Delaware Patriot And American Watchman (Newspaper) - October 24, 1828, Wilmington, Delaware ne centre of their his head and gallop with a He might have been pursued r knew the character of his the to be obtained by bringing ie are of national un- hope all proper facilities for into effect will be extended laving charge of the streets they will no doubt by the countless number of idle them but we hope they will if they attempt playing any h we have sometimes seen jling Indians form the not men that will their e of personal danger should re was in we are inform if the territory alluded to has not that governor Cass could ef are the warlike Uier dre fhe smaller tl The they occupy is schooners from the t and although surrounded number ten limes their feared to be We ry of their tribe pursue a then the brigs and the elegant appearing forest of masts Considered in a commercial point of the situation of New Orleans without a nVal on the face of the Although 109 miles from the its position is peculiarly favorable for an and which in due course of time it will most probably Standing on the extreme point of the longest river in the New Oilcans coin ma rids ft he commerce of the immense territory of the being the market pointed out by nature for the countries watered by tnis or by its exceeding a million of square You may travel on board a steam 500 tons and upwards for an extent of 1000 roiled from New Orleans up the Red 1500 up the Arkansas 3000 miles the Missouri and ilu 1700 miles up the Mississippi to the falls of St Anthony the sawe distance from New Orleans up the 120O miles to the north-east fiom New Orleans on the Big 13UO ori the 1300 on and 2SUO miles on the Ohio up to Thus New 0< leans has in its rear as permission for the whites this immense territory with a river 4200 miles long the the water com- of arrived at the and It- ft yesterday for 1 recollected by many of our the summer of 1827, the smothered this tribe broke out in a of which threatened to desolate our rn Governor Cass at the ig a treaty with the Indians at Green a deputation from the Winnebagoes ed On their not making their were entertained of their he with a crew passed into their with a immediate He that it was not only but that he way in eminent danger to the hostile feelings which extended to every man in the t and decision which has so con his with the In- at all to push through descend the and t. Louis by a prompt movement United ut Jeffer the farther of the country in the vicinity of next when the consideration the of i arly requested to urge upon our to give to the Indians any They ate already and when excited cannot ONS OF a the hand writing of following is the sentiment of a strand necessarily lead ei very bad according as arc more or less under the direction of honor is a resemblance between in goad j the great in so that it a sophism to that ths soul of Cartouche had something of soul of the great The revolution pro sorts of Ambitious ignoble and others were estimable and worthy of the high rank they took in Talleyrand and were ambitions com pared with Lebon and as eagles com pared with of consummate ami a very small number of wise men sufficiently rich to be ling to risk any were the only persons who could possibly resist the impulse of in of the chances which the revolution of is about to be competed New York and the river the of the West India ami the half of ick to the the rest of on its arid the continent of Europe beyond the I Gluttons of the zus tells there woman of Alesandri could of solid a still greater weight of and who couM above a gallon of lius Capitolinus that the Emperor often in one day diank a measure somewhat larger than The satne he says could demolish 40 pounds of a quantity which has mci eased to 60. Flavius in his history of mentions the delight that received the buffoonery ot mummers j and that due of a certain on some occasion in the a whole one hundred a and a young that he diank jn a proportionate and performed inn tations through a tunnel applied to the his arw in hi life of says that Cordus chaise of blood tne by arid reduce them at once to al verj cheerfully e the aid of were in a very few days ror the time effectually by the bix hundred well and this display of ir ho hail been in the murder is tn be delt with our and the hostile feelings of the surrendered for was ml notorious a Chief who his trilie as a respected by in the The spirit wnm could The rest of the sons of necessarily formed projects and graat I was of the and it could not be I formed friendships Robespierre and others of his class but was not their fore my ia but a flash of Of his campaign in An- has nothing to with the exploits ot this memorable campaign the courage and ot the French soldiers was elevated to the possible pitch of Had my tary dispositions been I should have con- Audacity and contempt of in eral instances made up for injudicious I knew that the French were but I had not supposed them capable of sucb eminent Their although aught with had shown me nothing comparable to and From this discovery the inconceivable of mv other exploits is I felt that with such men I could accomplish any thin him with by the which it appears that another much The tity ef fruits thiat Emperor is said tu have de- exceeds He was wont to when five hundred figs of delicioas species Greeks call one hundied ten and twenty pounds of grapes j to which he would occasionally add a hundred hundred a performance which would puzzle the heroic enterprise that glows in Arlington street or Whitehall place at when in Old boasted at that a It is certainly for a to dwell among the monuments of of Hercula and ol if he feets at he feels among these wrecks of past that he is A totally sensation the mind on entering an American In beholds what he can contend and what hp ran when his is not checked by the arbitrary will of a New Oi the where the hopes of thousands are for eighty years the wretch ed assylum of the outcasts of France and who could not venture one hundred paces t Mount Carbon to Philadelphia I Snain i Per last carrying its gates without utterly sinking to the or being attacked by has become in the space of twenty-three one of the most beau of the inhabited bv 40.000 sons who trade with half the J and before the dav of his he died in prison at Foi t as he was by the his il them that animosity which not and summer they again evinced a dis- ive the Americans from their ie death of their For this ions were sent to the Sacs ami nd the and a general sons who trade with half the The view isj argument at savage j splendid beyond ulien you pass j old Among other j the which is hete a mile rolU its im Arch Duchess of the Low 5 of Prague and and E- Dutchess of Maria Theresa wan the last of the noble race of the Counts of Coal Trade of Shipments of Coal I from Mount L. 3011 neighbours the disgrace of waters in abed a nation so ami few in ami the nf our hail riot been exhibited tu t' the fur the tin in the i portion of t iir upi 0 nou here Cni ire equal to ile to ith view t s in the and arc- k 1 f The mar. v cargoes of Coal shipping from UN if conscious nt its to other occasion a deficiency to look on thn bustle of the habitations ot in thre for c of this they Hoth its banks lined avoid by availing themselves of sugar midst of which present ample stuck of the most superior the airy mansion of sur i the Schuylkill coal on that and fi at Mount Carbun for one week thp of n sorted merchandize from 1-4 by a n of hic IK m i nr pi fie A- nf d in thp 1 to s st the Jl Jf t nf n. o half runs lor a a direction 1 In rear tnc cabins ni the and tlie sugar ami at en Canal is full of water of smaller if line boats are arriving with the and a number of boats have departed u ith cargoes for the in nf a fur last The of fnd .is river n lies n to their s rules ci x TC it tikes an it inr t ic of a a of the trade upon v. ill exceed tlie mast appear to fjc the arrc that ct of rn of flip arc rr t' e of the si fear or will LIP an- f the of the and com man mrt in council M. at the feet nf nf tie of P Mr. the onp of great importance fn Phi nat ears of It a of first rate a-e strewed upon or to at head of rurr Major's to of tie 8te.ni fa hts in the of he has at iv a-e tie rather morP keel by COO non- cm upwards of 8000 A village v newspaper sent and forth immense of s department of his his pioneer fnt into long above the P ran Sentinel Next elegant held for the and county Mill p M vi hich bv its and Ins all the facilities tn the or tmn nf an of i iges j he had often at one 4 fatted j polls and as many the mast hind ters of a and a stuffed breast of dently of a variety ot salted There in who devoured at one a whole calf and a whole sheep uncooked and Duke of accustomed to spend six at his which seldom was composed of less than ISO J Mother of Princes who in 1736. Francis Emperor of had fifteen or sixteen ten of whom were elevated to sovereign These Joseph II Grand Duke of and afterwards Master of the Teutonic Elector of duke yf Queen of ria Arch Dutchess of Parma JEWS PA PER I