Western Sun & General Advertiser, Volume 12, Number 13, Vincennes, Knox County, 28 April 1821 — Page 4
hLhhC i LU rOKTIiY. FROM I" H V. EASTKUM ARGUS. '.9:10 b-l':tahundml n the dust ; If-: Huf! rrl' ; fIc! the fi urr r vive?" THt LSiWN r A:D TUB ROSE. I mw blushing venial rose la ;tik its new 1juvu chivies array'd ; And m the inns of s ft repose, licneuui tiiat rlawcr an infant 1 :id. I giz'd oil each witi wild deliglit, For 00L1 vere lively to tne sign:, I lookM igain rind autumn's blast Hi I stripped mat rjsc of alius citrus : Am i death witli withering power had past, And clasped the ' t )e in icy amis. Nov w.iere Uie leafless rose bush ighs Low in its grave that infant lies. How nature, cruel law, I cried, Cais snorcthe hoar of beauty's reign ! lilt nature's ciicerinjj voice replied, T ey both shall live and bloom again Trie o ie in spring shall grace the grove, And one shall senile in coaris aove. m :nnon. row 'h- Y'littnal nuil'ncer. LOUISAS AND FuOlUDA. Tne tinn seitlenmt of the ui.v s and limits of tiies ceded lerritoriei, in the mjt harmo lious and effectual manner, vitii the royai an 1 national authorities of Spain, and wim tne in t friendly ua lersu idmg of all the U mrbo.i soverei is and outer powers in amity with France n i t "pVm, is a coiis'.riiuiathn devouticy to be ack io viedgc i oy t ie Iri mds of p ace. Foe part .inch the I'.eside it of th; United states h taken in tiiese affair, in his ministerial character of 175, a id I3v)2. in Europe, an I i.i us more el evated s-.ations of President Senator, an 1 Secretary of Sia'e nd War, i.i this country have identified ui na ne and character Tith that extensive co. noined acquisition. The ripen fruit, which it yet unpacked, of these fair acquisitions, is the susp .-tried caoital of our injured citizens, to t e am .i:it of fie millions of dollars, w iich wiil come to the hands of its o ncrs in the appieciated money of the present time. Tiiis gieat restoration of active capital, under the judicious and equitabic arrangements of the government, will sensibiy contribute to the reaninution of the business of our country, bearing, as it does, a serious proportion to the wiioic specie medium. The addition to our coasts of more than l0o miies, according to its curvatures from Saint Mary's to the Sabine, in a temperature capable of producing the China orange, corresponding with those of the bays of St. Ubes and Cadiz, must give us, with the Keys and little islands a complete and extensive new faculty for the manufacture of salt for our whole consumption and for exportation. XThe numerous ports from Amelia Island to Nw Orleans and the Sabine, as jfKl from their connexions with our own interior and adjacent country, as from their ministering to the foreign and the coasting trade, and by their salt, to the fisheries and wet provision business, and particularly with that of the West Indies tht Gulf of Mexico, and foreign America, will give a spring, an expedition, and an extension, to our foreign and domestic commerce, of the devest interest at the present time. It will enable u io to cure or tw prevent the evils to U of thatbuccanneering and marauding 9pHu which created during the wars that Jr-T out of the French revolutions, has been particularly nourished by many ob
vious circumstances, on all tht Amtricau coasts south ot Geoigia, since the changes in the got eminent of St. Domingo, in 1791, the cmbai rasaments of Spain and Portugal, and the civil and revolutionary struggles of the various communities and powers in Southren America, on the Gult of Mexico, the Atlantic, and the l'a inc. Tins momentary depression of the prices of American productions, bread stuffs, including rice, tobacco, sugars, and cotton, and of distilled and fermented liquors, gives a great importance to every opportunity, faculty, and discovery, which shall, by adding to the employments of our people, limit tne txcess, and prevent the depression, of the various present fruits of cultivation. It is manifest that the climate and soil of the peninsula of Florida must b capable of yielding all the productions of the Bahama Isiunds, including the pine applj ; and all those of Spain and Portugal, soma of the orange temperature of Lisbon or China, the orange of which is rivalled by fiat of our St. Augustine, at less than 3.) degrees north latitude. This demarcation includes the olive of Spain, with its oil, as before mentioned, the t g ot Spain and Portugal, the silk of S:)aiii,thfc suspended sugars of Mediterranean Spain, the lemon and the sour or Sevilla orange, various minor fruits, the gripe vines of Xeres, St. Lucar, Maiaga, vienccarlo. Oporto and Carcavella with their fabrications of wine, brandy, and the dried raisin, and the liv.sh iirnpe, bv short voyages to the northern ports. The climate of the turkey, or Smyrna, or drum fig, in 3 deg. equal, (at the usual difference of '0 deg ) to our 2 degrees, must be found in the peninsula of Florida, and the great olive countries of lower Italy, Astatic Turkey, and Attica, after the same allowance of 10 degrees of difference, mtiL-t be presumed to exist in our new acquisition.Being singularly peninsular and effected by the constant and near course of the warm gulf stream, the climate must be favorabie to growths of move southern coun;r'' s, and annually more so, as the country shall be cleared and drained. The tea weeds for barilla and kelp merit a careful research. We hate not yet noticed anv thins but the climatcy as a distinct and most important point. We have not yet spoken of the toil. We presume that the important productions of enffee and cacoa, or core, with the date, the lime, pimento, or alspice, or Janvcia pepper, the benni oil and castor 'il plan's and other productions of the West Indies, mav succeed on millions of acres of aouthern peinsula Florida, in w.-ich th"e re no frosts so far as those productions depend on the climate. In regard to the land, cJf. e the un'versal favorite of the world, does not require a rich soil, especially for the more delicate and esteemed qualities Neither does the olive nor the grape vine, nor the fig, nor the date. The success of coffe- in some sufficient places, in so large a country are to be confidently expected, and will prove an easy, healthful, and profitable new employment of a considerable portion of both our poor and our African population. The vine grows in France in gravels, pine barrens, and blowing sands. Attica, famous for its ancient commerce in olive oil, i a very sterile countrr. The olive occasionally failing in Frnnce in the 43d degree of north latitude, must succeed in all Florida to the kouth of St. Augustinci and
probably of St. Mary's river, in 31 dp gites noith latitude. The dale glows in the countries 'under the cquater, and thence to the island of Sardinun, in 32 ttegree north latitude, equal o out 29 degrees, and must succeed in our new peninsula. The temperature of Gteneiiain Spain, is the only climate in Europe in which the chied grape or raiscn is well and abundemly produced by the sun ; nd skill. It is supposed by some that the warm temperature, produced by the passage of the air over the Gulf Stream, tnanbles the planters to raise the sea-island cotton. If this be founded, Florida will greatly extend our advantages in that respect. The warmth of the Gulf Stream has been often proven by the thermometer. The Zante, or Corinth fruit so called, grows in the temperature of Florida. The magazines of the live oak, peculiar to America, and other timber and usi ful woods cannot be unknown to any who have attended to the subject. Much of it grows on the coasts and navagablo waters and may be rendered highly valuable by local ship and house building, and by water and steam mills The West India trade in lumbei must be immense and very active. The breeding and use of asses and mules, and the easy exportation of them to our foreign neighbors, must constitute a great business even in the poorest districts of land. The ingenuity, vet satility, and activity, of our countrymen will subject the capacities of soil, conformation ot the country and coasts and the climate, to innumerable
cxpciiments, in older to make the best
One Tumi red "Dollars Reward. ANAWAV cbctsl ti e Still da) October last, iicni San.utl Hopkins, esq. in Ilciidti st n ccui tj , Kentucf k), a mulatto man slave by the nunie Ov Gordon belonging to Mis. Elisabeth Iluckncr, of 1 aris, Bourbon county, Ky. the haul Lave is a Itigc well n.hde man, ncatiy six feet 1 ;igh, r-f a yellow coniplt clicn, slow of speech, and of humble deportment, a coeptr by tude, stents well acquainted with cunnion carj enter's tools,
as a cooper forsocral ytr.ts. vvs ird.ctil near Fiedericksburg, Virginia be tc-ck with him when he wtnt away a h rg black broad cloth coat and pantalcor.s, and si ndry article of clothing not made i:pt which he may hac cxcl-i'g' d iur ie;idy made clothes. It is belied be may bac gone far into the inteior of IiuiiLna, Illinois or Ohio, oris AtUirptir.g to gel to Canada. The aboc reward should be be taken up out c this state 1 am autJ.orized toeffer tony pcison who will tvlo up said slave and deliver him to the uv ner in Bourbcn ccunly, cr to 11. c in the town of llerderson, cr stcurc l.im in some jail in this Mate so that the owner gets him, or fUty dollars if taken up within this state. JAMES I TILLY ER. Ilcnccrscn, Ky. Feb 12, 1 82 1 . 8-St
of a '..rood bargain.
COLUMBIANUS. JB. WELLMAN,
STA'l E or INDIANA, posft cotntt Circuit Court, March Term 1821. Laurence Stull "J vi. v Petition for Divorce. Clarissa Stull. J , OW at this day came the plair.hT by his attorney, and it appearing to the satisfaction of the court, that the defendant is not an inhabitant of this state, it is oidcred that notice of the pendency of this suit be published in the Western Sun. a news-paper printed at Vincennes, the space of four weeks successively, and that unless the defendant appear at the next term of tl is court, to be bolden at the court house in Springfield, on the fourth Monday in May next, and answer to the said petition, the matter and things therein contained will be adjudged in her nhtnr . JAMES P. DRAKE, Clk. p c c.
Domestic Attachment.
1
7
820
e Scott,
Josse Jackson,
NOTICE is hereby iven, that a writ of Attachment against, the goods, chattels, rights, credits, monies & effects of Jesse Jckon. an abstnt debtor, has been issued bv the ?ubscriber at the suit 4 of Gvorge Scott, for S20, and that unless the said Jsse Jt ckson does appear and gr e bsil at tht expiration of 30days from t!i:s dr'e judgment will be entei ed again', l i v, . vl the property so attached will I e v.iv 'osed of according to law.
Given under mv hard and 5fM this twentv-firat dav o Anril. one tbrmiard c!gh hundred and twentr-one E. STOUT, .p.x.e.
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13-15
NEaR Till: STI-AM MILL
TTT) EsrECTFi'LLi uifoi ins hisfiyrtids c
4 . I . . 1 1 r. .-1 ..l.-.kt .1 ... l .tll
continues to carry on the lilacksmithing Business. In all its various branches, at the Ajv Shop, near the Steam-Mill, and believes himself to be completely master ol making all kinds of warrantable Tools, such as, Edged Tools. Narrow sixes. Broad Axes, Addzes. and all kinds of Carpenters Tooh. Horse and Ox Shoeing S Bellows Making, Can be had at the shortest notice. lie fiattcis himself fi run bis h ng experience in the above busii-cst, that he w ill at least merit a shaie of the public patrotyigc. Vint lines. Oct. 10 40-6m nnonw & aaak, ILL in future practice in V . conjunction, in the conntics of, DaviM. Knox. Sullivan, Vigo, Jtrnr Dubois and Pike, aid in tllC Siipiene Court One of tl.em will ct all tin cs be found in their cfiirc at Washington, except during the session ot courts. All orders and COXV I.iXCIXG will be punctually attended to. lVahingtcn-j1f)ru 10, 1830. 20tf T70H IJUTvrn
hi. as 1 a TT WILL rent the N. W. room, and I! th S. E. part of the house wherein
I now live, by the month, upon reasonable terms. GEXl. W. JOHNSTON. Aprils, 1621. ll-sw
