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AMERICAN ADVOCATE.
Ko. XXV.]
Published weekly, on Thurs
day MORNING, BY GEORGE W.
WHEELER. #JA AES CLARKE, AT
THEIR PRfNiING OFFICE, NEXT
DOOR TO DR. J M. S TERBTT—AT
THREE DOLLARS PER ANNUM—
OXE IX ADVAXCE.
From the Federal Republican and Baltimore
Telegraph*
FORCUrtXMXA s i
OR,
9AYiNGS OF PORCUPINE.
No. 2.
* Agreeably to my promise, I now enelo*
farther extracts from William Cohbet’a p
per of the Bfh of September, 1797, whicf
jroa will please to publish ia your useful pa
per.
Speaking of Timothy Pik<>rii!g, w.b>
was then Secretary of St rie, he observes :
.* Where, then, yon red -p v t ed, I■Wty -c h p
monsters—where is the f .Lshood or wi*.k f t)
Bess of our Secretary's letter ? Your words
are true—the accusation is as false as t’ i
srik*d, because it is ne ; her. Your words
\r true, and your meaning false. Howev
er, if you wish to avail yourselves of th*
equivoque in xaeakingout of the cent st. be
gone, in God’s naratu an t let’s uo more
©fyoa. Yon will nemr *haoge our opir.iou
either of our Se-retary of State, or of your
Infamous selves.”
From the Time-Piece*
a According to English papers, Thom .8
?*aine, Hamilton Rawatt, and Jrimes N.p-
Ser Tandy, were all in P ris on tne 4tli oi
uly last. The paragraphist* *pper to
apprehend something from the junction of
tfhis trio, convinced perhaps, that the United
force of these three honest men in any coun
try, i* mare than equal to the nefirlotis m i*
education* of all the knaves iu the universe ”
The paper from which this paragr phi
taken, is a little, mi er bie, filthy thin ,
puHiubed at by oua Freneau,
formerly an understrapper ?o the Virginia
Philosopher, Jefferson, the fumed historian
of the great bke Bull Mam.nvuh.
During the Philosopher’s Se retaryship,
’Freneau conducted a Ja olio Gnzct'e at
Philadelphia 5 bat it expir and With the of
fire of his patron. He then took a aort of’
trading tram© through the Jersevs.. Where
fee endeavored to barter his patriotism for
bread, but the Jsrseymen* will their usual}
Justice and good satis*, refused to a literary j
Vagabond of liberty and eqj.iity What they 1
never refuse to unmerited liistrtss. At last, 1
after hard travelling, aud long fisting, he 1
tonic shelter ia Nevr-Yotk, and once more set
bis press and his types to grinding
tion. He is bard at it, bat he’ll not do
much mischief- He seeds his paper about
like Biehe, without pay, or the hopes of
pay. I was plagued with it for two of
three months, without ever sending hira a
dingle paper itt return.
Notwithstanding all this, it most be Ve
ctembered, that the fellow’s a Captain— ——
How he c*nt9 to be thus dubbed, 1 know
dot, if it wag not, in consiri|ijeriee of his ser
ving feis master Jefferson in quality of what
Is called in England a led Captain , that is, a
tool, a toad eater, a lick-spittle, &e. &c. &c.
for which post he was undoubtedly extreme
ly welt qualified.
Such is the eulogist o? those three “honest
men,” Tom Paine , old s urvy Xapper Tan
dji and Hamilton How an.”
Jkxtract from CohbePs paper. Sept, $, 1707.
Speaking of Monroe and Harr is, he sayst
Barras is the monster who was fore
most in all the bloody massacres of Hob
bes pierre, who voted for the death of his
colleagues, who headed the army against
the sections of Paris, to force their aceepr
lance of tho present Constitution, on which
day thousands of valuable lives ware lost,
who owes bis seat in the Directory to the
monster, whose seat in the Legislative body,
he secured by force and usurpation, who is
a rank jacobin; nn enemy to peace iu .Eu
rope, and a most bitter foe, to ‘he morally
BubSime heroes, who have administered our
government, & whose administrations have
sen firm, pure, patriotic, be attended v itb
liberty, which appears incredible, when
■we consider the studied, continued system
©f disorganization, which has been practised
in this country, by every one of the agents of
Jacobinism, Americans as well as French.
The moral character of Barras is notorious:
the mirriage tie with him, is an inducement
So in rigue—lewd to exeess. H® disregards
the most sacred feelings of humanity, when
they offer a barrier to the gratification o(
Shis lust. Yet notwithstanding the depravity
f Barras, he is the bosom friend of our im
maculate M-AutwitT) Monroe, they held
LOUISVILLE, THURSDAY , AUGUST 1, 1816.
together their nocturnal orgies, and mid
night ftssoci’ttioos, th y “ parted with re
gret,” but not before Barras gave his dear
Monroe aftrewell feast, to which a great
mob whs invited, and amongst the rest an
op?ra girl by the n*me of Clotilda, upon
whose entrance Mr. Monroe, and the lady
of the Venetian Ambassador thought pro
par t retire. It is well knowu that Mr.
Monroe was in terms of the greatest iotvna
<*y with all the ja robin patty ai Paris; a
party who ere most inimical to peace ami
to the United States, bat happily for the
‘“Oman race, whose reign is certainly short.
Notwithstanding Mr. Monroe might be ia
danger of losing kl head tram. the moderate
.tarty who are getting the whip-hand of the
jt robins, for the divided part he has taken
rich the latter, still I ku gibd be is among
us, where, if he is detested and execrated,
nis life will not be in danger, or owr.national
ehanctef tarnished, by the ignominious
fate of one of our ex-ministers.
Although the people of these states justly
ascribe the cdiS rfassmentg they hare f. It
Prom French depredations, openly end crirci
iu illy passive, if not secretly a •tivft, in a
great measure to the<Sondn<*t nf Mr. Iv—— j
while in France, still to prove himself notj
so eb nrioaed as to be A.fogetheV loti to all |
regard for pc Th opinion, he eught t >
forward to disprove tbfc charge in <s’ a-1
minst him by Mr H arper in the His - r f
Representatives, of * being a traitor aod
having betrayed the interest* ‘fit lis eonn-i
fry ” This unqualified charge now stand?
against hint, end 1 believe ever W’H, ‘• s I
am credibly informed, (Mr. Giks “tiled up
on Mr. Harper respecting the business, who
shewed *im ss ‘h proofs and domment ns
stunned even Mr. Giles into silent ast nish
ment, at the patriotism and virtue of bis
friend.
From the Alexandria Gazette,
ST. LGULs:
The following description of a portion of
the Missouri Territory has at our request
been furnished by an intelligent sod hi .hly
respectable young geotlem nos this couo'y,
who hos btitlitely returned from a tour to
that country % a.* th of emigration to
that territory is rapidly increasing, and, s
i it will no doubt, at no very distant period,
so in un ifetcretuing portion of enr Repub
lie, we cun sot but suppose that the des/rip-’
i tion hen’ limited as it it, will prove
‘lnteresting to many of our readers—6l one
f.\ t the te i?r may be asmrod, that from
jthe character and respectability of the u-
I rhot full fuith and credit miv be given to
1 his stAteteent.— Editor Gazette.
i St Lout* is situated on the bank of the
Mississippi, about fifteen miles below the
confluence of that river and the Missouri ;
about the latitude of 36, lon. 50: 1* is a
healthy and beautiful situation, with a loftv,
but gr dual ascent from the river, which is
here one mile wide. The streets are mo h
confined and irregular, seme houses pro
jecting beyond the rest. The Ameriaans
are however, improving the place witu bet
ter buildings, placed farther hack, and wid
ening the streets. West of the town the
eosintry is handsome, but is a prairie, desti
tute of timber for six or eight miles. As
you approach the Missouri, the soil im
proves, and a good supply ol timber is al
ways found near that river.
Bt. Charles is 6n the north side of the
Missouri, twenty one miles above its month,
somewhat confined in it* situation between
the river and . he high ground norihof it.—
About three miles below St. the
ridge that runs between the waters of the
Missouri and those of the Mississippi, has
a very abrupt termination; the French call
this spot the Marine!. It affords one cf the
most beautiful landscapes west of the Al
leghany mountains. A level and fertile
plain below, in extent from seven to nine
miles, from river to river, and about eigh
teen to the conjunction, clothed with a beau
tiful verdure, and large herd* of cattle gra
zing on it. This plain is inconceivably
fertile, hut has no timber, except what is
confined to the Mis-ouri ot‘om*. Tbe
IVfarniel has evidmt m rks of having once
been the point of confluence; and the two
rivers pressing eich other have iorined an
eddy, and \ deposit of all the loam brought
from the upper country; gradually reced
ing until each has found its resting place
under the high lands. As an evideuce of
this in digging wells through a rich loam
of twenty feet in depth; logs are frequent
ly dug up; and the well w ter ui ques
tionably parte kes of the flavor of rotton
wood.
From Bt. Charles, following the dividing
ridge about one hundred and fifty miles
west, the proportion of timbered land to
the prairie is no greeter, than a* one to
twenty. Above that, the eeontry gradualJy
improves ; is well timbered, has Rood wa
ter and is Infinitely richer land, of a dark
chocolate colour. This country (gen2rib
known &e Boon’s Betilem°!it‘) abound* in
Suit Springs, some of which are large e
nough to turn a Mill. Tub Missouri river
’it one of the ugliest in the world ;—bring
very muddy, an-1 meandering very much,
j generally throwing all the bottom on one
I side or the other, ivhf h are eommoß’y one
noiie, and not (infrequently four miles wide.
Thare can be no just des ription gi euof
the fertility of th'‘Be bottoms--uffiee it Ir.
say that no laud under the heavens can be
richer. They are uniformly high and dry,
ar.d never inundated. Immediately trader
the bluff, lakes are very common, which a
rises from this singular fact. A c*’eck pot
ting into the river rarely ever crosses ihe .
bottom, but winds along fender the M'ls, ex-,
pending itself occasionally into a lake, un
til it add* iis mite to the river at the foot ei
a hill. Those ! >kes are not unfrequeotly
salt and nrodu -e fish ia the greatest abut*
dance, of a very superior q la’ity. Tbe
bottoms are all wrii timbered, with bla ’k
hickory, buck-eye, box-elder, pec
coo, cGtton tree tnd pawp&w.
i'hc Vlississippi, about the juaetion., is e
clear stream, about half a aide in
width; ►which gives it greatly the prefer ’
•nee in point i‘navigation, but it is sup- j
poacd 13 be mojw? ■’unhealthy from the hunt-.’
her of bayous,'or r* fluent currents, ft will
tee recollected by the reader that the tles
rrip ion here given poiu-H to that s*o M por
tion of the Missouri territory, which is now
so rapidly p* pts'i tiitg, Fiat is from set
Lous; three hundred miles up, between the
two rivers, wh: h ritir nearly parallel for
|oue hundred miles.
The whole territory contains by computa
tion 500 000.000 *er. * ; whereas not more
tbaa 100 000,000 can be eaid to be deni, t
b!e
‘What then are the great advantages,
which thc.t eosintry possesses over YirgitJ. ;
or of other parts of the Western country P
New-O- ear>a, being fha grand emporium
of the veserr* world, the M/ssctiri ha* man
ifestly the advantage.’ A deep navigable
w-ter- *t *,’•? 9***•*>■* of the .yerr between
four and fi^ , '6 hundred niiits nearer market
’ban any cf the < oun'•y e<iSt fri a longitudi
nal line crossing at the falls of Ohio.
The st&nle cosiniodirics of the country
are, (or wiii h?) curs, fleur, beef, pork, to
bacco, and cotton ; lead, furs, and poultry.
It also abounds in S.one coal and piaister ;
aad us already stated, in Salt Springs. I f
possesses a fertility of soil beyond compa
rison ; and at aueh reduced prices tl.at tlu
small cfepataHst Inay est biish himself
handsomely as an agriculturalist. A sain
brit v cf climate, equal to Frederick county.
The objections are these which are com
ntoa to aft new countries. Ihe want of good
society will be removed in a short time, as
the count i 'y is rapidly populating and many
of the new settlers arfe persons of property
nd education. The Want of & good sup
ply of timber is unquestionably the greatest
evil this country !• bors uoder at present.
COL. DANIEL BOON, yet living !
was the first emiscrant to Kpn
tuekv, and considered its founder, A .0
1771 ! Hi# was the first wh-rie family in
Kentu ky.
she following is an extract of a letter
from an officer at Fort Osage, Missouri ter
ritory, dated April 20, ISIS
“ We are ordered to this post, where \ve
arrived on the 24ih of March ; Irom Belle-
Fontrine, fifteen miles above St. Louis.-
This fort is be utifully situated on the bank
of the Missouri river, above four hundred
miles above its mouth, and on the boundary
line between tbe Missouri territory and the
Indian lands not vet purchased. There are
three or four small settlements on the river
between this post and its mouth. Our near
est white neighbors are those of Boon’s set
tlem-nt, about, one hundred miles beiow
us, near the mouth of ke Moine river, and
about sixty miles above the mouth of tbe
Osage river. The greater part of the coun
try between this place and ihe mouth of the
Missouri, over which 1 have travelled i
hunted, is equal or superior to any part of
the United State# in point of situation and
fertility ; and, unless some unforeseen oc
currence should prevent, this vast tract
must one dxy be the garden of America.
Our nearest residents and daily visitors
are the Big and Little Osage nations and
the Oaw nation* ; some of these tribes are
also with us. They are numerous & pow
eiful, but friendly to us. The Liiwry and
Saue nations are below us on the Grand riv
er; they are frequently with us. Though
hty Siok an active part in the late war a
qaiiwt uj they bow prufese but
we a sharp eye on *leir eondui t. None
of the tribe* farther north or west h.vis
ited us.—Sane of them ere expected in tha
course of the summer, t hey are not o friend
ly; they continue to commit murders and rob
oeries.
“ I intend, by next autumn, if I can ob
ta : n permission, to take two or ihree v.hitee
and a party of Osage iudians, and vis.f:
the salt mountain, k kes and pond ~ rindsee
the natural curiosi?i*'3 of tbe ‘*ounfy .. long
the mountain*. The silt mountain i* lut
fivecr six hundred miles west of this place*
“ We have been honored <y a visit from
colonel Boors, the first settler oflvatu ky 5
be I tiely spot two week* with u# Tl it?
singular man could not live in Kentucky
when it beromesettled. Be his establish
ed a colony or settlement, as meriioned. os
the Missouri, about ooe hundred ii’ilts be-
! tv fes, which has been nearly and stroyed fy
Indians during the late war. The colonel
annot livewithoat being in the woods
He 0"8 ‘i hunting twice a year to tin* re
moiest v ilderness he reach ; end hire*
a tn n to go with him, whom he binds ia
written arti *lcs to take care of him, and
arif g him home, dess] or alive.
“ Me left this for she river PI at?, ooe di=
tance above. Colonel Boou i* 83 ye rs old,
5 feet 7 inches high, v.foully made, and
active for cue of his years; is still of rigor
ous mind, and is p etty well infi-rmed.—-
He ius tnkcu part ia - il the of Ameri
ca, from before Brddo> k’* war to the pre
sent hour. He has h-Sil respectable state
ppaintment*. both civil nd mi’itary : K. s
‘■ecu a colonel, a letialaior, and a
irate; Se might h -ve ac'umalated riebes
i•<* rctiniiy csnnv man in Kentucky— but fie
i prefers the woods , wh-re you may see hiii ia
rile dress of the roughest, poorest hunter,”
From the Columbian*
DOMESTIC MANUV AC’i URES ANIi
CD\IM Etit E.
Nothing can shew tl;e importin’ ©
of these than th* ability acquired by Franco
in th® absence of foreign tn.de, to carry etx
war with all Europe, and to pay dumb &
Rosts when V ! Th’ following ex
tract* from tbs Boston Ikrily Ad.eraser,
ue in reference to a recent work on French,
gru'uitare, eciinnerce and manufactures,
or from i? :
“ Although the external coirnser-'e of
France, bears but the proportion of one six*
twelfth to it* internal trade, ye* France ex
ports me year ivi'h another, says our au
thor,, from 310 to 330 millions of francs,t? at
is, from 60 to €3 miliions of dollars ; ts
wf ich mure than half arise from reanufac
iurbd articles ,• one ti/*rd Irons predu t of
the soil, and only ones xth fVom foreiga
ar:icle* Y bat a vest idea,
’his affords of *hsj interior trade aad iadus
try of France!”
She supports a popa’ation of 30 millions,
many of tbeai in great luxury, and exports
fifty millions of dollars of her own produc
tions besides.
Supports do we say She has for thirty
years waged wur v-ith all the w orld, ami
come* nut of it as vigorous and wealthy as
she entered it. Think only of being a
file to p y in cash; as lord Cnstlcreagli
states, 6 pounds sterling a head for ontu
million of h*r enemies’ troops on soil,
and this besides supporting them. Y-t her
credit stands as high as it did three years
since, and almost or quite as hu h es> ourg„
Her five per f ents. are at 59 or GO — our se
ven percents, at about 90 or 91.
Though France exports 330 million* of
francs, yet she imports only 250 millions,
The balance of trade, 3* it is usually call*
ed, is in her f-ivor. This will probi.bly
long endure. Her productions are in de
mand in every country where there is any
luxury. Her demands on the other hand
from other countries are not great, except
for colonial produce and cotton.
The F each havtt cultivated mo-e thaa
ny other people a taste for their own pro
ductions, and a disrelish for those of othe?
nations. Wit, ridi ule and aigument are
ill employed end have been for centuries id
rendering the productions of other nations
lisagreeuble to the Freneh people. The
effect bus been great. There ia notbirqj
which they can endure from other tountrif s,
at least of the productions of human u
lustry, except the hardware of England, her
manufactures in leather, and her carriages.
They do at knowledge sume merit in her
doc cotton goods, and in her optical instru
neots they nda)i ! she is unrivalled.
Our author thus concludes a chapter oe
the benefits which France ean derive froa?
the United States.
“ To these considerations (of interna in a
commercial view) may be joined those es
policy. The United State* of America are.
tq to tkeegyae aitufttion
[VOL. I.