Indiana Palladium, Volume 11, Number 40, Lawrenceburg, Dearborn County, 17 October 1835 — Page 4

From the Tokea, for lG LIFE; ITS SEASONS. TRT C. AV. rVKRETT. litre huh its Spring-time! childhood's morn, When pure is young affection's ray; Gav arc the flowers without a thorn; And bright the hues of opening day: Wild music lingers in its bowers (irttcful the fragrance of its flowers And all betokens bliss: Hope weaves her wild, enchanting son"1 And sing's, at every path olong, That all shall be like this! Time's rapid foot-steps never 6tay, life's golden Spring-time speeds away! Life hath its Summer! anient now Is manhood's toil, ambition's svv.iv; llopa lighteth still the fevered brow", And sweetly sings the coming day: Fond arc Affection's whispars, bland And warm is Friendship's proffered hand Summer's horizon fiir; Hut ah! anon a cloud is seen Dark and more dark its threatening mien A tempest gathers there! & Sunlight and torm are o'er at last Life's fitful Summer-time is past; Life hath its Autumn! where have fled Those flittering promises of Sprint

ixua.uKu wuuereu roses dead Around no sweet perfume thv flip-. Hope hath been false as she was fair uwcnill the droarv blast; T he showers of ruin fail aroundLife 's withered foliage strews the ground! Life hath its Winter! snowy ago, When manhood's noblest vigors fail; Heavy becomes life's chequered page, Cold is the wintry, piercing gale? The faltering step the trembling limb Ihejlagging pulse the cye-balf dim Alike deliverance crave: Fainter yet fainter hark! the breath! 0 haste thee tyrant, angel, Death! nv elcome the frightful grave! Tis finished! life's short journey's done. 1 he sim hath set the Seasons run! & i .... MOORE'S SO.NGS. The following is one of a beautiful collection of -loore afeongs, just published in a port folio of twelve, all alike elegant and beautiful: Calm the sleep as infant's lumbers Rnght as angel thoughts thy dreams: May each joy the happiest numbers Shed o'er the their mingled beams, n'f uhcro pleasure's wing hath glided, 1 uere ever must some pang remain, btill bo thy lot with me divided Thine all the bliss, and mine the pain. liay and ntglit my thought shall hover Round thy steps w here'er they stray, ?. though dark clouds his idol cover, Fondly the Persian tracks its ray. As If this be wronr if ITe.ivo,, fru.,.'. In those bright eyes its rival see, 1 iien be my vows between vc blended Half breathed to Heaven, and half to thee. LINES ADDRESSED TO A LADY. 1JY O. r. PHEN'Tlrr Tcr Yes, lady, thou wilt die. , That lip of snow, r,Ana.thal nale l)nnv foretell thy early lot io n vi uuru moil Wilt rfo .v. -.uawi iiuana anu ougiitcu iiowers are notJ hou art too beautiful to linger where The rainbow brightens but to melt awav; And the sweet sounds that wander on the'air, but swell the dirge of sorrow and decay. Y fho,u ,xviIt ,lio- Th-V spirit soon will leave I his dull cold exile for its place on hih, And like a bright cloud on a summer eve, Melt in tiie deeper glories of the sky. 1 by homes wiil be where bluer skies are Haed In br.ghtcr streamcs, 'mid Love's undying bowers; And where the winds of autumn never passed, Nor serpents withered 'mid passion's sweetest flowers. Ay, thou wilt die and I shall linger here, W hen all the blossoms of mv h.Zrt r Will shine upon the ruins of my heart Like a lone fire-fly on the midnight I o to looom, tomb. COL. PLUG. A northern residence :n the West sometimes feete bis pride wounded, as he finds so few of the first famous residents' to have been born north of the Hudson. I take pleasure in having it in my power, to redeem one memorable oxorntinn frr,, IUII. r. .. . . .T 1 -.w... v..tl ppea t Col. Finger wns born in the county of Rockinguam, in "New Hampshire, and in a town, where they still call a kitchen scullery. He had a slight at cards, and a knowing instinct in relation to watches and horses almost from his babvhood. The boy, who wanted to be unburdened of his coppers, had only to play 'hustle or 'pitch-penny' with him. lmrt- t rPs?le a reverend dread of mortal hurts, but could l.ck any boy of his size at fourteen. J.eing a youth of broad red cheeks, muscle and im- : ... r ' , iai auum,ant,-v -stored with small r,rVV S l lwcnty-one he was a decided favorite with the fair, and had various love atiaiis, being reputed remarkably slippery in rcgird to the grace ot perseverance. At twenty four he had mounted cpiulettes, was a militia colonel, had a portentous red nose, and was in bad odout with ali honest people. Soon afterwards, he went under lock find key for want of some one who would bail him for twenty dollars. The colonel, on his release, in a hufl of unrequired patriotism, discovered, that the people had no taste of merit; and incontinently in Ins wrath abandoned his country, setting his face toward the western woods, which had just began to be a subject of discussion. T t J.uue is rcmrm horni I.: 4i. . of tl . imiii uii LiiM iritnpr ivaiprs appears, thnt he attempted than be bitfen. -....-., io one, Flat boats hao? begun ta descend the Ohio to New Urleans in considerable numbers. Hut from liuisv,l le to the : mouth rf the Ohio, was, for the most rart, a vast, unpeopled wilderness. At Tort Alas;f ii""'nf.c ,.olha.Mlssls''l,ni.-on-l! north shore ---- .ir, iiaruorca tain will i cutlerv and " j v! uii v Nifnk . n nu sometimes down tlcr..!- ffotM. were peen floating people, tall, athletic. 'ua.n.ned b unique ..-kri.a, I I pu . . . v curves, and liuh ' v v-aifNi. 1 1 -1 , addicted to trancje loved . t . , u.;r. e Biraul of 'ithal Tt.bev ivatDinoie uram, were f ndof pl .ying c.irdi, . ... neiu easily parted Irotn tbe nonesT. leiiows were the r ...... v.o. ,uiHiw8 were trie towls. ih k ' " ' Magsac and Ca6h delighted to pluck rffUes ,f F'uck. They would

ttUU jrjiuienng care, And woe around are cast: filoomy is life's late lovely bower. Here tails a leaf there fades a flower

"p ' . V ' nu mourn w,th hitter tear J he cold, the lost, the beautiful, the dead; And as life's star3 in loneliness depart,

e lihin- ( amI. :

i j lit k. i nri . t it . .

ll:..i. .i o

t PitV "--racior, who built a Hat boat for him man in rZV bSCa!S0 he insisted uPon rain? the a rron1Vfind y?nkec n"tions, among which as a promissory fl,p cf prlpor Co, rill joon made out to be remarkably 'cu e,' even to a fuclts ; and the people of that sharpeali,,; towv

noiucwiuing to wash their bandar . V . . A, . . ,l-ir "iinus or one, to whom it was bot.'i more agreeable, and nnr r. V'Yl 1

tr in ti,r i ', u"3 werc OI encu ernb e notorieerally with 17? b'"'. gon-

a irant? or tiinse ifpctii.u -:i

?. W iftsn e- . . ... -

entice the broad horns to land, and play cards Aith the Crew, and Cheat them Unddr the rnttnn J

shad They would pilot their boats into a d.iflicult I ; place, or give them such directions from th shore 3 wuiu uu cure to ruu mem on a snao-. Failing that, they would creep, like weasels, into the boats oy n1gnt, while they were tied up to tb.e willows, and bore a hole, or dig out the caulkinp- in the bottom. hen the crew found tlieir hnni e; i benevolent Csh boys were busilv nt hnX .;k their periogues and crafts, to sate th. floatir.o- barrals and boxes. Kmhtlv thev nm,1 ...i. f t , . J it, UUUUtl III Kentucky parlance; for thev rowed th nA up the Cash, and in the deep swamps next dlv no trace of them was to be seen. If one or two of the cre w chanced to struggle away in pursuit of their vewwrgo, mey scrupled not to knock them in the head, shoot, or dirk them, and giv them a nameless grave in the morasses. A volume of narratives ot Uese boat-wrecking scoundrels might be collectii 10x-lU you cver float by 1'rt Massac, the House of Nature, or the mouth of Cash, with an old residenter for a companion, without hearing hiirb"f.lhnSlf ?rics ?J, th knavery, cruelty and murders ot the villains of Cash. Col. Finger floated to these wretches by the attraction of like to like. The faded scarlet and the tarnished yellow of his epaulettes, his red nose, his cuteness, Iv.s strange curses, his utter recklessness stood him instead of initiatory grip. Hc was one of t.ieai forthwith, in honor and trust; and in a month ncwosine Napoleon of the desperadoes of Cash His slang-curses were ultra Keutuckian on a ground w;;4,l7c UI1U naa says my mtormant, more of this, than you could shake a stick at. The fjnd of his real fighting courage was questionable; but he was improving in that line; and for cunning and cruelty was an incarnate devil. Finding, that in that commonwealth, titles were not only not in demand, but matter of envy, he doffed his. To fall in with tho laconic and forcible stile of his troop, who came over all appellatives by the shortest, he cut down his family name to Plug. Deing, says my informant, of a delicate ear, and rich in Booktionary lore, hc undoubtedly thus condensed the name for its euphonic comoactness. For niMit and secret work Plug had a fleet of Hucksnatchers with chosen crews, to row up and down the river. Not a wareMuuse ueiween Louisville and Cash had a lock, for which this gang had not a model key. The enor mous uuncii ot black and rusty keys, shown at Dorwill hereafter be viewed with cnit.vu ence, as an antique relic of no mean mystery and importance. Plug had his episode of love and marriage on this wise. A periogue load of French and Spanish traders were descending from St. Louis to New Madrid, where they resided. They landed on the point, nearly opposite the mouth of Cash, whether lor hunting or divertiscment, or for what object does lint nnnunr ll.i I . . J , , M imc ins prototype, was roamino.j ..uw uiucu, urunK incir wnisiiey, and were ta:ing their pipes, and reclining in the shade in paradisaical reverie. These meek oit; ... . , vaitu CIO uuieto see I'lurr, as him of the A fifr ci 1 1 i-vl i it I ilnm! . wu. a uey ciearea out in their periogue in a twinkJmg. A damsel of their number had wandered away :some distance to rr.ith Cr nurnuro rlk. . . r -..1,,.0. 4 llxJ ijuny intercepted, and made her prisoner. They found her a giantces in size, of varnished, copper complexion, and evidently bearing the blood of at least three races mixed m her veins. Uut, though deserted by her friends, she neither wept, made verses or betrayed fear, or surprise, not she. A real cosompoller march was o'er the fallen logs Her home the forest shade. 1 Her dialect was as fair a compound as Plug's, tho' not very intelligible to him, being composed, in nearly equal proportions, of south of Europe, Negro and Indian. Uut love has its own lannia"e. She and the Colonel saw, loved, and mutually conquered. 1 he subordinates might envy; but who would contest the claims of Plug to the fair one? 1 he sex and the relation of the quarteroon to her husband were designated by the same tact, which cut down I tuger to Plug. She was thereafter known by the name Pluggy. Five mites up the Cash, on the verge of a vast VU1 surrounaea by deep cane brakers.and inex : uo uiC ivenuicKy orator said, in this subime s tile of retiracy among the abrogoins' had their skins generally too full of the happifying water , Jt- c I 0lher,thanan agreeable tickle, the nozzmig of the proboscis of musquetoes; and had moccasin bitten them, it is a question, if the serpent had not been poisoned, instead of the bitten. Many a load of whiskey and flour, and many a box of piece goods had disappeared in this swamp, through which ran the Cash: and if fame be noi egrcgiously a l,ar, many a boatman's body was disintiinfriff nn t-. TV" . ess senulehre: and . , ?T 8 T-i keys' IIere band't scenes transHired, whirli i.i u . ' . . , .....v... v,uljr iltcuuu ccunier s painting. have been as famous, as those of Venice, termanv. T n .... t. ri . to or i, ,- , " "uwiiia i iuggv s renown rivalled that of her husband. Herbert, fierce" ness and rough chin, and a kind of longmoss at corners or ner upper lip, not unlike mustachi OS, uiLtrri raisea oanteriucr questioning banditti, in th ;ir cups when the leader was 'HUH the absent, if he had not really taken a lady, to the partnership of his a man, instead of a bo nau become a joke amom t!ie m to rw, wU llo tMn nau not yet acquired tha habit of being b.tten Dr Mitchell and others had not yet V l'ysioiogicai distinctions; and this littln together platonic, was suspected to be between Pluggy and the second in com in progress courage of the commander had waxed, by this time to the Jt.cking point. He called the lieutenant! "T" u Ulrs wnqita -A.ne-eyes, to the field, or Dorr, your eoul.' id he. :andiestick-nmmer (meanimotirl will ro-l tr. do you think this sort ofc ing, perhaps, clandestine a do. bVJTQsll. T will nnt it tn. T ... . ... jjuoo . ii uu "j in imi it io you, or you shall to hey measured their ground, like two heroes - - o . - - ...I. .- juu, or you snail to me. , i"-t grounu, like two heroes, and A t w"nom,aKsin Iheatnir, which was -settled by ritW. E?ch carried in his flesh a round oi icau as a Keep sike ot the courage and close shooting" of the other. Each became cool and even atil'ctiomte, admitting honorable satisfaction. 'You are grit, said he of Rockingham to Xine-eye. The other wore 'that his captain had deported, lik a real Kcntuck.' A little curly headed Plug attended, as a kind of bottle holder. He was directed to rjico a bottle of whiskey mid way between them. Lach limped, pari passu, to the tune, one, two, three, &:c. to the bottle. Over it they drank, embraced, and attested each other's honor. They must lie by in dry dock awhile; but they comforted each other, that they were too welt up to these things to be fazed by a little cold lead. It was understood, too, that Ame-eyes had been plattonic and PIutv immieulite; and the historian averreth, that he is of undoubt.ng opinion thit no duel huh been more reciprocally creditable to the parties from that time , ' mt-y ri)DO ,?,.,r?or2 comm,tled. abetted, it w tlunk of compressing into our limits. niui. iio-.v many uoais iimi- r.-M.j i - J UISI1 I I ' I .V I ! 1 .1 nv ere bootless to The country

'":a iog oower ot the Arcadians. tr'" ,tirucu inc ooru trom the shore, broke the fast, oomc mil ions of unemployed musquetoes kept gar- ntl drove il into the stream, with only Plurron board, nson in the swamp. Hears, wolves and panthers 1 he waves fron aove, .ashed to fury, and the leak vere no strangers there; and moccasin snakes re- from beIow fillel the boat, and it sunk. Phi- had nevved their vernal skins at their lmcnrp. Tint ti, disengaged a barrel of whisk-ov nnrl ti. t r

rifn h n to nrvl ... t .. i - - I

a little wailer Plug rasied a lusty cry in the wood being, that the noor thinrr h.d M J, J. 1 V 1 10 UO.os

.cu u musqueioe

" luu r""S" reasonings of the gang, was deemed proof conclusive in regard to the sex. I heir, only domestic broil of public notoriety occurred some years afterward.

,had b?gua to settle. An officar, na.tned & Sheriff, ! becran to npramhutnta tH mnntrtf Armpd tn tho

lcetn and bearing the sword not in vain. Boats. that stopped near Cash were manned, and armed for resistance. Plug discerning the signs of the times drew in his horns, mended the exterior of his manners, and eaw the necessity of achieving by craft, what he had formerly carried, coup de main. The greatest success of the gang was in the line gamoung; and their mam resource in piloting uuuia aangerous places, ana in general, acting uie part ot boat-wreckers and moon-cursers. An occasional boat, feebly manned, sometimes fell into their power in a dark and stormv nirrht. It vvpnt iin the Cash; and in the morning neither plank, nor vestige nor crew was to be found. Ajax, Achilles and Napoleon had their reverses, and so had Ping. A Kentucky boat had experiencKV.nc muigiwiy, ana was prepared lor revenge, the next autumn. Five or six persons, well armed. landed above, and kept in sight of the boat, as they descended the woods in flank with it. Their hnnd i : .Tr mourn oi wsii, wnere t lui a"u y uwociweB were wailing, like spiders in ambush for flies. It was a sultry September

ttiienioon, anu uie weainer oetoKened an evening oflinem "nmcaiateiy

storm and thunder. They were courteously invited to land; and were piloted up the Cash for the securi . ty ot a harbor from the tempest. The three Kentuckians affected simplicity, and nroDosed a rame of cards under the cotton wood shade. Thev scarcely seated, andtheir money brought forth, before Plug whistled the signal of onset. Uut he reckoned this time without hi3 host. The concealed reserve sprang to the aid of their friends, and the contest was soon decided. Three of Plug's company were thrown into the river, and at least one was drowned. ah evaporated from their captain, as June clouds vanish before the sun. Poor Col. Plug resisted to no purpose. They stripped him to his birth-rfav suit, and thonged him so, that his arms, ncr force. embraced a sapling of the size of his body; and, for the rest, they fixed him as immovably, as ho had been in the stocks. As his epidermis was rouo-hish, and parchment-like, they faithfully laid on the cowhide to mollify the leather of his back, to facili late me operations ot the musquetoes. These lit tle musicians, by a spirit of concert, the secret of which is best known to themselves, issued forth, to the number of at least half a million, each emulous ot reposing on some part of his flesh, and tastin ins lymphatics. JNot an arable spot of his bod v. of mefcsize oi a musquetoe, out bore one; and the industrious little leeches often carried double, and even inpie, in the contest tor precedence in experimental nis composition. As soon as one sped awav with his sack sufficiently red, and distended, a hundred - I r ikjl ...a inutt;. x iug cneweu me cud ot IanutB, oiih-uuilt oiuer, anu wished himself lappinc cream in nis native ecu erv. He iUme,7 nnri sleeping parishioner in hay time does the fierv fif teenth' denounciation of his narson. JlPoor Pluggy in her lone bower knew, by tho failure of the return party, that there was reason to snuff bad omens some where in the gale. She set forth to seek her beloved; one of tho young PlurS in breeches and another in petticoats following her steps. She trailed the party; and in half an hour came upon the vanquished one, running the christian race, steadfast and immovable. He embraced the tree, as in the most vehement affection, with his face towards it; and his naked body was one surface of musquetoes. She soon decyphered his position. But instead of incontinently cutting him loose, she clasped her hands theatrically, crying out, -Yasu tree, and let the inarengocs suck up all vour sweet brud!' If Plug cursed her unadvisedly let it be urged in extenuation, that his spirit was stirred in him, and any thing rather than complacent. Be that determined as it may, he cursed her most unconnubially, and bade her not to let on any of her jaw, uniu sue naci cut mm loose. Plug begat him sons and daughters, and was in a fair way to have defrauded the gallows, and to die peacably in his bower. But lie was caught, eventually in a trap of his own springing-. A boat had landed not far above Cash; and the crew were in the woods to shoot turkeys. A Mississippi squall was coming on. l o equalize the danger, P;ug was in uie vacant boat digging out the caulking at the bot tom. W hile lie Was Vet in thn nnf l.a rm were running from the woods to get on board, the ourite resource, to enable him to gain the shore. Hut it rolled him off on one side, and then on the other. Plug drank water instead of whiskey, which he would have preferred. His sins came up in terrible array, and his heart beat quick and panlinody. In short, he found a watery grave. Thus fellthe last of the boat wreckers. Look AT T OTHER SIDE. JlM. When T wns n lioy, as I was one day passing through the market with my brother Joe, 1 spied a beautiful orange on the top of a basket full of the same fruit. I immediately inquired the price, and was proceeding to buy it, when my brother exclaimed, with a shrewdness, which I never shall forget "look at t'oder side, Jim." I looked, and4 to my aslablishment it was entirely rotton. In pissing through life I have been frequently benefitted by this little adrnonision. When I hear the tongue of slander leveling its venom against soma fault or fnihb nfa n;nM.f!r r I think i0l)k a o,k at Mother side, Jim. Be moderate: eril.ins tllQ fall It nr f.nldp vrm speak of is nlmest the only one in your neighbor's character, and perhaps vou have as great or "reater ones in your own. it may be this is on!your neighbor's weak side; and except this, he is a good citizen, a kind neighbor, an afc.ionate father and husoand, and a useful member of society. Others in iy listen to the story of calumnny; but remember, thoy will frar and desp.se the calumniator. Jarn to overlook a fault in your neighbor, for perhaps you may some time wish him to overlook a fault in NOTICE. ' ff Vh'fe'on . ba I and board," ! TT DEEM it an incumbent duty to inform the public that the undersigned Jvancy Small has "loft mv (to use a legal phrase) "without any just Hon." on mv uarr rri.; .... """.-I ui uru oca fore, is given "to forwam anv and H-Prv- ' r' trading, harboring trusting or hvS: lu ""1?' With her ill anv .nrnnpr nr .1' . " "'-:. J iu uo ueiermuiea to "exercise the - - "-i nijr dccuuni, as l am mined to "exerc se tha mnct . uecreeel to me by the law Sept. iG-373vv most rieoious peuaiues JOHN SMALL. NOTICE. TThOCTORS MORGAN &. BOND are associated in wtof tTCe fr I?" "n SuZery' ffice door esioi tae Mnn of Moecr. r i k. t txr Lawrenceburgh, August 21, 183: v. i. . est. SALT 5VAZna s"Perir quality) Fo rse ft v ni?nn ri t", t " " H uul uu uu can. iiroiri a . t inn .i,ui. June 12, 1835. " 1UUBLl CoFLOUR A QUANTITY of flour on hand and for sale by July 10, 1835. GEO. TOUSEY &7, CJLorjnrr ssw TEW bushels Clover Seed for sale by Lawrvnceburgh, March 17, 1835. E S

fnTr'; U "u m?V? a mU.Stle. pufficiently to TTt S. MAJOR will hereafter make his arrangements interrupt a single blood letter in his operations. 1LV. so as to be at his office on Mondays, Tuesdays, 1 hey heeded his curses and writhimra ns little no NV tdnesdavs. and Saturdavs; if ah !nt. it will ho rr rAY iro

BUSH. ll-f.

I HAVE now received my entire, stock of Spring Ucods, Embracing almost every article of JDRY GOODS, HARDWARE.

QUEENSWARE AND GROCERIES, Generally called for in this market, which T c good termes as they can be had mthis place. K. S. BUSH Lawrenceburgh, Nay 7, 1835. 17-tf. Potatoes tcantctl. BUSHELS potatoes for which the highest mar ket price will be paid if application be made soon, by G. TOUSEY & Co. iept. 12th.-33 Notice By the Printer. THOSE indebted to D. V. CULLEY or to CULLEY 6c COLE, for newsnaDers. iob Drintini. or advertising, are notified that their accounts are made out, and will be presented for payment with as little delay as possible. Those indebted by note will be required to lift A AR!). THE subscribers have moved to their New Building nearly opposite their old stand, and near the corner of Main and hort streets, where they are now receivinS and opening a large supply of CrOODS WtO. W. .LANE, & Co. April 9, 1835. 13-tf. hawk's Patent Ijcver flocks, COSISTINQ CF Rank Locks, Fire-Proof do. Store door do. Front do. do. Sliding do do. Upright mortice Locks Six inch. do. do. 6, 7, 8, & 9 inch rim do. Vestibule Latches, Mortice do. Recess and niffht do. Folding do. do. Which are manufactured in Cincinnati, by Abe Shawk, and warranted to be superior to any formeri - a i A . i i i iy ouerea to tue puDiic, are Kept constantly on hand, andtorsaleby W.B.SNYDER. Lawrenceburgh, Jan. 31, 1835. 3-tf Mr OH) JmaitS) &c. Jj. pUbT arrived, and for sale, a quantity of IRON W A'AILS, and American BLISTER STEEL. GEO. W. LANE, &Co. April 9, 1835. 13-tf. Eanliawa Stilt. A QUANTITY of Kanhawa Salt, just received anu lor sale by UEU. W. LANE & Co. ve mher W, lo4. 43-tf days a"d Fridays July 10th, 1835 2G-2mo JOHN E?rP2Kf Attorney at Law, MAYING resigned his office as a Judge of the Court will practice Law. Office a few doors below the Market house, in the room lately occupied by Caswell and Spooner. Lawrenceburgh, April, 1835. lG-tf. New Valuable Works. "TTUST received and for sale at this office a few copies of OV a new and complete map of the OHIO RIVER; the MISSISSIPPI, from Pittsburgh to the ocean. Also, the Traveller's Guide, a highly useful work. Coarse Linen, mi fft YARDS jLXNBar for Sacks or Can -v 'cr V vassing Meat, for sale by J. P. DUNN, & Co. May 8th, 1833. 17-tf Iron, C lass ware, ECEIVED fner Steam Boat Lady Mabsium large sumilv of Rolled. Rmi IRON; also, an assortment of Nails, Glass, Glassware, &c. J. p. DUNN, & Co. March 23 1835. n,f Jflap of Dearborn County, ON AN ENGRAVED COTPER-PL ATE. FTJlHE undersigned proposes to publish a Map of Dearju uurn ounry, inuiana, to exhibit the Sections, Townships, and Range;?, as laid down in the original Surveys; towns, roads, rivers and creeks, the political division into townships. The whole to bo neatly and accurately laid down upon a scale of two miles to the inch, and the polical division into townships colored. Mills and other manufactories, (distilleries excepted,) w ill be laid down upon the map, by the owners of them paying twenty-five cents per copy extra. The maps will be delivered to subscribers at fifty cents per copy, and will be ready for delivery by the first of March, 183G, at which time due notice will be given. Sept. 5, 1833-31tow SAMUEL MORRISON. TTUST received and now opening a large and genera Qif assortment of seasonable English, French, German India, and American DRY ErODS, ALSO, AS ASSORTMENT OF " Uardirarc, Cutlery, Queens ware, Groceries, Minis, Shoes, Hoots, BONNETS &C. We have selected these goods in the New York &. Philadelphia markets with great care, and will sell them on as fair terms as any House m the west. Buyers will find it to their interest to call and examine our stock. GEORGE TOUSEY, & CO. Lawrenceburgh, Jlpr U4, 1835. 12 tf rfO. II. DUNN &. PHILIP L. SPOONER have LW entereu juto partnership in the practice of the LAW. Office on High street above 1). Guard's Store. May 12th, 1835. jg-tf JOSEPH OR OFF, WHOLESALE AJs'D RETAIL, HAT MANUFACTURER; HAVING recently removed hiserasblishment.from Elizabethtown, Ohio, to Lawrenceburgh, Indiana, would inform his former friends and customers, and the public in rrfnprfll th.it. "factory is now in full operation, on High street, one door above Jesse Hunt's Hotel; where he will be happy to accommodate all persons, either wholesale or retail, with all kinds of HATS, of the latest fashions. BLACK, ERA B, BEATER, and OTTR Ir'1TS made on the shortest notice, and sold at a reasonable price, for cash or country produce. Persons wishing to purchase will please call and examine for themselves. t T . I jio wisnes to purchase a quantity of all kinds of r ujcz, tor which a liberal price will be given. Lawrenceburgh, August 2, 1834. 2( !9-tf

THE partnership, heretofore existing between the undersigned in the publication of the Indiana Palladium, has been dissolved by mutual consent. The debts due to the late firm, may be settled with either of the undersigned. Those indebted for papers, advertising or job printing are requested to make early arrangements to settle thJ same, by note or pajment. D. V. CULLEY, T 1 O-.V. lonr V M. COLE. July 2th, 1835 ITEtT1 PEATIIEIIS. A QUANTITY of New Feather, on hand and for sale JU&, 163S. TOU8KY, C.

LAWRENCEBURGH INSURANCE OFFICE; September 30, 1835.

A N election for directors of the Company will beheld JJL at the office on Monday the 26th day of October, at 4 o'clock P. M. to serve until the next annual election. By order of the board: E. S; BUSH, Oct 5, 1835-38td. Sccrctarys Carey's JLibrary OF CHOICE LITERATURE. fTTlO sav that this is a readincr affe. implies a desire for JUL instruction, and the means to gratify that desire4 on the first point, all are agreed ; on the second, there is diversity both of opinion and of practice. W e have newspapers magazine?, reviews, in fine, pamphlets i all sizes, on nearly all subjects, which have fceveTally their classes of readers and suppoiters. And yet copiousas are these means of intellectual supply, more are still needed. In addition to the reviews of the day, and passing book notice, people in large numbers, in all parts of our great Tepublic, crave the possession of the books themselvesr and details, beyond mere passing allusion, of the progress of discovery in art and science. But though it be easy let gratify them. Expense, distance from the Emporium of iterature, engrossing occupations, which prevent personal application for even managers to libraries, and even booksellers, are so many causes to keep people away from the feast of reason and the enjoyment of the covertet literary aliment. It is the aim of the publishers of the Library to obviate these difficulties, and to enable every individual, at a small cost and without any persanal effort, to obtain for t- , r' 1 - f. 1 nis own use and that oi ms iavorea inenus or lamn;, valuable works, complete, on all the branches of useful and popular literature, and that m a lorm weu auapieu w wiw comfort of the reader. The charm of variety, as far it is compatible with mortality and good taste, will be held constantly in view iu conducting the Library, to fill tbe pages of which ptho luueni literature or dreat xsritain, in an its vanuus uc partments of Biography, History, Travels, Novels, and Poetry, shall be freely put under contribution. With, i . . . . . . .1. pcicuance occasional exceptions, it is mtenaea to give entire the work which shall be selected for nublication. When circumstances authorise the measure, recourse will be had to the literary stores of Continental Europe, and canslationstnade from Frencbj Italian, or German, as tha case may be. Whilst the body of the work will by a reprint or at times a translation of entire volumes, the cover will exhibit the miscellaneous character of a Magazine, and consist of sketches of men and things, arid notices of novelties in literature and the art3 throughout the civilized world. A full and regular supply of the literary, monthly, and hebdomadal journals of Great Britain and Ireland, in addition to home periodicals of a similar character, Cannot fail to provide ample materials for this part of our work. The resources and extensive correspondence of the publishers, are the best guaranty for the continuance of the enterprise in which they are now about to embark, as well as for the abundance of the materials to give it valus in the eyes of the public. As far as judicious selection and arrangements are concerned, readers will, it is hoped, have reason to be fully satisfied, as the Editor of kthe Li brary is not a stranger to them, but has more than once obtained their favorable suffrages for his past literary effoi ts. TERMS. The work will be published in weekly number, in stitched covers, each numbers containing twenty imperial octavo pages) with double columes, making two volumes annually, of more than 520 octavo pages each volume ; and at the expiration of every six months, subscribers will be furnished with a handsome title-page and table of contents. The whole amount of matter furnished in a single year, will be equal to more than forty volumes of the common sized English duodecimo books. The paper upon which the Library will be printed, will be of the finest quality used for book-work, and of a size admirably adapted for binding. As the type will be entirely new, and of a neat appearance, each volume, when bound, will furnish a handsome as well as valuable, and not cumbrous, addition to the libraries of those who patronize the work. The price of the Library will be Five Dollars per annwm, payable in advance. A commission of 20 per cent, will be allowed to agents; and any agent or postmaster furnishing five subscribers and remitting the amount of subscription, shall be entitled to the commission of 20 per cent., or a copy of the work for one year. A specimen of the work, or any information respecting it, may be obtained by addressing the publishers, post paid E. L. CAREY & A. I J ART, " July 21. Philladephia. Subscriptions received at this office. Oct. 3.

NEW CDOUD C. H. a W. W E ST, TTg ESPECTFULLY inform their friends and the pubHQ lie, that they did, on the first day of January last, enter into partnership, for the purpose of Merchandizing in the town of Lawrenceburgh, at the Store formerly occupied by C. R. West, under the firm of C. R. West, &. Co and have just received a General assortment of Goods, Suited to the present and approaching season, CONSISTING IN PART OF BROAD CLOTHS, Super Blue, invisible green, London smoke, Olive brown, blue, mixed, and drab, SATINETS (assorted,) S2XITS, Real black Italian lutestrings, black gro. d. Swiss, black gro. dc nap and Senshaws. Mantus, Sarsanetts and lavantine satine; colored gro- de Naps, plain and figured ; colored Forence and satins. A VARIETY OF ZJIiESS HANDKERCHIEFS, Consisting of blond gauze, gro de zane, gro de naps, Popelino, and crade- chine ; superfine gauzes, and Crape scarfs; figured and plain bobineita, Thread and bobinett laces, and inserting, bobinett and Swiss capes, white and black bobinett veils, Black, green and white gauze do.; Irish linen, lawn, and Linen cambrics; linen cambric handkerchiefs, Pink, white and black Italian crapes; plain, striped and Corded ginghams : painted Muslin, Plain, figured and crossbarred jackonet; Plain and figured Swiss, book and cambric muslin; Corded skirts; Linen and cotton table diaper; Circasians, merinoes and bombazetts. Men's Summer Wear. CONSISTING OF SUMMER (9!l!iUlD Merino, casimere, brochell, princetta. And lasting; real linen drilling; blue and yellow Nankeens; superior silk velvets; Valentia, Satin face and silk vesting. STOCKS. Bombazin, plain and figured sil Black Italian cravats; Gentlemen's and Ladies gloves r JJrown and bleached sheetings and shirtings: Checks, plaids, and ticks, &c. dec. HATS, LADIES' TUSCAN aND STRIIF BONNETS; BOOTS &. SHOES; And are expecting daily, a general assortment of Iliratvtirc, Cutlery, Quccnsicare GLASSWARE & GIIOCEIUES. ALSO, Bah Iron, Castings, Nails, and Window Glass, c. 4 c. April 4, 1835. 2-t. They feel grateful to their friends and customers for the liberal patronage heretofore extended, and solicit a continuance of public favors. Notice. TO BRICK MAKERS AND BUILDERS. T rpUL great demand for Sawyer's Patent Brick MaAL. chines, has induced the proprietor for the West, to make arrangements in addition to his own facilities Tit- ;.- V.Dlckineon, manufacturer of the celebrated I- ranklin Printing Press, to devote a part of hi very extensive establishment to the erection of these brick machines, without, however, interfering with his means for lurnishing, as usual, his variety of printinS materials. 1 his method of making Brick has been practically proven to be the best yet known, cither as regards economy ana expedition in manufacturing or quality of the article wnen made. Competition, the test of all such matters, ii cordially and respectfully invited. I he 1 atent Right is considered well secured, even beyond the possibility of infringement; fcome of the ablen -ouusel m the Union having been employed in preparing the specifications of the same. I he subscriber will eell and give clear titles for Rights to use the Machine in any Western Toivn or Countvnot yet sold. He will also furnish Castings, with the wrou -ht chi.i1EViale-SOr,0geiher OTCOntract building Machines in the West on favorable termt. " Oct. 3. 36-9w Louiml!e,ky