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A, A i - '- rV?K , . . : ' . ,,. . : y v . . - , i : - . '' ;i-CIV.''H;Iwl. OURS ARE THE PLAXS OI? FAIR DELIGHTFUL JE ACE, UNWARp'D BY PAHTY RAGE, TO LIVE LIKE BROTHERS' . ' ' y if X, V JT 't X 1 c By Ma' $iV&. &ou, KnhiK Forth-Carolina. TERMS. T)ottns per aanum;onc half in advance. j ;il.t'th im (if tllb' rhnP Vino " liuucnm.' -v Sfribinj?,or subsequently, give notice oftheir . i h v iniilir.nntinned at the es- ciration of their year.wm be, presumed .de siring its continuance unfit countermandeu a dVeTr Tl SEME N T S , -., ceedin?; xrn lineal will be inserted '.r.'infor'rtoUT-d.twenty-fiecents .ii. ani nuKlir.Ation i those of tttr ea-i wu'wi""" i greater length, in the same proportion. If the number of insertion be not marked on them.they will be continued until ordered out, irul charffediccordinfrly. DUTY OF A OHUSTIAN MINISTER. recently reud'mg a Discourse on ihis miporlant subject, we met wiib the following sensible and elegantly writ teii'pussases,' which we take pleasure inpresenting to our readers : Reli'Mon, in becoming fervent, some- mantl the admiration of ases. In corres- potidencc with these views, let him strive to quicken men to a consciousness ot their inward ftatnre, ami ot. its attinttv with God, antl raise their stedfast aim and hope to its interminable progress and felicity. Perhaps I may be told that men are inca pable of risinsr tinder the best instruction, to this hetit of ttiought;and feeling. "Bit let us never despair of our face. lheie is in the human soul a deep consciousness which responds to him, who sincerely, and with the language of reality, speaks to it of the Teat and everlasting purpos es for which it was created- There, are sublime instincts in man. There is in luir.an nature,'' a want which the woild cannot supply ; a thirst for objects on wVich to pour forth mori? fervent admira tion and love than visfbje things awa ken a thirst for the unieen, the intnute. and the everlasting. have had 'moments when a new iht has seemed to dawn, a new life to stir in theni ; when thev have aspired after an unknown good ; when they have been touched by moral greatness and disinterested love ; when they have longed Ma break every chain of selfishness and sensuality, and enjoy a purer being. t is on this part of our nature that religion is founded. To this Christianity is addressed. The power to speak to this, is the noblest which God has imparted to man or angel, and should be coveted above all things, by the Christian Teacher. becomes morbid. Itisthe Minister duty to inculcate a piety charactenseil by vijiom, asmuchiasiby warmth ; to medi Ute between the reason and the affections, ,thr. with ioi nt energy ami in bless- ti harmony they may rise lojenier ami x l KAU l t KUM lie. 5r rcii nffcr un the uudivule'd soul to God. Who- Qf M r,,m f Xnrtll Carolina, on the mr understands the strength of emotion Enforctmtnt BilL in man?s nature, and how naruiy tne ua- . ' , i ' . Una- of the soul is preserved, need not t s;r to nerform a dutv a most be told of the arduousness of this work. soiemn duty such as it has never -fallen Devout peopIe,tnrougu love oi excueineiu, to my iot heretofore to pertorm. It is a and through wrong views ,oi me love oi duty wh;cl j win fulfi but, I shall do -1. are apt to cherish the devotional ht wilh the deepest, the most heartfelt re- feelinss. at the expense, n not tne exciu- jrrel. Jt is inv dutv on this occasion, sir, sion. of other parts, of our naturei rhey to nart comnanv with a number of jren- seem to think that piety, like the upas" tlemen with whom it has been both my tree, make a desert where it grows ; mat pride and my pleasure, heretofore to act. But the' member from New-York says, these gentlemen do not represent the sov ereignty of South-Carolina. Her Con vention only can do that. Rut what do the New -York papers say ? They tell us it is Hamilton, McDufhV, Calhoun'-amf Hay tie, who have led the people into er ror, ami that they ought to suffer yes, they outfit to suffer! Suffer what? Why, sir, as a matter of curiosity, I will show you how, and in what manner, some peo ple in the State from which the gentleman comes to whom I have alluded, think these gentlemen ou'sht to suffer. I have a letter here directed to J C. Calhoun, and dated Benton Contre, N. Yr- Mv honor able friend, to whom it was directed, was (about to throw it into the fire, but, at my request it was preserved. Weir, sir, here" it is. It con tains-as gentlemen inav see. Most Christians (Mr. Carson display ed.the.Jetter,) thegal- lows, and a representation of men sus pended; on the 'background, coffins at e waiting for the jrejeeptio of their bodies It is a produciion.pt "euius, Mr, Speaker, and ought, in inv opinion, 'to be preserved in comnanv with tne colhn hand bin. However, the letficr. may serve - to show that it is the. opinion of some person in the State from which the gentleman (Mr. ueardsley) comes, that these leaders have had the power to do" much -tbat is evil. Well, sir, I have another letter It con tains nothing in! writing, but encloses a lock of hemp. (Mr. C here unfolded the letter and produced the piece" of hemp'.) Mr. Beardsley mquired it that letter was from New-York ? Mr. Carson replied, no, sir : it is not from New-York ? A.s I am asked for the postmark, I will tell it. It is from Salem, Tennessee. But believe me; sir, blush when I name it, yes, I blush that a daughter of North Carolina should have one individual capa ble of sending such a letter. 1 yet hope there is but one man in her limits who could .do it. the in nd. if not thepoay, neeasa cioister. The4 natural movements of the soul are rpnressu I uie soviiii ucwuuus. uumum , 4ij irrsrp. an d ornament, and innocent exhilarations of life frowned upon; and I am perfectly aware that it will operate! as a banishment ot my sell trom the cause r I F i:nU..J ,t lnn oi a mail nuum 1 oavc iu umiui j of a man whom I have: ev er served, if not FHOX THE ITATIOSMl imif lCEXCEB. and that is,, by the people themselves sur-1 rendering theip iprmciples. But before they will disfranchise themselves, they must be sunk inlloth and ignorance ; and. therefore,' incapable of Self government. Of this, thank God, there s no probabili ty. In this respect the United States are widely different from ancient republics. It is true, we; have now. as there were for merly, persons Jvfho are willing to s:ive their fellow-citixens the trouble of think ing for themselves in political affairs : but the genVra in(irmationind spirit of enterprize, so widely diffused among the mass of our citizens, and for which we, as a nation, aNf held in,; high estimation abroatl, must forever interpose an insupe rable barrier to ii consolidated or despot ic Government. -X'No enterprising nation will long remain' in ignorance. ; No well informed nation ''tvjJU.ong subsnit to a des potic Goyernineiit, or tu a course of poli cy detrimental '.".to- the. general welfare. In republic's particiilarl v, the general and individual welfare -are so intimately con nected, .thqit theforte : cannot be checked without injury .to thc other. Ilencfe it follows, that th'e best domestic will usu ally 'twake. the -fest'' political economist, an-drv.ice -versa. ;'. Th,e grand requisites in republics, then, are,' first, education generally. diffused aniong the mass of the people. They ivill then he able to think and act for themwclves,-?and being well in formed, will generally think and'act right. Second, facilities of internal communic.i tion. By this, Jfvc several portions id tire Union become fmiliar with each other. Their several'van'ts made known and sup plied, lhemefljns of defence speedily concentrated atiany necessary point to repel invasion. Tiie manners and cus toms of the several -sections become assi milated, their interests identified and re ciprocal ; and ?hen the benignant influ ence of reason &ai I have dispelled the fog of sectional. jeousies. it will 'ttjSen be clearly seen, tlr.t we have a muatal inte resfr to protect5Tiul that equaNtldustry and enterprise iil "not fail to insure suc cess. - -;? "'- J. ' 'V ' SINGULAR ADVENTURE. 1 From the Albany D ily Aiivertist-r. A little boy. ag'd about three year?, on of Col. Hog.m, keeper of the jail, ins missing on Saturday for ;ibout 7 hours, land search was made for him in everywrecti on but in vain. A little child about his own ag, who could not speak plain, was continually saying to its mother, Buy in hole," Boy in hole," and pointed to a hole in the end of the arch ovrr Eagle street, at its junction with Beaver street. His importunities at length attracted at tention, anu it b;ing known that Mr. IPs child was missing, a man descended by a rope fastened under his arms, to rhe bottom . of the creek, a distance ofc twenty feet, witli a lantern. He there found a boy's cap, but he searched no farther, and was drawn up. The cap wa identified asthat of Mr. IPs boy. Sheriff" Gallup went to the place and offered a reward, to any per-. son who would descend and Search lor the child.' None could be "found, when the Sheriff. himself pulled off his coat and Was making preparations to go down ; whei a colored man was induced to descend with a lantern. ' After proceeding about three hundreed feet in the creek, as it goes down. Beaver street, and which is co-1 vered by an arch about four feet high,; he f.'und the little fellow, sitting'in the mud and filth, and resting against the' wall of the arch, almost exhausted' He brought Rim to the hole, and he was hoitd out and presented to his, till then, aftlicted, but now overjoyed parents. It appears that, after falling in the hole, he had wandered thus far. and had become so fatigued that he could not make his wpav D.icK to the noie. or proiianiy ne ue- came bewildered and deprived of the pow er of exercising his thinking faculties. lie was in this place from VO in the morn ing till five m the afternoon. Messrs. Editors : The tendency to con solidation in our Government appears to me to he vnsti v ovprratnd. I he argument -.1 - r i . I : J & wnn ine aunuv oi some oi nis irienus, ei i .t n r.. n,. ... . , . ill - j . I nun an iiic iiici ivcuuum.3 u. imr a gloomy, repuiuvc rC5.u.. cerrainiy witn as muen zea., wun as mucn wor,a hai, 5een des$rovCd in consequence wnicn, uy j iiu.um.. .v.. laaecnonate uev&uuu, as a &uu uouiu serve nrivations, claims a monopoly or boil s ni, father I I X L' ...ik I ... j favor, abandoning an io ms wiam who yes sirf i ever had my teelmgs so will not assume its own aau livery,, anu mucn devoted to any individual, uncon GEOLOGY Or THE U. STATES. DEFERRED ARTICLES, l tcho its own sepulchral tones. Through I such exhibitions, religion has lost its ho I nor : and though the most ennobling of all I . ... it 1 Z A.L. 4. ientinients, dilating me soui wiui vasi thought i and an unbounded hope, has been .thought to contract and degrade it. ine Blinistertis to teach anearnest, but eh- lihtened" religion ; a piety, which, far from wasting or eradicating, will protect. nourish freshen the mind's various affec nested with me by ties of blood, as they have been to Andrew: Jackson. But the time has come, sir, when we must part. Lear parted with bis Cordelia, and divi ded his estate between pis Regan and his Goncril, because they were more vocife rous in their professions ot filial anection and devotion than Cordelia. . Yes, sir, he banished Cordelia from his presence, and of their constituting but one people with one government, the head of which with j the co-branches of government, were with out check or control," has no bearing up on our s-ystem. We are one people in so far as oar relations with other nations re in the supplent to the Harrisburgh Telegragh of the 6th inst. is the very able Report of Mt.tSy, a member of the Le- jgisiature of that State, on the subject. of a theological survey ot the state of Pennsylvania,- tocether with . a copy of a bill providing for a geological survey of the State." On accpuntot its length we can not insert it at, present ; but there is a blasting in Polatid, quire in us, a single national character, to j coincidence tn this report with a document maintain an honorable independent rank among them. : And in our domestic con- 1 .1 cerns, to provide tne means oi aeiencc. afford the facilities of communication be tween the extremes of our country, so that the means of defence may be speedi ly concentrated at any necessary point he banished also the Honest Kent from his tions and powers ; which will add torce councits. The difficulty with me has been, LJnd to furth.r the hanoiness and promote .-. fs4B i-is-trw -will " i. a i m m as wen as aruor m u.c uwu , not now i snail punish tne rauits, Dumow tUa aorQi ' ac.Jt.n nr th Kv to reason, b.ch will at once biud us to God, and 8hai conceal the failings ofjhe man I counteracting the effects of interested fo" ttment and roumpty our ties io our lamuy, nave thus loved. 1 would rather hide trrem for country,, and mankind ; which will than expose them, I assure you, But this ie:ghten the relish ot uie's pleasures, mll I cannot hide, jthat proclamation l hilst it kindles an unquencnaoie mirsi caunot conceal. It met me, sir, on mv Lfor a purer hafiipiness in the life to come, j way ,ere . ant (jod knows the feelings of Religion does not muuiaie our nature, it ,ny heart, when 1 saw that the line ot se does not lay waste our human interest paration betwixt that man and myself, I and affections, that it may erect Jor God i Speak politically, was drawn forever. I a lurone amiositucci lien ii noi as inv own iiusioriuue ooiy , i which attracted a good deal of attention a short time before the adjournment of looked unon it as the misfortune of the American people. Yes, sir, that man. with the popularity he possesses, could have done more towards establishing, on reign policy, i In allother respects we are a separate people, having Local gov ernments, in which the manners, customs, and peculiar! circumstances of the people of the several governments have a con- trolling influence which is exercised by them. ,The General Government exerci ses no control over the. local governments in their domtf$i"c concerns. It onlv main tains those general laws without which we should have no national character at all. On the other hand the people of the 4pvprfll TTmfpfl StntH havp n trohle ran- a permanent basis, the liberty and happi- tr0nin g power in the General Government; ness ot this country, tnan any man since two in their individual and one in their the days of ashington. And, sir, as his Stat canac:ti,. The former is exercised ability to do giMid was great, so was his directly every two years in the election of ability to do evil, to injure the liberties of Representatives, and every four years in the people, mat injury, i uo soie.nniy the ciection 0f '-President, with the con- believe, as 1 tleclare here Deiore uou tne j tingency of his being elected by State evu is auuui im w u..Hc uj ine, yaa jshould no one candidate receive a majori of the bill betore the tl mse. tv of all the votes of the electors. The I hope I may be mistaken ; but such is iafer ;s pvprr.ised everv six vears in the soiauon'anu Buneriug uiau i muiuucu m my nrm conviction oi yie injurious enecif cnaiCe of Senators. In these respects that tne word, sin in revolt from God, which this bill will prod uce if passed, I lour own bears no analogy to former re in disloyalty to conscience, in me tyranny of the passions, in the thraldom of the soul's, noblest powejfs To redeem men from sin, was Christ's great end. To pierce them with a new consciousness of sin, so that they shall groan under it, and strive against it,, and though prayer ana watching, master it, is an essential part of the Ministers work. Let him hot sa tisfy himself with awakening, by his elo quence, occasional emotions ot gratitude anil svmuathv. He must, t-ouse the soul to solemn, stern resolve against its own hn this measure. It will be recollect le n and cherishetl corruptions, orheon-Pfi hv gentlemen that.'in 1827. when the r F )i - I J n ' 'i - . . . . Iv makes a show of assault, and leaves eentleman before me, (Mr. Adams,) held the Executive office of the nation, a mes saei Was. sent to Congress relative to the execution oi a trea ins. but widen the range of thought, feel ing and erijoyment.13u 5 and the' chriianjroinlstry Tiftying jfr its end the communication of tliis healthful, u ell -proportioned, and all -comprehending piety, demands evi ry energy of tho't, feeling and utterance, which the indivi dual can bring to the work. J 44 It is the duty of a Minister to rouse men to self-conflict,, to warfare with the evil in their own hearts. Thiols, in truth, the supreme evil. The sore&t calamities of life, sickness, poverty, Itorn, dunge ons and death, form a less amount of de- included in the foe intrenched and unbroken within. u lttis also thf duty of a Christian Mi nister to call forth in the sul, a convicti on of its immortality, a thipt for a higher existence, and a grandeur! and elevation of sentiment, becoming a being who is to live, ?n joy and advance forever. Hisbu iness is with men, not as: inhabitants ot this world, but as related to invisible be ings, and to purer; and happier worlds. He should look wjth revf rjejnee on the hu man soul as having within Hself thie germ of heaven. He should recognizevin the igno J"ant& unimproved, vast spiritual faculties Stiyen for perpetual enlargement, just as mo . ii.stist of genius gees in the unhewn u t h.: , the capacity of being transformed ujesty and grace which will conu cannot consent to give a vote against it, without stating some of the reasons which induce me to hope that it will not pass- I will first, sir,- address a word of ad vice to those gentlemen with whom I have heretofore acteifj and! who conceive it to be their duty to vote for this bill, because it i a measure of Executive recommenda tion. Those gentlemen have, in my opin ion a preliminary duty to perform before they ive their votes in favor of this bill ; yes, sir," before they: take another step tne interests of the people at large, with out a gross uereiiction irom uuty, in which case a corrective would be speedi ly applied either by the people, througl -lr publics. In all republics the principle is recognized that the people are sovereign, and that the maioritv must govern. If this be denied, then the United States are not a Republic. If it be admitted, what fault can be found with the exercise ot the principle ? With the checks which the two Houses have upon each other, and that of the President Upon both, it is mo rally impossible that any act could te passed that would seriously conflict with with the Creek In dians! In that document there was a kind of Squinting (if, T niay be allowed the their Representatives, or by the States through their Senators. Therefore, an act pa$ed by the representative, sanc tioned by the concurrence oi the senate, and aoDroved bv the Executive, is a law terrti,) at thf employment of force,it.spofcfe0r the stated, in their capacity as States, aboufa auperad.iea obligation. Anu wnai as weu aof popular opinion. The Sen- .a - A I . iL - ' . was tne conuuer. on inai occasion, oi tne ate nt;re serves a9 a nicely adjusted bal- gentlemen who then acteu wimme r wny, ance-wheel, itow checking the too sudden sir, we pounced on the ottensive document ,mpUlse ot moving power, and again sus hkc iiuuij jiiva vu v.. , naming mc acuou wiihi mere is a ueuti ency. In addition to this, there always ready to heap every term of political re probation on the man who had assumed even the existence of such principles. I nave uie uuvuiucui - u c uiv, n. , dated the 5 th of February, 1827 ; and I willask the clerk to read the extracts from it, which I have marked. has been, and probably always will be, party distinctions, sufficient to keep alive a sDirit of opposition. How, then, can we be in dangefoCinerging in a cOnsoli dated GoTernmciit?Btttoiie way remains,' Congress, .and wnich we inserted in our columns at the time. It was a Report of the Committee" on Military Affairs, to whom was referred the' resolution to in quire into the expediency of authorizing the Presientnf the United Stites to cm ploy a suitable person . in aid of the Topo graphical Bureau, to ascertain the mine ralogy anil . geology of each of the several States of tjie5; Uiyon, with a view to the construction ofa mineralogical and geo logical map of the whole territory of the United States. t On this subject the Report, of Mr. Say says : 4 Much benefit would be derived by the community, and credit to the En gineer, who would, while running lines for canals, roajtl-roads, &c. give even a slight scientific view of the country over which he passe" ine lienors oi tne inminrttee oi the House of Representatives was favorable to the plan'ota'tnineralogical survey of the United states,and recominerid:-d an ap propi iation forHhat object, which, if time allowed, would no doubt have received the a pprobatioii of Congress. We know of no project, so little ex pensive4 or exceptionable in any view, that would more. reaounu to the advantage anu honor of the. country and Government.- We scarcely open a period -cai from a brdad, but we find this country called up on for information respecting its geology. It makes us ashamed when we .know that we have none to give. We talk of science, whilst weare-,immeasurably behind all the civilized countries of Europe, and are taking no steps to quicken our pace. low many surveys have been effected by the Topographical service, that would lave been vastly more important accessi ons to ourdinow ledge, if geological illus trations haubeen attached to them by competent persons? This remark has been constantly ma.de. It the Government would only order this, to be done, it would be aying a toundation tor a work of deep national interest.. ; These observations have been suggested by the excellent, report of Mr. Say, him- sen a man or science ; ana we conclude them b saying", that we have frequently heard gentlemen, on their return lrom Europe", declare that nothing mortified them m of e: than being obliged to confess, in countries where the practical and phi losophical, importance of geology ace so much vaiURd, that we Knew little or no thing of th geology of our own country. Our Government might soon wipe away this re ' The. Russian A7ro, Nicholas I. What ojiitiiet couiu indignation, or natreu, or scorn, furnish sufficiently expressive of the enormities of this man ? i-outh, old ige; au 1 innocence, fall equally before his ruthless barbaritv. He has already transported to the wilds of Siberia, or orr dered to be butchered in savajje revenge, twenty thousand children : thus hellisMv the bud the future hopes o & whetting his brutal vengeance hv the blood of her gallant nobles. Out j of the group of the hideous images that this cruel man's atrocities call up to the mind I will take one. The wife of Gen. Roen stein hail two children, her only hope.. and fortune. Their father had nothing to leave them, but the inheritance of his patriot ism, his bravery and his virtue. Sheme morialized the Emperor, that they should not be torn from her her prayer was re jected. She then implored, in the name of human nature anil the God of mercv, that one at least, the youngest, might be left to her she was again repulsed with a savage threat. The miserable mother, bereft of all earthly comfort, kissed hrr child, and in a delirium of'despair, grasp ed a dagger and plunged it to its he irt. Dr. Fiankiin. CBowen. of '.Button. has in press a collection of the familiar Letters and Miscellaneous Papers of Benjamin Franklin, now for the first time ' published. The work is edited by, Mf. J. Sharks, anil will be published m onef volume 12 mo. It is stated that the let- i ters and pieces in this original collection have been obtained fmm various. sources. They have a value and'interest ; not infe- rior to any of Dr. Franklin ' published . ti i... wining., me ieuers in particQiar, amounting to. more than one hundred. that have never before been printed possess the rare attraction of familiar1- and unstudied -communications of the au thor's se-itiiuent andfceling to his near est relations, and inst intimate friends. Great ir.terest has been fejMwr the fate of some ship supposed to have beei lost t-s'eh, as the hip Martha, arrived at New-York, repnrts hav ng seen four teen dead persons floating, and having picked up a 'ladder, a stage, a trisail mast, and a block, on which was written M. H. Taylor, mate of the ship H." . It is feared tliat the lost vessel is the Hellespont, of ami from Boston... the Boston'-Transcript says ;-4t The ip llell'-siont,' Captain Heriry, sailed rum tia? port on tlie. 2th December last with a valuable carro fur the Sandwich slandssJh'aving on board, in addition to the ship's company, the following passen gers : .Mr. AY. Ladd lady, chiid, and servant : Mr. P. A, Brinsma&e. ladv. aidx child; Dr. Hill and lady ; Miss H a nr; ah p. dge "j; M is D e I a n d , o f Safe in ; Miss iJiniond, jut ewlon ; Mis A. Wood of Hallo'.vell ; Messrs. W. Hooner. anil George Foster.." .Which number, added to the ship's complement, makes 30 souls on board. . Explosion A dUtressirijifaccidcnt oc curred latefv'in the town of Richmond in It. Island.. A 'man -named Welcome Pros- ser, n,ai jn Ms house something more than a half keg of powder. It was left in an improper place, where it is sunpoe3d his child had access to, an-d ignited it. The explosion kijleil the-child, and wounded very seriously its mother, tearing off the sta'p from lierf head, and otherwise injur ing her. O e half of the house was near ly destroyed. '' Three barrels of flour, which were in the room with the powder, .i were brawn entirely away. The father was absent from home. The Royal Academy of Sciences'at Lis bon has latefy elected Peter S. Dupoa? ceau, Esq. of Piiiiadelphia to be one of its Members ; and the Diploma ofthis ' higlily estimable citizen has been trans mitted to him by the Viscount or Santa-' rem, Minister and Secretary of State f;r the Dt-paitment of Foreign Affairs ai'Lis bon, through thet'harge d'Affaes of Por tugal at Washington, the Commandearlv Torlade d'Azambiija. t 5 The packshj Pocahontas, Captain, West, sailed from Baltimore on Saturday morning for fjiiverpool. She has been vit'S sited, within the last fortnight; by tnu- sands of ftersons, attracted by thVinter- , VI u - ' . . v uaua - . s m m u , . i - - ---V -a " j mr Hfr.fVflannr.lF Snrprh nt ih Hnrlcno,, etulS spectacle of a vessel of the first , ............ . . c . t .. .. . He form Dinner. ciass, oi a mouei, construction and outfit. At a meeting of the Council of tn$ City of Philadelphia on Thursday evening, a memorial from William Bach.and David Ii. I..ee was presented, ' in -.Which tnese gentlemen propose to light the city much better than it now is, and at half the pre sent cost, by the erection of a tower for burning tar and anthracite coal." They say 4 As tar when burnt oter a will give a greater light than anv other substance which can be conve- rarely, if ever Vqual ledaod certainly not ' surpassed. The only regret we have, in speaking of this splendid ship, is,hatshe wdl not return to this port ao-ainv ifhe l" packet une, of which she is deservedly the pride antT the nrrrament, sails between ri ! l l i - . . . rniiaiieiptua ani Liverpool, aud we mustv consequently resixitiier to ourimOfe for-" tunate neighbors. Halt .Amer. Bv the, brig Durango at New-Orleans in six days from Havana, we learnVtnat the cholera had somewhat abated itrthat" . 1 Wrf- . . . - I I vs t rr f. ftr iln.r s. .. C ' I 1 . i '.' nientlv placed in a situation where it v "1 tvuaJ3 lc".uu lunei aeparture would" give light to the city but if oil or The captain states that the dumber of gas should be preferred, a tower of sum- oeainswere aoout -uspp day: and that, lar construction to that represented in the the disease had made fa appearance in drawing might! be so arranged as to use t,,c country towns and plaritatiynV, -where oil or gas, instead of tar and coal, and still t was committing great ravages", pririci- light the city more effectually, and at less pa'"y among tne colored population. , cost than on the plan now in use. Yourj .. memorialists believe, that, with fair and siiaoama we extract lrom the Hunts- . coal, burnt at;i proper elevation, aided ville (Alab.) Advocate, the following ar- by suitable reflectors, a light might be ob- ticle b whch it appears'that al restrict tained at less than one-halt the present u,ms w lIie '"iucuou,.oi. aiaves into cost of lighting the city, which wo at Stfte were remoV4 Jby the lasLe-, 4 qual the light occasioned several fyears 1 gisature -:: "siJ ": jfiM since by the burningofthe Masonic Halt, h lntrdW"m of blavcs. fpequenr inquiriesCv? " . y . : . I haviiiPP hr-fn mrl- im,.n: i r.;'. 'He . s which (your memorialists are informed, Uik proper Co .ute that he iZxr&:: shone through the windows ot Col.'Pow-Uih. 6U. 7th. 8thu 20di hrtdVtA i.t..i$7!uZ:A on the west side of the J Act to prevent the introduction .of Slaves inta . river Schuylkill, to that, degree, that a Alabama, and toother purposes. werereeah-tVj person read a newspaper m the darkest 1 " , , X iLL. F Wa. Ise I ' . v.. . I sect ions ntirVeiited t h(-itttrwW-ti,-,r.vrtr -cu- ' . . part ofthejroom : and a yourj memorial - fitr tote-defined the circumsUtoce.-ttrkf wh5cSf : ists have also Jpieen informed, made it suf- land the persons by whom, tbev mieiit be intrul K ficiently light at the Rising Sun, and ,-atWuced preibedthe couys&io be pursued by ' Frankford, to enable people to read m the p-r urmng mem imrwen aisubiBtieaj open streets." The memorial as:rer-r red to the Committee on Ijas. ; that now. all feslrictions arerem&.-id.. Temperance. ....Charles;.5 6.:. Olmslead, Esq. a candidate forrConfixess in Terink. sec, aoa OI1U9CU iuc, icaiperpce catiOl- date a new test in Dur elections, ile places his claims to the public suffrages exclusively on his zreal- in the cause of mm, -t . m , : ..... , temperance, i" biect me fin this prjnc i i time. So i Something New. The Ajax, arrived at 'New-York 'has among other things, 3,820 I L i - r nn.. r t . i , s ijDUSiicia vi :i ucaw iiuui iiiTcrjwyi. -' Messrs. Carey, Lea & Blanchard, of Philadelphia, have issued a handsdjpe edition, in two duodecimos, of Mrs Jamie Characteristics of TPomen. . The fervent eulogy of this work in the num ber of Blackwood's Magazine tor January last, is not an- exaggeration. Mr. Jamieson," says that Journal, " has im- mortal lzed hereit by5 ,ab.-ok that shows throughout the deepest insight into all pic'isays he io hi circular,") and the: news would ny on the wings ot the frind thevijtues of her.sex, and the fullest and to theremotest corners of the UnioL. cllafest conception of al;the female char Pulpits would resound with it ; the pub -acters thatShakespure ba& sketched." tic press would teem with it," c. tc. r ii u i Mi i r V hi 1 ,(, J is I "e s.r " it Af. ir ft - "l f, 4' l - s, f
The Weekly Raleigh Register (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 30, 1833, edition 1
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