Newspapers / The Durham Recorder (Durham, … / June 29, 1853, edition 1 / Page 1
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t .1 111 UNION. -TOE CONSTITUTION AND THE lAV-THE GUARDIANS OF OUR UBERTT. VI. XX XIV IIILLMIdivOlf.I!. .. iVi:5EUIV, JIJE 39. 133. Ilillll il li M W XT D ? 3 3 3 To Country Merchants. WE h era alalia J for adjutant 1 or S 7X.nCT saakiac Mir aaaortttrat m cemnuoJiiif M at any Hm du'inc lit scaaoa. tlrrchaata rrplf niia ' their Hocks for the Sust-wer aaoittlu, would ad il to Uxir ii.ttirrf ttf 1' OS SIKVEXSOX.& WEDDELL. THE DISCOVEET A WD COLOOTZA a. T10N Of AHEEICA . a V. A LECTURE, ,. " Dttletrtd ttfort the Xntr Vsrk Huton- cm oorttfy. T BOX. tu iR XVtttTT. Jtr.PntUtnf.wnd GtntUmtn ,j Although I appear before too at the if i son at hich the various religious, mural and philanthropic societies usu- HjrraaMir Sueet, Pnerahurf. Va. ally hold their annual meetings, to dis- single scientific projrf.sition the ter raqueous earth U adhere. ' After Tears of fru.tlen arid hear tick solicitation after tvKVnng ia erect to this nioiiarch and to that monarch the gift of a hemisphere, the great Disc their territory. Sack are the facta of preclude as far a a possible a!l ceafUct the case, and such, one .avid say. with Portegil, the iimeas liue of de ouht to be the law and eqaity of the tnarcation s proposed frwn the Nrth eax. Eat. a!ai! for the native chiefs aad South, a fcUOifred tr-rves vest f ana iw name rare. Uciare ne sail- cae Azores, cuttinr the earth iota two I - .1 P. at I . a a a ..a 9 iea iron patn. uiaubua was lurnian- naives like aa inn ftind. aa fir ai ti, -.. ! lumui m n a i wiiuihtbi uj r new eucoteries were coctr'jru, g lie succeeds, out in enlitift the sm.dinabd and lMibrlta. creating him their ing to the Spaniarda all of the pathr cf his cufttrTnien at Genoa and jVicero and High Admiral in all the line, and confirming all east of it t Venice fur a brate brother sailor aot'sras, island, aud continents which be the Prtnrae. in virtue cf the rrint in giving a new direction to the spirit should dicoer,his heirs fireer to alreaJf eatiuue of Ppe NitnI j i prrMM-rapird br nitfja of maritime adventure which had so' enjoj the same officra. The Viceroy .the Fiitb. J ! b-Firm li ruirVrd be it.tS . llmtrmttt But Ih pa, mt m i.e gi e'ntatrfa during wkirk rrroia f iJ.V moicMi esr fjNfMV NUiw rarti nhtr m rapid uTf " i n4 H.t fi-ri a iirtiitM dee wrd lo ihflurM fiwinHraofrhrUtra. '.1..HI, orrr plvJ bv ht! an b liui rrl.-MtJ4 iUir mmm mk. U llr rMir if art aotrmih renry, ltt Fnr rti and ihr Eflh iw4 naiiKM of all lital art riii Arrir. buh long pretaded in Portugal ; out in a wakentKthecotumercial thrift tf Hen X B. Orkra atiall b aur brat atlmlitm. My 13ih. 1653. f 84- BOOKS! " cass the stirring topics of the day, I need not say to you that the proprie ties of this occasion reqoiretne to ab stain from such subjects; and to select a theme falling, to some extent at 1 nlT . KiVt'wrJ least, within the province of an histo- Buka at Mr. iainra Waiaoa , mrni(t whirh i . i t ,rrlbM,.h.K: WUry'a K. v. Form Bnokj If.' society, propose accordingly, Witr Jt. U. KraJrrj Wbarler't HiMurf ; an j "ng. iitriupi axcitn oi uie aKiuM-ut f tU Amrrkan Tract arki'a : historT of the'disrovrrr and roloniza UMk; Keiifiou, Hiaiuiiral and Trmjfira , tion of America, and of emigration !.. M gral ailrty. Chtnp, very .. th L'n!tH Ktafa. I ran .f r..iir ..f. iherni Aajr Book. fm.ubI to or. i fer ou wilhin ,imit, of , 8; ,e SAMUEL PEARCE. Agent, address, but a most superficial t iew of 85Sovast a subject; out I nave thought that even a sketch would suggest im portant trains of reflection to thought ful minds. Words written or spoken are at best but a kind of short hand, to oi the aboleie monarch or Aragon and i regret that want of time will not Castile! - ' m- i,. ,!u..ii ,i : .V.- vl. .L .t i it ' Ji.f... n V.u V. i i P'u" ": ..w.sArricuBreiiciQre history of this line of demarcation, for of the Catholic king. His sorrowful it was discovered. By tne law of na- the benefit all Sutea having boundart rtrklnAr tniirhil tnm kasart f a tin linnt a ftin tiniUrfiiivl rand I lnt . . f, v , " V - r . . ; , , . coniroversies, and esprciallr our aiater oi prioces, wormy tne inrone wnicn were is ie reti cnaiige in ua uoc Uf publics of Nicaragua ai me sooir.eii. ine ccw world, wnicn tnnes at me present uar man we are Republics of Nicararua and Costa Ilira. It ia t ... ,k.t . ki inct .irtniH.'ik. Vitktt. Iin.prfr- raaflv tife lKiilr m . . r i m riti m a . . - L ,V ,r , " ' reni4ineu a sauject or dispute and col Flit .nliTiinil utr.il t V r. . Ka tn trritihfv ttltl .Ar.riint.nt ff all . . . ' . . l.t t f m f . I f . t ? t 1 I ft Union lilf lhra kumlnil .ml aiwv.Aia the w omanly compasaion of Isabella. "' newly diac vered regions, inhabited by ,m tnd finlr settled at the Cou- 10 TBVirr? 'V" w gress of Vjenna.'in 1818. Cad and aVr. HUlJwroujb, May 10. House & Lot foresaid mum It is truly melancholr. however a- contemplate the w retched equipment, the Christian prince under whose aupi to for which the most powerful princeas ces the licoer was made, subject to in iiinsieuuoin was reatiy to tieiige e rauuvauou oi uic rope, at we uiu her jewels. Floating castles will toon mate disposer of the kingdoma of the be fitted out to couvey the miserable earth, buch waa the law of nations, as natives of Africa to the gohleu shores then um crsood, in virtue of which, of America; towering galleons will be frm the imraent Columbus, on the dispatched to bring liome the guilty night of the 12th of October, 1492. treasures to Spain ; but three small ves- caueht, (rum the uuarter-deck of the sels, one of which was without a deck, Santa Maria, the tw inkling beams of Hiini renxivrj tnCball Hill, .1 i :i . - it- l: . ne ii-rruTi iiiamir rr- . ... ... . . . " i . .1 t .k .... .-t.l l . ..-r .k- .U... IriM' ia Ihriuwnuf HilUrouth aucu up uy me reauer r nearer. itr i uiciii, jmuusuij, cjictu- !. - wi oau ciii rJUaala. Tb Uweiiin H..ue i I gratined it, alter honoring mg ute capacity ol a pilot boat and uor, an me term mi ami political huwi ru.Nny.aiid er rvemriiilyarMiiKrJ. mT haste a;;etch with your attention, even these niipresaed into the public rights or its simple iahaLUa:s were ex- Tliare m a f.iod UiGrt on ibe M. wuh iwu rwn.. you shall deem it worth filling up from service composed the expedition fit- tiuguiahed rneer. v hen, on the Tot a Well. Irn anj Sinbles ami every neeMarr Vuur own atiireafif knu, lilir ami ted out under roval natronave. to reaU lowinir h ornin-'. the keel of his eesswl Iliil 1 1 ttiimr. I he Hiiutc M ailnalnl An Km .1 1 . . ... . .... V -. w r .... 1 .1 " ......,k- f" - ii. . T. : Mgni. lou win lorgive tne, u. 10 e wax magnmci to the auWhbrr, al Ch.fl Hill, .V C. , ' , IIUOH WAD HELL i AprU 19th. im 81 The territorial extension of Portugal and Spain, whirh resulted from the discovery of America, waa followed by the most'extiaordinary effect ipon the commerce, the finances, and the poli tics generally, of thuae two countries, and through them, of the world. The overland trade to the Eaat.was aban doned. The whole of South America. j a nd a considerable part of North Ame rica was. in the course or the sixteenth Centurr, ' settled by tWe Govern ments, who organized in their trans- Drugs! Drugs! TlIC SuWriheu ra now receiving their Hprinf, Suck of UBCUS. MEDICI NB8, PAINTS, 011.8, DYE hai aver before been oflt-red in thia market, and which they j 1 O p f w ficent conception in grated upon the much-longed-for strand, the attempt to give a certain complete-, which the creative mind ol Lolumbus it compieieuwiui more man electric ness to the narrative, I mar. be led to had planted thegermsofa New World, speed, that terrible circuit which con glance at a few facts, which, however j No chapter of romance equals the tiected the islands aud the continent interesting, mar seem to vou too faini- interest ol this expedition. The most to the foot-stool of the Spanish throne. V liar for repetition. fascinating of the works of fiction, As he landed upon the virgin shore. Us In the last quarter of the fifteenth which have issued from the modern native inhabitants if they could have century, an Italian mariner, a citlen press, have to my taste no attraction foreseen the future, would have felt, of the little Republic of Genoa, who compared with the pages in which the f 1 niar presume thus tu apply the had hitherto earned a livelihood as a first vovaire of Columbus is described word, that virtue ha-d one out of it sri:L .-.i MPtr-ps Dilot in the commercial marine of difle- br Robeitson. and still more bv our forever. With some of them this pro brarin a larcer Mock than! rent countries, made his appearance own Irvin;and Prescott. the last two cess was sharp and instantaneous; with ..1 . . . - . . a a . a successively at various Courts in the enjoying the advantage over the great owera more gradual, but not less sure; South and Yet ol Kurope. soliciting Scottish historian ol possessing me wun some even, auer neany mur cen- el latel discovered, journals and letters tunes, it is sun going on; out wun navigation. The State ot ol Columbus lumselt. The departure " n wat an irrevocable uoom. tne as in some to the adventure. Se causes, and especially the invention cup of water for his way-worn child,- inoftensive Peruvian the fierce Arau of the art of nnntins. had produced a his final farewell to the Old World canian all fared alike; a-foreign rule general revival of intelligence. Still, at the Canaiies, his entrance upon the id an iron yoke settled, or is settling. E bate ju receded our BrtciAU aivu however, the state or things then pre- trade winds which then for the first-down upontneir necita mrever. KL..M.M&K wwus. rieaae can ana . vaitiiu' in Ihia resnert. ua verv difle- limn filleil a Kurrun sail th norten. SUCll was the law Ol nations OI mat rent from what we w itness in the mid- toua variation of the needle, never be- day not intented, however, by Spain die of th nineteenth century. On the fore observed the fearful course west- It was in reality the old principle of it prepare to n lor u.an.or on i mon.o. fl-J am IH for , bold tnd nov ume to punctual uenera. rnvairiina anu mui-r . , ., Tl. .! : L.....U. .- ..ii ..i project in navigation. I lie State ,uk S. D. SCI100LFIELD & Co. Aprd 19 82 stains & sOTmia eddiso M BR E8, which hiva heretofote given gieat aa- lUfaclion. - LONG & WEBB. Apnl l?th. I85W 81 ONE THOUSCND PIANO FORTES! ! VpiLnrdt nf one ihmnnnd Vianot olf, ond ' ntter td a M tint ! ! ! .1 I.xlavd thai oak! arirrr to the heart of ide roaiioeni; tracrd ilefrej lake sa llieir pairul lltklria and vrrpinf (unit lain ; tlceeended lb lliaiiiiM. .Mira- a a a i . rir- uj iiuu)!ii ana iii.av-.iiin hero i -ra er fieifuriued by I hair gallant adeniu rrra and u aiaioiaiir ia lit depths f .r Weairrn wildrrneas. The Enlih e ireirhe.1 aluf the co. he frof ra pint wit. M have prooouneed thai h rrei.rli, ia ao, ropnaitnj i iltemaeltre ih uiflny ba-inaf iht Viai-i pi and -I lie S". Ii fence, bad (4 pnaaeaaion of ili britrr'ju't ( tie ton.iiieni. Bat it waa art aiietnpi lu romptat the second volume of ihe Fortunes of Amrriea. in ail ranee 4 I lie lira I. Thin il was ordain ed alrnuld be wriiieu ai Jauicflown and Piymouih. . The Frrneh. lltiwh esrelliiif all oiha er na ioov in the world in ih art or eoroiitonieaiina fur iemHrary purpoaea widi aavage liihea, aeria. still more lhaa lite SpamaitU, in be dt-tiuuit of the aua . i. .11 : a . . . . tlantic pomsMons. a Colonial system "T " w . ol the mot rigid and despotic character. 1 m k lhrt ,n '! Th t i ... - in uie viiniu aa a rtiiiinv im r lanr f m. reueciin?. aa lar aa waa brie tic am e iu . . . vond stern features ot the Muther Country. di.i.nt tW.nr.k K...l iU ,l. Hif M m.tt a M.wprimi u.immiinweaiin. A li-dt a inillKin if Fienrli peasania in i . . , . The precious metaU and a monoply of " nmwJ 7"! the trade to the East, were the great , ' T""? 7 T' i " objects. Aliens were lorbidden U en- 1 t,M,,,;, AJ ''-; , ter the American Vice-Rovalties; none ,':9 ""1 ''J wrf but a contraband trade w."s carried on P,''r.,,.", r,t'xeH " i laie m! Kit I ikrifvtiiit mi tm An..t 1-.. . sist this trade., ae vere rieht f search S ,w ,h' "'"!''" was instituted along the entire extent! hai it led in bear livine wiinrts that nnl a reniuty a(i Fianee raa ilie inietresa of the belter i i. ik.- . : . of the coast. Ihafe recently had an;"'. ' T T.- V, opprtunity, in another place, to ad- ''.TV T C r. . J . r ill l!iilniiia nriainBllv ttlunicil ne imm vert to the eBects td this srsiem opon 1 . , r i it . .k- - . C . . .,-.- i I J r v v i acquired by England, dial the rieal work the inter-national relations of Europe. S. . , . . v.r... ...k:.-.. - .ii. . . .l i of the sevenieeinh rrniory waa peilorio Native subjects couhremerate to these ! . , ,. . . - . , . n..i..-..i . ?i :.u .u- ed a!oly, loil-omely, efffei elr. K ee ihem. , They will I aold upon accommodat in j lerma. ' t 1 1 ii . : . , ... SuKerior FKENCH CLOTHS and CAI ! part of the great mass of mankind, ward and westward day after day and the right d the strongest disguised by - .... . . y . . i I . . I ..I ' ' . I . r, 1 . - .1 1 - . ...... - ..I I 4' . I -1. I mere was uui nine improve men i over nirni auer niirni over me unknown a iircicn. a vuisai nun mic"v the darkness of the middle aires. -The ocean. the mutinous and ill-appeased cilded over with the thin foil of a seem new culture centered in the Convent, crew; at length the tokens of land, ing troth. It was the same principle the Court, and the University places the cloud-banks on the western hori- which prompted the eternal wars of esentially distrutful of bold 'novelties. 10n, the logsof drift wood, the fresh the Greeks and Romans.- Aristotle 1 he idea' of reaching the East by a voy- shrub floating w ith its leaves and ber- asserts, without qualification, that the age round the African Continent had be- ties. the flocks of land birds, the Greeks had a perpetual right of war nun to askinne consistency ! but the ulwxla nffich that mhahit chnlloiv vntur anil rnntiuejlt against the Karhariana AJ'or'S u,r significant idea, that the the indescribSble smell of the shore, that is, all the rest of the world; and tint and North CarnUna in-eibei with the ori-1 earth is a glnbe, and capable of being the mysterious presentiment that ever the pupil of Aristotle proclaimed this paraded number we have aold, (more than one ' circumnavigated, had by no means be- goes before a great event, and finally, doctrine at the bead of the Macedonian ihnuMml.) enahlet nio aoacrt with truth ami ( come incorporated into the' general on that ever memorable night of the phalanx, on the banks of the Indus. eonfi.lcnre,froniaoUiPBaiidwelliriedejprricncej inteijrence of the age. The Portu- 12th of October 1492, the moving light The irruption of the barbarous races thiitheyare. v . t, , 4 ,'tese tiaviiators felt themselves safe seen bv the sleepless eye of the dis- into Europe, during the centuries that UNSURPASSED IN TONE AND FIMbH laa ipv ri-ent alnnir tlia' African rnast i ivi ror kiinsulf Irmn th lrtr nf tlie nrvceileil and followed Hhriitianite venturing each voyage .a tew leagues Santa JWaria, and in the morning the rested on as good a -principle rather further; doubling a new headland ; as- real undoubted land, swelling up from better; the pretext only was varied; tBiaff aTjkl.n ia.1 a-k. a. -an!. ..nla a 1 sU atkaa, - v Ray wvfi via tarns uwa9c-am9Uv fim j m mi i a .a a a a a .V ,u- . . i inwhiy wmk for Amenrs and inanmd, permission ot th uoverninent. In- , A , .... i. , e er i i . oi wnirii even wr, iuiiii ami pruuu oi 11 stead of affording an asylum to persons' , .,V...i- ' ,, r, u r .l as t an, do but taimly eues iha our dissenting from the religion of the . mi. i - . .i . . .... T . . iniliiil,.! li liiulil llnnllv be Oulil. at lhal State, con ormity of belief was, if pos- ' , . ' ;,: ...r.. i : n" : .1.-f llime. to iiroier in any 11I 11a parts. Ml iuiV tuiuivcu wific iiiuij iii tut; ww-1 . Inniea than n lht Mutlur Piinntrv. 1" .' No relaxation in this respect has taken place in the remaining Colonies of Spain, even to the present -day. As lor the aboriginal tribes, after the first work of extermination was over, aremn ant was saved from destruction by being reduced to a state of predial ser- Jde. t-u no rriuru ih me ptcuniarv capi tal inveairil.- I he pulinzal relaiinns of the eoliuiiet fom"lia fim wenMhoae of enrroaeltineni and trsi-ianrt; and even the moral, pi met pie as lar a mete wit one, ott which they were founded, waa mil rnnnimemly earried out. There was ronflict with the savages. wa'r with the ! French and Spantatde, jarring and fends embracing in the aame Piano a Mutt Mtllow mid Soft, ft wtll in a Mitt Pqw ... . .t'fi'tKuptrb7ont. ' ,'cendinji some betore unexplored river;-:"the bosom of the deep, with its plains, although the Gauls and the Goths did '."VrV''"'.!! ."holding a palaver with some new tribe and hills, and forests, and rocks, and not probably trouble themselves much ra IM UIC 7(1 taVCt WJIraVjfHI SIIV IVlV0fl J , . , . . awa . . rwa a a 1 lhal punhaaeia can lw4j fmd exactly the ile,; f the native races ; but to turn the streams, and strange, new races of about pretexts. They adopted rather etc-thev mav want: the diflrrence in nrice'lie-' prows of their vessels boldly to" the men, these are incidents which in the the simple philosophy of the robber in? occasioned miIv by the outward fimh, ena-. West, to embark upon an ocean not authentic history of the discovery of chieftain of the Scottish Highland: Pent in this fort' cm of the north, . ..... 1 . r .1 . ; . -.1 1 t 1 luuc. a lie iieicvieu anil auiriiicaa. ..... ..i..; . . .1 ... . ., -iDeiwrrii iiciaiiiHiiiiiK einunira, ucpcm- posterity of the warlike tribes, that L (f AtwM- im,vld,..ls.,.d.7c,s. oBered no mean resistance to Carte ! ., ilKtt m ,., and P.zarro, are now the hewers of , ,ro )nrliiriM Yrl in lhe inU OB wood and drawers of water to Mexico jJV ,,,,, the wfnl on. T,,jngi and Peru. In a word. Iron, the :ex-l h , M), WOfk ,y WHked , hff treme southern point of Patagonia to lf (( d((, ,,. rk h ,h the. Nor hmost limit of Nw.Mexicti,Wrtlkw hy ww,itlo WJ BM,u,on Fr. I am not aware that anything hopeful jbU mMf el,,pinel. f(PW ro0. was done for human improvement, br.- (f fu f,Mlie,. habitaof either of the European Crowns which; ... -0WBIB, r.K,d linftevea in ailileu theae vaat domain til their ter-1 . ... . ritories. bleathoee who wth to l uy cheaper inetromeiiia, ,;noWu; in the popular geography of our Continent excels the specious won the tan advance nf a fine ami laul,ful h (, to ,uve M oue. gh t Jer9 f rolllJlnce as much tS gold eX- tnnai in ta Pi ha nf atrasfttawa Hltlfl A Inr0 . " - ... .... . Pftent.urg, April 1&. 1853. REMOVAL. - Root and; Shoe Business. lv, of Spain, ' of Portugal, and of Eng land, and for a long time without suc cess. The' state of science was not or to follow out this most wonderful of histories sinking, as it soon did, i'lto I .... C ...L!-l. , . 1 . ! .. .1 . . -I. . i.umlr w nnw'aell. are left enliiely to our ' ceia uiisn, or u e uu in uic own iate and election, by thoae who are not ler had ever returned, and Iroin which outshines the flickering taper. aMetoliepreentthenueleR.anda it aUavade- experience had not taught that any tra-i But it is no part ot my purpose to voivra much inire reaponKihiniy uHn a, an mnv veiler could return, aiid thus to reach , dwell upon this interesting narrative, l - i . i . i .1... :tU . . . . ..... ... . ... ..I . . . . . anurru, who wam the Last by sailing in a vvestern di- .?!Tk ,?k,ion " p "m,TT IMIrA rection. this wa a conception which they ahall have a Piano Forte at prmrly tnt . ' . . . r or,er price. (.. h.a Wn often ttcd.) ind human being is known to have an inatrunient from lhe beat makera in lhe world, lormed before Columbus, and which Guarantied, and allowed to be returned if not he proposed to the governments of Ita- .... i. . . an iney are reprcaenieii 10 ne. K. P. NASH. riano Fwle Wrr Rvn.s. AT I II l t. - t,rne jcamore an,, o.na oucc.a. t . . , Hicriminate between the improbable and the absurd. 1 hey looked upon Columbuo as we did thirty years ago upon Captain sy mmes. But the illustrious adventurer per severed. - Sorrow and disappointment Thk subscriber would respect- 'clouikd his spirits, but did not shake Think'at thou we will not tally forth. To spoil the spoiler aa we may, And from the robber rend Iii grey. When the Mohoinetan races rose I ,.i lhal was etinuiiMidlY am red; the I C. ..C f.il.. l.....l.li.. La ll..ll mm it If this great territorial extension was, . rmh,x'Wt4 l0,,leal va- fruitless of beneficial consequences to America, it was not less so to the mo ther country.1 For Spain, it was the commencement of a period not of pros perity but of decline. The rapid in flux of the precious metals, in the ab . . . t sence oi civil nucrty aim oi jusi pnn to tent ol Colonial rule; and in lhe middle ol the eighteenth century the approach of iiiiuhlV ehaiiKea began lo be diinly foia aeen by eioed apirit-. A faint streak of purple light bluahed along lhe eaateru sky. fwrt ihinii wortji mentioning rnntrU One waa the absence r power, thev claimed dominion over who disbelieved the Koran. Conver sion or extermination was the al tenia- i ? ... i r : . . I Cipies anu insiiiuiioiis oi intercourse ......i ,A r..i. all nU8iriwas pniuucuve oi ma i.r r ,,ie pwilMW mru,f yht Briii.li Co- loiu vlia,auu iro... w,c .e..i oi r.io.p o((,e weff .U , ,,,, Will, f -0J. Ai tl, il iiuv n Viiidini v., vue ouauiau 1 1.. ,, , ii iinilHnce ol jt'ihl anil silver in Mrs- fully inform hi fiienda and the public n,s faith nor subdue his will. His well St""". lu 'hM''T.'0,red,,mSho instructed imagination had taken firm p Shop to the houae on King atieet, one . . ... , ... .1. 4l :.. . douwe.tofMrs.VaHacur'ConA-clionarv,whera l,u u ln.e, ,ula ' he will keen on hand an excellent amortinenl of Peie. VV liat SCCineU 10 me muiu BOOTS, SHOES, BROGANs, &c, which will be sold very low. . f , The sujirrintent'ence of the bqaincM. as here tofore, will be entruated to Mr. 'J'liomna C. Hsyea. The bent workmen lhatean I procured, will be kept ready to' execute all orders for work, end every paine will be taken to give satisfaction. Thunklul fur the liberal patronage heretofore be stowed, he respectfully solicit a continuance of the aame. W; F: STRAYIIORN. January 3d, 1853. - 67 MOLASS E S 's . ItlST leeifived, 10 Hogaheads'i.f New Crop ' ,4 MolasciC Mareh 8. 185-V LONG 4- WEBB. 76- ' BLANKS forale.at this Oflice. tude even of the educated of that day a doubtful and somewhat mvstical the-1 ory; what appeared to the uninformed mass a monstrous parodox, contradict ed by every step we take on the broad flat earth which we daily tread beneath our feet, that great and fruitful truth revealed itself to the serene intelli gence of Columbus as a practical fact, on which he was willing to stake all he had; character and lite, v And it de serves ever to be borne iu mind, as the most illustrious example of the con nection of scientific theory with great practical results, that the discovery ol Americawith all its momentous couse- 3uenc 6 to mankind, is owing to the iHt.nct cgnception ol Columbus of this a . .a .a a a i IIIUUBIkll V (I I B au wllisi lltriu I LO I 14 a . .....I aa... . a.l...... .1 a.. a tale of sorrow tor Columbus himse f. t.ve which they ottered to the worm . ; - , heaJ yf fc - - - uy and before long ending in one o the and which wa. announcedjn Jetters iol- J , 1 do not ascribe this down- most frightful tragedies in the annals fire and blood fronv Spam o the Gan- to the cause mentioned; of the world. Such , seems to be the ges. Tl.e States of Christian f-roPe the two Indies. ' J' law of humanity ; that events the most .d but retort the principle and prac-; h P M . desinible. and achievements the most t.ce, when 111 five.success.ve crusades, Jaccelerj,ted even the pr0"?ess " ' r V r,M "r Hf ,wu important, should, either in their in- kept up for more than three hundred J ce ate Jeve n.Jhep Z JX ception or progress, be mixed up with -Lrtffi7lZ nu lh' L ewE 3 , VS? ? disasters, crimes, and sorrows, which it est ol Asia, in order to rescue tne . , h Inquisition was the duel, f, a,.,.,,.,,.,. California has had from makes the heart sick to record. sepulchre ol peace lrotn the possession lk.,.w i'"'-. ,,,H,,l', Vlorn "f" ,wa l,inn llie nrsi uie hovaniMe 111 iw-iig inrip rated inbi a staMe political system, if wliii-h as si-ir State she forma an iu- .. m. .. ,..1.1 ..II I . I The discovery of, America, I need ol unbel e.ers. ..,.:...,." ...a ..... hardly say, produced a vast extension Such were the principles ol the pub- v. .,.....-..v ..... secution. the scandal ol ail countries whose ausnices the discovery was they existed when the great discov'e- and all churches. Protestant .as well as tegral pan. it is quite douMful wheiher. viiue auspices ine uisunnr . J , . . ., ui...r.t.n. mLrnm 1... 1 ... . j.. k. ............ .. .1 iw...,- it. made. In contemplating this point, l ies oi the niteentn and stxteeiitn cen V .l . T. . tnri tnuL nlari. hwn t lit Port U mysteries in the history of our race, gese began to push their adventures strumetit in the holy office in Spain in h,-ien her setilement ; but ihat would ai TxteTsioi of erri or vou are "eV far to the South on the coasts ot Afri- -the 1 6th Century, such as it never pos- any r .te huve advanced with .treat rapid dv to exclaiias' Imw could Snain ac- ca, in older to nuire. anv ten-itnrt- hv the fact, that a the highest sanction navigator, sailing under her patronage, PP Nicholas had near coas shore not Rob lam are occupied and settled crowded hrst voyage, the King ol Spain h on the coasts ot Afri- 'the loth Century, such as it never pos- any r..te huv give to those principles aessed in any other age or country. It ity. One o ction, they procured of was not merely Jews and Heretics tin coiniiry V., in 1454, the grant whom it bound to the stake it kin- admirable w of the iii'si imellerinal men in the authoi ol one of lhe most work in our laiii;uaie, me:rj ' .... .11 I - l ..,I..KI ft... ;n tkn ' 7. .,.-.....-. ae,,. nn. inalK J a . a. a. . a. r. a. . a 9 n mm . ava a mm aks ii war as mi ua-iia ua uic aan 1 11 int m mm wm iitui m wmw im c 1111 avjiiai viiuw a m landed unon ihip or two islands 01 a rigni 01 sovereignly over an ore - . 1 -;- j j . lamietl upon one or two ibianus t ' ... ... heart of Cast and Leon. The hor ed to ine. dial " Caliloruia would be mid the Continent ol America, anu 1 caw .., uw... y'M'""v" .:...:..i ..t . ., .... c . ;.. .1.. ,!.! .J ted for a hundred miles alon" its discovered or to be discovered by them riu iou k, pr.vut.cu, ...c.c.j ......... ..or "V iT'st 1 ieu 101 a uuiiuieii niiiea ai"" ... ... . . '. .1... v-.k..i....io i.., ;n u u .. r u .f 1:... ... -.1 .1 .,..1 f... ih unlit I s ? These shores and islands are from Alr.ca'to tndia; and the exclusive u.c - - " " - . n4 adeserton which Columbus like a t tie thus conterred was recogtuxed by ie mouier cwauj, inw . r , ,r, , ... ,....-..- - , a tuM.ri on wnicn lyOiumuus, nr.c .0 j r ........... c...., a.l , ......1 1 .rhlr manner onon tsoinCrusoe of a higher order, has all the -other nations td Chr.steniio.n. r-- . " . " . ' 'x "1 ' f.'ln. 1 i.j..i .1 -1'i.u tin tin rptnrn .l t'l.iitnhiu: Iriim nil bile cacape 11. one ciiucunnu uk , - k" .- - led;and taken 'Daasession. Ihey . w, return 01 toiumou irom ma r - 1-... .1... .k i..u..i nnr rn uciiiuu 111c cici uai viuimii , m-- .-. f into exigence lee bv the Governmer diuki ' ler) ... -j , ... - r- . - even w ith inhabitants subject to the lall behind is,netghbors in the strength government of their native chiefs; and of his title, lost no time in obtaining neither by inheritance,', colonization, .fpnt Pope Alexander VI., a similar nor. as jet, bv conquest, has any hu- grant of all the heathen land discover man being in Europe a risiht toruleover ed by Columbus, or which might here- . v r. .1: :.. ,1.. . 1 . . toot 01 tyicr mr mwiMriai, lit uic ! them,, or-to pussssa square took to herself the w ings of the morn ing and dwelt in the uttermost parts ol the sea; but even there the arm of retribution laid hold of her; and the wrings of both hemisphei es were aveng ed iu her degeneracy and lall. existence lee n the pi-ople ; thai they were hmlie- id coltioisis but by einivMnis. j hw t. tn of (iiivernmeni and; ront d-ra operax r opny 1 Colo- ealled J rnmer 1
The Durham Recorder (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 29, 1853, edition 1
1
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