Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 5, Number 20, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 November 1845 — Page 4
INDIANA STATE SENTINEL. Jlonnimiit to cm-rail Jackson. Tiie fwlloAinj (Huer.t ad.lres.-t to the pi,leof t'ie Uiiii-tl.S:ait-,-vii the editor w" the V ah.ngton U-i: srseJes the necessity t,f any eh borate ap1 fr,! our own pen. We go for tha object it pro-h-irt an.l ti.tud. It i a üue respect to Ihcm::niurv ii- of tJ first inen, not only of hUcounLry.M,: ;f ii n0'f--i patriot hoe services lave .f'd ü neve -r-dyin-r lus'.re tii-on our mil.tary fame and Cjn ourcivil institutions whose death has covered a whole nation wiih mourning, and drawn from the lips of almost cwrni less on tor itlie warm eulogium which n due to h'n services and merit-?. It is well t do juslice to such men, n A only for their own sakes, but for the benefit of posterity, anJ to cherish the tUtne of generous euiulat.on in the hearts of men. "Wa-diin-tou's statue is about to be created by Congress. The gratitude anJ the honor of the nation demand it. The:i will it be said that Congress have redeemed the recordetl pledges of their il!u trious predecessors, and paid due resect to the m m who was "ftrot ia war, first in peace, and firt in the hertrt3 cf his countrymen." Tie statue of Jeil-rson should also be erected, to do hoiur to the anther of t!ic Dechntion of American Independence, and one of the first statesmen of the age. Tha appetl is now matb to the people, in behalt of another of their illustrious benefactors, whilst the heart still throbs wi:h gratitude and reverence over the tomb in which his remains have been ho recently deposited. It is imwsible that it should not succeed, if proper exert'uns are made to receive the contributions of a mt.on's feelings. Tho om;n;ttee of t::is city are determined to do th'-ir du
ty : and th'i fo.bwmrr address is the hrst o.iermg which tli'y l y ii;n I. is shrius. They Lave framed w.se instructions f r the r gents whom they are about to aoint. LiOt t io vi nrents cr-or,rr;ite wun its friends everywhere, and the work will be done. JACKSON'S MONUMENT. To le pro-hi of th: U:i'-J X'ates : A Iire meet in" of th citizens of Washington on the lOih of September, lt5l.", (Gen. John P. Van Ness presiding,) unminvuisly and enthusiastically adapted thee resolutions : Jlenoh'fit, Tint the A wriest prp!e b caUod op-n to unite in erecting, at the eat of tho federal p.erntii nt, auiuble tnonuTieril to the m.-morj of the Hero. Patriot, and Saije, whose recent loss the nation still d.-plore. to go l.wn to our mist distant poaUrity, a a reord of the ereat man's elory. and of his country's gratitude and grief. llesohed. That a cdossi! equestrian statue, in imper ishable bronze, is deemed the niot suitable fur the pur pose, to transmit to fu'ure centuries the features and frm on which the annals if the republic wi!l teach each new succeed in? generation to look wiih an ewer-renewed loe and reverence, and an ever r-newiu i ambition to emulate his nob!e deeds and noble virtues. Ileiolced, That, f r the purpo-e of raising by voluntary ubcription the requisite sum, a central committee of ih r teen be appointed, which shall proceed forthwith to or ganiza the necessary measures for the collection of such subscription, by whom a monthly publication of the same shall be inad. and the money securely invested ; and Retoivtd, i hat, as General Jackson s own most trusted and beloved friend, and the seleried inheritor of his pa pers anil ku iru in o( bis lame, Francis 1. Ulair De sppom'ed 1 re isurtT. Rewind. That the f d'owin; citizens constitute Said co-ii Mii'f- f itnrteen. with power to supply vacancies in their wn numtxr; and. afier the coinj.letion of the sub seritin. to dircc! and supeiinteml the executi.m of thi i,r-iK-ed wiirk : Ce Johnson, Franris P. Blair, Tho mas Ritchie, Amos Kendall, John P. Van Ness, John C Rive. William A. Harris, Jesse E. Dow, Be' j imin D French, J tin W. Maury, Charles K. Gardner, James Ho ban. and Charles P. engst ck. Tne comm'nt-e on whom devolves the execution of the high trust deiöenated by lh ir fellow citizros of Wash inzton, f el coufi lent that its fj'utme it is not more ear nestly desired by their immcdia'e constituents than by the grest mass of the American people. A col.issal equestrian statue in imperishable bronze, presenting ti t!ie eyes of all future generations tl.e Her and Patjiot as he Iied, exhibiting the fea'tires, the person the apparel, the atthuJV, and almost the action, whirh be longed to bun at the moment of rendering the highest ter vice to hi country, has always b cn looked upon by ibe free and noble-minded people of every ss;e, as the best be quest they could give to their descendants. In such model, tha virtues to which the republic a'triluite it greatresa are, in aome sort, rnduringly personified; and the posthumous honor which imparts an immortal pre coce io the m dst of bis countrymt-ri to one great public be nrhctor, givig birth to the patriotic emulition which - . a i firousn succeed, ng ages, multiplies aspinuts to a Kindred fame. It is not only lhrn, the national gratitude, but a J ist sense of the public interests, a wise care of the national glory, which erects lasting monument to commemorate the citizens wqj devote themselves to the service of the republic Thw Oonzress ot great mn whr contribu'eJ Io fund the fre g veroment wi crij iy, decreed a:i rq jestri in statue to Washington, as the nnn most worthy of the renown of our g'nrious ievo!ntlo'n.. It wm to hand bim down to the remotent posterity H h:s military chnracter, in the lineaments and habiliments which he wore when he achieved the independence of his couhtry, that the Congress voted a monument which should present the general s he appeared on the scene of his greatest exploits. At that time the fioe arts had not attained a maturity in our country adequate to eiecute worthily the design. Now, American sculptors have ari-en, from whom Europe borrows power to eterniza the features of her illustrious men; and hence the last Congress took ih? first step towards the accomplishment of the resolution for the construction cf the equestrian statue of Washington. The gratitude and honor of the nation imperiously demand the full and immediate execution of the work, which circumstances have already too long delayed. If our countrymen should a'so decree an eqtiestri-in mon'u nerit Io the patriotic chief 'who shed his stripling blood in the revolution;" and who closed the last war for the maintenance of his country's independence in a bl.iza of glory, only I es brilliant lhan that wh'ch achieved lhat independence at York Town, it woutd bo equiva! i,t to an instruction t the approaching Congrew ti eonsunrtmite the movement of the list session ; and ih nation may be gratified by witnessing the elevation f filling memorials to the heroic gi-nefal who cnnq-iered liberty for his country, and to him who presvrvd it. Suc'i trihii'e offered spontaneously from the noM 'na! heart t ihe immirtil d-nd, art the highest mec I of puhbe h"i;r far the highest deseit of public service, and vr't-r'? to le encouraged on pro;er occasions, as the bequest of on age (o another, and one of the best means of perpetua'ing the silent, but deep ai d prrvading moral " power f tha characters a::d examp'es of ihe country's worthiest and greatest sons. It is proposed to build the monuments to Washington and Jack3 i tit ihe seat of goernment. for the reason lhat - this city U the city of the Union, ceded to it' by the States, a the point which concentrates the representatives of the States and the American peop!e, and cf foreign governments, and ia calculated, bv annotating with it the forms of illustrious patriots, to add strength and permanency to the Vt ion itself. To fulfil the duty entrusted to them by the citizens of Washirg'on, the crsmrrittee will appeal, through authorized agents in every section of Ihe country, to each patriotic and liberal minded citizen of the Union. Subscription may ba male of any mount; and it is hopd that an adequate cum may bo obtained, if no subscription exceed oph hundred dollars; but, as there may be aome mistake in our calculation, it is also to be hoped that no man of largo mean, aid cf a liberal p?rit, will cor aider himself limi'ed in (he amount of his con'ribu'ion by this suggestion. The smallest contribution will be received, even the widow's mite." for ihe country. will feel more pride in the multitude of hearts engaged in this wrk, lhan tha amount of money. As an acknowledgment to subscriters. an I as check on all concerned in the collection of subscription, a monthly publication will tie made v( the names, residence, and occupation of snbscribers. and cf the amount subscribed, and the original lists transferred " Vt slereotvpe, or inscribed rn s-une permanent material, will b perpe'oated in connexion with the monument. It is the intention of the eo-nmitlee to invest in aome seeo'e fonda the auna received in tho progress of the subnr'ption ; and much of th accruing interest on which as may be neeeary, will be dedicated Io procure theexecntion of fine engravings of the s'ato f r the ulscriber -none of which engravings shall be disposed of in any other way. . No compensation will be received by any of the committee not even by the secretary nr treasurer fr their services. Agnts authorized to obtain subscriptions and make collections will be allowed a reasonable per rentage. It be setl!ed by ageinent ; ard a clerk, who will devote Lis whole time to the labor of keeping the aeeonnls. and in eflkctuning the crrejondcnce of the committee with all parts of the Union, will receive a compensation dependent on the sarplu acrming from lh interest on Ihe funded collections. It is the fixed determination of the committee thai not one cent tf thfl amount Collected (reaching ths treasurer) hII re diverted from the subject trr which it is given. And to fleet this, adequate security will be tiken to make safe the funds, wherever lodged; and pnWo-i'v will l t; en. in qoarterly or aemi-annnil tat em. of fvery mti. r touching the concern, for the rstisfacüon of subscribers.
Alt the igt-nia of tui committee will be furnished with , a letter of appointment si n'd by the chairman and mem- j bcrs of the committee, and countersigned by the eieik.
witn tht iraeal annexed. i - i nrK rnininuiiiii i in be reeojn 2e l 11 authorized b us. All who may prefer to Jj , may tentit the amount of their suhacriitions directly to the chairman of the comrtilitee a coursd which ia earnestly tecommenileJ to all the friend of the enterprise, inasmuch Da it will save the eapeus. a incident to collection. CAVE JOHNSON, Chairman. riiANClS T. ISLAM, THOMAS RITCHIE, AMOS KENDALL, JOHN P. VAN NESS, JOHN C. HIVE. VM. A. 1IAKIU4, JEE E. DO W. BENJAMIN B. FRENCH, JOHN W. MAUKY, CHARLES K. (iARDNER, JAMES MOHAN. CHARLES I. sENGSTACK, Com. Statue to Cromwell. Tho English press is dis cussing the question whether Oliver Cromwell shall lave a statue among English sovereign?, a sculptor-! ed catalogue of wham is designed to be executed for lie decoration of the nc.v Parliament building. It appears that the authorities charged with this task, meditate the exclusion of Cromwell from the list of English monirchs, on the ground that he held the reins of government, not by "divine right," but by usurpation. The whig portion of the English press denounce tue design, as a siiameiois, out lutue attempt tJ "blot out from the history of England and lcr sovereigns the me of the greatest man that ever rulcu the country, and liie mnijry oi twelve prouu and eventful years of her national life." The London Marning Chronicle, which insists that Cromwell should have a statue, remarks : Tho statue would not say any thing about Crom- . 1 T-t V WELL'S title, lue question ci title is not raised any more than the question of moral character and political genius. The tatue would only speak to the fact. It is not a critique, hut a history, that we are rroing to wriie in our nr.v national palace. We have nothing to do with the facts of our history, but to set them down there as our hist jry gives them. We are n;t to take the g od facts and leave out tho Lad facts; nor in truth this particularly awkward and ugly fact of Oliver Ckohwzll excepted are we aware that any such intention exists on the p irt of the authori ties. We shall not beat all nice in tins busine-s. The company of English s overeigns w.ll not be by any means select. All tho usurpers will be there, all the tyrants and rufSans, all the profligates, and all the fools. The only niKtlmcation will be the hating reigned de facto over England and Englishmen. The British nation is not about to allirm the legitimacy of Stephen, John, and 1Ient.y VII., or to declare that Richard III. was a kind undo, end Henry VIII. an affectionate husband but simply to register the fact that these and no other were, at such and such times, Kings of England. We are not poinjj to clear up "historic doub'.s ;" the York and Lancaster Question will still stand 0en ; and there need bo nothing; to hinder Charles from continuing a "blessed martyr." Succession in the ord..-r of time is the only sort of succession which, our statue gallery will pretend to authenticate." The London Tünch ha3 the following on the same subject: A New IIistokt for England. If it be finally lot prmmf.fl iirwin ltint ri'1 a?ntn riT (rfTnwrll cTinll Kr I erected in the Ncw i'ariminent House, the wise nnn dignified measure will be followed by another equally sagacious and magnanimous. An act will be passed, containing very stringent clauses, compelling all men to bring into a certain place -to be duly named all copies of the History of England so that they may be destroyed like debased coin, and a new history issued; which history shall satisf ictoi ily prove that Charles Stewart died at a green old age very comfortable in his bed : that John Ilainpdt n flourished a? a tax-gatherer, collecting ship mrv?y ; that there was a certain Oliver Cromwell, a bluff-looking man with a wart on his cheek who lived somewhere in Huntington, following the trada of a brewer; and that men called Pytn, Vane and Martin were his quiet pains-taking servants. The history will contain a very touching narrative of all the circumstances of Charles the First's dcatii-bcd ; ho will be made to die of sheer old atre, with his pa'ernal advice to Charles the Second who will be proclaimed next morning at St. James s. It will als'i be shown that Charles the Second passed his leisure hours in translating Thomas a Kempis and such other piou3 books ; that he was the most fiithful of husbands; and had ha been blessed with children he would have been the tenderest, and very probably the siaunchest of friends. Lady Catlemain, Nell Gwynne, and such rosy signers, will be treated as Niebuhr treats many wbc'nt we have been accustomed to lo;k upon as real personages as men and women cf flesh and blood; namely, they will be shown to be pWrts abstract ion, mere heroines of fables. Jarres the Second will die iir good old ti.ne in an English palace ; for it is not to be thought of that an English King was ever decapitated, neither can it be allowed that a British monarch was" ever turned out of his realm. There will, to be sure, be a little difficulty in the House of Haucver ; but it is difLculties only that test true genius. Tns Sutrr of Persia. The following account of the King of Persia is extracted from a letter recently received in this (Boston) from an American gentleman hi Persia. u While the present Shah is rafhor severe, he hns not a character for wanton cruelly, as some of his acts migiit poem to imply. On hrs accession to the throne t"r example, two of his younger brothers, of whom he had some apprehensions as likely to become ii y.ii i - nun ooinv ui'tiviivtidi- ug wo titvi ulluiiiv, his rivals, vrere in Pr n at Ardrbil ; and one of his first acts was to send officers to: Ardobil and put out their eyes. On tiie arrival of tbe oTicrdat the 'pribfi, they announced to the two prisoners the death of the old king, and the prosperous accession of their elder brother to tiie throne. Tiie brothers expressed th"eir high crrnti'ication at the intelligence. Well,' said the officers, now what well yotf give us for announcing it to you what is our Moorhtalik ! a present, to which the bearer of good tidings, in tho East, regard himself as entitled.) ' Almost anything,' sard one of the unsuspecting brothers ; ' what must we give you! Your eyes, rvpficd the oT;c?rs, and then immediately passed the hot iron, w!;i -Ii was ready at t!ie door, over the eyes of those two line yonng men. This cruel deed he' has always disavowed, charging it upon the importunity of his prime minister. And it is said that his Majesty's deep grief on account of it hnd not a little to do, in inducing him to put that obnoxious minister to death. Yhile .v't' were at Tehran, oue of these blind brothers visited the capital and desired to hi conducted into the presence of the king ; but his M.ijesty could not bear to' see him. yx:i after his accession, als-", the king invited some ten or twelve prince -his tincles'and cousins on one occasion to' breakfast with him ; and while at breakfist his officers, who had been instructed on the subject, rushed into the apartment and seized each one 1 prince, and bound him up upon a mule, and thus they were all hurried off to the Royal prison at Ardebil, their great train of attendants still waiting at the door of the palace, unapprized, for some time of what had happened. Lot the goal of the country doubtless required some suth disposition of these restless, haughty princes, who were swarming at the capital; and pcrliap this summary method of disposing of them, was o.t the whole, less humiliating, as it was less troublesome, than a more formal arrest and removal. Doston traveller j . DrUtrixr; out a Needle by Maoxet. A colored woman'at Frankfort, Ky., ran ä needle in to the fleshy pirt of the palm, sorrre months' ago'. Last week Mr. John Goodman, to whom the woman belonged, knowing the kneedle would not reimin stationary, that it would produce suppuration and gradmllj move from its irabedrnent, it struck him thnt it might be attracted to the surface or ekin, and he produced a magnet and applied it to the hand. Soon a sensation of pain wai produced, and three days after the needle made made its appearance just undar the skin, wheiT it was easily extracted. The Tittsburg Factory girls went to work on Monday, under the old system the employers agreeing to adopt the trn rnvir watem as soon as it enn be con curred in bv o-oe.i m-'nMf.r'rtrif. There vrua no symptom cf disorderly conduct evinced.
The Kussian Serfs -their Condition and IV umber. In a work recently Dubliahed. entitled the White
which pervades the Russ.an Empire. The number ol ... . be.ngs embraced within its folds is not le-s than forty-three millions of souls. The emperor himself is the proprietor of ticcnty-one rni'lionsor, in other words, he owns more slaves than we have people in the twenty-eight States of our Union. One can thus imag.ne the colossal personal power of such a monarch. He is undoubtedly ths most extensive possessor of serfs, of any d?s-ot that has ever existed. Genghis Khan, or Tamerlane, would not comrire With Nicholas. It fs üso ßa'.d that is continually augmenting this vast number by confiscations, and by foreclosing mortgages on money loaued, or a fine ex acted, on the estates of his nobility. In this way. if his successors stead.ly ptir-ue the same policy, they may monopolize nearly all the serfs in that vast empire. Since the daj s of Teter the Great, the accumulation of serfs on the imperial domain has gone on ia an extraordinary ratio. The number has advanced from two or three millions to twenty-one millions. In this connexion it is proper to state, that though the emperor is nominally a despot over every soul in iiussia, both serf and master, embracing an aggregate of sixty millions, yet he is restrained by certain laws and usages from treating all as serfs. His ! twenty millions are peculiarly the chattels of his will, with all of whom he can do as Ins pleasure or caprice may dictate. It has teen frequently stated that the serfage of Russia was different from the slavery of the South, in that the serf could only be transferred with the eoil ; and that therefore you could not buy one, without being encumbered with the other, which to a certain extent, was a clog on the selling of human beings. Kut tl is is not so. Though the law is, "that n i serf could be sold withiut the estate to whirh he belonged," this is evaded by selling land in the desert wastes of Eusia, which is not really worth a penny an acre, and attaching, äs they call it, the serf or serfs to this ncicly-carvtd estate, aLd thus the sale would be legal. It is als. said that the emperor punishes with great severity all infractions of tiie regulations which he has established for the benefit cf the serf; but, most strangely, these punishments i) not lead to the enfranchisement of the serf. Not in ths least. The emperor puts a rend fine on the olTender, and, if he cannot pay, he either emfscates the estate, or brings it within the imperial domain, and thus add to the number of his own serfs. This circumstance shows that the very laws which he is alleged t- have made fr their eventual enfranchisement, but transfers the slaves from the hands of the nobility to the hands of the emperor. This, in our opinion, has no tendency to weaken the serf system of Russia, though it may modify the severity which he sutlers on the estates of. thr nobility. The serfs of Russia are supposed (though this tradition is disputed) to be the descendants of Sur, who founded the Svrian empire of Ninevcl After its overthrow, his descendants spread to the west, into modern Ru-sia and Poland, where they increased and multiplied, tut then incursion upon incursion came nnnn tKin lil:n nn n vn in nrhrv Thf SJrvthian t!if Goth, the Teuton, the Hun, the Mogul, and finally tiie Tartar, swept over that vast region of Eastern Crone yet st.U keeping the original inhabitants, who are properly called Slavi or Slavonian, (from which the word slave seems clearly derived,) in bondnrr wtiprr thev i-nnt Olli to this day, even after the 1 ipso of tWO thousand years. This is certainly a more remarkable continuation of serfdom in one race than has existed even anions r : J . J Africans. Yet, notwithstanding their long ages of mental, moral, arid physical degradation and de-
that he is still of the ichile race. Though stupid, he ! tho old American frigate Constitution, 41, commandcan learn. Travellers say that he is remarkably in- j ed by Commodore Stewart, when she captured the two
genious in manufactures, though too versatile in character to compete with the more steady industry of the English and Germans. He makes a superior soldier, for his courage and nerve are as undaunted as the iron which he wields. His endurance of heat and cold, his blind obedience, his abstemiousness of living, when necessary, show a character encrusted with the dark- ness of despotism, but still as worthy and fit to be a freemen, as the masters who ride it over him so cruelly. It has been supposed that in our day we should live to see the enfranchisement of the serfs in the Russian Empire. We fear this will not be. The dawning even is not visible. The Russian autocrat is too deeply interested in its continuance, to induce him to adopt any but palliative measures. He will not strike at the root, by enfranchising the serfs on the imperial domain. Not only the large but <increasing> number on his estates is calculated to harden and strengthen the natural passions of avarice and personal power. This very increase also binds still tighter the sinews of his monarchy, and thus foster both the strong passions of personal and political ambition. As able, statesmanlike, and benevolent as Nicholas is said to be, it would require <virtue>, almost more than mortal, to induce him voluntarily to divest himself of a power which renders him so terribly great, not only in his own empire, but throughout the world.--<Albany Argus>. ----- LATE FROM THE PRAIRIES.-- A gentleman just from the prairies, called upon us yesterday, and related to us the following tragic incidents, which have recently occurred in the great American Desert. On the 2d of August last, a caravan consisting of eight wagons and fifteen men, left Fort Platte, (formerly Fort Laramie,) laden with 3,000 buffalo robes, belonging to Messrs. Pratte &, Cabanne. When the caravan had reached 500 or 600 miles from the settlements in Missouri, the feet of the oxen had become so worn by the short and rough grass on the prairies, as to render further progress almost impossible. In this extremity, Mr. Adams, who had command of the caravan, despatched our informant to Missouri, for relief. He arrived here some three or four weeks ago, procured the necessary supplies, and fresh oxen to be sent; and was returning, when he met a Mr. Johnson near the Caw Missionary Station, who had subsequently been despatched by Mr. Adams, with the information that the caravan had advance [sic] but little, and that their cattle had either all died, or were perfectly useless, on account of their sore feet. It seems that two American-, traders from Mexico, had fallen in with the caravan, and started with Mr. Johnson for the settlements. A few days after, they fell in with a Sioux war party of Pawnees. They were told by the Sioux to be on the alert, as the Pawnees were on the trail of the Sioux, and if they met them (the Americans) they would kill them. A few nights subsequent, their camp was atticked by the Pawnees, and the two traders were mortally wounded, who told Johnson to save himself, if he could, by flight, as they were dead men. Johnson succeeded in escaping, but entirely destitute of any thing to procure him subsistence. He, however, in a few days, fell in with a party under Mr. Papin, who furnished him with clothing, a gun and ammunition; Johnson, a few days afterwards, was robbed of his gun and ammunition by a party of Caw Indians, who stripped him stark naked. When our informant met him, he had nearly perished, having with him a remnant of a rattle snake, upon which he had subsisted for several days. He conducted him to the Caw Missionary Station, where he is now under medical treatment. Poor fellow! His mind has suffered from hardships, and is at times quite deranged; and his feet have been worn to the bone by the rough grass of the prairies.--<Daily Missourian>. ----- SINGLULAR.---A bald eagle flew on board the U. S. Ship John Adams, at sea, much fatigued. As poultry died rapidly at sea, he fared well, not being eatable, and became very tame, walking around from mess to mess, getting a crumb here and a drink there. He is now considered as one of the crew, and attends to the furling of the royals. He never left the ship until the Princeton anchored at 1Pensacola, when he alighted on her cross jack yard, took a searching, glance saw that all was right as far as Uncle Sam was concerned, and returned to his own ship. The singular part of this occurrence is, that three foreign men of war are at anchor near the John Adams, and this republican bird will not visit any of them. ----- ---->An approved method of silvering looking-glasses isto dissolve nitrate of silver in distilled water, adding to it alcohol, amonia [sic], carbonate of amonia [sic] and essential oil of sassia, and pouring the liquid thus produced on the glass, adding at the moment of the operation some essential oil of cloves. In two hours the silver, reduced by these oils, covers the glass with a coating of silver. The inconveniences, time and danger to the health of workmen, by the present mercurial proces [sic], is avoided by this new mode.
The IIa ii It mania. The Dank mania is getting quite a start again. In Vermont, a bill his pa&?ed the Senate incorporating the Eennir.gtoj County Bank, with amendments increasing the stock to $UO,(t:(J, and nuking the single shares IJ0 instead of 2i)0. In Ohio two new banks have been started at Toledo, where the Wabash and Erie, and the Miami canals pour forth their produce upon the bosoms of the likes. The curious observer may have remarked that banks, like thieves, alviays station themselves at the great outlets of the national industry, in order to seize upon the produce of labur to convert it to their own use, as it issues into the oj:i markets. These two Toledo Banks are what are called branches of the State Bank of Ohio, that part Tthe "Sea Serpent" bill being as we predicted on its passage, the favorite with the "produce grabbers." The two systems authorized by thern will have already prtparcd promises to isaue as money, as follows : State Branche?, GOO.000 Independent Branches, &M),OtX)
Total new Bank, fc9.;0,(00 Old Bank, last report, 2,370,2 2 Total Circulation, $3,3tt),212 The new Banks may issue 1,200,000 of circula tion, making near $13,100,(00 of paper issues for Ohio. It is observable that these notes have by law no security whatever. In our article of March 5, we remarked in relation to this law "The State Branch feature of the Ohio law offers so much greater inducement to banks, that the indepen dent' feature will scarcely be availed of." Accordingly we find that the branches are becoming far more numerous than tiie free banks We will suppose that there are five persons who wish to form a company in Ohio in good faith, lhey have a capital, say islO.OOO, and may choose between the two plans. If they choose the State branch, they arc to have a nominal capital of $100,000, and are to pay tip $00,(00. They may then deposit $f,f00 with the board of control, and receive $'00,0(0 i f circulating notes, with which they can immediately go on with their business. If they choose. the indepen dent plan, they must have a nominal capital ol ft-xl,-000; they must pay $15,000 of capital; buy $15,000 of 6toek, to be deposited with the Comptroller, and receive $io,oui ot circulating notes, l lie same capital under the free vlart trill cice them one-fourth the circulation they may tJilain under the State branch systrm. Of course, as the object is to circulate notes the latter will be the only plan availed of. Further ntore, although the ctpital if a branch if, by one sec tion of the law, not to be less thin $100,100, another section makes the payment of more than sixty per cent, of that amount optional trin the stockholders, thus, in fact, making the minimum capital $00,000. Hence, five person?, with a capital of $10,000, may issue .$1'J0,( .00 of notes, whereof '.'U.tKX) may be discounted t ) the stockholders and u ed by them in paying tm their instalments. This is all that is re- ; quireil of honest bankers by the strict letter of the law. Ihe lU,UuU ot the original capital may, however, never exist except as kites on New York, because the 55th section makes a New York credit specie wherever that term is used in the law. Hence SWO to de posite with the board of control is all ; 's necessary to start a branch bank. Jhe free ! banks are requireu to proauce actual siock ior me j notes they circulate, and as the same object can be j attained without that provision under the other part r ,!ie lavv lt m:iy b0 caSil7 supposed that tne stock I ...in . u i i. ti. . : r .i i ;n will not u.j unigiu. aiic u-rauwi in um law win j probably be to give Ohio gl6.0C0,C(!0 of circulation i unilcr lhe branch plan. A. 1 . Aetr. Anecdote cf Old Ironsides. The most brilliant naval action of the last war undoubtedly was that of j British corvettes, Cyane and Levant, of greatly supe rior force, each of them being equal to the old fashioned 3'2 jrun frigates. The handling of the Amefican frigate was throughout scientific and unexcepi tionable. By no mauaeuvrinf; could either tf the 1 Lritishcycsfsc1,3 ?Uain a rsitin t0 raf te Constitu uun- oiuit ineir grouuu as uiey wouin.uiu ironsiuei OS was between them, blazin; away at both vessel at the same time. During the whole action Stewart, instead of mounting the horse-block, 6at in a more exposed situation astride of the hammock nettings, the better to observe the manoeuvring of his antagonist. The Cyane was the first to strike to Brother Jonathan not an unusual thing with British vessels during that war. The first lieutenant came in haste to the Commodore to announce the fact. 'The star1 oaru snip nas sirucK, sir, said the officer. I know . ' 1 tr, 1 . a 1 n t am ' t n , ,i !-- l'.-ir- - rwt- 1 iri hn tt Iri la 1ilit hn I t won. V I r I I T s- r ? tln hini n er piL-a im s Doodle, sir!' inquired the lieutenant. Here the Com iuiiuii a v uvi n i xr u iiiu vv on tne uir Ji alines modore took a huge pinch of snuff, and then answered quickly, fllad we not better whip the other first, sir V 'Ay, ay, sir,' replied the lieutenant, taking the hint, and went to his quarters. In a few minutes afterwards the Levant lowered the cross of Old England to the stars and stripes, and the battle was ended. The lieutenant feeling somewhat rebuked at his premature exultation upon the surrender of the first vessel, was rather shy of approaching his commander again ; but Stewart, beckoning to him, said with a smile 'Don't you think the band had better strike up Yankee Doodle now, sir ?' In an instant that spirit-stirring strain was floating in the breeze, played as no other than a Yankee band can play it, and the gallant crew shouted forth their cheers of victory, as no other than a Yankee crew cad shout. A". Y. Globe. Curious Sub-Marine Substance. Jno. L. Dim-mrw-Ic. Prrvsirlpiit if thr W.nrrnn Tnnrnn Hnmna n v
(Boston) has at his office a very curiosu specimen of, ciar .furms the 1)011(1 of union an ihmusof commutho won.Wful rnoftit'rnn of H- nnnn snhstnnrp I nication between most heterogeneous oppositions. It
deposited noon its bottom; It is a concreted mass of submarine substances, such as various shells, &c, united with the solidity and weight of stone, from which are protruded several bpanish milled dollar?. This is a part of a large quantity which has been recently taken up from the place Where the Spanish ship San Pedro was blown up, on Febuary 11th, 1815. An enterprising company fitted out the brig Frances Amy, Captain 13inney, from Baltimore, for the purpose of making an experiment for the recovery of the money known to have been on board the Spanish ship at the time of her destruction. We are happy to hear the attempt has so far proved succes-ful that they have raised and brought home over $'27,000 nearly all of which was in the same state as the specimen cf which we have here spoken. Among other curious formations which were raised in the course of the search, we learn that a single cannon ball was brought up with thirty dollars firmly imbedded in it. Some of the solid masses of rock and sh Iis, on being broken open, were found to contain rows of dollars, es if they had remained there in tiie same order in which they came from the boxes in which they were originally packed. This property is now brought into use again, after having lain thirty years on the bottom of the ocean, subject to all the wonderful charges' incident to such a situation. iV"Isfibel Sfcond, of Spain, is described as fat. fair and fifteen. Her arm is immense her bi:st redun dantly developed, and her ankles are solid enough to support the grolden tower of Seville. She waddles in' her gait from excessive corpulency, and her fat, chubby face, after a little exercise, becomes suffused with a delicate bloom the result of the fatigue of carrying so much blubber !. Her manners are represented as exceedingly childish nnd common place. The young Issabel's appetite, it is said, ia well calculated to nourish the fitness of her frame, as her corpulent Majesty devours at a meal, soup, an entire fowl, fish, pastry, followed by swen.tmeat.sand preserves of which she is passionately fond. She has been badly brought up, one moment having had every whim gratified, and the next, being culled by her mother her education too, has been neglected. She writes and spells very badly. This is the prize that Louis Fhilippe wishes his son, the Duke d'Aumale, to possess ! ior this " fat, ftir and fifteen " lump of flesh the king sent h"i3 son to Spain ! A farmer lately turned his sheep into a lot occupied by sonre cherry trees, which had sent up shoots from the roots ; the consequence was that the sheep partook of the leaves of the;e shoots, and were soon seen staggering about the lot and tumbling upn their heads. Many of .them died, when their stomachs were found to contain large quantities of these leaves, which, all know, abound with prussic acid, fatal alike to' man and animals.' It should be known toothat tho stones and twigs,' as well as the leaves of the peach, also contain prussic acid, and are poisonous.
ISallad. BT MSS. EMMA C. EMBCBY. Li rose cuerillt et It caur gagne ne plaisent q uu jour. The mxMen sate at ber buy wheel, Urr heart was light and fee, And ever in cheeiful saug bioke forth Her bosom's barmtest glee. Her s irg was in nvjckeiy of love, And oft I heard her say, ' The gathered roe ai.d the stolen heart, Can chaim but fur a day. I looked on the maiden's rosy cheek, And her !ip o full and bright, And I sighed to think that the traitor lore, Should conquer a heart so lihtt But the thought not of future days of wj, While she cirro leJ ia tones so gay : ' ' The gathered ioe, and the itoleo heart, Can chaitn but for a d iy. A year pased on, and again I stood By the humble cottage door ; The maiden sate at her busy wheel, But her look was bli;he no more t The big tear stood in her downcast eye, And with sihi I beaid her say, ' The gathered rose, and the stolen heart, Can charm but for a day.' Oh ! well I knew what had dimmed her eye, And made her chetk so pale ; The maid had f jrjtten her early song, While she li-tened to love's soft tale. She had lasted the sweets of his p,jioued cop, It had waited her life aw.iy An.l the stolen heart, like the gathered rose, Had chaimed but for a djy.
Hymn. BT HOWE. Come ye signers, proud and lowly, Rich and raeged, lean and fat, Come and fork oVr what you owe rre For the Dollar Democrat ! The Parson's anxious to receive it, Ah ! he sadly needs the chink, Erery dollar bright, believe it, Doe for paper, rent and ink. Pray don't hesitate, ye signets ! Of Ihe Printer's pittance think Send, () send the silver shiner ! Quickly, Cash us, or we sink ! JErDurinp the singing f the hyniii, the deacons will please band round thtir hats. Setak. The Hoosicr Gal. The heart proclaimed her peerless, and her eye ricamed forth the hues of a biUht summer fcky ; Her check, in tint, outvied the finest roe. And, oh ! how beauteous was her raven hair ; Each gUnce would ever some sweet charm disclose, As if the paitial gods had heaped ihem tbeie ; I long besought her, fmdly to be mine A thoujjhtful shade w is seen her fce to cross, As if she dwelt on all she mut resign. And then the murmur'd, "Well I will, old Hoss !" Winter Scrap. The following quaint epitaph was written cn the tombstone of a youth at Frith, in Derbyshire, England. The comparison is seasonable : " Our life is hut a winter' day. Some only breakfast, and twav ! Others to dinner slay and are full fed : The oldest man but runs and g e to bed ! Large in bis debt, who lingers nut the diy; Who goes ihe soonest has the least to puy .'" Tobacco in Spain. In Spain, the Bourbon dynasty (as else where) is the hereditary tobaconit-geiieral ; the privilege is generally farmed out to some contractor : accordingly, ' no such thing as a really good home-made cigar is to be had fot love or money in the Peninsula. There There is no royal road to the science of cigar making; the article is badly made, of bad materials, and to add insult to injury, charged at a most exorbitant price, In order to benefit the Havannah, tobacco is not allowed to be grown in Spain, which it would do to perlection in the neighborhood of Malaga ; the experiment was made, and having turned out quite Success- j ful, the cultivation was immediately prohibited. The j badness and dearness of royal tobacco favors the well ! meaning smuggler ; this great corrector of blundering i i rj - , , .. , , chancellors ot excheouers Drovides a better und cheaDcr thing from Gioraltar. l aV f The rich alone can afford to smoke Good ones. Ferdinand VII, unlike his ancestor Louis XIV, " qui," says LaEeaumelle, " liaise sait le tabac singuhercnient, quo;qu un dr ses meilieurs revenus, ' was not only a great manufacturer, but consumnier thereof, lie indulged in the royal extravagance of purones, i a very large thick cigar made expressly for his gracious use in the Havanna. He w as too good a judge to smoke his own manufacture. Even nf these he aPl,i,,m amnl-o,l .,. ,i, ,l i,if. V,-. -.,... eeldotn smoked more than the half; the remainder was a grand perquisite palace lights. Ihe cigar; was one of his pledges of love and hatred ; he would I give them to his favorites ; and often, when medita- j ting a treacherous coup, he would dismiss the unconcious victim with a royal cigar ; and when the hapy individual got home to 6tnoke it, he was saluted by an Alguacil with an order to quit Madrid in twentyfour hours. On the Fardos and Alamedas urchins are always runing about with a slowly burning rope for the benefit of the puplic. At many of the sheds where water
ana lemonade are sold, one ot these ropes, twirled j iiministratarof tiieetaie nrTimmas t ixwiuan, it of wrilikfi a Rnafcft round ft nosh nnd limited, ia rnnr! fir I on cenmr, Slate of Indiana, deceased. An persons liavm claims
i 0" a hre as the match ot a besieged artilleryman. In the houses of the affluent a small silver chafing-dish, j prume batillum, with lighted charcoal, is usually on a j tabic. r.Ir. Hennmgson, chap. 10, relates that Zumalacarregny, wrhen about to execute some Christinos at Villa Franca, observed one (a schoolmaster) looking about, like Raleigh, for a light for his last dying putf in this life. The General took his own cigar from his mouth, and handed it to him. The schoolmaster lighted his own, returned the other w ith a respectful bow, and went away reconciled to bo shot. This necesity of a light levels all ranks : it is allowable to stop any person for fire, " fwgo," " candtla." The ,s.tne corpus ot Ispanisii liberties The soldier takes the fire from the canon's lip : the dark face of the humble laborer is whitened by the reflection of the ci.rar of the grandee and lounger. Magnetic Telegraph. A correspondent suggests to the Morning News a valuable purpose that may be attained by the Magnetic Telegraph, thus : "There is one use to which the Magnetic Telegraph may be put on our Atlantic coast, that I have no where seen mentioned it is in telling us of the approach of northeast storms. It is well known that they commence in Philadelphia often Boine hours sooner than here, and farther south at Baltimore, Washington or Norfolk still earlier; and here hefore they commence in Boston. Now, word could be sent ahead of any hurricane or storm, from station to station, and thus prevent the loss of many a richly laden vesseL For, instead of leaving port only to beat against the wind, or get on alee shore, they could remain1 securely moored at the wharf until the storm is over. Not only may the merchant and mariner be benefitted, but all classes, especially the firmer, who might be notified of tiie approach of a northeast storm, over a considerable extent of coun try ; and thus, in harvest time, save thousands of dollars worth of hay and grain. Why, I am not sure but that we shall see the time when we will look at the newspapers for the latest magnetic intelligence, so as to know whether to take our umbrellas ulon with us or not. The valuable lute used in the south of France for grafting trees, is said to bo made of equal parts of r-t , l. 1 .i j , , . train oil and resin melted together, and applied to gratis wim a painter a brush. The night mare is now politely termed "the nocturnal horse of the feminine gender." FASIJIOXAIILE JEViELUY. ! U VST received from the Kalern cities a laige and farhionable ! 9 stock of Jewelry, consisting in part td" Ureast Pins, Finer Kings, IlraceletU, NerkUce-i and Shirt DuUnn net with yellow,' pink, purple, and white Topaz ; rlso blue and black Enamelling, of j all soils and sizes ; nl?o Cameo, Coral and Jet. This Jewelry was j selected w ah care nnd expressiv f this market. The subscriber : ÜMmn himself lie ran tuit Ihe most fasiidiotH lane, ritlier in style, rftiaiity or price. The pit lie. are requested lo call and fike a l.mk ftore opposite VVahiiigi..n Hall 4t W. II. TALBOTT. gold riiiiimi:s. f AY lie found for sale chetp at V. II. Tatbutt'i Jewelry Ptore a ill lew Cold TlUmbles of diirnt sine ; also Silver do ol all sorts andsir.es; also a large lot of Gold Spectacles suited for Idie' or Cetulemen's wear. CaU and see. 44 W. II. TALBOTT. iMTErT L,irrTEir iialax i.s. WUST received, a few Patent Letter Ilalances wtli pencil, pen e1 and tonllipirk attached; they are the most convenient and n-e-lul pencil now in use.. Every business man ought to avail himself of this opportunii v and p-t on e ; they w i U be sold at Philadelphia prices at W. II. TALBOl'T'd. 41 PEtKIFOCAIs . SPECTACLES. . THE subscriber has been made the sole agent for thia city, for aellinx the perifocal spectacles and classes; these glasses are aid to be ihe best article now ia use. I have just received a larre lot of the Stiers, also the classes, and will be able to suit all sorts and conditions of eyes; thexe elaane nnd spectacle will be sold at the mauutacturer's prices, by W.U. TALBOTT. 41
the jiAititirrs. C.VC.V.V.m. Oct. 25, ISIS. FLor A sale of 500 bids city mills y est er Jay a!Wno n at a price not mad publicunderstood to be of a fu'l rate ; 100 da do thia morning at 4 27 at mill, 1000 do do at M.I5 ; 400 do, mixed brands, from Riilrosd depot at f4,"5 clear; 62 do from Canal at f 4,10 inspected. Wbisket. A sale from canal of 196 bbli at 19 j cU ; 37 do frm river at tame ; 40 do in two lota at 19 jc. Lixfeld Oil. A sale yefrday of 25 bl!s city at 63c iuLERATrs. Sales cf 30 eks. good, at 3jc. Baco. A sale cf 3 hhJs clear SiJes at 8jc; 1 do at SJ and for hbds. Oct. 23. Floc look a tumble ycstcrdiy. The 180 Lhls noticed yesterday was settled at $1 ; a sale afterwards of 250 bbls at $ 3,87 intpectrd ; 1C0 do at $3.75 and inspection ; 503 do mixed, fair brands, at 3,75, part 663 bids in ihe last 25 hours, miking 3,565 bbls since Saturday morning, ard this morning tbe landing ia pretty well covered, with no buyers to be seen.
Tree Po-t Olllces for the State Sentinel. Marion County. Piketon, Clermont, AIIisonille, Webb's Farm, (Jermanlown, Cumberland, New Uethel, Bridgeport, Augusta. Ilendricki County. Hampton, PlainGelJ, Br!!eil!e, Stilesviile, Danville, New Winchester, Brewnsburg, Springtown, North Salem. Hamilton County. WestfielJ, Nob!esville,Sirawlowo, Cicero. Bonne County. Lebanon, Thnrnleysville, Royalton, '.mestown, Cagle Village, Norlhfield. Morgan County. Mooresil!e, Monrovia. Hancock Cuiinty. Greenfield, Sugar Creek, Char ottesville, Philadelphia. Eden. Johnson County. (irrenwood, Franklin, Far West. She'by County. Pleasant View, Shclbyville, Morris town. .O i K i .. Orncc Ipdiaka .McTciL Fibb IwirnticB Courier, I imdiuiupoU. October 31, I 15. ( r'F'MIE Tnetiilirrt of Bill com piny rs hereby motird lhat llieir As. SL noil. Miitiio will lie Iw-ld at this Ottice on the fir Wednesday, luring the 3J day rf Orcrm'irr licit ensuinf.at ten o'clock tiie f.nenoon, fur the choke of Direct!, and lhe transaction ol auch i other Ixisiurss as may he deemed nrccssnry. ' rreraons intending to vote by proiy at said meeting are reminded that proxies must I in writing, signed by the party reo resented, and filed with the Sferretiijr . ty order, C. IV. CA1V, fery. Publishers of tl;e following named pniien are requested to publish I the above nonce to the amount ot sac dollar in their respective pa- ! per, and prei nt their lulls for payment la Ihe local Agent of the - Company, who is lierehy authttrized lo iay the same, via : Oazetu, New A llmny, PullaMum. Richmond, Sentinel, port Way ne, Ijyrest, j Terre Haute, Ouztttt, Vincenne, Fret Pre, Lafayetie.iarsu, Eri anville, Benenn, Lawteiicehurgh, free Pre, South Bend, Ttltgrofk, iLoj-iii'IKvrt . IHmorral. Uoetien. The pulilirhers of the alne papers will please forward their pa- . pers containing lhe advertisement to the Treaurer. 41 tut ISaiilV Scrip ami Treasury IVofr. T yE iinriersiirned I fon coni? ninrt.t a lot of Hank Srrim mnd 7anr .Wf wi:.-h I.e. will eiclian;e upon adranlaseou term to those wishing to use -i'li-r. Borrowers of einktnc fund and o'lu-raat a distance, would do well to apply ly Irt'er for the amount they vmt t ef'ore the n:iil.ii: fund Shies in Koveuiler. If it is di'üired I will make payment for them at the proper olTire ri'kout charge. I sliiill , mine to pay tuxes in any rounty in the State. Fund si. nut I I e forwariled ly 1st of Deeem' er next. 5a tf is A .W. JM O R RIS.Cen. Agent. TO TIIE IlLIC. ripilE suWrihrr has just returned from Philadelphia and New -L York wiih the lrse selection of fine watches ever brought I) this rily. confuting of t.old nnd Oliver Levers, Anchor do, La pin and Vertu a). l.iin, extra, and lull Jewelled, of single rase, double do and Hunting ca-. The puMic are respectlAlly invited ui call and examine ll.e-e walches; the anrtment I very large sndwellselerled, and w ill I nld at New York prices, und in every instance1 where a uatrli f.ulato give entire satisfaction it will he taken back, or in other words lliey w ill tie warianted to keep good time or n sale. Store opposite K. Ilrow ning's. 44 W. II. TALBOTT. A El V" EYES. " PERSONS wishing a good a ilicle of Spectacles, and large lot lo select fimn, cannot fail to be suited by calling at W. H. TalboU's Jewelry iSltop, where may be found all kinds of spectacles, aa well as all kinds of glasses set in gold, silver, German silver, steel wire, or heavy steel I rime gorales, with green and pray glasses, fce. &.c. at all kinds of prices from i." els lo $15. Store opposite the Washington Hall and 3 toon east of Gen. lrake'B llorH. 44 W. H. TALBOTT. SO.IIETIIIX IVE1V ac;ai. NEW aiticle just out and very fashionable, in tbe shape of hoop, balf moon, and swing earrings, of all sorts and sizes, for sale che p, by W. II. TALBuTT. 44 4 M I M STStÄTO IS.S IV Oll C E. "IT ETTER3 of administration on f he estate of Benjamin Orr, deJLJ ceased, having isued to the iindersicned, he tien by gives no tice to an those in denied lo said estate, to make Immediate payment ; nu i nose Having claims against saio estate to present them du V BU ,i.-i.,,.i r... ..i . tk ..... ; . . ' ms in" n v a s rviiiruiT.ui. M irr; ciuiio IB vrlli.. K. (Jilmnre Jordan said administrator. is authorized lo collect and receipt C me ai 3T3wis JOHN 8. BOBB?, Adm. i AI.1SIM j T"f Nov!"? n lVTUATOEl'S SALE. srd to iuhlic saie on Thnrsdsy.the 6th day t, nt the store room of the lute ilenianun Orr. deceased, nil the pertonal profierly brlonsing to snid deiedcnt ; consisting ol bureaus, beds mid l.edieals, i Moves. 1 row ,4 clocks, carprtire, lahlr,chHir,st-itee,auda variety of bou.-tt-oid and kitchen furniture. Ate. &c. Also, a laree and general assortment of ready msdeclotbing, coasisungof cUktks, coals of every dracripiion, paulaloonii, vesta, eh ins, drawers, hosiery, umbrellas, and tenth-men's furnishing, of hka a more particular description mil be given in posird bills, rale to connu-ncpat 10 o'clock, a. m. On all amounu exrprdinc three duiacdlt of rtl ,,,, wiu be given, hv ot ..h srved scurity. 39-3wis JOHN S. BOB Adm. XOTICE. L.L ppnsons inHeMed to the estate of Benjamin Orr, deceased, are lierely lurtl.or notified, to make sottieinent with the onftntctmPfl O . I -i ( 1 1 f H'irAin.n 1. it Ii .ft n f l.nn.t. I Q I j and tliataU accounts and cliiimstlien remaining unadjusted, will tie pui in a process of collection without respect to persons. J. S. BOB BS, Mm. rTliose desirous of ptirehnsine til ths sale of Benjamin Orr's effects, ran l.nve nn opportunity- of examining the articles that will he sold, by catling on J.J. Wiseman or E. Gi'more Jordaa. 4Tt-3w A E)JIISTISATOEl'S XOTICE. TOTICE is hereby given, that the undersigned has beea appointed gainst s id estate wi II present them duly authenticated for settle ment, ani those owing the estate will pi ease settle u same without delay. The estate is supposed to be solvent. Ort. 13, 184.. 37 is JEStK PRICE, Administrator. 4 I XISTICATOZ&'S S A LI'. THE undersigned will sell at public snle, at the residence of the Lite Thomas t'heeseman, deceased, in Wayne loirs, ship, on Saturday, November 1st, a two hör wajoa, one earriii;;e, horses, cattle sheep, hops, forming utensils, household luinltnre, corn in the field, niu in barn, carpenter's tools, i.e. tc. Ua all sums over three dollars, twelve months credit will he riven wiUl approved security. JEbE 1'UICE, Jldauiuilrtlor Oct. 13. Irflj. 37 -3w is A I31 1 ISTR A'E'OI lS 2VOTI C I'. rjtHE underpinned has lieen sppninted administrator on the estate of Samuel Kenm, late of .M.irii'n omnty, defeased. All persona indebted to said estate will take notice arcordinr'y, and make immediale settlement : and those having claims n;nintt the same should present them without delay to the undersigned. The etateis supI osed lo he solvent. 40 2wm BENJ REAM, Adm. AI3IIIK'rSATOIt'j-i HOTlC'll. "COTICE Is herrtjjr riven that Ihe nndeisicm-d tins taken ot leti ters of administration on the eshtle of John Reacan of W ashinzton township, Iloone county, late deceased. Those having claims Hsainat the same will file and prove them as the law directs. and those indebted to said estate will majve pavrrent. The etme is probably solvent. SOLaVaV COOK, Jtim. October 18, 1843. 43 3 w a DiinhiiMTosivs sim:. frWIERE will he offered at public sile to the highest bidder on Frtday, Ihe 14lh of November, at lite late resilience of John Kea- , dece ived in tVashincton township, IWne county, lhe following property, viz ; hoss and sheep, corn, farming utensils, whit household furniture ; the credit will be 13 months I y fivinf bond with approved Brciirtty. Further condiiious made know n on lhe day of sale Sale to commence at 10 o'clock. S0L0M0.Y COOK. Mm. October -j4ih. I4.r. 43 3w M ite or Iiitlhiiia ISoonc County Probate Coi rt, Pookc Cocktt. Arocs-r Term, 1845. Joseph Larimore, Ai!mr.. J.-inies Kcrrvhill. deceased, vs. Esther Berryhill, wi.tow, Alexnnder M. Berrvbill, James Berryhill, William Berryl:ill. John h. Iterrvhill, Joseph Berry bill, Andrew J. Berryhill. Atsa liorrvl ill. Rae had llerrvhill. Marvaret Eerrvtiill and Alary licrryliiil. .o'roirji. ND now at this time rom-s the raid administrator and shows to tiie rourt that the writs herein issued to Fountain, Tippecanoe and Boone counties l ave been returned, served on all the defendants herein, except Alexander M. IWryliill and Joseph DcrrjrI. ill. and on motion of said complainant, tili cause is continued to the next term of this col.T, and Alias process is awarded to the sheriff of Ti-ecanoe county for said Alexander M. and publication ordered as to the sail Joseph llerrvhill in the Indiana State Senlinei, a weekly newsp. ner puMMied nt Indianapolis in said State; of the which the said Joseph llerrvhill will tnke notice, t'.y order of tl.e court. J0ÜX CHRISM AN. Clk. Oaioos fc Si-it. Att'ys for romp?. 39 3 w is State cf Iiili:iii;i--II.-iiniItoii Motility, ss. IImiltoi t 'laccir t'ocar, StrrcMscR Term, 1843. William S. Pr nle vs. William M. Jones. vreiis i'taehntenU vtOV comes tiie pUiniiir by K. S. Sione, his attorney, and the ivj writ tailed rn-rnn hiving ln-cn reitirned by the sheriff' on the fir-d day of this term, statins in hu return that he has au.iched tbe ; q'' awiUm i7,m township j 1 eonlaininB t1 acre, as tiie pmpertv nnd la i valued at $-2tio. The said defendant, Wii tinlowint- rierrihed real ewtate.tn wit : The enxt half ot the soatk la north, of ran so 4 eal. ind of ihe said defendant. illiam M. Jones . is herehv notified that said writ of fireign attacliment is still pendins in said eouit, and that unless he will appear on or before the calling of tbe case for trial and plead to or answer the same, the court will proceed to try, hear and determine ttiesame iu his absence, of w dich said defendant w id take notice. J.YO. 0. ECR.VS, Clk. October 13, IS 1.. 42 3wT State oT Indian:! Hamilton County. lllMU.TO ClSrCtT t'oCIT. tKPTKMRCK TuS, 1Ö4Ö. America llorui.lny vs. i'liny ilorniday. irr.-. "M OW comes tiie said petitioner by Carver, lier eotinsel. and it 1 spiwarins from Hie alieri't 's return on tl-e sninmons issned j ,cren hv the court lhat the S!,it defendant, P.'inr llornidar, 1-e noherein that the said defendant is not found. Thereupon it is ortiiied of tue pendency or tins pptition by three successive weekly publications in the Indiana ti.ie Sentinel, a weekly public newspaper printed nnd published at Indianapolis, Marion county, in said Stale, the lt of whirh )ui!.liration to be more than thirty day ttefore the fit day of the next term of this court, and notifyinc the said defenünnt that unless he will plead to or answer sr. KI petition on or before tbe CBlli.-ij of the cause at the next term of this court, tiie same will be taken for confessed and determined in bis at.senre. By the court. Attet. 43 3 It JVO. O. BI'RVa. Clk. Notier? of Assignment or Dower, rn'OTlCI is hereby civen that the ondersiened will make applli cation to the Probate Court of Hendri-ks conntv. Indiana, at Its next term to be holden nt theConrt lloune in Danville, in aid eountf, on the second Monday of November next, for the appointment of commissioners to isMcn and et off to Susanna
I Aldred. late Susanna Johnson, winow ol Cornelius Johnson de- ! ceaaed, her dower of In and to the following descrified real estate, to wit: west half of the aontheast quarter of sat ti on 13, town- ; ship 14 north, ranze 1 west, containing fcO acres; of whirh tha said Cornelius Job noon died seized. A'.LE.Y K. BRAV. 1 September 17, It? 13. - 33-3w-i-l
