek CASINETTS UUELNS S HA ROW A U Ef CUTLEUW GROCERIES,

shoes.

IS Ail

LADIES and (iEN 1 LE.MENS

All of which they will sell wholesale and retail at the most reduced prices fr Par m'jriey. Tlusc who ?ish to purc'uabe with CASH will pc i hap find it to their advantage to call and examine the (iOi)DS near to Mr. Ch. Greater'b Tavern, Maiket street. I -if Vincennes. January. 1821.

ILL in future practice J. A 11' in conjunction, in the counties of

Davis A'fio.r, Sulih-an, z c, Icnifi Dubois and Pike and in the Suprtinc Court One of tliom will at all times be found in thsir oPdre at Washington, except during the swsfcion ( courts. All orders and COXl'E Y.JXCTA G will be punctually attendc! to nWu'ifCon. Afiril 10, 1820. 20tf mK ney k councfi.i.ok at law.) "J .'R'R-I' practice in tin first Judicial V y Circuit, of the Mate of Indiana r:d in the counties of Crawford and Edwards in the state ot Illinois. -lit- n av ahvavsbe found at hi oihee in rinr ( i r es uidess when absent on profr sior ?.l business !e has made an atrc meM. f)r business forwarded to him, in hi absence, to be attended to. 5 I tf.

Reply of the queen of England to the address of the Highland Society f London. ' it is with unfeigned complacency I accept this artless tribute of glowing affection and generous loyalty, fiom an assembly of the metropolis, who are natives of that romantic region where the spirits of departed warriors still speak in the winds, swim upon the clouds, or gleam upon the hills. I ain well aware that they coma from that land which is renowned for faithfulness to its ehiefs, and that their fathers bled for a sovereign who had no other clnim to their support but that which grief gives to the faded cheek and sunken eye. They arc natives of that land where adversity attracts more regard than the smiles of fortune ; where the houseless have a home, St the friendless nticr want a friend. I was sure that griefs like those which I have suffered, and persecutions like thosw which I have undergone, could not be objects of indificrcr.ee to those ho were orn and reared io that district where the brave are i-e;,bie, ar.d the sensitive are brave. T!:t:- !i:ids could not contemplate with pM !-y t fond mother, i earning like an exii; ir. ; distant land, v, hile her only child v. v., in vain, imploring her presence, v iih that look of wolieitude, & that gaze of importunity, that mark the parting hour. The dark cloud of death soon covered her wnwy breast ! Deep and generous was the lanunt uhen her heart bent no more 1 GiJcf sat cn every biow, ami the IVcc of the country appeared as if the dissolating blast had traversed the land. Her remain needed no obsequies. Hrr tomb was the tomb of virtue AfiVctioti scpulchered her memory in every h.eait (k The ycais hut are past, n:d arc to be no more, are but r things that have an ideal exister.ee in the memory ; but still they may cm:sc th eye to stream with tears, or the bo.om to he ave with l egret. The loveliness that hati sunk into th grave is still lo rly in the n.ird ; and in th?t form in which virtue has made its abode, death is not lasting oblivion, but increased and laiting remistence. It is tiuth, it is integiitv. it is benevolence ; it is the amiable, the generous, the sincere ; or, in one word, it is goodness, pure and holy, that converts the mortal , into the immortal, the ding into the ever living the thhdow into the substance, the fugitive into the fixed, time into eternity." While one of the yours; Iftdies of the deputation presented a bouquet to her mcjevty, r.ml the whole deputation vas passing-, the banner waved and the bagpipe? plrvMl -e inspirinp- air of " Scots wha ha wi' Wallace bled." It gives true and sincere ?r.tisfnction to lcr.:. that the Spanish and Neapolitan Governments arc doing every thing in their pon ert aim ?r.d organize the People and that their (fiorts c?e nobly and hcaitilv sci red i good dispositions f f 1 ; e with their regenerate d ;j.ve-i v : .-. v z )oyc and trust their riatf:is v. .u i ! -. : d i. eu i;s and sinewy enough to C,iu J them fit rn t.e couddned Tyrr.iits, vho are about to march against Viiem. (Hir lpte Londc'n dates aie onlv to ti e 25th Jan-.ry. An arrivsl in G 0 d av

would therefore bring us news twenty five days later than that which we have via Charleston. We should then know the issue of the struggle for power in the British Prrliament, and what ii infinitely more important, of the march of the Allied armies, and the resistance likely to be made against them. Fiom our verysouls do we hope ihat the Gcd of Armies will scatter to the winds of Heaven, the consuls and the forces of the Unholy Alliance, v.hu nrt wantonly and wickedly marching against the Independence of nations and the rights of Man. Demo. Press. WAR AGAINST NAPLES. From the London Morning- Chronicle ot February i5. He must be a wise man indeed who ban predict all the consequences to which the renewal of hostilities may lead, livery thing seems in the outset in favor of Austria. The army of that pow er is numerous, arid in one arm particularly, that of cavalry, it has always been excellent. The great empire ol Russia is also a party against Naples. Prussia, too, espouses the monarchical cause The French government is said to countenance the invasion, and England, once the proud protector rf European Liberty, has brought herself, by the glorious war, which ended, in the opinion of Mr. Bankes, in the noblest peace she had achicved for four hundred years England has brought herself to that pyss, that, even if she possessed a Government inclined to counteract the abominable measures of the Holy Alliance, she dare not stir. All seem to conspire the destruction of Naples. hat is there then to counternct this irnmrnse array ? '1 he cause of Naples, and the cause alone. Naples has, indeed, seven millions of people, and nature has done much to fortify its approaches ; but if this were all, the matter woud soon he decided. But the cause of Naples is the cause of the human race. The ground is hollow under the despots who are now destroying in imagination the Neapolitan Constitution. 1 heir pout r like all power, rests on opinion ; and opininn is every where against them. There is hardly a human being so ignorant or debased throughout Europe, ho docs not view the attack on Naples in the l'urht of sacrilege. ( an that opinion be difiuved among the pcopie without being also communicated to the ohhrr ? Impossible Barrack up soldiers asjoii will, they must kno-. what is going on in the world, and all your resti aints on their intercourse v ith other men will only give an r.oVdticnal incitement to their curiosity. They art men before thtv are soldiers and they cannot be deprived of sympathies which belong to our nature. If a plan could be dev ised for forming armies of different elements frcm those of which society is composed if bcingt in human shap could be reared in sufficient number in utter ignorance of all the charities, all the ndearnu ns of life oil the ties which bind men to their k nd red and thicr friends then despots might have an instrument impenetrable to public opinion, and they might fearlessly commerce war against tht most sacred