Indiana Palladium, Volume 6, Number 14, Lawrenceburg, Dearborn County, 10 April 1830 — Page 1
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DEVOTED TO jYEIVS, POLITICS, LYDUSTRY, MORALITY, LITERATURE, AAD AMUSEMEJVT. i - . - . A Volume VI. LAWRENCEBURGH, (INDIANA 5) SATURDAY, APRIL H, 1830. Number 14
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NOTICE. FUBLIC notice is hereby given, to the heirs, creditors, and all other persons concerned in the settlement of the following mentioned es Utes, that the administrators of each, and erery of said estates, have filed in the office of the clerk of the probate court of Dearbon county, State of Indiana, their final accounts and several petitions, praying for settlement of their said sevev at estates and that the said probate court will proceed to final settlement of said estates at the term of sid court, on the first Monday in May nest, to wit: Estate of John Donahoe, deceased.
Estate of John Miller, Estate of Jacob Darling, Estate of Edward Morgan, Estate of Henry Garner, Estate of Robert Mayally Estate of Hugh Ray,
By order of the Hon. George H. Duqo, probate Judge of Dearbon county. JAMEb DILL, Clerk. March 29th, 1830. 13 Sw List of Letters "JTp EM AIMING in the poit-office at LawlOL reoceburgb, Indiana, on the 1st day April 1850, which if not taken out io three months, will be sent to the General Post Office as de&d letters.
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Anderson Andrew Alden Samuel Abbet Robert Abel! J. D. Armstrong Jobn Bonham Benjamin Bonte Jane Miss Brewster Joseph Blaedel Jacob jr. Bowen Charles Buell George P. Carrengton John B. Caldwell James Calliban Thomas Calvin Phillip Casedy Hugh Crandon John Coieboom Cornelius Cochran John N. Conger David Condal John Curtus Thomas Cheek George Dill James Dowden Samuel H. Decamp Alisebith Dila Henry Dunn George H Darling Thomas Gibbs William Gulick John Griffith Francis Hall Jobn Hall Sylvinoa B. 2 Harrison Benjamin Hays Walter Hays Jacob Hansel Thomas Harrington Aaron Haflfman Benjamin Huestia Oliver Hill Alaoson Henderson Isaac & J. Henderson S. & W. Jackson Ezekiel J. W. ( 89 letters.
Kittle William Lucas Tuder Lawrence Daniel Lotton Sarah Lewis Jonathsn Settle Id Nebemiah Manfield George 2 care of Jobn Smith Murray James Mote John Mc Withy Ansil Neal William Nelson ElenderMra. Oldham Azariah Powell Thomas B. Pratt Edwin P. Ry William M. Rtply Ann Miss Ruble Thomas Robinson Richard S. Right Hi rata Swift Paul Swift Charles Small Samuel care of John Oyler Shepherd Jonathan care of T. Longley Swan Matbew Suttles TJIyatb, Snyder Mary Sylvester Joseph Stroud Joseph Sinks Joshua Tanner Thomas Test Dunn Van Houten Isaac Upp William Way Amos Walker Henry White Jobn Whitcom Frances Wykoff Allen Wheeler Bethia Woodard Davis Wiley Moses. HUNTER, P. M. 13
NOTICE. A meeting of the Trustees of Lawrenceburgh Township will be held at the Court house to appoint supervisors of board districts on Saturday the 24th April next. E. GUIDLEY, Clerk. Lawrenceburgb, March 30th. 1S30. NOTICE Is hereby given to all persons concerned, Amos Lane. ) That a Domestic Attachment r. C has issued by the undersigned John Ackerman.ja Justice of the peace in and for Dearborn County Ind. amount demanded 261 21, and been returned executed, by Horace Whitney, Constable, by summoning William S. Ward as Garnishee. This case is s? t for trial at my office, at Law renceburgh, on the 5th dy of April, at 12 oV lock of said dy, for the examination of the said Garnishee, as to the rights, credits & effects within his knowledge or possession belonging1 to the 6 aid John Ackerman. J. W. FUNTER, Justice of the peace. Lawreneeburgh, March 26 1830THE ELEGAjYT HORSE
YOUNG riOROZEL,
ILL staod the ensuing season, commencing the
first Monday in April and ending the first day of July, the first week at the stable of James
Backhouse, below Harrison, and the second week t the stable of Mr. Watson. in Ehzabethtown; and so changing throughout the season Young Florozel is a beautiful dark brown; 6 years old; rising 16 hands; and in every respect well made and portioned for service under the saddle or in harness. He was sired by the celebrated imported horse Florozel, considered one of the best blooded in the Union. Farmers and others wou'd do weil to examine Young Florozel before it is too late to secure the benefits of the present season. The terms are moderate, and produce taken in payment. glpFor particulars, see printed bills. P. & A, BACKHOUSE. March 13, 1SS0, 10 If
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Cash! Cash! The Subscriber will give $10 PSHBI02TTH or good laboring bands at Portsmouth on the Ohio, 115 miles above Cincinnati. A passage up on a steam boat will cost from $1 to 1 50 cts. The work on the Canal has just commenced, and hands will dad employment at all times. LEMUEL MOSS. February 1830. 8-Smo DEARBORN COUNTY,) Dearborn Circuit Court.)
October Term, 1
Margaret Tharp) vs. On Bill for Divorce, Thomas Tharp. 3 NOW comes the said Margaret Tharp, by Lane her attorney, aad on his proving to the satisfaction of the court, now here, that the said Thomas Tharp is not a resident of this state It is therefore ruled and ordered by the court) now here, that notice of the pendency of the said bill for divorce, be published in (he Indiana Pallsdium, a newspaper printed and published at Lawreoceburgb, Dearborn county, for four weeks successively and also requiring1 the said Thomas Tharp, to be and appear before the judges of the Dearborn circuit court, at their term to holden at Lawrenceburgh, in and for said county of Dearborn, on the fi st Monday in April next, then and there to answer to the bill afore said, or the same will be heard in his absence, and a decree entered thereon accordingly. JAMES DILL, Cl'k. A. Lawe att'y for compl t. 25tb Feb'y 1830. 3 w
Dr. Thomas White's Vegetable Tooth-Ache Drops. jPHB only Specific evtr offered to the public L from which a permanent and radical cure may be obtained of that disagreeable pain the tcoth ache with all its attendant evils ; such as fracturing the jaw in extracting of the tteth, which often proves more painful than the tooth ache itself ; and cold passing from the decaying teeth to the- jw thence to the head, producing h rheumatic affection with many other unpleas ant sfFects, such as a disagreeable breath, bad taste in the mouth, he. &c. all of which are produced from foul or decaying teeth. I am hppy in having it in my power to offer to the world a remedy, that will not only remove the pain, huts preserve the teeth from further decay, (9 time out of 10 if properly applied,) and arrest the disease in such as are decaying, and have not . ommenced aching, restoring them to health and usefulness , CERTIFICATE. Mr. Thomas IVkiter have the pleasure to in form you, that agreeable to your request, I have been using your tooth ache drops m my prac tice for sometime past, ana I must acknowledgethat I nd them far superior to any thing 1 have ever yet known lor that purpose. You are entirely safe in recommending them to cure nine times out of ten, tor, from the success 1 have
had, I believe your recommendation fails short
0: their merits. I am well convinced, that it will cure most cases of the tooth ache, when it is timely anu properly applied 1 am not able to say much at thtstimeasto its preservative properties but from whit 1 havs seen of your teeth that have been long cured and preserved from decaying, and from a few weeks experience, 1 amdccideuly of the opinion, that it will have a very beceficial eflect in preserving the teeth ; and recommend it, hoping that it may prove a blessing to humanity, and advantageous to yourself . With respect, I remain yours, he. VM, 1. A.IilKKty. Surgeon Dentist, No. 99, South fifth Street Philadelphia Pa. Sept. 12, 1829. fcT For sale by Samuel Morrison, Lawrenceburgh. Price 50 cents per phial. 52 Corporation Notice. The President and Select Council of the Town of Lawrenceburgh, VERSUS James Leonard and others, heirs of Samuel Leonard, deceased, Amos Lane, David Guard, Elizabeth Bowen, and Samuel Bowen, (the said Lane, Guard and Elizabeth Bowen, being the administrators of said Samuel Leonard, deceased,) John Elliott, Zerah T. Percival,and A. S. C. Vance, Margaret jYoble, Lawrence Vance, Catharine Pinckard Thos. B. Pinckard, her husband heirs of Samuel C, Vance, dee'd, and Stephen Ludlow. NOMCE is hereby given to the foregoing named persons, and all others whom it may concern, that on this day he President and Select CcuDcil of the town of Lawrenceburgh, by their attorney, have filed in the Ceik's office of the Dearborn circuit Court their petition, praying said court to vesi in the petitioners the title to certain tracts of land in front of said town on the Ohio river one of said tracts lying on thtupper side of Short sireet and belonging to said John Elliott, the other tract lying between Walnut and Short btreets.and between New streets and the river, a part thereof supposed to belong to Zwff.h T. Percival, and the residue to the said Jirr.es Leonard and others, ur.kaown heirs ot Samuel Leonard, deceased. JAMES DILL, Cl k February 27, 1833. 3 Flour, Corn meal, Flax-seed, Tallow, Will be received at this office in payment of subscriptions and other debts,
From the Montreal Herald, Feb. 27. LYTERES TLYQ ADVEA'TURE.
About six weeks ago, as a young Indian of the Sf. Rgis tribe, named Lisar Tarble, was amusing himself in the exercise of skatiug on the St. Regis river, about a mile above the village of that name, he incautiously slipt into an air hole. His cries soon arrested the attention of some Indians who were returning from Hogansburg, by a land road separated from the river by a small thicket of woods. The Indian death cry was a sufficient signal to inform them that a friend was in distress. The whole party consisting of six or seven persons, left their horses and sleighs and ran in the direction from whence the cry came, and soon discovered the unfortunate boy, struggling in the last agony of despair. They all stopped at the verge of the ice, except onethis was an uncle of the boy; he did not hesitate, but plunged into the water, perfectly undismayed by the awful prospect before him, of which he was cautioned by his then sinking nephew, in these words, "Uncle, do not come after me, or you will perish with me." He swam a few rods when he met a bar of ice that separated him from the air hole in which his nephew was he used all the strength he was master of to break the ice with his arm?, but finding it impracticable, he dived under it, a distance of about 24 feet, and reached the side of his nephew who had alreadysunk below the surface: he caught him, and with one efljrt of Herculean strength, threw him on the ice, when, with very little a6sistance,he might have been saved, but being quite benumbed, and probably insensible of his danger, he slid back into the water and was drowned. The generous uncle whose name deserves to be recoided, (Jean Baptist Terrence,) was, by the exertion made in swinging his nephew on the ice, driven under it on the opposite side, and was seen floating down with the current by the persons above, at a distance of aboui 8 or 10 feet from the airhole. In this most horrid of all imaginable situations,
he had the presence of mind to endeavor
to break the ice with his head, but was Iwice unsuccessful, when, in his or:n words, desperation impelled him to one more effort, (not, however, before he
had taken a considerable quantity of
water,) he managed uith the motion of
his hands and feet to gain the bottom, and with one bold spring drove his head through the ice. I saw him six days after the occurrence, ho appeared quite recovered, except the top of his head, which was dreadfully bruised.
Brake De Giz. A Frenchman once kept a livery stable in this city, who could speak English but poorly, and sometimes, as appears by the following story, spoke it worse than he understood it. One morning a gentleman called to hire a hoise tSwell brok to the gig," as he was about to flourish a new vehicle of that description. "En ! oui, monsieur, I ave de cheval vat is sure broke to de gig, he will do it parfailment." The horse was hired, placed in the new gig, but very soon came back with it dangling to his heels, and miserably "broke." Our knight of the whip complained sadly of the cheating Frenchman, but could get no other reply than "ma f oi, did I not foretell you3 he brake de gig ; he brake all de gig, vat he is ever put to, so you ask for a horse well broke to de gig, I was sure I could varrant him." The gig owner went away with an exclamation of regret, that all Frenchmen should ever drive any thing larger than frogs. Sat- Eve. Bulletin. A Military Anecdote. A German peasant newly enlisted in the army, was scarcely arrived at the regiment, when he was sent with others upon a skirmishing party; and approaching a wood in which a party of the French were posted who immediately fired upon the Germans, and while the musket balls were
flying very thick, the honest peasant stepped out of the ranks making a sign to desist, at the same time howled out. "Why what the devil are you firing for don't you see there are people a coming ?' We are sorry, says the editor of the National Gazette, that we cannot find room for extracts from some recent speeches of Col. Crocket and Mr. Chilton, in Congress. None bat the most rigid muscles of face could withstand them. These "congressional" orators remained us of the case of an applicant, in England, for a license to preach, who, being asked whether he could read, answered, "Mother reads and I 'spounds and 'splains,"
LATE FOREIGN NEWS. The great magazine at Chumla has been blown up it contained 2000 casks of powder, 63,000 cartridges, with great quantities of bombs, grenades, &c. and 40 field pieces, the whole of which were destroyed, with 43 artillery men, and a vast magazine of provisions adjoining, the explosion of bombs, &c. much increased the horrors of the scene. The winter has been exceedingly severe in Europe, generally. The provinces of France bordering on the mountain?, had been much alarmed by the descent of the wolves. In one instance, they killed a clergyman and his horse, as he was returning from a visit to a dying man. Large flocks of swans had appeared on the Seine, near Paris. The Garrone, the Rhone, &c. had been firmly frozen. It may be worthy of remark that wolves rarely appear in the wildest parts of the United States, almost every man possessing a rifle, and well knowing the deadly use of it. It may serve to defend them equally against invaders of their rights, as to exterminate races of animals less savage than tyrannical men. The British frigate Blonde returned to Constantinople on the 28th October from a voyage to Odessa, on the Black
cca. It is said that the Turks lost 80,000 men by sickness, only, in their two campaigns with the Russians 12,500 died of the plague at Varna. The French army is to receive an increase ot 60,000 men. The English people have suffered exceedingly during the winter, and one tenth of the population of Dublin were in a state to need parochial relief. A conspiracy to throw off the government oi Spain, is gaid to have been discovered in Cuba. Twenty one arrests of persons, as principals, had taken place. Gen. Vives has issued a proclamation on the occasion The president of Hayti, (in consequence of the demand of Spain for a surrender of that part of the island that formerly belonged to her) has declared war against the "adored" Ferdinand.
The effects of this nation of free blacks may soon begin to develope themselves on the neighboring islands; and the prospect is not a pleasant one to the white inhabitants of them. Miss Frances Wright had arrived in Hayti with 24 liberated slaves, for whom she intended to provide land, &c. The country bankers in England are sending their money to London, to be employed at 2 1-2 per cent, interest. This must arise from a great want of confidence in the country, or a singular
glut 0 capital all over Europe.
The establishment of the black colony
in Canada by the "Canada company,"
appears to have excited considerable at
tention, and some resolutions had been introduced into the Canadian parliament
concerning it.
The seat of lord Rendlesharn, one of
the most splendid establishments in Eng land, valued at 100,000. has been des troyed by fire.
France is making great efforts to carry
the war into Algiers' 25,000 men were
destined for the expedition.
It is again reported that prince Leopold will be king of Greece, a "legiti
mate" ot course, though placed over the people without the ceremony of asking their consent Greece appears much distured. Nothing important from Turkey. The minister Halil pacha had started from St. Peteisburg. The cession of Palestine is strongly talked of the Rothschilds to be the purchasers. The old and wicked "queen mother" of Portugal is dead. The province of Conception has separated itself from the general government
of Chili much disorder and many rob
beries prevailed, and nearly all the for
eign merchants had gone to Valparaiso. The ship Florida, arrived at New York from Lima, brought between 60
and 70,000 dollars in silver and gold A certain lord Grevesdied at London on the 8th Feb. The verdict of the jury was, that he had destroyed himself in a fit of insanity. Much irregularity appears to have taken place in the proceedings of the inquest, and it is said that the testimony attainable was not sought for. It is broadly intimated, that lord Greves was murdered his "royal highness" the duke of Cumberland and lady Greves, being intimate. The people more easily fell into this belief, because of the death of one of the duke's valets, named Sellis, some years ago, who had a very pretty wife, whom the "royal daks" was said to honor. This royal i
personage has been very unpopular, and for a considerable time as if banished to Germany. mmmm Huron Terriiom. We have receired a copy of the bill establishing the territorial government of Huron, reported by the committee on the territories on thb 6th inst. The bill provides, thatafier the 6th of September next, the country bounded southwardly, by Illinois and Missouri, and by a line running due west from the northwest corner of the state of Missouri, to the Missouri river, norths westerly by the northern boundary of the United States; and eastwardly by a line running from the northeast corner of Illinois, down lake Michigan, east of the straits, to the southern extremity of Bois Blanc Island, and south of said Island; thence due east to the boundary of the U. S. in lake Huron; shall constitute the territory of Huron. The Governor and Secretary shall be appointed as at present for Michigan. The legislative council should cousist of five persona elected for two years by the people. The counties of Brown, Lowa, Crawford, Michillimackinack, and Chippewa, shall each be entitled to one member. Officera in the territory shall be elected or appointed, as in the territory of Michigan JVbrth Western Journal.
State Statistics. The following statistical information is derived from the New York Annual Register. There are 50 counties in the state, 5 cities, 741 towns, 296 incorporated viiia ges, and 1 ,406 post tflices. The estimated value of real estate 13 257,560,S96 dollars, personal 73795102 total 328,939, 999. The whole number of newspapers in the state is 211, of which 32 are antimasonic. In the city of New York there are 47 newspapers, 11 of which are daily. The total number of sheets annually issued by them is 9,790,340, requiring annually 20,415 reams of paper. The whole number of banks in the state is 45, with an aggregate capital of 25,234,600. In the city of New York 14, with a capital of 15,430,000, beside 2 incorporated and not subscribed. The amount of tax paid into the N. Y city treasury by the banks of the city, in 189, was, on real estate, 2,670 16, and on personal, 5,420 39. Insurance companies, real 1,905 42 personal 41,S16. Miscellaneous companies, real 1, 1E5 80, personal 5,762 41. Total amount of taxes 104,721 37. The number of attorneys and counsel-
lors in the state in 1820 was 1,248; il 1829, 1,6S8. There are 129 Episcopal clergyman, 363 Presbyterian, 91 Refumed Dutch, 306 Methodist, 211 Baptist, 13 Lutheran 18 Roman Catholic, 14 Universalis and all other denominations 14 total 1,229. The numbci in 1826 waa 761. The Baron Swedenborg's notion abouC Revelation feems to be this: That the Almighty gave the Bible to man, as a person might a nut to an infant, without telling him there was something within good to eat; but after having suffered him to emuse himself for many ages, with the exterior of this nut, the Deity at last sends the erudite Baron & crack it for us, and show as the kernel. How much better would it be for man kind, if cavilling polemics would quiS the arena of their disputations, for the heavenward paths otactivs benevolence If they cannot agree precisely on tba
merits of Christ's death, it is impossible that they should disagree as to the mer
its of his life. Let them, then, as far at in them lies, 4;Go and do likewise."
JY. York A mule L
Integrity. Integrity is a great and
commendable virtue a man of integrity is a true man, a bold man, and a steady
man. He 13 to be trusted and relied upon. No bribes can corrupt him, nofear daunt him. His word is slow ia coming but sure. He shines brightest in the fire, and his friend hears of him most when he most needs him. His courage grows with danger, and conquers opposition by constancy. As he cannot be flattered or frightened to that he dislike?,so he hates flattery and temporizing in others. He runs with truth and not with the times with right and not with might his rule is straight, soon seen, but too seldom followed, IVm. Pennt to hi Children. A woman told her husband that she had read The Art of Love on purpose to find out how to make herself agreea ble to him. 'I had rather have luTt without the art said he.
