The news. (Washington, Ga.) 1816-1821, July 05, 1816, Image 1

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V Oi.UMF. 1.1 . o ..; .. 1V...- ls, MY JOff.Y A M CfUftLTOX JPRIVK—T..- t T. HiLF paid tv * £.va * f, K. NO IKE. All perl ms indebted to tne est He of Garland Pearson, dec,, a’ ed, are requested to make im nt, i ate payment to the Subfcri -ers, and those to whom laid estate is inclebt ed, are rcqueftec, to cal for fetrle inent, their accounts made out ac cording to law. JVlicha: r. Pearson, admr. Elizabeth Pearson, June 24. 3 t. admx. C illflON. Whereas my v/ife Elizabeth Mallory, has left mv bed and board without any provocation whatever, this is to tor warn all persons from trading with, or har . bouring her on mv account as I un no* accountable for any of hc r contracts—thole that do not com ply with this notice, may expitft the law to he put in rapid force a- i gainft them. WM. M. MALLORY. June 28— 2t OPTTU \TU\ •FROM TH'E NEW YORK PATRIOT. LmLD, in N:’ • York on Thurs day evening, in the 29th year of her age, Mrs. FEDERALISM. Jler death was occ fioned hv a vi. oienf attack ol the voxpepuli. which 1 he. tong been undermining her ner iife ftirnifh ample fobje&s ol : speculation to the tnoralift and state man, while they prefen t an { arduous task to The hiftoriari At I .puftnt he following sk ;tch, fro,) | actual observation, may be accept j able to feme. Descended from ! the Royal family ci Great Brit fin flte never deviated from that line o conduct which rfiftiuguifhes the i citimate inheritors of Nobil’ty, and Deitinacioufiv avoided st:v o i thci conn-'rHon, *'■ an such as :• : - £•*■■ *(’ e aggrandizement of her . B o. Bonfe EE r relatives and friends were 1 lunrie? ous, hot • in Old and New E gUy-l, ns we’? sin Cimuh* a?id Nova Sc ia, and cannot be char s ■<: w.th having ever lacrtficefi her ititr -its to the vulgar di. rat $ of n- atity and honor, or the ftaic fupgeft’- ns of petriotifrn. In early life lhe made fevers’ : tcurs through the southern am: | middle Rates, but not meeting ev 1 erv attention due to her noble birth ; finally limited her residence am? travels to the “ Nation o* New | England.” 1 here happiness might | have attended retirement, hat! it j r.ot been prevented by an incorrig iblt* imoetuofity of ti: mper, whiul i taught her to ruin where lhe couu l not rule The bud of repose was scarcely j biown when its fragrance was 1 i polled and its beau ies blasted !: j the pt flilent breath of domefti ( - cliff ntion. A dispute arose from! fome pr (Ting invitations being giv en to hei American copfins to ac company Admiral John Bull in foment his expeditions; th'.fc in vitations were considered importu nate and were refei ted with Ipirit. Mrs F. war through t K e whole , tJifcute the ftrsnuous advocate 01 j TII E NEW S. WASHINGTON, (geokgia) FRIDAY, JULY 5, 1816. Admiral Bull, and at its termina tion, found that Hie had taken so strong an interelf in his behalf, that evan the folks of MalTachufetts had no great notion of her remaining a mong them. Thus situated, New liampftnre pro.niied an alyiu u horn taunts lhe daily received. Ori her arrival in that state a Mr. SheafE- volunteered his protedion -bur, unfortunately fell in a ren contre with a plebean by the name of Plm cr. So mournful were her reflec tions ori the- bate of her friend, that ihe dt tt rmined to retire to a Monaf toy, and, with that intention,pro- 1 needed, to the borders of Conr.edi- I cut, where, ala;.! ihe t und her j Ttends in. such a Hate of tumult and | i irritation, that iter proidfions of in noceble were unhec led nd un- j heard.— She Monks ‘would not % 1 promise allifiar.ee or oft r protec- I tion, fearing that the blue lights, ! which had so long blazed on the ! altars of their idolatry, wire ab u; i to be extingmfhed, while the Go- | tide m-ffituiions of their state were | menaced wit h lub. erfion. Rendered frar.tic with dilap- | pointment, her friends then appre h • Jed a tragical cfote ol her even- i tual career, and had half refolveci 1 t 1 abandon her to the guidance of chance At that gloomy period, however, they learned that a king who had pled her cause in Europe, redded in the ftaie of New-York, and wished sincerely that she fi fight j triumph over her enemies. ila- I ted with the hope of success, and ; fired with the ddire of levenge, i she rv.di puff ro meet ‘dm ; i and inj mediately on her arrival tv I try foetal attachment felt the cor -1 > . ... | reeling influence of private p tker- 1 j ing and public ‘ftrife, tier Royal i frtend stood forth tde fa d.and bra- 1 j veil on tbe lift uiChampions ; bur, j j his 1 fforts were unavailing to her, and fatal to him eU ; for he boon i received ids death rd v h om a ‘• sprig -Hhclaia! . personal 1 c -Tirefl vyith a “ E. aitCs Sen.” j I hat bifafter conium and ihe def tiny of Mrs, I . conlukria thelaft | ‘.lake as ■ left, she v-C Go to the i Ityftenc agonies oi: jespefa'ion heightened by ihe dcipondi ... pre feririment of pee y dissolution. j The d’ioi dcr, v ith w hicb sf had been -io ir: and, returned wi h in creased virulence—letting at and fi a c: the power of medicine and the efforts of sk ill. • Eieve of the moft popular of her nhyficiai s were called upon i out tar were hey from affording | relief or removing the liiftemper, • that ail fell victims to its infectious | rage, and w ere interred in the fame ! grave with their patient. The fu neral obiequies were attended by a meat n uh'tude, who testified the | unccrlty c f their rtgrttbv as length ned vftages as wx-re ever before ; ‘ifneiTed in our land. , lhe fate of M>B- E. exhibits an ; admonitory lesson to the votaries ? *i ambition, who, while perusing | [ herhiftorv- will P’ ndcron the mu j lability of human greatneft, and be ’ ready to exclaim with the poet, •• Ith serial ‘■ -ifar (lend arid turn'd to clay, , ir. jhf cl bole to kap the uuitul away” ‘ OUR NAVAL HISTORY. The Naval Monument, pubiifh | ed by Mr Bowen i- jullly regarde* ] as an im- ortant acquisition to tht I American public. It contains offt- cial accounts of all the naval W tions fought during the late war ; besides 25 engravings ; vvifn anec dotesof persons, and circumftan tial narratives of Events, &c. I his work, together with the Naval Chronicle, compofmg part of the Analedtic Magazine, muit be ve rv ufeful in repelling English mis representations Among other ob fervatious on this fubje6t, the Bof ten Patriot ha the following : ‘• k I his part of our national fto- 1 ry ought not to be Ifudicd in Bri tifh auh >rs. Every artifice has been ulod by them to hide from the w"'r’d the mortification of defeat. | Our frigates have been represented i as seventy-sours, and our lioops I have been called frigates, becaul'e ir is never admitte i by anKnglilh | man, that a Veflel of his country 1 j has (truck her flag to an eq :al or ! inferior i rrce. Even the little ft i- ‘ g.m ~ ,r cx’ was called by the Con- ! r.er, a ship of the line, to hide from ! the world the tact that the haugh j ?v conceited Britons had ddpatch ed a36 gu■ 1 frigate, and a 2.8 gun (loop in pursuit nf an American tri gat eof the imalletf class. Ihe hi! tory ol I urope, we learn from : British auth rs. The atlio sand ! character ol Erenchmen, of Span- j iards, of Germ-ms, Ac. we become ! acquainted with through the medi urn of the Englifti pros ; thus we lee nothing in its natural colors and pr'portions, all is discolored and distorted by English pafiions and preju ices. An attempt will be made by their htftorians to rob our navy of its glory Indeed we fee I jr already 1 ‘he new Annual Re | gi>ter has a'chapfer into which are 1 copied the grolleit mifreprefenta | rions of the Englilli papers 011 this iubjett. the Edinburgli Ency | elope ta it is gravely affirmed that i the Lirtle Belt bear oft’ the frigate Prefiderir, alter a ft vere action of 140 minutes. Falls hoods of this j kmd will be spread by the Engliih 1 prds over Europe. The naval monument will check their circu lation in America ;or at least al ford the means of detecting and ex poling them ” NAUI I cal. The Glatton, whole tonnage is about’ 64, lasted from Portsmouth ! 23.1 September, 1802 tor ILr.my I Bay, lanced convicts there, and 1 retutnedto Portsmouth, Septembt i 22, 1803 —having returned try ! Cape Mom, and circumnavigated j the globe in 364 days, of w hich (he was o'-ly 277 at fi a. lhe time 1 occupied in the full circumnaviga ! tion of the glob- (A. 1) 1516 ! 1522) by the expedition under ; Niaga!banes, (Magellan) was three i years within fourteen days ; an | the distance failed, in different di rections during that period,amr un ! ted accorcing t the (hip’s reckon-.j ( ing, to 14,160 leagues Lon. Paper I More than fixtyinvidualsin Lon don have for above three years sub lifted wholly on vegetables, fruits a> and diltillecl water, enjoying during that period robust health, and an i exemption from tho(e maladies 1 w ich, under the diredtion of Dr Lambe, ltd to their adoption of 1 ‘his iimple regimen. The editor ■ f the Monthly Magazine, from co.nf.d ratic is of a different nature U'di abftaifted from all inftatal food i | -for three an.l tliirty years ; bui l*r Lambe carries his abstinence (till further, by abstaining from all stimulants which excire third, io that we are told he does not drink a pint of any liquid in a month. One of the dik iples of Dr Lambe, Mr. Newton of Chichefter ftieet, has publiihed under the title of // Return to Nature,” a very in genious arid ablt ilbrftration ol the system, which merits the notice of i the inquilitive and pbilofopliical part oi the public. It is worthy of remark that none ol the kings ol Fran e liave I -ea lucceedcd in th< throne by 111 . it* own foils lor nearly two centuries ; the prefect king Louis X V lll. fnc ceeedeJ Lis brother Louis XVI. who Hu ceded his grand lather Louis XV who lik w le Incceeded his grandfather Louis N IV. when. | about five years of age ; not has the pii-fent king any son to fu ceed him m the evu nt cl his death. A daughter v of capt. J Moulton of Btandiih, (Diftnct of Ma in ,) spun on a cotn non Wheel, and reeled on a common reel, from he • tween the hours of 3 in the morn, j iiig till 9 m the* t vei, ng, twenty* one, itven knotted skri sos wooi j ftn filling. CNone of onr Literetias \ can do this J A’; ws. “ The Seven Churches.” Our readers will, 110 d’ übt, peruse with lively inierell, the following let j ter in relation to the pnfent fin e of the Seven Phureh,:.; of ,(i n-. -<i u ■ ed in the firfi three chapters of die Re i veiation of St. John BtH ri H & vorr 10n mm e societip.s. Extract of alette* iron the * ever nd H. Lindsay chaplain to the etnbaffy of Con Rant inop le rela/h'e to the present Jlate of the Apocalyptic chin , hr, 1 O'N tan iiN’ PLE, Jan. JO, IH'O. W hen l iafi wrote y. u i was O’ •! e point of letting ou’ o>> a lit )rt excur sion into Asia Mino> ■, travelling luf 'ily, as I was coifitraiitcd 10 do. from he circumfiance of mt fi nation, the infirmaiion I could piocure ’tat v.e ccffttily fu;>P( fioal n. and 11 ‘fa'isfac -y, an however, I di!tribu*cd he few h •< of the fi ciety which 1 as ah 1 o ca ry with men. I think i r net. t. y Ito give fonae account of ihy* cov . f | 1 >ok f’he repufaf in r erc< urf-of h:ig j ‘.and v. iih Smyrna will enable you to ’ procure as accurate intellig’ :ce c ( bg j pr leiu ft ate a. i can pretend ro offer. Forn the cntivcrfauori I Lad with j die G ‘ k biflv p at and t}i>- clergy, a3 well a vatious well informed individu ; als. I am led to suppose, tljat, and the [p ;, u'abr nos Smyrna be ei v imated < t I 40,000 inhabitant; there are from 1.5 ; o 20,000 Greeks fi 000 Armenians, I 5,000 Ca holies, 140 Prcktlta, Is, and I I ! .000 Jews 1 After Smvrna the firfi place I v fi. j ted was Eph. fu ,- r r ‘he < (-, .t the e lis not quite ihe f e) .trafa ic w i h ■ Confdtt of ahou 15 c t -i N .. I 1 found rhe’ehut three chrillimv, • o brothers who keep fn all and a Gardener, i hey are all 3 Greeks, and tiieir ignorance is laroerrable in deed. In that place, which was b'cf fed so long with an ap iftle’s labors, and those of his z alous afTifiants, aie chriilians who have not so much as heard of that aprdlle, or feein only to recognize the name of Paul as one in the calendar of their faints. One of ‘hem I Lund able to read a little, and left with him the New l eftament in ancient and Modern Greek, which he expieflbd a U'ong desire to read, and prom i(ed me he would not only tludy 1 it lumfeif, but lead it to la* it;cndi io [No. 25.