Indiana Palladium, Volume 11, Number 2, Lawrenceburg, Dearborn County, 24 January 1835 — Page 4

LINES WRITTEN IN THE SAND. In merry boyhood there was one Who shared my youthful heart; We swore no fortune and no fate. Our destinies should part. But as we twain to manhood grew, Time broke that golden band, And proved that mutual oath of ours Wai written in the sand. Youth brought with it a gayer dream A fond and lovely one , Smiled on me, till love's ties seemed wound Too fast to be undone; Faithful till death we pledged ourselves, With willing heart and hand; We lived to know that plighted vow Was written in the sand. Anbitio.n whispered me to trust His promised path to fame, And with devotion I essayed To play hisolesperate game; What gained X but the blasting firo My own wild hopes had fanned! Alas, the promise I pursued Was written in the sand. Wealth tempted me with golden hoards, Her proffers were to me, Like green and sunny isles to thosfc Long tossed upon the sea ; I grasped at gain, and, day by day, New schemes of profit planned; The luring phantom proved at last A writing in the sand. A crafty friend, in joyous guise, Upon my sorrows stole, And with a rcadd'ning 'suasion urged The pleasures of the bowl; I listened wo betide the hour! 'Till friendless, doomed, and band'd, I saw the mockinir demon's words

Worn written in the sand. Detroit Cour. AN ENGLISH GRAMMAR. "MULTUM IN PAUVO." What'erc we see, ox feel, or touch, or taste, Amongst the Nouns is by grammarians placed; The Articles point out the thing itself, A horse, a tree, an owl, the miser's pelf; Whatever "' thpKfi mav DOSSeSS, - Color or form the Adjectives express. Pronouns, of nouns the repetition save, Imply possesnon, or distinction crave. Being, or suffering doing what we may, By Verbs alone we can the fact pourtray; To Adveubs, verbs great strength or weakness owe, Ab,'I love dearly" or "I scarcely know." JVeame or distance, agency or place, By Prepositions we distinctly trace. As Interjections we can only class Such sounds as Oh! or Ah! alack! alast Conjunctions join all setences aright, As, "I have done, and therefore, now, Good Night." L.onlmn paper. COURTSHIP. "O, Laura, will nothing I bring thee E'er soften those looks of disdain) Are the songs of affection I sing thee All doomed to be sung thee in vain? I offer thee, fairest and dearest, A treasure the richest I'm worthI offer the love, the sincerest The warmest e'er glowed upon earth." But the maiden, a haughty look flinging, Said, Cease my compassion to move; For I'm not very partial to singing, And they're poor, whose sole treasure ia lovo." "My name will be sounded in story; I offer thee, dearest, my name; I have fought in the proud field of glory; U, Laura, come share in my tame. I bring thee a soul that adores thee, And loves thee wherever thou art Which thrills as its tribute it pours thee, Of tenderness fresh from the heart." But the maiden said, "Cease to importune; Give Cupid the use of his wings, Ah! fame's but a pitiful fortune, And hearts are such valuless things!" "O, Laura, forgive if I've spoken Too boldly nay, turn not away For my heart with affliction is broken; My uncle died only to-day; My uncle, the nabob, who tended My youth with affection and care My manhood who kindly befriended, Has d ied and has left me his he ir. ' ' And the maiden said, " Weep not, sincerest; My heart has been yours all along; O, hearts are of treasures the dearest Do, Edward, go on with your song." From the Xcxo York Jttirror. LETTER FROM N. P. WILLIS. CONSTANTINOPLE. Punishment for conjugal fidelity drowning in the Bosphorus frequency of its occurrence accounted for a band of wild lioumeliotes their picturesque appearance Ali Pasha, of Yanina a Turkish funeral. A Turkish woman was sacked and thrown into the Bosphorus this morning. I was idling away the day in the bazaar and did not see her. The ward-room steward of the "United States," a very intelligent man, who was at the pier when she was brought down to the caique, describes her as a young woman oi iweniy-iwo or inree years, strikingly beautiful; and with the exception of a short qu?ck sob in her throat, as it she had wearied herself out with weeping, she was quite calm and submitted composedly to her fate. She was led down by two cviuiio, in uci usuai urcss, uer yasnmacK only torn from her face, and rowed off to the mouth of the bay, where the sack was drawn over her without resistance. The plash of her. body into the sea was distinctly seen by the crowd who had followed her to me waier. It is horrible to reflect on these summary executions, knowing aa we do, that the poor victim is tav v T VW!JuuSe uPn tne least jealous whim of iier uu&uum or raasier, condemned often upon bare raspicion, and hurried instantly from the tribunal to this ifiAlAnf onn foifvT, J 1 ,,iwur..i.M?uin. Any suspicion of commerce wiui u sunburn, particularly, is, with or wiiuout eviuvuut iiwuuh rum. jNot long ago the inhabitants of Arnontkeni, a pretty village on the Bosphorus, were shocked with the spectacle of a Turkish woman and a young Greek, hanging dead from the, 6hutters of a window on the waterside. He had been detected in leaving her house at daybreak, and in less than an hour the unfortunate lovers had met their fate. They are said to have died most heroically, embracing and declaring their attachment to the last. Such tragedies occur every week or two in Constantinople, and it is not wonderful, considering the superiority of the educated and picturesque Greek to msDrutal neighbor, or the daring and romance of vk2TC1 -p reuitot bidden happiness. The liberty of going and coming, which the TuricK!?wenjy'WraPPfdonl.y in veils, which astripe, and and theVelf.8acrific wh.n the heart is concerned, 0w! ?ludfhe fn Proportion to tha demand for if heT& 1Q rfttl SSI!?1 BlcilLa who a"enk the seraffliol cfthe : sultan s Bister, consisting of a irreat nmXl? I -Wf coasnsiinff oi a great numhnrf. ef Wmn.t.U,m.tb.ttheirte SS

cupied in sentimental correspondence, by roeaps of flowers, with the forbidden Greeks and Armenians. These platonie passions for persons whom they have only seen from their gilded lattices, are their only amusement, and they are permitted by the sultana, who has herself the reputation of being partial to Franks, and old as she is, ingenious in contrivances tft retain their societv. Mv intelligent informant

thinks the Turkish women, in spite of their wantot ,U w j - J O veducation, somewhat remarkable for their sentiment of character. With two English travellers, whom I had known n Italy, I pulled out of the bay in a caique, ana ran down under the wall of the city, on the side 01 ute sea of Marmora. For a mile or more we were be neath the wall of the seraglio, whose small watergates, whence so many victims have found Their way to Marmora without a boat, it are beset, to the imaginative eye of the traveller, with the dramatis persona ot a thousand tragedies. One smiles to detect himself gazing on an old postern, witn nis reein sum aar luemcr, aim mo uau on end, in the calm of a pure, silent, sunshiny morn ing of September! We landed some sevon miles below, at the een Towers, and dismissed our boat to walk across to the Golden Horn. Our road was outside of the triple walls of Stamboul. whose two hundred and fatty towers look as if they were toppling after an earthquake, and are overgrown superbly with ivy. Large trees, rooted in the crevices, ana graauany bursting the thick walls, overshadow entirely their once nroud turrets, and for the whole length of the five or six miles across, it is one spenaia picture oi i ' . . . decay. I have seen in no country such beautitul rnins. At the Adrianonle crate, we found a largo troop of horsemen, armed in the wild manner of the east, who had accomnaniftd a Roumehote chief from the mountains. Thev were not allowed to enter the citv. and with their horses picketed on the plain, were lvinc in nrouns. waitiucr till their leader should conclude his audience with the seraskier. They were as cut-throat looking a set as a painter wowld wish to see. -The extreme richness of easttern arms, mounted showily in silver, and of shapes so cumbersome, vet picturesque, contrasted strange Iv with their rasrired capotes, and torn levins, and their wav-worn and wcarv countenances. Yet they were almost without exception fine-featured, and of n resolute expression of face, and they had flung themselves, as savages will, into attitudes that art would find it difficult to improve. Directly opposite this gate stand five marble slabs, indicating the spots in which are buried the heads of Ali Pasha, Albania, his three sons and grand son. 1 he inscription states, that the rebel lost his head for having dared to aspire to independence. He was a brave old barbarian, however, and, as the worthy chief of a most warlike people of modern times, one stands over his grave with regret. It would have been a classic spot had Byron survived to visit it. No event in his travels made more lm pression on his mind than the pasha's detecting his rank by the beauty of his hands, lllo fine description of Hi wiia vourt ot Vanina, in Childe Harold, has already made the poet's return of immortality, but had he survived the revolution in Greece, with his increased knowledge of the Albanian soldier and his habits, and his esteem for the old chieftain, a hero so much to his taste would have been his most natural theme. It remains to be seen whether the age or the language will produce another Byron to take up the broken thread. As we were poring over the Turkish inscription, four men, apparently quite intoxicated, came running and hallooing from the city gate, bearing upon their shoulders a dead man in his bier. Entering the cemetery, they went stumbling on over the footstones, tossing the corpse about so violently, that the helpless limbs frequently fell beyond the limits of the rude barrow, while the grave-digger, the only sober person, save the dead man, in the company, iuiiu ntu u. i ma ucsi. opcu, nuu 1110 i'iiJV-aA.i3 aim fViMsMimrl 4- I t ex Ixrrt ft-ifil imf h tun mnlr o m I shovel, lhese extraordinary bearers set down their burden not far from the gate, and, to my surprise, walked laughing off like men who had merely engaged in a moment's frolic by the way, while the sexton, left quite alone, composed a little the posture cf the disordered body, and sat down to get breath for his task. My Constantinopolitan friend tells me that the Koran blesses him who carries a dead body forty paces on its way to the grave. The poor arc thus carried out to the cemeteries by voluntary bearers, who, after they have completed their prescribed paces, change with the first individual whose reckoning with heaven may be in arrears. 1 he corpse wo had seen so rudely borne on its last journey, was or had been, a middle aged Turk, He had neither shroud nor coffin, but "Lay like a gentleman taking a snoose," in his slippers and turban, the bunch of flowers on his bosom the only token that he was dressed for any particular occasion. We had not time to stay and see his grave dug, and "his face laid toward the tomb or the prophet." We entered the Adriannnlf ant.o. nni rmttsA tTi triangle, which old Stamboul nearly forms, by a line approaching its hypothenuse. Though in a city so thickly populated it was one of the most lonely walks conceivable. We met, perhaps, one individ ual in a street; and the perfect silence, and the cheerless look of the Turkish houses, with their jealously closed windows, gave it the air of a city devastated by the plague. The population of Con stantinople is only seen in the bazaars, or in the streets bordering on the Golden Horn. In the extensive quarter occupied by dwelling-houses only, the inhabitants, if at home, occupy apartments opening on their secluded gardens, or arc hidden from the gaze of the street by their fine dull-colored lattices. It strikes one with melancholy after the gay uaiconies and open doors ot France and Italy! Wa passed the Eskai serai, the palace in which the imperial widows wear their chaste weeds in solitude; and, weary with our long walk from the silent streets at the bazaar of wax-candles, and took caique for the Argcntoplis of the ancients, the "Silver ciVy" of Galatia. Peculiarities of men of Genius. Homer, it is said, had such an aversion to natural music, that he could never be prevailed on to walk along the banks of a murmuring brook, nevertheless, he sang his own ballads, though not in the character of a'mendicant,as recorded by the infamous Zoilus. Virgil was so fond of salt, that he seldom went without a box-full in his pocket, which he made use of from time to time, as men of the present day use toDacco. Zoroaster, it is said, though the most profound philosopher of his time, theoretically, was very easily put out of temper. He once carried his irritabili ty so tar as to break a marble table to pieces with a nammer, because he chanced to stumble overit in the dark. Shakspeare, though one of the most renjW men. was a orpiit hirm-in it . ( i Vivau dispute with a shopkeeper for half an b a the matter of a penny. Hecives Hntsnnr 1 ?Tnr portion of his own disposiCv When he A k'frhim say "I would cavil on the nKh partof a3Lfr? Peter Conexlle, the grMt lyvii ot nis timefe tar as concerns nis worlcsv remtirnhT-n ; conversation, as was at lison. hn ; v ! edged to have been one i :inost eWUr , that overlived. V4- ; i Handel was such a mTserrthat at the ur that he was in the receiDtSfLfift nnn . , '! '

wivinfr.f.-vr.vciii

j i t. ..7 -"B rouiwrewuuauie ienn as tney can he purchased in tha " ,R.WS S?'?? - ' JOSEPH OKOFP.

doggereU for sen-ant girls, that wt frequently find attached to beautiful airs, under the title of poetry, such as Wandering Willie, &c. Byron was also sadly addicted to the "mat sloup. Some of the noblest of his stanzas, however, were produced under the influence of the jolly god. According to his servant, Peter Conroy, lately deceased in this city, a pint of brandy was his nightly al-

Samuel Rogers is an inveterate punster, albeit ! from his poetry, one might suppose him to be the gravest man in Christendom. He has one peculiarity that distinguishes him from all poets, past, present, and to come, i. e. three hundred thousand pounds. . Thomas campoeu, mougu u uSij man, 11. , Is verv vain of his personal appearance; he once dis charged a servant for hinting to him the propriety of o-ettin"' a wig, as his hair was turning grey. Sir Walter Scott was said to have taken no pnoe in th wonderful creations of his genius, at the same time that he was extremely vain of his title of sheriff of the county. Ho"?, however, is the victim ot a sua moreunnnrnoimble vamtv. V henever he is asked out to dinner, he invariably says, "I shall do ye the pleas ure, and then ye will ha' it to say, mat ye naa me honor to sit in company with the Ettrick Shepherd, allowed on all ban's to he the greatest sang writer in the warld." Earl Gray, thejlate premier, who is indisputably a man of genius, is so timid that he will never sit in a room after nightfall by himself, for fear of seeing a ghost; and though he acknowledges to this, he aflects to be skeptical oi their existence. Parlour Journal. A Xovel Case. A young girl by the name of Catharine Dingwall, was tried before the Quarter Sessions in New Brunswick, on Saturday last, tor stealing a horse. The history of the transaction is briefly0 as follows. The girl is from Yorkshire, England, where she became attached to a young man named Charles Stewart, who was driven from the house by her father. She absconded in search of her lover, assumed men's clothes, and arrived at New York as a common sailor. From thence she travelled to Boston, then to Philadelphia, and away to New Orleans. She again returned to New York came over to New Jersey and being wearied, heart-broken, and dejected, she stopped at a barn with the intention of committing suicide; but the appearance of a horse suggested to her the idea of stealing it, that she might thereby incur the penalty of death, which was the law for that offence in her own country. She was taken up with the horse near New Brunswick. When put upon her trial, she nleaded rruiltv. and refused to retract it, but her counssl was permitted by the court to enter a plea of not miiltv. and the case went to a jury, who brough in a verdict of not guilty. Such was the sympathy excited in her case, and so strong was the beliet tha the act was one of frenzy, and not of deliberate in tention, that no one appeared against her. Xewark Eagle A Disagreeable Subject. At the time when Sir Richard Steele was preparing his great room in York buildings, for public orations, ke happened to be pretty much behind, in his payments to the work men; and on coming one day among them to sec what progress they had made, he ordered the car penter to get into the rostrum and make a speech that he might observe how it could be heard. The fellow mounted, and, scratching his head, told Sir Richard that he knew not what to say, for ho was no orator. "Oh," cried the knight, "no matter for that; spoak any thing that comes uppermost "Why, then, Sir Richard," says the man, "here have we been working tor your honor these six months, and cannot get one penny of money. Pray sir, when do you design to pay usJ" "Very well,' replied Sir Richard, "pray come down, I have heard quite enough; 1 cannot but own you speak very clis I ttnAt Mr f h Al1fh I ffnn'f mllK flfmivii itaii. iiKnst " I mivuijr , wuuuu i uuu l uuuuic J uui ouujuvu Anecdote of Dr. Franklin. While the doctor resided in France, as Minister from America, du ring the war, he had numerous proposals made to him by the projectors of every country and every kind, who wished to go to the land supposed to flow with milk and honey, America and among the rest there was nno thnt. nnereil himself tn lis lrintrf t introduced his proposal to the doctor by letter which is now in the hands of M. Beaumarchais, of Paris aiaimg nrst, that as tne Americans nad dismissed or sent away (renvoye) their king, they would want another; 2dly, that he himself was a Norman; 3dly, that he was ot a more ancient tamily than the Duke of Normandy, and of a more honorable descent, as his line had never been bastardized; 4thly, that there was already a precedent in England, of kinirs com ing out of Normandy; and on these crrounds he rest ed his offer, enjoining that the doctor would forward it to America. But as the doctor did not do this, nor yet send mm an answer, the projector wrote a second letter; in which he did not, it is true, threat en to go over and conquer America but, only with great dignity, proposed, that if his offer was not ac cePte3 an acknowledgement of iJ0,000 might be m0-Q to lum for n'3 generosity! nwirimiF i n jueuifq Geo. I9, nucll V Geo. m JLanc, 1TP ESPECTFULLY inform the public that they iiU' have just received a large supply of Spring & summer Goods, Among which are Blue, Black, Brown, Olive, Invisible, Drb G,aree and Steel Mixt Broad Cloths; Fancy, Striped and Blue Cassimeres; Dark, Blue, Brown and Steel Mixt Cassinetts; Summer Cloth; French and Brown Irish Linen; Blue and Mixt Cotton Twills; Painted Muslin, Ginghams and Calicoes: Fancy '(iause, Silk Sc Crape, Delean dress Hank'fs; Jilack and W hite Crape; Superior Black Sattin; Black, Brown, Sky-blue and Brown-watered Silk Pongee, Black Yeils, Plain and Figured Bobinetts; &c. &c AN ASSORTMET OP Saddlery, Hard A Quccnstvare, CROSSCUT, HAND & CIRCULAR SAWS, CRADLE, GRASS 4 BRIER SCYTHES, WllllAM'S CAST STEEL AXES, Tire, Band, Square, Round, Hoop Iron, American Blister & Cast Steel; Also, a quantity of Coffee, Sugar d Jlolasscs: A FEW BBLS. OF WHISKEY; All of which they are offering for 6ale at the store room lately occupied by Maj. John P. Dunn. Lawrenceburgh, April 1, 1834. 12 HE subjps have received from PIIILADELF( a general assortment of jdmy , 3ns, iiann uwhe, BjOTTS, SHOES, &c. &c. which they wjlfell low. October 24tfiJ 1834. N.&G. SPARKS. SEAI.-STrTrT V rITT5 nAm' rmiTi? o.,k;i :.T. T T. l' rne" JH113 ilh: an ot winch w K

.V1IM T fUSUTl T. ml PHILIP L. lLP 8POONER, arc associated in the practice ot law, in the Dearborn Circuit Court. AU profess sional business entrusted to either, in the said court, will receive the punctual attention of both. 0l'lce onllifh street, in the room formerly occupied by lv Walker, Iq. where V. L. Spooner may ic ioium, except when absent on professional business. Lawrcnceburgh.Sep. 10th, l&M. :k"tf E. BUSH HAS lately received an addition to his former stock, which makes on hand a very general assortment of Fall and Winter Goods, which he is anxious to dispose of. UK HAS ALSO TO SELL, A ONE HOUSE DEAIIBOIIIT, a PAIR OF SECONDHAND HARNE PA TEXT BALAXCES, (drawing sU hundred.)) i h n,t oV iQsi U-tf I awrenccburgh, Oct. J, lxM. - ..I Lawre ILiimbcr for Sale. 750,000 feet of Boards, 20,000 do. Scantling, 350,000 Shingles, On hand and for Sale by WM. TATE. N. B. All those indebted to me for lumber are requested and expected to make immediate payment. Lawrenceburgh, Sejt. 2tfh, ISo-k 3i-tt. STR AYED from the undersigned, residing in Lawrenceburgh township, Dearborn countv, Indiana, in April last, a DARK BROirX .MARE; five years old last spring; about 15 hands hio-h: saddle marks on the back, and those on the left side considerably the largest; pigeon toed; by close observation will discover small white specks on the breast; the color of her feet not recollected; was heavy with foal when she left. Any person returning said mare to the undersigned, or ffivinjr lntormation where she may be found, by mail or otherwise, shall bo liberally rewarded. ALEXANDER KINO ID. 4D-3 Lawrenceburgh, Dec. 10, 18114. THE School Section No. 1G, in township No. fl, range 1 west, in Dearborn county, will be offered for sale (in lots as described by the trustees) at the court house door in Lawrenceburgh, on Friday the 27th day of February next, between the hours of 10 o'clock A. M. and 4 P. M. where duo attendance will be given by HENRY WALKER, School Commissioner. December ICth, 1934. 41Ma X.fVJ FOMl SIIj1u. 5 am authorized to sell the south-east and north-cast quarters of section 21, township Ti, range 2 west, iVrc. containing, each, 107 J acres of laud, situated in Sparta township, near the geographical centre of the county of Dearborn, iV about 8 or 10 miles from Lawrenceburgh: The other two quarters of the same section are settled and well improved. This land is rich, heavily timbered, is gently rolling; with some springs of water on it. For further information on the subject imjuiic of Alexander Hamilton Dill, Lawrenceburgh, or address, vast iaid to the subscriber. EDWARD W. DAVIS, Dayton, Ohio, 22d Dec, 1934. f0-Gw Boot ami Shoe Store. W. B. SNYDER having purchased the entire Shoe Establishment of W. S. Durbin fc Co. situated ox Main street, first door below C. R. West, has just received a general assortment of EASTERN SHOES, BOOTS. Ac. suit able for ladies and gentlemen; and in addition, will have at all times on hand. custom work of every description. All of which he respectfully invites the attention of the inhabitants, and of the vicinity of Lawrenceburgh, Lawrenceburgh, jXov. 8, 1634. 43 tf ABOUT TO BE OPEXED. A tenant, who is well qualified to have the care Sc management of it, will meet with a permanent berth, by applying to the subscriber, living on the Ohio river near Laughery creek, in Laughcry township, Dearborn county, Indiana. There are from one to three hundred acres ofland, of the best quality, adjoining, to clear and rent with said yard, if desired. No one need nnnlw lmt riiK no .. recommended tor sooer, moral, and industrious I t J w...v wuwt. IW I.UH kUIUV habits. dLou, to rent, CO acres of cleared land, of the best quality, in the Same neinrhhnrlmnil. ?ll innfi! ci toru w iu oe paid lor cutting steam wooa by .STEPHEN S. SPEAKMAX. 1 ... , . , a . . . , ' vviicg u. jjec. ism, j S3-!. ITould Candles (Vauiunti0 7nY the box or less quantity, manufactured and soUl by L. W. JOHNSON. FALL & WINTER GOODS. THE subscribers have iust rpcpiinl rrannmi sortrnent of CiOODS suitable for t) Octobtr 4, 1S34. viApril 0, 1S31. Kanhawa Salt. UL AN 1 1 V ot Kanhawa Salt, just received and for sale bv CHO. V. r.vpi.n. A NovomberS, 1S34. 43 CLOVER SEED. THE highest price in cash will be given for anv quantity ofirood Clover Srrd. if j theseason by L. W. JOIINSOV 1 t 411 1 1 4 ' ' iU-tf Trcnurcr's Ollict j LAWRKA'CtHl'KCH, December TTDUBLIC notice is herebv all persona -u. who may be in possession of alt nni! - oOf-) Treasury of fDarBorn countv la thni W. AKMS7BOXQ, Treasurer D. C. s. 7TTJY William Purs of Ian township, Dearborn -LLD county, Ind., oi the 20th davr v l 1834, a BROWN (OW maVked tlTft bcr' with swallowfork-tnl ofT aboe tho m ddli Car white under tho bellUDDoWd tn L -0 years old. Appraisedo eleven dollarTaTOwiu bv arren Tfihhs nl cents - - . -kuiuiiaui j i vter. bef JOHN GOD LEY, lore me December 22, 183 J. p. BLANKS OFD1FFERENT KINDS FOR SAL EAT THIS OFFICE,

WINDOW GLASS, ALL sizes, from 4 by G, to 14 by 1 inches, for salc hy L. W. JOHNSON. GLASS CUT to order.

Sheriff's Sale. (&-POSTPOXRD TO 2477 !.3T.JX

BY virtue of an cxecmion to mo uircrieu inmi the Clerk's Offke, of the Dearbon. Circuit Court, in favor of Jacob Hays, against J.rcnunl, lMnnneyand Davis Woodward. 1 thai oxc to public ke at the court house door, , Jn the tovn ol Lawrenceburgh. on Saturduy the MS tween the hours often and two o'clock on eaid i lay, the following described tracts and parcel of land lying in Dearborn county. State ot Indiana, aj tna property of Jeremiah l'hiunoy, to satify the j a.ortsaid execution, to wit: All that certain tract ol land, hounded as follow, being part ot eccuu o, town 0, range 2 west, beginning at the south v.ct corner of the north-east quarter of said section; thence north W rods to a run; thence outh-eat-wardly up said run, until it strikes lands owned by Jacob Darling; thence cast to the corner ot lindi owned by Jacob Darling, and Lucius laiibank. formerly; thence commencing o:i tho north-west ir. lWrV land, and running ea?t oO .... i i ii. i lUiiai 'vw - - , .. rods; thenco south -w rod on , thence running east to a public road; then ccntrc of gaia roaJ north-cahtwardly, u DC&CII a JIUCj lence along tho centre of said roau nortu-eanwuru , uuw. . sects the west lino of lands formerly ownea uy mucins Fairbanks; thence north on f:iiJ line to Jacob Darling's, and lands formerly of Lucius Fairbanks, supposed to contain fifty-eight acres. ALSO, all that other tract of land, adjoining tho above tract, and being a part of the tout-east quarter of section 2", town , range 2 wort, boginninff on the west line of the first above described tract of land, at a stone placed in the centre of a public road leading from Cambridge to the State Ro:id leading from Lawrenceburgh to Indianapolis; thence running south to lands owned by Riley Elliott; thence with the line of said Elliott, until it strikes the centre of tho aforesaid road leading from Cambridge; thence running south-eastwardly along the centra of said road, until it strikes the laud owned by Joel Reach; thence running north on the line tf said Reach, until it strikes the line of the first above mentioned tract of land; thence cast to the aforesaid road leading from Cambridge; thence- running northwardly along the said ro id to tho place ot beginning, supposed to contain 1-0 acres. ALSO, the following described inlots in the town of Lawrenceburgh: The south-east half of inlot No. 107, dividing the fame by a line running at right angles from Walnut ttrcet in the town of Lawrenceburgh; also, inlot No. 10", and south-cast half of inlot No. 108, in said town of Lawrenceburgh; also, that part of inlos No. 13 and 70, in said town, within the following bounds: beginning at a point on the south-e6t edge cf Walnut street, from which the east c0rner of inlot No. 70 bears Fouth orty-five degrees east, distant forty-one feet and three inches; thee southe 4" degrees, west 132 feet; and thence north 4.r degrees, west 41 feet thrco iuches; thence north l. degrees east 132 feet to Walnut street, the place of beginning. ALSO, all that tract ofland in Dearborn county, Indiana, partof the nosth-cast quarter of section 2, town 5, range 2 west, and bounded as follows: beginning at the south-east corner of land formerly owned by James Vaughn; thence west so far a to strike lands formerly of Jesse and Joel Vaughn; thence south to tho line of aid quarter ectiouj thence cast to the coner of said quarter section; thence north to the place of beginning, containing fifty-five acres. ALSO, all that other tract ofland in said county, bounded as fullows: beginning at tho south-west corner ot north-west quarter of section 1, town 5, range 2 west; tWnce north one hundred ami lift y lour rods; thence cast fifty three and a third rods; thence south one hundred and fifty-four rods; thenco west to the place of beginning, containing fifty acres. The above described lands will be sold subject to a mortgage. JOHN WEAVER, Sho-ifD. C. December Gth,l?3i. ' 47-ts Sheriffs Salc. (grPOSTPOXED TO yi'iVi 1XST.JX BY virtue of an execution to me directed from the Clerk's Office of the Dearborn Circuit Court, in favor of Jacob Hava. and against Jere. miah Phinney and Davis Woodward, I thall expose to public tale, at the court house door in the town cf Lawrenceburgh, and State of Indiana, u Sat unity the 2lth instant, between the hours of ten and two o'clock on said iUy, th following described tracts and parcels of land, lying in Dearborn county, as the property cf Davis Woodward, to satify the aforesaid execution, to wit: beginning on the north cdyc of Third street in the Addition to the town of Lawrenceburgh, commonly called New Lawrenceburgh, at the south corner of a frame building standing on inlot No. one hundred and one, from which the most eastern corner of said inlot number Ml, bears north seventy-thrce degrees east; distant about 4S feet, and running from said beginning point north 0J degrees east; west tS poles to tho centre of I anners Creek; thence down the centre of the channel of said Creek to n point which bears south 73 degrees west from tho beginning point: thence from said point in 1 anncrs Creek, north 7a degrees cast to the place c f Leginning, containing two acres. ALSO, all that tract of land, bounded as fullows, to wit: On the cast by the lower street or road, running fmni tl.o M -V . . ' r -lew luwn, ana uem n south boundary of the New Town Piatt, bounded west by land belonging to Stephen Ludlow, ami smith Kf 1.1.,..:.,.. .. r 1 " 10 j ,u.lu uviuugiHjf io iaviu .ACVitt, supposed to contain eight acres. ALSO, inlots No. itt t1,A - e 1 . . . " .uuion to . luftn ui liawrcnceburli. RPri'lAil lp.Mnta. ...Ml 1 . i December Gth, IsMl. . 'V4 " -U. Sheriff I). ' 47-ts Kectifjcil Wliii by the barrel on .reoBmffi,1.111 wJI " in V 1 111,3 . May lf 111, As i. SPARKS. TO TUB PUDUo. r f 1 1 i . im i.i . - rr1l n ... j. . -...v- u, nereity jk ('fnsun, of .Miller town n the habit of basely and ....... ,.ul(li; on, ,, ... , . . uai one jonn '' is. or lm l ckedlv :...- ito satisfy Icc. t'ltj. 1S31. ISAAC JACKSON. TVSl,1 -"cd ,h. Offic a Lavo .11 hio fees for irecordiw lDCCC',,;fV"'C?s"Jr ,a feo-bill. will lvctoT&'VCA,.UKii tl'C?'i? er recorded nn VsaSmiti. ' "--" wirauio present Recorde r AsaMmth, J.mi., where thev i ... i , ur payment can be made. Tl.. 7I.V ,auu cost by attending to thi, notTce. mn ",c tjjomas porti:r. November 7, 1934. Blank Deeds Mortgages, Executions, Summonses, Uiu8 of Ladmg, and most other kinds, for aalo at this office

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