Western Sun & General Advertiser, Volume 22, Number 9, Vincennes, Knox County, 9 April 1831 — Page 4

b

i ('

I cxtinc-uUhcd. xxhWc the democratic. rii.

" : r

ru liberty l becoming stronger every

Mr. Stout. Having gien publicity to 'The Rejected hover," without comment, I iend you another on Courtship. Respectfully, V. B. TOR TKR WESTERN SUN. ON COURTSHIP. Would you act the prudent lover, Still maintain the manly part; ' Let not downcast looks discover All the secrets of your heart.

Women, soon the truth divining, Slily laugh, or sharply rail.

When the swain m accents whinin

Tells his melancholy tale.

it by some of its citizens, but more especially by the king of Prussia, brought

diy that spirit which can alone gie about a blocdy war, which ended in its cheap governments and lice institutions, division as above stated. It may be a When ohsension is completely at an enci matter of surprise to those unacqwaint-

Ihcn the Union must lie repeal, d. The ed with the fact, but it is nevertheless Union ought to be repealed; but it can- true, that Prussia at one time was in a not be repealed by iulence. As Catho state of vassalage to Poland; that Rustic emancipaion was caniedby petitions sia,inthe beginning ol the 1 7th century, and by arguments, so will the repeal of saw its capital and thtone possessed by the Union be accomplished. Let us pro- the Poles, and that Austria, in 1 683, was v.ecd within the pale of the law, and be- indebted to a king of Poland for the pre fore two vcais, I promise you that with- servation of its metropolis, and almost

in two years wc shall have the Parlia- for its very existence. These three al-

tnyeelf, this nan does ?:of cjrJr it right. When 1 pjss along the n.ad and bee a house wnh the ciap boaids barging on end by one nail, and old hats ar.d rags stuffVd into the broken windows, and tenccs all down, a mud hole before. the door,

and a vrhole family loitering about in 1 , ii r . j . r .. . t tne

luieness x Know incy oo nai wutk it

right. When I seo a countryman frequently

going to the tavern or giog-shop, or the .Northern Tuvnpil laboring man catryine home a bottle of chosen, because it

THE REFORMED 3SLr0VtftCtlBt0U.

Now, by sanguine hopes directed, Rise a victor's haughty strain; Every nymph, by pride protected. Learns to scorn the forward swain. Him for conquest love shall fashion, Him the graces all attend. Who with the most ardent passion, Joins the lover and the friend. VINXLNNES BARD.

mcnt in College green.

POLAND. As this country is now the theatre upon which a revolution is acting, it na-

turally rivets a large share ol public attention. Presuming they will be acceptable to those of our readers, who are not well acquainted with the history of Poland, we have extracted a few par-

iticulais from a geographical woik, pub

lished in London in 1794, by William

Guthrie, Esq. Poland, including Lithuana, runs from the 57th degree of north latitude, and from the 15th to the 34th degree of east longitude. Its length is seven hundred

SPKI2C1I Or MR O CONN BL, At the aggregate meeting in Dublin, held

January 2b. Mr. OXonnel now came forward amid the most enthusiastic acclamations, vniich were continued for several minutes. As soon as he could procure a hearing he commenced by saying: Re collect this, let the fact never be forgotten, that the union was brought about by one rebellion. There is only one way of preventing the repeal of the union, and that is, by provoking the people to

resistance, and exposing them to the attacks of cavalry, of artillery, and of soldiery (Hear) But the experience ot the past, with all the train of errors that marked the most fatal era in our history, is before our eyes Wc are not reckless of the lives and properties ol the Irish people I will not allow the people to be provoked to any, not even the smallest breach of the peace. (Hear and ioud cheers ) To thosa who cheer stir through the streets, I am extrencly obliged; but I will tell them I am not

obliged to those who call upon others to take off their hats, and put another out cf the wuy, or make the side walks be cleared for mc as those who arc walking cn them have as good a right to them as I have, and they should not bedisturbed. It is for liberty I struggle, and not to deprive any man of the slightest right ot

which he is possessed. Let there be peace; let there be tranquility; let there he no breach of t;e public peace, nor any violence whatsoev. er; tet there be this, in spite of the paltry ma tojuvres and wicked irritation ol your enemies let there be this, and I promise you, that sure as to morrow's un shall arise, you will sec a Parliament in Dublin. You will see Sackville street g lin a street of the mansions of the nobles of the land. My crime is. and I am ready not conscious of any other, a desire to suppress illegal societies, and accordingly, out comes a p ochmation. That society was never formed; wc obeyed the worse than Burbon ordinance, and a fourth time we were riht. (Hear, hear!) We av.'di.i get irvliiforcnt coffee, good tread, hard egg, and soft sugar, by tak :ng breakt tsi and paying one shilling a d sixpence far it at Homo's. (TIca heat I

laughter )

English miles ; breadth six hundred and eighty; containing one hundred and sixty thousand eight hundred square miles, with fifty five inhabitants to each. This was the original extent of Poland, and its original number of inhabitants Both have been considerably diminished by parts of Poland being attached to other kingdoms. Lithuania is entirely ps sessed by Russia; Red Russia and Little Poland is attached to Austria, and Po lish Prussia to the Prussian government. Had it been kept undivided, with a good government over it, Poland would have been one of the most powerful kingdoms in the universe.

foianu lathes its name trom rolu, a Sclavonian name, signifying a counity fit for hunting. The northern parts are cold but healthy. The Camathian mountains, which separate Poland from Hungary, are covered with everlasting snow, which occasionally falls in the midst of summer. '1 he soil is fertile in corn, and in some places rich in pasture. The country is generally level Mines ol iron, copper, silver, salt, coals, ochre, and several species of granite, abound throughout Poland. Warsaw i3 the principal city. The water of some springs is boiled into salt. In the Palatinate ot Cracow there exists a spiing which is said to possess wondcrlul virtues, for the prescrvatinn of lite The inhabitants near it, who use the water which flows from it, coounenlv live to

lied powers now possess and control almost the whole nation. Poland has given birth to many great men Some left the wreck of their country when they could no longer assist it, and gallantly enlisted in the cause of our

country's independence. Their services ate gratefully remembered. Phil. Sat

hv Post. Prom the Glasgow Free Press IRELAND.

Ireland is every day becoming more

unanimous in its demand for a repeal of

the Union; and repealed it will be ere

lonjT, cither peaceably or in a different

manner, unless the new government a

dopt some other mode of conciliating the

people, than thatct ruling them by des

potic proclamations. 1 here is just one way of calming agitation in Ireland, and presenting its legislative separation from

Btiain, arid that is, promptly to adopt

measures, first, for alleviating the suf lei ings of the poor, both by the intioductionot poor laws, and the settlement and cultivation of waste lands; second, to do away with the evil of abcnteisro; and, third, utterly to abandon that spirit of favoritism in the government which arrays sect against sect, and rendeis magi tiates atid grand juries only scourges to the country. This is the only effectual method of rendering Mr. OXonnel in noxious, and seeming to us the permanent connexion of the Irish people; but

ing man cat tying

whiskey after his day's work I am cer

tain that man does not work it right

I Y and with the consent of the Reform

O ed Medical Society cf the U. h'ritcs.

new Reformed Medical Int:tutic.n has

been located in Woithington, un ir.terctir.g and P.r.uruhing town cn the hetslotx

n er, eight miles north c t Cclumbu, on the

Le. This state has been

presents th

vantages to laci

botanical student

rectest ad-

iv npn i pp 7i man i ijti iavly iu uuiiu iti . . . .

- w"" t ui tk 'jnn v a . . . . l . - -.i -

barn or a stable, suff-nng his cattle vhcHthy and delightful in the ve?tero r -i.n-

ne out through the winter in the rain ana . try and because the occupancy of the lare snow, throwing their food into the mud I college edif.ee, tegcther with the ground of

litate the researches of the f : the country aroutd it a- if ccry variety of m dic.y

wasting and destroying all he raises up

on his farm the man acts like a tool.

say I he doce not rk it right hen 1 see a ttadesman or mechanic neglecting his shop and business, obliging his customers to call several times, and at last requesting them "tocallagain," I fear that you will not only lose your custom but your eAcl, say I ; "Keep thy shop and thy shop wili keep thee." You do not work it right. If I sec a farmer without a good gar

den, and without fruit trees upon his place, when with a tew hours labor he might have both he has a lean table, say I, he deprives himself of many iux uries which he might enjoy with a very little care and attention ; he dees not

work it right

In short, how many pleasures, bless 1 t a a m

ings anu comforts are overlooked and

lost for the want ot a little attention : The industrious and provident man has every thing around him which the heart

can desire He is independent of the

wot Id, because he supplies all his wants within himself. His food and clothing

his comforts and luxuries, are the reward of his industry, good order and perseve

rance ; and he has none to thank but a bountiful Providence for what he enjoys

Two Irishmen one dav a p-unninc. a

Earl Grey, though he promises largely aiee flock Gf r,Ceons came hVintr over

on mis as on otner suojeets, uoes not seem disposed to adopt so plain a reme-

dy. very wen: tne disease will soon

go beyond this power to cure it.

evtiy variety of soil for anextenViveo.'Uni al garden, has been presented to us by the board of trustees Ji Worthinton college. There will be attached to the institution, a dispensary for analyzing and pre: aiirg vegetable medicines; and an ini;ru;?rv, where persons frum the neighborly 1, . v. distance, laboring under fevers, o ' Mimp-

jtions, dvspepsU, liver complaints, irra' r'y

Ulcers, nstulas. cancers, occ.wc. will be m;ccestfully treated, without bkedit,g,iKe-cu.-ry or the knife, and from which the student will acquire a correct know let: e cf tie na

ture, operation and superior efficacy of ve

getable agents m reinon.g disease.

I he necessity for such an restitution cf

this kind, in the west, to be undei the direc

tion cf competent profevsr.-s, is -tnki:!y evident. It is an institution that L desiji.t d

to concentrate, and disseminate, all the

know lodge and discoveries of doctors of medicine and emmrics. saees. and spaces:

and that will demonstrate to the str.tU nt the sick that vegetables alone, afford the only rational, safe, and effectual means cf removing diseases, without impaiiirgther restitution, or endanger life or an b That the present system of practice, which v.v difeasesof every form witY. n.etallic r i? .rals, the lancet, or tne knire. is dai re us er inefficient the lamentabW tcts s: ich erry day present too fully illutrat . Ncr is this truth inure clearly exhibited, than ihe f.xt that vegetable substances alone, aic

void of danger, and powei fully elScient when administered: a preference to the. success cf our New-York infirmary, and the success of ignorant botanicai physicians, proves this fact.

The college and infirmary ill be rpen!

the first week in December, where s'udents

Nor does he appear likely to be much

more successful in England. The spir

it of in utiection still spreads in that

country, tlespite ot tne many victims

whom the law is ruthlessly offoring up

in most of the Counties now visited by

special con-missions.

their heads. Patrick elevating his piece, and firing, brought one of ihem to the

proitnd Arrab,texcla medh s comoa- " .r" V.

x , . ',v in an parrs may enter ai u complete tneir

nirvn l vl iiqt wnn inn irf rn ivcr uriiir i .

meaical euucation, ana where persons labo-

nion) what a fool you are to waste your

ammunition, when the bare fall would

have killed him."

MAKUIAGE

'ourg men," say Montesquieu are sufficiently icadv to many " How

one hundred, and some one hundred and should they not be ? The pleasues, the

nry years oi a;;e. l ne spring is in avowed sentiments of love, ate only perflammable, and by applying a torch to it, niitted in this condition. It is said thty

uames ukc spirits oi wine. are onv emancipated trom a double sub-

ring under every species oi disease shall

recene prompt and faithful attention.

1 he course of study to be pursued, and

which will be taught according to the OLD and the Reformed systems, by Lectures.

Kecitatious, Examinations, and suitable text

bocks, is, 1st. Anatomy and Physiolocv

Old and Reformed Sureerv. 3. Theorr

- .

and Practice of Medicine 4. The old ar.d

improved ty stem of Midwifery, with the dis

eases cf women and children. 5. Materia.

Medica, with practical and general Botany.

6. iVledical and Botanical 1 henn;trv iinri

!iRY,&C. I PharmkCV. 7. Stated Li rturc t r.n rn'tlt-

O. 3, for March, is this day pub ral ScienceMoral and Mental Philosophy

hshed, and contains as rreat a va T renoiog-.uecicai Junsprudtnce

THU LADY'S BOOK,

NO 3, FOR MABCU.

A MONTHLY UTERART MISCELLAY.

DEVOTED TO LITERATURE, THE FINE

ARTSsFAS!IIONS, BIOGRAPHICAL ANEC

DOTES, TALES, NARRATIVES, MUSIC,

RIDING, DANCING, POETSY, EMBROID-

The forests ot Poland abound with

jection, and that they ate placed at the

buffaloes, horses, wolves, lynx, elks and head of a littleempire. "It is the young derr nil nf thr.rn wild, hdc! varinnn nthpr I t . .,.i .....u u.'

deer all of them wild, and various other

animals. They aie, perhaps the best hunting grounds m the known world The authority which we quote, num nets the population of Poland, before the dismemberment and partition, at 14.000 GOO, of which 2,000.000 weie Jews The military force, bctore the division, was about 170,000 cavalry, and only 20,000 infantry. The Poles arc not partial t fighting on foot, bin always prefer appearing in the field well mounted. Af ter the division the population of this

'country was, of course, greatly reduced.

Guthrie puts it down at 9,' 00.000 of which GOO 000 are Jews. What strength the insurrectionists can biing into the

' field agatns Rvissia is not known With I uit aid from forciirn nua'ters, or from

..b,.,.. ,iUBUated with an Engraving; A P i family, where proofs oi b lhe Amhor Qf Li Hope, bffoctions may be given and Drake. Thc EbCruloirc embeni

i'.'i i i.iuvrir.cr i i) u i wnax nannr.net : . .. . . .

. 1 ' . io(Jic parts wu;cn onginaiiy oeionuea to hev discovered treason in the cotfee. . ;. n

. r uiiu, u t.a jc nuuu!ir iik.o suincicni

sen 1011 in tne sugar, tne cgjjs were rett ltous, and I do not know but there wore pikes concealed in the loaves.(Cheer- and laughter.) We had, it is true, our tea, toast and eggs together, when out conies another proclamation, declaring " Bret k fast no more (Laugh5e .) You recollect the tradgedy of Tom Thumb, in which thc kin says. "Petition mc no petitions. " So says Anlt-sea in his piuclamaiion f lie Mrquis ot Anrdesrv savs, that

IrcUm! and England must stand or tall

to cope with the forces ot the cnemv. i he Poleare said to be exceedingly fair and handsome in ihci- persons They are brave, honest, and hospitable; and their women sprigntly, yet modest and submissive to their husbintU. Their diversions arc warlike and manly; thev are so hardy in their make that they will sleep upon the ground, without any coveitng, in the frost and snow, without sustaining injury or inconvenience. entertainments neither knives, forks, nor

i spoons are laid on thc table, as each guest

men, he adds, '"who need tobeencour-

aged -IJut why : uo tne motives

which lead them to marry, want force?

It is only by marriage that a man can ob

tain the favors of the woman who in his

eyes is worth all others. It is only by

mat riage that he can live freciy and pub iicly with an honest and respectable wo

man, and who will live only for him

There is nothing more delightful than

the hone of a

thc tendercst a

receive.': where power blended with

kindness may be exercised; where con

fidence and security at e found ; where

thc consolations of old age may be ttea

sured up ; where we may behoid our

selves replaced by ourselves; where we may say, I shall not entirely die. A 1 t

man wants an associate, a cormaent, a counsellor, a steward, a mistress, a

nurse, a companion, for all seasons. All

these may be lound united in a wife -

What substitute can be provided ? Bintham : Rationale of Reward.

riey of interesting articles as any form

er number.

EMBELLISHMENTS.

Portraits of the Three Sisters.

An interior view of a Lady's Boudoir.

Comparative anatomy, Medscal history, etc.

by attending this institution, the student

will acquire a correct knowledge of the present practice of physicians a knowledge ot the use. and abuse, of Minerals, the Lancet, Obstetrical forceps, and the knife, and a knowledge of the new and improved system,

Embroidery Front and crown patterns, that supersedes their use, with tenfold more

An illustration of "The gentleman in satety -and success. 1 here will be no speci-

Black " nea lin,e 10 complete a course ol stuuy ;

The ornamental Artist.

"Wt Met," a popular song set tornusie

CONTENTS. The Three Sisters,

illustrated with an Engraving; A Poem,

Dr

embellished

with a beautiful vignette Lngravmg; WnmMi! TwilirHit! Nirht Scr.n in the.

V . V tion. will be Sl50in advance.

tauic, a iti icy 1 an iic 1 diuici, mc

whenever th-? student is nualifed he mav

graduate and receive a Diplomason will pass in one year others will requite n.ore.

REQUISITIONS FOR ADMISSIONS

1. A certificate of a good moral charac

ter. 2. A prood oieiish Education.

TERMS The price of qualifying a peF-

son to practice, including k Diplema, and

Madman, from the French; Carbonic

Acid Gas; Oliver Cromwell; '1 he Ro

mance of History; The Stars; Happiness; Embroidery for Head Dresses,

with several er ravings ot the Front ar.d

Crown patterns; Early Death, by IVillis

Gaylord Clark; A New Year Ode; The

or in ad

vance, and SlOO at the close of his studies.

?Jery advantage given, and sme allow

ance made to those in indigent 01 cumstan-

ces. lioard will be had at SI. 00 ur ueet.

and books at the western city prin s.

iTytiVery student on entering Wcrthir.r-

ton college wiil become an honorary mem

ber of the Reformed Medical Society of thr United State from whom he will receive

toge'her." I am quite ready that they blinds these wih him

shou; J stand, but 1 bar thc tall (Laugh ! Nobles, clergy, citizens and peasants.

ter ) ! am exceedingly anxinus that j the last but little better than slaves, are

E'i'aOvI should be prosperous, ar.d that

re s iiuid enjoy that prosperity along! with ner Hut rna'ithc present situation of Irct.o.d? She is like the M reiuis's wu charger, sad lied a"d brid!fd, i.nlcvtrbjd. E'.tr1 nd is mounted upon

her. and there is the gallant M-qau 'n

pulton behind L.tuglitT J li is ' trtv:, indeed, if tne nt-ir brute. Ire

'ell, the people of England houk;

t.i

INFANT S SLEEP

So motionless is its slumber, that, in Young Lady; Byron; Ti.e Ornamental

watching it, we tremble and become im Artist, trith appropriate Engravings; A

patient for some si or sntind that may Mother's Grave; the Swi-s Hunter;

assure us ot its t-xisteece ; yet, is tne 1 ne oanisnea, a iaie,oy lvuss incram:

lancy ot the sleeper busy, and every A Categorical Answer; The Gentleman

pulse an artery of its frame engaged in in Black, with an excellent illustration,

the work of growth and secretion, though engraved by a well known artist; Egyp

Ins breath would not stir the smallest in tian Women; "We Met," a ballad from

Demon Ship, thc Pirate of the Mediter DiDloma. -nd Annnni Hf-r.nrt ,aii th..

ranean; The Sweetest Spot, from the ings and discoveries cf its different mem-

Persian; the Worm aod Flower, by bers, and be enutled to aji its constitutional

Jamca Montgomery Esq ; Burial of a privileges and benefits

10 5 of

v lai. siong mth he-. Ru' what I want is, ha their shall be a fi-r partnership be

wWvtn ingtand and Irehud otic which wc shall have an ccual share

incpionts, anfiot the losses also But cur crime i that w are looking for lepi-al of the Union Here Mr. Q'. Conor I resd several et-aCtH from a pair ptiir' wri'ten by Jud-e Jebb, while a briefliS Iawyer in 8o He then returned his speech by saving At present lhe usjoritv of the growing children

cinrnd. The minds of the people arc

the divisions which exist in society The nobles arc known by the apprlla tion of Brothers. They do not value ti tics, but think a gentleman of Pol-md is the most honorable one they can enjoy. Torture w is abolished in Poland in 1776 by n edict of the diet. Murders, aiid other erroneous crimes are punished

bv hi heading; lesser crimes by whipping j

and imprisonment The nobles are not liable to corporeal punishment. 1 he Polish language is a dialect of Sclavonic, and is both harsh and unbar monious. on account of the vast number of consonants it employs; some words hiving no vowels at all. The Lithuanians and Livimi.uis have a language lull of corrupted Latin word?; but thc Russian and German tongues are understood in the provinces bordering on these countries Connected with the early history of Pohnd and some of its conspicuous ci

lr.f .-med; thev know that "knowledge ; tuos, are many deeply interesting ciris p'jwer;" and thev are also aware that cumstances, perhaps too well known to r.o n-er upon the face of the earth can be repeited here At one time the govresis the speed of knowledge Hear emment was strong, mighty and powerThr vorld in a sure of transition; thc fu: but still essentially defective. This,

.atDnssrc moving; the torch of arista, jail reea'ed acts of the most bae and . treading up the soil, and breaking the cracy r-X TCy U:spitisra ii about being 1 dishonorable ptrfidy, exercised toward! t oota of thc grass and wheat, I eay to

sect that fcported on his lip though his

pulse would not lift the flour leaf ot

which he dreamed, from his bosom

Yet, follow we this emblem of tranquility in alter lile, we see him exposed to every climate, contending with every ob stacle agitated by every passion ; and, under these various circumstances, how different is the power and degree of the heart's action, which has not only to beat, bat to "beat time." thtough every moment of a long and troubled life. ll'ilson's Lectuten. THE FARMER.

rOR APRIL. S'crn winter now by sprikc rep rest, Forbears the long continued strife. And N iture on her naked breast, Delights to catch the gales of life

ITp nova wnr wnnv it Rtr.rrT

I often say to myself as I ride about the country, what a pity it is our farmers do not work it right ! When I see cV.tlc late in the fall or early in the spring,

rambling in the meadow or wheat field.

Those wishing further information wili

please address a letter (post paid) to Cel. G. H. Griswold, cr the undersigned, ar;d i: I shall receive prompt attention.

btu .ents and rthers had better beware r l

the slanders of the present physicians, who

know no mote about our institution, this thev do about Botanical Medicine.

J. J. STEELE. Preside?::, ll'orfhivicn. G.Oct. 1, 1830. NO I E Editors publishir.tr the ibovc

Circular fifty-two times, shall receive as

compensation, a certificate entitling the bearer to tuition cratis. or an ccuhnlVnt to

that sum (S150) in medicine, ad ice or at

tendance, from us or any member t f our society. Tlme publishing it 26 times, to ha!: that compensation. Such editnr in thr

west as published the N. York Circular o .z

year, by giving the foregoing twelv inset -tions, can send their student to this institu

tion, and he shail be accepted. .

November 1.7, 1830. 42-ly fttformatfou intrtr. ANY intelligence concerning I horeas M'Donnell, son of Uurh M'

land, begs leave 10 tender to thc inhabi- Dcnnell, of the Parish cf Coolmar.aph,

latus 01 vmcenncs ana 11s vicinity, nis and county o termanagn, Ireland, who professional services. Hemaybe found came to the United States in 1815, will at all times (except when absent on the be kindly received by his sis-er. Marr

business of profession) at his room in M'Donnell, Rochchster, N. Y , or to tho

the Songs of the Boudoir, set to Music;

The Bird and Child T. W Memory

J. S C; The Gatherer; Manners;

Self Respect; Analysis of a Tear; Re

member Mc; an original Pcem S. L. A GOOEY, St CO

Subscriptions receded at this Office.

Philadelphia, March 9 8. 7 MSDICIST2J,

DOCTOR UESBY DAVISON

1,1 EMBER of the College cf Sur

i v J eeons of London, Licentiate of

the Lying-in Hospital of Glasgow, Scot-

the house of Mr. George Davis, Water

street ; his charges shall be moderate

and he confidently hopes that his capaci

ty may entitle him to the confidence of

those who may call on him. Vincennes, Dec. 16. 1830 45-tf

INDENTURES for Apprenti

ces for sale at this office-.

Roman Catholic Pastor of the same place It is presumed that he reside in one of the Western States, perhaps Illinois or Missouri. Editors friendly to the cause cf hU manity will please insert this. October 16, 1830. 1 few pounds of Wool wanteds