Western Times, Volume 2, Number 3, Richmond, Wayne County, 19 September 1829 — Page 3

1

7 G y J rc ch in it c, u li c :r. tf r a en hII ma ay n cf i of r, reo put he

.-d the Mt lari. J )r?t (iP nt!? dtd Hof a litit n'i i tr and sfcr do i oar, i, ol' cur k at irpi that one no o i rrf f .nil d rrli'-h

udi-

utff

j'Ot

.. ....d I t per acre, and improved land not much more: indeed, so good is ,i. prospect for a man who must live i-.Juiti v, that I wish all my friends 'j .u-.jaamtances were here 'with me. ' .fcl say, I wuM not, nor would

htv, return la Lngland on any ac- ' '. ; i,,t h ati v r. 7ESTERN TIMES.

... ii i'v i ii r. sifriilii'it io. irM.!...,..i.,c i"..n 1 ...1..1 4-.i.

,1 '--- ... -- - - ; . .1 AMi. F. Fril(ifS i a candidate to ' t:,. -lh e f Justice of the Fcace in ,lt. t,Mvnl,.p. Way no curdy, made v a-j ,1 l ls the It '--UMi.iti' 1. I ibiLrh ("nil. SI. I.UT M Ut I.K.IOV. f.penin " r,e nf i r ?outli in 'th.mge , i-, the f:i-t thirijr that caught our at-..-..Miw.t the fallowing alv ettif ment.', i ! I v ,th -t irme cM . -v ;.i af.li: m.(;i:oi-' . n. ..IL..( lHti iti .i i i -nJ 'It ii.irinf . iii ,i ii wi'htwochildren. the ( n ear old. j tto other turned of le months1 v ' ! I t d i 1 jw, I r cash. Apply at tin c s ,,-l'he whole wdlbe b?( th. r. or: idP'cdl frvarau . t uit pun hiFhe older child i- a b n , the oung .1 " Weinke hid the tni-erits of livcry , i out t u in ever) hideou t-rm ; we reread in mirnVrlei? authors the cruf t :nnV ted ou the p r I I ' k by th it . 1 1 .U - iiia-! rs : I ut m r r b f ro uftc : ,r ff elinj so enl'ly sh ked, r.nd our ' I m rie to cnm-n our cht ek wh the of siirne n think o-ir-elf a mm." i- i the firt sisrht of this a hertiscment i i i i at d hiu. nt able truth, that tho v . ..ft" e fiee st-itc. :re nd tortuied by 1,w.i: (, !,orid'!e traffic in human -S.i is of d id v O'Turi enre in the outh'T, ; n l si ivedr-d li:- -t4t We h ue ! f!t f 'I the r.-ndt;'!!! of our white ' 'ft. -ten, w ho liv e v. here t id e d prevails i I '.sj ad nf i?ed !lu ir r.i'i'O, when we !.-f. heird them hiirhl tteitrd fr then - i-'.!ie towards the Micks under t!e : -m -v lh.it tin ei!s ( f 'Uxor.' w-rre n t '-fd i'euer.!ti-.i by t eir i . .v -.1' ' I'. I '!j: lit ni i isr'T I row - i r v to l-e n-i r i i-e (: i h n e . l ui n i n f r If efierfd. uAli .1 " Ft V w t". o 1 ttie h he !,' .'!'lv;d hft i.te are pnhliely adier li!e ruu'e or tin!! rk! And .t ::d diiit' w if t'di. li"-c nam i con !, i- w illmg to tear nuri';( r the deart t Me- id ri t'uie. and cpatate the f uul paif in 1 her htfle lhes to he earned into ' ,T- M ,.t f irt- i I th rr.ut.try, to he plared y. the l i-ht fsme rru I -.tk m.iMer. fhd w ill h.un them, and t.kk them, mid f; - niif ii -weat with stripes that nerc) "i d a bice lir e heat t wf f ps w hin she ee k t d nn a h". -t.' V t thf vrrv ntiif- pper from which we to lie III- a iv rti inf nt, ha an editor w ho '! pre-uTie mike a pr'ife"-i'n d nliin - -uhol iid hi- paper with Sun-lay School, b f'''. A U r fa ry , and 7Vrt -f .Sm. ' ty not ire s &'i t r ii e dins. r h ive n v er iefu" 1, fr ' "iril, f xch.,rpe with any paper, f'f "Mh ie iliiWenf e ir opinion on anv I'i'jf t, 1 ut w.e we not rurioiM to learn v. hat u i ked.i.f ih ei-t among some Virr .niJ. . ril, vve would rettaiul t' i t -i h a li-gi are fi un our 1 1 t . I'i,'-1.-rif', com CiMii.'-Wp have fiepHii'dv rr id, that in early tinn's there rf witi his. hulf ed, eur piou puritan nr,ff -tor-hav e hit record evidence in a b-nd ince, to ptove that they were very tr d,i i.me to the c"fid people, even in thirdly. 1'eit n Itv irig. in his auther.tic l i, 'orv of N. York. autes u that ever) Udv f)l l woman in N Liigland, who wa f i en uperted of holding rumrnunion w ith evil pints killed off, we did not supp )e that such a thing a a w it h iMtel at the present tine. A I'eurnylv ania paper, ho .v ev er, f onie the Indictment, in a c;ie

that occupied the time of the jury, at Sun-: Samuel I .1. arson, t.irvj'enn-lvania, at the Aunt-t Term.'; !;r W (:om.fr, . I1 ,i- . ,'l.dinuod Deheny,

i;.".f, wi.icii . i v u.mn ..-, ....-.1-.,. th? early records f,f our ancestors, except that it i much m re technical. We give the l ist count of the Indictment And the inquoftrfoirsaid, on their on!h nu I alhruntiotn aforesaid, do further pie eot. That Mr. Harrington. Mr. Downie, M uter Downs Clown S'.okes Mr. Karon,! Ha l Sf rgeant Andrew, po--eMng tile pow-' ir nf WitArrafi. Cnn-tratmn. h.nrhantmmt ai'X V) rfry, and tiei'ig uioreovei person of evil and ilepraved fiipodin, ;nd nr in t.'ic.d character" having private ronlei

borough of Sunbury, in (he county afore-i said, on the nineteenth day of Augut, in the year aforesaid, expose to the view of divers and very- many people of this com n"vealth. various frats acts, decd, ex h'bitions and performance of magic, and

" " '"" ? ""''' para-, oy me whole stud of Horses. 1 "I ounir American hanging from hi? horse,' "Leaping over a hor?e; through hoops, over garters, thro a barrel, "Koman attitudes,' "Comic stilt dance,' therein the cloven fet -u cs jalpubin displayed ''Flying by the whole cornpiny," ''Muster Paeon riding oti hihead," 'wonderful summerset from a hore at full peed, by Mr. Downie,' "Dropping from the rope and coming to life," to the threat t:i )rt;jicaliniUlc "Leaps,' "Vault "Feasant Fmlick, " Otliccr and lie rrtiif f.r l)-.i,hLn 'IV.niofinn.iii,,,, ,.1'i... tl:.., " ..rvi.i, r..,i;.L i- . fiiim j vi nil Mlinicu - I'll IM IMC lllll , c.t r i . . .t mulsration of the infernal art, to the frreat 'scandal and delusion of the human species. '""trary to the act of X.d Henry the Eighth. : 1 - I l i II A I I l".."7 " " mVie OI a 1 m,,er "c "in u.iiui;, .win ;ig.uiti uir rat f .mi Milfoi ty cf the Commonwealth of lnns Ivania. AMlr5 V.I.LM AKI.lt, WCy (irm ral.

Milton (i resz, Lq. h i retired from thejl'icrcet ,.in w . e er before obtained in a

concern of the I'uiiana Valla, Hum, and left the editorial department of that paper to the sole guidance of Mr. Cullev Fhihp S. Maikley, formerly a member of l oiiiii f, and more recently removed j tVm the cdlectorship in Fhiladelj.hia, by the Freident, has heen appointed by (;ov. . oui- aiuTin v vitnerai oi i ennMvania v- . , nim!llip - - ' v iiiiinitnv I I I IIIV VM, Jl extern Hcvicv. The lat (September)

number of the Western Monthly 1U ; , , ' " nufn n"- e.ore ne com- . i , . . muted the deed, he wrote a letter to the reached us hy the last eastern mad, and' Director in which he acknow ledeed him-

we ate almost constrained to speak favora-Uclf

bly of it. contrary to our former opinion of the woik. We have always admired Mr rr. , I i i , . . , 1 IlTit S Stle. n ml roiiredeil til turn t i on't of t!,e llit onler, with a mind enriched by much reading and observation, and ome f In- subierts are so handled as to he re.! rlllritli Ififefettfiiifr Imf l-i a i. mnn 1 1 r. n c ,. II. , , i too prolix, and rattier dry. and according; - S1 to eunane,i frequently untortunate in his. 'election .

Contents of the present number. At-, tsin V. rejort w ith confidence that there tack of Pry ant's Station. II imiltoniari Sv.ajare no pirates at present on the South side

tem. Levievv of Owens conrhidini; speech. It tly.hv Cailo l'otta. Conver.iti'Mis on Political Leon my. Principles nf Lhjcution.

that our MINISTER, Mil. POINSETT, .f i- Papers. The number le-s new pa H AD UIILN ASSASSINATED at the city per that are springing up almost weekly .jof Mexico. Thi report was generally bem (' itfe rent n.irt-oflhe 1'niun. are hnhl i hev ed atTlimdad.

cornj Iiuieiitary to the taste and spirit of our countrymen I . , .ut among them there; are mmv that can reflect but little credit i.'i their nhli-hers und still less pood on tl en ie.ilei- A p per entitled The O'tiu Stole llu'hl' n, has been i-ued n few v eeks at the eat of gov eminent of Ohio, which. from it appearance and execution, we would take to be a valuable paper. Put on a letter acquaintance with it. we find it to he edited by a ort of eastern quibbler io politics, who, according to general information, has been imported from IS'. Voik bv the "great magician.' Proposals are now in circulation for two new papers to be published at the City of Wa-hmgtim; one of them to be a register of interesting mat ters the ether to be a political paper, entitled The H liner of the Constitute n, and to be edited by Condy Paguet, late editor and propr ietor of The Frte Tra le Ad r,catt. published in Philadelphia. If we recoiled rightly, Mr. Itaguet wa. rensu led fur his conduct while Consul at Puenos Av ics during the administration of Mr. Adams f'r which he opposed his re-election. He i the warm advocate of southern Anti t.irirT and Anti-internal improvcment principles, and. say the 'Vashington papers ill divide the favor and patron ag of the national executive with the L S. Telegraph. We have ato been promied tivo new papers in this state, one at Indianapolis and another .it Lawrenccburgh, hut they haenot yet appeared. TvYr.NTY-r IKsr CONCUESS. NORTH CAI.CI.INA. The following are the names of the Pep resentatifcs in the next Congress from the State of North Carolina: Willi Al-tou, (iahriel Holmes, Daniel L. Pat ringer, Johndiles Jee Speight, William P. Shepard, Aug. II . Sheppcrd, Pohert Potter, Lew is Williams. , Tljomai II . Hall, TKNNKSSM-.. The following are the Representatives elect f iom Tennessee to the next Congress John Pl.iir, Prior Lee, John Pell, James K. Polk, Cave Johnson, David Crockett. J- Standiler, Jacoh (-. Uaacs, lionen immm, KF.NTLTKT. The following is the Kentucky Delega-

James Clarke, Henry Dmiel, Hichard M.Johnson Chittenden Ly on, John Kincaid, Joel Yancey, Charles WicklifTee, Thomas Chilton, Joseph Lecompt, Robert F. Letcher, N. I). Coleman, Dr. (Jaithir.

ALABAMA. The following arc the Representatives elect from Alabama to the next Congress: It. E. P. Baylor, I) ixon II. Lewis. Clement C. Ciay, nilODE ISLAND. In Rhode Island Tristani Burgess and Dutec J. Fierce have been reelected. They were opposed by two etntlenien of line talents and much personal popularity ;j the two who represented that state nCo .Iffrr - s. and gave its vote to Mr. Adans, in i u.. i"n .-.nit; i i-ini n-iru 1 1 1 1 ills .iiv.is,0'- ,,,u l''"g im .1 rr r. . , , iurcs the ianff m particular thev soon ... . :1' alter opposed his admmitration, and were nominated, and run with muc'i warmti, by the fiiends of the present administration, ajrainst Furgr s and Fierce, the true friends of the American System, and its great champion, Henry Clay. The result has been, a greater majority for Ilurjress and lc;.c wljeie tlieic was opposition. is. i v.. n.a, c.i r ) a INew Orleans paper of the 10th of August, we learn that the Yellow Fever was raging with great violence in that city from forty to sixty d ing of a day. hnitmloi Scnlitirl. We perceive by the New Oi leans Argus of the dh inst. that Mr. Wm. M'F. SAUL, Caslfier of the F.ank of Orleans, put an end to his exigence on the day previous by shooting himself with a pi'tol; the bail i ..i.i i n.r a defaulter to the Rank in the sum ofl eight thouand dollars, and that he could '"ot rrl,lace lL Heally, the name is unfor- ....-. i i fi Hill. lie. . MUIUI KflZtlie I Vensacola, Awr. 4. The U. S. srhr. Shark, Lieut. Com oorheers, arrived at this place on Satur lu.iv last. I he .shark, with . . one of the large tiargCs attached to tin station, ha i, -,, i, f f-n li r Hip al thn l mniilln rimcintr nn the South side of Cuba, and has been ahle -. ..... ..... V, ..'...- VilJ.Ci.lt, to eive the ro.ita diligent search. Car . . . i of the i-land On the0h July, Captain Voothees unflerstood at Trinidad, that letters had that yay fyien rec( ne l from Vera Cruz stating The officers and crew of the Shark have !ftii.ieil iirellent Ik.'iIiIi .lt r.iirl- mn-l ' ' " ' v 'Hill, IIIUIUULII I1IUVII ; , , ot ( ui,;i. - "JFW.-IY w MUllDEIir A negro di iv er by the name of Cordon, w ho had purcha-ed in Maryland about GO negroes, wa driving them to Miisippi The men were hand culled and chained together in the usual manner. The negroes had succeeded in separating with a file the irons, w hich bound their hands, and while proceeding on the road about 8 miles from Port-mouth, they dropped their chain" and commenced a tight, in which two of their drivers were killed; Cordon, the principal, escaped. The poor wretches have been arrested and are awaiting their trial. This is one of the natural consequences of slavery, when accompanied by extreme cruelty. We have no sympathy for the; 'lave driver, vv hen the whip is wrested from hi hand by hi slave, or his life is sacrificed to the vengeance of the victim, who ha broken his chains, we may lament the circumstance which produce thi encipicnce; but we. believe the righteou judgment of Heaven will be, that bis blood hall be upon bis own h"ad. W e entertain toward the slave driver no more sympa thy than we do for the pirate, w ho falls by the hands of those, w horn he was about to rob and murder. We make these remarks, because we see the facts noticed in many papers, without any disapprobation of the manner in which our fellow men are treated by the dealers in slivcs. Hamilton Intellizfticrr. From the Galena .Fkrrtisrr of .iug. 2. INDIAN TREATY. . ,r , r . , we ie;rn irom .. gi.iiiie.nan wno ar

rived here last night from Prairie Duilp .. . illrl n 9n(i fnr

Chien, that n treaty with the W'luoebagoes and Potawatamies Ind been con cluded, and a purchase made of all the lands south of the Ouiscon'rUi, between Iho Upper Missippi river and Lake Michigan, including aVi lands in this trai t heretofore held by the Indians. We are informed that a ? mail reserve has been made in this ceded tract, but its particular locality, or quality, we nave not understood. Tne stipulations of the treaty arc, that the Wtnr.cbagocs are to receive annually, for oO year, the sumof eighteen thousand dollars, and the PotawatamieB arc to receive annuailly liftcci' thousand dollars, so long a9 they siai,, iheir name as a distinct nat;;,n, Unuiual harmony ctwCeii the Com.manners nud Ve jiaU, prcVailcd dur,,,if ...e treaty, and the Indians express t perfect satisfaction at the accomplish

merit of the long contemplated tale cf

Tobias Watkins. The concluding

scene ol Watkins case, is said to have been absolutely heart-rending. The sternest could not stand by unmoved. Many left the court house, unwilling to behold the agony and distress of an unfortunate man. Ilia cheek was blanched, and his whole frame bore evident marks of the deepest anxiety of mind. He shaded his eyes, and rested his pale forehead upon his hands unwilling to look in degradation, upon those with whom he had once associated, and who he regarded as his friends. The sentence we are told, was read deliberately, but without comment or remark there was no useless mummery The iron had entered his soul, and no blow could drive it deeper the words of the judge would have been of no avail. What a moral lesson did that hour offer! What an exhibition of human frail'y and folly! Alexandria Gaz. Swcanngen, bince his apprehension and imprisonment, has not suffered much in mind. Confinement ha9 somewhat impaired his bodily health. It was noticed that he exhibited no signs of sensibility while the witnesses were detailing the bloody tale of the a9sas . . b . . 3 . . sinat:on and it was only when the sentence of guilty, and the more solemn sentence of dculh was pronounced that he quailed, and was thrown oil his balance. He trciihlcd then fr the first time, and felt an al urn at his impending f.ite. lie lias made some confessions, which are absurd and contradictory: he attributes the murder to Rachel Cun ningham, and considers himself scarcely as an accessary. When one of his Counsel announced tu hirn that he must the, he repdied that he was not long making up his mind to any thing. And rumor says, that he speculates jocosel)

on the last act of the tragedy, in which Geese, a variety of Fanning Utenhe will soon perform a most ignominious sils Household Furniture, and alpart. Conscience has not yet enjoyed Bn n nfWUn. fh

A I A t a ' I J fa riirlitc nut 1 1 rte ciar 'junno r: c'irpn f UrlPli A-tA tin rt mre-i-rr HoirnlA uuu - uvuui m m ' c ;ivati iir f utu We have been amused and much in tructed in conversing with a poor, half witted simpleton, named Jc 1 allow, who goes piowling along our streets .ind allies, ruking the gutters for but tons, marbles, tops, pins, old nails, and uch trash in 1 id he is a perfect os ti ic! nothing comes ami? collecting every thing 'Well, Joe, what do you do with all these matters when you gtt them 'Oh,' says he. 'you would not think what a parcel I have got three trunks full'.' 'Ah, Joe, well what do you do with them, now you have got them.' After screwing his ugly physiognomy in the most knowing fashion it is capable of, replied, 'I counts them.'' Such poor fool a the way of the world. Stephen (iiraid with his noble bank full of Spanish dollars, cn do no more than 'count them,' and yet in the ejes of sensible men, one of them is elo vated to the highest pinnacle of shrewdness and w hose ady ice would be listened to with far greater respect, if he were to condescend to instruct some poor wight, how to arrive at the su preme good that of getting rich than we pay to the precepts of the Redeemer of men, when he points out the path to the abodes of never ending bliss whilst the other is pushed unheeded by; as the poorest driveller who occupies the lowest place in the scale of humani ty such as boasted human reason we toil night and day sacrifice soul and body, for what! to make a good speculation i. e. circumvent one whose acuteness and information is not equal to our own that we may heap up tress ure to bequeath to our children, or grand children the means of living in luxury and idleness. Stitmur. The Pacha of Egv pl.h.s now at work in lis capital an expensive printing press, lor. which an improved Arabic type has lately been cut. With this press all the details which tend, to illus trate the system borrowed by Ali from Europeans, are freely and widely dis seminated through his army and navy llnil nf hit. ..il!l'irr floivj irnrl-a I13V0 im j ui III lllllllKI T Ill,.il "Ulna uiiiv , . r, ;ticlrilrt; of th the regulation of the infantry. A work in praise of war has aUo appeared this year from the same press. The picha has likewise ordered the publication of works on scientific and commercial sub jccls. Several books on geometry, as tronomy, surgery, and gr immer, have made their appearance at Cairo within fhe Ia9t few month?. The great work of IWalciiifi, illustrative of the history and statistics of the country which he so ably governs, is the l ist book which his highness has ordf r -1 to be printj. tTdu'j-. V, hen a Jew was a famous lJutcli printer, b'cycjht to Con stantinople, printing pre-s n &lc. to introduce the art Cji printing in thatcity, the Vizier caused him lu be hanged, declaring t.'iuit it would be a great cruelty tha one man should enrich himself by taking the bread of eleven thousand eciibce, who gained Iheir living hy their

NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.

Public Sale. WILL Be sold at Public Sale, on Saturday, the 24th. day of October next, on the premises, two very valuable parts of TOWS? LOTS, In the town of CENTRE VI LLE Wayne County, Indiana, being the South half of Lot No. 49, and 33 12 feet of the North side of the same Lot. The half Lot lies immediately adjoining the Public Square, and is elegantly situated for public business. The Cumberland Road passes directly through the town, which is the county seat of the best county in the State, and prop, erty must of course increase rapidly in value. It has to be sold by an order of the Wayne Probate Court, for the bene I fit of the infant heirs of Jacob N. Book. er, deceased. One third of the purchase money to be paid when the sale is confirmed, and the balance in equal instalments, on credits of 3 and 6 months. SARAH BOOKER, Guarrfn. Sept. CJ h. 1823. 3. Ids. Will be sold at Public Vendue-, on Thursday, the loth day of October next, at the late residence of Simon Summers, of Centre township, Wayne county. Ind. deceased, all the PERSONAL PROPERTY Of said deceased, consisting f Horses, Neat cattle, Sheen, Hos, rJV -4 VJ JL ft 111 T VI, IIVU ll III J 1 ISltlUK Attendance will be given, and con ditions made known, on the dav of salek LEAH SUMMERS. Admx. GOLVIN SUMMERS, AdmW, Sept. 19 A, 182'J. 33. 3TATE Or INDIANA, J IN THE W AYNE a,) In ss. ; S Cn W ayse County; Circuit CotRTj August Term, 1020. Rachel Johnson i On Petition vs. for a Isaac M. Johnson.) Divorce. And now at this day here comes tho said complaint, and it appearing to the satisfaction of the Court that the said defendant is not a resident of the State of Indiana; It is therefore ordered by fhe Court that the pendency of said petition be made known to the said defendant by publication in the fi'titern Times, a newspaper published in Centreville, Wayne County , Ind. for at least four weeks successively, prior to the first day of the next term of this Court, requiring the said defendant to appear and answer the petition of the said Complainant, or on failure so to do the same will be heard in his absence, and decreed accordingly. J. D VaUGHAN. SOL. l'RO. COMfT. Attest. 1). IIOOVFK C. n. C C. Taken Up, TY James Tharp, of VWhingin Township, Wayne Ci.ur.t), Indiana, a DARK BAY HORSE, Fifteen hands and a half high, two hind feet white up to the footlocks, branded with an I. on the near shoulder, some collar marks which is white, on the off side, and some white hairs K'.ong hi back, one small saddle . mark, and a. small hump on his back, and a little hi p t on the ofl side, and considerably creese fallen, and all his mane lays over on the near side; supposed to be fifteen years old. No other marks or brands pcrceiveable. Appraised to twenty five dollars, by Samuel Grewell and Jcss-e Harris. I do hereby certify th above to be a true Copy fremrnv Estrav boi k. JAMES BFESON. J. P. September 14fA, lG9. 33. At this o;nce, an APPRENTICE to the POINTING BUSINESS. A smart bov.of erood habits, between the ages of 14 and 10 years, who can read tolerably well, will find a situation, on acceptable terms, by calling soon, at the ollice of the Western I unes. Centreville, Sept. 19, 1829. 3.

PPJ1TTI1TGA'eatly executed at this orricc

their country. pcn.-Curiosit ics of Li!n i;i:uc, i

.'.!: 1 spirit f M;.ieJ; !::! at the I turn iu the next Conre: