The Morning Star. (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 262, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 9, 1841 Page: 2 of 4
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184.
tell
They an-
(ien. Sam. Houston, the President elect, arrived in town
A schooner has arrived at the Island frem
lations qf his friends an
AROUND
the specimen before us.
the East, some few weeks since.
I.
I
:k
mm 0 i
। *
Mr. Stat \
those who took part
I SCt nef y
*• .
i
1l
likeours, but thrown Trio
pray
Ar <
discord is-kindled, on an occasion, perhaps, far less
"Thus,” said Mr. F. "died
n hat infidel
i
T
immense Wraith—The ancester of the Thelluson
f
by Congress, to suppress the insurrection and effect their
»
arses!
- V
4
f
i
v
shil
- h,
on Saturday afternoon, accompanied by his amiable lady.
H ' was met at Capt Black’s, and escorted into town by a
fr<en her knees, for 1 would haveno praying in my house;
and then 1 have left the room rushed into another, bolted
vBI i
WILL
■ I had read much of the be
r-
ui
k
THE Soil
y ate rday by i
Simple Remedy
kard to have of
i
roM 9
out u
every
k
N •
in his death are not tie b ss guilty of
th r ,'
-i
srupe, nud
mending toe Adveruise
portion of our readers.
The Regulators in
es of in ustry V rn^ut
ianarwhen he was seized and brughtback. .
- What ver inly have been the crimes of this wretch.
I
to put back into a
was much damaged,
for Texian ports.
i
IDoz MoRRIa-- Nothing can exceed the satisfaction
that prevades the community at the elevation of this gentle-
to the Bench, and with the manner io which he has
discharged his judicial duties in three counties where he
has already puesided. Not only the gentlemen of the bar,
but the citizens, and the public generally express them-
selves in terms of the earnest approbation of his contures
vet dignified manner towards all whose business leads
i‘
ld iuet
of' the
it is]
ing liquors:
Chi you
appetite.
Quaker-
"A peculiarity of English scrpery
! The fields are oil en fored with th*
l fellow-citizens of Houston.
। Fovsrox -—We were presented
is their hedge
se--not laid
whru
highest order. We are quite sure that, if m the selection,
of a judge Congress should be guided by the partialities
of the people of the District over which they place him.
Judge Morris will be our judge for the next four years
We counted yesterday morning twenty wagons in
Mam street, ten loaded with cotton, nnd ten preparing to
load with goods (or the interior.
• . e c .
Kiona I had formed
tenuable. If the Regulators are numerous or powerful,
(which we cannot believe,) enough to set at defiance the
4, ।
th', nth ing t ' say th it
r
l
lightof it, and th* season passed byleaving him as uncon
corn d as ever N f lvng after this, Mr. F. had return d
to his h meoneSundy night lauigued with excessive la
, and retired to bed.: The might was one of hitler
of bill anil vil < ,
to, and we believe that nothing will € ffectuate the restor l
ntion of peace, order, and law to that section of our Repub'
hr, the scene of so many outrages, but the energetic pros
ecution and exemplary punishment of the ringleade rs
whoever they maybe, no matter how respectabe and use-
ful a? citizens, apart from their conduct aS Regulators.--
If through their rank and influence in the community any
ofthese should be suffered to escape unpunished, the ex-
qitement may die away and quiet for a while resume its
Heign— bftt this will only last until some new brand of
H”4
Housien, Tuesday, Nov. 9,
Our Galveston -dates are totheothmns
nillons .pounds of wool of Vermont, worth, at an aver
a-- of . t ts per pound, $1,400000 year to Vermont
hour, and heard her engaged in prayer in her own room,
and I have gone in and commanded her to cease and rise
,g. ,, g8
hand oi
avewih
family died, in England about one hundred and thirty
-years ago—directing by this will that his property should
acetmulate for one hundred and fifty years, interest upon
interest, and then the existing young Thelluson to come
into possession of the whole. The period expires in eight-
een hundred and forty-eight The present Mr Thelluson"
ears old,
i
I i 11
A'f A
Wm H
w
3-
, r
I
i pursuit of pleasure, and was the gayest among the gay.—
A revival of religion took place in the town in which al-
most the who mmunity were effected; but he mad
। presented
rfoth din
cuuuliva lit •
, lhe ri ule Me
j f •
( 0i
G pous o: T
I lti .
niyou
tv Loud
farmers. First it gives a d« maud for,the i hue and a
squares aud straight lines
variety of circling, and
ed the cone*
* J
--- —...... Lt.!^. > 1, .J ... t.J". » ■J>?—
I them into Court. Unbounded confidence is placed in his
— integrity; and his legal learning and talent are of the
interesting to Wool (iroutert — It is stat'd that a
pick of w ol (240 ibs) will employ 58 pi sous a we k
to m i n ufi tuire it into bro idcloth . or to hit within the
British port for repans. Her cargo
Several vessels are up, at London.
. a. s lu
our fi lend M F Bringham, with a me s of
h iSwerh
k, more brautiful to my eye than the
rice of c su lluted towns aud halls
civil arm of their immediate district, let a sufficient por-
tion of th* militia from neighboring counties be called out ;
"the MORNING STAR
yrs;T- c-rrc-ar--.. . . _
cloak their deeds of rapie and revenge.
It is high time ihat the dreadful state of things so long
♦ xisting in some of our Eastern counties was put an end '
but I W as
a b iuale
Hi "0
Ala csa
the winde asp ci
we have no hesitation in recoil)
o the patronage ofthemercantile
But he was sunmoned to encounter its severity,
j and go to the residence of Mr who was in a
dyingstate. He imnmediately complied, mid tonn i Luo
so dear death that no time was to be I ost in cenversing
‘The Rm Busmen—Mr Rice, of Ripley, Chautauque
Co., N. Y., has an extensive establishment for keeping
bees. Twenty years ago he had one swarm—from which
in twelve years, he had 396 swarms. The Erie Gazette
states that they had then become so powerful that- the y
commenced depredations op the neighboringtribes going
out on predatory excursions to th distance of two oi thsee
miles, much to the annoyance of the unfortunate neigh-
bors He then killed of a number of swarms, andol-
tained over two tons of honey for the New Fork marki i
He has now adopted the patent hiv s fur a part of his be s,
in which small glass drawers are placid in th* uppe npait,
with small apertures for access from the main post of the
hive du this way, by drawing the slid* the bees can be
I seen at work, and the amount of homy asce rtajned
' Whi n filled, i he draw er cun he removed, am! the pla .
supplied by another, without destroying the.iudustiious
insects.
«'_____________..
■ the door, and thrown myself upon my fake, exclaiming,
~o Gori have merry on me." "Thue." enid Mr V "died
with him Fearing that he could do tittle for the ilying massive stone—fot they
man. ho yet desired at least todraw from him som ething p nocence and happiness
which might benefit the living;-and he enqired what
had been his real views and felings m r gam to 4 hristi
anity—whether he hadindeed been as unbelieving and id
pray to him?” “Sir," replied he. "do you see that wo-
inanF pointing to his wife, who was at his bed-side in
tears of agony—"many a tiin have I come home at a late
j e r .
murder. Nay, those who rise up, and taking info their,
own hands the execution of a one-sided, hasty, and vindic-
tive justice, inflict summary punishment on even the great-
est villains, are not only guilty of murder, but perpetrate
a crime far more dangerous in its results,—high treason
against the laws and institutions of their countryI They
have acquired the enviable fame of being the first in our
Eepublicto violate the oqth which every citizen swears, to
' support the Constitution. What- ver may have been their
provacation. by whatever motives they may have been
actuated. by whatever sophistry they may attempt to
plliate their crime, penury, murder, treason, may all lie
nr w Irish Potatoes, from his garden on the other side of
the Bayou. These potatoes wire of the second crop
which Mr. Bringham has raised this.year; and they
lication of the particulars of his entr, and the resolutions
of a, public meeting on the occasion, together with all the
correspoode nee, &c , &c., which we had commenced put-
ting in type * To its columns of yesterday, we refer those
of our readers who are de sirous-f furtht r । ulrs.—
The General is in Imo health and happy in thecongratu-
.....
interest on fifty-tbree’millions of dollars at 6 per cent is
three millions one hundred and eighty thousand dollars
per annum--*lwo hundred and sixty five thousand dollars
per month—eight thousand eight hundred and thirty-three
dollars per day—three hundred and sixty-eight dollars per
hour—six dollars per minute
harvest, am
nounce the arrival of the British Bargue RAPID, Alexan-
der. Master, seventy days from Liverpool. The British
Barque Jolly Tar, is daily expected at the Islend, from
London. We are informed that this vessel met with a
violent gale which_drove her into the Bay of Biscay,
where she sprung aleak, and inconsequence was obliged
she passed the New YoRK on her passage up the Missis-
sippi. This steamer may therefore be expected in a few
days.
A new Steam-boat, the Victorja, J Brown, Master, ar
rived from Galvston, bringing upthe-mail;we are in-
formed that this boat is to continue in the trade,
A. J Yates, Esq , the talented editor of the National
h telligencer, has issued a daily newspaper from the same
press, which bears the mot, st tale of “ Baily ADvER-
- i TsER" This paper is to be devoted to commercial news,
giving correct prices current, exchange-tables, &c. From
jn luxuriant shad- olte n lit । rally bu rit d .1* foliage
| sandwinl an d . . < . » i?
vues-—with genrrally a gaiden surioundedbyagrtcu
t dge attat h d to i : . . . 1 5 $ a. • 1 .
thru wn into clus 1 ■ . . unn g ri ... 'a nd hav
quiet hom ' Ilk-
. dugy mlnifice
4.
WRI •i.
y '
I-"
_____ p
in eighteen hundred and twenty-eight, was forty y
and poor; his son, the heir, was eight years old: so that
in his twenty-eighth year he will be master of twelve
millions sterling, or upwards of fifty-three millions of dol-
lars * Parliament tried to set the will aside at the time,
bbl coulnot; they hare however passed an act, that no
such will should be legal from that time forward!
different as.he professed to be. Mr F saw by the work
ings of the dying man s countenance, that his mind labored
intensely; and wishing to bring him to some definite
point, he asked, “Hav* you ever had suffici* nt belief in
the Bible, and felt so much foarof God as to lead you to
l to ' s e a r
+ re r i- i. ' bt < n ■ tei
i a liberal return it was the hiJ hay
of thy land seape in t R : - tl ♦ . purrnt •
andshadeandcolormugof nature Every spot bares tti
ces of cultivation —ih v. ry Tnhs of the canals and
roads are frequently seen ornnmented with h dge tows
and vegetable aud flower gardens The loads arepei
feel I y smooth, and uaverse the country in every directon
while littleyellow, ribbon like foot paths wind away from
cluster to cluster of couage s among shadetrees and al
rossi d the boundary ne, nd s izing a man named Boat-
• wright in th- parish of t ‘ addo L ana, brought him on
to this side of the line, nnd put him to death The Nat.
chitoches Herald, relating this affair, says that the only
offence of B iatwrightwas opposition to the proceedings
of the Regulators. This partial statement is contradicted
by the Redlander of th- 23d ult, which contains a brif
sketch of the crimes committed in Texts by this Boat-
wright; who,it appears, was a notorious horse thief,
i counterfeiter and highwayman Bring compelled to h av e
Shelby county, on account of the murder el hs wife by
his owfihanl.be withdrew into Cdd o Parish. There
he kept up a correspondence with thegmngof villains coir
gregated in Shelby cointy, aiding them by si lling in
Louisiana the horses and cattle which they stolann l drove
. ofTfrom’Pe n- H ' had been but a few weeks in Lomis
laid to their charge. Would that these misguided Regu-
htors could only bebroughtto-rcfectthatthty,ar
baps preparing for their children th- same fate to which
th-y o"rotardly devote others, with th- difference that
their offspring may be the tifio'-nd victims of a future
proscription, set jfl murderous villains.
Drunk rand (1
upon’ny honor ti
Qaker Wl
sel of intoxicatine
contains it be fore a
be drunk again 11
The toper wat
he followed it, an
Many thousanc
an 1 painful pre se
this We publi
may ' at!) 1 t> I i
' Dh
I howe rs—-n a a single ■ l !' scen whert t
G6T
th • l IV: ) ti an
fi. I Is were enlive m with Lav mA' i> ’
"The English cottage is almost arjiormly emhowt i
- ” ‘
N < bh ans committee of gentlemen deputed by the citizens for that
I purpose. The Houstonian has anticipated us in the pub-
one C r.! uous ‛ . ‛S8 hi
thie de i ich ■ »
preciate this Uo-m than sit 4 n a thr
gold, the me 0 1J h . ! Hl ringire. ! w '
was plepa
disuppoin *
who could easily borrow the title to
son of li mpe raw arnthandi irt aul .
chimps of tpAs and villagrs nd cotlag Is w > I W
then a gatle crowning । lolly hiltop, ovttlook
, tin ge ■ l li ... • ' ..
bsit 1 s'oni s, cruz b ed int
! th y. cove re J—ir will
j heaven shall piss away 1
In thie next plae, it takes thousands persons from agri- i wh J) > >
culture fo bi come manufacturers, tnkrs them from the 11 * i
ranks of prod icers of provisions and places them in the I Pect}
j ranks of consumers—thus giving a good market to the
form-r for his produce Aul. finaily. we will add that this
mere is-! demand for prodnee and for labor, inereases the
price of produce, and the wag
Walchman.
*
1 I
h
m i • ■ r . redi
E - Pi km i N
Nov 2 181. j
B
I I ’ LLAND d
Il oct 34 kwt
N/EDICINES-
„RANOY tih
I ) oci 30 dut
5OPAIR Neg
10,000j
2,00051
3001 ;
rOBACCO —Je
A ities, Stout’s br
ap 20 d&w
sprung from the seed of the first.crop Although the soil
around Houston is by no means comparable to the rich
■ bottom lands of the B nd Trinity rivers, it is amply
fertile to supply all the wants.ofa large city,—a fact fully
borne out by the variety, abundance and cheapness o
culinary vegetable • whi k daily ctowli ourMarket hous
••■i i. / . h
Hr. 14 Nut
rpy Ja
l rincot
A
■
It.
9
I h
I
-1
uuty of the,k.u 11 sh lu
sets llusbandmen, sov the • d olimurud
sons and daughtersimie it w ’ , row i
fruit, though the drivins m ;!
truth, wi i employ on- person one year At this rate, the l! spring, or untimrly
annunl wool clip of Vermont (three millions and । half ol u th’ . I ' ! '
; pounds) will give employment in mnanufactnringto 1 1. Y° ' 1 t
583 p r ons At a glance, then, w< can see how it is “-sa
'' • stic manufacture afordsamarket for the- l’ " 1 urish '
A n|
vvelai 10-
id Li i tern ■ ' - n
f
EDUCATION A tir-a'x.litl Lihal I had r the r for
the appearance, if I must choose between them, sei the
I country dolted all over at its eross ronds w rth ite plain lit
1 tie village school houses, thin have the high palates of a
-few large towns crowned with the most splendid fabri a of
Greciab and Roman art I had rather forthe strength
and defenceor thecountr y, if I must choc ..i, then
see the ronds that lead to those school housssthroug d
withchildnn ofbotll ■ saluting the 'I :v her ne he
-passes, in the good old New Figland way, v th
little t ourt sy or nd, than g /» up n i* mentscfmi
cenary troops parading upon the ram , t otk
ble fortr -MS ( Ay. for the honor of the thung l h l .
• tner have it - ii i of me, that I wus by ch . the I,
| citizen of th' Stale making the best provtsin foi the
l-ucation of all its childi > n, an I that ! h !" heart
running brooks r
A laborer in Italy, einployed in throwing down r.
bish from a house, called to the passengets to take cart
but one of them, paying no attention to the warning, was .
wounded by a stoii*'. He cited the man before a court of
justice, and demanded damages. A celebrated Advocate
undertook the defence of the laborer , but as ne found it
impossible to prove that his client had really warned the
passenger to take care, he had recourse to an expedient to
gain his object. When the case therefore came to be
tried, and the defend* nt was asked why he had thrown
down the stones so heedlessly, he stood mute and motion
less The Judge repeated his queston, but he maintaiped
an obstinate silence; and when the Judge expre ssed his
surprise at it, the Advocate remarked, that his clirut was
unfortunately deaf and dumb. •'No, no,' exchaimed the
plantif,offhis his guard, "it is false, it is an evasion, I
myself heard him very distinctly say, “ Take care ' take
! care r" "And why then did you not follow his warning F
I said the Judge smiling, and dismissed the case.
. ------------------------f
Infidel Conb'iuon - In. th- course of a sermon lately
preachedin Me tho dst .chapel, in B al more, by Rev Ri h
a rd Fuller, >i distin goish ed Baptist Clergyman from South
Carolina, he stnted th following facts, as reported by a
correspond* nt of the Baptist Advocate.—S. S Journal
Th ere was a ge n L m in in th' pi ce of Mr. Fuller’s
residi ncewho wa s a freethinker and nfreelivtr lit
prob ssed to disbelieve in religion and often opposed and
I ridiculed it. Hiving property he spent it freely in the
win h.- t u* sL o th tl th* v I* v
Jok Ilk.' homes Of p Let and ill
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The Morning Star. (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 262, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 9, 1841, newspaper, November 9, 1841; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1497685/m1/2/: accessed May 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .