Norwalk Reporter And Huron Advertiser (Newspaper) - September 22, 1827, Norwalk, Ohio importance in the to country as to be ered of the tion of Irishmen or as your it the hie ami blood of do nif our haw given to the all credit of a MI- there are men in thi conspiracy who arc nut superiot to nif but cv n to your own conceptions of rny splendour ol and I bow ivilli and who would hink themselves dis- honoured to be called your u themselves bv nicking vour Mood stained hand he was loid you H me on the passage to that which that of u Inch you an- only the has for my murder I am accountable all the blond that and will be in he tell me this arid I must be very a slave as not to repel it I who fear not to approach the to answer for the of whole I to be appalled falsified by a remnant of I you too uho if it p collect all the shed in your uni in one great in il ilic Judge no ii an wl t 1 rr dr ad to charge rue with KG attaint niv be Sieving that I eo ild in any but that f nty V and mdt 01 that I pliant minion of ii the or the n of iny men the g for my m ws inference be tortured from to tenance or merit at treachery from 1 Slot have submitted to a fun gn in vader for the same reason that I would the domestic oppressor In the dignity of liave fought upon the of tny country and enemy ah enter only by pushing over my lifu less corpse And ami ho lived but for my country who sub- to he dangers of the and oppressor a d uow to the of the grave only to give my countrymen their rights and my country her to be loaded with calumny and riot d to resent and repel No God If he spirits of the illustrious participate in the concerns and cares of those who were dear Vo hem in this transitory ever dear and venerated shade of departed father look down wi h scrutiny upon lie conduct of your so truing ton and see if I have even for a moment deviated from those principles of morality and patriotism it was your care to instil into my youthful mind and for which I am now to offer up my life My lords you seem impatient for tiie blood for which you thirst 19 not congealed by the artificial errors which surround your victim it circulates warmly arid through the channels GUI created for noble poses but which you are bent to de- stroy for purposes so grievous that they cry to yet I have but a few words more to say am going to my cold and silent grave my lamp of life is nearly ex- my race 13 run the grave opens to receive me and I eink into its have but one request to ask at my departure from world it is charity of its no man write my epi- taph for as no man who knows motives dare now vindicate them Jet not or ignorance perse them and me re- pose in obscurity my tomb re- main until other times and other men can do justice to my character When my country takes Lier place among the nations of the Barth then and not till then let be done tin ri S 22 1827 our one U to the lint six of that twu will r Hint tw wiil he charged ding tu tlic II for robbing the ol thn Male tho 7th of c in the ol for week v idem and Tlic jury retiring w i 1 1 n lain to y in the I IK re M -t ID d Burden Lvi of this V i j ipn iip iiii i f 11 i n 111 in u is T if it i did not pi i I K mid 1 Hn ail UK h ID fl v h r oil it v is m m IK f al he lop V u tb and a in i M k of w n i s in IK i i t II U i I if to lilt top Jl JiS to top of st li One f hi 1 c irs i 111 u I D 11 urid ui f IK i c i IMS 11 s ol Is Tins U en 1 f Mr 1 Hi on d hor d om c u ill j c h i ill c I rue o in hi r a HI l j n u in 11 i Ins the Lean JH grow ou this soil From the llor We stop the to announce the melancholy intelligence of of Honourable GEORGE CANNING dis- re sing of was brought 1 by the ship which ed from the evening of Che of August Mr Canning died at the seat of the Duke of Devonshire on Wednesday morning the 8th of August Thus at an caily age in the full vigour of hh intellectual the perfect triumph of his character nnd principle in ion of his confidence and the nation's love has perished one of the most highly gifted and ly one of the amiable ters that ever was entrusted with the of a free arid mighty tion Of his personal and political character we have not space to at present The London with an unanimity creditable to its feelings has expressed its most earnest and heartfelt It is a regret which will be felt in the cottage as well as the by the people as well as the prince AH Europe will lament his ly death Ii will give a new acter to the politics of the old world and its influence will be deeply felt in every quarter of the new Perhaps there is no person now living in Europe whose sudden decease is so certain to excite a eral sorrow in the United Stales as that which is to follow the tidings of Mr Canning's death The ministers the king and the people were all equally surprised and grieved by this event The of Portland h'm law was the first to be acquainted with the melancholy It is singular that he died in the same room in which Charles Fox expired Mrs Canning's health had suffered from the daily and nightly attendance on her husband She was extremely ill and was aMy seized with hysterical Wr Canning's last prayers were the foreign and to all parts of the kingdom In Ihc city and on the Exchange the news of bis illness and death had a considerable effect on the furida meetings were held everyday The mortification which turely terminated the existence of distinguished was throughout the whole of its progress more than usually scarcely 24 hours from commencement the illustrious ceased to breathe The Hon in-law and Mr who has for years been his private secretary were the only individuals except the medical attendants who were ent at the moment The Right Hon shorty after midnight sunk rapidly from ex- and as stated in the letin a few moments before four without a sigh and ly without pain he gently breathed JH lafet The physicians whose duty ir Mas often to witness similar of distress declare that never lion and or more appa freedom either or mental in their lives The funeral of Mr Canning was take place on the 16 lie was to be buried in state m Westminster Ah he r was born in lix yf ar 1770 and at the f-f nod of his 57 He in the daughter of Gen Scott One of hn sons H Capt n be navy Another is a student af HIS only daughter is the of Loid was to he Mr Canning's successor This is a popular and proves that ibi Kme to rcrc in Ihc polic No er have been fixed Il was down be Foreign Secretary Mr Charles Giant Chancellor of the Exchequer From the DESCENT OF J MICHIGAN Tne spectacle upon which the public curiosity has bren greatly ex cited was witnessed on Saturday laft by a large concourse of people For two or three days previous the multitude had been and on the the loads to the Falls weie literally crowded from an ly hour in the morning until two o'clock in the afternoon with of every description filled with persons hastening to the novel sight The steam boats Henry Clay Penn Niagara Pioneer arid Chippewa were put in requisition on the occasion and filled the and fashion of the country contributed riot a hide to the interest of the scene view fiom the boats was enlivening in the extreme it seemed if The iv arid was in motion eagerly to one point led on by the overruling passion curiosity The or gan or condemned as she has been with her cargo on was towed down the gara by the boat Chippewa and anchored at Yale's Landing at about half part 12 o'clock The final arrangements for her descent were made under the direction of Capt Bough the oldest navigator on the Lakes In her main chains were placed two effigies one on either sides of no prepossessing aspect which designated by the names of Adams Jackson Of her effigies were placed in different parts of the ship upon which were bestowed appropriate cognomens puch as Natty Swart Blue Beard while the one in the foretop was called Carter Beverly whose vince seemed to be to look out for breakers The animals on boaid consisting of a Buffalo from the Rocky tains a Bear from Green Bay and another from Grand River in ada two Foxes one a Dog arid a Cat and four Geese were cut loose previous to her de- scent In this condition at 3 o'clock P M with the American Ensign at her bowsprit the British Jack at her poop and the Black Flag at the fore mast head ehe was towed ikwn the torrent The sight now became grand and interesting She chot down tbe current with the velocity of an arrow and parsed over the first rapid in gallant style She upon the for a went by the board and swinging partly round dhu pre- sented her broad side to the current and she was swept to the bottom of the short fails quite in pieces It was at this point that the animals left her Her mam timbers ed until she passed over the great fall when she was dashed to atoms scarcely one piece remaining upon another and floated down the river covering the surface for some dis- tance around After some descent two of the Geese and the Cat were picked up below the Falls Both if the Bears swam ashore above the Cataract and secured in good condition The I jg was sub- sequently secured having reached Grass Inland above the Falls ly Nothing was seen of the animals the moment the vessel struck upon the rocks at the f jot of the rapids the lo which was observed to pass down ahead of the wreck The small imals either reached the shore seen or thsy were dashed to pieces and carried down the river beyond recovery to no small ment of the virtuosi The number of spectators bled on both sides of uver to look at has been estimated al from to 15 000 DISTRESSING ACCIDENT On Wednesday the instant a few miles from this place Mr ard Saul and his two sons lost their lives by ing into a well filled with damp or carbonic acid gis The had been commenced sometime before and at the time this melancholy happened was about 30 feet deep They had not came to water A son-in-law of Mi Saul's was letdown in the well in the af- but bad not reached the bottom before he desired to be drawn up again exclaiming that he could not stand it to in the well One of Mr Saul's sons then descended who fell lifeless at the bottom Another of his sons fol lowed to see what had happened t- his brother who quickly shared the same fate Mr Saul then prepared to descend anxious to learn uhat had befel his and was in vain cautioned as to the result of such rashness by his law He been let down but a few feet before he fell out of tbe bucket to the tom of the in death his unfortunate sons The were drawn out and some means used to resuscitate in vain So strongly was this well charged with the deleterious gas that a light let down only a few feet was in- stantly extinguished Mr Saul a respectable citizen of about CO years of sons were just en- tering the prime of life A a mob A meeting oi the of that town was held for the able purpose of taking measures in bring to justice the cf the outrage The erection of the Monument has al length been con menced The base is it is 40 feet and 15 to within the earth A sale of lotg in Otsego r r belonging to the state few days since They had been praised at and for 6 U as A young man of Rev Tho as Smith of N Y accidentally killed a few davs by his own gun whilst through a brush fence His Dog remained by him ran to the of the deceased barked and mo and led him to the fatal his lifeless master lay REUBEN WOOD Assembly DAVID CAMPBELL ASA Sheriff ENDS GILBERT GEORGE SHEFFIELD JO D County Treasurer CYRUS AS AH EL MO ftS IS HENKY BUCKINGHAM JOHN MILLED DANIEL ASA COLE ADAMS Commissioner JOSEPH AMOS WOODWARD Por thi ANSWER TO not friend tbe slow decay That wastes thy Nor kind ann cnn Thy youth fruin an grave What is there Prom we to pj Unt woes in tins unfriendly sphere Which check each fond But in that peaceful on high la thw lower sky Arc of love Where we again to inett dear though as ihn Though the then inn t Soon must of Mark where thy aivi forlorn I thither rove Guided by friendship and y 1 With I then thy Vcd tarf with tears prudence on their part might have j saved the lives of these charged with 1 lje tbe its whispers iu that tender u We soon shall mecc to piAt no nate men A well damp can be told by ing a candle let down in if and the deleterious gas may be ed by burning in the well or some other O S Journal On the ult an infant elegan ly dressed was left under the dow of ROWLAND T PARKER ESQ oi KKy with a billet ai to its clothes requesting tha gentleman and his having children to take it under ir guai and protection The ent was gladly accepted As soon as the election of Gen Lafayette known at the Americans in that town ated their hotels The American vessels in the harbour their colours in testimony of rejoicing on the occasion The Albany Daily Advertiser flerts on the authority of competent judges that at least faty thousand persons the of Strang An account was kept of the number of wheeled carriages which passed out of the avenue leading to Troy lit which to about 1 75 were left mmh of brid e A quiet arid peaceable ment of Indians at Brunswick Me COMMUNICATED Tn the ire arc i In tins Village ou t CaLb N Gallup Uis illness though of short 3 J tion was very excruciating 1.9 with great fortitude table are thy ways Oh GOD has Icen to thyself one whose virtues smooth tlie asperities of an uneven K Few have travelled so sin it witli more reputation to Scarcely GUJ week hns since lie vno 5 loom of lite and health the d a circle of and younT whom Death has snatched from an early lie was a whose goodness of heart shone through all the follies attendant on and every part of hib conduct r-1 benevolence of his henri: let it lie bered that frailty to Ini ty and seldom on ty Apprehensive that his dissolution