Richmond Palladium (Weekly), Volume 3, Number 39, 12 October 1833 — Page 2

fer.cbcof,ihc land of rocks." The i.obls Kennebec and the swift Androsogln bear testimony to the race that discovered thenu So perish the gencrttLn of men. Tli ; r fountains stake oar thirst at noon, I7?a tUetr hills oar harvest waves, Our lovers woo beneath their moon Aid 1st us spare at least their graves?

r"rvai the X. Y. Courier and Enquirer. FROM. ENGLAND. It will be seen from the extracts we tivc below, that Marshal Bounnont liad abandoned the siege of Oporto. hoA by a hatty march concentrated his turf es near Lisbon, with those of the tfter comnvtndert of Don Miguel. Much doubt appears to be entertained in London a to whether he had actually approached so near to the Portugese capital as tho accounts represent, but if it b true that Uourmont has left behind him troops which retiiti possession of the forts at the mouth fthe Duoro, and that the egress of tiie garrison at Oporto is thereby prevented, it would eccm prohablc that Miguel's commander will hive it in his power to attack Lisbon with a force fir greater than his antagonist can Lave had time to organise in its defence. A good deal cf discontent is expressed in the papers nt some of the measures taken by Don Pedro, particularly at his disprni-ing with the services of the Marquis of Palmella, and raising no individual called Candido .Xavier to an exalte J station. Tha Russian troops hive Withdrawn from the Turkish dominions, but the Minister of Nicholas has succeeded in concluding n offensive and defensive Miiianrr? with the Porte, which, it is al leged, places that power at the mercy of the Russian Autocrat. There is nothing interesting from France, In England, the Bill icchartorintr the JLast India tympany had passed V-olli Houses, and the trade be tween the British dominions and Chi na is thus soon to he thrown open to in dividual enterprise. The bank of Eng land charter has been found not to pre vent the establishment of joint stork Imka in the EnglUh capital, and con sequently one or two institutions of that description are to be founded ; we have no doubt they wiil prove as advantageous thrc as thev have been in the .United States. . , Tho session of Parliament was ex rr.cted to close in about a week. In many parts of .'gland isolated cases ofj cU-Jera rsau occurrea. i . The Marriage of Donni Maria. Renort says the projected marriage betveen me lsuite oe inemours wim iw r a Maria will not take place t the young i?:een'hns o:enly avowed her prefer-K-e otthe Duke Eugene tie Leuch tttinberg, the brother of her mother in The Duke of Eeuchtemberghas ;:h'eadv be-n a competitor with the I hike de Nemours for the throne ofj Belgium. Vrcm the New Orleans Bee of Sept.9Mr Ijoter from Jtfrxtio. The schooner. Ge ne ral Lafayette, which arrived yesterday from Tampice, has brought us files of papers to the tilth ult. Tranquility has not yet been established. The cholera has been making the most dreadful havoc among the i-.rmies of the rebels, awell as those of the President. Duran, the woi thy associate of Arista, has succumbed to the ecourgc. General Mejia hsd likewise been attacked, but the last accounts state that he was recovering. ' Letters from the capital to the 6th nit. state that on the entrance of Du nn into Celaya, cine men of piquet ofj cavalry fell dead of cholera in descending from their horses. Cauallro commits all kinds of robV . .-.! .- i .. t tin lKacflt r jtCwj &iiu arau7iimuvi v Oajaca. Arista has taken and pillaged Gnannjualn. The ravages ot the Cholera

has daily thinned the ranks of his armyJettc, dated Pine BluiT, May 2Tth,!

atnd the dread which that disease has Wi produced occas;ons the desertion great num&crs who seek for security in all quarters It may hence be in terred that ctmtn Anna wu sonn or entirely victorious over those hordes of brigands. The itatc cf San Luis, has passed a decree, awarding death to any individual, who holds any intercourse with a, rebel, or who seeks to disturb the tranquility cf the general government,!. . 1 " 1. . ii CilrA0L T : "' :. W;": L-,

fixm Cen. Victoria, !atedPuebl ,.3()thu,,e:irs,ncss been adjusted to the

July, rt appears t!at a rorp , C 1 1 Ml. 0i VJrv horsemen, uodcr the command of the rebels Serana and Sao, were complete 1 v routed near the village of St. Salvador and St. Martin. The Vice President, in pursnnnca h extroardinary powers br which he has been vested by Congress, his just jrioscdPup, to foreign commerce, for six JIIOII nontbf , the portt of PueMe, lejo de Tamico and Soto de la Manna. The

.decree which ordains this measure. brs dale 12. t Tr.c tsai Sorter, of tho cotnmaa -

dcr-in-chief was on the 10th nit. at

Querctaro. By a proclamation of that date one may judge ot the ravages which the cholera has mide in the con stitutional army.' The President learned that the rebels, Arista and JJurun,w:ih their armv, were marching toward; Son Migvel-de-Allende on the Goanajuato, had given order to the commandant general of thtt city to fortify it, and to try and detain the enemy for oue or two day when he would come to his assistance. Accordingly he immediately put himself and his forces in motion: on the first dav having arrived tat the village of Apasco, the epidemic made its appearance, and to such a degree did it rage, that the next miming when the troops was about to continue their march it was discovered that 200 men had fallen victims. The second day the disease consid erably increased and continued augmen tins in its fatality untd the fifth day. when it was found that 2000 men

out of the force of upwards of 4000Dcl-iware3, with the country yet to be

iR tii-lf. HvintT. ae ..!?. Thf hullo-

tin addressed to the 3Iinister of War,!issippi,is greater in extent, and com - from whence the above information is! prised more land, than the state? of New

Jsrivi ed, is calculated to strike terror.! I Santa Ai.na desDi-in? all obstacles. however, pursued his marches with ra-j piditr to arrive in time at Guanajuato.! Having learnt, when within a few! m;!ftcf that pi .ce, that Valentio Gomfz.lhe commandant, from a want ofi forces, perhaps, to resist the rebels, had made his escape towards the coast of the city of Ieon, where Duran seemed disposed to follow him; he would have attacked the forces of Arista from the entrance of the city, had not various obstacles prevented it. Moreover, Arista's forces were well situated behind a strong fortification, while the President's troops were fatigued with forced marches, dispirited by sickness, nd dying almost of hunger. The day following the camp of Santa Anna was horrible to be scn; the dead aod the .dying were strewn all around. OlScers and soldiers had fallen indiscriminately togetlier. Nothing was sought after but remedies, aliments, and ligaments, things very difficult to be found. Notwithstanding, however, the ad ventitious circumstances in which St. Anna found himself placed, he resolved, upon hearing that Duran was on his return to Silao, to go and attack hitn.7 lie accordingly formed a coljmu of 800 infantry, and put them in motion at 8 o'clock in the evening. But a heavy rain having fallen the roads w ere so bad that he was delayed lor a considerable time from pursuing his journey, and finally gave it up, when within two leagues of Silao, dipairing of surprising the enemy. During this one inarch 150 men died. On the return of Santa Anna to his camp, and after having consulted with! :- .... : 1. . J... : I j ..! ins state-II or iij uciwi iiuic-u iu kikc ? A T 4 up ins ncaa quarters ui vuerraiaru,: and to suspend ail kinds of warlike' operations until the epidemic ceased.! His total loss is estimated at about '2O00 men. The G'accts Tumpico which iias!

Ihe Cholera had been on the rtUj as at the present moment, on account .the King of England as a branch of legtslauIU twenty-three days in Zacatecas, of the civil war which exists, as well j ltire Pwer, it has not been exercised since Ith its ni..il viol.rr i ,. rl . A. K- year 1632 a period of one hundred

--- - vvw-..-iw i vunt vb uic iavni;ca niauc j f

been increased in size, contains in its poorer classes have been the principal I throe last numbers the Constitution osuflerers. Of these, about 7000 have!

Texas. A remarkable circumstance, and one that shows that the augl--American population much exceeds that of the hi:pano-American, is the fact that that document is drawn in v . English, and that William H. Wharton, and Thontos Hastings, the first Presi dent, and the latter Secretary of the convention that adopted it, are natives of the United States. THE INDIANS BEYOND THE ARKANSAS. A letter trom the Quapaw -Indians,; which we find in the Arkansaw Gj' - z - (announces that a supplementary treaty ' . . ' otl!as been concluded between 31r. Schermerhorn, Commisiioner on the part of the United Statts, and the Qua paw Indians residing in JefFerson; county, X Arkansas.) aoout sixty miles j from L.ittle Rock, by virtue of which, they arc to remove to the country fixed upon by the government as the residence of the Indian Tribes. From the same source, we learn , that the couflicting boundaries of the territor - ies alloted to the different tribes in that! region, which had given rise to much iVIVkl Ui ali tUVCI llCiS The Indian;:, says the Major, arc rapidly advancing to a state of civiliz ttion. Indeed, in many of their families you will find as much good economy .... - J Ii. . vaII aml'. ofed whil(L&mi. They are giving up the chaetra tiirmngtheirattention t the cultivation of tbeeartha much more certain and sure method of procuring a support for their familieC than to pl An tYtm rrs--M ) mT tmXflnm

,aroc r - , a. The Indian, hare greatly improved ,. - fOBjit?a3 in iwot. They

(have a dcLgbtful country pood lands, 1

with saline more than sufficient to pro-! . . - i: 1 duce salt lor the enure sauiaa "u white DODulation f the Arkansas Territory. There are six salt establishments now in operation in the Cherokee country, viz: Rodgerss Bswwn's.nnd Vav, on the Neosho; and Webber, Mackay's, and Guest's on the Illinois. I have been informed that Governor Houston has a very valuable saline on the Neosho, which if put in complete operation, would produce an immense quantity of salt. It lies about twenty-five miles from Fort Gib- ( son, and has every advantage of a water communication with the lower country. The waters of the Neosho and Illinois are verv transparent, and afford

great quantities of the best kind ol hsh. The country inhabited by the Choc - taw,. Creek Cherokee. Osaces.Sene-l'ary

- . . . t

ras Kaskaskia, PiankesawJ, XVenr .arry, ng the mra.urfe into tali el-.

Peorras,

Shawnee. Kansas, andi,ycVr,wucrPw,-,-9-l',-tu"J "F"-J

fiven to the lnaians east ol me !;?- York, New Jersey, and all the Eastern j . States. The Indian boundary extends from longitude 17 west from the city of Washington, to Longitude 23, or the j

' I taws have about sixteen million acres of land; the Creeks about thirteen million acres; and the Cherokecs about! thirteen millions five hundred thousand I acres. The Osage s have a country about fifty miles wide, and one hundred and fifty extent. The Senecas have about one hundred thousand acres. SALE OF PUBLIC LANDS. During the quarter ending the 80th June, 1833,there were sold at the land otlice in Springfield fifty two thousand five hundred and tixty two acres, amounting, at one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre, to sixty five thousand seven hundred and two diilliirs, and fifty cents; a large, proportion of the above lands, s.y thiee fourths have been taken in Sangamon county. NotwithstM'.ding, the large quantity of land that hat been entered and improved in this county, a population of near 20,000 inhabitants, with the piospect of surplus produce enough the present season for the consumption of twice a many more, there is yet sunject to jentry a large quantity of as good land, in !

lOOthdegreeiromLondon.-TlicChcc-ithe

as eligible and pleasant situations as any j draft, as it iowapp-trs was drawn by that has been entered. The same niv;l.,. National Ihini ihU ritranthp

he said with perhaps, the exception of! Morgan, of every other county in the northern section of the state. Great indulgence is offered to emigration from tne eastern states the present year, in the superabundance and consequent cheapness of the necessaries of life, and an addtttoi inducement is presented in tb certainly ol a speedy rise in the pries of improved iancis,"Now,s theday aoJ cow's the hour. .iow Herald. rt .il. rl- . n-. wivugcs nj uiz .ririrru in ins Kittf of ,f . f . .'ml jiicxlco. . e nnre neen iavored witn the fidlawtng extract of a letter from a resident at ?.rrx!co: CiVy of. Mexico. 21A jiiururt, 1833. Business has never beep so inactive the Cholera for fifteen davs past. I he i died. Within the three last days, 900 or 1200 persons have fallen victims to1 t . j the disease every dav. Few of the; better classes have hitherto been at-! tacked, hardly twenty of them have1 fallen. If is hoped that the disease is now at its hifrh. r.n TJ;t ii !.,-. 4 4U j public by the account of his suffrrin i."yii fiiirt. M- i. rii Kiirj n ii I f viir: which a captive among the the African Desert, as well ' benevolent character, has reecn turned from a voyage to iafd presented to the American ization Saciety ftrere of"Ba7-oa- ; ..... .,. 'ryvneai; in Hopes that it may lie oel - ter adapted to the soil ol LatM.na, than; 1 that grain of this country. This wheat i is thought the best in the world, andj flourishes in a climate where frosts are never known. Should it suit Liberia climate it must prove a most valuable grain for the Colony. Indian Rubber bathing tubs are manofactured in X. York. The artik'e folds up like a cot bed, and i so "'C" t rnay be carried in hand from ! apartment to another. Air beds,! pillows, &c. &c. are made out of the same material. Trunks are rendered waterproof by being lined w.th a thin jlndi-: Rubber cloth as thin as bank note paper. In England th.-y have a method of restoring strength and elas ticity to rotten India Rubber, and the uhsfanchas there lately been brought into use for whale fihing lines, elas tic cable! nd rope?, the superior exc I lence of which for many purposes is highly spoken of. .llbany Daily Jldz A cargo of 350 voong -widows and spinsters was lately shipped from Lon don for the supply of Van Deaian's

From the Washington Globe.

We understand that the following . .a r Batiks have been wlecie-1 cv ue :vcretarv of the Treasury, for the deposite of the money of the United States, in the places where they are respactivels situated. The change to be made on the first of October next: Baltimore The Union Bank ofj Maryland. Philadelphia The Girard Bank. New York The Mechanics Bank. Do. The Manhattan Company. Do. The Bank of America. Boston The Commonwealth Bank. Do. The Merchants' Bank. We understand that another Bank wiil be added in Philadelphia, as soon . .. a the proper inquiries ana arranger - ' ia"4r n. New ork-and that hz preparations are in progress nrt . . . m- n nriii:i ill t :i if i ii.i.i ticable. j The N. Y. Courier adds: Our or lyj ;urf rise oa reading the foregoing, is to j perceive that the Alaidiattantmpany among ir.e .Banns sehtctetr. ir.ai i . t :! : i. lusiuuiioi., it is iioionouMj ..c-ii known, is literally a foreign U.ink in the sene used by the President in his Veto Message, and yet in defiance ofj principles aavocateu in tnut aocu . -a a a . ment, we see it selected tor Uie purpose ol being the depository oi the Government Funds! Ifthe Bauk of the U. States is unworthv of the cotifidence ol the Executive -3ecause one ' fifth of its stock is held by Foreigners,

with how much more lorce docs the nrst w kit December next ensuing, for same reasoning apply loan Institution, the purrMse of nominating suitable candida majority of the Stock of which is the ates f,r the offices of Governor and Liett-

property of foreigners? Jbut this is the consistency of the opponents of the U. S. Bank! Another forgery on a Philadelphia Bank. In the course of Thursday a forged draft for $6,000 was presented1 at the counter of the Western lant. of Pennsylvania, by a person callia.g himself J homas J ownsend , and ptd. After the closing of the Bank tha fact of the draft being a forgery was discov ered, but too late to arrest the indivi dual who uttered it. He received in exchange for it in the bilU of that bank, five SUm, one S'OOt frur A10t), and the balance in smaller biiis. The 1 6th instant, up.i the Western Bank, to the order oe Thomas Townsend, for Sixty Dollars, and ingeniously altered from that amount to Six Thousand.-

The ostmber of this draft was C9, and ofihe people. twotthers of the same bauk numbered j As the matter now stands, our del8 and 70, having been previously pre-j elates will go to Indianapolis ignorant

sented and paid, the pay g teller had not the slightest supicio i tnat any thing was wrong. The person presenting the draft endorsed his name upon it in the presence of the teller, but whether it is his real or assumed name, is left to conjecture. Veto. It is a remarkable fact, that attbo ugn an absolute negative is vested in IUHJ J 3" l. J J, .. HH nmnto . nn I'ViiKtitatiAn af th ...! . I. ..!.. ... i.;. United States," says 'tbis fct can only be accounted for upon one or two sapposi.

tions; either that the influence of the crown and let us hear no murmuring, no after has prevented the passage of objTOtionabte;coBpjalDin

.. i. ..a...... ,.,. .. i.f nA . a .. rv hs w reaah aI hn wmm

not been sate to exercise it. except u5oi''me since. It was not attended. Thin

the most pressiag emergencies." JValional Intelligencer. The purchase Q iaK..r casi ticio vs. IieiJ. wiucli h s twen e.jiii ' J, w nrir iitit. whole ol ls.tww''.i I-'uljrd. ; ' w-ho are the defendaau. hd proceed-d;

Arabs 0r : hours towards us. and absorbing

.wi-t.i" ninTi- ;; - .,? r iTkBi i ai:r .n .

,5I k.. V.-.r,tK- . . Si! :-r atteiition. ha departed

lly re-;.i. ,.; .1 uA , . i;M. ',.t au u to resum. our wonted

Mogadore,!.ilAPV;?Mrf. !,. taLpn. mJ Mr. I : ; mceling now would be

Colon-i WorJ.as counsel fjr the CJrth xiox eartv. attended, and i t!i;nk we owe it to

: . .!.-.. m

jm his arguments about three lo irs, wo-ji thejurordeclareOhinaseltuaable to remttin any longer in Court.

Disturbances cf a serious characterirnoch interest as the Bank question.

have lately taken place at Montreal, i And I wish to allay all unnecessary The inhabitant! of that place aod the jexciXeraeut by simply understanding soldiery hare in several instances beenje another. I am under the impretarrayed against each other, and it has, sion that there is tome contrariety of required all the exertions of the ma-jopinion existing on the question, and 1 gUtrates and the officers of the troops 'deem it important to ascertain whether to prevent fatal consequence?. There a majority of the voters of Wayne are is a jealousy and a bitterness of feel-opposed to or in favour of a State ing, both on the part of the populace Bank.

and the soldiery, which seems to re-j The government deposits will shortquire but a favorable opportunity to,)y be withdrawn from the Bank of the

manifest itself in the shape mi ejtcn bos - tility. Congress.' -The political complexion of the House of Representatives, in the next Congress, as far as ascertain ed to a certainty, is Jackson 131, Antifackson 77. It is estimated that the members from the different States, in which elections have not yet been held will be Jackson 13, Jinti'Jackson 15. Making m all 147 in favor of the pres ent administration, ana "J against 1 leaving a Jackson irjority of 55.

PALLADH53.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1833. Having in some measure regain! our health, we Lave again entered upon thm , cares and perplexities of oar profession. , The Palladium will appear ragtdarlj beiw after. Heath of omr 7Vic.x- The eholera, Van almost entirely left. We Lave haJ but one case ia t o weeks, and that was a very slight attack. And we beSWve it is aa clear of other disease as is uswal at this season of the year. The following is a list of the entire cumber of deaf In since the first cf September. CoSn's child CVdera. Mrs. Ann Stokes Consumption. Mrs.' Knj3j Cuolera. Mr. 51. lattray's child Flux. Mr. iP. Webster Cholera. Mr. W. Madison Che lera. Sir. R. Horner's child Chclera. Mr. II. Hoover's cLil J-Cho!era. M iss Cox ':blcr a. Miss 51. Sutherland- -Cholera Mis N. Nearinge a Cuolera Mr. P. If itclcJck -ChoJcr Mr. H. Madison -Cholera ?!r. A. Beard Fowcl Cumplaint. ATTENTION. Tt.e Demccrf .tic .Republicans of Wayne county are re uested to meet at the bouse of Sir. Elijah Fisher, in the town of Centreville, on Saturday the 26th of the present month, US o'clock P. M. for the purpose cf s ppr fluting Delegates to attend the Democrat c .Republican State Convention, tofje held at Indianapolis, on the jtenar.t Governor of the State, to be elected f t the next ensuing State Election. For tie Richmond Palladium. STATE BANK. As the Legislature of the state of Indiana in a short time will be convened for the performance of the trust delegated to its members, aod as on of the most important subjects that will be presented to that body, will be the expediency of the charterirg of a State Bank; las a citizen of Wayne County having a common interest with my fellow citizens, deem it of normal! moment that a public expression of cur opinions should be made upoutWi question. It is undeniably thestJ & our Representatives and Senator to vote our will, and I believe they are all disposed to do it, indeed I have no doubt of this. The only difficulty as pears to be the asctrtainmcnt of the wiil of our wishes, and so far as the will of their constituents is conceived may grope their w ty in the dark, aod it wiil be in vain and ungenerous for those constituents (or any of them) after the action of the members upon the question, to charge upon them a disregard of the wishes of their constituents, when these constituents previous ta that action rf ihn mpmhra would not take the trouble to express their desires to the member. Now is the time for action. If we feel an interest in the question let us express it, I nnl. lKr. tt m -. fK nMk.p to the exercise of their own ludeinent. t F r t w A Dank meeting was called some i fact I presume was not attributable to !ad absence of interest in the question ; hut to the unpropitiousness of the season Wc row eniov better health: tha , ii.- . .:u:., .. cl ing?, di.trrrif;rr the annroachof r.eichncarly and left avocations. well arselves and toour delegation, to meet ;uu ia tunc express our views, inere is m qtiesuoa taat will De presemea 1 to the Legislature (of which we are. iaw:n at nrpepnf'. that wiil excite So t United States. That Bank wiunotbe rechartered; another U. S. Bank can not go into operation until 1930. I hs present Bank must curtail its discounts and wind up its business, and our whole circulating medium (nearly) will be (at least for years) the speculating issues of individual Bai.king institutions of other States. For my pft I am decidedly in favour of a State Rank with sufficient (tranches to an swer our purposes. We may object to the details of a Bill but how any busQ nes manecac object to the charier