Rising Sun Times, Volume 1, Number 16, Rising Sun, Ohio County, 1 March 1834 — Page 2
mt,s;: Aims.
i V.-;? the .Y. . Co .irntrtial Adintiscr. Rv the arrival of the puck -t United St.: to?. Halting-, which :ti!od on I he l.Vh Dee., and Napoleon, Smith, which tiled Per. CI, we have copiou lib s of Lon 'Ion n;i;nM to the 23d, and Liverpee' ( (" tiic 2 lib, i:eai I) one month later ih.:;: previous advhe. Our comtnerial anil marine intelligence are to the late-! dan -s. Ltv mrooi . I )ec. J I. I)r a .'" ';i :jnrrci k. ( n Sunday 1 i" Mcvis :t' a ainl Pirn, the ow ner of 'he Lord Planoy. sent out a steamboat to examitv" the hanks and shore rear vvhnh she w as lot, and if possible to pi k up any part of tlie wreck. Not a mi :m tide of an- kind could he found a: I lh sK-atner returned into poit w ith v. it h iving gained the least information relative to the 1:010 or cirrii'nstnu. o t tie disaster. The manifest t tin" ' ! I ha sime been lenivod lVoro No vi . ami it furnishes more pari .' u'.ar inform ilion a to the number of pa -diL't 1 ? aval the amount of pi opi i t v o; board. The iiiiin'icr of individualin hiding thn?o who hi long to t!ie vessel. vvu: it; the name ami doct iptions ate a f ilov-: ('apt. Stewart, K. X., cumin-ler; "Stephen Robert, ihief to. i'e ; .1,-. Smith, sei ond mate ; William I irlii.jjVn, fi: st engineer, (bod) found) M itthcvv Clinton, second rnitif er; M ilk v ntb n-h. steward; T. Tohin. The 11 ni iiii.h r of the Lathi? are noi given, as their name? are uncertain. Tie- ot.lv eahin imimii'i' known to I. iv hem o hoard vvn Mr?. Robert I'm -.Ion, of New 11 ; only one deck ticket na i-'in d. to Mr. John, (body found.) La : wa a pi ron named JamesGord ":, w ilh a man scrvent, on hoard, and a race horse called MountcaLr'e. valued . t C.5 " . which wa lost. I'raMi:. There is precious lilih new from Franco. Civil 1 ontontion in ihe Metropolis arc spoken of, hut v v ibid i!" particulars. Associations w ere vet forming by the working class, . Sjver.il ni' dical student had heon nrirsic !. and the trial of some of (he t lombci of the society of " Lcs droit? i! rilor:vr. " were in progress 1:111injj some excitement, of course; hut the capital :va.; reprt seuted to he comp irativclv triniuil. It i.- stated that the Puke of Oilcan i about to ieit the I "iii't d Stales, and to p.a-s n year in cur c m;;,;, . lie was to embark in M uch. la regard to tlie political ti ial i t the " I'rieiul of the Right? of Man," now oinT on, it i said, '".he qovenuuei-.t U indieatmu it fears and it vvcakne. 'i'iie garrison of eisaiiies has, for some da past, been gradually drawing nearer to Pari;. The. troop?, infantiv arul artii'rry, are hillcled at St. (.'loud, Houi.'ne and Sevres, which place are irou d 'd w ith soldier. Mon.ovci , t!:e :.i".0)0 'inttl-ent bayonets' of (he Na tional (iiiards, are told to he ready, for tii it the real fonajui; red cap Republic i- about to re-appear as in tlie terrible dav .lime. It wa he'icvovl that the indi-:ti::,.,t could not be sustain d. Tokh ; Advices from I.N'mnare to tho of December. (Srea- sens ilion ha 1 heon excited by the attempted an. -t o( Count Paita, by iho orders of I ).e: Pedro, alt'iough the act was suh-se-'piently diavowed. lie wa rharprd wit!i jrj published letter? retletting soverelv upon the measure of Don Pedro's government. .V itiu'utstianee a;;ain-t li.e attempted arrest was prem nle.i ;i::.a d !y the Puke of 1V'. eira, Paliiu i' 1, lu!e, and mar.y other peet.of the real. 11. It was afterwards j i ill d bv Pan IYto, and his defence of it f.ec.asioi.ed very strong reprobation aamoivj; his friends; and supporter. Mi iel was till entrenched ;;t Smtar..;i, with about 1.3,000 men; and Pedro, wit': an army of about eiju.il force, icupied a portion ejni ditant iVom .i tit.ir a: to Lisbon. It is repoitcd that negot iations were on foot l:tw-i n ti.o r.val brother?, under tlie aupi i of l-'rani e and Lngland. Hat of tlii lie ie. i- much doubt. A divi-ion 01 Pedi' forces is said reeentlv to b ive o- eii t ui 10 pirces ny juguei iroop... A L'i 11' d eng leoment was soon peetvd. S;i.. Lieut, (ieti. aides, romii in h r in chief of the army of operation, defeated a body of the Cailit Hoop-, who had fortified ihcm-clves at On.'te. Morell iha-i been taken by the troop ol the (ueen Regent, f.nd the general si per l of her raue i favorable. Cuoi.r.it v. In Cadiz as in M tliga, tii; fity wasotiicially declared free from on ,:-! oiis di-temperson the 1 Ith int. The l ;t(( rs which communicate the wi b ome news, add, that the French Coie-nl who Lad died of the Cholera, wa interred on the. same day. From thi. it miy he inferred, that that tinfovtuivite gentleman was the very last 1 1 . t e:nt npe of the last, and we
hope the next accounts will r.e.t tvirn-j tioi) the occurrence of new deaths of the same disease, a we arc sorry to find is the case at Malaga. The Bordeaux lndie.atc.ur of the 1 Ith has the following paragrnjdi: "The entrance of Spanish troops upon the Portuguese territory, i confirmed bv news which ha reached us from the Isead-fju si ters of Gen. Morillo. This oilieer would not have set foot thereon hut to pursue Pen Cuiioc. who. alter two noi!',h' hesitation, has considered
that hi? ray ;1 i!ir' dtv v quired him to ajmear upon the soil whe re the rights of Ooeeu 1-ahella and hi own are in conflict. This display of monarchical courage wa not cf lotig duration. (Inly 30 men of Ins suit were able to save them-elves: and on the l2i.hii the Prine was tit Llvas. where w ithout iloubt. he will take rest niter hi fatigue?, but, v, here i-i'.her the troops of Don Pedro or those-cf Isabel!. 1 will go and di-lodge him. I lie Memorial Bordel u o ma lTtn eontiiin the following extract of a let ter of the 1 lib from Saragossa " Pohticiil afl'iir? are taking a tutu in Arraoii, not ip.iite so satisf.iclorx as might be Mipeosed from the news of the last few day. The Cailists tiie showing tliem--elvc at seve ral point? of our province, and we are assured that Yaleni ia ha declared itself dec idedly against the Queen's Government. The partizin of Isabella assert, that if the Govern rent bad not a considerable m.li'.u v fi ice in that prov ince, it would be hi lompLle insurrection."1 Put i.y Great 3Ii:.x. The r. oild i? full of what ate tcinn d ''Great Moo." The individual who cai , on certain oecasiot:?, perhap once or ivy ice ia a year, utter great sw cliing w ords," i straightway baptised a '-great man." We would not be thought singular, yet with till humilitv we must beg to dissent from public opinion on this subject. Take any "groat" man for instance Daniel Webster he is a lawyer. You have a case in court you employ him as u,ar council you desire his opinion as to (he result von ask Lira if lie can g:ua 3 our cause ,ie tc.il y ou "it i un certain. Uo a?K way 1 it uncertain viur 1 ansa is good il i3 found-'d upon Lite immutable principles of eternal justice then why is the result uncoi lain! Doe? truth ever change. Ak a Carje.uter if he can build a houe; a Tailor if he can make a coat, and they do not tell you it is " uncertain." WhyshobM there he any more uncei talnty upon a t;point of law"' than in making a air of shoes? We come to the conclusion tli.it he who is certain of .in end when he employs the means;, is a greater man, than him who depends upon chance and contingency for the result. Therefore my Shoeniak' r is a greater man than Daniel Webster. .V. . Z.'r" ,';)(' r. U ho shoul, V,'e' .7 nh m Spirits ? Not the rieh. far they do not need it f r reic eshment, and as a tneiiii inc it isnf no service. .h.t the poor !cr it injure? their purse, their credit, their health, tin ir morals, and their families. Not the idle nan for he is lazy enough without it. Not the industrious man, for it will render J in inmroviJent. Not the merchant, for it will probably renderbiai a bankrupt. Not the mechanic, for it ". ill cause Lim to make promises whithl.o cannot keep, and. so he will lose Lis customer-. Not for the far mer, i r it will nnke his cattle lean, his sheep hide-hou:,;' his br.rii empty, and til! the. vvindo.'.'s of hi house wi'h old La's and old rag. Pan nts do not need it; children do not need it; misters do not need it; ?eiv.ants do not in edit. Who doe? Nobody. Wbv, then, do.- s any one drink it ? Hecause hi- ;:pj!cti'e governs him. TiT ro'i 'Pvt. A country fellow w a pa-sit g d'wvn Wa!iing!on street th--otl rr day, wl.en a wag thrust his head out .,(' a window of a boarding bouse, s:t."g out, Hallo, there nure 11: l.'J von (o::i: no.vn ; .1 ouii 11, I loan east o:s eves u: at tr.e wiiidow. sf !-.; :o;d replied.'' .-av toi (ei vou'd better haul in your he;ul; Joik will think you keep a slaughter h ni.-e; seeing a cah's head hanging out of the window. Ihdhnm Patriot. .A -.rsptiprrs. I positively never knew a man in tlie country who was too poor to take a newspaper. Ye t two out of three, eyen respectable people, read no paper? but what they borrow. As I spc ;ik generally, I hojie I olU nd none. If I do, the greater the necessity 0 speak out. Lveiy man is able conveniently to t ike a weekly newspaper. The cost is fourju nee a week. How many who think themselves too poor to take a newspaper, pay as much daily for drink. Miserable man, thou art poor indeed! Dr. FrnnJin.
Southern LUxnlily. John McPon-
ough, one. of the most wealthy and in fluential citizens of New Orleans, has presented a Memorial to the Legisla ture' of Louisiana, pravii g for leave to educate hi? slaves. He state that he is the owner of from fortv to fifty black children, male and female, of various ages, the offspring of old .and f lithful servant, who have mostly been born under his roof. These slaves are valuable being mostly mechanic, and would sell for & 1 50.000. The design of the o iH r, however, is, to give freedom to ail. and colonize them in Liberia. For this purpoo. and that thev tnav he etialilied for the proposed new sphere of a tio". he ib-siro? permission to cdu ciite- them. It will make the hearts of our imm'dlntr abolitionists sick, to see sin h fruit growing from the labors ni t;ie uioiiizalion boc let v . H e, howev er, can rejoice and do rejoice to see the work a going thus nobly on. Mr. MePonough is beginiug in the right way First, prepare the slaves for freedom prepare an asylum where they can 01 joy the blessing and then bestow it. .firr lork Commenwl. MFCH AN ICS. We rejoice in common w ith all liber al minded men at the glorious spirit of indepen :ei ee vvitiih 1 rapidly being made -manife-l among Mechanics.Thal body of pojde who with the far mers end niaini.'acluie are the very tile and smew ol the nation, have too long been in subjection (o a ilomiin ering and self-iuflaicd aristorncy. hi a government like this whose greatest boast is the freedom of its opinions and the purity of it? laws, it is a matter ot a-io:::!nr.ei.t that intelligent and en light. n d Mechanic should have so long toii. d a a slave whilst wealth .and ari-'.ocraey acquired emolument and pnv.ets. Cramped have been the inert il energy vf the industrious and poor, and fettered as their opinions have been through the prcssine of the times a? d the force of circumstanei it is a goiiou indication of magnanimity and courage to hn.l them stopping boldly forward in the rank of public opinion, declaring their rights and privilege as freemen. We the Peoi nr.. Jht:iii: nt Donations Ye learn w ith great pleasure (through the courtesy of the Lditorof the Atlas) fhat nt the Annua! Colonzation meeting on Monday evening at Washington one the most crowded and interesting in the Society's history over .S9.400 were subscribed for its benefit, of which Gerrit Smith, Esq., of Peterboro' New York subscribed five thousand. Bo?t. Jour. MARCH OF IMPROV EMENT. The newspapers occupy the position in society that the priests formely did; people advie with them, confess to them, and took up to them for protection. They give information on all suhjo ts; the) moralize, legislate, censure, and direct. With them we begin the day with them we end it. We talk out of them, think of them, and wln n they are delayed hunger for them. Tlie press is all prevailing: It begins with supplying us with a house or ;i servant: It goes on to leach us how to make laws; it brings intelligence from every quarter of the globe; and appears to know more of what is passing under our very noses than we ourselves do. Does any great man do wrong; is his offence beyond the reach of law, let him beware, not of the remorse of co.n.cienc.o, as in former times, but of the more terrible power of public opinion: let hi n apprehend exposure publication. This is the torture of civilization, no transaction is too private to be whispered in the ear of the press; no personage is loo high not to be visited with its terrors. Ijondun -ri" Monthly Magazine. Th : Huntingdon Gazette relates the following; : "Last week a young man named Thomas I lung, whose lather formely kept the Dlack Horse at Sawl kv, Huntingdon, and who had been brought up a tailor, enlisted in an idle mood with a recruiting parly. Reing next morning jeeaed by his brother, who said his family would not be at the expense of buying him off this silly frolic, he replied that he would make litem Support him for life,' and straightway he went to the shop of a butcher, anil with a hatchet chopped off the fingers of his right hand, thus rendering himself until lor the army, and unable to follow any mechanical pursuit. The unfoi iiuiate family had to pay the recruiting scrgant a guinea a the smart money, to prevent his further punishment by the articles of war.'' Auraria. (Geo.) Dee. 28. Gobi. We have been informed by highly creditable .authority, that a discovery has I ate I j' been made in Habersham county, of a gold deposite mine,
that far exceeds in richness, any thing we have ever heard of. The mining
ground is very extensive upwards of one hundred acres on a lot known as Richardson's Lot. Vfe are assured by our informant, that numerous lumps of gold were every where to be seen and picked up in the pits; the ordinary size of the pieces, was about that of a grain of corn, many were much larger; eight hands, say s he, 111 one day made nearly five hundred dwts. of gold though this was an extraordinary day's work; but since the discovery, they will have averaged twenty five hundred dwts. the hands per day. The mine, so far a? has been tested, bids lair to hold out and to answer tlie owners most sanguine expectation. Gid'on Lie, once a shoemaker and a poor man who went from house to house, willi his kit upon hi back, to make .and mend shoes for his more wealthy neghbors lo obtain a livelihood, is now immensely rich, and nt this time holds the high and honorable office of Mayor of the city of New York, the largest city in the United States. Such instances of successful intcrprize, it is true, .are rare, but they furnish examples which ought to stimulate every young man, however poor to deeds of virtue and a steady course of industry', with the full assurance that distinguished merit rarely goes unrewarded among enlightened and free men. Mr. Lee .arrived to his present standing by a course of preserving industry and economy, having always sustained an irreproachable character for honesty and integrity. Buffalo Bulletin. NE W S PA P ER PATRON AG E. The New Hampshire Patriot stales that it has 1200 subscribers, and that there are not fifty dollars due from them lo the proprietor!!! This is an extraordinary case of punctuality. The truth is, the public are loo apt to imagine that a debt incurred for a newspaper, is a thing of but little consequence. Newspaper accounts are very difficult to collect. Some people who cannot cat their breakfasts without first having read tiieir favorite Journal, consider this preference a pay ment in full of their subscriptions! This is all wrong. A newspaper costs money. One of any circulation is sustained, al an enormous expense. The paper alone comes to many thousands per annum, and these thousands are gathered in by mere driblets. But further, besides the general disposition to give the 'printer' the 'go by' there is another practice in vogue, that of appealing to his good feelings for the gratuitous insertion of notice for societies, that are in the constant recepit of large sums of money, and yet have not the fairness to pay for what is not only advantageous, but indispensihlc to their operations. Froni theA'tw York Mrretmtilc. FRAUD. A check drawn by the Suffolk Bank at Boston, dated 3d "inst. for .5,000, on the Phenix Bank of (his city, to the order of a merchant of this city, w as presented and paid yesterday. It was presented by a public porter, who after handing the money to the stranger who employed him lo draw the cheek, had suspicions that something was wrong, and went back lo tlie Bank lo see if all w as right. The Bank, on examination, discovered that the indorsement of the merchant was forged and immediately adopted measure to ascertain the rogue. The check was paid in five .$1000 notes: it is hoped this circumstance will h'.ad to the detection of the person concerned in the fraud. The Bank issued the following notice: .Ve.c York Feb. 5, 1834. The public .are cautioned against receiving any notes of Ibe PHENIX BANK. N. Y. of the denomination of Si 000, the sum of 5000, having been fraudulently obtained from the said Bank this day. Questions by a Shnphisl. Ov er a certain river there is a bridge, and at one end of the bridge a gallows, and at the other a house of judicature, with four judges, who pas the following law: hoever passes over the bridge must first take an oath, and swear where he is going and what is his business. If he swear the truth he shall go free, but if he swear false he shall be hanged upon the gallows. Now a certain man takcing the oath swore that he was going to be hanged on the gallows, and that was his business, and no other. Now said the judges, if we let (his man go free he swears ; lie, and by (he law he ought to be hanged, while if we hang him he swears (he truth, and by the same law he ought to go free. How shall they proceed with ibis man according (o law, or what will be a just verdict?
ii li 12 A A 1 A ii S .
The Drpositts. The editor of the American Farmer say he must speak out" on this question. He had some ten or twelve thousand dollars deposited in the pocket of hi subscribers, w hich he wishes removed a soon as arrangements can be made, to hi? own. CdT'Yoa don't love me, I know you don't,"1' said a young married lady to her husband. "I give von credit, my dear, for a keen penetration." Writing may bo compared !o wine sense is the tlrcngth, but wit the flavor. A gentleman being asked !i w old tlie Siamese tw ins were, replied, very artlessly, that he thought the eddesl ns about twenty, and the other two years younger. C7The editor of the Nantucket Inquirer, very gr.ivelv account? for tin fact that pork is so very plenty in the Western S(aie, by declining that pig's (ail tire cut off and planted every season, and that the 'yield' is prodigiou. 0OMrs. Royal, in a recent number of her Paul Pry, says: We wish the Temperance men would convert our printers they took so much Gin la?t week that our paper was delayed several hours past the unusual time, a veiy uncommon thing. Prehaps. OCrTwo Individuals, both about TO years of age, who had been courting 17 years, we re lately married m vV rndh.'im, Conn. OCT Remnant. A fellow down cast advertises his customers to come quick, as he has but a small remnant of two thousand yards of the article left. Irish Illustration. A Sketch Paddy M'Mahon and his wife were a snug couple in their way; and a good way that was for their farm was good and cheap and the world did not trouble them much. Plenty took up her abode in Paddy's cabin though peace,! believe, was seldom n guest on his floor. '7b 7callo:c naked in December's sn itr. C;tpt. Ross describes tlie new race of people whom he discovered in the polar regions, as mild and inoffensive and as going about entirely naked! a circumstance almost incredible, considering the intense cold of the climate. Both Capt. Ross and his nephew, vouched for this fact. Accident by Fire. A fisher mail'? boat lately took tire, and burnt up. Luckily the devouring element did not communicate to the river; owing probably to the dampness of the wcr-ther. Boatmen ought to be extremely careful not to set the river on lire. OCT" An Eastern man advertises that be has about forty "elegant" hogs, and fifty "smart looking'' sheep for sale. A smooth bullet, wrapt tightly up in a silk handkerchief, may be melted over a candle, without, burning lite handkerchief. Col. Pluck. A Baltimore paper of last Friday says that this renow ned personage was to he exhibited nt a hotel in How aid street (I1.1t evening admittance 25 cents. He would be a valuable ac quisition lo some of the I rave lling menageries. Tlie Lowell Journal ha? the following marriage: In this town, Mis Rebecca End, to Muster Jonathan Foremost. The editor of that witty and generally correct paper has in ibis instance, got the ivronrr end foremost. An engagement took place in Philadelphia, between the tlog-kiliers and dog owners. The battle raged from 10 until 12 o'clock in the day, the combatants consisting of about one hundred on each side 03-Thc brig Lady Adams arrived .it Baltimore from the Pacific, brought, ;ts pari of her cargo, between 250,000 and 300,000 in specie. The schooner Lady Hafsfead has arrived at New York from Jamaica. Quiet was restored in ibe Island, and the slaves had returned to their work, without murmuring or discontent. A bill has been introduced into the Legislature of Ohio, for removing disabilities from witnesses on account of religious opinions. A Curiosity. The Cincinnati Republican says: A lad of e ight years of ago, is now exhibiting at the Western Museum, who is really a lusus natunr. He is a line looking boy has a beautifully developed head and a strong and well proportioned chest but nature has deprived him of his limbs necessary to walking. Notwithstanding this deprivation he skips about over the floor, over benches and tables upou his hands with as much agiltiy as the best marble playing urchin in the street. His parents are poor; and the proceeds of his exhibition are to he appheil to furnish him with an education.
