Rising Sun Times, Volume 1, Number 41, Rising Sun, Ohio County, 23 August 1834 — Page 3
v.
RISING 8Ui:
SATURDAY. : AUf.l ST 23, IS3t. Jackson, Esq. has requested us to itnte, that at the Jate election, hj received G3 ve to for County Comruisionr, instead of 7-23, m published in the official returns, lie says the error mutt have originated in the Clerk." STATE BANK LOAN. Ve have at length received certain information that the Commissioners appointed to negotiate a loan for the purpose of enabling the Inihaha State Bank toco into operation, h;;ve ueceeded in obtaining the sum of five hundred thousand dollar?, in the city of Xcw York. It ii tho;;htthat Use Bank Mi" commence busing a'.mt the firit cf NoveaiV.cr. THlv I LIXTIOV. The return ;:' the la'.e election fir Governor have r.ot all born received. The In li in u.olis Democrat of (lie JUh r.tar.l, ?ays tho majority "or Noble will probably be ir on to 10,0. Kt viUh. It iiiiisl be a source of the highest giati-ilrsti-.w to the enemies of parti spirit, to larn that tlx- ejection in t!;;.s stto, was conducted (rscc; lin.r, jvilnps, a few instances.) with an eye to the best interests of the country, instead of the pditi, of the candidatf . We do not wih to he understood as saying tbat Messrs. Read and Culley wouM not make good officers we peak in reference to choosing ranr.bers to the Legislature. lix'.ian.i has set a cood -xarn-jde: let the other States follow in her waki, nd they will soon hrin bn k tho'c pood old times, when the citizens of our republic went to the polls, nntrani nu lled by pnrtyism, and votid lor men who would represent the whole rtoII E ii'.stnd of a sin!i party. KEMTCKY. The riht of Messr. Kobrl T. Letcher and Thoinis P. Moore to a seat in Congress, from Kentucky, which our readers reeolloet occupied so much of the time and attention of the ln.t session of Congress, and which was referred back to the people, has finally bren derided in favor of Mr. Letcher. Hi majority over Mr T.loorc is between two and three hundred. We have seen it stated in our exchange pa. I er, that therp will be a majority in the next Legislat-ire cf Kentucky opposed to the present ndministration. STKAM IJO VT ACCIOEXT. Wc learn that on Sunday evening last, some distance above Cincinnati, the steamboat Ximmd Wildfire, while under full way, ran upon a pile of stones in the river, which caused her connection pipe to break, and so badly scalded ft number of passengers, that eight or ten died, A gentleman who saw sorne of the sufferers on Monday morning, represented them to be in a state of pain and suffering, such as he had never before vitresed. From what we car. learn, wc believe that the pilot of the boat might easily be convicted of mamlaughtcr. A captain or pilot of a steamboat, unacquainted with the duties of their station, or the channel of the river, ought, in all eaes, to be held responsible for the lives of their passengers. THE COURT IIDUSE. Some of the good people of Lawrencebursh hnvc got to be quite spunky of late ilays. We have been told that, in relation to the removal of the Court House, they not only et the trhole count; of Dearborn at defiance, but aho the Legislature of Indiana, and the whole United States'. They arue that it is contrary to the Constitution of the United Slates, and of the State of Indiana to remove the Court House from l.awrrncebur-h; and say that if it is attempted they will commence suit, and carry it tip to the Supreme court of the United States! They have a wonderful jmnrt set of peopleabont Lawrsnceburh, ve djn't think. We advise them, however, to keep their temper still, for they have not been half used up vet; the late election was only a commencement : it merely icrved to show the people of I)rloru that tins porcr tc covcrn is in their own hands, and not in the hands of a few managers about Lawrencebuigh. The Lawrenrcbnrghers argue, too, that if the Court House is removed, the old one must be paid for. This was made use of before the election, but it wnsso foolish wa paid no atten tion to it ; for any man of common sene know s that the Legislature has power to appoint Commissioners to re-locate County Seats, when and where they please. We would like these tages these wise men who are so learned in the Jaw to tell us who the Court House belongs to! We have always been under the impres ion that the Lawrenceburghers agreed to build it, provided the Commissioners would re-locate it there. Are they yet in debt for it! and do they want the people to pay them for it! This remind! us very forcibly or the little boy who boueht a cent' worth of candy, and after eat ing it, went back to the confectioner, and cried for his cent'. But we don't want the present Court House The neop'.e will build a decent one on high round, in the center, or as near it as practica I I., -a.;..k m11 h nrressihle at all times, with out the aid of rry boats. The Lawrencebureh en may have the old Court House, as the stee pie answers a very good purpose for making boati fast in high water. Emigration. Among the many who daily pass through this place, with their faces to the setting sun, we noticed a few days ago, a poor fellow, who per liaDS out of a considerate regard for the hrute creation, or a wish to enlist the vmnathie of his fellow bipeds, betook himself to the ehaft, and drew after him a four wheeled wagon ot consider ..ui-: i..it nf licht construction, hav
cwm r 1 .t v. - - t inp apparently no iron about it.
Hit
help-meet and two or three "small fry" f oed it by his sid -, rtad oreaMouaMv lent a helping hand. One of Ms notions recommended itself particular! to our notice, and may perhaps, afford some clue to (lie cause of his apparent destitution. After paintr neailv through the town, he took from his waCon an empty hottle and after an absence of a frw minutes returned with it replenished with the "blur ruin." Richmond Palladium. Rivn!t. It is reported that the office of Post master General of the U. States has been olK-red to Col. Arram P.i.axding, of Columbia, S. C. Col. Rlanding vve know, would make a second M'Lean in that department. Ot rgia Coui(r, July 28. In connection with the above tumor, whieh, for aught we know, is very well blinded, may he mentioned another, Iich is in circulation in this city, viz: that Mr. Barry is to it'.-ign the oiiiceof Postmaster General, and to be succeeded in it hy Co!. R. M. Johnson, of Kentucky. These, however, are rumors merely. Whoeter succeeds to the of tiee, should it heroine vat ant will find it, under its present multiplied embarrassments, any thine hut a sinecure. .Vati'inal IntiUifrnccr.
B vltimore, July 1 2. The first four d i s of last week were extraordinarily hot. A good many persons were found dead oa the road or in the fields and others died suddenly in the streets of the cities from drinking cold water. The latter was particularly fatal to newly arrived foreigners. A New Voik paper published an account of thirty persons and eight holies who suddenly died in that ci v, on the 9th inst. winch was prohablv short of the real number, in a considerable amount. In some places, the thermometer stood at neailv 100 degrees of Fahrenheit, on the 8ih. This was the hottest day at Baltimore, hut the ex cessive heat ofthee four days was almost equally felt from Boston to Richmond. Unless on account of these sudden deaths, the cities on the Atlantic. coat are unusually healthy.- .Ytlcs Register. Riot at New ark, N. J. It eom that the Rev. Mr. Weeks, who has been recently inoculated with the amalgama tion infection, introduced a colored man into his pulpit against the previous as certained will of the people. When thepopulace found this out, they entered the Church in great numbers, took the latter forcibly from the pulpit, convex - ed him to the jail, threatened to tear it down if the jailor did not receive him, locked him up and then returned to the Church, broke the windows, tore down the pulpit and pews, and reduced the edifice to a shell. Mr. Madison. A correspondent of the Baltimore l atriot thus writes in reltien to the venerable Patriot, in des cribing a late visit to him. The venerable and venerated Madi son slowly recovers from a painful and protracted indisposition, and all apprelensiot.s of his immediate dissolution ire dissipated. He has sufficiently re ived to afford me the high gratifica ion of several hours conversation, occa sionally sitting up but generally reclin ing, his calm and philosophic tempera ment enables him to resist the ravages of disease; with fortitude and resigna tion he endures the afilictions of an all wise Providence although the decay of his physical powers are but too evi lent: the wreck of mind has not even ommenced 011 every subject he is hi minous, instructive, argumentative and convincing. Although the lamp of lite just now seems to flicker feebly yet the reviving freshness of his native mountains, his calm endurance of suffering, his tempe rate habits of self denial, the longevity of his ancestry and above all, the un ceasing care and devotion of his exem plary wife, (who watching over Ins sick couch, is as when gracing the drawing room, equally unparalleled) may yet 1 fondly hope prolong his invaluable life. md afford me the high gratification ot an annual pilgrimage, to a i-atriarch's shrine, where hospitality, intelligence, patriotism, virtue and wisdom, all com bine to attract, instruct and delight. Tennessee. A law h iving been pass ed in Tennessee against gambling, m i king the exhibition of the game of faro punishable by fine and imprisonment in the penitentiary, it was anempiea to a void the law oy making some cnang.- . . . 1 . -t in the eame.and calling it "forty-eight ti, r.mru have ruled that it is the ;ime paine. in the meaning of tne stat ute, and sentenced a person according ' . 1 ly to two years connaemem. J Baltimore lmerican. ti .w.i.to f tin mnmif.iH lire nflmn in thp State of New Yoik, ol lion, in tne oiaie i i"t mtVrf .1 about 4,000,000 per an u,T
Free People of Color. The free colored emigr nits from the U. State-, !io hav est lidished a cok.ny at . berterec, Upoer Canada, have published an invitation fir other similar pers.n:s to join them. They represent tha: 'h ir location is healthy and pleasant; that the land is cheap and good; that manufactures are advancing; ard that the means of obt air inga living a re great. They ask parents to send their children there for tuition, suggesting that board, washing, mondit g and schooling can be had for ,1 50 per week. TEXAS. Not long; since, we extracted from a western Journal, a statement that Gen eral Santa Anna had said, that "so soon as matters were tranquilized in Mexico, he would send five cr six thousand men to Texas, to chastise those turbulent North Americans; and if they proved refractory, he would confiscate their property, and convert Texas into a desert." Since the above extract was publish
ed, we have seen and conversed with gentlemen from Texas, who left there as late as the 1st of June, and they have assured us, that the statement is utterly destitute of truth; and that the most favorable indications have been made of late, by the Slate and General Congress, towards the citizens of Texas. Kind feelings have been intnifested by a repeal of all measuies by the Congress, that were of a character unpleasant or unfavorable towards the prosperity of the North American settlets. We have no doubt that Texas is in a more prosperous condition at this time than it has been at any firmer period; and of course persons wishing to settle there wili find stronger inducements to emigration than ihose which have heretofore existed. it- i i . i i e do none tnu persons who are capable of presenting things as they really do exist, will io so. The citiZ"iis of the United Stales must feci a lively interest in the prosperity of our ister lepublicof Mexico; and particu larly so, since many of their relations hhI friends have hecome citizens of that country. Jishviltc Banner. The King of Greece has just return ed Irom a visit to Athens, which has been at length officially declared to be the future capital of the kingdom of Uroece. A plan lor rebuilding the citv has been made and accepted, and will w - 1 be strictly adhered to. 1 he oh u ct ot the King's visit was to lay the first stone of his new p dace, lie travelled ince nito, but was every where recognized and treated in the most enthusiastic manner by all classes of his subjects He made an excursion to Cape Colonna (Sunium) and some other places in the neighborhood, and on the 22d March laid the first stone of his palace in pre sence of an immense concourse of Athe nians. The Greek navT is to be originated immediately. I he chief seat of its for mation is Poros, where the dock yards are already presenting a busy scene. Contracts have been taken for the deliv ery ot the dilterent material, among which is one contract for 3000 tons 01 English coal, which is already at Petras waiting till steamboats are built. Co mm itnica led. Messrs. Editors Please ruhlish tlie fol lowing ticket for corporation Trustees, to be supported at the election on the 2d Monday in . - cepienioer next Jlltrcus D. Lykcns, Joel Deconrscy, Jatncs Joyics, Juhn IV. Hall. Daniel Taplry. For .Sale or Unit. ,THE subscriber offers for sale ,or rent, his HOUSE and LOT situated on Poplar street, in the village of Rising Sun. I he House is a good frame building, suitable for a family to reside in. 1 or further particulars, ap ply to EZRA SLAWSON. Rising Sun, Aug. 2 J, 1 834. 314 1 PUBLIC VEI)II3, N Suurdiv, the Glh day of Sep tember next, the subscriber will n.:r lor sale at puduc venoue, at nis residence, two and a half miles north west of Rising Sun, and half a mile south of Win. Rickets's, the lolloping property, to wit: h :s lieatl ot Horses, frys Four acres of CORN in thelI field, half an acre of POTATOES in the ground, one Cupboard, 3 Ploughs, one pair of Gears, and sundry other ar ticles. 1 he terms will be made known on the day of sale. GEORGE TAUUE. Angus! 23, 1834. 4 lis J O riCE. The individual who borrowed the Reviis sed Code of Indiana, is requested to re ... -r ii. - turn it immediately to the Town Clerk. ! Rising Sun, Aug. 23. fgfn
TAtLOZHXG A Tr A I ? I D. FISHER, TAILOR, GRATEFUL for past favors, takes this m thod of returning his sin-
cere thanks to his friends and the pubtie generally, and reminds them that he is stiil prepared to execute work in the above business, in all its various in .'inches, according to the latest fash-1 ions, with punctuality and despatch. l). I . generally has on hand for sale a few articles of wearing nnnarel. which 111 vIl i he will dispose of on reasonable terms. C-AII persons who know themselves indebted to the subscriber, either by note, book account, or otherwise, are I respectfully requested to call and settle the same immediately, or they will havo themselves to blame for the lawful roftsequences which mut follow. Rising Sun, Aug. 23, 1 83 1. 3141 Fay hj asiil save (fusts! ! LL persons indebted to tho r.hJrJL scriber, either by note, hook aci - - count, or otherwise, arc hereby notified to come torward and discharge the same immediately, or their accounts will be placed in the hands of proper officers for collection, without respect topersons. I he subscriber will be compel led to take this course, because he is in need of money, and tnjisl have it. lie has a great number of outstanding debts which have been unpaid about long ennug;h; and he hopes thev will now be settleil pcacrnbh. STmiEN S. WALKER. Rising Sun, Aug. 23, 1334. 3141 Cation Yarns. IHriE Rising Sun Cotton Factory has been in operation for four months, and is now making a large quantity of Per sons desirous of making purchases of it, either wholesale or retail, will do well to call and examine the article. P. JAMES. Rising Sun, Aug. 23, 1834. 41 03-A few Spinners will find steady employment and liberal wages. P. J. HEREBY forewarn any person or persons from purchasing or trading for a Note, given by me to John Neal. for eight hu.idred and eighty dollars, dated about the 16th of August, 1834, as said JNote was obtained fraudulently J and without consideration: and as 1 have received no value for said note, 1 am determined not to pay it, unless compelled by law. . . . v SAMUEL McCOY. Rising Sun, Aug. 23, 1 834. 4 1 :3tp JrA 4i ; b) &k v4 b 7r55ts Those of our subscribers who tjSsy wish to pay their subscription to the Timrs in Oats, are informed that tfi& wisi we will allow Twenty Cents per bushel for all that may be delivered at our office previous to the first of next month. I EN bushels will be taken as advance payment for one year from those who may wish to subscribe. STEVENS & GLEJNN. Rising Sun, Aug. 16. 3t IJ ES PEC T V U LL Y inform their cus- " tomers, and all those indebted to them, that they will receive all kinds of Merchantable Produce in payment, from this time until the first of Septem ber, if delivered to them in Rising Sun. BEXXETTb MORGAjX Continue to carry on the Halting busi ness, at their old stand, next door above Haines & Lanius s store, Main street. ('ash and produce will at all times be received in exchange for liats. Rising Sun, Aug. 1 6, 1 834. 3t40 Administrator's Sale. "ff7ir7'lLL be sold at public auction, Y J at the late residence of George Parker, dee'd. in Rising Sun, on Satur day, the 6th day of September next, the personal goods ot his estate, con sWting of HOUSEHOLD b KITCH EN FURMTURE; a variety of Carneuter's and other TOOLS; several HIVES Oy UKUS, and many other articles too tedious to mention. Sale to commence at 10 o'clock, a. m. Nine months credit will be given by giving - note with approved security, Tt nviis nAntt THOMAS BRADLEY, .admr. ! August 16, 1834.-40ts
. 'n fTiilil' liMTiI 11 fill 1. 1 II. i.JU
Administrator's IVotice.
jpHE undersigned having taken out ACtate of Jane Blackedrn, late of Dearborn county, dee'd. hereby requests all persons indebted to said estate to make immediate payment; and all those havM"JI claims against the same, arc here by notified to present them properly an tnenticated tor settlement. The estate is considered solvent. THOS. NELSON, Adm'r. August 16, 1834. 40:3t THE subscribers respectfully inform t,10,r '"ends and the public in general, that they have entered into co-parlner-,'l': r . e PurP0Se of carrying on the jiiionig r;imiecs in this place. lne)' wl" execute all orders in their line, in the neatest, best, and most du rable manner, and according to the la test fashions. Their experience in the various branches of Tailoring, iustifies them in saving (hat they will be able to please all who may favor them with their custom. Their shoo is at C. Campbell's old stand, on Main street, opposite the Printing office. Most kinds of country produce will be received in payment at the market prices. CAMPBELL & QUIRK. Rising Sun, Aug. 9, 1834. 39tf PUBLIC SALS. r IIE subscriber will offer for sale at public auction, at Ins residence, 1 miles from Rising Sun, and 1 mile from John Barricklow's, on Saturday, the 30th of August, inst. the following pro perty, to wit: HORSES, Cattle Hogs, Sheep, and Far ming Utensils; also, 1 two horse Wagon and Harness. Terms made known on the day of sale. JOHN ELLIOTT. August 9, 1834. 3w STEAM SAW MILL FOR SALE. F' OR SALE, one-half or the whole of the Steam Sato Mill, in Rising Sun, Indiana. This mill is 80 feet in length, and 2G feet wide, carries TWO SAWS, and saws 40 feet in length. The substantial manner in which the building is put up, the simplicity of the machinery, and the strength of the engine, has been acknowledged by all who have seen it. The boilers are 22 feet long, and 32 inches diameter. There is also a pair of Mill Stones 3 feet 7 inches in diameter, attached to the saw mill, that will grind above 200 ted on three lots, andN has a first rate stone wall Well, 53 feet-vlecp, which supplies the boilers. Any person owning land above this place, who could furnish the mill with logs and firewood, will find this estab lishment worthy his attention, lermt will be easv. For further particulars apply to JOHN ROSE, or E. S. BUSH, Jlgcnt, Lawrenccburgh, Rising Sun, Aug. 9, 1334. 39tf Administrator's ftotiee. rrHE undersigned having taken out - letters of administration on the es tate of George Pakrer, late of Rising Sun, dee'd., hereby requests all persons indebted to said estate, to make immediate settlement; and those having claims against the same, are requested to present them properly authenticated for settlement. The estate is consider ed fully solvent. THOMAS BRADLEY, Admr. Rising Sun, Aug. 9, 1034. 3t3'J i:isia; sun MILL. CASH will be paid for Wheat at said mill. Superfine Flour will at all times during the season, be exchanged at the rate of 30 pounds for a bushel of Wheat. STONE COAL. STONE COAL for Blacksmiths, of the very best quality,nnd at moderate prices. DANIEL. 11 1 JN SDA LE, JigenU August 1. 3w33 LOOK HERE! rr HE undersigned having closed their business until they can procure a shop, are desirous of settling up their accounts. All those who know them selves indebted to the firm, either by note or book, are requested to come forward and make payment immedi ately. Those who neglect this call, will find their accounts placed in the hands of an officer for collection. II. & G. GREENE. Rising Sun, July 12, 1834. FLAX SEED. CENTS Cash per bushel will be given for clean Flax btEDaltne Rising Sun Mill until December next. April Sth, 1834.
