Newspapers / Newbern Sentinel (New Bern, … / March 23, 1822, edition 1 / Page 2
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-s b.nillet! three nu.iihs before, and J j J t ie Km proteciia i.i hi pock- A faithful tiepeuJa.it threw him self before li:."f-mnter, ta save his life, 1 y the sicrifice of his o.m, bat the ball Killed bjtli ! The bodies of the t.n Mit aad depen J i:its weresurrouudeJ, cnJ every man butchered that was fju.id Thir!vcqht persons tvere thus sur- -lised in tlieii bed, and hanied into lernily, without a rnjmcnts warning t ) breathe a propitiatory prayer, by liie blo3jy.ii iti ! ite ofrb ruyai 'friend :if cicll and religious litjcrty ! The iV.t;'n wa M mtrder all ranks under ?wntif that lived in the vaMey, to the umber of abaat txo hu.t Irtd ; bat vj:ne efthe tLtachm'mti of the mur derers did not arrive in time to secure tiie pisses; to that about l6) made their escape. Campbell, fie hypo ttitiir.l fiend Campbell, having per petrateif this biutal missacre, ordeied all the houses to be B"HNF.r. and made h prey of the cattle and effects. Such ol th- women and children as had not di:d of fright, or been BL'iciiEritfD by .mi si axe, were turned ou. naked at the dead if nijht, a kcn freezing nijit, into a wasiecovered with snow, -i t t!ie ditnce of a'tx inhVs from any pl.ice of shelter. The morning dis co vt-red rhiity-eiht bdies drawn out n the ruins, and the voinin Wtrre io ;iiera found either starced to death, or expiring with their children, under rocks aid hedges I This horrid bu una irt$ never effectually inqjired t". . The murderers tecrc not pun ished. The authir of the rr.irdtrs rat never tailed to any aero tut. 'I he King siti it w as ax ovi:r:i;.i r. It v.-as a m ich greater oversight, to re main in pvse$Mon of the ch'tnee of Coiu:niltin S'trh uttttcr. It is diffi cult to conceive which Avas the ra ore critniu il the Kinp who ordered ui'ir iler to be com iitttd unimt his . oath to aJninlster justice to ull or the' vill ai.'is who couamMtod marder in his came, after havi:iHu!led all suspicion f their infernal business, by by p criti cal professions and after a treatment which would hae disarmed tieisof iheir fury. With lhi, and other b'ot, upon the exoitisii of leg iti nale p'r.c trsf let us hear no more of iaob-o- verr.ment," or " mo'-law." Wh en the people are forced into resistance by intolerable outrages, their exci'td passions prompt, and even txeme their violence. 'I "hey oirly copy the cruellies they hive bi-en taught, and the ferocities tint have been ex ercised towards thrm. Rut Govern ments have no such excuse. Kin- bave no such upoloV and hen they establish these sdiools of barbarity, they have no right to complain ll they ure rivalled by their pupils and fall victims o the cruellies which ihey have recommended by their example Fro m the Satio.tul' Gazrfte. COLOMBIAN REPUBLIC. Gentlemen, have just-read in your paper of Tuesday lat an article from the Charleston Mercury, in which i: mit forth, as- news brought from the 4i Spansh lain," by the united States' schr. Gra::iptis, that 44 The foreigu ad venturer, who had entered the Patriot service, were re garded by the natives with a very jealous eye. They are put uon the Severest duty oft very kind,and the dis position of the people is to rid them selves wf thera as soon as possible. The Uiitlsh LcciOf "ho had distin Ctiibel themselves so much as to have rtceived thetlianks of -Genera! Rolivar at the head of his army, w as I educed to about three handreil men, imd had embaiked uith the army des tined to net against Maracavbo. Gen eral Dcvpreux, the former coiyman clerofthe Legion, is under arrrst at Caraccas for hone ich7pp;'iig the l ice President of the Congress of Colum lia. 44 The Congress had adjourned foi three years." !Sow, 'gentlf-men, I have the satis faction to state to you that every little of this intelligence trom the Charles ton Mt rcuiy is Juke. The LnglLh und Irih who enlisted themselves un der the plorious iand.tr J of tle Col cn;bin Republic, and who. through every hardship have to this day te maiiuHl tine and faithful to the cause, of i.iJpndenceand liherty. are not i eluded by the natives with a very jealous ee"J on the contrary, they have been tieated liberully and affec tionately, umi tar from a disposi tion on "the part cither of the govern- lid themselves of them assooi; as posi- hie," seveial of them, according to j meir respective merits and services, have been appointed to high, honour able confidential and lucruiive situa tions. This I shall prote to you by ! rvidence not to be questioned, when I wait on vou wiU this communion- tion. The Dritih Legion, that is the JLrHbh aud UUh corns which (ov-hty aon?U.!-, under the genera! tXiIe of British at Carabobo, and are now united und r t!ie distinguished and e.tvbbte appollition of El Batall6n de Carabobo' could nst have been sent against Maracaybo,in as muclias that place has been for more than a : var in the endisnuted possession of' the Independent urmy, and forming i an inteirul part of the Republic The English and Irish are not put i upon the severest dutv of everv kind, every branch of; tnem. jn me a,c nor u ooii an v duty not common to the rage amount of a jear of war, when native troops and to all troops in all we supplied the continent, and the ' countries iu lime of war. wSiole trade of the world almost cen- ! On the particular service in which tered in this country, the imports .did j :!iey are now engaged they were not I not exceed 60,000,000 ; and m t.ie i sent contrav to iheir wish they vol- current year it is estimated that they uattcred, as thev have upon every will not tall snon oi m.u .i.uu.. j occasion where honor was to be reap- more than one or two millions, ed or service to the Republic to aV It appear that 500,000 bales cot rendered. The service they are now ton ha've been grown in America, do on is not, as 1 have alreadv said, ring the last year, of . which upwards against .Maracavbo, but one o"f great of 300,000 have been exported i mpottauce, which will shortly devel- Kngland, principally to Liverpool and op itself, to the i ief of those who Glasgow. (some ol them u.iiiaturally) would1 It is not more than 23 years ago vis!i to see that splendid portion of ; that we imported iron from Sweden the new world continue under the and Russia, and such has been the as frightful disposition of the old. tonishing iacrease and success of this General D'Cvereus, neccr did, as ( trade, that we are now the largest ex-tai-ft in th ri...rl.cfon IMpi ritrv . ! Dorters in the worl J. horse whip r,e Vice President of the Repub'ic. As a gentleman and a published some months since, the re soldier, he has too correct a sense of p-rt of the House ot Lords on the se!f-re3pectt and of u hat is due to subject. Uy this it appears tuat there the constituted authorities of the has been manufactured in Great br.t cou.itry, to be guiltv of such an out- " during the last year, t Aelve out rage. He never vas under arrest for lions of pounds of silk whicii ' is an such an qfence, nor is he now under excess of iwo millions upon the quan aneM for any ttfence whatever. Il is tity consumed in h ranee, true he had leen under arrest, not for ' 1 the qros offence stated in the Charles ton AI rcury, but for a letter written by him to a late Vice President, a ' pasa ia which was supposed to convey an invitation to fight a duel. For this he was put under arrest and broujht to trial, the honourable tei- mindtio.i of which, you will learn from the official document I enclose you lor publication with this letter which will put c ilumny to the blush. Gen. D'Kvereux is wo, as stated in the Charleston article, in the city of Car- racers. On the 5ih of DeceinbtT last, j i :.i 1. 1.. i i !.:.,( lit; was con-Mieruui v Hutamcu uu uu inarch to Quito to join the President and tlie army in that quarter. The Congress o! Colombia has not ad journed for three years, but for the usual period, namely, from the close of the session hi cue vear, to the com uiencemeut of the vear following. In much then for the accuracy of i vhe intelligence said to have been re ceived by tiie United t ites' schooner Grampus. Kvery letter from General D'Eve reux speaks in the highest and most aflV-ctionate ' terms of his illustrious fiieud,the President, of the Congress, of the civil authorities, the military chiels and people of the country. These, gentlemen, with letters from several of his officers to the snme ef Lct, I can produce to you, and J have onlv to rejMct that there should seem to be a disposition in a part tf the press of the United States to give em ulation to every flying slander on the liepuDiic oi uoiuin.Dia, ana on most who have embarked their lives, in the cause of South American Indepen dence. A reeollection 'of events in the last half century, should have kept alive a disposition and sympathies of a vcrv different nature in the breasts at of the statesmen and riewpaper edi tors' of this republic. . 1 have the honour to remain, gen tlemen, with respect, your obedient servant, An Officer in the service of Colombia From Bell's Weekly Messenger. VIEW OF TIIL TRADE OF GREAT BRITAIN. Our eiports and imports are nearly as high as on an average of any three years during the war; thai is to say, take the average of foreign demand during 1S1I, 1S12 and 1S13, and the average amount of any one of those years will not exceed the exportation of the present year. The average tonnage of Crhish .vhrps duiiun the war was about 2 1-2 millions. Id 1812, one of the best vears, it did not exceed two millions six hundred thousand. Now, in 1821, when the accounts were laid before Parliament (at the beginning of the current yearj the actual tonnage ex ceeded .650,000 an increase of 50, OOOtoHsupon the greatest year of tlie war. In the other head under our navigation, the number of British sea men the numberat present employed, equally corresponds with the amount in thc ureatest year of the war ; the average amount in war being 170,0C0; and the estimated amount of the cur rent year exceeding this amount by nearly one-tenth. The next cent ral head is of course our commerce, bv which we rufan our loreicn fade.'our exports andira- ports. Under this head iikewUe, there ) s the afce p:3isst"2 of the' condition 01 oor navun.ii In the best year of the war, about, the year 1812, thv araSe amouiot of the imports did not; exceed 2jfff whereas in 1S19, lhe' exceeded 3, ,- uuu,uuu,7ina ior me estimated to exceed that sum by four or five millions, j lib respect 10 our ei ports the same lavoraDie siaic oi ; things will be louna i uuyc ' With respwl to the silk trade, we I DRAWING SCHOOL. I1I1E SUBSCRIBER will open JL his Drawing School on the first Saturday in April, at 9 o'clock A. M. at the Academy, where hMvili attend on Saturdays, from ) o'clock in the morning to 12, and from 3 to 5 i:i the afternoon. He will teach the rulKs of perspective, landscape,' painting flowers, Arc. in water coJours ; and drawing with the black Lad pencil and Indian ink. f Terms of teaching, . 4 a qaarter. NATHAN TISDALE. Newbern, .March 2, 1822. '6tf VOW SALE, A FKW CASKS CHOICE BORDEAUX CLAKET. ALSO, Tivo second hand Cchles One 7 1-2, the other & inch. NATH'l. SMITH. March 12, 1822. 2v8 FOR SALE, TIIE HOUSE .LOT ON MIDnLE-STREET, t present occupied by Mr. J. Good ing. A ALSO, , AN UNIMPROVED LOT, OX WATER-STRKET, Adjoining Mr. John Franklin' extensive credit will be given. For terms, apply to ' JOHN OLIVER, or SAME. & JOS. OLIVER. March 9thx 1822. 3w7 House and. Lot for Sale. ilHE HOUSE and LOT ad - joiningthe CollectorU Office and opposite. 'to John Rryan's sq. will be sold on accomnvjda ti n terms. Apply to JOHN W. .GUION. March 16, 1822 '8tf RICHARD N OLIVER, Cabinet Maker, At the old Glebe, Middle street above the Court House, Returns his grateful thanks to the inhabitants of Newbern, and the vicinity thereof, for the encouragement he has received from them ; and hopes by his strict attention to business, and unremitted exertions to . please, to merit a continuance of their favours. He has on, hand, an assortment of ready made' FUR NITURE, and the best mate rials to make any thing that mat he called for, on the most mod erate terms All orders from town or country, will be punctu ally attended to. O He has also on hand, a handsome assortment of Mahog any and other woods, for COF FINS and attends funerals, as usual. Those vhn are so un fortunate as to lose their friends, will find it to their advantage to ! call as above, as he intends re- . i i .1 r "ucingiuc expences increoi so as to be an object to the employers, Newbern, Tan. 5, 1822, .Yeiv Advertisements. ON DKSTI J ION IN the management oi mr uru. of children, it is highly necessary. .-.1 . M. A L that the surgeon should have a a per fect knowledge of tlie order in which tlie teeth of. the permanent set are formed, and of the t'mae when each tooth is expected to pass through the guns. . The formation and, perfection;., of this set of t-eth occupy a ver n.vpur tant portion of our limited existence, no less than twenty years, and more, being necessary lor their complete evolution. Nature begins to attend to the production of these permanent in struments of mastication even before birth, and in'many instances they are not wholly completed before thetwen-tv-filih or thirtieth year. The permanent set of teeth vary murh from the temporary set ; some of the teeth bein? much larger, and others differing much in figure; they .are in number thirty-two, and there fore consist of; twelve teeth more than the temporary set. The falling out of the temporary teeth, to make VV for those which are to be permanent, is commonly cal led the shedding of the teeth: ft is th consequence of one of the most cu rious actions of nature, and is of great importance to our comfort, since the beauty of the face, and the proper ar ticulation of speech, in a considerable degree depend upon the regularity 'with which this part of her work is accomplihed. . . . The i-ecessit v of teeth for the masti cafion of food commences as soon as the time of support from the mother ceases, and therefore a set is provided at a ver early period, which occupies but a few years without falling into a state of decay These teeth are only proportioned to the size of the mouih during childhood, and would conse quently be too small and too few in number for the extentU u state of ue i jaws in the adults ; hence the forma tion of new teeth becomes indispeitSS ble, and according to the manner al ready described, a set of teeth is form ed,ofa magnitude and number propor tioned to" the mature state of the 'body, and intended, from their compact structure, to continue through life. This change of small teeth for larger, and of larger for smaller, points out the necessity of giving some assistance to nature in one of her processes, viz. that of throwing out the temporary teeth before tlie permanent teeth ap pear ; if this be done at a proper time, the teeth will always take a regular position, and 'every deformity arising from irregularity be prevented. Daring the progress of the second dentition, art opportunity presents it self for effecting this desirable object j but every thing depends upon a cor rect knowledge of the time wrhen a tooth requires to be extracted, and the particular tooth ; for oftfn. more injury isoccasionedjbv the removal of a tooth too eaily, thgn if it be suffered to re main a little itoo long; as in the first instance it w'iH sometimes take a di rection more, difficult to alter than a slight irregularity occasioned by an obstruction of short duration. This mode of treatment is not al ways had recourse to at a time when every irregularity might be easily ob viated. Parents most commouly wait until, by an irregular growth of their children's teeth, a manifest deformity is produced, ere they perceive the ne cessity of advice. In cases of ! irregularity during the shedding of the teeth, the treatment to be observed is to remove the obstruct ing temporary teeth, and then to apply pressure in the most convenient man ner, upon the irregular tooth, in order to direct it into its situation. The first permanent morales often become carious soon after they appear: when this is the case, and the other teeth have riot proper room, conside rable advantage always attends their extraction. , Tlieir removal permits the bicuspides to fall lac ;, and gives way for the regular p. skion of -the cuspidati. I " The rembval of these teeth when decayed; ought always to be recom-' mended, although they may not occa sion pain, or there be no irregularity in the front (eeth. Diseased teeth al ways afiect others, and therefore ouirht never to remain in the mouths of chil dren, j On these jaccounts it should always be recommended, when children's teeth have become carious, and occa sion pain, gjim boils, or abscesses, to exiract them, as they not only, very materially injure the health, but also are liable to prevent the formation of the permanent teeth. March 23d, 1S22. BLANKS Of every description for sale at this OJiec. ... . ; r Samuel & Joseph Qiiver OFFER FOR SALE, On accommodating terrnV Hogsheads W. I. RTJM Casks RICE, ' COFFEE in bags, Mess and Prime PORK Goshen BUTTER, ia Vreeding HOES, ia casks. ON COXSIGNEEXT, One Case Men's and Youths j ST HAW HATS. March 23, 1822. 3i'9 THE SUBSCRif H AS JUST RECEIVED TROM B LTl i-jg bbls. FAMILY FLO r 30 do. CORN MEAL, ?r J A DDT T ri li . 18 do. RYE WHISKEY, V Which he cfferi for sale on vert low terms. . JVUliam Du?m March 20 1 822 4t'9 VA.'I'Il"1! P ' 1 1 HE Subscriber being desirous of L closing his business, requests all ihose who are indebted to him, either by note or account, to Vonie'lbm-ari' and settle the same ; and those haviijjj claims against turn, to present them for payment. 4i HE HAS ON HAND, A HANDSOME ASSORTMENT Ot BKYGObM AM) GROCERIES; Which he will sell at reduced prices for Cash or Country Producereither at wholesale or retail. ' John Harvey, Sr. Newbern, M arch 20, 1 822. ?3tf TBS GRAND AND PATR10 J IC SCHEME of the WASHINGTON MONUMENT LOTTERY, . f Js now drawing in the CITY OF BALTIMORE, Under the svperintendance of the Com missioners appointed by the Govnnv and Council of the State of Maryland: THE CAPITAL TRIZES ARE . 30,000 Dollars, V 2(,()()0 Dollars, 10,000 Dollars, 5,000 Dollars, m 5,000 Dollars, " S,0fj0 Dollars, , , 3,000 Dollars, 2,000 Dollars, 2,000 Dollars, 20 of 1000 Dollars. Not two Blanks to a Prize.-The vW payable in Cash. I rUESENT PRICES. Whole Ticket, $10 Half, 500 Quarter, - - -rrhfh. . - 1 & TICKETS & SHARES, Tn thp armiwt variety of numbers,9 be had (warradted tindravnj at COHEN'S Lottery S? Exchange OjM No. 114, Market-street, Baltic0' tl rr.;ta! Prize? hate Either oW'1" Deen soia man i , t0 America ; and' where was so o, gentleman residing in AHffl?f tv Virginia, the Great Capita fn of FORTY TBOUSANPie LARS, drawn a few weeks Grarid State Lottery.-Also,. THOUSAND DOLLAR in the same Lotteey, sent Dj gentleman at Lancaster, , .um SEVENTEEN OTHER V TAf.S, also in the same-- various parts of the bnioo. , ORDERS from any p 0 . hv mail0' ' i United states, euc, ,hec vate; conveyance, ei.w , - n!ff or prize tickets; ,poSl pai". It, ,he me proovp.' ad icalio- tion as il on jicau - addressed to '' J-LCOfIE'- Secry to the Managers, March, 1822. .
Newbern Sentinel (New Bern, N.C.)
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March 23, 1822, edition 1
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