. -7-3 ir 1- '" ; 'XV -r r. -,tt r-r .w" --""'Mr" . -wi . , s.v . ,. T v". ' ' . . I ' .1 may act a tbev sJ.flll judxe inot pro M- la ouvelle Melini and JtzureuA &r rr "e iiicr.cls ol- CThcj ' Jleioar werelmr-rte'Jialely "tfisu tbVinU !-' L,tere 1 16 W4 Wnam$ j;t!iC0oi tl the ah of 'fnyy-a Inrcjcr cai :o o j missioners appcuuta uiiucf iuo resu w flour Indian corn. .and. wheat. ent h- nion,l x M K3 nard, in th name of ti e Pari UMrinct! Ypsilapttfurer, i!ile of A Genoa, and Hague: Commit teeid . PT protests against the above reached NHpofi di Homanis, and ,njf J aet r Government. "In Inking df pom f id in "lU Governmeut store? ' l,ie resolution to asfc the exclusive in houses. T? h II u 2-00 Committee, hav i lervention of the Knglish AuibttMitiln1 to arrange the auairs ofGreeco, ' National Assembly (fie says) depart from its duties, aud is wanting in the object of its union. It was not to an nul the Independence rf Greece, hut to consolidate and perpetrate it, that the nation confided to you its full powers. Doe9 the fall nf Missolong hi frighten you?i Confide, as in the leiuniogj of the rugs;ei to(the tvell- ad! d 10 000 francs t the stun of OOQ franc previously given. At liei " 1 mi . 'ho wul)criptioi)g produced 520 000 Iranca to the Parii Committee. New -fork, July 31. Mr. Randolph arrived at Liver pool on the 14th of June, and on th i5'h accompanied Mr. Huskigsunl, i.i. i . 1 i- . 1 I "l.-' uuouuu uui.es ami gem emen , known euerev ont' n-itriot.i of the On A HlPiimliiiAt ft Yiiiritiiii M r lil . rw,.-' . r ' .. ' . . , 19, a second Missolonglti. Do you appeared highli gratified with the at i. -i . 1. tcuunii miiicii wan nam 10 mm. nilin.A.i .a Ann..i... .t,--. at near MIlu.wnTOl .iV...iLr .f.lL ' ue deal we neea protecnoo- ciaim it of every Chriijjan nation: our ac ?! tual situation and (heirs guarantee us U..n. ,w! rPPeived in a manner! ""'rW 11 " in cn.ai juuc b. ' .. ii'. ri.l turea that prpfit nslinna iirwf true rit mnai ikva Dnnvinipii nun in inri c? hM. P.timalinn in which he is held! lPn! 8hoW h'"1"- !t "y l f ... .Wall tirvioa In liu a alnva hnl it la lifli 1.., i.ta Mnn.t.nint r. h --snojte an "v " " IPnotL. anLlhenCnve the healthll cult o become free. To arrtsi if ,ou - .. 'i. wish neaee.'. &c. r ed with 'liift'i fvr some lime The health of His Majesty wa drank with three time thrc.-: afie whirh Mr. Huskisson's health wa of Mr LUndolphwJio, in returning d"ne ) him, adver ed in tern.9 of "e w"Mruet pre se, to the institutions of Cir ut Britain. He then spoke -f Ci hhetf, and aid. that he r niidcrrd th Cuhtiett had qualified himself for a M'Ht in the British Moose of Cm KOBKU T MOIHM.S. It ho often Ik'pp anked, "Vho were the favorites of Wain notour whom did he lov V I aisvver the most wortliy WnthirigJoe lived for hi couotr?,' and for so much did he Hive in . - IM. - mi me SHiiif ia uiai s"mf u 1 nii moVp,' nil nutot ho the ' if soi r-.jM.me qnalifiMl for a jiig ,)at wieo Je tevi.d a malI thal situation in the MHjrdalenJVsjIum. mall mUgt love hit cduntry. ' i'j la the war orindependpnce Green Nrw-Yohk, Aug. 2. I'y.tlie lirigiwas his HephestioD, yet such was his Ttn,' vifiieli arnved yesterday in j delicacy iti- hestowiug praisereven 3S d from Havre, we were favored; where most deserved, that he ueclin- to inclusive. iucnt. So much wtxs this, a nmUer f ifourne, that the st vuitl havii u Urst placed Mr. aurlt wine at fiieplute imriiediatcly on the rlht ol the chief, would repair tirthe dwell .tig of Morris and observe 'Tbe President dines with a select paity of ' 1 end u to day, and expect your tom miny an usual." . ..When Mr Morris. first Vengaged in f hose speculations uTijeh "terminated so unlifppil y, NV'ushington, with the privilege of sincere frieiuUhip, re mnnitraled, observing, You are old, and had better retire, rather than en gage in such extensive concerns " .Morris replied. "ur advice is a proof of that vindom and prudence which govern all your words and ac hons; but, my dear eeneiul. I can never do things in the suml); aius! J icirales. amkiucan coxvkmmov.?,;. 'X The following notice has just been, coinmuuicatf d fr pulilicaliun in the detuus of uiiiersul ijinatieiiatiou; ,iuu 1 he. editors of Newspapers gen erally, in the United btaiei, iire rt (juesi'd by the Secretaries to insert it tor the information of the public at large. To the Abi.litioii and Mjiniiii ss'.ori SocietiC 111 tlio LrDiicJ stales. An adjourned meeting of the l'Jtb biennial Kesioti of "Amencau CJnu veuijon for promolittg the Abolition of Slavery, aud improving the condi tion of the African race," will be held at Baltimore, Mary iund, on the 2jth day of October (10th month) next. I host? Sucielies not heretofore re presented, are requested to seud J)e- is;: either he a man or a vwu&e " In TT08, when the lieutenant gen eral and commnuder in chief repair ed t 0 rh 1 1 ade I p h 1 a to superintend the orgHmzation of his last army, un Bv order of the Convention Heciok Coffin 5 Sretanes. "J Extract from tfieConstitution of tht ConventToii. "The Convention shall be compos ed of such representatives as ,he re- proper to appoint; provided that the riitl uvonwit tun mindful of ihef diffnity,iMea!th and splendour which crowded to greet his arrival, he paid his first visit to the prisbn hxuse and Robert. Moiris. The, speolive Societies, atsociated to pro old man wru.it ihe handof lhe chief I tect th,e right of free persons v color in silence while hU tearful eye gave! or to promote the abolition of siaverv the welcome to audi '.A home The within the Untied Stttcs, may think mouse was indeed, in his iron uouiid oagebiU iu4heUiJeU States of AT ineriea, lor viorns to nave necn un priBin''d in diameter, the bars should have been oj' gold. How is this, A inerieans? Is it not the comhmna tion f M anlius oh Ihe Capit ) ine Hill: a crime which the heathen Uo man dared not commit! The finan cier of the revolution, whose talent and credit sustained the cause of his country, in that country's utmost need Whatever may have been his mis fortune say his faults, hid not his generous services "plead like angels trumpet tongued, egtiihst the deep Lawrenebufg.IndJu!y22. Dan e! Fuller, of U-orgoiown in this county, understanding that a sto ry prejudicial to his mural character, had got in circulation, went to the house of . Golden, (his father-in-law,) with a paper, written in the form of a libH, and insisted on two ywung girls (Miss G.ohleoa) to sign it, charging them with circulating the report, liavnl Uoltlen, their brother, a youth f 18 or 19, deeinine Fuller'i T' HtppIc fnmmittPA ot Puri. have received intellicenee that ,. prayed that his comrades might re Greeksrund-r the command of Niei-rVP t!l.ll,r Wl;I,-ear,u't, eominenda t ninred Tritinlii7.a on ilm i.iih A' tion.---ik on, sir. ar. consnfered in Mav. lhe n..,ts of Ibrahim to sue-!l.his Qrm)' RS m fttV0.rilp offirerj your to thai illustrious commander who) grey hnSrs descended in sorrow , to the grave, how was. the lust duty paid t k.. cor that turned to Patras, after sufier ing considrrablc losses. (Sen, IJoche has addressed to the , Greek Cnmnijttee at Paris the follow ing documents Resolutions of the Eighth National Assembly at Epiilaurns. .. "His I'hcelleney the British Am hassudor at ('onstanMnnple is requo ted to treat for peace between the Ot toman Porte and the Greeks, on the following conditions, viz: 1. No Turk shall be permitted to inhabit the Grecian territory, nor to hold any property in Greece. 2. All the fortresses in the poises sion f the Turks shall be given up to the Grefks. 3. The Sultan shall have no influ ence on the internal organization nf ,the country, nor on the clergy. 4. The Greeks to have a sufficient -- force for the safety of the interior. anda marine for the protection of its " Commerce.' . 5 That they shall be governed by ixr2tbehme regulations und enjoy the .same rigl ts ;n t lie Peloponnesus, the CKiitineiii of Greece, t he Islands of 5, JJubi a, C'andie,and the Archipelago &tijll) 'be Provinces that have token up inms, and (hut have been incorporated in the Creek Govern meit. (I. '1 hat the artie'es mentioned ir. the present ect, cannot be change ! h he Aniliassador, nor by the Ciiin rn'ission named by the National As sembly to correspond vtith the Ambas sudor. k 1, I I c Greeks shall preserve their .OVUl flg ; j 8. They shall have the right to division is composed of Southrons my morn immediate countrymen. Such are my reason It has been thought that fertwin vivacious persnnnges, as G vi run' Morris and General Henry L e, were in (he habit of taking libfrticn with the Chief. Around the F.i'her of hi Country, his virtues and character ceated an atmosphere of awe and veneration, in which i:ndue familiari ty could not have existed for a mo ment. N men living were more ar den'lv attached to the Chief than the It- votutiooary Statesman and distiu guished ofiicer alluded to. They him we owed o much? -How many nfthuse-.- ho had bnsked in the sun ine of his prosperity, fed at liis ever hospital hoard, and dniok ol his ever (lowing cop, fillowi d his h"ire. Whert were the -corporate, where the long jrains of youth who were led up to pay their last, homage to the rp?6t'.s benefactor THOMAS NELSON Another and most valued friend of the chief, was Nelsen, of Virginia, designed the Declaration of Indepcn; dence, and was a patriot statesaiao'a and sntiiier. .t' . At the commencement of the war of the revolution, . General 'Nelson possessed a noble fortune; he lavished it in the cause of liberty. From his possessed brilliant tateuts, had ren- personal virtues, he -had the most seeiitelhe girls for slander, and star ted for home. Golden took his gun and followed him On coming up with Fuller he enquired if he really intended to prosecute the girl5.,Ile said he did Golden then observed. 1 will stop you," nnd immediately presented his gun, which tnist fire. He then tried the l gun ft second time, wheu it went off and wounded F in the side. Fuller picked up a club and threw ai G. and then went for his house, were he arrived before be fell. Golden turned aud went a short distance to a fence, reloaded his gun, and, with the assistance of the rum V01I, shot hims' If in the breast Sur gical aid was proeurtd as soon as nhs'sible, but in vain. D ath, with iron g'Msp, was fust drawing them to the embrace of the grave. Bath ex- dered conspicuous services, nnd were j commanding influence in the mo1 t pleasurable companions of he exerted it in rallying her sons,' .: Tl - Tl .1 l X r , . .. , d 'P'red on the 15tb, in the morning, a u;e st.?5 bou; the same time. Fuller, at his ItA anna 1 7 r, . " a . i . v j. j. , ... , iiitii in uva , mis iiucircu yy up SIUO These considerations, when a powerful foe invaded her soil. .lf- a l.ii ,i, .., ; , . ' I I A Pli iPf. Wl It U'nii avaaiitail ii, liu. " '" i unu Ul 11119 place, some time since. Fuller bad a their time. together with the absence of restraint at the private parties of the President, gave rise to the idea that there were certain characters who could ap proach without reserve, and even toy with the passive lion. But the lion, though passive, was the lion still. He could always "he approached, and sometimes m sportive mood but not so near as to lay hand upon his mane. If I am asked And did not Wash ington unbend and admit to familiari ty, and social friendship, some one person, to whom ajn and long and in Mis waight of character enabled him to unlock the coders of avarice, and give their boards to th aid of the country, when that country had nei ther a dollar in her treasury, nor cre dit to obtain one. His plough was left in the furrow that his horses might drag our niuuitions of war: and when invited by La Fayette, to point the guns of a new battery at York, he directed them against the best house in t .-wn, because it was JiiT own pa ternal mansion, and was supposed to contain the enemies of his country. coin money. V). The amounr of tribute shall he jjxed, mi d ' the mode ot payment he annual, or be id loll. 10. That a truce shall be grnnted. A nd i case- of Jt h e - r f usa I A 1 1 e Tortf to acccdfito4 these propesa-'s th commission ('rnay. it.ddrtss tl ei teTvTrisrtm teresting association gave peculiar jSuch were the virtues and services of privilege, the privilege of the heart? i I horns Nelson. Having lived to I answer, that favoured individual witness the consummation of that In dependence, which his pen had -signed and bis sword had earned, he closed was Kobert Morris. The General in chief of the Armies of Independence in the relief afl'orded i his eyes in peace, leaving a very nu- ot the privations ot his sulleririg sol- merous faintly, and a fortune greatly dicry, first learned the value, of Ho impaired hy the vast sacrifices be hail belt Morris. It was he who brought order out of chaos, and whose talent -4am credit sustained the cause of his country in the nrst-of'Jtiuies. V i rr iucs and services like these endeared their possessor to li e paternal chief, in whose heart the financier of th rrvoiutinn held an esteem ivhich nei her time nor misforluno toujd alter L'.r.JSI1?-1 ': v r. Morns was ever a guest arthe privtuc aud select parties of the Pre- uiiide lor American liberty And will the 9rtu?ri can reader believe, that the widaw of such a patrjot and such a man. lives in Yirginin, on which the lam and character of Nel son sheds unlading lustre that this youerible relict, now on the verge. of in iuiatilife, blind and poor, has yet to learn whether an emancipated ouiitry a n -bejustj murelfraft forty veaTsjiot having sullieed to show her wuetacr n cau on zraieftiu i family, who are thus hastily bereft of a husband, father, brother and uncle. Valiad um. The following is an extract of a letter received in this City from an authentic source at Carthagena, dat ed 3d of July: "There has been a very severe shock nf an earthquake at Bogota, which has destroyed some, oqd injur ed many, of the best hotiseis- The loss of property is computed, in some letters, at half a million of dollars. The country in the neighborhood has likewise suffered severely, and it is supposed that the shock has extend ed nlong the Northern range of the Andes, and that Venezuela has also suffered. ' The same letter stales that the Fe ver has considerably abated at Car aeeas Jat,,Int. v On Tuesday, the 23th ulU'at Phil adelphia, a fVatchman was bound overby Alderman Christian, to an--swer at the next Mayor's Court, for having given another Y'atc'hiban a shatieiigtf -Trtgin V(dnerrwun(teatin,i- weapons, coutrarv to li e ac! of Ai". ' sentuly, lecc. I ... ' Jul. M 1 4t 'A rope to usk-aid and piueciiu)i, m. 1 ... . - ssbbs-ws! r . . . . ' . ... asoT7Z - I