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may well inspire us with flattering
hopes concerning the august National
Convention which has been convoked
for the -id of January. You will there
discuss all your rights, all your inter
ests; and in accordance with yuir own
wishes, establish a new government,
capable of maintaining the liberty
and independence of Colombia: but in
exercising this privilege, calmness of
the passions & moderation in dispute
are necessary.
The Convention of Jiron has not
been fulfilled on the part of Peru; and
by the pretexts alleged for this neg
lect, she inflicts new injuries upon
Colombia. We shall find oursflves
compelled to employ force for the
attainment of peace; and although
glory would be the result of new
combats, we shall sacrifice every thing
to the reposa of America, and in
Special, of the departments of the
South, whose grievous and cruel
Suffering has contributed so much to
repel a hostile invasion.
We shall re-occupy Guyaquil solely
to comply with the preliminaries of
peace concluded with Peru. We
shall not strike a blow, unless in self-
defence, until we have exhausted
o.ir indisputable rights. We will go
further. The Peruvians and the fac
tious of Guyaquil being expelled, we
will seek peace from the vanquished:
this shall bo the nature of our revenge.
Co id i :t so moderate will give the
lie, i:i the face of the universe, to the
projects of conquest and the im ueuse
ambition with which we are charged.
And if after these acts of disinterest
edness and givcrosity,' they si ill
should contend with us, calumniate
us, and seek to oppress us with the
opinion of the world, we shall answer
them on the field of battle with our
valor, and in negotiation, with the
maintenance of our rights.
Colombians'. As subject to the
national will, I only express the
intention of the nation, and the pow
er of the army. By the justice of the
former,'and the heroism of the latter,
we are sure of victory.
BOLIVAR.
SLAVERY IN COLOMBIA
The anxiety and eiforls of the
Colombian government to rid them
selves of the curse of slavery, and to
reinstate an injured class of ni.tn in
the enjoyment of those rights which
our own Constitution declares to he
“unalienable,” put to the blush the
tardy and heartless proceeding of the
U. S. Con gress on the same subject.
— Scarcely had that Republic es
tablished its own freedom, when it
enacted laws for extending the like
privilege to enslaved Africans within
its limits. Certain revenues arising
in the different Provinces, were
sacredly set apart for this purpose,
beginning with those who wore most
worthy to he free** anil always pro
ceeding with the consent of the pro
prietors. At the same time it was
provided that all the children of
Slaves, horn after a certain period,
should be inviolably free.
Under these arrangements, the
number of slaves has already been
greatly reduced. In the four De
triments of the North. viz.Maturin,
Venezuela, Orinoco and Zulia, em
bracing nearly half the population of
the whole country, only 29 371 re
main in bondage,—a few parishes ex
cepted, from ivliich returns have not
been received. The number of
children born of slaves in the same
Departments since the law went into
operation which makes them free, is
9,04G; and in (he whole Republic
probably not less Ilian 20,000. Let
this system be continued for a few
years longer, and to the triumphs of
their arms the Colombians will add
this great glory, that the groans df a
slave are not heard from Orinoco to
Assuay.—Jour, of Com.
families in dens and caves.
The day after my arrival at Egina,
I went with Mr. Stuyvesant to visit
the poor in the dens and caves of the
earth. Tlie Bishop of Talanli and
two other Greeks accompanied us.-—
W e visited perhaps GO or 70 caves
iu each of which lived a family. In
several we found two or three fami
lies, and in one seven. Nearly all
the families and individuals we saw,
appeared to be in the greatest want,
wifu scarcely any clothing, except
what they had on, and that in many
instances, little more than a single
garment, patched and sown till it ap
peared to he made up of a thousand
different pieces.
Among all the sufferers, however,
one claimed my attention in a partic
ular in,inner. It was an old woman
from Livulia. As we went from !
cave to cave, looking at the ragged ;
inhabitants, talking with the children,
inquiring about the places where !
they were from, the manner in which
they gained their bread, which of
their lathers were killed in battle, 1
saw silting at a little distance fijm
the mouth of a subterraneous abofTe,
an emaciated, withered form of a hu
man being surrounded by three or four
little ragged piattlers, who had not
seen more than five or six years of this
world s misery, and who, if their own
wants of bread and clothing had been
supplied, would have been quite hap
py. -Their great-grand-molher, to
whose aged form they clung the clos
er I as approached, no longer enjoyed
the light of the sun. 110 years had
rolled away since she commenced her
pilgrimage on the earth, and she had
become totally blind. “I have been
a wanderer,” she said, in reply to my
questions, “a wandered from my na
tive place, for these eight years!
Here I ain, helpless with these little
ones, and where shall we find bread!
Their father labors every day in car
rying stones, (to builil the Orphan As
ylum,} and receives a loaf of bread!”
Having uttered this, she raised her
hands towards heaven, evidently in
petition, and then sat silent* till I n-
gain began to draw from her, by my
interrogations, a descrip ion of her
sorrows. Mr. S. said, he could not
pass by such an object, and made her
a present of a little more than a dollar.
The next clay we visited other
caves, and in one we found twelve
families, and upwards, I believe, of
liltv persQiis. The day following I
arose at an early hour, took mules
and went out to visit the poor, who
live in caves, at a distance from the
oily. We visited, I believe, between
seventy and eighty families, consist
ing of nearly three hundred persons,
the greater part of whom were wid
ows and orphans.
The population of Egina is estima
ted variously by different persons, but
I should judge that the number of
strangers 1 here is about ten thousand.
1 should think that about two-lhiids
of the strangers are widows and or
phans from Athens, Livadia, Solon,
and other parts of Ranmely, & from
different parts of the Peloponesus.—
JMr. King's Journul in Greece.
BRITISH DEBT.
We sometime since noticed tlie
generous donation of 6/. sterling, made
by a gentleman in London, towards
the reduction of ihe National debt.—
A friend of ours has made a calcula
tion to show how far this sum would
go towards its liquidation. The debt
is 900,000,000/. The average inter
est paid is said to be about 4 1-2 per
cent.
The interest per an. is 40,000.000/. Os. 04.
per day is 109.539/. Os. 0 I.
per hour is 4,4(!6'. 4 . 21.
per minute is 76/. 0,. 0,1.
jifersecondis 1/. 5s. 4,1.
So the donation would not pay the
interest of five seconds of time—not
long enough for the commissioner to
write a receipt for the money, but
allowing him barely time to say,
“please to accept His Majesty’s
thanks.”— Portsmouth Adv.
__ SUMMARY.
In the last number of the Edin
burgh Medical Journal there is an ac
count of a case of dropsy in a fe
male, in which'the operation of tap
ping was performed 53 times, and
139-4 pints of water abstracted.
A gold mine has been recently dis
covered in Davidson Co., N. C., con
taining a vein of tlip precious metal,
eighty feet in width. This is the larg
est vein ever heard of either in this
or any other country. Tlftjy general
ly vary in width from two to five
feet.
Mr. 0 Brian, from the North of
Ireland, aged 34 years, who stands
nearly eight feet, was exhibiting him
self in Liverpool at the last dates.—
He says that he is allowed to be the
largest and best proportioned man
ever exhibited iii the United King
doms.
The editors of the New Bedford
Courier copied tho following from a
bank bill a feiv days since: “A New
Bedford whaleman bids farei^ll to
his last dollar of a .three years voyage,
amounting to $309, the whole "of
which has been spent in Intemperance.
June 1, 1S29.”
It is stated in the last number of
the African depository, that in North
Carolina two thousand slaves would
immediately be emancipated and com
mitted to the Society of Friends, to
be sent to the Colony for Liberia, if
funds of their transportation were pro
vided.
It is stated in the Pittsburg Ga
zette, that the present appearance ot
that city will scarcely be remember
ed in a short time, so rapid is its ad
vance, and so bold the features of its
improvement.
The New Bedford Mercury men
tions, as a sign of the times, that
vvhalesmen, when they come home,
go to the booksellers to enquire for
new novels by Sir Walter.
As an instance of telegraphic de
spatch, the Liverpool Chronicle as
serts 1hat a Communication was made
from the station at that port, to the
Holyhead, and an answer returned to
Liverpool, a distance of 140 in the
space of fifty-three seconds!
Proposals have been issued for pub
lishing a daily newspaper in the city
of New York to be called “New
York State Enquirer,” by J. G. Ben-
net, associate ediior of the late New
York Enquirer.
There recently lived at Weston n,
New York, in one house, three moth
ers, two grandmothers, one great
grandmother, three daughters, two
grand daughters, one great grand
daughter, thtec children and three
mothers—the whole family consisting
of Jour females only, all grown persons!
A Ciucinnatti paper states that
there are 30 divorce cases before the
Supreme Court of Ohio, for one coun
ty, Hamilton. They are denominat
ed “applications to the Court to cor
rect ihe mistakes made by the parties
in marrying the wrong persons."
Te l! ilifls in VVasliington City
Commence their notices of sales thus:
—“/?i/ virtue of a distress." This is
calling things by their right names.
The Indiana Whig mentions an
extensive slaughter recently made
among the serpents in that, neighbor
hood. About 420 rattlesnakes were
massacred in three or four attacks.
The Salt-borers at Montpelier,
Vermont, have gone to the depth of
700 feet without finding sail water.
The lower strata perforated arc slate
and limestone.
The following appears in the Can
ton Register: “Two cofnn makers on
Homan have received forty sets of
coffin timber, of the best quality,
which they recommended to their friends.
The price is not fixed. ’
The statement from the Niagara
Herald, respecting the body of Mor
gan, proves to be erroneous The
body, found was- that of an Irishman
who was drowned in August Iasi,
in attempting to swim from Queens-
ton to Lewistown, upon a wa
ger.
A worthy gentleman in New Haven
county, Conn, has recently ordered a
fine apple orchard to be cut down,
“because the fruit can be converted
into an article promotion of one of the
evils of the day.”
In Connecticut the members of a
newly formed Temperance Society
who had agreed not to drink, give or
sell ardent spirits, were at a loss how
they should dispose ^f some they had
on hand. A proposition to pour it in
to their cider, it is said, was finally a-
greed upon.
A French jury have decided, at
the assizes held for the department
of the Cher, that to rob a fellow trav
eller in a stage coach is not a high
way robbery, a stage ccach being “a
rolling house.”
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IdT” A Methodist Cami) mooting w ill
be held at Coiiasauga on llic 27th Vugust
next.
*n3 ri, 0n tho 3d of Soptomber next, thei/
will he a Camp meeting held at Oougdo-
gee.
THE AMERICAN
MOJs'rilL Y J\IA GJiZLVn.
editx:d by n . p. wilhis.
HE AMERICAN MONTHLY
MAG1NE is intended to resemble, as
nearly as possible, the London New Month
ly, edited by Thomas Campbell. It will
be devoted to Reviews of new Rooks, Es
says upon matters oftaste, fancy or feeling
Sketches of bcenery, Journals through,
interesting portions of country, Amusing
Tales, Poetry, and Miscellaneous Writing
of every description, calculated to be inter
esting. There will also be a department
devoted to a liberal .nscussion of the lead
ing Political Topics of the day, and a Sum
mary, comprising notices of Current L t-
erature and the principal Events of the
times.
As far as can be discovered, there is bud
one opinion respecting the fitness of such
a work to the present period. The polit
ical tide iff just turning, and every thing,
relating to the character of the coining ad
ministration will In.' in the highest degree
interesting. There is a call, too, lor a
Magazine of the literary character pro
posed, The two Leading Reviews of this
country are published but seldom, and arc
conlincti to the heavier branches of litera
ture and science* and thoilgh there are
lighter periodicals of very considerable n.
it, there is a wide interval between (he two,
which may be advantageously filled with
out detriment to either. The Editc-.’ is a
young man, but he trusts that with ‘he
promised assistance of several able Writes f
and an entire devotion to it on his own
part, the Monthly will be found worthy °*
the patronage it solicits.
—CONDITIONS—
1. The work Will be issuer! in month 1 /
numbers, containing 72 pages 8ve., wh ch,
with the title page, preface, and index,
will make an annual volume ol 364 : a
2. The price is five dolgaks a y arj
payable in advance. A suitable ailovvan e
Wiii be made to agents who take a large
number of copies,
,9. The mechanical execution of the work
shall be good; and the monthly numbers
shall be faitinully transmitted according to
order.
4. Each nurnbei will be published on the
fifteenth nay of the month of which it bears
date.
Payment in advance is required fof the
following reasons:—The expenses of a new
establishment make it desirable and prop
er. Some risk is incuned by the publish-/
eis; and it is but reasonable that .patrons
should ailord accommodation of paying so
small a sum, at the commencement ol the
year. In Europe, periodical works are
paid for, either in advance, or when each
number is taken. This practice is last
gaining in the United Slates, and it is
hoped may become universal. In that
case,*thc little debts, which are often so
troublesome to subscribers, and so discour
aging, and sometimes ruipous to publishers^
are not suffered to exist-
M.:y 5.
PROPOSALS
¥^OR publishing, in Hie town of Nash-
vxilo, a paper under the title of the
JUVENILE MUSEUM—to be edited by
Wilkins F. TannehiU arm William ’x .
Uij-nj. P riodical publications have be
come so numerous, that proposals for issu
ing them me, by no means, novel or un
common. V\ e, with pieasuic, witness tlie
lite.ary taste oi our country increasing,
and, therefore, cherish tlie hope that our
humble undertaking will meet with suc
cess. Another circumstance which raises
our expectations is, that no publication of
precisely a similar kino has ever been at
tempted in the Western country.
It may be deemed the height of arro
gance lor us—without the endowment of
talents or the advantages oi experience—,
to attempt to otler to the rising generation
any tiling like a source o: ami.semem.—
Rut wr. hope our endeavors, however un
successful, will not be mistaken for varntv
or presumption. Young ourselves, (hav
ing but little more than centred cur teem)
we intend to uerote our exertions to the
entertainment, if not instruction, of the
Youthful pai t of the community; and al
though we have no pretensions 'to liteiary
eminence, we may occasionally ofi< t some
thing not entirely unworthy the acceptance
of more advanced age.
We will not promise too rr.uCh, lest we
should fail; we, therefore, only add, that
we will endeavor so to conduct our paper
as to meet tlie approbation of its patrons;
and that whilst it is a source of pleasure to
them, it may be a means of improvement
to us.
iCP Communications will be received
with gratitude, and attended to with
promptness.
Conditions.—The Juvenile Museum will
be published onco a week, on a half sheet
of medium paper, at $1,50 per annum,
payable in advance. To be commenced
‘as soon as a sufficient number of subscrii
bars are obtained.
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C11E li 0 K E E N A T10 N,
for the years !S2G, 1327 4* 1328. for
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CHEROKEE CONSTITUTION,
Printed in both languages in parallct '
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