= Cholera Aor nt on the final vote in the house of Si sentatives, has been excused. He rep: nted that he was hungry and stepped | Re nIV a short de to get some refresh nt, when the vote was taken. One of constituents, who had been active 10 sending forward resolutions to cncourage him to pers severe in favor of freedom, now oscs, that on a future occasiony his \ituents should stuff his pockets with | {Ne ' i iS © as] Te nthe!g 1 e.lder that his szomach may not m+ {Such an emergency. out ob Gaz. give York 15 | ———— on) ALI PACHA. | . paramount authority of the Grand or was never more seriously threat-15 \li Pacha, the ac- of Eo oypt. He has \hrown iT all riance to the an open declaration of ; nunicate x0 s declared wand has the secretary of state, commin cated it has declat ‘ed wary a a against the congress at the last session shows { ) ean sed. a igres De the i yn which our law LP urkast dyna any ; he has eve 2 hin : \C dig- las to se dh pl jes into C nstantinople, and dain to b land 2d, by re attemp 2 to assassinate the. ministers of the laxation of Ther systern j he jsulta nw ho were hostile to his projec cts. on opportuni ny now offered i Ve ry few musselinen chic fs have pos Be SSEC hers Sif; norts on character and enter prize of Ali Pacha. most | Rold , active and ente! prising, with a strong mind, well cultivated, and great energy, he has thrown ofl those restrictions imposed by the | Mosle m {aith and immemorial cus- tom, 4 and has drawn around bim Christians sso the co- {of talents gnd enter prize. He has adopted} PY of Mz. Pasquier’s loag pro nised answer|im proved modes of warfare, and of internal on the subject of our commercial relations, improv cement ; ; he has completed the can: al which was not received till after I had clos: ol Ramanieln; on which he employed 30,000 you. meny an h gives great facility to the commerce of Cairo and the Nile, and has increased and disciplined his army of Mam- justice to ours giak ¢s. The gra of Seignor is preparing ure \n army to attack him, but it isa mere ef: but they will not act in op posit ion to the! fort ; for such is the precarious state ofl, ramonstrances of the shipping interest, an dj Tu rkish relations with Russia, that if their n from the frontiers or T's of comme wi : been consulted. That of Paris 1s averse to march towards Egypt, it would be the sig- fe nal of attack from the Muscovites, Al RL. that} Pacha posseses the key mot only to the Nile, ( pin-fbut to the Red sca, and has a check upon fall caravans and pilgrims bound to Mecca; his position is, therfore, calculated to he many cases {create great uneasiness at the Porte, be- taken by 1 us .e the usual appeals to the fanaticism of publish the! Musselmen have proved unavailing. Rus Eoglish ph fyi 51a 10 doubt is the fiiend and ally of Ali R. 8. which {Pachasand | furnishes means and advice ; be- eminent sides it appears, by E uiopean papers. that member vof the fac country, to Russia is nepoc lating for a Joan of 100 mill- » subi Sifted them for his opinion. lions of reubles. We shall not be BUrpr is editors, who are ev er rea ly to | ed if the long meditated attack on Turkey should be near at hand. A. Y, Nat. Advocate, sation wh it} mi-| But cise could they have pf Our nister to that country long eno treated them to listen to. reason, and long enough put off by evasive answers. Pheinot.onl J subtoined extract ofa letter from him gs i an it has been by Seaurageo us bey wel en- al ep 2 Mime 'y DY yl 7 3510 th C end, ¢ as wise as Eng a 11 of t to her, placing the footing of thet t! Intel. in gu! Extract ofa y Secretary 0 1820 1 NAT} ¢ | have now tt tin to the Jans 20 Cris Ele 1&¢ honor to ep ed my last despatches to dw hic I am confirm ed i in the opinion; that noth- } 1 us nti} shall have slyes by our own meas- ine will be\done | we 9 » . The ministry is, I think, disposed : 2 A 3 one vee LO iy of the cham re ah ave |! nee is§ withdraw 3 Avery 73 informed had given leed, Wir. Pasquier lcaux alone oa to them. Bor ye Ne vorab widest oo Antidotes, iE a fl en tf Occur oi] on us to an ale or desig OW tno di rection Ss tone, 1 5c oF. J Lito have met the aj cian fan PP this Ou 4 br ott {end their presses to the gause Ian we ot ice and views bv extending the. circujation er benevo fursher ofl humanity will, out these girecil HOLERBRA MORBLS, From the National Advocate. ons: True Amer. of Risenic, or of metal, ori Tren. the preparations 1, When mercury, ¢ ant inOnY) when any unknown substance or im alter) has been swallowed, and there have speed- ily ensued heat of the mouth and throat olent pain Mr. Editov—I percieve by the weekly bills of mortality, that many persons die with the Cholera Morbus, which is very unneces- vi. sary because it cau be cured. 1 once had : 3 Ha violent attack of this disease, so of the stomach, retching andj : : i gimuc h so, that for three days 1 suffered to immediately drink plentiful Hy of A : ala degree that cestroyed all hopeofrecovery; warm watery w dh common soap dissolves ¢ : . [ sent forvan old physician who had served or scraped into it 3 two or three quarts of |! IE X 0 v 4% 2 : ontinental aymy--1 will cure you warm water, with fremthree to four ounces lin thee {my y pout d of suap w vill notbeg any 107 iSar niost vomiling too} confidence with which this was said, sur- prised mis ced up the receipt below, and in a half hour I was well, T re. commend it therefore with equal confi. tdence I have since tried it with equal B. 10 hait a much, 2a 0 eC i me—he 9, ' When any of the prepatations of opi- re Ai» tock. fovelave INIOCK, ‘OX10 SOUS um, henbane, nijzhtshade, he ot stranoemium, any pol istaken for mushroons, or unknown fang {uot or 0s, piritous ii ) for SUCCEHES. Cure for the Cholera Morbus, Put one table spoon of Ao? into a bier of oid cider give the patient ithree table spoons of it, the cure will ordin- tarily be effected inl other swatlowed, on without pain of the stomach produc QSAes, giddiness, drowsiness, and give shanty one tabiespoon full of four of must. din water, and ‘repeat ‘it in copious dranehts of warm water constantly ait ing takes place. ‘If the person bo. comes so inscnsibie as not fo be easily Tous.y od the must nsiead of water, and rub and shake the body actively and incessantly. 3. When oil ef vitirol, spiri have heen ( sw yn the skin, d 5if EPs ntl px io) July 27. been ex- nev, at least in g harvest just vO r The Season.—-121s tremely favorabie (c this part of the sta over 2 and the )k haveriéver been more li repaid —— : crops of wheat and barley, rye and {EH hay and flax, always good in these paris have been this season more than ust 5h as hy can bi wid soap? ily abundant ; and the Indian Carn has nev- olash, or chalk to a6 « water. "for occhimgre pr omising. Amidst. the | lef ey hiculties of the timss, therefore, we enjoy fo correspondent’ recommends the Capes ne prospect 0! plentifaily of the herb SAG, as a corrective suppiicd with the real of lile, own extravagance and folly, 30 “ {althoueh aur : . 3 1 1 3 EE oleh) aithiougn our i 4 . 435 ivy ork Fe try UE a surably deprived us has —giye and iil vineear 1 . iS the husbandman berally avy oF Fas rR HA 1000S, oD oT 0 oe» O 1 QO p th ness in the stomach and ndiges tioh may DAVE mRCa omoting a suitable appetite, IPI gs ay:n 1 {O10 ILS UXUrics. nad At Trion Ol many )C sight al ad | neat ring to. h al SS 1 ¢aith and long | fatements are suj ncient writers, ant references (o of longev- £ ynorted by | ‘instances Whales Lewis just ai La 3 his passage her says the Edin- 18 the infusion of thejand we have assurat of 9 (ure, or ha 6 and veracity, that t ith rectified spit, taken in Lent, i'stinctly seen {rem Nahant Clj s+ these contal thie on Saturday pity for more that 1 hall sages the distill best preparation, burg “Hasponsat tory, dary OC anes drank as tea >a tn an } xerat y d wa nly ils Watmith and at . on F Bb ISh alladiune., c ratic members of con- uncommon 5 1 4 -t VEINS Alen ori t vith thie ’ $e icut, Foor, Otc S415 5s LAC aur Le WN LUC « MON v . Naha i Nana he rocks ol ne of them weighing’ 57 bs. one 99 i “4% LD i in Mi S50Ur, | Die—0 ihe =" 20) 1k y byes vr 11 ; 46 ibe. one 39 ibs. and the smallest a: Aesrsd ere oud tiessy, when taken, avoiding tay wl as at JH ada a ky rr ahr hl US) WhO was ab being made a luncheon by tae Sea Snake. gingerbread, foi s of resolutions, in or-| {says he, and in a half an houry the tone of _ ¢ mre \ Negro Ge orge’s emancipation. . Then sin: n sity yr Ti { : { {if Joseph Hiester's friends can nr Anes The Pa Tig ® fo authentic evidence of his bencrol a disiuterestedness, and aversion to : 11 am certain you will ish it for ir the ery {1 have no doubt your readers ; of ey {cription ; will like to see the jof Hiester’s friends in this county, § = been taking considerable pains to cir reula é the slander about the habeas corpus justed from the court to bring up the body of negress Hannah-——it is but both sides should be heard and the whole truth known, even if it should be to co fir sion of those who first invented the sland te and of those who have taken such Pains to &ive it on ation, even alter th icy. khew it (to be false: Your compliance with cost, will oblige a number of youp READE RS ‘ “To speak histhoughts,is every freeman’s right, aVervy ) publ . SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER MARRI E D—On the 27th ult. by the Rev. L. W, legen, Mr. Abraham Krape, to Miss Elizabeth daughter of Mn. Peter Niess, ail of Haines township, a DEMOCRATIC MEETING. At a meeting of the Republica gates of Centre and Clearfield convened.at the Court house In ough of Bellefonte, agreeably notice, on Tuesday ti gust 1820, James Duncan, Chairman. and YOIy lise 2 truth—some a ANiege , Niese, fai that the n Dele counties, the Bor. to public 29th day of Au- this LS a d Ie HIESTER AND SLAVERY. - ry he Pen “1 2407 YS nd P. Cambridee, Secretary; after which] Z'rom the Pennsylvania Gazette, It could scarcely be conceived that a the following resolutions were unanimous-| ly adopted ; ple who held the slavery of the hum Resolved, That we approve of the [cies in such abhorrence ministration of the General and State go v-| Pennsylvania ; could poss ernments, and of the nomination of James 10 make choice of a slat Monroe and Daniel D. Tompkins for the chicf-magistrate. Yet such hed de graded offices of Presidentand Vice President of ict ; a fact which could admit of no pali the United States,and that of WILLIAM tion were itacknowlged to have been ge; FINDLAY, for Governor ; aud that we rally ki nown. Pennsylvania stands honora- will use all honorable means to promote bly distinguished for her efforts in the cause their respective elections. of humanity, and has exerted every ners Esq. was appointed ad as do the i be Indu c ny "Jor their Resolved, That as we believe the peo- (to put an end (o a system which has fixed ple to be Dossessed of sufficient virtue and an eternal strain on the name of re republic C. information, to judge, think, and act for ‘It cannot therefore be supposed that A peo- themselves, so do we deprecate = otial ple professing and acting upon such princie dictatation, and therefore view in its prop- Ples, would knowing gly make choice ol an er hight the attempts that have been fare. advocate of slavery, m eh less of a tofore made, and are now making, by a few holder, for their first ‘executive officer unprincipled firinters, to a place a man in that they should hail with the title of excels the chair of State, (Joseph Hiester) whose lency, a man who acted In dips opposition incapacity and political tergiversations, ‘© their ideas of what is right and just.— have long since proclaimed unfit for such “bis additional the ters 1 of the at exalted station. pan, whom we are tole 1 by his worshipers, Resolved, That John Kerr and Jacob ¥ “4c freofric delight toh can no longer Kryder, be appointed Conferees, to meet De concealed : an 3 tet possibility other Cunferees from the counties of Hun- of denial that William Findlay was a slave- tingdon and Mifflin to fix upon a suitable {hold ler in year 1801, we submit the proof person to represent this Congressional ‘positive. That he is still vi Is probable district in the Congress of the;Uniied States, jirom the temacily with which he asserted and the said Conferees be instructed to use| Hi right to the body of vi Negro Hannah,” all honorablé means to put Join Brown in anless death has freed her fiom her tyrant, nomination atthe said Conference. It appears (hat an attem; pt had been made Resolved, That the following persons be. to procure the liberation of # Hannah from recommended to the Democratic Republi-, the bonds of slavery, in consequence of the can citizens SS Centre and Cleatfield coun- Words for i being omitted in her registry, ties, as thy of their suffrages for the Willi am Fiudlay claimed her as his slave res ato count ly offices : : for life, and it will be seen by lowing decision of the supreme court of Pennsylvas nia that Hannah was delivered up to her master, Extract from Judee Yates’s 1 age 261, “ At a circuit court at Chambersburg, October, 1801. Cham Yates and Smith justices.” “ RutepuLIcs agains? LAY, Esq. On a habeas corfius and subji ’ (AU C= trait int 35 onor, WO 3 WO the fi Assembly, WILLIAM SMYTH, Commissioner, JACOB BOLLINGER. Auditor, REY JOHNPATTON, Esq. [4 body of negro Hannah was bi oug nl the court and the registry was invalid, by reason of her beiug entered as a slave with= out the subjoining words for life. —In other particulars the regi Gi was strictly formal, « Per, cur. The word d slave, in its coms P. GAMERIDGE, Secretary. men acception, signifies cx vi termini, a AD Foe, {27 REQUESZ.] perpetual servant and will be to nid that itis used in this sens nd 5th Among the many palpable and sections of the act « for the aboli- groundless falsehoods which the adversar- tion of slay ery.” Thus Resolved, That the proceedings be sign- cd by the chairman and secretary, and pub- lished in the Bellefonte Patriot, JAMES DUNCAN, Chairman. Mr. Editor, 1 Dall. Laws 139 ies of Governor Findlay have invented, and in the 4th section the words arc published, to deceive the people and de for years, or Life, or a slave ; 1a the 2d stroy his fair fame, one 1s, that he is a tion, servancs for life or ; (riend to slavery and a slave holder. This ¢hildren in cons seque nee of was invented by an attorney in Lancaster, th 1h ivi sla the thers, &c. are used 3 and in and published in Hugh Maxweli’s paper|section the words are, negro or a ai there. The same Hugh Maxwell who /ife or till the age of 31 ye ars, KE. has beep alternately a federalist, a demo-|gistry is clearly good, and the neg crat, a"schioolman, and all and eve ry thing) be remanded to her master. suited his present purposes——The samel Hugh Maxwell whose carcase was very well-bast inadoed some years ago in Young- Whoever will read the for ine, manstown, by a’ gentleman there who | 1a an‘excellent a had made free to slander in his paper—"The| how rh. opporiin 5 ow truth may be perverted same Hugh Maxwell who when driven| ico s ‘om that Hes moved to this town in 18 16 ac and set up a paper called « The Indepen-| dent Republican,” under the wings of ' the In the first place, in order to 4 Schoolmen and Federalists, and at their|d18position with which the above was, pen proper costs and charges: but before a/ned, we, will admit that it ight appear year expired eloped and left them to set-| from the record that governor Findlay was tie'the reckoning = the best way they could ;|2 slave-holdor in 1801 : but the wriler To but that they might have full scope fori ters Irom this yHiat be is not their charity, feft them his wike and family| cate for slavery, but he'1salsg 8 sidv en to sup port on clee emosynary pring iples. I’ Vat this tine ; whic 1 Is just as reagonabit was in the paper published by this vags abond |! D say that because a man that the vile first res-{in 1601, he owned him HOW, pecting the governor being a slavehol Set, Joe ¢ of him could be: los and it was prefaced by a warm pail hetic| phil ppic against very ; the write being 2 ware, at the time, that it wa seph Hiest ery, and not William Ii who was the slave holder, the supporter of] slavery, of kidnapping and the slave trade as fully appears by the journals of the \| General Assembly of March 1788, : 179, reference being thereunto had will more fully and at large appear. rary Lromithe Harrisburge Refiublic may ty of obscrving the sin eo 80 falsified I, as to dest tioy all re= emblance to the reality 1 ow {tho hold own slander appeal red ly We shall not hos facts 1 5101 7 nd the winel anda ii ! rs oi thc calumi ndiz ay, f Ye 3.4V€ law of Mr. | was rcgisic tepin, the father-1n Fin ay. ont : J . hor. VTRO ah . Dace! 30th O pterober, 170 Jy she bein: on y des ycars 0d. Alte r Mr. Irwin’s v Drom bagd | widow that at her death, 1 the wi if you will be SO kind as to publish the | man should have nex freedom ; hut she . om tet Ip wr : following depositios it will show com-!coming Hpac nt Irs, win sc pletely the malignity of the falsehood. Wi Hit er daughter, under a vou at the same time be so'good as to ptib-| after a Le rim of yea lish the certificate from the Records, of Findl ay’s family a Promise She remained in Mr. t time, when scn@ I'S. c} S01 servant’ elioris voi, .. Y