Vincennes Gazette, Volume 13, Number 40, Vincennes, Knox County, 9 March 1844 — Page 4
Front the Christian Advocate and Jouru,! Thy Urothcr shall Rise Agraia. Air ThkLa of Rich mono Him..' I dread thee not, thou darksome grave, Though thou dost yawn lor nit; Per Jesus Straus, his own t save, tShall my Deliverer he. The turf may rest Upon my breast. Yet broken is death's chain And I icjoice To hear a voire, laying, 'I shall rise again.' Since Jesus makes my heart his home, My soul can fear no harm The deep, damp vault in vain ciies, -Come To darkness mid the w i"- ' T- : k-.-.g ;'"! -t i . - j. 1 1 , j ..... . i. i' t . ; .' . i : . s : 1 i r S i -.. . ,.: ro ' ,,.uers roar Beyond the floods I gee those laiulWhere sorrow is no more. Phut dazzling- light That shone so bright, That loud seraphic strain (). ecstasy! Tis Ucl"'tis He! Who died and rose ag;ii:i. I mount 1 fly I near the throne. And loader peals the song Mv eves c;e fixed on One alone, Hizli o'er tho sjl;Urrin W bile sc H'hs sins. throin. W nue arches m:g, The I.3;ii' that once wash!ii;i, With ra-otc.e Lold I cry , Behold! lit lives for me again! 3einr under tho Tig- Tree. Air Lovk's Vor Mi Dnt.vM.' W'hrn in tho silent sha.ie I kneel In fcecret praver, O give mv inmost sou! to fee!, That th.iu art there. W hrne'er I raii9 the note of praie, With thankful heart, to thee. I'xism thou to Le tr my humble Ucr. "a ili :ht- tree. 1VS 'itve me to tVi i the c.ihi Of sacred sonn. oelig! When lova is ivi.ai, and hope is bright, And faith is strong -O, :!-.?se hour when heaveiilv poweis Come iiy i i : li all abroad Again man walks in Eden'?" bowers, And talks with God. SCENERY OP KENTUCKY. i;V JAMES. HALL. B it when we ctoss tiie D uo, an 1 pas Through Kentucky, we find a il'i lie rent etate of society, and a widely dilll-rent aspect in the appearance uf the country. In passing from Maysvide to Lexington, the s'.cge roils over one of -he finest Macadamised roads in the (nitod Elates. The country is hiily, but mod-Tately fertile, and well improved, until we reach the vicinity of Licking river. Tne agriculture i? good, the houses wd! constructed, and comfortable. The farming statie of socety is passed, and much attention s pai l to in'' refinements and courtesies f( domestic life. On approaching Licking river a wild and stcriie waste presents itself, extending for a few miles on either ide of that stream. The hills ere abrupt, broken, and rocky , the sod thin, and the vegetation stinted. The rocks an overgrown with moss ;n I lichens, and instead of the tad timber if other localities, we find a strangling and dwarfish growth of low bushes. Nothing can be m re dreary tit m this sombre landscape, or more strongly contrasted with the rich f.nd cheerful dis'ri :ts that lie around in evt-ry direction. It is a mineral regi ui. abounding in saline impren iti ms, and to this cause 'ati neuie writer attributes the app"ara::c ; which wo have nou.-cd. Dr. Yandell.i f the Lxingloti Medicni Scrio-d, remarks: At one time the hi!', which, now bare, show as waited skeletons, must t.p.ve iiad n covering of ciay and vegetab,.i r. julv, 5 r the country in "tv uirecm)i, at ths distance of a few miles, is rich, and clothed in luxuriant vegetation. It is well known that the first adventurers to the wet, found it abounding in every ppecies of wild game. Der, elki, and buli'abes, were met with in numbers altogether incalculable. These animals resorted in vast numbers to the spring?, and the la 'tr came from a distance, and lingered for weeks in the neighborhood. It is said that the roads which they ma :e in innrnoi'intT itiitKr arA Bfi!l r:ihl -it J-..a distant day. And finally, the mastMon, and arctic elephant, we may infer from the osseous remains that have been exhumed, were among the ancient visiter at these watering places. Tho effect of such a concourse of animals sojourning for weeks together in. the neighborhood, and feeding upon the shrubs, herbaceous plants, and sujIi limbs .f trees as were in their reach, bruising ana lacerating their roots m passing to and fro, must have been in lime, the destruction not only of the prass and more tender herbs, but of the forests themselves; and the soil thus deprived of its necessary support, would be ultimately washed by the rains into the stream and valleys. This caus, of course- has long ceased to operate, and with its cessation, a new change has com menced. The soil is again in the process cf renewal; and the sides and summit of
the hills begin to assume an appearance of verdure and life." Having passed through this region of sterility, the road to Lexington winds thro' an open champaign country of the most delightful appearance. The heavy forest, which once threw its deep shade over the lurking In lian, has been cleared away, and highly cultivated fields adorn the whole of the wide landscape. The surface is not broken by hills, nor is it level btit of that beautifu!lv rolling or undu
latinji character, which is, above ah oth ers, the most pleasing to the eye, and the best adapted to the purposes of husbandry. Its similarity, in this respect, to thtrraeel'ullv waving prairies in the central and northern parts of Illinois is very striking. The soil is of the richest kind, and the improvements not only substantial, but elegant. It is seldom the eye of the traveller is delighted with so pleasing a combination of rural beauty Ac tasteful em1 eliisnment. i tie uw . " .--.! j MllP'Ts MiO -t 3 iMmr.ioK,em are . . : .. 'cabited i 1 .- ' levant ... . . ed. d by em and it,,: I I i. rill' i ' ( i i; T).,. e is a - wen as oieijaui. Wi . i i . .ii me residence of a farmer of this part of Kentucky ; a combination of taste, neatness, comfort, atid abundance, which is singularly interesting, and which evinces a iiih degree of liberality in the u-e of wealth, as well as g-ejit industry in its production. The fields are extensive and well cultivated. Not a spot remains in its pristine state of wilderness ; but everywhere the hand of art is seen to have exerted its energies with an unusual vigor and felicity of execution. Kvery foot of ground has b"?n adorned, or rendered productive. The woodland pastures which are peculiar to this section of country, are remarkably beautiful, giving to its extcnsive farms an unusual degree of elegance, and the whole character of the scenery an originality, which attracts th attention cf the most casual observer, while it fills a genuine admirer of nature with the mst pleasurable emotions. This agreeable effect is produced by a simple procedure. The woodlands are all inclosed ; the underwood and the useless trees are removed, while the Valuable timber trees are left, standing sufficiently far apart to admit the rays of the sun, and the free circulation of the air between them. The ground is then sown in grass, and extensive tracts, which would otherwise have been mer wilderness, are thus converted into spacious lawns, studded with noble trees. These are so numerous, and of such extent, as to form n prominent feature in the scenery, and it is hardly possible to imagine ;.uy tiling m ere beautiful, than th alternations of woodland and Mi-tI'W, with h-itlip and roruiitiids, and orchards, which the eye here meets in every direction. The dwelling houses aro usually large edifices of brick or frame, surrounded by numerous offi-es, and embowered in shade trees, among which the locust and the lombardy poplar are most frequently seen. The fences and other improvements are excellent, and the grounds neatly kept. The whole appearance is that of a country possessing wealth, ;ndutrv, and refinement the retudence of a hospitable people, who cherl - I I ... - I ... 1. - L . ;,:e social virtues, ana wnu oesiow much care in surrounding themselves with i he comforts an 1 luxuries of domestic life. This beautiful region comprises several counties, and includes a circuit of more than forty miles in diameter, of which Lexington is the centre; but there are s-'veral other counties lying round it, but linle inferior m pomt of fertility, and uvuked by similar ftatures of industry, improvement and manners. The traveller cannot but pause to con, L r a t the appearance of this country, with that of the wilderness which existed here forty years hgo. Within the memory of living witnesses, the soil whica is now so lineh embellished, and which supports a numerous and highly refined population was covered with luxuriant forests am vabt cane-brakes, w hich alTorded thelter to the roving Indian, and the prowling beast of prey. Here were the lodge of the- Indian and the camp of the solitary hunter. Here the pioneer endured in his rude log cabin, all the precarious toils and sudden vioissiiudes of ihe border life, 13boriousfv opening the rich soil to tho action of the sun. felling one by one the giganiic trees, and resting by night, like ihe weary soldier, with his rifie by his side. And here are still seen the ruins of those primitive fortresses, which protected the emigrants and their families, from tht tomahawk, when the savage warriors came in sufficient force to drive the hunter from his camp, and ths settler from his newly cleared fields. So rapid has been this change, and so complete the transformation, that it seems ns .1 the pioneers who had expelled the Indian, and the beast of prey, had been in their turn supplanted by a more wealthy and refined race, who by tiie magic influence of go! I, and tiie energy of a superior industry, had converted tiie face of the land from a desert to a paradise. Hut such was not the actual procedure. The wealthy farmers who now occupy the soil, the educated and accomplished individuals who compose the population, are, for the most part, the immediate descendants of the hardy men by whose courage thecoun try was subdued, and by whose enterprise its resource were brought into operation. This beautiful region extends to the borders of the Kentucky river, to the south of which we find a hilly region, intersperscd with feiliie valieys, and crossed
bv several rockv, elevated, and precipi-1 tous ritlgp?. Much of the- land in this
district is poor; the population is thinlv scattered, and many of the settlers are
rough and illiterate," though independent days, therefore, is injurious to the manure and hospitable. j heap, placing it so deep that it cannot Thence proceeding to the south-west,' soon become active, must prove prejudiwe meet with tho Tlarrens, an extensive, cial lo those who practice it. tract oi rolling land, some of which is said! Manuring in the hill. l is understood lobe rich, though a larje portion of it is that many of our farmers ara at the troucertainly not of that description. It te-.ble of manuring in each hill. Somouseup ceived its name from having been, when .the whole in this manner, and some spread first visited bv the whites, "wholly desti-a portion over the field tube ploughed or tuteof timber, ami covered with" bushes, i harrowed in, and use the remainuor in the
anil frnm llio Iipllpf nf llmqn ivlin ilipn PV - plored it, that it was not sufficiently fertila
ever, been exploded bv the fact, that since jlheir lands UIl!es il is spread on broadtho settlement of the 'country, timber hasicnst- T!,e.v arge lhat l!l13 moJe 13 at boen ranidlv nmdueed : and manv narts tended with less labor that they gener-
of it are now thickly set with flourishing forests, where not a tree was seen ! you ng forty years ago. In some places, the timber has attained a size w hich renders it useful to the farmer for fuel and fencing, but in general the young trees are not tall enough to shade the road, while they are sufficiently hio-h to prevent the circtutuioii of the air, and in consequence, the traveller who rides through this region in sultrv weather, finds the heat insufferably of passive. This tract is nearly level, and very dry. Hut lew springs or running streams are found upon tho surface; and its genrrnl resemblance to the prairies, of w hich we shall treat hereafter, sufficiently shews an identity of character and origin. Hevond the Harren, and throughout what is termed the Green River country, the lands ore timbered, and in general fertile. Some of the counties are populous and well improved ; but this part of the State having been settled at a comparatively recent period. exhibit. for the most part, the indications peculiar to a newly settled country. As our plan does not admit of great minuteness of detail, we shall not pursue these descriptions through the State of Tennessee. The variety of Furface and scenery is even greater here than in Ken tucky. A large proportion of the territory h occupied by mountains; while another part extending to tho .Mississippi partakes of the aihi' ial character which distinguishes the borders of that river. In attempting to describe the remarkable features of thrt topnrrraphy of the western country, our intention is to dwell chiefly on those which are the most peculiarly characteristic. We have passed hastily over tho-r parts which differ in appearance and quality, from the general surface, so greatly as to form exception, but which vet partakes of some of the attributes of the whole; and shall proceed to spea : ot tint brom! p. am whim comprises the great holy of the lands of the west, and which in the, vastness of its extent, i.i tiiti m ifoi mitv nf lis outnr.o. .i the singn'arity r f its conformation, and in the unbounded fertility of its soil, stands without a rival. Application of Manures. Much discussion has lately taken place, as to the best modes of applying manures in tho field. It has been .customary with seme fanners to let their winter heaps remain piled up by the barn, until one whole season his elapsed, or else to carry them out into ilia field in the fall, spread them on grass lands, or lay them m small heaps for spreading the follow ing spring. In this way much of the goodness departs by excessive heat engendered in the heaps, and bv evaporation through length of time. Manures can not be kept from year to year as salted pork, or as dried hay may be. They must be used in time, if we would have the full benefit of them. ;jg manure. Some farmers contend with great plausibility, that nothing is lost, by burying long or unfermented manure, beneath the so I as soon a3 it can be d -tie. That as the gases from it never descend, but are continually ascending, ihe whole body of the soil becomes impregnated with it, and that we thus derive from the manure all the benefit it is capable of affording, and with much less ,bor than when we aitemrt to convert into compost heaps before we use it, or than when we place il on cr near the surface to be there harrowed and mixed up with i . . . ihe soil, while the drilled crops are. growing. Jiuryinz deep- Some contend w-csy. not burv m mure too deep in the soil that as it 13 admitted it does not descend to any considerable depth below where it is placed, we must eventually have all the benefit of it. While others contend that they obtain far better crops by means of surface manuring than w hen they bury deep. In determining these important questions much allowance must, be mad 3 for! different sods, and for dillerent kinds of ci ops. Clay soils are far more retentive than sandy foils, and therefore in them the manure need not be buried deep. In gravelly and sandy soils, unless the manure is completely covered, wo lose much of it by evaporation. ' Whether we ever eventually lose by burying manures very deep, is an important question. It is said, if we derive no benefit from it this season we must the next. But if the position, that we cannot keep manure long in a heap without loss, be correct, may we not lose if we bury so deep we do not feel the advantage of it the first year? Mixing it with the soil. When long m mure is buried deep, by the plough, it cannot be reached through the summer to be thoroughly mixed with tha soil. It lies in some measure in he?ps, and it musi thus rcmam until we turn over the furrow
again. It must remain in some degree dormant. It does not impart its richness
so readily as when it is stirreu olten anu mingled with the earth. If great lenth of i'l'll Hut a large portion of our farmers nevtcr consent to let any manure be put o.u a!v obtain better crops and especially in a dry summer and that this broad spreadini: is far more beneficial to future crops Host on Cultivator. Tobacco. Lime. Mr. Editor. A difference of opinion exists among planters relative to the great er loss of tobacco in the process of sun and fire curing. To satisfy my own mind upon this subject, 1 determined to make an experiment which would fairly test tiie two modes and as it may be cf service to the public, I communicate the result to you, to be published in the Planter. In the month of September I selected eighteen plants of tobacco, cut t lie same day, of nearly the same size and appearance as possible, divided them into two parcels of nine plants each, and then weighed each parcel separately. Tiie first weighed lG: pounds, and the second KU pounds. The former was put o;i a stick, and marked and put in a secure place in the sun, to cure the lat er was put on a stick, marked, carried to the tobacco-house and plac-d on the ground tier of a house, then ready for curing, and the process commenced immediately. The stick which was in the sun, when cured, was put in tho home; and about a furinight ago, both sticksof tobacco were taken down, in good order, stripped, and tied into bundles and weighed. The fire cured, weighed .'J pounds and 3-1 of an ounce, and the sun cured weight two pounds and eight ounces. From this experiment, it appears that there is a difference of abount 0 per cent, in favor of the fire curing process. In January last I made an experiment with lime, to ascertain if it rvuuld be a preventive lo rust in wheat. 1 had about eight bush ds to the aero spread on a part of a field then in wheat; in another part of the same field about twenty bushels to the acre, and on the residue none. The whole field rusted badly, the limed as well as the unlimed. K. G. Moiiris. Southern Planter. First Principles of Good riousrhinrj. Every farmer and every farmers son feels as though he knew how to hold and drive the plough, belter than the man who writes. Tnis may be true, but he knows that the furrow never should be turned wider than the plow-share cuts clean; and always as much narrower as the stiffness of the soil may render it necessary, in order to lay the furrows smooth and free from clot's. In such casesof narrowfurrowof the extra expense ploughing, is saved in the expense of harrowing,-with this advantage to the crop, that the harrow pulverizes the surface; but the p'ugh when properly directed, renders the earth mellow to the whole depth of the furrow. 1 his again raises the question, how deep is best? To this I now reply, as it has become one of the most important questions of the farmer. That ploughing deep is of the utmost importance to make land productive, no one. who is a good farmer can deny. Vet how deplorable it is to see so many of our fanners instead of ploughing their ground, persist in the ruinous practice of just skimming it. Soils of the best kind, may soon be impoverished by this method: while on the other hand, those much inferior may be much improved by judicious ploughing. Why, it may lt.be asked, are swamps and bogs so inexhuastiblv . fertile after being drained? )ne simple reason is, , "' "re po-se,seo oi a sou oi great uepm 1'hen why not plough deep in order to increase the depth of the soils in uplands. Lands which have been ploughed shallow on leceiving the first ploughing, are apt to fail in some measure in producing a good crop, in consequence of turning up the clav. This has disheartened some who have tried the experiment and they have abandoned it. Piiit the action of the sun and atmosphere on the upturned clay, contributes in a great measure to its fertilization. This being ploughed down, and the former surface turned up again, with the addition of proper manures, gives land a deep soil and renders it fertile and productive. Hut few persons are aware of the depth to which li'orous roots of pirass descend into the ground. It has been discovered with very tew ex- , cepuons, that they reach to the bottom ot soils, However ueep; consequently plants growing in a deep soil are much better protected against the effect of drouth, than those growing in shallowsoil I would suggest, therefore, that land in ordinary cases, be ploughed not less than eight inches deep. Will it not be much better to sutler partially in one crop, and thereby save afterwards a many fold increase; than to be always toiling, with very imperfect returns for our labor. These statements here given, contain the outlines or fi.-tt principles of good ploughing; and the minute attention of each farmer n-v soon discover the mode best adapted to the Uiuerent soils, and different crops, with this general principle,to deepen his soii at every ploughing as far as the nature of the substratum, or under soil, and the sifety cf his crop will admit; and therefore, in this way, he may soon bring his farm into a high state of productiveness. The success of one half of any one of his fields, under a regular deep tillage, compared with the other half under the skimming process, is the best argument in favor of deep ploughing, that can be laid before the practical farmer. Try it and sec.
PETER'S PILLS.
Truth h:u Prevailed. (7t such fun they say to get well iciih them.) LL mankind throughout their wide and &Jm extensive circulation, that ever try them still continue to buy them. Peters' Pills are purely vegetable they work no miracles, nor do they profess to cure all diseases, because they are the scientific compound of a regular physician, who has made his profession the study of his life. Dr, Peters is a graduate of Vale College, also of the Massachusetts Medical College, and has some reputation among the family of the ate CJeo. Bates. Peters' Pills are simple in their preparation' mild in their action, thorough in their operation, and unrivalled in the results. The town and country are alike filled with their praise. The p ilace and poor house alike echo with their virtues in all climates they will retain their wondeiful powers, and exert them unaltered by age or situation, and this the voice of a grateful community proclaims, PeW rs' Pills prevents, keeps off disease when timely used, and have no tival in curing billious fevers, fevers and agim, dyspepsia, liver complaints, srek headaeh, jaun. dice, asthma, dropsey, rheumatism, enlargement of the spleen, piles, colic, female obstructions, heartburn, furred tongue, nausea distention of the stomach tnd bowels, incipient diarrhoea, flatu lence, haoitual costiveness, loss of appetitel bloched or sallow complexion, and in all cases of toipor of the bowels where a cathartic of aperient is indicated, producing neither nauseas griping nor debility, and we repeat all who try them, still continue to buy them. The most triumphant success, has ever attended their use, and enough is now known of this unrivalled pill, to immo talize and hand it down to posterity w ith the improvements of the age. Dr. Peters was bred to the healing art, and in order to supply demands he has originated and called to his aid the only steam driven machinery in the world for pill making; 'tis perfect, and its process imparts to the pill essential virtues, for by being perfectly wrought, all the pills' hidden virtue h revealed when called into action, and here also auain it is Peters PTrpls nl! the world and takes all the premiums, medals, andf iplomas so clear the track for the Engine, Pe ters' Pills are coming, a million of witnesses can now be heard for them do yt hear that no a few can testify they believe they o;e their salvation from disease and death to Peters' Pills, and if calomel and knives aie riot getting into perpetual disuse, we are only mistaken. Certificates, this paper could be filled with thin by tndianians look here! it is now well know n that he people will have Peters' Pills, and t ) hinder would be to stop the rushing wind. Price -o or 50 cents per box. Their happy iniluer.ee on young ladies while suffering under the usual changes of life, as directed by the laws of nature, they impart a buoyancy of heart, feeling and action, an elastic a id vigorous step, velvet cheek, lily and carnation complexion by their action on the chyle, &c., and iaJies in delicate c-ilUaUons a! ways a.bait their power and innocence, and take them 'Z ot Z at a time, and without in the slightest degiee nci-fu ring the hazard of abortion, which facts are oi the utmost importance. 'Tis fun to get well wiih Peters' Pilis, for they cause the blood to couise as limpid and gentle through the veine, as a mountain rivulet, 3 or 4 is ji common dose; hence the patient is not compelled to make a meal of them. For sale a few bushels by Dr. PECK, i v. Dr. SOMES, A meenr-es, Also by some authorized agents in most towns in Indiana and Illinois, and the U. States, and by J. T. KING, general agent, Terre-Haute May 19, 1S43. 50-1 y . it EN MY ALISOX would respectful1 xr inform fhf Pif i7Pria rf Vinrpnna and its vicinity, that he can entirely re move those troublesome and painful pests without the least pain; and will do it at prices to suit the times. .None, there fore, need say hereafter, "I can't get rid of them." 12 if." COPPER, TIN AND SHEET IRON W A 11 K , TXAXUFACTURF.I) at wholesale y g and retail on reasonable terms. Also, a large lot of assorted Castings and Stoves. For sale by N. SMITH. July 21st, 1913. 7'lvi T A I L 1 TrTN Gj CHEAP CHEAPER, CHEAPEST! T MHE undersigned would respectfully H tender his grateful thanks to his friends and the public, for the liberal patronage helias received. He' now occupies as a shop the house adjoining Mr. Morgan Jones', w here he will at all times, and in the neatest manner, attend to any call in his line of business. He also intends cheaper than any other Tailor in Jown. Produce of different kinds will be taken of those living in the county7 in exchange for work. J. II. MASSEY. Feb. 18, 184.1. 37-lf. T H E K . W COPPER, T(N ANDSHEET iRCN Manufactory A 11 E A I) . IS. F. ROBINSON has the pleasure of informing his friends and the public, that he will keep constantly on hand, a large quantity cf Copper, Tin and Sheet Iron WAKE, Always for sale wholesale or retail AT LOU- WATER MARK. lie is also prepared to do any kind of Job Work In that line on the shortest notire and in a BETTER STJjE Than any other shop in tho country. Shop on Market street, one door below W. J. Ileberd's. Vincenttes. April, 'JO, Hl'L 10-tf.
'T'HE subscriber returns his sincere thaftks to the citizens of this and adjoinir g counties for the liberal patronage extended to the firm of Thorn & Tracy, and would respectfully solicit for himself a continuance of the same. A. V. TRACY. March 10, 1S13 40-ly
NOTICE. ILL be received by the eubsenber y lor iteots uue tf.e late arm ot Thorn oc Tracy, if delivered on or before the :20th day uf September, Wheat, Corn, Oats, Corn Meal, Flour, Live Ilegs. weighing 123 pounds and upwards, Beef Cattle, Tow and Flax Linen, Jeans an i Linsey, Beeswax, Flax Seed, Feathers, Tallow, Lard, Bacon, Dried Beef Hides; and Cash will not be refused if offered. Goods will be given in exchange for any quantity of Corn and Oats, delivered to the undersigned in Vir.cennes. A. W. TRACY. August 1, 1S13. 9-t. V n S A Jj ! . T H 1 1 1 E subscriber has on hand a genf'raj assortment of Dry Goods, GitCe ries, Queensware, Glassware, raib, V,n. dow Glass, White Lead, Powder, Soj Lead, Tea, Salt, " '' whic,1, will' U sold as low as any in the market. Persons wishing to purchase would do weU to call and examine the prices before purchasing elsewhere. 2 Tons Sugar Kettles, assorted -sizes. 20 I3bls N . O. Sugar. 40 liags Kio Coffee. -iESOAn extensive assortment of Bridles, Martingale?. Girths, and Surcingles, for snle low for ca.sh or suitable produce, bv A. W. TRACV. March 10, 1813 40-ly ('ill' W r3IIE subscriber having purchased thr stock and trade of the estate of Samuel Thorn, deceased, has on hand a general assoi trnent of DRV GOODS, HARDWARE. QUEE.NSWAIJE, GROCERIES, &c. which he offer for sale at the old stand of Thorn c Tracy on M a'-,'r strcet at Prices to Sllit the limes' fur cash or such produce as miiy suit. A. W. TKAJV. March 10th 1813 40-ly ?To tTc k . S5UEUSONS wishing informal ion in relation to the ir business in tho hands of Abner T. Ellis, will during his absence, call on E. C. Derail, who may be found, after the :20th inst,, at the office opposite the Bank. Vineennes, Jan. 8. 18H. 2ti-tf. Bedford W. Shelmire. John Robertson COMMISSION & FORWARDING rVcw Orleans, 3a. A D W. Tracy, Es; "1 S. Bonn eh, )'inccMies, Li. John Ross, J. S. & W. J. Wisk. J Autrust 1, Vo. 0.ly. REGULAR PACKET. THE Steam Boat OCllAA has been purchased expressly for the Wabash River and is of very light draft of water, which will enable her to run the entire season. Her standing is of the highest character in all the Insurance offices in Louisville. Freight will bo taken for New Orleans, Cincinnati or Pittsburgh. For freight or passage apply on board, or to I. DQRAX, Agent, T7ce?i?e.v, la. Jan. 13 ti2-3mo. Ml. Carmel Register, Terre-Haute Express and Lafayetie Free Press will please copy and preseifl their bills on boar !. Fresh and Cheap (loads for VXSll OR KAKTftSt. TJOIIN CALDWELL, would respcctfully inform the Citizens of Yinconne and its vicinity, that he has just opened his stock of GOODS in the house formerly occupied by Wm. J. Heberd, at the corner of Second and Market streets where all are specially invited, who wis!, to procure excellent goods, at cheap rale.' . His stock comprises a general . variety eT staple and miscellaneous articles, wku-fi were purchased before the rise in ihe eastern market, consequently can be sold unusually low; and he feels confident of hia ability to uit all tastes. This is no puff. December 1st, 1813 2fl-tf WILLIAM W. CARR Attorney and Counsellor at Law. VlNCF.NNF.S, Ix. Office on Second Street, in the Post Office Buildinu;. Oct. 14, 1843. " 18--13 TIIE VIXCENNF.S liAZETTE I-s utltsfceT) rVicrn SatucHap 151 il. . CADDl.GTO. TERMS 2 00, If paid in advance. 50, If paid during the first tix months f 3 00, If not paid during the firs sir months, l 25, For six months. Papers discontinued only at the option of th publisher .vhile arrearages .are due. (j-Adveitisernents making oue square or Jer will be inserted three times for one doll.tr, an : twenty-five cent- for every subsequent irwtior longer advertisements in the same proportion, advertisements sent without orders will, in rj'i cases be inserted until forLid, and charged accor. dingly. Five dollar- will invariably be charijeJ fsr advertising wives.
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