ARID. — pi fa : \ “ Not for himself, but for his country.” MONDAY Mar 17, 1824. 3 3 ht will be seen by this week’s psper that we bave disposed of our Upseated Land advertise- ments This, no doubt, will be very acceptable information to many of our subscribers. We shall endeavor to make up for the time and space we were obliged to occupy in the publi- cation of them, by crowding into the Patriot as much information, both foreign and domestic, as we conveniently can. We must, however, reserve a corner lor the SHERIFF'S. And al though there seems to be a pretly good num- ber about to % enter the list” yet we think they will not require so much room as the Treas: urers Sales. We intend giving them all a fair start, but who will prove himself the ¢Eclipse” is left for time alone to determine. It 15 to be hoped that those who « enter themselves” will ncither get slame’ nor ¢* fly the course” during the race. Feel § Wr We have commenced publishing some of the more important laws enacted by the legisia- ture of this state during the last session. Ia the last page of this week's paper will be found the law entitled © An act to provide more ef- fectually for the education of the poor gratis, & for laying the foundation for a general system of education throughout this Commonwealth.” We would recommend it to those who may feel themselves interested in this law, particularly schoolmusters, to preserve this paper. tl § Qos From the best information we can obtain from different parts of the United States, little doubt remains of the election of General Jack- son to the Presidency and John C. Calhoun to the Vice Presidency. Old Hickory’s move- ments towards the Presidential Chair are al- most as rapid as those he made against the enemies of our country during the last war. « Fortune favors the brave.” i: ER Wr The Tariff Bill was taken up by the Senate of the United States on the 28th ult. After un- dergoing some amendments of a trivial nature, a motion was made to strike out the duty on Iron, which was carried by a vote of 24 to 23 Apprehensions are entertained by the friends of the Bill of its final failure in the Senate. ’ ——R— he At the request of one of our readers we have inserted the following poetical effusions of his pericranium. We cannot recommend it to our readers as any of the best of poetry, but the sub- ject upon which it treats being somewhat in- teresting at the present time, has induced us to give this newly manufactured song a place in our paper : FOR THE PATRIOT. A NEW SONG, Zunes Hail to the Chief. Hail to oLp HICKORY, the pride of the nation, Honor’d aud loy’d by the whigs of the land, VWho will place Aim in the President’s station, With Joux C. Carnoun, that true honest map ? Gods ! how he’ll turn about, Turning the old laven out, And making them walk to that shameful old tune ; Come then join in the throng And let this be your song, Huzza for Old Hickory & John C. Calhoun ! Sons of old Penn, you were first of the nation, In bringing this Chieftain to public view, With John C. Calhoun, you’ve taken a firm sta- tion, A Patriot try’d and found firm and true. Pov’t fear the Crawford cor’s, With negro’s blood through their por’s, Nor be deceiv’d by their whining tune 3 Let them do their dirty best, You stick firm to the zes?, And Huzza for Old Hickory & John C. Calhoun Hail to this CurerTaIN, whom we can rely on, In peace or in war he’ll take a firm stand, With John C. Calhoun, that noble statesman, The pride of his country, the joy of the land, Let then your voices raise, Every man sound their praise, With exclamations as high as the moon ; Take then anoble stand, And let every man Huzza for Old Hickory & John C. Calhoun. PUBLIUS. ri FROM THE NEW YORK COMMERCIAL ADVERTI- SER. LATEST FROM ENGLAND. The British Packet Frolic, lieutenant Barron, arrived at this port yesterday, im 30 days from Falmouth, with despatches for the British charge des affairs at Washington. The des- patches were immediately forwarded by a spe cial messenger. The presumption is, that these despatches relate to the late negotiations between the two governments, on the subject of the slave trade. The Frolic, having been em- ployed as a despatch vessel, did not hring the mail, which we understand was to be forwarded by the eclipse packet, to leave Falmouth on the regular day. London papers, however, to the evening of the Ist of April, have been received. : pid nem of T. W. Moore, Esq. the agent, fora Truro paper of the 3d, which is the latest i town. » Mr. Peel has announced in the house of com- moos, that the manuscript of Milton, recently discovered, the nature of which is to furnish proofs of the truth of the christian religion, was about to be published under the auspices of the king. : : _ The slave-trade piracy bill was read a third time in the house of commons on the 25th of Mareh, and sent to the lords. Sir J. Mackin- tosh expressed his entire concurrence in the billy and hailed the auspicious treaty, entered into with America, with the most heartfelt satis- taction. Si Another loar. bad rather unexpectedly 2p- peared in the London market, of two > and a baif sterling, for the service of the ancient kingdem of Guatimala, or the united provinces of Central America. The Paris dates are to the 30th of March, and Madrid to the 18th. It was rumoured that a consultation of foreign ambassadors had been! beld in Madrid, on the subject of establishing a constitutional government. It was reported that count Bourmont, the French commander in chief, bad been asked whether he would be able to support the plans proposed ; to which he re- plied, that considering the spirit that predomi- nated in the provinces, the forces under his com: mand were insufficient ; and that he should re. quire reinforcergents to the amount of 50 or 60,000 men to maintain order and tranquillity ; to which it was added, that he should have whatever force he desired. Something extraor- dinary was expected to take place, and it ap- pears certain that there had been a discussion an the establishment of a government which was not to the taste of the absolute party of the monks. There were reports in circulation of much dissatisfaction in several provinces, which was chiefly ascribed to the violent conduct of the royal volunteers. One account from: Mad. rid states that an order has at length been pub- lished, granting a general pardon to all the mili- tary of the constitutional armies, with an excep- tion that none of them are to reside at Madrid, nor to inhabit the royal palaces. A civil am- nesty was said to be under consideration. Don Juan Martin, better known as the Em- pecinado, has been murdered at Roa by a band of ultras, in consequence of the refusal of the ministers to put him upon his trial. The Spaniards taken by the Algerines have been given up, and were landed at Carthagena by the frigate Hermoine, 44. The London pa- pers give a report that this frigate had an action with the Naiad, 38, one of the blockading squad- ron off Algiers,and received a ¢ good drubbing.’ The Hermoine, it is said, was brought into ac- tion in consequence of the captain not thinking it necessary to hoist his colors as he passed the blockading squadron. She suffered severely in the loss of men, but was permitted to proceed as soon as she acknowledged the country to which she belonged, No interruption to the good un- derstanding between I'rance and England, was expected from this occurrence. The Rockfort, 80 gun ship, had arrived in England from the Mediterranean, with informa. tion that the differences with Algiers were ami- cably settled. M. LAREVEILLERE LEPAUX, quondam mem- ber of the national convention, director and founder of the sect of theophilanthropists, died in Paris March 28, aged 70. It is said that the emperors of Russia & Aus. tria have determined to effect a considerable reduction of their armies. All the Greeks who were in prison at Saloni- cha have been released. They had made some landing in Cassandra, but re-embarked without any operation of consequence. They had tand- ed supplies of arms at various points of Thes- saly, In Macedonia all was tranquil. It was stated that Coron surrendered to the Greeks on the 18th of February. They bad al- so succeeded in taking the outworks of Lepan- to, on which occasion the English officers of engineers, who were gone to the assistance of the Greeks, particularly distinguished them- selves. Lord Byron had returned from Trip polizza to Missolonghi, and had been every where received with great honor. At Constantinople, February 24, extensive preparations were going on for the campaign against the Greeks. No progress had been made in the negotiations with the new Russian minister, and 1t is said a Turkish army was as- sembling at Sophia to act agaist that power. ¥ Loxpon, April 1. Owing to the information received this morn- ing, that Ferdinand is determined not to sanc- tion the old Spanish loan ; the Spanish bonds are gradually sinking. They opened at 19 1.2 3-4, and are gone down one per centum. In the foreign market little bas been doing. Greek is very heavy at 2 discount. A new in- surance company, under the title of the ¢« Brit- ish Assurance Company,” at the head of which are inany of the principal bankers and merchants in London, has been announced as forming. Its objects are very extensive, and much anxie- ty is expressed for the plan, which will shortly be made public. : Extract of a letter from Odessa, March |. A ship which has arrived at Constantinople, after an extremely short passage of only forty hours, brings the important, and, for the Porte, most alarming intelligence, that Mohamed Ali Pacha, viceroy of Egypt, has at length thrown aside the mesk and declared himself indepen- dent. It waslong ago known in Constantinople that he meditated great things, and the Porte therefore tried every means to weaken him, and ordered him to furnish 10,000 men to combat the Greeks. Mohamed rescived, instead of SNE dl “XS further particulars, and which may, pethsp FROM THE NEW YORE PATRICT, MAy. § shake all the eastern provinces of the cpus Io a lever te a General at Curacca fon not to speak of the situation of the capital itself, Ceunt DoNzELGT (Lovernoe ol Martiniq €) i which derives so many supplies irom Egypt.ideclares that the policy of France 1s wholly oi 4 We presage that this event will complete thefpacific tendency, and that the armaments re emancipation of Greece, and give the death-blow{cently despatched from Brest and other port to the power of the Porte. were solely for the protection of French com ms merce, and to suaccour tiie garrisons ID the isl PERNAMBUCO.—We learn from captainjands subject to Louis in the West Indies—be; Rathbone, who left Pernambuco about the 3d)ing nowise connected with any desigrs of th ultimo, that an English frigate and two sloobs| government on Senth Awericd, &e. &c—A fe of war, and twe Braziinan frigates, and a sloop! months before the French ariny cres ed the Pyd, of war, the latter under command of commo-irences, to subvert the Constitutional Govern dore taylor, arrived off the port five days be-|ment of Spain, the King of I'rance congratala fom: from Rio Janeiro. The commodore inform-jied “his Joyal children’ on the general peac ed captain Rathbone, that on the 6th of April bejthat pervaded Europe, and hypocritically gav should put the port dander a strict biockade, and{out that his nation only wished to remain ay peac should not permit vessels of any nation to go injwith allthe world : Yet, as we have seen, at that or come out until the present president was re- very period, plots against Liberty, and contrivans moved, and the person appointed by the empe-|ces to give them effect, were the orders of the ror was placed io his stead. This the majority|day at the French Court.—Who would place of the inhabitants were determined to oppose, any mote faith in the assertions of a despol’s! and a number of troops had already come in slave, than in those of the heartless tyrant bim- from the country to aid in defending the town.'self? The Kino was false, and Count Donze- The place was in a good deal of confusion, and rot is his tool. the market dull.—Aew Yorg Gazette, : — - dm FROM. THE NEW YORK STATESMAN, MAY 4. Indian Reservations in Georgia. ~Some days since we published the address of the President of the United States, together with ab abstract ot the documents communicated to the House of Representatives, on the subject of lands hieid by the Cherokee Iidians in the state of Georgia. Since the publication of that paper, another of a similar character, and still more cepsurable in it seems that the spirit of insubordination amonglits doctrines and sentiments, has atiracted our the blacks there is not yet extinct, and that in-|attention. It is a report of the select commits telligence of new plots on the Last Coast hasitce to whom was referred the Piesident’s Mes- caused the militia to be again in active service. sage relative to the compact of 1802, Letween By the information from Martinique, it appears!the United States and Georgia; also a memo- that the inhabitants of that island are taking ef-|rial of the Jepisluture of that state upon the same ficient means for preventing an insurrection subject. This rcport was presented: to the among thelr black population, tHouse of Represcniatives on ihe sth instant tf {by Mr. Forsyth, to whose pen it is PL ity FROM THE BUENOS AYRES GAZETTE, FEB. 10. | After examinig ils contenis, we were almost CHILI—Valdivia has been taken by Quinta- surprised that it received (he usual courtesy of villa, who proceeded from Chiloe, with about being © read and committed.” In this epreion 4000 men, The director Ireyre, it is said, bas 1t is. believed cur readers wiil fully concur marched to resist him, with the corps of the ar- when they shail bave perused a fey extracts my which had retreated from the Intermedios from the body of the report, togcther with the to Coquimbo. resolutions, with which it concludes. 2 The paper of January 12 mentions the receipt’ After a laboured attempt to convict the Pres- of information, from Sanatigo, of the return of ident and the Secretary of War of gross incon- the Chilian expedition to Valparaiso, and the sistency, chargiug them with an intentional der- capture of Riva Aguero by Bolivar, which event eliction of duty and injustice towards the state ia, the report complains that ¢ gje gen- was celebrated at Lima with great enthusiasm. of Georg [t is added, that Bolivar was preparing to open eral government authorized the establishment of a campaign with 10 or 12000 men, ‘missionaries among the Cherokees, to instruct The paper of the 12th contains an extract of their children, and to give them a taste Jor the a letter from Valparaiso, of December 12, cultivation of the soil.” ‘Fhese philanthropic ef which mentions that an English vessel from forts of the government to civilize and meliof at Calcutta, with 200,000 dollars, Chilian proper- the condition of the Indiansare aii alone constra. ty, was taken by a privatéer under the Spanish'ed into a manifestation of bad faith on the pa flag. This privateer, and another cruising in of the United States, and “into a direct viola. the bay of Calloa, were fiitted out at Chiloe. {tion of the promise to extinguish their title as The paper of February 21 contains a notice of Soon as it could be done, frcaceaby), nd on red the arrival of the frigace United States at Rio sonable terms.” } ag Javeiro. The paper of January 15 contains a’ But censurable as are the foreg ing eviracy J law of the Junta of representatives of the pro they are nothing in comparison with the mene vince, directing the manner of electing a gover cing language in another part of the 1€por nor, Hes to be chosen by a majority of vote The committee state, that the « present position of the house of representatives; and for the term of the Cherokees is incompatible with the claims of three years. The Gazette of January 10 con- of the state of Georgia,” and the knowledwe of tains a decree of the Governor, appointing brig. the fact, that the United States will rat o) adier general Don Carlos de Alvear minister sequence of the perverseness of the Cheroke plenipotentiary to the United States, with a sala- comply with the obligation of the compact df ry of 10,000 dollars per annum ; lieutenant colo. 1802, will necessarily produce irritations and re nel Thomas Isiarte, Secretary of Legation, with scntments, the consequences of which may te a salary of 2000 doliars. easily foreseen. Zhe United states may be une —t der the fatal necessity of seeing the Cherokee PORTUGAL.—Printed proclamations were annihilated, or of lin iden Mid found posted up in Lisbon inviting the people to own citizens ! |! Here is an insinuation—nay, rebel against the King in favor of the Queen. an open threat, that if the Cherokees are not res Chis was considered as a further explanation of moved by force, the citizens of Georgia will the murder of the Marquis of Lorrejo. Let. butcher and exterminate this remnant cf an un. ters from Oporto give a melancholy picture of fortunate tribe, unless the government of the the state of society in that place : the influence United States prevent this barbarous catzstronhe of the friars and fanatics paramount ; and the by the still more horrible alternative ofa civil streets swarming with idle persous in conse- war with a member of the Union '—These supa quence of the stagnation of trade. gestions come from a prominent individual, are —ti—m sanciioned by the autrority of a congressional FROM THE NEW YORK NATIONAL ADVOCATE. Committec,and will be expersively discemina- The war declared by Algiers against Spain ted through the medium of the newspaners and other powers is not likely to terminate as among the citizens to whom a spirit of insurrec. soon as was expected, It seems that the Alger- tion and bloodshed is ascribed. Such sentiments ines, contrary to their nature and interest, have appear to us little less than treasonzhlc and far had peace too long. It took them some time exceed all the alledged but ymaging at- lo recover the shock occasioned by the bombard- tempts to excite the blacks to rebellion. : ment of their city by T.ord Exmouth, but they The following are the resolutions with which have since discovered that the strength of their this intemperate document roncledos : fortifications had nearly proved fatal to the Eng. Resolved, That the United States are bound lish, and they are cut off from their usual re. by their obligations to take immediately th sources. In a rash and headstrong Dey, a dec- necessary measures for the removal of laration of war is a thing of a moment. Ifsuc- Cherokee Indians beyond the limits of that st cessful, he makes money by it—if he fails, he Resolved, That such an loses his head, and he calculates to Jose it some the state of Ge day or other. The requisitions made upon the lead the final a Algerines by the Sublime Porte in this Greek state under the compact of 1802, with the Jeast war have been very heavy.—The Algerines possible inconvenience to the Cherokee and have lost some of their best ships, and have ex- Creek Indians. within the boundary of tlie State pended a vast sum of money. They returned Resolved, That the sum of. dollars should home discontented and avaricious, and Spain, beaporopriated for the purpose ex ressed i he from her late troubles, presented herself as a above resolutions. AE suitable object of plunder. Lord Exmouth con. cluded a defective Treaty after his heavy bom- 1 5 3 ” bardment of Algiers. He only stipulated that The Missouri Intelligencer of the 27h the Algerines should make no Christian slaves, March, acknowledges the receipt of informati when, backed as he was by the power of the al. from an officer of the arm a For Nuon led sovereigns, he should have prohibited them by which it appears that fve i ; Hog from declaring war without votifying the con- longing to Mr. Brazeau’s tradi od ihn Ey tinental powers, and particularly the nation were lately killed near the or. i WE against which hostilities were meditated, in or- ascending the Missouri river. hes ae ore der to prevent these declarations of war for ob- veyed in a batteau and w ore tls Re iw jects of gain. There are few powers who can purpose of trading with the Madore r Ae make it convenientto go against Algiers with aras — Within ohe day’ y os el rd i any prospect of success; and while they are village, the Ira ae Aricaliy) willing to respect the Treaty as it relates to jeft De Ae oo Dpreneesive , of dangsiyf, } company and proceeded by land. le FROM THE NEW YORK COMMERCIAL ADYERTI- t SER. UNPLEASANT NEWS FROM DEMER- ARA. Files of the «Guiana Chronicle,” and the “ Colorist,” from the Ist to the 16th of April, have been received by the editors of the Nortolk Beacon. Some extracts are given, fiom which > e the ate. arrangement with orgia should be made, 25 may djustment of the claims oi that Sl § We MORE INDIAN MURDERS. complying, to declare himself independent, and for this be has certatnly chosen the most favor. | able moment. Those alone, who are competent to form an idea of the Situatich of the Turkish empire, can judge what may be the consequen- “and we were yesterday indebted to the polite- ? ces of this event, respe ir g which we look foribe made for them making Christian captives, they will occasional- promised to rejoin them at the Mandans. whose y commit depredations on the commerce of town a : 'e Mandans, whose those nations who trade in th : » O0€ mile above the Aricara’s he entered hie ade in the Mediterranean, under cover cf the night. The day aficr his ar- v . A $ . 0 iady dail i ted 3 Tie Sp Dae how it 1s to be preven. rival, he received news that his men were #/ ~ B- paniards, Sardinians, Genoese, avd murdered, his cargo captured iS Bighont 48 i 4 tah wal 5 poittans will svffer mo and a Treaty must| The amoutit of goods taken was ot eho als 8 0 3 ad al Oly 2° by ¢ 8 “uropean pew ars. {Mr Tilton, at the Mundas, sent coe of 5 ol & Sal