Norwalk Reporter And Huron Advertiser (Newspaper) - June 23, 1827, Norwalk, Ohio DIFFUSION OP KNOWLEDGE THE PALLADIUM OP OUR RIGHTS I SATURDAY JUNE 23 1827 HO 13 PUBLISHED By j F BUCKINGHAM is published weekly at Two DOLLARS per annum 52 paid in advance or DOLLARS and TWENTY FIVE CENTS within the first six months if not paid before the expiration of the year Two DOLLARS and CENTS will be charged No paper will be discontinued un- til all arrearages are paid A fail ure to give notice for discontinuing 3 paper at or before the end of the term subscribed for will always he considered a new engagement who receive their pers by post must pay the postage will be con- inserted at the usual rate One Dollar per square and Twm Cents for every subsequent continuance The CASH must ac all Advertisements wise they will be continued at the of the advertiser until paid for and om ons to the Editors must be post paid otherwise they will not attended to kinds of Country Produce will be takea ia payment at the market price H COUNSELLOR and AT- LAW AS removed his office to the formerly occupied by Dr S V R Bogert He designs in future to attend the Courts of Com- mon Pleas in the Second Circuit Business in line of his sion will receive from him he trusts punctual attention May 14 1827 OUR copies of the LADIES BUM together with elegant en- gravings for Frontispieces are ceiled and for disposal at this by the Agent The Literary Magazine to be united with the Album nest June when there will be an additional price of Fifty Cents to all except the pre sent subscribers f M E 13 M C t 55 BI 36 7 E 29 June 3 1827 the of Second Regiment Second Brigade and Eleventh Division of Ohio In pursuance of the power vested in tne by the General Assembly of State of Ohio You are to meet at the ground near John on the 4th days of July next for the pur pose of holding officer muster able to the twenty-second Section of the act for organising disciplining the militia of the State of Ohio ed Feb 1820 By order of COL S WHEELER AME into the enclosure of the Subscriber about the 20th of April last an old s forward with foal both hind feet white shod all round The own er is requested to prove property pay charges and take her away JOSEPH OTIS May 12 1327 CHEAP FOR READY AT THE title South oj A W HOWE'S Hold in Arc now receiving from New York a general assortment of Groceries tj ke Which they will sell at a small advance for Cask or kinds ci Country Produce I May Second Regiment Drigade I ah Division of 0 M P S It is requested of the Cap- ains of companies to notify their Officers and to attend muster Jims S 1827 rf a inform the inhabitants of and its vicinity that they have ed the above business at the house of Col A Emmitt where they are ready to execute all orders in their line with neatness and dispatch They also intend altering and whitening LEGHORN BONNETS so that they will have the appearance cf Orders from the will be thankfully received nnd attended to 22 J 827 PQ IS LI ci from the subscriber y the first of April last A DARK OLD white fiank and belly with strip across under her iioms the end of her horns cut off carries appearance of a will inform the in Eldridge or V I'M ijllan 80 tbat can obtained shall receive p SMITH Zl vi Subscriber has purchased the Carding Machines ly owned by Judge Southgate of Peru and is fitting them for diate use at his old stand in WALK where CLOTH for ING will be received and delivered ALSO THE ss will be carried on as usual at MONROE under the firm of All those who wish to furnish grease are requested to bring it from the Wool and tuay depend on having their work well or Oil will be for all those who request it TIMOTHY it May Hj Subscriber offers at a very reduced price for CASH or proved CREDIT situate in Range two ship No I Ripley and Section No 2 in Huron County The a- bove will be sold if desired in sepe rate Lots or smaller parcels to suit purchasers Title Indisputable Apply to the subscriber living in Norwalk Huron County Ohio THADDEUS B B Messrs NICHOLAS 1827 THIS is now kept by the subscriber Having been at much expense in preparing and ting it up in Genteel Style a portion of public patronage is respectfully solicited and no effort will be ed to render the accommodations of the place equal in all respects to any of the best Hotels in the ern part of the State A W HOWE Junes 1827 3 On if N B The subscriber intends keeping on hand fresh LEMONS would be happy to sec his friends at any time FROM THE ALBANY taken an Office next door West of Mr Butlers More in the oj TS W A X K VV rita AS Where all commands in the line of his profession will be punctually at- tended oe He has paid particular attention to diseases of the and EAR and will endeavour to merit the dence of all who may have occasion for his services in that part of the profession has also on hand a ply fresh May 1st 1827 SOPHISMS ANSWERED A society of Churchmen who had for the last century been engaged among iher benevolent designs in conveying the knowledge of to the Heathen convened a meeting near rny aunt's house to consider the means of ex- tending to of poor I- Hindoos the If of Now whatever gion and sound Wisdom might urge upon so plain a point mere Prudence could not but be alarmed at an at- tempt however quiet to disturb the creed of sixty millions of people Accordingly having entered the sembly 1 rose and to the admiration of my aunt made the following tion I rise Sir to oppose the motion which has been submitted to this assembly on the following grounds In the place the Hindos are savages and Christianity was not designed for savages In the second place the religion of the Hindoos is a very good then should we try to change it In the third place their has made them excellent slaves for centuries why then teach them a religion which is fit only for In the fourth place they are sunk so very deep in and misery thai it is impossible release them horn it why then attempt it u In the fifth place who would think of beginning to convert for- eign nations till we have converted every one of our own people Sixthly when the time for the general conversion of the world some sign will be sent from Heaven to tell us of it Such Sir are my reasons for re- resisting the measure and whoever promotes it and opposes rne is an enthusiast and an enemy to his country and his species Having made rny speech S will own that 1 expected as the very smallest return the loud tions of the astonished But a most profound ensued till a clergyman who as then thought looked old enough to know better arose and thus addressed the Instead Sir of replying directly to the reasonings of the speaker who has preceded rne I will simply put another case and request his ion upon it Suppose instead of the present assembly a thousand Peru vians convened on the Banks of the Amazon to take into consideration a supplication from the nations of Europe to supply them with hark of Peru which is the only known antidote for avery large of our diseases And conceive if you will eurr would be happy to undertake the i embassage to be the advocate for feverish and nations io the only possession of this anti dote Imagine him to arise amidst the tawny multitude and with much feeling and to state thaf at millions of people de pended upon their determination for and life At once 1 am the cry of multitude would interrupt the pleadings of the orator and one and all would ex- claim Give them bork them bark and If t not an European ish whom it is possible for a an to save Thus for all would be well But conceive of the assembly's being permitted to act on this benevolent decision some Peruvian of an age in which ihc prevalence of policy or mere dence over justice arid benevolence is more intelligible and pardonable to and to address his Peruvians you are far too pre- Consider I beseech you the character and circumstances of the persons for whom this privilege is demanded In the first place they are they read and write they slep in beds and ride in es they wear coats and who then will say that bark is meant for such persons as these In the second place their fever and agues may have many cies with which we are then attempt to cure them In the third place these fevers and agues assist exceedingly to thin their then strengthen them merely to destroy ourselves Fourthly these fevers and agues are so deep seated and violent that it is impossible to cure why then attempt it In the fifth place who would think of curing foreign nations till we have cured all the sick in Peru Sixthly when the time comes for the general cure of fevers and agues I have no doubt that the Great Spirit will give UB some sign from the mountains Such Peruvians are my sons for opposing the wish of the speaker and whoever promotes it or opposes me is a madman and an enemy both io the Incas and the Great Now continued the old clergyman supposing the Peruvian Orator thus to reason I should be glad to know by what answer that young gentleman would repel his arguments He then to my infinite horror sat down and left mo with the of the assembly fixed upon me as if waiting for my reply bur not ing any precisely ready J thought it to be taken and leave the the p Episcopal Register From the Religious Intelligencer COAST OF Whether the waters of the ever reach the sen or are absorbed by the thirsty sands of Central ca is ot no smal tance to the western and Such a communication with the vast regions of the interior would mote the extension of Christian commerce and civilized society arid increase the power and wealth of nations inhabiting or destined to in- habit its course much as the and Missouri contributed to the peopling and cultivation of our western and the rapid growth of the states that lino their banks In every other the part of Africa which we are now de- scribing is as capable of being ered with great nations as were the western and southern members of this confederacy It a ity not interior to their a and a greater variety of valuable ducts The too though different is at an The mortality that pre- among the first emigrants to wag owing altogether to other causes They arrived during the worst season of the year and re- mained exposed to all us cy without any arid the matter oi surprise be that any of them escape destruction A worse result attended the at- tempts to settle America In Virginia and even as far north at Plymouth int New England all the settlers were repeatedly swept by the ges and malignant diseased and the idea of persevering in colonization was for a considerable time and forgotten ft began to be considered as j visionary and im- practicable scheme and climate aa utterly uncongenial to he Euro- pean constitution If jg neither nor that similar misfortunes should have followed the fust attempts to settle They are incident io all undertaking in every quarter of the globe A want of experience will lead to mistakes mistakes will lend to exposure and exposure prova fatal In removing from one try to another we are apt to forget to make corresponding changes ia cur habits which is just as sonable as it would be to follow the same mode of life through all the of any climate That of Europe is much more like tho American than either like the can It is sometimes imagined f has because the latter is ent from the two former it is fore not BO good but this we an erroneous conclusion and are in- to believe that the its the better climate All that is is to conform to it and not to in Africa as if were still in America or The is by no means so changeable as ours and that already is a great tage It is divided into certain eo regularly that their proach is always known There ares no sudden transitions irom heat to cold unless it be among the tains or by he rarefaction and con- of the air in the There are certain seasons during which you may count upon an serenity of weather then is the time for agricultural and commercial operations There are other seasons again at which you must provide against rainy weather Is cot this distribution wiser than if you were liable at every moment to be ed with rain or surprised by a nado Upon mature reflection it will to every one appear whether this division of the