re ——— elligence. = —- Ce oreign Int y Cn 34 ED 11 En From the N.Y. National Advocate. FROM GIBERALTER. “By the brig Preseverence arrived last evening from Giberaltar, we re. ceived papers to the 16ih of May con taining Spanish news. Nati i L Don Matias Vinciesca, the king's Chaplain, had been tried for his plan to overthrow the censtitutional system tn Spain and sentenced to 10 J 4 confinement in one of the seitiements Dy i a Py 4 on the coast of Africa. The mob dis © satisfied with the sentence assembled * on the 4th of May betoie the prison in which heawas confined, and notwith- standing the resistance of the guard, { forced the prison door the same after “meon, and put®him to death.~—The kine was affected at this occurrence. Toe Spanish’ squadron in the bay ol ‘Naples had been ordered away by the | pew government, althoueh one of the ships coald scarcely be kept afloat.— The editor of the Reducteur General a Svanish newspaper, says, this act Yin S coupled with the recall of the Neapol- i 3 Ambassador and the appointing of alfrench’ minister, shows us what we i are to expect from the Allied Sove- reigns. 2 im In the Macedonian came passenger Me Francis A Bond, of Baltimore — This gentleman resigned a commis ston in the Marine corps early in 1816 to join the brave and unfofunate Cariera as a Captain of Dragoons in the expedition he fitted out in the United States for the delivery of Chili, nd for the recovery of Lis own per- pagal fights in South America. But e machinations of his enemies had stroyed al! his hopes in that hemis gre before his arrival, and their ha- d and persecution of Carrera wa: pnded to all such as were suspect- bi any friendly feelings or attach- t for him. Mr. Bond was there an object of, peculiar vengeance em, and after three or four years nexampled neglect and cruelty in Ard for the patriotic aud noble zeal, sarvied him to the aid of their ef he has once more reached his try and his home. ieuts. Randoiph, Hall and Price, the Constellation have returned ome in the Macedonian, the two first ks passengers, the latter attached to per on duty. Bos, Pat. 01 A letter from an American gentle an at Naples dated April 10th, states hat 25 C00 Aus stationed in the city in such comforta- RT | @ 4 ¥ bie quarters that they were well satis {told us something about the previous fied with their situation. tid. « MELANCHOLY POINT” IN IN. DIA. . A young officer in the army, having married a lady in England, was or- dered a short time aftei wards to pro ceed to India with his regiment, while the lady’s relations or the gentleman's own circumstances, would not permit her accompanying him, They were therefore foro to scperate, and he proceeded to Bengal. A correspon- dence was carricd on between them for some years ; and at length he per- suaded her to undertake a voyage to India, which she ‘accordingly did, and arrived safe at Sangur roads. He was at this time stationed in the fort ; and on the very day of her arrival in the Fivery was seized with a fever of the country, which terminated his exist- ‘ence before his wife, and a fine child, the pledge of their mutual affection. ‘could reach the place where he lay! On her coming into the fort and be- holding her husband’s corpse, she fell into a state of ioscnsibility, which was succeeded by that of melancholy, and in six weeks she followed her husband to the grave | during the period of her decline, she used to go out every day and sit some hours on the neck of land on which the fort is situated, weeping over her child: hence it ac- quired and still retcins, the name of « Melancholy Point.” ni —— N.Y. Commercial Adver The Neapolitans are made to suffer bitterly fornot (more effectually) op- osing thednvasion of the holy aihance. 1 ie aestoration of the king of Naples, who by the bye has not yet reached his capital, like all similgr restorations 1s to be attended by a severe sacri- ice of those few who may yet dare to prefer, even in thought political free Kom to politreal stad. wy A proclam- tion is issued under the name of this fraternal monarch, for the institution of eourt martial, by which persons, carrying arms. are to be condemned Bs assassins, © Domiciliary visits are to ake place for the search of arms and war-itke stores ; and all secretgassoci Rtions, and particularly the society of the Ca bonari, are te be suppressed. — All who shall join their societies, or at- end any of their meetings, shall be unished with deathy as guilty of high jeason, All who do not belong to the From the years aroonari, but who shall be taken in any meeting with a view of overturning the public order, shall likewise be pun. ished with death. ¢« The same court shall pronounce sentence of from three to eight vears imprisonment, upon any one, who knowing the place of meet- Hog of these ruffians (the Carbonari) shall not immediately inform against them.” a UNFORTUNATE NAPLES, It appears by the recent news from Europe, that in Naples, the Austrians carry on a strict search for arms.— ‘The discovery of a knife is a flog- ing, and any other instrument of of: fence or defince is death.” And yet, an America. editor says that the Car- honarl’s opposing no resistance to this tyranny is a proof of their abjectness and pusillanimity. This is surely un- generous. How can the unarmed Carbonari resist their armed enemies ? Have not the English had their seach ings for arms within a year or two ; iheir floggings, and massacres, and beheadings ? And are not they com- pelled to submit ¢ Why does not Z%e National Gazette, for the same thing, term the English abject and base ? £, Gaz. ha The Patrio Not for himself, but for his country.” * SATURDAY, JULY 14. More Esquires. Appointments” by gov. Hiester. PHILIP WOHLFART to be a Justice of the peace in and for the township of Miles. : A. B. REED to be a Justice of the peace in and for the county of Clear field. i For the Patriot, Mz, Epirtor, The improvement yon tration. to suit different appetites, paper, of a lady of pleasure, which is in troops were then J rather too conduct of that unfortunate lady. You know, or ought to know, ‘that every event which bappens in Moral or Re- ligiqus life, has its cause. Nor does it require. the spirit of prophecy; to declare, that the villiany of your sex was the sole” cause of the misfortunes of that unhappy female. once innocence and beauty, and wouid have remained such had she not been swerved from the path of rectitude by’ an unprincipled man. He found mean: to introduce himself into her company; ofit ; perhaps she may captivate some fool.” Thus she is cast, friendless, on the poor, unfortunate, female is_ traps formed from a terrestial angel, to satanic imp, by the treachery, delusion have made on the PAarTrioT since it has passed into your hands, canno! escape the notice of any man of pene- You cook up various dishes, tolerably well. I took notice of a description in your But you stopped short You should have ustly drawn. soon. She was flattering promises, oaths, &c. were not wanting, to accomplish his infern- al purposes. The innocent, unsus: pecting, victim, became his prey.— She, in an unguarded moment, intoxi- cated with delusive promises, sacrific- ed her virtue & her character, bereay- ed herself of friends, and embittered the lives of heraged parents, hasten- ing, apace, their heads, silvered by time, with sorrow to the grave. The Wha says he to himself ? « Shall I sacrifice my youth to that silly girl ; she has no friends, money, nor expectations ; but Deceiver now abandons her. sie bas beauty—Ilet her make the most an uncharitable, ill-natured and cold- hearted world-—always ready to cen- sure the distressed, without enquiring into the cause of their distress 3; and a and infamy of the male sex. Nor was Selcmon against the unhappy Harlot than cui nN Da modern = debauchees. He censures the very thing of which he himself was guiliy. Hundreds of young women were collected to gratify his lust, and his whole life was a continual scene less vindictive! reflectin ing into his seraglio the unspotted fe male | giving his testimony to the world against the artifices of woman He says, in his Proverbs—¢ With he: much fair speech she caused him to yield, with the flattering of her lips Such guage of a man who I boldly pronounce to be the greatest debauchee that ever iived. So much so, that, for this very thing, he has become Proverbial. Happy is the woman that meets she forced him.” 1s the lan- with a wan of honor and good princi- ples : por is thewman less happy that meets with a woman of virtue and good sense. ’Tho, in the natural course of things, they must expect to meet with crosses and disappointments, which will ruffle their tempers, yet they are but transient, and the sunshine of fel icity is never long absent, in which time they taste the ambrosial nectar of unadulterated and reciprocal love. We cannot Jook for uninterrupted felicity in the circle of mortality. The cap of life is filled with many bitter in- gredients, and oft’ unwarily, we sip the and their can be nothing to sweeten it but religion and virtue. The man possessed of these valuables is invincible against the plots and machinations of wicked and envi- ous men : having on this panoply he poisoned chalice ; is proof against the arrows of fortune » he serenely enjoys the passing hours with him, awaits the approach of death | to land‘them in a better world, where, wall the spicy mountains of Arabia were in flames they would not per. (ume the ambient air with half the fragrance of that blessed land of pure delights, prepared for those whose “very action is In unison with Him hat gave them being. ALEXIS. 3 FEMALE INTREPIDITY. Sunday during the absence of the family, the house of Mr. Watkins Back street was entered by four ruffi- ans, by means of picklocks keys, who broke open a room and stole bank notes, gold and silver coins, watches and plate, worth in the whole about 200 pounds. Having carefully pack- ed up their booty, they descended to he yard intending to escape over some back premises, but were obsery- ed by a young ‘woman named Sarah Cleare, servant to Mr. Parkes, brick- layer, adjoining, who challenged them Lhe man paid no atention, but jump- ed inte the garden in which she was standing, and’ attempted to rush past her into a shed through which their passage lay ; she, however seized two of them ‘by the throats, and called for help, but they broke away and knock- »d her down. She pursued them gain came up with the fellow who -arried the plunder and grasped him y the collar; he made » violent en- deavor to get loose, and kicked and thumped the poor woman most bratal- ¥ 5 but she held hum notwithstanding, il Mr. Harvey, the parish constable ‘ame to her assistance, and lodged the tellow in St. John’s watch house. The prisoner underwent an examination yesterday, before Alderman Smith and was fully committed, — ren About seven o’clock on wednesday venting a respectable looking middle wyed woman seeing a bill on the par- ur window of Gospel-street road, for he next house to let, she knocked at ie door, and desired to be shewn the wouse. The servant got the key and iccompanied her t6 the door of the house, which she unlocked and her master and ntistress being from home, she returned home ; the lady went in- to the emp'y house, taking the key and shutting the door after her; an hour passed, and pot returning, the servant ecame alarmed, went and knocked at the door of the em ty house, but received no answer ; she waited until her master and mistress came home at 9 o'clock, when the master procured a ladder, and enter. «d at the first Boor window ; he opened the street door, and when they entered (with the light; they fund the lady si- Ung on a chair in the back parlour quite dead. —t— tical exhibition now in this city called the Androides, which forms a pleasant recreation, and is to be seen every evening, ¢xcept Saturday and Sunday, in Fourth near Library street. That ithe heat may not prove incenvenient, Mr. Haddock the proprietor and ins ventor of this exbibition has fixed a large fan to the cieling, which extends of debauchery. Yet we find him Lot) {rom one side of the room to the oth- g on his own conduct in fore- in the smiles of a faithful wife, who, There is a very ingenious mechan- er, and which is occasionally put in motion. It is unnecessary to give a particular description of the ndroides, as it 1s contained in the bills which can be obtained at the room of exhib- ition ; but 1 will venturé to assert that there will be few who will not be high- ly gratified by paying Mr. Haddock a visit, The Z2elegraph, of itself with on and Oliver, the governor and lieu. tenant governor of Massachusetts, to the British government, just before the breaking out of the American rev. olutionary war. Dr. Williamson had learned in - London, « that governor Hutchinson’s letters were deposited in an office different from that in which they ought regularly to bave beep placed ; and having undersicod thas the explapations of Mr. Haddock, 1s well worth the price of a ticket. piece of REITAR cn { the adm to work it, and which figure at com mand will spell any word given by the company. This telegraph is so simple in its construction, that any person can at once comprehend Its operations The great wonder is, how the ingenu- ity of man can produce a wooden fi- gure toact at command, as though h were a human being. FR, Gaz, —clD § Qm— From the St. Louis Enquircr. A gentleman who had occasion tc visit the capital of Texas states thai on his departure from Nacogdoches, he found the American settlements to continue for about 15 miles on the great road leading from the seat of government ; and to his astonishment on his return, which was in a month he met the advanced posts of these settlements at least seventy miles in the interior ! However: these settle- ments were the first habitations of men he had seen, in travelling a distance of nearly five hundred miles. The old Louisiana road through the country is still discernable, though there is not the least sign of the abode of a civiliz cd being forthe whole way afier the traveller passes the Amcrican im- provements until he arrives at St. An. tonio. But the most important fac respecting Texas which has come t our knowledge, is, that a concession of the immediate country at the mouth of the great river Colorado has actu ally been made toa gentleman of the west by the Spanish autherities, on condition that he will cultivate the lands and bring with him a certain number of families: The Colorado emptics into the Bay of St, Bernard, and at the contemplat ed spot will afford a fine harbor. A town, upon an extensive plan, is to be laid out which will enjoy the advantage of a port of entry, agreeably to a late order of the cortes establishing a port town at the « mouth of the Colorado.” This recalls to our mind the assertion of the late Mr. Sampson, of New Or- leans, who in speaking some years ago of the outlets of the Bravo and Color. ado; pronounced them amongst the most eligible sites in North America for large commercial cites. — Gr X A DRUNKEN CLERGYMAN The congregation at St. Sepulchre’s church was disturbed during divine service on Sunday last by the inde- cent behaviour of a drunken man who made bis way into the church, and was with some difficulty taken eut by the Pike, one of the beadles and lodged 'n the compter, ; When brought up yesterday to an swer for his misconduct before Mr. Alderman Cox, he was recognised as a regularly ordained clergyman of the church of England and not long since a popular preacher at a very respect- able episcopal chapel at the west end of the town, where he was for many years the established minister. He married the daughter of a backer of the greatest respectability, by who he has a lovely family, all of whom by have his unhappy passion for liquor been reduced to the utmost distress, and are now by his own description, destitute both of food and raiment-— The only visible means of support he at present possesses 1s an allowance of some kind from the navy of be tween 50 and 60 pounds a year. This pit tance unfortunately for him, he re- ceives annually in one sum, and it is soon squandered in his fatal indulgence. tinued scene of poverty and misery. Being sober his behaviour his be- fore the magistrate was most respect-! ul and gentlemanly ; he expres: ed, great sorrow that he should have been guilty of such excess, and promised a stricter guard upon his cenduct in fu- ture. Mr. Alderman Cox, after a serious admonition upon the dreadful effect of his conduct upon his wife and family, permitted him to be discharged. The prisoner returned his thanks in a most impressive and feeling manner, and retired from the bar. A Discovery. This|there was Jittleggxactness in the busi. that onlness mp ith cabify pated | underneath, where a small figure sits hat office, be immediately pe. it, ang address® himself to the chief glerk not finding the prinei- pal within. Assaming the demeange had been received from governop Hutchison and Mr. Oliver, noticing the office in which they ought regu= larly to bave been placed. Without a question being asked, the letters were delivered. The clerk, doubtless, sup« posed bim to be an authorised persen from some other public office. Dr. Williamson immediately carried them to Dr. Fravklin, and the next day left London for Holland.” Franklin Gazette. i From the Village Record, shad in Ohio. There is no fact which we publish this week, more intersting and exe traordinary, than the appearance of lin the Obio river. No insiance we believe, has before occurred of that fish being tak in the western waters. It is probable, we think, that the numerous obsiructions placed in our eastern riy for the purpose of ‘improving the gavigation and for mills have driven them to the necessity of ecking new haunts and more eligible places to deposit their young. Many years ago, shad were abundant in our Brandywine, but nene have appeared nit for a long time. The salmon were so abundant twenty-five years ago In the Connecticut river, that the fishermen wouldsiot sell an hundred shad unless the purchaser would take a reasonable proportion of salmon at a few coppers a pound. 1 well remem ber when the stage from Hartford to Norwich bad a large piece ofb rong fastened wnderncath the b dy for the shag or Ci or “i Sy I's L vr { purpose of bringing salmon fiom the former to the latter place. But this delicious fish is now no longer known in those waters, Perhaps they may make their appearance in the Ohio & Mississippi. In Lewis and Glark’s Journey to the western ocean, they speak of the abundance of salmon take en near the Rockey mountain, in the Columbia river. Would it be possible [or is the distance top great] to bring some bf them across and place them inthe hcad streams of the Missouri ? Bat this is rather a remote specula- tion. We congratulate our good friends in Ohio and Indiana, and other wests er states; on the acquisition. — 4 Cp Union Canal. . The President and Managers ofthe Union Canal company have been along the contemplated route of the canal in Lebanon county ggand the managers having gone to ti hom s the past week the presid continues with the two scientiifnen to take surveys and levels on the Whole of tie route from the Tulpehocken to the mouth of the Swatara ar Middletown. We un- derstand that as soon as the surveys & ery id ve LAY levels are completed, active pperations. on the canal may be expected to com mence, Har. Chron, antiin rr atl ———— ste em i tpt SAS TS WANTED, A person calculated to “teach an Dr. Hosack has lately read to the] peculiarly interesting by the evidence it contains of a fact wh®h has never before been publicly asserted or known that Dr. Williamson was the person who obtained for Dr. Franklin the fa- mous letters written by Mr. Hutchis- vania. This production is renderedied by law. English School,at Pennsylvapia Fuorn- ace. A man with a family would be prefered. He can be accommodated with a dwelling house very convenient The remainder of the year is one con. to the school house. Application must ‘be made soon. July 14, 1821. 4 — =X a N CAUTION. Notice is hereby ‘given to all the inhabitants of the Duited States, not to purchase two judgment Doles that I have given to Esq. Philip Ww olfart, of Centre county, Pennsylvania, on the 58th day of November 1820; ope of them for $40 dollars, payable Ist of April last, and the other for 3! 00 pay= able Ist of April nex!—as said notes: were given for 160 acres of land in the * state of Illinois, and said land was sold for taxes, befire the o v of official, he peremptorily stated, that i he had come for the last letters thag PF 8 | . { 5. Rs 4 & te . GB << title wag. made to me by said Wolfart, He have compeil- AUGH. $e X GEORGE ALSB July 3d 1821. FOR SALE AT THIS OFFICE, ay yh w a 3 Historical Society of New York aling warranted the land clear of all ina’ By Biographical Memoir of the late Dr./cumbrances, I amnot willing to pay Hugh Williamson, a native of Pennsyl- gone cent of said notes unless 8 it