Crawfordsville Record, Volume 4, Number 19, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 3 October 1835 — Page 1
1AWFOID COMB. LIBERTY AND UNION NOW AND FOREVER, ONE AND INSEPARABLE." VoLUJIE IV. 4U3IDER 19. CR A V P O R n c v r i t tt iat .t . ' . mm v i . rv m n m .
tow
' -iM JJLVL U 'A
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7 V-r v
or
PUBLISHED WEEKLY, BY I. F.WADE
At 00 per annum, payable in advance.
.1 . "
wmi.n inree mouths :;tler the lime of subscribing; $2 50 within the year; or $3 00 af- ; ter the year expire?. paper will be discontinued, unless itour option, without special notice and paytment of all arrearages.
Irtvcrtiscmeiits TVTot exceeding 12 ,ines, will he inserted three limes for one dollar; and 25 cents for each subsequent insertion. (7-AnvERTisF.MKNTs,fora limited time, or, fiom a distance, must be paid for in advance otherwise they will be continued at the expense of the advertiser.ZO Letters. on business must be post paid.
riSOSPECTUS.
Iin proved
LAND FOR SALE, TI (TridT Acres "f ,and (8 iles N E. Al VVHV fromCrawfirdsviIle.cn tho
Whole Number 175.
ARRIVALS AND DEPARTURES OF THE MAIL. At and from Crawfordsville. ARRIVALS. 1 'Eastern, Saturdays y Tuesdays at 10 A. M. SoutJtern, do do Northern, Mondays &. Fridays G P. M. Green Castle, Thurdays " u Newtown, Monday evening.
Cordon Saturdays 10 A M & Tuesdays
DEPARTURES' Eastern, Saturdays & Tuesdays 10 A. M
oouuicrn. do do " Northern, do do " Newtown' Tuesdays
Greencastle, Fridays 5 A. M. . (ovington Saturdays 10 A M &. Tuesdays r atOPM AM letters and papers intended to be sent many Mail, must be handed in by 10 tV clock, A. M. L C. ELSTON,P. M
'rrrn
most careless observer nf nnl.t
tnnent must be convinrprl :r..n .i
""") i nil loose
a single candidate for the n . m. " 1 mioriawe A0,e, and
candidate will be elected. f endeavor , J W ELL OF WATER
effect such a r.nnrpnlr;ltin J .1 i ... Convenient to thedonr. nHUrorl rr
nuu uieiVlly pre- I v iui oaic vil at the election of ihe nominee of ib R .1 C'mmodating terms.
I . . rm .
enquire ot the subscriber in Crawfordsville.
vent
on.ore caucus, will be a primary object in the
wiauiisiiuif in ot 1 1 its paper
u, ,....feis not to examine into the
wu-s wn.cn nave heretofore prevented con
.irauon among the people. We will not discuss the merits of their candidates. It is
' J ,re me public the name of a distin
June 12, 1835.
DAVID CLARK.
G
Three per cent, fund. Treasury Department, Indianapolis. June 19th.
gnished citizen, whose public service whose jWOT,CE ishereby given that the three
'c.auou top.irties whose public and DrivatP . Perce- 'unci accruing from the sales
( (C
CINCINNATI. BANK NOTE LIST. (Corrected weekly )
OHIO. Cincin. banks par Bank of Chilicothe 1 do payable at Phil. 1 7V.T:rilM.-l 1
Mount Pleasant 1 Norwalk 1 Geauga 1 Bank of Zanesville 1 Si . Claitsville 1 Commercial bank L Erie 1 Dayton Bank. 1 Coiuin1! hk Scioto 1 F &. M bk Steuben- . ville 1 F&iV bk Columbus I " Lancaster 11 Muskingum bank " Urlona banking Co v Western Reserve ' Clinton lik i.l'Col. 1 KENTUCKY. Bnks of Louisville p i Bk Cmmoiive;dtb 1
NO Banking Co 5 Union bk of La 5 All others uncertain MISSISSIPPI. Planters' bank 5 Agiieun'urd bank at Natchez d State bk Miss at do 5 All others uncertain ALABAMA. Bank of .Mobile 15 Stat.- bk Ala & br 15 VIRGINIA.
i I . .
n o.er, nave already designated him as the cand.date upon whom all can rally, without a sacrifice of feeling or of principle. He is the candidates he has always been the man, "t the people. The son of one of the distinguished patriots who represented Virginia in the congress that declared
Born and educated, and always a democrat aK?o,i?nel from ''s year's receipts the sum hp waa snnninin,) I... M I rr .. Mil SSoOl 21.100 r r,,. n .. ri
ol public lands in Indiana, for the year 1S34, is received at this office, nnrl
disbursement to the commissioners of the
proper county entiled to receive the same. To those counties from which no appro
priation was made for the "i
.1 . I
me nav,g;,on ot the Wabash river," there i
is
OfV
cy : Br uich li
V
l ink ol a. Jc bran
dies 1 J d"pv. Clnrleston " Fiiint-is1 bkVuVbr 11 N W l, Wh.lmg " lo p .y. ;,! Vellsl7MICHIGAN.0 Mich bk and up. 3 Far and AKi: bk of Mich $5 and up. 3
Sulnl!.! it. it...-. O
do Ky and branches I jB ink f Riv. r Raisin 5
Other banks li INDIANA TENNESSEE. F & M l.k j55 &un 1
State I'kTenn and br3 Union bk Nashville 3
do payable at Phil 1 J Yealman &Wo d
pay. at Nashville
do payable at Phil.H LOUISIANA,
Bk vf Louisiana
Br hkLawrtnceb1
All oiheis 1 DIS. COLUMBIA . Bk of Metropolis 1
3 Other banks 1
PENNSYLVANIA.
Allegany bk of Pa. U 5jBk of Ch imbersIiV
do Orleans 5
Com"! bk Loui'a 5 Cinsolidatl Asso'no CitybkofNOiVns5
Louisiana State Bk 5i Pittsburgh
unester county Germantown Delaware county North America"
11
Citizens bk of La
Mec Tra bk ybr 5ally from 2 to 5
tthiT banks gener-
liewas appointed, by Mr. Jefferson, the
emor overall that territory which now con-
Mi.uies uii.o, Indiana, Michigan, 111
Missouri, Arkansas, and Louisiana. He has
grown up with the great west, and become
Hieniined with it m reeling and interests. As
me. commander ot the American forces in the northwest, he defended tint extensive frontier from Indian depredations; and in so do"g became intimately acquainted with, and won toe atTeclion of, the jralhnt tm..,
were his companions in that arduous dmy Our candidate has no political debts to pay nor has he any political animosities to requite If he is elected, he will come into office as the servant of the people, prepared to sustain their intetes:,an.l at liberty to binicr ir.tn i,;a
counsels the ablest and purest public men regardless of p irtv dictation. '
buch, fellow citizens, is VT TT Had
ui&'AN. I o sustain his election, to heal
nresent divisions which separate those who have .1 common purpose; to restore the ascendency of the ot;"ocratic party, it is proposed to publish, in the city of New York, a paper to be called ' T 11 E B A N N E R . " As the Banner will depend upon the people for its support, it is proposed to organiccommittee, tme or more for each ward in!
me city; tint these committees will aid in obtaining subscribers, whose nanus will be given to a newsman; one of whom will heap pointed for each ward. These newsmen will receive the p. peis when printed, and deliver diem to snl.scnbers, or others, at one cent each. Eich ne.wsman will also receive f ml 'r insinit advertisements, for which he will be allowed 50 per cent, on the price of insertion Plus interest of the newsmen to continue so long as they are employed Ivy the proprietor of the paper, ami no longer. The Banner will also be published weekly for the country, on a large imperial sl,eet,al 3 dollars per annum, or two dollars and fifty cents if paid in advance. All letters for subscriptions, and all applications for engagements as newsmen, must, for he presen', be addressed to the executive
commniee of the friends of general Harrison, New York.
1ME21ICAIV GOODS
WAKJE HOUSE: NO. 150, MAKKET-S i'KEET,
rrrm., o.,i.o:i .. .
if " iM'Liun;ib wouiu iniorm tneir IL IVientls, and the Western Merchants.
generally, that their stock of American Cot-
f $391 33-100 to each county. The ap
portionment to the sime count ifs of Olio
K.s.yeur, is atso in readiness for those
counties that have not drawn. To those counties from which there was $112 50-100 taken for the Wabash, there is now in readiness $397 S3-100 each. And to the county of Miami the sum nf $308 38 100. The foregoing sums do not embrace the undrawn appropritons of 1833, and previous years, which may likewise be drawn by the persons properly authorized to receive the same. N. B. PALMER, reasrofstate, agent 3 per cent fund, Dr. If. Isinasevs v eg e ta ii Ij e xorvir AN EFFICACIOUS REMEDY IN FEVER AND AGUE. THIS preparation may be advantageously used as a restorative after nn attack of Autumnal, Bilious and other Fevers and in all cases of weakness or debility' where a gentle warming Tonic or aiPMnril,
mg medicine ts necessary, and in the cure of AGUE, one bottle of it is about equal in tonic powers to fifty grains of Quinine, and Will lH fnUrifl nllll nrl-j nl In , m
u"u"""i iiioie eiucacious. In all cases where one bottle does not cure if ihe patient has gone according to the directions, a second bottle will be given gratis CcCrThe above medicine nny be hud at the Store of R. C. GREGORY &. Co. Crawfordsville. Sept. IS, 1835. 1719 Ad m in islra tor's Notice.
O TICE is hereby gnen that the undersigned have, taken letters of adminis
tration on the esiste of Richard Canine, late of Montgomery County, and stal oflndiana, deceased. All persons indebted to the said estate are requested to make immediate payment; and those having claims against the same are notified to present them duly authenticated for settlement. The estate is supposed to be solvent FRANCIS MILLER Adrift.
CHARlTY CANINE Adm'x.
From the New England Magane HEBREW LANGUAGE. Tbe Hebrew is one of the most material
o- -6wv.v, qJimcil. mere is hard v an abstract term ,n its whole vocabulary J "s entire formation it seems to be made by a people who are as far from spiritual ideas as we can possibly conceive. It has no tense.
ynuse wmcn have been called past and fu.
I: , veriiun,v aonsts,) no scientific or scholastic .erms, no participle to express the nicest translations of thought, very few intellectual expressions of any kinrl Aim,.-, -n
W("te"hch express mental operations are material ,n their origin. Let us mention a few instances without the formaliiy of quoting the original. The word tojecomes in the causative to cut. I seem to see a tribe of primitive hunters.
down and taken a deer.appo.nl one of the wisest of their number to cause it tn bP nt n
m equal portions; and thus comes the ideas
... j'M.gmg. 1 he word to mourn comes from .e withering of a plant. The firs, man who J ung down his head in sorrow was likened to a plant blasted by the sun and failing for for want of water. These instances mUt tin nml i ...!.,. J . I . . .i . i ii.
,7 . ; Ul are s,,tncient to show that the language was formed in very ea.lv times; u bears all the marks of the poverty and s.mphc.ty of a primilive hl . J worthy of being studied, as a beautiful specimen of tl,e infant efforts of men at ex prcss.on and thought. It completely transfers you to the ancient world. anH ,L:
you with the intellectual habits nf,h
mve beings. I,s Lexicon is a Magazine of m '1 form I . . - i o
" '"''Js, anu you ring! i l0k tor such terms as decorum
tion, magnanimity, any other that
I .,
F-u. .n them by crcumlocution . l.t ,
see ii.w completely ,ie royaJ poet ' C0mrn.clte the omnipresence of God: Whither shall I go from thy spirit? U hither shall flee from thy facet li I ascend into Heaven. There THOU o,7rHoiat'rene,hMWO'w I take the wings of the east, J-Jr I dwell in the remotest west. J here thy hand shall lead rre Ally right hand shall hold me up. Ps.cxxxix, 7, 8, 9,10.
But the beauties of the biblical nnfr
a t . severe beauties, must be acquired by siutly. J hey are so simple, so unlike modern sen timentahsm, that, when first seen, they T, W,,h d-PPoin.ment. Jt
ayam uiiu your attention will be
-u a uiiro time and you will adrn
arrest-
ire, and
r . ' O' ' "'"IV III vain for such terms as decorum, grace. loi1n.
r ' -to IMr lint r . . . ,
es the nicest shades of thought. Le Ge,c in elatmg the dogma3 of the Pharisees shows mat tney could not believe in tl
sto.es, because there was no word in
language, even at that late aire, whirl. mi,i
express that notion.
buch was their speech a lnnn. t.:i.
seemed to be firmed by beings immersed ,n He material world, yet when we pass to their
we nnu mem the most vast and intellectual that can can pnssiblv meet I,..
. nu- Vin "e engage in their subjects they seem to leave" sublunary nature behind them, and soar into the da. kest regions of the closest thought. They describe no battles and citiesbut the conflicts of mind the agonies of conscience the mysterious intercourse of man with his maker. They paint the sorrows of repentance--the hopes of f lith, and the winding and snares ihrougb which the errant soul returns to God. They are every where like the painters with the pencil put into their hands, and compel led to draw only allegorical forms. They must not go to the landscape, and copy tinlilies and the lakes. They are not to dwell on the
once let the model impress your taste, and you win admire forever. It
or touching the deeper tones of the heart, tho Hebrew poetry has an internal grandeur, compared with which the songs of mytholooy' are cold and unmeaning.
Exodus xx, 4.
Sweet interchange Of hill and valley, rivers, woods and plains, Now land, now sen, and shores with forest
crowned,
locks, dens and caves.
Jr.
1
lI,BS.orgoodZ?A COiVwanted imme
diaiely, for which the highest price will be
paid in goods. Also, Feathers, bees-wax,
tallow, hemp, linen, and flax, will be received in payment for goods, and cash will not be
relused.
BURBRIDGE& MILLER.
v-rawtonlsviiie, May '22, 1835. 3tf
ILaw Notice
-55-
7oi A' Woolen Goods, for the comiiiir ?i-n!nii
win comprise a L.AKU : vV. X , P P.TP w 'sui ii j mm ju mtmm IsJLua !fi
AbbOR 1 MENT. which will be offered on li cents rr lb. niven for old POT ME
the most liberal terms. Among other staple I AL,by BURBRIDGE A MILLER
ariicies are the tollowmg goods, of the most orawtordsville, JMay, 1835,
approved manufacture' ISrowncc Bleached
Shrrt; vonre cinro I 1ttiTlit in ol oL.i
ISAAC NAYLOR, ATTORNF.Y AND CofNSELLoR AT L.W,
TTTTAV1NG located liimsrlf at f ..'raw fords -
JJjJ. ville, Montgomery county, Indiana, Style Prints; Bleached and Fancy coloured JLYJLL iff's sale, two lots in Cincinnati, which will attend punctually, and faithfully to the Cambrics; Men's Summer wear; Bed Tick- 1 h;,d soldi a,ltl liikpn a mortgage on them for duties of bis profession, in II the counties inSS Maids $ Stripes; Checks; Sattinctts: "e purchase money. The purchaser had
composing the 1st Judicial Circuit of the Linseys; llanneh; Kerseys; with a great ,'ld a Part of one of the lots to one Daniel
state aforesaid, he will also attend to the var,e,J " ouier articles. collection of debts, in any, or all ofthcoun- VMLLIAM H. BROWN, & CO.,
ties of tire Upper Wabash country. He will une mown, Utasc, cy Co. attend to all law business intrusted to bis 1st Month, (January) 1835.
IN. 15. be business will be conducted on
he usual tenni althe old Stand 43
care, in the Supreme Court of Indiana, and al
so, in the. United States District Court for
the State of Indi ana. QMis Office is on
Green Sreet, two doors north of I. C. Elston's
Store, where he can be found when not ab
sent on business.
IN it. lie has tormert a partnership won
Th. J- Evans, of Covington Fountain cot.
Ia., in all business in tbe Circuit Courts, in
the first Judicial Circuit August, 1831
Mew (Rood!J
ftlHE subscribers are just receivinirat the
stand ofM. Holmes, lately occupied
as a urug otore, a
Of Dry Goorts, Hardware.
fiit'iii.MVfirc;, alio,
ciiffcri,
Gorman, who by will left it to his two sons, Thomas and Hugh Gorman. I made verbal assurances to said Thomas and Hugh, if 1
should succeed in obtaining from the lots.
C3 J
more than the amount of my debt and inter
est, that 1 would make them an allowance
The lots are still unsold, ImjI are of far sreat
er value than the amount of my debt and inte
rest; and 1 hold myself responsible l redeem
my promise lo said Thomas and Hugh, or their heirs, if dead. They left Cincinnati
some twelve or more years since, and settled
in Unto or Indiana. 1 hey were both extreme
ly poor. N. LONG WORTH
July 31
Commissioners sale.
WILL be sold at the court house in Craw
fordsville on the 5th day of November, 1835
the 10th section in congressional township
FTT1 AKEN UP, by Absalom Utter, jr., Itv
U ing in 'Jetlerson township, Boon co. ogether with Iron, Glass, Xails, &. in short, la. , about 4 miles south of Tbomtown, on th every article usually found ii. a retail store.
'21st day of July, 1835, two estray mares. Their stock has the advantage of being
One black, near bind foot white, and a small entirely new; every article,, belonging to it No. 17 north, of ranae 5 W, One fourth of lfl l tn l I III. .11 C i t i i I. O
star in iter loreneau, some sauuie marKS, nan n.mng rceiniy uwn careiuny selected, by the pun base monev paid in hand, and one on a small hell, about fourteen hands high, one of the, partners, in the cities of Ph ladel- year interest the residue of principal to be
supposea tone leu or ii years oio, no ouier pnia, i nisuuig, hiiu jinciunan, irorn the p nj in ten years al Q pT centum in advance
iii oKb uui rn.v....ure,n1,(ii,liPcu mi i uldi iu... ......... , ...iv v,, ... vii.. .cei pii- Sate to commence at ten o'clock, a. m. and
ritteen dollars. i iw ouier a nay, a small 'ems ami quaiiiies: nnu as iney aestgn tloingJ continue until all is sold
star in ber lorehead, a scar on tier near tlnali, business permanently in ihe place, ihey resabont four! - n b mds two or l bee inches lugli, pect fully invite ".heir acquaintancts, and the
supposed ' be three years old I isi spring, no public generally, to call and examine their oth--r inark v br .iiiN pen-eivab'.e, apprised stock, coutidetitly lielieving that they are
to twenty U.,i, '" m. Uoirough aud Li
Cox.ir. 13 fore me,
July 29, 1835.
WM. YOUNG, J. P.
E.M'CONNELL, school com'r, M. C. Indiana. Sept. 4th,l835. 15
prep ued to sell goods of it quality equa to
ny u. tbe .place, at prices as low as the low-
u-st . i ISA- s r ;
111 Cranfordsvilkj May 15, 1835. 2tf
Our acquaintance with the blind, the deaf and the dumb, has never been such as to make us familiar with the extent to whic'i their olhei senses are susceptible of improvement. Ihe lmlewelmve seen done in the ed ucation of mutes, has been a source of sur. prise and wonder; while we have fully satished ourselves that it is possible to teach the intricacies of literature and science to him who can neither speak nor hear. And how often on the streets of Zanesville, nve we paused to look at Burns, the. hllJ
C t ' nil 11 , who fearlessly passes our encumbered strec"; without cane er guide, and finds his way at once to any point he desires. Ask him where he is, he can tell precisely: while from his manner of walking and acting, few who see Urn fur the first time can think him blind: yet Ins eyes were lost in mfincy. His industiy deserves encouragement . Zanesville Gazette. Cure for diarrhoea. As this
usually prevalent at this season of tho year, a gentleman who has for some tim
past used tne following recipe with great success, requests us to publish it: A table spoonfull of vinegar, and tea spoonfull of salt, mixed wiih a gill of warm water. If relief be not afforded in the course of ten or fifteen minutes, a repetition of the dose, he says, has been effectual in every instance he has observed. This is i simple remedy, worthy at least of trial, and can do no harm. N. Y. Merc. Adv.
FOR SALE HERE;
Fhey are to transcribe only the moral land-
cape they speak to the inner man. They
sometimes pass ihe flaming bounds of space
anu lime, and deal with the mysterious es
sence of the Deity; and all this with a language which seems at first view inadequate to the object. It is impossible to conceive of a greater contrast than the materialism of
the Hebrew language, and the unemobdied
and exalted nature of their fivorite themes.
Phis then was their difficulty ; and they lave conquered it nobly. This" contrast was
l far greater obstacle to a Hebrew bard than
the Hexameter verse was to the heroic poets
imongthe ureeks. 1 hecnucs have been in
raptures at the invention of Homer, and all must allow that he has rolled through every melodious note in his own beautiful language, and laid a contribution on all the stores of
nature to enrich and adorn his theme. But
every one must see that he had previous fa
cilities prepared at band. He collected his
flowers in a garden: while the Hebrew poets collected them fiom a wilderness. What a
rich language did he inherit ! What charming expressions! Every word a picture! He
was indebted to those prior geniuses, who had invented expressions and thus prepared
the held in which bis mind was to play in his
own unbounded luxuriance. We must take
something from the glory of Homer, and di
vide it with those perished names which, like unseen rools, nourished the tree on which
this bird of the muses sat and sung. He could
hand his apples of gold in a net work of sil
ver, while tbe Hebrew bards were obliged to provide not only the song but the lyre and its strings. By the learned reader who appreciates their language, the strains must be read with perfect astonishment. Let us take an example. I have already remarked that their language had very few abstract terms, not even those which seem absolutely necessary to describe the character of the Deity. What could a modern theologian do, if he were compelled to discourse on God without using the words omnipotence, omniscience, and omnipresence? These seem to be absolutely necessary lo communicate our simplest conceptions of the great Jehovah. Yet
not one of these words can be translated into Hebrew. There is not a term in that restricted language which answers to these essential ideas. The truth is, an infant Peo
ple never abstract and when they first a p- ' proach these mighty conceptions, they ap-
Bold and remarkable robbery. The Whir of the loth inst. , contains a very curious a count of a robbery committed not far from ibis city on the 30ih of last month. Mr. Joshua Trotter, of Springsborough, Warren
county, was on that day stopped by two men on die road leading to Howell's basin, four miles from the city, about eight o'clock in the morning. With a pistol at his breast silence was enjoined; he was Mien dragged from his horse, blindfolded, laken into a cornfield near by, robbed of one hundred and fifty-four dollars, and the money he had received the day before, from the bank, demanded: and when he persisted in saying he had received none, they told him they had seen him receive it it was a mistake however. He was kept in the cornfield till night; then taken to the river, atul placed in the hold of a boat. Here he was kept several days, while the boat floated, and was at times towed by steamers down the river. At length he was taken on shore, at night, blindfolded, led into the ... I I . l:l ... mm ..ii
uuuua auu tei ai uueny. inc ruouers escaped at once. When he found a house, he discovered he was near the yellow banks, 300 miles below the city. Sixteen dollars weie raised to pay bis passage home, and on Saturday last he arrived in town. One of the robbers was a tall, well-dressed man, with black whiskers; but Mr. T. thinks he should not recognize either of them unless by the voice. Cincinnati Mirror and Chronicle. Mr. Locke, of moon hoax notoriety, is said to be writing a scientific novel! A cotemporary at the north informs that "news is becoming scarce." The poor fanatic Matthias jumped overboard, from a ferry boat, into the Hudson river, and was drowned. An attempt was made on the 30th of Aug. to raise a mob in New Orleans the soldiery soon put it down however. During the next year, the two hundredth anniversaty of the establishment of Harvard University, will arrive.
Iron steam packets are to be introduced on the river Mersey at Liverpool. Speculations in real estate are very active at Pittsburgh and Erie, Ta. Properly is going up like a balloon, and the good people think nothing of making a fortune before din ner.
t,
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