Connersville Watchman (Newspaper) - October 3, 1834, Connersville, Indiana ox Madison I Mill I W. VAN IN ADVANCEr AFTER YEAI can only dwell with a People who know their and dare OCTOBER 3, 1834-. 10. October 3. 1834. CANDIDATE For We received the following communication on publication hence we have held it in abeyance until It comes to ua through the Post Office from dated on the 22d day of the meeting of Bank in that We duly paid the as the stick of timber presented us to make a Congressman out is pretty we shall not grumble at the Wo are glad to that the invitation which we gave to our to draw their lights out from trader the is being acted So many lights have been and are popping up in our little that wo had become almost bewildered and intoxicated with the glaring of that arc flashing around We had begun to regard when contrasted with her like unto the galaxy or that lights up the past wo heard spoken a proper person to be regarded in making a selection for From some personal knowledge and from we feci authorised to speak of Finley as a gentleman in deportment and as a man of very respectable intellectual attainments and considerable experience as a politician and a These together with the other fact of his residence being in the largest town and largest county in the Finley's pretensions to a scat in every way to say the least of the As little as we folks of Fayette are addicted to political fancied that we could feel a little heat and suffusion about the at the idea that we have all the of brass in the Of course wc arc partial to our own and would prefer always having from amongst men being wo always want the dignitary without We had much rather the neighboring counties would contend with us for the and then if wc get wu will know how to prize it. So we say again to our show your Dont be Tho that you have suggested the names of several gentlemen as probable candidates for the next Congress and it being a service in every however is I hope you will not consider it an intrusion to recommend an additional name to your Not that 1 feel any personal hostility to the gentlemen named by but because I think where a number of counties are associated as is the case in this with a common interest and common danger to be provided for and a spirit of comity and mutual concession ought to be observed and a union of interest encouraged so as to secure the greatest possible good to the greatest and if possible have the wishes of a majority of the district fairly represented No one County ought to assume the absence of all evidence to sustain such a to possess all the and qualification of the district for that high Eighteen years have elapsed since the organization of our State and the most populous county in the has not yet put forth one aspirant for that has in the mean manfully for and contributed much to their and she must not be supposed capable of being ungrateful to lier will not sacrifice upon foreign altars whilst her own hearths present patriots as and more uniform and consistent in their and whose hearts beat a higher pulse to the nor can she be expected to give further countenance to the reproach that her population is but to be manufactured by the political artisans of other she has many a gem of purest ray serene in the dark unfathomed of is true you have named James Rariden of as among those who will probably become at present i mean to say Villi not countenance the idea that our population can be made to waste their strength in domestic I am only anxious to select the man who among us can unite the most And although quite indisposed to question cither the capacity or of yet he and his because the constitution embodies friends must know that from pie provisions for its own partly and partly he the necessity of restoring to las in his own county many enemies jof great power and who oppose him with an eye that never and a wing that never which his well known uncompromising spirit and high temperament is calculated to rather than He is I not in my the Son upon Wayne can most harmoniously to O. H. and J. both of their friends have a | right to speculate upon past events which each of them are and i to act upon the suggestions Those appear to consider themselves a8 the patentees of the seat in Congress from this and the single question which of them shall occupy the only of discussion connected with thei present Congressional For the six years last past they have managed this district and as the love of life with them appears to increase with length of they may be expected to continue to play the same game as long as they would it not be well to stop by reminding them of 1 they used to preach to in i to suggest that you add to probable candidates for the next one of the Editors ol the Richmond a man of a high order oi yet modest and retiring in his He will not protrude himself upon public consideration although he has enjoyed as many evidences of public as any of those before spoken of. If upright moral deportment and unbending and unflinching pertinacity in his political opinions be any to a neat in the public life oi Finley speaks for and seems to me to point him out as the man whom this district would delight to send this to Mr. j ley being one of the Editors of the only paper now printed in this I if sent to from delicacy suppress its Voice Waym Sept. 22nd,ISdi. hazardous If our I politicians would talk less and act more any important amendment might be carried through gross and the State Legislatures in itwo or three without and without Green thus his third letter to the public in which he has to show who Amos Kendall is. This witness on which Green relied to prove the between Adams and Clay is here shown never to have been worthy of Telegraph was established in the | winter of 182626. I purchased out the | original proprietor in June 182G. la a i conversation of in September of that he told rne that the part which Mr. Clay had taken in the local politics of the State hnd given great to many of the leading new court that ho had a conversation with Mr. and believed that he was much with Mr. Clay's could be induced to lake a decided stand against the The result of conversation instead of tbe tho Lynchburg The famous Dr. Cooper of South in a late the call of a Federal give authority where it is and to decrease authority where it has been He suggests likewise a permanent provision for the periodical meeting of a Convention every twenty-five to revise the were once inclined to favor the call of a General but subsequent events and additional if they have not rendered us hostile to the have at least induced us to doubt its If the framers of the with whom love of country was an absorbing and concentrated found so much iu reconciling conflicting and conciliating adverse and jarring how much more difficult would that task now with so many of our leading patriotism is merged and swallowed up in selfish Within the last few in the State Conventions which have been in Georgia and we have witnessed what great excitement has been produced in the adjustment of the basis of rendered so by tbe existence among us of a class of partaking of the mixed character of persons and If in small of comparatively homogeneous feelings and this be of such how much more so would it be in a Convention of the a certain principle was fixed by the Federal of in relation to this but would that principle be again agreed to at this We may at least doubt when wo recollect the emphatic mere than once made by distinguished Northern that were the bargain to be made over they would object to the slave representation of fifths in the National and it requires no prophet to if this were now the Union would be instantly tHc less necessity for 1 a General of the for I took stage When I reached that Kendall was so sick that I could not see 1 however consulted with Judge now of the who told me that Kendall was much dissatisfied with Mr charged bina with and he believed that but circumstances that he was indebted and so poor that he could not pay the he would not hesitate to an- As I could not see he advised I should go to and endeavor to bring about a reconciliation between Mr. Barry and my Mr. John and thus pave the way for a concert between the Jackson old court men and the relief assuring tnc that if Barry Pope would act and the sum necessary to pay debt to Mr. bo such the of feelings towards Mr. that the Argus would take open ground the did go io I Mr. Barry and Mr. 1 brought them agreed upon the plan of and Mr. Barry went with me to SCO Col. R. M. whose influence over the Argus it ivas would be Col. Johnson entered into our but his opinion was that Kendall would require at least twelve hundred and I authorised him to say to Kendall that I would advance that sum in a short time after j 1 reached gave that j assurance to Kendall did take ground against the He came on to I advanced the and was the means of obtaining eighteen hundred more for have used the names of Wordon John Judge Mr. Barry Col. without know that all these except Judge are decided partisans of the and 1 have seen so much equivocation and falsehood in men who once had my that although I cannot believe that either of them could be induced to deny a word that 1 have would I hesitate to place myself in a situation to risk the consequences of such a were it not that I am guarded by some corroborating facts depending on other and that enough is in the knowledge of Judge to me against the denial of all other parties if it were possible for them to Under the circumstances their wdl be equivalent to an affirmation of the truth of my I am not without other my be especially by Mr. I have the means some things to his which will show the estimate which he and Kendall put upon my services in that us pause for a moment and look upon those While Kendall was Mr. for a situation at per i and pledging himself to defend Mr. Clay against Gen. Jackson's charge of and he was pretending to that he was only restrained from assailing Mr. Clay by the pecuniary obligation that he was under to Little did I when I pledged myself to advance him a the sum to discharge his debt to Mr. that he might be enabled to have paid you what 1 owed and my press is free to assail say little did 1 think that he was at that same moment begging Mr. Clay for an and pledging himself that he would not be the the occasion of casting any imputation on his honor or as Kendall he had been restrained from assailing the by an unwillingness to use a press against bis so long as he was under pecuniary obligation to he was in seeking to obtain the means of discharging that When I agreed to advance the supposed that his opposition to Mr. originated in hia disapproval of Mr. Clay's little did I suppose that he was soured by and that his purpose was to avenge himself on Mr. Clay for refusing to accept his service at his own But history is full of such I have much more to say of I have said enough for the to that he has and corrupt he was the principal witness to prove the intrigue and against Mr. and that on his examination before the Senate he admitted that he had tendered his services to go to to defend Mr. against this on oath that he then believed it to be a although in his letter of the 8th of March 1828, he says that he that Mr. Clay to he Secretary of for that reason he promoted I. have done I have proved that he continued to persecute Mr. for an under the pledge to defend Mr. Clay's vote for Mr. and at the same was persuading those who were opposed to Mr. Clay's vote that the only reason why he did not assail the administration and especially Mr. was the consideration that he was indebted to Mr. and unwilling to bring upon himself the imputation of was then poor and comparatively lie is now the power behind the stronger than the throne Look upon and Already does he tell hia parasites hia dust will be equal to that of is no limit to his If Gen. Jackson is he is and for his benefit has the hero of New been made to disregard fill and public TO What money have I in my groats and two 1 can get no remedy against this consumption of the Borrowing only lingers and lingers it but the disease is is oven 80: Unfortunate Sir so fond of good living with means so But there are enough to condole and sympathize with merry being in the same predicament that we have any special confessions to make upon this since wc are merely recording the fact that money will no more last forever at at any other although the hotels may be crowded to a plethora for yet every day produces numerous and a whole week almost an entire It is often amusing to hear the excuses for short stays and when i the case is so transparent as not to be arc going to leave ua this them a For this purpose the baronet was carried by them through the wilderness from Johnstown to the High Rock only one then The effect of the waters waa and their fame became slowly noticed The ten springs of various situated about a mile to north-east of the high where the next were discovered and sequently to the revolutionary the ' Springs began to attract the attention of and so beneficial were they to Gen. or so fond did he become of that he built a small near the High Rock in which it was his practice to reside for soveral weeka in the The flat rock was next and afterwards the Congress and then the The original was built near the high but the greater popularity of tbe ' springs subsequently I the fashionable location to the intermediate space between the Congress and Rock The Union Hall was built in 1802; Congress Hall in 1812; The Pavillion in 1819; and the United I States in 1822-3. Other public i and have been since j until the town by attained its present respectable size and I Every year adds to its and its and if tho and the would i expend a little more time and ia planting and erecting suitable temples over the principal and mending the condition of their they would not be the losers by the The principal hotels are noble for summer and their broad and shaded piazzas are the ultra of during such heats as we have recently But sands in some be and solid beneath the owing elms and should be for the accommodation of and the crowd that follows in her waters are beneficial in r great variety among which are billious viscera sir The waters don't agree with at home requires immediate But enough we will not be too After despatching the present shall be but we shall not continue to pour in its numbers until and the village will be full while the Cholera or until one of the chilly Autumnal when the strangers will scamper away like pigeons to the notwithstanding these continual each day will be put a counterpart of its and and and will be mixed in New will be some to endure for a and others for a longer Now and then a brisk or a beautiful girl stag eyes and cyprus as would be said of a Persian will and be proclaimed the reigning belle for a to be when some other popular figurante appears to take Much will for the moment be said of the beauty and brisk will bask in their they disappear be no more Such is the way with the gay such will it ever as they were called by the Indians were slightly known to the population some years before the war of the The first white man who was known to have visited was Sir William Having been severely indisposed for a considerable with whom he very and were 4-c. Salts of various are so that health can be packed up in papers and sent to a or bottled up and sent off with the same properties which bubble up in the The villagers make great use of at all seasons of the and with as with great numbers of annual waters are believed to be almost an infallible remedy for most of the ills that flesh is heir always poverty and fractured er amputated Thus you may hear the is the best spring of the to be got the dyspepsia like Congress wife is bilious and her take Congress I you think Congress water will every if one another son Bob has lost his Spring at II aunt Deborah is suffering under a great of iron to strengthen the Nothing like chalybeate you caught the Scotch fiddle at him the like you as Doctor Stell would say i the widow Cheerly has come up in search of a said Mrs. widows would keep their husbands i till my daughters are well off my i her drink of them clear her and make her ' look young and fresh Mrs. Dumpy and her six daughters are here on the same I them plenty of Congress i I have a worse complaint still These Saratoga charges have emptied my I am afflicted my good there is no remedy for this consumption of the A of Indians near Pea I Dale murdered a boy bout 18 vears of had ed them in the act of for the of hiding their horrible accident occured on board the steamboat Orleans to son oi cabin in passing through the engine was caught by the ily I and instantaneously severed m i arms and breast in the while the half of body hung to the His were interred at Grand Rail Road is informed of and recommended him