PEN dL BELLEFONTE, CENTRE COUNTY, NSYLVANI A, PRINTED BY W. BRINDLE. Hge Ghee SA TURD A YE SE NID ¥G, October 16. 18109, oki 7 hed CAL 03 ar 23 Q Of what a source of amusement were the prived ! Whiten Ca (raul twenty or thivly da » 5 | T1160 NS: sar was b hte Lhe price of this paper is’ two dodlans !Jifiy cond per anpum—bat if paid hall yearly in advance, two dollars only will be “ho weed. Advertisements, making no more in wrth then breadth, will be inserted three times for ong dollar 3. and for every subse guent continuance twenty five cents — Those of greater length in proportion.— Rule or figure work double those rates. No subscription will be received for less than one year; nor any paper discontinu ed until all arre: rages are paid. If the subscriber does not request a dis continuance of his paper, at the end of the year, it will be considered as a new ci SARC ment; and the paper forwarded according ly. ancients de ar 5 ng in ¥S ‘were ne : cessary to-convey the news ob victory, and more of a defeat, to the seat of empire. And even then much time clasped before the peuple were accura And of what source of amusement are not we 10 For, edge should we nai have had of the history : % every if newspapers had not been introduc dd ? This jostitution, I fear not to assert, is is 16 tely informed. what ao Ww hat } be deprived ! it an accurate knowl” of past ages, now buried in oblivion g ts most perfect state in this country, 1 have often wondered at the conduct of ths subjec i Subscribers whe have their papers car | | re » Le British Government on this opher ; we a would pmphatically call man an stectiongeiing S04 mal 3” this app lation conveys &p Idea of qualities waich we con- ceive no brute animal can possibly lay claim to; the fondling of a dog has some. 'mzs shaken but our position a little : when we consider that his caresses are al- ways sincere, our doubts are removed ; "a i late circumstances have convinced us th ¢ talents of electioneering are pe culiar to nan, and'that in fatlure he ought to be dis- tinguished as an « clectioneering aningal”’ 3 Pittsburgh papier. wt Cire wdl.yy Esq of Westmoreland county re Jor the Dysentary.—William ie i ommends from experience, any commoy, ried by the mail, must be liable for the : )S- tag Letters addressed to the editor must be post paid. oi ON NEWSPAPERS. SE , a2 This folio of four pages, happy work! £1 i { IL diffusion of knowledge is certainly one « the frst obj: :cts which an enlightened ¢ 1 ‘| Great Britain by laying a heavy stamp duty] in view. And vot ernment onght to have Lo on papers, so that few can purchase them This is not the case heve, and I hope never wily! o Ce evidently counteracts this diffusion. ‘Which not even critics criticise ; that holds Inquisitive attention - What is it but a map of busy life ; 1ts fluctuations, and its vast concerns! Cowper's Task, b 4. The origin of newspapers is of very an- We can trate something like be. It is an indelible stain on any govern. ment. Bat this is a still less grievous evil than the tyranny of the préss, which in a greater or less degred exists in the conti- nental nations. Where there is liberty of the press, the people must always not the cient date. their institution in the mangled remains of he held i in intcllectual thraldom.—A news early Roman antiquities. This institution . , Le however was very imperfect in comparison | Papel will then inform the truth which they, to that of modern times ; the Roman Gaz-|must believe, are only truths, because the dhe _ ~ ’ 4 5 3 an etts contained nothing more than the te- government wishes them to be so, and are i strictly forbidden to believe any other thing cords &vents, and were of course extremely rare. ot public transactions and public than that, which has received the stamp of There is hardly any other institution in governmental approbation. Liberty of the! * eivilized nations which can claim pre-emin- ence over newspapers, when they are prop- erly conducted. They diffuse over the na- tion a general knowledge of its political state ; and this knowledge will in general press is the first and the most holy of our civil rights. Without it what are we ? Te dupes of tyranny and bigotry : with-| out it, all the noble qualities of nature are Plighted j without it even freedom herself becomes adangerous light like the fice that is kindled on the ocean rock, to warn the | seafaring man, that its approach ig peril and its contact destruction. for if one give an incor. will ‘.e very accurate j rect statement; another newspaper shame it ioto a sense of its most important duty, which is impartial veracity. A man who is most o_cupied in business, as well[ Irom the number of newspapers in our 3 : country, we may form an accurate ide as the most indolent reader, who never took Ys 2 OF the literary — up a book since he escaped from the eye of y information of the people. A There are far more newsp his preceptor, 15 never deterred from read : a R spapers in the U. he subjects of ordinary States than in any country under heaven ing the paper. . ing pat of equal population, I was astonished the reading an account of their (number in the National Tnielligencer—aond « (they increase by several hundred [years the | + | wap on the wing. Discussions are discussed 3 y fo 3 re frequently drawn from it, conversation are {frequent {other da ya and every one feel§ ashamed to be ignorant What a fund of ent tainment do not the newspapers afford to the inhabitants of the country, When papers arrive, expectation and interest are on common topics. r= every AN OBSERVER. —EY— A correct definition of man has been al lesideratum for some thousands of years ; over again, opinions canvassed and rejected "~ .t IL a ppears to have been involved in as much | or approved : and a thousand collateral re- fie The affairs of the most distant parts of the nation and events loubt as that of the soul. He js distin- | | 1 | | ctions introduced, guished by sonie philosophers ag « being a reasoning animal, and capable of formin 3 or 51 i not appear t be a sufficiently distinctive mark, as it is | th that freedom of which a rational being > shrewdly suspected that dogs and elephants The paper takes The aged will read and discuss ‘hich happéenec v a few ddys ago, are : which happened only a few days ago, syllogisms,” this however did 0 universally koown, and commented on wi 01 aver ha diy tee should never be divested. have sometimes been dete plans, and of being able Cte cted in forming = - 2 YONA its rounds. consequently of comprehending the principles minor, every thing that relates to solid ancient subjects ; the young will relish anecdotes: aad real or attempted wit,—The farmer of major, and consequence, he has again been called an «imitative being ' out i as renratel ramming the aotat “QL 4 3 will accurately examine the state of domes the monkey tribe have some pretensions to Yic and foreign markets, and with an orac-|ihis characteristic, it scems generally to be | Aa tra AYE Rb FA SPrRRA aA 3 ular visage emit shrewd prophesies con given up. = Plato called him a « two legged cerning the ensuing year. The soldier will {animal without feathers +’ Diogenes de. » y i A Ng” S devour every thing that regards foreign|stroyed this definition by de war, and embracing one side of contending his he battles e lost and won, discant on the misar of its feathers and thro wing it into the myidst | parties relate to arers how of the disciples, whilst the learned philos opher was in the middie of a We ¢ probably defin nition than head of a pai los- yas lecture. rangement of the troops that were vanquish-{are led to believe that ‘we hav ed, and demonstrate how the y mig ‘it haveldiscovered a more correct turned the scale of victory. lias ever yet entered the Ui hited States nf 23,750,000 dollars per ann. | { co *priving a cock |! |mone, a short distance from Algesiras, be- purge, such as salts, jalep, or rheubarb, 1s an effectual eure for the Dyscntary. | When prepared medicine cannot be procur-|’ 4 ody tHe white-g@a. fut bark bolted dow mito al consistency to make pills, will answer as | well as any other purgative. From the. fit. | merous instances Mr. Findley recites, n which this remedy has been successful we cannot doubt that it is the most effica- J cious and easy cure for this af cting dis- ease that has hitherto been discovered. : A —————— From the Demrcratio Press, Mr. Binys—Though it is very well known i; this city and vicinity that RYE i lan ex cat sul bstitu.e > for Coffee it may not tbe rts known and I wish it made public as possible. since both Zealth and * economy are alike interested in the (tate being adopted. © The Rye shou!d be {prepared by one yp» avteriafan hours boiling i —then dried and roasted—nat burnt. Cof.| lee is very apt to injure the head, causing 1a vertigo, in consequence of which, two ot my family’were obliged to 1 | use of ity near two years since. Rye has no injurious quality. A family y of 8 persons | will use 24 lbs. coffee a week, at breakf: as alone ; a 30 cents per Ib. gives 73 cents per week, or 39 dollar Rye is 80 cents per bushel, half cents per quart ; S$ per ann, or two and a; 3 pints will serve the | same family for a week, leaving a balance of 71 cents per week, or 36 dollars 92 cents per year, in favor of the Rye ! Let us carry the calculation farther, and suppuse there | are 1,250,000 families in the United States, | cach of whom would save halt the above | sum, or 19 dollars yearly, by the use of Rye instead of Coffee, (which calculation would be considerab! ly within bounds,) we| shall have a clear o gain to i the people of the T he best judges wili be deceived by tak-| jing the Rye for Coffee; Aft if properly made. | er this who will have the ‘eff ontery toj mplain of hard ‘times and continue the | ‘use of Coffee 1n his fa amily ? Were Congress! to lay a heavy duty on the article of Coffee, | las well as many articles of manufactured | XY OL ds, g it would tend greatly to benefit the coyntry. L. ell 31 De Gibraltar July 2. The disputes between the British officers land those of the American, squadron have been amicably adjusted, Notwithstanding r t th 'owever, all the precautions and rigid or- ders, as well on the part of gen. Don as he American commodore, a second meet- | 6 ing was arranged and took place at the Pul- tween capt. Johntson, of the 64th regiment, | d lieut. Stockton, of the Erie, Capt Girdlestone was the friend of capt. John- stone, and My. Bo utne, purser of the Erie Pg T10(¢ % the friend of Mr, 1 | it es had ! gubstie clingaish the | | i twenty are on the Oldhaty; received. —Seven persons in all a IRIMEnATTE NY mn, Stockton, Sots dish greement took phar as te the nade of firs ng, wh ich produc ced an animated dis CUBS ion among the. parties, but fortunately capt. Girdlestone succeeded in makiug the coma batants sensible that they had on a previa ous occasion sufficiently demonstrated their courage, and done all that was necessary on the point of honor, consequently there ‘existed no neces sity at thatmoment for a sanguinary contest, and he therefore pro=« posed thavin place of continuing the diss cussion asto the made of firing, they should discuss the causes of the dispute, and ' en deavor to settle 1t in an amicable as well as honorable manner. Bourne assented to the proposal; and finally capt Girdiestone convinced his friend capt. Johnstone of the propriety of his making an apology, which being made, the parties shook hands, and ire y Fa my affude wehich has Xe | citeduhere” 1 no. common anxiety, because from the well known characters”of all the ‘individuals concerned, a fatal resuit was | eheially anticipated : and perhaps it vas entirely owing to the intervention of capt. Girdlestone that the affair was thus arrangs ed. This proves how much depends on the conduct of seconds on those occasions capt. G. been governed by the tordinary rules among duelists, he would y g have considered it tos late to attempt ace fcommodation after the parties: had oot {to ithe ground of combat. A curious ¢ this ~ circumstance arose out otf affair- The American Officers, . fearing ‘some interruption on the part of the Span- 's crew, well 3 med to attend them to the pl ¢- of meet» ish Authorities, caused a hoa'’s er ing. A Spanish guard ede aps peared, threatening to seize all the parties, (The sailors rushed on the guard, took away their arms, and kept them under an larrest until the whole bt usiness was closed. » fe 3CATS 3 The Governor of Algesiras, it apy , is in a great rage at thecoaduct of his guard {and much exasperated a Ameri {cans for having committed, what he calls, against the - an unpardonable insult to the Government The I ‘ever, is that we a of Spain. Iain matter of fact, how" i I laugh at the affair, and ‘consider it merely a very natural frolic for sailors to perform, ein Latest from England d.-~By the Hiberria tand John Dickinson, Irish Papers, con- taining London dates of the 19th of Atigust (are received, by which it appears that the | Reformers were fly] ng from Manchester to their homes with all possible speed. One jaccount says all the roads leading from this (town ! o Ashton. Stockton, Cheadle, Strate ford, Liverpool, Rochdale, Oldham, Bury, Bolton, &c. are covered with wounded (stragglers, who have pot yet been able to (reach their homes after day. sons along the Stockport road, thirteen or the events of Mon- There are seventeen wotinded per th & ie ourteen on Ashford road; at least seven or eight on the Rothdale ; besides several others on the roads to Liverpool &e. One woman died last night at Eccles, of the wounds she re said to be dead: Mr. Hulme is not dead, as at | first reported. The events of the mecting had caused 3 very great sensation in London. d —E——— Lieutenant Varohagen, a G erman, discovered that rly ' hab ha awd 1st, particula of soft wood mixed with gunpowder, in equal parts has thrice the strength of powder along, when used in blowing rocks,