Western Sun & General Advertiser, Volume 24, Number 26, Vincennes, Knox County, 27 July 1833 — Page 2

apprehended, if they wew possessed of the powers before described, lhat ihe individual members would be induced to use them, on many occasions, very timid, ly and inefiicaciously, for fear of loosing their popularity and future elections? We must take human nature as we find it. Perfection falls not to the share of mortals. Many arc of opinion, that Congress have too frequently made use of the suppliant, humble tone of requisition in applications to the states, when they had a right to assume their imperial dignity, and command obedience. Be lhat as it may, requisitions are a perfect nullity, where thirteen sovereign, independent, disunited states are in the habit of discussing and refusing compliance ith them at their option. Requisitions are actually little better than a jest and by-word throughout the land. If you tell the legislature they have violated the treaty of peace, and invaded the prerogatives of the confederacy, they will laugh in four face. What, then, is to be done? Things cannot go on in the same train forever. It is much to be feared, as you observe, that the better kind ol people, being disgusted with the circumstances, will have their minds prepared for any revolution whatever. We are apt to run from ono extreme into another To anticipate and prevent disastrous contin gencies, would be the part ol wisdom

end patriotism

South Carolina calls it, with a holy addration for the Union Ohio is almost or quite a Yankee state, if we, as is the practice of the South, call all yankecs who are from the north

of Maryland. New r.r.g...ut.0, -kf-rently, compose a great proportion of the population of Cincinnati. There are manv German emigrants here, but the yankees, probably, outnumber all. Throughout the state, as is well known, .h nrenonderance of Northern emi

grants is immense. Almost as much may be said of Indiana, for very many ot the emigrants of Indiana were originally from the North, having settled in Ohio, and as they became "crowded," moved further west, to give lands to their children. Illinois and Missouri have a more varied population. Probably a very large proportion ol the Illinois emigrants were from the north of the Potomac. Mis souri is settled by very many Virginians, who emigrated there with their slaves, lhat being a slave state, and long habit having accustomed them to such labor, and, in some degree, rendered it neccs sary. Emigration is said to follow, in a

great degree, the parallel of latitude, and thus to advance from state to state in columns

The emigration westward is, even now, ,

Snow at one place, as Maria Cornell at another, and Maria S.Cornell at a third. Thus has the character of Sarah M. Cornell, the unfortunate deceased, been loaded down with the singularities, the frailties and the crimes of another whose name bore a resemblance to hers. Why has this been done? Let those answer who best know. We do hope this affair will be thoroughly investiga

ted and publicly exposed and the authors

of it made to feel the full weight cf their

merited punishment. Lives there on the earth a fiend, a devil in human form,

that would or could resort to such measures for any purpose whatever. If there be such beings let them be kno.vo that

they may be shunned.

On he 8th inst. the jury in the case

Rev. Mr. Avery, were burnt in efiigy

and he hanged in effigy at Middlctown

near Newport, state ot Rhode Island

Warning. The wife of Mr. Chester Beard, ol Rockdale township, is lying dangerously ill. Near a year since she was picking her car with a pin (a very common practice among females,) the

head of which coming off lodged in her car, and all her attempts to extract it proved unavailing, and it is supposed

'that this will soon be the cause of her

immense. Signs of it arc visible on cv- I death. ery street and road, although this is not j From the Flattsburgh Republican we the fittest season In truth, the star of I learn that the emigrants who have am-

KCT2C3

TT S hereby given, that I have taken out

JLL

NEW GOODS. fllTUTi-IT X" ITFJ1ERI7 r(

I.. f .. . t . KS A M M M. . , -

of William Collins, (late of Knox county) j AV just received their Stock of C deceased ; all persons indebted to said es- j STJITIi2DH GOODS; tatc arc required to make immediate pay- j which added lo their former Stock, makes ment, and those holding claims against j rassortraciltC()!nt,; etc. which thev will

said estate, to present them within ccll unusuanv i0..v forcas,.

year legally authenticated for settlement. Said estate is believed to be insolvent. ZACHARIAU PULLIAM, Aihir.

Julv lu. LSJ3 !. St

PUBLIC SALE.

June 23 22-3m.

mm? ids S. & T7. J. T7ISS,

n r?rECTFiLL" lniorm tneir trior.:-;

fTJMlhkl. v. i i 1 be so .1 at public sa c.on t -,, .- i t i fl ti . .. .... l c . ' .., ull continue business on Market Mnrct,

lll'.UJll.H lilU Hil Ol .'lUUSi. (

Wl ' next, at tho latf. Iivpr.!r.r nt U illi mi 1 id-i . . . -

, , 7i , , VP- , non A Ross, and have just received lms. deceased, nn w AnK-iJi ru-ir n , ' . . ' . .... J

- , p ade pna, JJ.i tnnore and 1'itts- ' mile below meennes. all tlm personal : . ...

, i r .. - -i , i. burm, a well selected ami general asv.nixochIs and chattels ot said decedent, con-!

j mcni oi

2.

"March 10, 1787. "How far the retision ol the federal

system, and giving more adequate powers to congress, may be productive of an efficient government, I will not, under my present view of the matter, pretend to decide That many inconveniences result from the present form, none can deny; those enumerated in your letter are so obvious and sensibly felt, that no logic can controvert, nor is it probable that any chjnge of conduct will remove them, and that all attempts to alter or afnend it will be like the propping of a houe which is ready to fall, and which no nhores can support (as many seem to think) nay also be true But is the pub lie mind matured for such an important change, as the one you have suggested? "What would be the consequence of a premature attempt? My opinion is, that this country is yet to (eel and see a little more before it can be accomplished. A thirst for power, and the bantling I had liked to have said monster sovereignty -which have taken such fast hold of the etates individually, will, when joined by the many whos-3 personal consequence T . t 1 ! H i . t a . ill in n

111 ItlU I U. OldlU uuuias, in iti at

manner be annihilated, form a strong phalanx against it; and when to these the few who can hold posts of honor or "profit in the national government, arc compared with the many who will see fcut little prospect of being noticed, and the discontents of others who mav look for appointments, the opposition would be altogether irresistible, till the mass -as well as the more discerning part of the

community shall see the necessity

empire is emphatically moving westward Ohio has its million already and now there is uncultivated land enough handsomely to support five millions Indiana is becoming a great stale. Illinois is increasing with prodigious ra pidity. I am told by a resident of this

last state, who has traversed every p-trt

ved at Quebec this season are, generally

people ot" propeity and wealth About 480 English, Scotch, and Irish, left Quebec about a week aeo to nurchase

tarms in Illinois the rrrcater part of J Bond and security required.

sistinjj of

23 ACRES OF CORN,

A lir.YNTITV OF OATS IX THE STACK,

Five head of Horses, ONE COW AND CALF, Some Hogs, 3?anmus Eltrnstlo, Household and Kitchen FURNITURE. A credit of nine months will be piven.

BRIT GOODS

them arc agriculturalists. On the same day 700 more lelt Quebec lor Montreal, and 1500 catvc ur to the latter city on

of it, that there is no land in the world j the Sunday following. Canada was per

which thus unites fertility and health.

fectly healthy and had a rather brisk bu

fhe numerous prairies kept open forjsincss.

RAILWAY liArXiRIMLN 1.

An experiment o veiy great impor

pasturage by the settlers, as are lakes for the boatmen and sailors, arc exceedingly

fertile, and give a settler an early crop without the necessity of clearing Illinois, probably, has as many, or more, inducements to emigration than any other western state. Slavery is not tolerated there. Every thing is new. Land is cheap, and the good land is not all taken.

ZACIIA11IAU PULLIAM, Admr.

of William Collins, deed. VincenncFj'july 10, lS:W-i25-3t.

REfOiriLL!

rnIIIi subscriber respectfully inform?

Jl his friends and the public, that he!

ha purchased of Frederick Ilapphis Stock Suitable for ths present and anproacliinii

seasons comprising

(MOCEUIES, S ADD Ll.

CHINA GLASS J QUE 3 SWA UK, Leghorn and Slrair. Jh lcr and DlhsUiII' LADIES, GBSTLET'EX U CHILDREN ' BOOTS AND SHOES, or lvehv nrseitiPTiox. This tock of joods hns been purchased unusually low, and will be sold on the test terms for cash or approved bai ter. Mayr., 1S33 1-If. NEW GOODS. Till subscribers inlrm tlicir friends and the public, that they have j?:st re

ceived from 1 JiiLidcIp'ua, Baltimore and Vittslnirirh, a m;v and r.xTT.N-sivr. assortment of

GOODS,

fowns are vet to crow, as Cincinnati

and Louisville have grown. In older pla . travelled with the weight of 15.0C0 kiloces there ate not inducements to young grammes, orlourtccn tons nearly, inclu

tancc to railways has bten tiied with Lf r !s. rinorlv called the Hnrmonv

much success upon the railway of the Store anj bus rciiovcd them to the room Lowe,ihe consliuction of which was un j t;)rmcrv occupied bv Thomas D. Berrv. cler the direcion of Messrs Melleit and ; Co Jn rirh,. street, where he has late-

uenry. j iocoihomvc engine, i..a;.uiu-w j jv fCC(.JVC(J

turcd bv Messrs 1 enton, Murray and '

Jackson, of Leeds, employed upon this

railway for the transport o" goods, has

men, for they have, in some degree, become like the towns of Nuw EngJand and the Middle States and to grow with the growth, and strengthen with the strength cf a place is an immense advantage. The readiness with which men in this

7

if

if

THE WESTERN STATES.

-. s a

i-rcm thiS'Oueen ol the West," as

Cincinnati has been called, I will say a vrord or two on Western manners, habits and customs True, 1 have seen but little of the great West," sailing up the Mississippi an 1 Ohio as I did, but 1 have seen no remarkable uncouthness-not cvtn among the boatmen on board of our ateam boats, with a few exceptions I peak now t)f the boatmen from Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Indiana, and Illinois. Missouri and Arkansas may occaeional'y send down an odd animal, like "Mike Fink, but I have seen none such. That race hasdeparted long ago to the

ding thr weight of the engine, tendet

water and fuel, and has surmounted an inclined plane ot a rise of 4$ in ICO. with a velocity the more suprising, as the pressure ot the steam did not a mount lo more than 3S pounds upontht square inch. The inclined plane is 2134

'quarter of the world quit their homes j yds. nearly in leng h, and the engine as

and their early associations, is quite re- .cendcu it in six minutes, anu tiescenaeu markablc. There are hundreds in Ohi it immediately with great chsc and iti who now talk of emigrating, and hun- j pci feet security by regulating the velo drcds who do emigrate. Kentucky an- J city of the decent. The power of the nually affords a large emigrating popu engine was only applied to one pair iation for Illinois, Missouti and Indiana, of wheels, and they did notslip round in Tennessee is marching to At kansas, the ; the least. Red River, and Texas. Western Vir- This experiment has far surpassed a ginia is wisely leaving old Virginia, and ny which has come to our knowledge; seeking a people advancing with the and w hich has been made up to this day; age, so as to live in a state that keeps up lor the experiment attended with the with the times. and does not slumber on htit results which have been tried in the post where years and years gone bv j England, is lhat upon ihe inclined plane

first found it. Men make nothing of mo

FRKSII SIITLY OF

SPRIKG Sl SUIuISEZt

GOODS,

VvTiii-h added to the former Slock, makes

the assortment complete. Those wi-hin j to purchase would do well to call, as he is !

determined to sell very low lor casii, or

j approved barter.

J. iMAlMJOA. Vincc-nncs, July I. IMWMf

j

vin hcnr.e thousands of miles A steam

in the tunnel at Liverpool, the use ol

which is only one in fifty, that is to say.

boat carries them far un the Missouri or j four ninths of the rise of the inclined plane

Arkansaw, or the While river or Red at Bernatd, where the trial took place.

river; or they march over land across the Wabash and ihe Mississippi, ar.d stretch with cheerfulness towards ihe Rocky mountains. In Atkanaw they talk of Indian reservation! Reservations? the white man is already surrounding the wretched and haunted Indian. Everything here is of interest. There is a novelty and odd combination in all of one's associations A man is startled on looking about him, and seeing what has happened. This Cincinnati here but the

ANNUAL ELECTION, i

TOTICL is hereby jiiveu, tint an c-

lection will Le held in the see::tl '

FOREIGN AM) DOMESTIC Dry Goods,

BOOTS AND SHOES, FUR & WOOL HATS, Iron, Glass, Castings, Nc. tc.

i Which were selected at a favorable time; and will be found on examination, worth v I the attention of purchasers, and will Le j sold miusuallv low f r cash. ' SMITH CARSON", j Viriernnc?, 1st June, 1:1. It tf

f

town

full

i t- . 1,1 i IT have appomtc nshnis in Knox coviiity on .dcnulay, the ; fl c -I t . .. i Ju aitorncv in la ot August next, lor tho purpose ol e- " n i . 1 - ' ii settle nil claims u mir r.e member t tiie on"res ol the; . T -

PUBLIC KGTICS.

luivc app:intcd John Law, Iqr. inv

tact to receive, adjot and

ue or owing to me in the

t51' C 1 ... 1 l :

I , icuuniy vi ivuuA, ciiiii ?u ifa nun iiisjmc

lectin

L( till IJUia .' , tl.i; tlllVJ I J Illy- ' . , . . .- ' . .. . . il inv nronrrlv in tht; liornti rh ,A m.

to the btate Le2islaUire: ! - 1 . ,

1 . r, . , Mcemies Anv arruncment nfauo wit

, , . J . . ' t r him, will be bindinir on inn.

KJV-IU'VJI VV'lllllll -riillLI . 1 IIV lll-jHA J Ul the several townships are required tojjive their attendance in their several tow nships , by D o'clock a. m. cd said day. ;

jonx ruucELL, sj. July 0, 1SI53 -Ji-lt

If. LASSELIX. Yinccnnes, April l.", lSu.J i'J-it. I shall leave here abut thoXMui if thi? montii; persons having business with r.us after tiiat time, will please call on Mr.

i Law, who is authorised to arrange it.

paths ot the hunter, on the outskirts ol j forest of yesterday! This Louisville,

civilization, even beyond the axe of the

adventurous pio.ieer. I have seen nothing .nore wonderful among this class of men than among others in like employ-

outnumbering m populatirn towns ol two hundred years on the Atlantic! The western banks of the Ohio, are full of

neat and elegant villages, clustering like i

xnent, exeep' that they swear more tnan stars OVer :s majestic current, and illu-

any ovher people I ever met witn. .My j minatiog ihe dense forest lhat overhangs

firsi impression of western boatmen is greatly softened by further observation.

them from ihe neighboring hills. All these must be towns by and by. Many

Paulding's "Westward Ho" is all a j will be cities, some immense cities In caricature ol the good people here or j truth, prediction is at fault, and lags be in Kentucky, and was probably intended j hind the 3ge, when it dares to speak ol as -uch, or to represent the by -gone the future, Aneastcrn man, warm his jT.af.ners of a rone by people. There is ! fancy as he may, unless he looks with hi

in Lexington I am told by friends who : own eyes upon what has happend, can !

can speak by comparison society as j hardly understand what is to happen good and as refined as is to be found in ; But all this is to happen with privation, the Union In Louisville I am confident ! with want, with sacrifices of enjoyment no man cou'.d wish for better compan- j and ease, and by immense labor. Let no ions. It is quite time to cease to talk ot man think a life in ihe western wilder

Kentucky gougings and knock downs 1 ncss a life of ease, as on a bed ol roses

Probably, people will right mere, as m ew England, but I suspect there is as rnrh done in one reeicn as in the other.

The Irish of Kentucky may have that ! one sense, be bryord ihe Alleghanies .propensity which in this country so dis He who expects to see this country, tinguishes the emigrants from the Isle! must go there, hundreds and hundreds

Up to ihe present lime it has been tho't

that the maximum lisc of the inclined

plane upon which an engine could possi

biy travel ought to be ten milimetres in one metre, that is, one in 78! The above trial, however, increases much this maximum. The inconveniences arising from the employment of stationary engines will be completely done away with, should thoy give place to locomotive engines, since ihe train of diligencies can, through the mechanical agency of the latter, overcome the inclined planes. From 'Le A'ouvuau Journal dc i'em, et des Dcfiartmints AN IMMENSE ESTATE. We exttoct the fol owing from the news books at the Northern Liberties Free Admission News Rooms of Tuesday: "We noticed a rumor a few days ago which prevailed in this city; that the Chancellor of New York had decided in favor of the claimants in the important cacof the Trinity Church, which has been contested in law for many years,

and which involves property lo the amount of twenty-five millions of dollars; one of the principal heirs to which, we learn, is Mr. George Brewer, of Kensington, in this city, an elderly gentleman in moderate circumstances, former ly a clerk in the old U States Bank. It is stated that thev have made a further

claim to ISO acres more, situated in the centre of the city of New York, which, with the other lands, will not only cm body the church, but its revenues, as well as some of the most valuable real

l a country, I repeat, i estate in that city This property has e, if we hold together been a subject of dispute ever since the

close oi the American revolu'ion Chronicle.

5

But the hardy yeomanry of the west, for here there arc yeomanry, and not slaves,

! will surmount all. The Union will in

ii r

7b Itozc Ar.c Grader, iridoi? of Chrix- j . 1

iauGraitcr, late of Yiiicawat, IC.joxI T&T&ITTfc ATTfiP!

Count,,, Indiana, deceased. irmil-! WiW.r K-..

1 y . ....... .. ... j. w.ua.u, Maoam on will please to take IWj 3 Vinccnnes. is now nrcnared fo is.

tec, that we shall apply to the ensuin-! polices. JIokvs and Furniture. Srcs Circuit Court, to be holdcn m and for the ! -dVt Good, UoaU and Carres will lsaid county ot Knox, in the month of Sep-: s;ircij UI,1JM anJ rcas,jnabIo tcrIl.c. tcnibcr, and upon the second day of the 'and thus an opportunity isafi'rdcd torr' term, for the appointment i.f Commis- ry prudent person to 'secure at a uiHii." sioners to assign and set apart to you your ; expense, his property from accident dower of. m and to the real estate whereof; fj-Oilice on Market-street, aJpi-iir."-the said Christian (Iractcr, our ancestor, j the store oi Tomlinson Sc Uo-s. died seized, situate in the said county of! .Samuel Judah. VrcnUUnT. John Ross. Secretary.

t- ...-.!...: 11V 1-11.

beseems, jfibirmuiion anu iwcr; vvmcn Samuel Tornliusou. Xirh.,!.m Sm.?S U

real estate is as follows, to wit, KUi acres j D.ivid S. Bonner, J. B. Martin second rate land, River Duchees. Town ym j Jleherd, Tw invV Biilev Jots in the borough ot meetings No. lsl,, Thomas BUhoi, M. Mjrt.hv " ' i.-)ti,'-.;)S, i:umi);, iug, i:r, Director, 4 '

i -. - -

Ls7, 15:), 2i)0, 177.

The company will I jan m"nc frth r:

Aisojoncuuruoi mo nan ot undivided ; periods, upon real or ponui ruritv lands purchased by Christian Graetor and ; ail(j wiu exchange uncurrcat bank note" Henry Hurst, at shcnli s sale, viz. -100 ! forcjwn olJ cc acres, donation, No. VJ; 75 acres, loca-j persons vlho "mav occasionally necl lion, No. 113; acre, location, Xo-. ! ,n0ncv, and d not wish to involve thello vc 11W; -100 aenjs, donation, No. 10S; . fricnijs mav im a bond and mort-a-J01 acres, location, No. bo; acres, a collattcral security, and thus iHsaec.-n.-location.No. 1 11. j modatcd upon their own liability, v.itk 1ILXRY P. BROKAW, jm;s advantage also, that tLo- n'h i r-

t . .... 7 - - -

of miles hal

then, ours must b

Rome, when mistress of the world, could

never fco3St of such an empire as an A merican Congress may soon speak of, if ihe Union be pres rved!

. i

of Enn and there the IrisM are numcr

cus bui the native born Americans are probably at free from the love of wrang ling as any other peop c The frank ncss, noble during, hospitality and generosity of the Kentuckuns, are probably no exaggerated Mr Clay is all Ken tuckian, though he asbornin Virginia He is a Utile Kemucky in miniature of high and low, a:d rich and poor tho' few of her sons have his abilities. The peculiar clractemtic of his manners if rnnfider.ee in public life, are

V... . - - . , , , ,

chiracteriitics of very many of the Ken j actcr we say nothing, lurther than to , Having cemaus aainsi saw estate are rctuckiaos. The people feci' an ardent at j sate what ought to he known, viz. that 1 tpiested to present them fr settlement, taclvi -ent to their st ite, a-d identify there is now no doubt this is the iderli-and th se ituh btt J to make immediate themselves with its fame and advance-: cal girl spoken f by ihe witnesses on the ; nayment. STLIMIP.N CHArPLI.. cent. They tciBpcr this chivalry, as Utand in the trial of Avery, as Maria j Pike County, July lf, ISX

Fror.i the Fell River Monitor. What next Wc hive been inI rmtd within a few days past, on good authority, that there is now living in the

town cf Providence, a female by the name ot I ike i

of Maria St ow Cornell. Of Ik r char i that said estate is insolvent

Sdmmtstrator's potter. m F.T'I LRS of administration of nil Jjj and singular the roods, chattels, richts, credits, and efil-ets of Jacob Chappel, deceased, late of Pike county, havis:; been granted to rnc by the Probate Court

f j: ... j" I .

K,u,uuu, ,vr i.u,iTv Tur.(Ums orrow, will be allowel to row ti.c N . S-MLTI I , Guardian for j whoIe or aniJ parti at anff ff v(hm n . (jractcr- an abatement of all the "interest n-weJ July 1.1, I-Ot. upon, for the time unexpired, but tv.o C XJXi, iJAiiJ. 'flic company will receive money on I WISH t.jsellmy Tavern .Stand, now j deposite, and will allow interest at' the occupied by Col. Alexis LeRoy, situ- of six tQr cent pcr vcar fir d.-it fc atC4i t,a Vlkcl rcct,in the h. HOUSES IX T1IE COUXTUY vw'i IRTil X'A oi nceiipcs; also t::2l bc in5urcd at a very b-.v rate.

jliul Two Lots

formerly owned by 1). C Johnson; situ

ated at tiieeast end of. Market street, in the '

KTOTICE. rnMIC Subscrilier having remmcnerd JL the HATTlNi; UUSiXKSSwiV.a

borouuli aforesaid. tcr street, incenncs, in tne

The Tavern Stand is in a healthy and house formerly owned by Uil-

Pike county, notice is hereby given,

-all persons

pleasant part of the borough; and tli oth- 'son Lagow, takes this method 1 it , i . , ' e '..c : .t... i

er house is wen calcinated lor a private ; 'moriui:: ci.iei.-, anu family, and likewise in u pleasant and the eountry at large, that vA

hcallhv situation. j expects to keep mi ham!, and fur sale, a ForVurther particularsjnrjuire of A. T. ' general assortment of PUR llAT, which Ellis, Esqr. and Zaehariah Pulli un, both , wrk he intends to have made iuaiical, livini; in Vincennes. II. JOH.'0.. substantial and fushionate manner. Vinccnucs, Ind. March Lr, 1SW 7 tf. i fc5-Th highest price given for all kinds .jot- ELKS. II. M. (IILIIAM BLANK DEEDS ' Vn.-.-ns, h. y treh ntis:i-j. t-q ALVAT? ON Ii.VM, A!SD Foil SALL AT Tills j " Z 77 77Z orrii-r. I Bacon wanted at this Office.