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Other Editions of Connersville Watchman

Connersville Watchman Saturday, May 31, 1834,
Indiana

Connersville Watchman Friday, June 06, 1834,
Indiana

Connersville Watchman Friday, June 13, 1834,
Indiana

Connersville Watchman Friday, June 20, 1834,
Indiana

Connersville Watchman Friday, June 27, 1834,
Indiana

Connersville Watchman Friday, July 04, 1834,
Indiana

Connersville Watchman Friday, July 11, 1834,
Indiana

Connersville Watchman Friday, July 18, 1834,
Indiana

Connersville Watchman Friday, July 25, 1834,
Indiana

Other Editions from Saturday, May 23, 1835

London Morning Post Saturday, May 23, 1835 ,
Middlesex

True Sun Saturday, May 23, 1835 ,
Middlesex

Baldwins London Weekly Journal Saturday, May 23, 1835 ,
Middlesex

Courier Saturday, May 23, 1835 ,
Middlesex

Albion And The Star Saturday, May 23, 1835 ,
Middlesex

Washington Globe Saturday, May 23, 1835 ,
District Of Columbia

Washington Daily National Intelligencer Saturday, May 23, 1835 ,
District Of Columbia

London Standard Saturday, May 23, 1835 ,
Middlesex

Covington Western Constellation Saturday, May 23, 1835 ,
Indiana

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Connersville Watchman
Connersville Watchman

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Connersville Watchman

   Connersville Watchman (Newspaper) - May 23, 1835, Connersville, Indiana                                Office on Madison W. PARK CO Pm IN THE ER THE YEAR Liberty can only dwell with a wno know their dare maintain 1.  52.  the and Naval OPPORTUNITY FOR THE OF FROM ST. morning of the of August | was just dawning on the gay circle slumbers of the silent { which that had graced the cautiously of Sir Hudson and Lady the birth day of George | then Prince and the which like a mantle had ed for many nearly to their ba- i the mountain was rapidly ascending I to their when a report of the j signal gun from the Admiral's almost instantly responded to by those of the surrounding drew tion the festive and those | who a lew moments before were leading the mazy urging their coursers to their greatest were i seen ascending the winding s and precipitous roads which led to and 1 surrounded the lowly dwelling of the | exiled A frigate and small gun brig had slipped from their and the next the Fori Wayne RAISING THE It is amusing to witness Uie schemes that the returning steps of the I or to send them on li men were not noticed until within few the when I brave said { in ' at he shall be informed of what sorted to by different individuals to obtain a if dreading to have on of root of all him instantly to I shook the noble fellow by the you come on shore for into his in a few moments to rescue a vesel close in upon the was on and when his little skiff but you will not be hasten ji returned he found a few bags him not a moment is to be and half a barrel of as an wealth and never fading of his noble and his In a St. Helena faded in the i of riches and would be but years have not been able to take one of them for Lis In certain was 1 of their from my memory the feelings of this laudable design he when the words cannot j thai one when all my sanguine a letter to the Chief of the j fell upon my they pressed also like I hopes were blasted by ihr a load upon my and it was cannot will be your great had been my just been made acquainted with one i which from its originality is thy of being placed on A needy 1 adventurer in Cincinnati we heard glowing accounts of the and though not wealth of the ladies of the has persuaded himself that a sure moments before I could command voice enough to order the cowards after the other the lights were extinguished at the night dragged heavily we were found three or four miles from the when the first dawn of the morning was ushered by the roaring of a crowd of steering contrary almost over our were standing out of the answered by others from The surprise created by these sudden movements was almost ly relieved by the appearance of a black gently gliding from behind the projecting and bearing down i under her three topsails to the little I now nearly within gun a few j moments sufficed to bring them i a boat was seen to a grain like the taken from the and like A mother was kneeling in the deep hush of evening at the couch of two whose rosy arms were twined in a A soft as the will be found We are at a loss which to admire most in this modesty with which he sets forth his pretentions and the advantages to accrue to the Indians from their connection with the cunning with which he has endeavored to conceal his real and to flatter the Chief into a with his Having no doubt that ills references would prove highly satisfactory to the and being capable of I transacting any kind of business either I portion of the known as I the Old consists of three ties of and and contains about 120,000 At the recent session of the i courts in those after a cation of three months in four seven in the there were I but two indictments in the whole of each of them for petty nies of less than ten dollars in I and not a single indictment has been i found for any aggravated or any that would subject the offenders to punishment in the Stale It is not likely that a parallel state of Society could be found in the Y. black ship spread her swelling canvass in the creasing and the evening that whose morning opened on | such a busy beheld her sink yond the Curiosity for aj day or two all questions were evaded at despairing ofj being sunk into | and all appeared A or two I revisited own native when in a small dentally mentioning the forgoing 1 received the following account from one who proved to be the most conspicuous i give it nearly in his own and the interest excited in who was a witness of what i have already induced i a belief that it might not be unacceptable to the 12th of 18, returning from we made the island ofi St. the thick haze which prevented our seeing the land until close at that the curtain which screened it our view gradually until it rested on the summits of the highest j The picture now presented | was and deeply on the the residence of with the small whtie tents of his guard sprinkled on the the lofty with its summit and signal tower enveloped i in the in the precipitous rocks descending lo the | the murmur of whose rippling on the seemed to infuse their own calm into the bosom of tlie hardy who were listlessly gazing | on the surrounding and ting ot the various fortunes len The evening closed the lights were waving through the mansion of the tents were no longer darkness and tranquility So absorbed had we all that not until this moment I had any one noticed how very near we i had approached the to use a you might have almost a biscuit on A short | calm was succeeded by a light air which rendered our before now and once the minds ofi seemed to revert to the prisoner on this lonely It evident we had not been discovered on | our the night had just ed the breeze would freshen as we receded from the and the j might rise on our gallant little | bearing the rescued exile land and the home of the impulse was lors were called ty of effecting the object in a few words and the half consenting crew requested a few moments to make up their To bring their resolution to the sticking a dram was administered to and thousand to be equally the touched the and shortly after horses were | seen galloping towards the All appeared bustle on and we soon by the approach of a little that equal activity was on the A shot whizzed over and ive bore a boat came 1 was ordered in and conducted on in the cabin I Op. a at the after part of reclined a handsome young full even to buckles in his who on my in rather a sleepy are you from did you Jate in the one foot from the he is you were not seen from the signal post at which of his Majesty's ships boarded you in the havt not seen that the ship on the must have boarded that fell through the lattice over them like a silvery vale lay on their delicate lips ij or it being soft bright curls that on their pillow were slightly stirred by their and healthful and which might eventuate his self aggrandizement and the i writer very modestly informs the which beams from the pure depths of that a young lady of undoubted glad yet rested on the The j selected by his own mother their exceeding beau- | from his family or that of some of his chiefs ty irith a momentary as of renown and will suit she to gaze on the lovely We are sorry lo dissipate the pleasing her dark eye deepened with jj and demolish the splendid intense and unutterable and a cold shuddering fear came over lest those buds of so fair and so might be touched with sudden decay and gathered back in their to the And she lifted her voice in passionately that of Life would spare to hor those blossoms of over whom her soul thus And as the low breathed accents rose on the still a deepened thought came over and her spirit went out with her loved and pure ones into the you should think proper to doubt my had my men acted as were urged to I most have been re- j from this unpleasant a little more animation he had gOne too far lo and there was also an noble expression in his which invited and seemed to go I did so. should probably have had | Napoleon on and been far beyond your from the with extended hand and speaking he you by the proffered 1 reiterated his would by castles which the gentleman has doubtless built on the strength But we can inform him that he is on the wrong The J. B. I Richardville to deep an insight of human nature to allow the flattery bestowed on his and known so far to dazzle his eyes as to prevent his seeing the real drift of the The allusions to the pecuniary circumstances of his intended are too i palpable and frequent to be hid by the I flimsy veil which is attempted to be wild paths of and a strong horror filled chief has frame a. beheld mildew on the and j of between the two and high and rich is scathed i; acquainted vvith the guilty And the prayer j which generally induce white she was grew yet more to agony that He who the I Globe of the 16th We are happy in being able to that the proper authorities of the State of Maryland and have signified their acceptance of the portions of the Cumberland Road within those States agreeably to the provisions of aa act of the last authorising the of the sum of for its final The road is thus surrendered to the State and further appropriations by the United States will become It will be kept in repair by moderate established and collected under the authority of the The above sum will put the road in complete and render it equal to the expectations of many of our readers who are interested in the condition great We understand that arrangements are already making for the of the j hurricane passed over Liberty ' a few days which prostrated dwelling houses and other in all On the rice plantation of Richard J Esq. five negroes were and the overseer much One of them was killed while tending a plough in the field by a blow from a detached piece oi one of the buildings blown sit first by Ihe he had shown that tell me how you you had were your repeated what you have already interrupted once or near the close of my by the 1"  he looked me steadily in the hesitated a and the in an under tone have doubtless heard that many attempts have been and one or two nearly to rescue it is not so. You are the only if aided as you ought to have who has slightest and to be would have lyour The ships had all been called the signalman from the post jj reported nothing in must have been enveloped in the and all the officers were on shore and to attend Lady first great in commemoration of our Regent's birth and you holding out his haste and from what a scene your appearance has called me. What would I not give for the satisfaction of seizing your rascals in the and giving them a dozen said after a short would certainly have had and we should | no longer have been signal from the Admiral went on the usual questions and answers when of ail purity would these he had given her in their perfect permitting neither nor nor fully to cast a stain on the brightness with which she had received invested from his hand as with a the prayer died away in the weakness of the spent a pale shadowy form stood beside the infant am said the I come for these thy 1 commissioned to bear them tlie perils you depreciate are where neither stain nor dust nor shadow can reach the It is by them to me you can preserve them forever from contamination and wild struggle as of the soul parting in strong shook the mother's but faith and the love which hath a purer fount that of earthward and she yielded up her babes to I the said as he touched the fair and beauty of life gave place to a holier and the smile of innocence is now forever Thoy will waken where there is neither blight or And the benign whom we call the bore away the now perfected blossoms of immortality to the off be set to the rising or to believe it have influence opening more fully the gates of and reconciliation to all Had the applicant all unnecessary and plainly stated that his sole object was to make money by we think his chance of success would have been His intended could then him credit for honesty and 3d 1835. Chief poor want the of the necessities of rich in general want the feeling of waiits a rich physician wants his patients to use up his pills and pay mechanic wants plenty of and good spirits to do and prompt pay whea 'tis merchant wants cash and extension of and Editors every man to do what is right and to give them their is whispered that ladies want we think this to be a if it we will be happy to correct we believe it will be admitted by that every description of people want fortitude to bear with the ills of and that very want sufficient skill to float peaceably along the current of me through medium to address on a subject and may in and asked witness examined in an Illinois was it cleared every thing directed to give and with a anxious j you what water you may awaited It was was such 'the master of thai if he has During one of the frontier wars in was found necessary to send out a company of rangers or After they had arrived at one their points of it was advisable to send out one of the officers of the company with a command of five to reconnoitre tlie movements of the A Dutchman constituted one of and on the evening of the second day they carne i upon an Indian camp covered with bark and discovered fresh signs of the A council was accordingly upon which it was determined to secrete themselves upon the lop of the await the arrival of the After the night fail had set seven of these sons of the forest 1 entered the divested themselves ofj their implements of and commenced i preparing something to satisfy the calls of Our Dutchman had an itching to j know what was going on He | ding raised himself upon his hands and and thus drew himself forward in defiance of ail the gestures of his until he had reached a point so far on the projecting that it tipt with and precipitated him head foremost upon the When he discovered that he was he cried I coomes py Whereupon the affrighted savages fled and left the camp an easy conquest to his me to that I have for a long time witnessed with peculiar satisfaction the manners and leading characteristics of your and those of the nation over whom you have itie honor to preside as Being a young man capable of transacting almost any kind of cither agricultural or respectfully say that I am in search of a and have a strong desire to fix myself in some permanent place and for Well knowing as 1 do that we all sprang from the same infinite source of I am therefore of opinion that a young lady of undoubted selected by your own elevated from your or that of some of you r fellow chiefs of renown and good would suit me. object in making this proposition would be in the bettering and extending my business facilities in together with the honorable example which 1 set before the rising of lawful and voluntary marriage between the two thereby and rooting eventually any animosity that has hitherto been excited in the minds of aud opening more fully the gates pf reconciliation aud peace to all If you should be disposed to join me in the promotion of these general which I presume to you will from your well known magnanimity as you will please manifest by writing me soon on this informing me at the same time what you can do for me in the selection of an amiable good also who she together with and pecuniary Her fortune I am desirous shall lie to aid me in furthering my both in reference to and cementing more closely the bonds of national union and good As to my it is 27,my said to be circumstances rather ' counsel for the how the plaintifF generally generally rides astraddle does he ride he has a good horse he always keeps does he ride when he is I cannot for I never was in company with him when he rode by may stand longer women live the younger they 1 know ladies who six years ted at thirty-five and who now stands at It is next to impossible for ' a woman to get over The only son I ever met with who confessed that i had passed this barrier was an old lady of i but then her great grandson was What is the this son of Van Buren when even Connecticut has forsook her steady i habits and over to the the city of Albany has turned her on New York's favorite the j Albany Regency and 1 At an election for Charter Officers on the Albany which lis good the Federalists have carried the Philadelphia Times has the The proprietors of this paper last week 1 recovered judgement against a postmaster for a paper not taken from his of which he neglected to inform All Postmasters who do render themselves but my references as to integrity i; ding Ui a stage with seven band good character will be among the and a squalling A dull of the in this | in i as that of New York and not A letter to write and to write Three or yards of advice from one I know to and a And then that everlasting onc has nothing more L. will be satisfactory no doubt to dear my warmest wishes for the and happiness  

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