Indiana Palladium, Volume 3, Number 40, Lawrenceburg, Dearborn County, 13 October 1827 — Page 2

can, rather than British Industry. Tennessee votes with the enemies to Internal Improvements Ohio is a tirm friend to roads and canal?. Had General Jackson been a western man, the Southern States would have opposed him, as they did Mr. Clay, whom they denounced as the advocate of Western interest. Let not the friends of the American System deceive themselves. General Jackson is a southern man, in every sense of the word, and as such he was brought forward by Southern politicians, who believed with no other southern man could the western people be so easily deceived; and they knew ver

well, that without western aid, he could not be made President. In the selection of Gen. Jackson they were true to their local interests, and they deserve itome credit for their penetration. They wanted a candidate who had some reputation with the people, and whose political opinion?, were of that flexible kind, which would admit of their being mould

ed in South Carolina into one shape, and into another in Ohio. How then can

Gen. Jackson be called a western man

it ought to be paid; for that is the very notion of its being due. It is no more lawful to withhold from a man what is due, without his consent, because he is rich, and able to do without it, than it is lawful to steal from a man because he is rich, and able to bear the loss. SUCCINCT CHRONOLOGY. Napoleon Bonapartt was born at Ajacio in Corsica, on the 15th of August, 1769; he re-

which xtfns to create throughout Galicia and Estremadura the same insurrectionary movements as in Catalonia. Large sums destined to further the explosion, and to maintain the insurgents had also been seized, and it is significantly intimated that the greater part of the coin bore the impress of a foreign power. It had already been openly surmised in the Spanish papers, that the attempts of the

JCarlists had been secretly encouraged

ceived his education in France in the Royal; by prance, in order to atTord her a pieMilitary College; be was appointed Li-ut:nant'tenCQ for continuing her military occu-

tbe 1st of bepteoibcr. 17ao; Laplaxn, the llh February, 1792; Major, the I9ih of October,

1793; Commander of Artillery f at Toulon, in

Deceutbsr of the same year; Brigadier, the 6th of February, 1794; Lieutenant General of the army of the interior, the 16th of October, 1795;

palion of the most importaut fortresses of the country. Portugal Is still in a state of fermentation and the downfall of the constitu

tion is predicted. The princess regent

Commander-in-Chief of the army of Italy, the 23. i of February 1796, and was married in the same year to Josephine de la Plagerie. widow of Beauharnois: sailed with the expedition to Egypt the 19:h of May. 1793; mi?ed at Alexandria the 1st of July ; embarked to return to France the 2iM of August; arrived at llaphin, near Fr;us, the 9 h of Octoher; was named

r First Consul the lfrh of Jannirj, 1802; Consul

He resides in Tennessee Tennessee WUT l" "V Q 4 r U uL '

and rjtnperor ioe io.ii oi may, iow-t; uo consecrated and crowned in Paris by Pope

a southern State as respects its great products, and the character of its labouring population. Tennessee through her representatives, votes as a Southern State, . . m . n m i i i

in opposition to tne iNormern, ivitaaie,

Pius VII. the December following; proclaimed King of Italy the 17th of March, 1805, and crowned at Milan the 26h ofMv; he whs

proclaimed and arkoow ledfd as Protector of i

and Western States. Tennessee, with the Confederativn cf the Rhine, the 12th of July,

respect to the great interests of Domes- S06; Mediator of the Swis Confederation, the tic Manufactures, and Internal Improve- lOih of Srptcmber, 1807; his marriage with Joments, is arrayed against us, and is as sephine was declared null the 16'h of Decerncompletely a southern state, as Virginia, bir, !809:onthe 2d of April, 1810, he married

North and South Carolina, or Georgia.

That Gen. Jackson is the Southern candidate cannot be denied, and ought not to be concealed. Attempts have been made to delude the weslern people into a belief that Gen. Jackson will support western interestsybul it is hoped that the people are not so destitute of common sense as to expect support, from a man who has been brought forward and now mainly supported, by those who openly

avow their determined hostility to every measure, proposed to sustain those interests. Can the people of the west expect to find support from an Administration, to be formed by Gen. Jackson, when the) hear his friends boldly intimate that should the tariff hill become a law, the south must secede from the Union ? Will Gen. Jackson form his cabinet from

among his friends or his enemies? Will

he disappoint the people of his own

state, by supporting that policy whicl

they have disapproved? If he will not,

it is plainly our duty and our interest not

to support him. We cannot close this address without

recommending to our fellow citizens,

who are friendly to the protection of

Home industry and Internal Improvements, to act in concert, and by every fair and honorable means to promote the re-election of that distinguished .staleman John Quincy Adams, whose Administration has hitherto given a decided and able support to the measures

which Ohio has approved, and which her citizens almost unanimously believe to be essentially necessary to her present and future prosperity.

Field marshal, the 26th of the same Octobcrjlf PPear3,to have lost her spirits in her

laie aicKness. it is also siaiea in tne French journals, that, from the language of the ministers it is to be inferred that the French government will espouse the cause of don Miguel, and co-operate in

establishing him on the throne of rortu

gal, as his legitimate right. There is a

rumor that Don Pedro, of Brazil, was expected to arrive at the capital of Portugal, in order to assist in restoring tranquility. The unsettled state of affairs is still attributed to the dismissal of Saldanah and the plots of the Camarilla. The English troops remain in Lisbon and its neighborhood. Greece and Turkey A constitutional charter has at length been adopted by the national assembly. Letters have been received at Na poll, stating the Greeks who occupied the convent of .Mgaspileon,huve beaten and repulsed 1,500 Arabs, whom Ibrahim Pacha had moved forward thus far; the loss of the barbarians amounts to 400 men, killed on the declivity of a hill, where the Greeks iiad prepared an ambuh for them. The emperor of Russia has ratitied the treaty for the pacification of Greece, entered into by Russia, France and England. At Constantinople the Reis Etlendi is said to have declared that the lives of the foreigners at Pera, particularly the English, would not be safe if a treaty had been entered into, which would op

pose any ohstacles to the operations

The following is an account of the sta- al distinguished mechanics whohave seen Hons of the Preachers belonging to the it, say they see no reason to hinder ite

running perpetually, until n is worn out.

The ingenious inventor intends taking it to Washington the approaching winter. Springfield Jlass. Rep.

and Wil-

Maria Ijouisa, Archducht 69 of Austria, who

was born the 12th of December, i79l; (of thi

marriage there was hum on th 20 h of March 1 31 i JVapohon Frmci co CarldsJosey King o

Rome;) he made his e ntry into Moscow, the

14th of September, 1812; this was the apogee of his glory, from which his adverse fortune

and decadence bern. All those nations which

had already declared against him, made th

greatest (ftorts to precipitate his ruin, and con

stimulate bis end. The Allies entered Paris on

the night of the SOIh of March, 1814; he h

dicattd the Ilth of April, 1314; embarked fur

the island of Elba, the 20' h of the same month

and arrived on the 4th of the following; there he remained until February, 1815 in which

month he embarked for France, where h arri

ved the 1st of March, and landed at Canes, in the Gulf of S. John; he entered Par'i9 the -20th da j after his disen.barkmenf ; lost the battle

of Vatrloo the 18th of June, 1815; abdicate!

a second time in favor of his son, the 22d o

the same month: he submitted himself to the

protectiou of the English, and embarked in the

Builerophron 71, the 15'h J ily ensuing, am was subsequently carried to the island of St Helena, where he disembirked the 13th o October, and died, without its bein; known o

what particular malady, the 5lh of May 1821, at

7 o'clock in the morning. The were his last Words "7 leave the op

prolium of mij death to the reigning house of

llnzland .

v .On fulfilling Pecuniary Obligations, The following is extracted from a scrim n by the late President Edwards, on Exodus xx. 15. "Thou sh alt not steal T -O le way in which men unjustly withhold what is their neighbors, is by neglecting to pay their debts. Sometimes this happens,, because they run so far into debt, that they cannot reasonably hope to be able to pay their debts; and this they do, either through pride or affectation of living above their circum

stances; or through a grasping covetous

FOREIGN NEWS, GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND. From Liverpool pipers to the 2uth uli.

The duke of Wellington has resumed

his post as commander-in-chief of the ar

myybut is excluded from a seat in the

cabinet. Thus the chief pillaroftheoppo

sitionhas bowed down to the golden calf. The new ministerial arrangements were not yet completed. Mr, Canning's will has been opened, and his effects

said to be under JL20,000. It is also intimated that he died insolvent. A meeting.has been held in Liverpool, and measures adopted for the purpose of erecting a statue or pillar to his memory. At the royal naval dinner given in Liverpool, on the 11th ult. to celebrate the birth day of the duke of Clarence, lord high admiral,. 'Mho health of the president of the United States" was given as one of the regular toasts. On

dispositio n, or some oiher corrupt prin-l which admiral Coffin "sincerely thanked

cipl. sometimes they neglect to pay their debts from carelessness of spirit about it, little concerning thenvevles

Illinois Conference, for the present year,

with the increa.se of members belonging

to the Methodist Episcopal Church, in

the bounds of said conference, during the past year.

Madison District John Strange r. E. Madison Station Edwin Kay. Madison Circuit James Garner and

A. H. Chewer.

Laurence burgh Circuit Allen Wiley

and Daniel Newton.

Lazvrenct burgh Station James L.

Thompson. Whitczcater Thomas S. Ilitt James Scott. Wayne Stephen R. Beggs and

Ham Evans. Connersviile Robert Ihnnes. Rush ville James Havens. Columbus Constant Bliss Jones. Indianapolis Nehemiah B. Griffith. Vernon Henry Buell. Charleston District James Armstrong, P. E. Charleston Circuit George Locke and Enoch G. Wood.

Corydon John W. M'Reynolds and Samuel Lowe, sup. Fault Win. Moore and James M'Kean. Eel River Wm.H, Smith and Benjamin Stephenson. Craufordsville Eli l Farmer. Btoomington Daniel Anderson and Stith M. Otwell. Salem Wm, Shanks, C. W. Ruter and John Hardy. Washington Thos. C. Davis. Uabash District Charles Holliday, P. E.

Vtrm ill ion J oh n Fox.

United Stales and G. Britain, From Washington 'we learn that two conventions between the United States and Great Britain have been received at the department of state, which were concluded and signed in the early part of last month, a few days before Mr. Canning's

death, by Mr. Gallatin, and Messrs. Grant and Addington. By one of thera

the third article of the convention oi 1818, which stipulates the joint occupation of the country beyond the Rocky Mountains, is continued; and, by the other the commercial convention of 1815, which was continued by the above mentioned convention of 1818, is further continued. The duration of the convention of 1818, having been limited to tea years, which would have expired on the 20th of October, 1828, on that day the existing commercial convention, and the article respecting the country beyond the Rocky Mountains, would have terminated, but for the recent convention. Tliey are now to continue indefinitely as to time, each party reserving the right to put an end to either of them, upon twelve mouths notice given to the other

party.

i'ii'es.

NEW GOODS. BAXTER DAVIS T3 AS just received dirtct from New York, and a. J. id uow offering for sale, at the Wrll known s'an !. formerly occupu-U by UAN'L BKUWN,

I . ii- -i. - . i . ... L. i y I

nncames John Miller and Asahelj:" " !'VV cv " wrc uc CUU! ' " l ,cr"

Risley. Pa'toka Chales Slocombe. Boonvillc Wm. Moveta. Wabash Circuit James Hartley. JWount Vernon Thomas Foils. Mount Carmcl Aaron Wood. Cash River Samuel C. Cooper. Illinois District Peter Cart w right, P. E. Illinois Circuit Samuel H. Thompson and John Ilogan. Faskuskia Wm. Eccles. Shoal Creek Thomas Randal and

the Turkish fleet. "The porte would: John Reams, hardly, however," savs the London Sun, Sangama Joseph Tarkington and

"draw down the vengeance of England ilsaae. b. House.

the company for the honor they had done to that gentleman. Asa native of Amer

ica and a subject of this country, he hop

whether they are paid or not, takin" noled tne two states would long he united

care to go to their creditors, or to send!111 hrotherly union.

to them; and if they see them from time to time, they say nothing about their debts. Sometimes they neglect to pay their debts, because it would put them to some inconvenience. The reason tyJiy they do it not, is not because they cannot do it, but because they cannot ib it so conveniently as they desire; and xo they rather choose to put their creditor to inconvenience by being without what properly belongs to him, than to put themselves to inconvenience by being without what doth uot belong to them, and what they have no right to detain. In any of these cases they unjustly usurp the properly of their neighbor. Sometimes persons have that bv them

with which they could pay tlieir debt

u mey wouiu; our mey want to lay out their money for somethig else, to buy gay clothing, for their children, or to advance their estates, or for some such 'end. They have other designs in hand, which must fail, if they pay their debts. When men thus withhold what is due they unjustly usurp what is not their own.

buietimes they neglect to pay their

dents, and their excuse for it is, that their creditor doth not need it; that he hath a plentiful estate, and can well hear to lie out of his money. But if the creditor be ever so rich, that gives no right to the debtor to withhold from him that which belongs to him. If it be due.

For the duke of Clarence's commen

tary upon this toast, we refer to the appointment of the hon. Frederick dc Rous, the gentleman who wrote the very notable book on the U. Slates, as his dag lieutenant. France, An individual who came to Paris, as a rich man, and who died last year in a situation bordering on indigence, left a statement of his lo?ses at play, and declared that persons, whom he named, had employed fraudulent means to play against him with the certainty of winning. These two persons one of whom was formerly a dentist, were put on their trial; and the celebrated M. Comte was summoned as a

witness, and gave an explanation of the art, or altered cards, by means of

which their frauds had been committed.

The court of appeal has confirmed the sentence, by which they are condemned to eighteen months' imprisonment, and a fine. A great falling ofTin the orders to the silk manufacturers of Lvons has occurred this year. At the fair of Beaucair, all the merchandize, with the exception of paper hangings, sold at a reduced rate. Spain, Numerous arrests had taken place in the capital, in consequence of n vast conspiracy discovered by the minister of police, Recasbo, the object of

l.J MUM ll 1 1 I'll 1 1 i Dreadful lire at Moldavia, The Aus

trian Observer of the 11th August, contains an afflicting account of a dreadful

(ire which has reduced Jasse, the capital

of Moldavia, (one of the principalities

for which Russia has been contending

with the porte throughout the last half

century,) to a heap of ruins. A melan

choly interest attaches to the details of

this conflagration which has proved hard

ly less fatal to human life than destructive to property. Fifty dead bodies are

fated to have been dug out of the ruins, nd while the flames were vet raging, it

was found necessary to set ail the male-

actors, who were confined in the pris

on, at liberty, as the building in which

hey weie shut up was found to be on i mi

ire. i liese wretches appear to have

made an ungrateful return for the tner-

iful consideration which had thrown

open the doors of their dungeon. They

prepared to pillage that portion of the

city which had escaped; the most active

xertions of the magistrates and inhabit-

mts were required to keen them in

necK. i ne writer oi tins sad imrraive towards the end of his letter, decribes the flames to have again hurst

out in more than one part of the city. To add to the horror of the scene, a storm

raged at the same moment. It would

seem that to arrest the progress of the

calamity was beyond the power of man, and the letter concludes with the mournful declaration, that "Omnipotence alone can save us from utter destruction."

Peoria Smith L. Robinson. ripple Creek Isaac Scairitt and I. T. Johnson. ritlus Samuel Bogart. Potazvutami Mission Jesse "Walker. John Dew is superintendant of the mission and conference collector.

White. No, of members this year, 15,974 No. lust year, - - - 11,147

Consisting of a variety of Broad Cloths, Casinets, Flannels, (green, red & white,) Bombazetts, (different colors) Shirtings & Sheetings, bleached and brown, Domestic Plaids &. Stripes, Calicoes, newest Fashions, (Splendid patterns,) Queens-ware, Hard-ware,

?CSI Jfi' TEAS.

7 .

Sugar, Coilee, Raisins, Brandy, Wines, &c. &c

Increase, 1,827

riLSO A few Dozen Gentlemen and Roys'

-;Sea Otter

Brown Otter do. Nuter do.

Fruit, At no time, within the recollection of the oldest of us. has there been

such superabundant crops of apples, Black, brown & grey Seal do.

part's, peaches Plums, ccc. 5cc. We

were astonished to see the quantity of peaches which a single tree contained; and still more so to see between CO and 70 bushels of pares upon a single tree. There is scarcely a sound peach tree left in the whole country, the unusual weight of fruit having broken them to pieces. Many apple orchards are veiv

much injured from the quantity of fruit upon the trees. Cider ii now selling at

fifty cents per barrel. Grce

As the above addition of Goods receivrtl, were purchastd at ihr Eastward for Cash only, they can he afforded very LOW for Cash, or io exchnge tor approved Country Produce. Having nude arrangrments to put up Pork thi fait, he will purchase Pork, and Lard Kegs, For which liberal prices will be paid Farmers and Ccoprrs will find it to their advantage to iite him a call.

ibvrgh Gazette.

Newspapers, As an evidence of the trilling value of a newspaper in those

parts of Lurope where they are under

The 7var over, The gratifying intelligence has been received in this city, that the Winnebagoes, alarmed at the formidable preparations which have been

so energetically made against them, have repented of their late outrages. As a preliminary to more satisfactory atonement, two of the chief participators in their atrocities, have surrendered them

selves to the proper authority. Many of

the principal men of fhe nation were pre

September 15, 1327,

36if.

D1SSOL UT10X OF Prill 7l ERSWP. VHK Partnership formerly existing between UKKSON & GIBSON was dissolved on the 5 h mat. by mutual const nt. AU those indebted to the late firm are earnestly rtqueated to call on either of the late partners, at their old stand, nov occupied by Kwtn and Gibson, and mke immediate payment a much longer indulgtnce cannot, be giveu. AMOS nT.fcSON WILLIAM GIUSOK. Laierenceburght Sqt. 20, 1327, SS-3ur.

jYolice.

vith 11,000 subscribers for 1 1,000 dol- whites might take place. Gen. J

ars. in iew i oru, a uauy paper, wun unison wun tne lorce unaer nis com

mand, was proceeding to the Portage,

elusion of this affair, such arrangements

will, we hope, be made, as to prevent a recurrence of any future aggression. The show of this formidable force, so suddenly concentrated in the heart of that

A al i a 1

government comrou we may instance pent, wno mauuesieu a sincere oesire

the recent sale of the Berlin Gazette, that a perfect reconciliation with the

with 11,000 subscribers tor 1 1,000 dol- whites might take place. Gen. At-

I

such a subscription list and a correspond

ing advertising patronage, would be worth considerable more than 100,000, and in London might be sold any day for something like 350,000. The Morning Chronicle was purchased by its present owner for a little less than 250,000, and had a circulation of less than 3,000. The annual profit of the Times, (which circulates about 6,000), averages between 80

and 100,000. The secret of this vast

difference between Prussia and England,

or America, is that the despotic government of the one can suppress every journal in the kingdom instantaneously and with impunity, whilst under the free go vernments of the other, editors laugh at ministers and fear nothing but the laws.

The population of those portions of

Poland which have successively fallen to the share of Russia, is about 20,000,000. To meet the intellectual wants of such a mass of persons, there are but 15 newspapers, eight of which are printed in Warsaw. Our 10 or 12,000,000 are supplied with something like 5 or 600 newspapers. There ia a difference here,

THE subscriber having removed his Store, rfquests all peraons indented to him, to call and settle with DAN1KL IIAGBUMAN Eq. who has my books and note in possession. KRASTUS TOUSEY. sept. 2i, i:r. 37 tf, AMOS LANS.

where a junction would he effected with attorney and counsellor at law,

the troops from Green Bay. In the con-l !1 nvoums the public that he win constancy

Jnientsi attentl 'lie I erms of the Supreme Court; ibu

District Court of the United States, at Indiana, polis; the Frarklin, Dearborn, Switzerland, and Hipley Circuit Courts ; aud any other Court in the attte, on apt-cial application. That in future

j his undniJed and prevering attention and tut-

savage region, will have ihe happy effect may. at ll tim-s, be consulted t his office, in

Lawrenceburgh, nexl door to Mr, Hunt's Hotel, or at Court,

Jutu 25, 1827.

29 tf

of awing the refractory and evil disposed

Indians. 6. Louis hp ibacan. Perpetual Motion, Mr. Lewis Babcock, a wtach-maker at Ware Factory

Village, has constructed a machine otj

brass, of about 18 inches high, and 10 ten ' ' professional business intruded to his

inches wide, which has the power 0f ffe. He w,ll atttnd the courts in the 3dcircnit. . ,. . J , also the Supreme and U States courts at indtwinding itself up once m o minutes hy anapolis OSceoa H.gU Strtet, opposite the means of a spring lever, that falls instant- Cle Vs office

I

Feb. 25, 18-26.

N, HOWARD, COUNSELLOR AT LAW,

7j fcv-'-tneeburgh, Indiana, will faithfully at,

ly," without diminishing or retarding the power of the machine. When put together it commences motion immediately, without any starting cause, and moves a pendulum at about the same rate of a clock pendulum. We are informed that it has now been running

about live weeks incessantly, and scver-

8f.

JOHN TEST, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Having removed to Lawrenceburgh, offer, his professional services to those wbo may wish his assistance. Office on High Street, ia a room directlv over Ceeg-QD Gibson's Store: May 12, 17. 13 if..