peJunc, another member of the Chamber cf De " putir performs hii functions. I f has made an aAtiuotul demand tn the part n( the , Crown. ,Ttittc two papers, that lit tho retoiVnd the de jnand.were printed for the use of the Peers only, till the change their character of Jury tf Jccu nation for that of Jury J 7Va(jutt such a des potic business, you tee, as the trial of the Queen of England ! t , . '. , Among the arrested is Col. Fab tier, an officer ""on half pay, and one of Ch6 most 'distinguished of me oiq rmy dj nit nne taients, spienum actions, generosity, and patriotism. Several Dcputlet, Peerijmd Generals, haveibeen. denounced : in r this prosecution a having the' conjidence of the conspirators, and at having been selected to be ,pbt at the head ol the new government. The demand of the crown has named iy en, end leave it to the vltdmoT the Court to require a - wfifttementi'or extension of the act of accusation. The raviUiaMaruMt that is the party d'Ar toll, and the ministry, have united To ob'taTn this extension ; In other words, to play over again the part of the-convention. and Hobespierre. The Alinistera have even condescended to visit per sonallythe Peers, and especially the members of the Committee, to engage-them to-support the organs of the crown in their demand. These intrigues and solicitations have hitherto failed, even though they requested only, at last, 'the accusation of three deputies, M. La Fayette, M. D'Argenson, and M. Corselies, member for Lyons. The members of the committee of Peers have refused to receive indirect or second 26th uU. was a magnificent spectacle For us to witness the manner in which the governors delivered their powers Into the hands of the Na tional Congress was most grateful and affecting. The public joy was unbounded. The five per sons chosen for the executive government are men who give general satisfaction., Commis sioners are appointed in every branch of admin Istration, until a new code of laws Is established. The plan of our new constitution, composed of 3Carticles7hai been presented tothc Cortes by the commissioners appointed for that purpose.- It is as liberal as any nation can wish for the King, has. no povferj and it makes Portugal a complete republic; rOne of the articles! on the liberty of the press, has been three days under discussion, and met great opposition from the bishops, and some.of tbedergy, who are' mem ber of the Cortes their objection being relative to the points of religionbut finally decided that the press shall be free in every, respect , - We shall tTourisTfaml without doubt rprosperr- It it astonishing to see how many men of talents have appeared in the country. Yesterday a schooner arrived here, having on board three deputies for the Cortes, from Ma- The King has sent orders to all the ports, di recting that the free commerce bctwen Portugal ami the Brazils shall not be interrupted, y American vessels now get cleared immediate ly by the Health Office, which is kept open at all times, that vessels may suffer no detention. hand evidence. v A" motion. wasj how'ever"raade in the chamber of Peers, with closed doors, by M. Desexe,the defender of Louis XVI. and se conded by the Duke FiU-James. The most vio lent debates ensued. Count Semonville, the Crande Refelendaire, a warm royalist, declared, that to push the accusation as far as was deman ded by the government, would be to endanger the throne and the monarchy. s The Ultras pre-i tended, that after the expression of the request of the government, they ought not to shrink be fore certain namet, and denounced, as pusillani mity, the refusal to attaint the chiefs of the con spiracy which agitated Europe. The liberal Prm contended, most victoriously, aeainst these am of violence, and so many royalists joined them, that there were against the accusation 101 voten, and for the government only 52. M De eze, who made the motion, it is said, declared, that, since they could not obtain the accusation in tnas, they would resume it in detail. The Pens holding places under the court and under the Princes, voted for the supplemental act of ac cusation. The Minister of War was absent, but the two Ministers present, the Duke de Riche lieu, and General Lauruton, voted for the accusa tion. Two cousins and a nephew of General La' Fa ette voted also for this measure, which was designed to secure his an-esujion, and If tosiiJLll,r ble, send Mm to-tfiguOTotine. Judge of the'Lj uornu aiaic oi anairs. Thf Peers, from whose honesty, in the main, especially considering they feel they are an ille gal court, much is to be hoped, are now employ ed in examining the charges against each indi vidual, and deciding whether they are to be liber ated or put on their trial. About half of those examined up to this time are liberated. The explosions are to give life to all these iniquitous proceedings. There areour police in the Cha teau, and, therefore, the ihing does not concern th" public it is their own plot. They alk. of Prevotal Courts, c. r ranee is surte charbon Extract ft the FJttort" of tftr Franklin Gntetlr, ditto! liio, tiB. 17, 1821. " The Cortes arc now in session. They have before them the constitution, the substance of which I send you in the Gazette called The Con ttitutional. It is nearly as liberal as our own, (the American.) I hey have already abolished all the privileges of the nobles, and established the liberty of the press. -The debates on the li- ocrty ol the press were very interesting, i nc final vote was for civil liberty, 68 to 8 ; for reli gious liberty, 48 to 36. The press is entirely free. ' '1 he Cortes conduct their proceedings with much dignity and unanimity. Madeira has declared for the revolution, and sent three depu ties to the Cortes. 1 hey have been received with every demonstration of joy. It is with great pleasure I inform you that all the vexatious im positions and expenses have been abolished with regard to the quarantine on American vessels from the United sutcs. The government ga zette, which i send, contains some interesting debates. ' hey have translated here, and are now selling, the constitution of the United States and the declaration of independence " A Berlin artist, Mr. Cbas. P. Rummer, has impres subject more forcibh upon the mind than the mode hitherto adopted, and is consequently admirably calculated for geographical instruction. GREAT BRITAIN. Nothing can be more contradictory than the re pi t'stntations of the state of Great Britain, made bv the ministerial orators and writers on the one hid, and those of the opposition on the other. Ail is Spring with the members and adherents Ol rtaminisiniuon an itucr wiui uic wnii. An intellk'cnuwriler in the London l imes savs, with taxes and poor-rates amounting to Hear seventy millions per annum a civil list and a church establishmept : the most extravagant in Europe, and nine hundred millions of debt, we are not willing to be consoled by the declaration ' of any minister of finance, that for many years to come he does Dot intend to burden us with new taxes. ': ' '" ' " v- Mr. Curwen, a distinguished member of the House of Commons belonging . to the acrricultu ral interests, be Id the following language in the debate of the 24th January, 1 82 1 : - .-" When he looked to the state of agriculture, he would ask, could the noble Lord Castlereagh be really ignorant that the agricultural interests were in" ro wretched acondition, that even no abatement would after some time, induce "the cultivators ofjthe land Ippnwjth their labors. " It was impossible that the country could go on and pay the enormous taxes with which it was burthened; how, indeed, could it be expected that with an income so decreased, such an over .. grown system of taxation could he discharged The whole landed property of the country at 25 y wrs' piiTchasc ccmld not meet the demand upon us. i he poor rates had increased beyond al . precedent ; it was calculated that this tax alone , was adequate o the whole rental of the country Petersburg Intelligencer. IJSTERLSTIXG, FR 0.1 PORTUGAL. Extract or a letter, dated Lisbon, Feb. 16. Yousare already acquainted with the orderly manner in .which our revolution begun ; and I have now to inform Vou of the hanov brhn-ri . . , . - - . . - Ti r--p - VioiwestVc. IN'CEKDIARIES AGAIN. NoaroLC, AraiL 12. Another attempt wss made to fire the town of Portsmouth,on Wednesday night, about hall past 9 o'clock, by depositing a ouintity of ignited ma terials in a house on Mr. Joseph Porter's build ing wharf. Happily it was discovered In time to prevent the meditated mhc!,!;f. It was observed by a negro, who says he t ' a white roan, wear ing a aurtout coat, run away Uom the spot on his Contlderlno the hour, and the circumstance of the superior court being then engaged.whh the trial of Castilano, it would not be itllo suppo sition to suggest that the wfctchTwh made this diabolical attempt is a colleague of that criminal a, and that his object was to give him an opportu nlty of escaping in the . confusion whlchoujd naturally have ensued, if his plan had not been defeated. ero """ The trial of Joseph Detnar Garcia Castilano, one of the two Spaniards, charged with the mur der of Peter Laguadette, in this borough, on the 20th March, came on yesterday before the supe rior court in Norfolk county, which commenced its session at Portsmouth on Tuesday last. The court room was crouded to overflowing at an early hour. Eighteen witnesses were examined on the part of the prosecution, which was conduct ed with great ability by general Robert B. Tay lor, Mr. Nimmo, the attorney for the common wealth, being too much indisposed to discharge the 'duty." After'' an eloquent speech of about two hours, in which he summed up all the evi dence In the cause, gen. Taylor was answered by Albert Allraand and Wm. Maxwell, Esqrs. coun sel for the prisoners. The defence occupied more than three hours, and was managed with all the ingenuitv and zeal which the nature of the t.ase would admit of, or the humanity of the coun sel could inspire After an able charge from judge Parker, the jury retired about 12 o clock, and in "bout ten minutes, came into court with a verdict of u ouilty of murder in the first deorke M The ptisoner heard his sentence without emotion, and was then escorted to his prison. The trial of Manuel Philip Garcia, will take place to-morrow. ib. SECOND TRIAL FOR MTRDER. Manuel Fnlii Garcia, was yesterday put upon his trial at the bar of the Superior Court of Nor folk County, as an accomplice with Demar Jotrfih Garcia Cattilano in the murder of Peter Lagua dette. As this case was included with that of Castila no in the same bill of indictment, and the wit nesses were the same, there could of course be Klit little rr nn 4tvrWir'Kitivn tVim rvr r! in tr recently. pttfcuhr .OIwts.htynuiBa.lta ctKJGen. Tayloagaln appeared i assist. bkiir-xcuted m relief. This method impres-7. n. rv.,n.i tn thZ nrrt,tinA nnrt m... aii mand and Maxwell as Counsel for the prisoner : but as the cause was to be tried before a differ ent jury, it became necessary to go on as mi nutely with the examination of the witnesses and the pleadings of Counsel, as at the preceding trial. The receiving of evidence occupied the Court from 12 till 5 o'clock in the afternoon ; and the pleadings were not concluded until 1 o'clock this morning. 1 he jury then retired, and after an absence of precisely six minutes, returned and rendered a verdict of Guilly of Murder of the hrtt degree The prisoner, on learning the purport of the verdict, exhibited a considerable degree of emo tion, not so much, as it appeared to us, the effect ot grief and despair, as of chagrin and disappoint mcnt, the result of a fallacious confidence he had all along indulged in the inefficacy of our laws to punish capitally upon presumptive evidence Not so much from a disposition to doubt the ius- uce oi me veraici, asirom me laiiure ot the able Counsel he had employed to effect his acquittal 10. MORE COUNTERFEITING We deem it proper to caution our readers against counterfeit Five and Ten dollar bills of the Bank of Cape-rear a number of which we understand are in circulation, and are so well executed as to deceive good judges of Bank pa per. We have now before us a five dollar bill of the Bank of Cape-Fear, which has been sent to the bank and condemned, and was leturned a day or two past from Fayetteville to a friend here ; the following extract from the letter in which it was transmitted will evince the opinion of the wri ter as to the accuracy with which the represen tation of the true bill has been preserved : " I his, says the writer, " is the first bill of the kind I have seen, and is so like the original . ii at irs i i . i a - T. Dote .i snouia myseu nave Dccnaeceivea oy it. Several of this kind, and of ten dollars nearly of a similar plate, have.been presented at the bank lately.". -If several have recently been presented at the bank in North Carolina, it is probable that many are in circulation, and our reader Ivill do well tobe guardetl aeainst-them. The one now before us is dated,' Wilmington, 1st Jan'yi 1814, No. 466, payable to J. Adam, or bearer John London LPresident,and R.Bradley, Xasbier.. The paper and plate are a good representation of the true bill, and would not rca lily be suspected in the ordinary course of business. I he bill is ieft at the Augusta Bookstore for the inspection of any persons who may wish to examine it. " Aug. Adv. .. ..'.xaox.xaX' -xl-oaIvB--'-'-, " Iinhortant . I' he particular property of the Colchicum seeds in allayint irritation of the winuuiuc, lungs, kc. anu inereuy rcmovine ine causes of the asthma, consumption, Sec. is the grcaicsi uiswvcry xnax nasoeeu maue m raeui? cine. It appears by the last . number of the Monthly Gaz. of Health, that a few doses of sy r up will effectually remove the symptoms of i ...... t ttsiniua, anu arrest incipient consumption, anu in a few days it will restore the patient to health 4 and that the wirie of the seeds', combined with an alkali, as speedily cures ecut and rheumatis'm. So extraordinary has been the salutary effects of these new remedies in those diseases, that the editors do not hesitate to. pronounce them speci fic. j Thev other information this popular, me dicali dietetic, and philosophical iournal contains Iparticularly the-exposltion of literary ciuacke'm TUESDAY, MAY 1, 1821. utTbc co-partnership heretofore suWuting between the subscribers; U this day, by mutual consent, diMohed, All persons, t!ierifure, who are. Indebted to us, either by book, or otherwise, will, it U Loptd,-cW their accoumi aaiwnp()sslbte,7rr7Tt:-;; J..kmi)Ei .Jfrlmt. ; ; , BINGHAM. .... f ..J . y ' yVV;f-URflJA'GEMFJfTi - From a Western Paper, Stop laws, (or laws Tor suspending the usuaj process for enforcing the payment of just debts!) are not so mcern arTnany thinteTheywfcre frequently attempted among the Romans tbey were-desired bv the maioritv, or rather br the prpfligateramong- themrand a$r theumer of whose Immediate interests werVfo be Relieved were not loud m their resistance to theilnjustice ot which they were to reap the benefif." A pop ular government is calcuhted to bring forth the noblest virtues and qualitiei TbTraalbut there is no perfection on earth ;;and where tne ruling part w'tnwpopatat "government Is touched in its in terests, unfortunately injustice isioo little regard ed.- - There is no difference between denying: the debtor what is due to him when he i entitled to demand it, and depriving him of it altogether. The only fair reUef to the debtor it a bankrupt law ; u a r vui rmacT y m property to oe aivtaea o mong hit creditor. The contracts between indi viduals should be held sacked, and if the suffer ings of. any portion of the community are so great ana general as to require legislative re lief, it can only be done by a loan, if the means ot the government suffice for the purpose. From the Petersburg Intelligencer! Gen. L. B. Mitchfli., at, the head of the Creek Agency, Georgia, has been dismissed the public-service by the president of the U. States, The underilgjied )iaving become the joint and sole owners of the etubllshment of the WiVteh CAifouxiiitilt UllI in future beonductcd under 1 the firmof Oixqium & White. i In announcing this changetbe undersigned beg leave to add, thaas they are both regularly bred PrhUers, and i'y birth and in principle Amer icanli they- jhobc. to renief.it an'adyanUg'eouT " one.., Under rthy late Yrrangementi' but'oiie of the partners was an active one and, consequent ly, all the duties,' editorial and others, devolved exclusively upon hiraf; under the present, the time, and labors, anexerdonsvof jwd will be unremittingly employed toWndeT Die CAkoW kiaw, as far as their limited means' will permit, deserving of public patronage and support, and not disreputable to the character, and talent, and literary taste of the Wmt. vm. ninth iuv; Jiwuttv U UMMICU aiCIUlUH, an unceasing derotednesj cm the!rjart, they are fully sensible if these alone arelo be depended on, their paper cannot assume that elevated charac ter which they wish, and which the interest and respectability of the WESTjrequre.. cThey so licit, therefore, with confidence, the correspon dence of literary gentlemen ; of the clergy, to whom a portion of our little folio wilialways be cheerfully devoted ; of the politician of the ag riculturist ; and, in brief, of all who can contri bute, in any way,to add interest and pleasing va riety to our columns. Should the Musx " wake her wood notes wild" in our native groves, and tunc her voice to song, we promise that her strains shall not die away in air. On the conclusion of the present volume, we shall enlarge, the. j?ages of the Carolinian, so as to enable us to addxonsiderable to the quantity of matterThich lheyarprescnt contain: It is not unfrequently the case, that as the patronage and, emoluments of a newspaper increase, its character and value decrease in an inverse ratio: We know the uncertainty and impolicy of lirom ties generally; but notwithstanding, we shall hazard little, we think, in trpmiting that such shall not be the history of the Carolinian. LEMUEL BINGHAM. PIIILO WHITE. . 44 We cannot resist the temptation," said a classical and accomplished American writer, on a similar occasion, " to cite a pertinent passage from one of the wisest of mankind. The opiiuon'cf King Solomon is not only per fectly just, but his fortification of it is impregnable : ' Tvt are better' than one; because thkt havk a good re ward roa the ta labor. For if they fall, the one will lift up lis fellow i but wo vnto him that it alone vhen h faUethfi for he bath not another to help 1dm.' " i r j v W trifth wmp nfmir nrarlial flrir wntdd jfind leisure to furnish us occasionally j if not re-" ' gularly, an essay for our Agricultural Depart ment. Some of them, undoubtedly, have dared to deviate from the beaten road ; and the results of their experiments and a statement of their im provements will be of no inconsiderable interest. To poiht out defects in our present system of husbandry, to state facts, and to suggest new methods of cultivation as -will increase the quantity and quality oi our products with a de creased quantum . dMabor ; in short, to contribute in any Way to the improvement of the agricult ural interest of our state, or country, is not onljr ? delightful, but a dignified and honorable employ ment: an employment so dignified, and noble, and patriotic, that it could entwine an additional laurel arbiind the brow of xyen-tlieillostrious Washington, the American Cikcinxai: It Seems that our silence latterly, on the sub ject of a Convention, has been most unexpect edly and unaccountably attributed to a diminution of patriotic spirit and to a less lively interest in the politicargrievances of the West ! Hovr this unjust imputation could have been cast on us, after the few remarks we made in our 37th No., in respect to the very silence which' is now com plajntdjrf;.anto referred to highljr ? Snterestlnffi wir tij- irm-t, (W ---