Indiana Palladium, Volume 9, Number 1, Lawrenceburg, Dearborn County, 19 January 1833 — Page 3

FAIL liADIUM.

fjwrciiccbnrMa, Jan. 19.

Th:s p ;per Ins again been selected, by the Department of State, for the publication of the laws of Congress.

The citizens of this town and vicinage arc solicited to meet at Mr. Hunt's Hotel, this evening, at 6 o'clock, P. M. for the purpose of adopting measures for the detection and punishment of burglars, horse-thieves, &c. A general attendance is requested.

Roctes. On Thursday night last, the store of Mr. James M. Darragh,of this place was feloniously entered and robbed of 18 or 0 dollars in cash, and some other articles. An 'attempt was also made on the same night to force an entrance into the grocery of Mr.Lytlc Johnson, by cutting through one of the window-shutters so as to remove the fastenings; but the villains failed to accompltsh their purpos-3 in this instance. Several other robberies have been committed in this neighborhood within a short period, and it behooves every one to bo on the lookout for the rogues.

The Bank Bill wa3 taken up this morning, directly after reading the journals, and the amendments made in committee of the whole considered and generally concurred in. These amendments gone . through, and the bill still open to amendment in the House, the tug of war commenced. The first motion made, was to strike out the 25th section, allowing permanent loans for five years and pending this amendment, another was moved to strike out 5 and insert 3, which prevailed, but was subsequently reconsidered and lost and the question recurring on striking out the whole section, it was lost, ayes 19, noes 48. A motion was then made to amend'the 1st section by striking out 9 branches and inserting 3 lost by a considerable majority. The next move made was to postpone the bill to the d Monday in Dec. next, and thisbringing up its whole merits, debate commenced and continued up to the time-of adjournment this

evening.

The session will, most likely, clcse on Saturday week- not sooner.

The House of Representatives of this State is composed of 75 members, viz: 42 Jacksonians, 31 Clayitcs, and 2 Anti-masons. 12 are natives of Kentucky, 18 of Virginia, 15 of Pennsylvania, 5 of Ohio, 2 of Maryland, 7 of N. Carolina, 2 of Tennessee, 1 of Delaware, 1 of Ireland, 1 of Indiana, 1 of Massachusetts, 2 of S. Carolina, 1 Connecticut, 1 Louisiana, and 1 of Georgia. 42 are farmers, 14 lawyers, 4 merchants, 1 carpenter, 1 currier, 1 tanner, 1 hatter, 2 traders, 1 printer, 1 tailor, 2 manufacturers, and 1 bricklayer. The oldest member is 62 years the youngest 25.

The Hon. J. C. Calhoun has resigned the office of Vice President of the United States, and it is said has taken his scat in Congress as Senator from S. Carolina.

The Steamboat, Franklin, formerly running between Baltimore and Alexandria, has been purchased by the Federal Government and ordered to Charleston.

Governor Reynolds, of Illinois, has offered a reward of $150 for the apprehension of William A. Sweeney who is supposed to have murdered Peter Ettee, in a barba

rous and unhuman manner, on the night of

the 1st of December last. Said Sweeney is described as being "about six feet high, thirty-four or five years of age, with a high forehead, and but little hair on his head; fair skin, blue eyes, has an obvious impediment in his speech, a part of his right ear has beefi taken off, and he is by trade a blacksmith.

Froiz the Boston Mirror. Disunion Read! We invite the parti

cular attention of the reader, whether he be

Referring to Mr. Webster's determina

tion, avowed at the late Boston Meeting, to !

support the views of the President cordially.

a union-manor nullifier, tariffor anti-tariff as expressed in the Proclamation, the Ken

if he be an American citizen, possessing I tucky ijazette remarks

one American feeling, with one drop of

I-aivrciiccbursh Library.

rliHR D.rectorsnf the Lawrenceburf h Libra-

j. ry i;om

Treason. The Nullifiers have given a

new definition of this crime. Their organ,

the Mercury, holds this language

"Every man in the Senate who mav vote

in favor of coercing Carolina will be guilty

of treason to his immediate constituents.

The Senators are, strictly speaking, the Am

bassadors of the States, who are their Sovereigns that Senator therefore who votes for coercing any one of these Sovereigns, is a traitor to all the rest." There is nothing more remarkable than the originality and seeming confidence which pervade the manifestoes and unofficial arguments of the Southern Hotspurs. New codes of Laws, national and municipal, spring up at their bidding, in support of Nullification. Vattell, Pufivndrof, Grotius our own Federal Constitution and all the commentaries which the sages of the revolution have furnished us upon its provisions are thrown to the worms and the bats, as worthless: as behind the enlightened era in which we live! Competent to the crisis, as they boast themselves, they are resolved to break a pathway up to power and sovereign independence, through mountains of reason, of authority, of principle, which are piled against their heedless career. They in fact have contemptuously dolled all the restraints cf social law the whole compact shattered, crushed and spitten upon, is under their feet. Unbridled in their furj their judgment has "fled to brutish beasts." A kind of monomania on the subject of politics has infected the public mind.

1 lie brightest and boldest intellects of

the day who in another cause might adorn and immortalize their country, are bewil-

uereu uy an iniatuation winch clings to

An article will be found in another column of our paper, from the Boston Mirror, which we commend to the serious consideration of our readers. If any thing were necessary to open the eyes of the public and expose to view the ultimate tendency

of nullification or disunion, the statement of

the Canadian editor must be abundantly sufficient. It will bo observed that the course South Carolina is pursuing has been "long expected," and that the intimation is clear that a traitorous understanding has for a long time subsisted between the leading men of the South and our ancient enemies, the British. It is there exultingly set down that the Union of the States "is forever sun

dered.'' And is it so? Is the fair fabric of the Constitution, reared at the expense of

the life-blood of our fathers, to be razed to

the earth by the unholy combinations of in -a

ternaiand external foes? No. We trust

in God there is a redeeming spirit in the t A 1 . ...

HMiuoi our countrymen which will avert

the threatensd calamity, and brino- reproach

and degradation on the dishonored heads of

the instigators of the treason. "The perish able infamy cf their names should be pre served and rendered immortal."

puerilities and absurdities in political law.

that would disgrace the reasoning powers of a common school-boy. "Grim-vis-aged war" is rearing his "wrinkled front" among them his banner is unfurling his sword is leaping from its scabbard, and the peaceful fields will ere long resound with the shouts of a maddened soldiery and all these dread results arc prompted and sustained by such shallow-pated sophistry, as is put forth in the paragraph we have quoted ! That a Senator of the United

States sworn to support the Constitntion, will commit treason, by voting for the sub

jugation of a State that is treading that Con

stitution in the dust, is a propasition so ut

terly absurd, that the men of other years will look back to its propogation now, as but the dream of romance. Again. Conrrres i hnt

an assemblage of ambassadors! Admit it, and how can they commit treason by approbating war against South Carolina? (conced

ing her to be a sovereignty.) The JVullics claim no allegiance from the Senators (or

auiuacouuui ut uiucr amies treason then

cannot oe committed tor nr.tmrT arrnmct

Sotuh Carolina, in their diplomatic character not against that State, for they owe her no fealty not against the rest of the confederacy, for they arc acting with and for its integrity. We have quoted this sentiment merely to exhibit the state of hopeless delusion into which party spirit has driven the Carolinians. A night of thick darkness seems to have fallen upon the public mind and amid its gloom, fierce and untameable' passion is abroad, hurrying his victims to the

rendezvous preparing to lift the curtain of

the drama with his sword, and deluge the arena in blood. Louisville Adv.

ii i . ...

.vmerican oiooa coursing through his veins,

we ask him to read the following extract from a late Canada paper, without feelings

ot remorse, shame, and indianitmn. if lie

' J " can. If any thing can rouse him to a sense of the danger with which this country is now threatened if any thing can ctart his national pride, and elicit from him a solemn resolve to make all sacrifices, to brave all

dangers in order to preserve the Union of these States, this will do it. No man can read it with feelings of indifference; nor can he reflect upon the horrible 'consequences which must follow a dissolution of the Union, without fear and trembling. The extract here given should be republished in every paper in the country. It will produce more good than ten thousand town meeting speeches. It goes home to the heart it touches the national pride of every man, and will wake the people to a proper sense of the dangers which threaten them: "Since our last, the long expected and much wished for intelligence from the United States has arrived. . The blow has been struck which forever sunders the United States. South Carolina and Georgia have respectively taken the stand from which no force at the command of the manufacturing states can remove them. . Hence all apprehensions of danger as to the future pros

perity of Great. Britain are dispelled. New and never failing markets will be thus

opened for the products of her industry, which taking a fresh start will conduct her

to the acme of national strength and great

ness. J his Union which was to endure

forever, and to be an cvcilansting exemplar of man's capability of self government, it seems however, has not been calculated to

last, even the term of a single life. Opin-

ions 10 mis enect, nave been a thousand

times expressed by men read in human

nature, and coincident with, and confirma

tory of them, is the extraordinary fact, that during the sitting of the South Carolina

Convention which met to seal the doom of

the Union, that body were called upon to pay the last tribute of respect to the last

signer of American independence." The Tiverton Murder. Some additional particulars relating to the murder of Sarah M. Cornell, by Rev. Ephraim K. Avery, are given in the New Bedford Gazette of Monday. The examination of

witnesses on Friday, added considerably to the evidence of his guilt. A handkerchief found near the corpse has been identified as belonging to the prisoner. We have been favored with copies of letters addressed to the deceased, found in her possession, which there is every reason to suppose were written by Avery. Lynn Messenger. Appointments by the President. Gov Tiiroof, to be Naval Oflicer in the port of New York, in the place of John Ferguson, dee'd. Hector Craic, Surveyor of said port, in the place of M. M. Noah, resigned. C. A. Clixtox, (eldest son of the late De Witt Clinton,) Consul General of the United States for France, to reside in Paris.

I i'l ..inlMri' in. - U -...I il. I llOn. and In rmm. ma. .1 It l ih. -..

unuai i III liUI I AlK tlUWUIlS, ailU UlU- 1 . . - - . .... .v. . v i. tw oiu w

or prominent Anti-Jackson men expressed ?, l,ct ?r. thf community, re.nf ctfu Jy pr

their solemn drrmm,.; crt t!, W '"iV'J J,ncf J'em.ik,, in relatio to Us

w ' I nil iiiii 11 r i T a

mpany, by their Cammittee. deairmi

to extend the useful operation of the mit'tu-

ruble

esent

prcet

President in his efibrtsto enforce the laws the exertion. f fcv ,p,r:iM ami liberal and to preserve the Union. minded individual in the jer 1818, it has re-

hy do not the friends of Mr.Clav in the ce . x vriou timet, such additions ta t

West assume the same open and patriotic r J. . nor . inteU.gence and pubt-e sund against NullificMio,!? Why So ,!,cv

not, promptly, through their Legislature and enlightened viewa amonp ita citizens. For a

iniougn uie columns ot their leading papers short period pat, from circumstances moatly in the West, make some efibrt to discoun- ceidtn,i its concerns have been njjlijrenty tcnance the llcvolutionarv movements of manfd. anl it has cnnscienily fiSed toex.

South Carolina! Were they to rally around " . nVo ner ow L nf nt-T T Cm i i c i i-i i . t . r. manci a proper areTe 01 intrrest in its nros the principles of the Proclamation at this fear- pfrity : it. eiain however upon the patron, w ful crisis, they would not only, by such an of the public, prow with our e;rowth an t act, bo discharging one of the" highest duties strengthen with our atrmuth. i he Library

thev owe their countrv, but they mWit bo f0al,n' present a'jsut uUCvjiumes oicuce instrumental in preventing resistance eto the ,ml e) ,tc,e!1 xvork, wmpri.injr man of

laws, and perhaps a severance of the Un- ,listorv, Trave!$ , Knfrliih CUs.ics, and 10n. tuitah! nmnnrtion nf u'ntlc nf m t .it

At the North and East, but one sentiment viz : Poetry, popular Novels, Biography, Sic.

seems to prevail amoni? the neonle on this inu ,,oru,nK ricn ana var.ea repan 10 ma

L They seem to fomet, or to lav r. obtained at a trirtinrpo.t.

aside, for ,ho lime bei3, ,,,o potohal , rff. WtTSZZ

enccs wmui may nercioiorc nave divined Kes likely to accrue from to valuable an insti. them into distinct parties, and to move in a tution. An enlphtened community will at body as one man struggling to avert the hor- once perceive in it, a source of credit to tho

rors of civil war, and to save the Union. lown, u "waiuanie beneiit to the mertry ant

In the West, however, a different scene " :Vu OI lia c';;ns' consequent.

nts itself. Many of the leading ene- ft "V, '7 "'""r:"

C7 i vv .vtiiii, 'iw 0 1'u trier in in ii r i ii iuf!0. a lM

a population like ours posessMjj a lare num ber of younff mechanics, just cut er'uiff upon tho

prcsc

mies of General Jackson seem to hate him more than they love their country. The

public good seems to be with many of them but a sav)u?tfv consideration. They make

no etlort to excite and embody public senti

mcnt against South Carolina Nullification

acuvc auues or iwti ana where few tiriv&tA

libraries are found, it sfljrds fjtctlitie. far men

tal and moral cu.tivitiom and rational and useful employment of leisure hours, peculiarly valuable: the prospect moreover of the loci

they make no effort to avert the danger that tion of the Connty Seminary within our limits, hangs over the peace and liberty of the should serve a an additional inducement t country. The strangeness of their conduct ff.tcr n ins!.I,utio'1. ,xv,,ich prove so valualmost forces us to believe that thev would auxil,av to all the ordinary mean, of oimosiiorces ua to oeuce mat mcy wouiu ,mpirl ner llscfui knowled m.l rormt IM.

preter seeing tho Union severed, and the timents. A fnv shares may be had by calling whole country involved in a civil war, to upon the Librarian, D. S. Major, I!sq. at flva

seeing it prescved trom sucn evils through uwars eacn.

his instrumentality."

u v (HIV J

J. II. UUOWLTv, Committee.

JAMES DILL,

Police Office. An entry was made two

or three days ago, by a gentleman at Mai

den lane, of three hundred dollars in bank

bills, which he supposed had been picked

from his pocket in the Fulton market. A V Y m)' DC(1 and board without any just suitable reward was offered for the recov- cause or provocation, this, therefore, "is to

cry of the money, which the advertiser had forewarn all persons from trusting or harbor-

no occasion to pay, as he found it all tho ing her on my account, as I am determined same evening snugly stowed away in the to pay no debts of her contracting after th;i

breast pocket ot his surtout, where ho rccol- uate.

(o-.votjcu;j

TTO 7 HE HEAS my wifc Frances has left

lected to have placed it in the morning in

stead of his pocket book for greater security.

it. i. courier.

January 1 hh, 1833.

HARRISON LOW.

The Tariff. By way of justifying the course they intend to pursue, tho opposition to the administration arc now exclaiming, that the President is about to yield to tho dictation of the Nullifiers, by forcing a reduction of the tariff to the revenue standard. In each of the Messages of the Executve to Congress a reduction of the revenue to the wants of the government has been urged. This fact is undeniable. Why, then, are we now told that the President has determined to vicld to tho dictation of South Carolina that the protective policy is to be abandoned that the American System is to be annihilated to please

the South?

In urging a reduction of the tariff the

President is pursuing, with his wonted firm

ness, the policy he has invariably advocated since he was first elevated to the exalted

station he now fills. A different course

would subject him to the charge of acting in opposition to his own expressed opinions, in order to obtain an opportunity to make war on one of the States of this Confederacy. Ijouisvillc Adv.

Extract of a letter to the Editor, dated Indianapolis, Jan. 15, 1S33. Dear Sir: The several committees to which business was parcelled in the early part of the session, have now generally reported, and the bills thus brought forward arc passing the ordeal of investigation, with all the industry and attention that usually mark the closing of the' session. A bill has parsed the Senate, and been read twice in tho House, npprcpiiating $300 of the three per cent, fund to each county in the State. On yesterday a bill was offered in the house, to authorize the governor, in the event of a called session of Congress, intervening the 4th of March and the 1st of August next, to order ejections for members of Crongress, by proclamation; and to provide that electors for th:i purpose shall, after the next, lake place in' 1834, and biennially there-atW-in crT.xt, r's-snacting the old law.

The Lost Man Found. We mentioned

week before last that a Mr. Barrett, of Westfield, was missing from the family, and that

tears were entertained that he had wander

ed off into the woods in a fit of derange

ment and perished. We are happy to state

that he returned to his anxious familv on

the evening of the fourth day after he was missing. It proved to be a fact as was an-

prehended, that he became suddenly dea . i

ranged, and continued traveling uncon

scious of his course lor about thirty-six

nours, wnen ins senses came to mm and hi found himself near Ellicottville, Catarauu

county, about sixty miles from home. He

immediately commenced retracing his steps, and relieved the painful anxiety of his family, as mentioned above, on the evening of the fourth day after his departure. A similar circumstance occurred with the same individual several years since; but then he had proceeded only about ten miles when his presence of mind returned. A'. Y. paper. Port of Entry. Efforts are being made for the establishment of a Port of Entry, at Camden, N. J, to be composed of all that part of Glocester county at present attached ,10 the "District of Bridgto!l,,, and Sale in county.

T I ' l .t. - . .

c icarn irom our irienas tint on rnuav

evening, 9 P. M., 4th January, inst. a meteor arose in the western part of the horrizon, displaying a very brilliant light. It traversed the zenith towards the cast, and was seen to break in two parts; in about a minute after, an explosion was heard, which to some appeared as loud as a near clap of thunder, which shook the houses very perceptibly. The same was Mo observed at Williamsburgh, in this county, and for some miles easlwardly and westwardly of this place. The evening was remarkably serene for this season of tho year. Some persons immaginc they saw a brilliant cavalcade traversing the hemisphere, and have stretched their fancy to suppose that the Angel Gabriel, or some atrial deity was enjoying a short circuitous view of this mundane Globe. But as we have never made Astronomy a study, and have seldom even noticed what we suppose this to have been, an atmospheric meteor, we only notice the subject to let

Astrologers elsewhere know the extent of

an undefined and inexplicabb (to us) phe nomenon in nature. Pa. paper.

A List of Letters EMA1NIXG in the Past Office t tiur.

1 rcncebuirh, Dearborn Count r. Indiana.

on the 1st of January, 1833 which if not tak. f n out within three months, will be cnt to tue General Post Ofiiceasdcad letters.

Armstrong XVm. F. Loyd W.

Longwood Christopher

.Mi Jo

We Icarn from the National Intelligencer, that the House of Representatives of New Hampshire, have passed a resolution approbating the sentiments of the President's Proclamation, by a vote of, ayes 181, nays 2; and by a vote of 155 to 40, a resolution

approving the general course of the present administration. Louisville Adv.

A IVew Light. Lorenzo Dow has juspublished a work entitled a "Short History in Miniature," giving a full account of the Georgia Missionary business, commencing back as far as 1793.

Nullification below Par! Georgia protests against it with "abhorrence." Tennessee reprobates it The Committee of North Carolina disavows it as

unwarranted by the Constitution The

Vommiuee oi uaimum scouis it as a heresy Virginia disclaims it as illegitimate More than one-third of her own citizens (S. C.) oppose it with all their energies. There is not another State out of the 24, w ho approves of her remedy, however they may sympathize in her wrongs. Does it best become her then to push on to extremities; or, to pause in her career, take counsel with her sisters, and unite with them in the

best means for obtaining relief and for preserving tbe Union? Richmond Enquirer. A Predicament. Slaves escaping from one State into another are now reclaimble by their masters, whenever found within the Union. Slaves, however, from a foreign country are not so treated; of course South Carolina, if she separates from the Union, is in a fair way to lose all her slaves; in other words more than half her population. In the town of Mansfield, Connecticut, the past season, raw silk hs been raised to the value of $35,000.

The "Thirty-six" of the Statesman are beginning te smell their course in regard to the South Carolina heresies. They have been waiting a long time for their cue, and, having received it from the Louisville Journal, (the only advocate of nullification in

the West,) they yesterday applied the tongs

to the pulses of their readers, and, by a na

tural progression, they will probably next

week venture their fingers.

Armstrong Irwin 2

Alger Wm.H. Bryant Martin Ilraz:er Robert Buel CeorpeP. 5 Heach Joel Hlasdel Jacob Hostick James Marlon Wm. Bloomer Elizabeth Honinrton John BiUingsby John Boon Mrs. Binepjar John, tnd James Hunter Brumfield Win. Bruce Chas. Croiier George Callahan John Carroll James Crss Rachel Mrs CaMingharn W'rc. Dunn John P. Duskey Enoch

Dill James Dunn Isaac Dunkin Mary Mrs Fleming William Galney Jarre U. Gil ett Sam't T. Gouchar Samuel Gidney Isaac Gleason A . Gilbert Mary Miss Stephen Jcel Dr.? Chares Gibson J Hundley Benjamin Hundley Robeit

Hudson John Hook Kliza

Henderson Wm llibbiu James

Harrington Wm.

Johnston Wm. 2 Johnson George

Keiguiley Robert

LIBRARY NOTICE. A T the annual meeting of the s!oc

A holders of the Lawrencobur"h Library

Company, the following gentlemen were

duly elected Directors for the ensuing year, viz: William Tate, Geo. II. Dunn, John Porter, A. S. Vance, J. W. Hunter, James Dill, and J. H. Brower. By a resolution of the Board of Directors, all persons having in their possession, any book or books, belonging to tho Library, are required to return them to the Librarian, D. S. Major, Esq. without delay. A schedule of shareholders on arrears to the Library, with the amount due from each up to the 1st Jan., 1S33, is left at the ofnee of J. W. Hunter, Ksq. for collection. WM. TATE, PreaS. J. II. Baowrn, Sec'y. J3ortgagcs Excciilicne, &, Suhpccrtns, Far Sale at ftii (tfce.

or

M'Clester James McnJal George Morrow James Mtlcnmh Robert Miller Sarah MrsMil'erKuck,or Tomis Fcery M'Neely John 2 Vewton Henry Perry William 2 Parks John Patterson Robert Reid Herod C. 2 Held Herod or Thomas Ross Samuel Ridlen Abraham Ripley Joseph 3. Rarulcll John Rhodes John W. Scott John Hv Swales Mary Mrs. Smith Hannah Schoales William Satton Juliana fieibert William Thorn A Pea Tibbets Benjamin Tucker Wi liam Tlucher Elijah Test Edward F. Tousey George Tousey Oner 5 Van ile William 2 Vancleef Garret Yanhorn Cornelius W ilson Joseph Wilson Maria woman of color Walpo'e Luke 2 WaMotWames Wilson John Wood Ebenezer Walker Robert

Wadley Silvester

JAMES W. HUNI KR, J.V.

nnilE subscribers, J. II. Lane & Co.; 1J have removed their stock of Goods to the corner of High and Short streets, in Stephen Ludlow's new building, where they intend to keep constantly for sale, in addition to dry aooss, &0. H7 Wiley, Flovr, Salt, by the barrel, all of which, will bo sold low for Cash or produce, payable at the time of receiving Goods, having determined to sell only for

pay in hand from tho first day of January next.

CEO. P. BUm; J. H. LANE Dec. 5, IS32. 47-5r Administrator' Snlc. rpilE undersigned, having taken outlettert I of Administration on the Katc ot id .m bdon, dee'd. will expose to sale on tie 25th int. at the late dwelling of the dee'd, all ilia personal tffVcta belonging to saideiato, on a credit of niao mnntl.s. FRANCES ADDON, Adm'r P. S. Those indebted o tbe Ftaie of Vtn. Abdon, deeJ wU mike imiotdu'e payment, and those having1 claims fphii.it sid Kktae will present tl.tin to me ve'l auihe rtirated, with n one jesr. The t'tata is rorsidm!

solvent.

F. ADDON

January 1, 1823.