Page:Niles' Weekly Register, v28.djvu/12

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JV IKDEX. Constitution, t'ne first modern written one 127; remark con- cerning 26i; Copper mines on lake Superior 11 Cotton— cultivated in Virginia 3, 115, m; trade in the article 98; imported at Havre 3; East India 116; Egyptian 149; Ota- heitean 149; imported into England 40; manufactures 114, 149; on the demand and sup- ply of cotton 83, 87, 99, 149, 273; imports, prices, &c. 406; prices of and speculations in 87, 97, 99, 149, 153, 161, 177, 183, 198, 258, 273, 292, 307, 322, 369, 390, 406; seasonable remarks on the price, fcc. 149; cargoes of 225; wet cotton 272 Cotton goods, exported from Li- verpool 36 ; from the U. S. 83 Counterfeiters ' 192,352 Crafts, William, his addVcss 207 Crawford, Mr. leaves Washing- ton 33; at Fredericksburg 50; at Lexington, and his toast 177 Credit, long, bad effects of 416 Creeks— see 'Indians' and 'Geor- gia.' Crimes and punishments — re- marks on 354 Crocodile killed 416 Cryer of a court, anecdote of a 80 Cuba — a fleet arrives from Spain 35, 148; supprcsion of free- masonry, &c. 41 ; persecutions and proscriptions 41, 62; mar- tial law in 62; decree of the captain general 69 ; population, revenue, &,c. 163; speculations oonccrning the fate of 214, 339 Sb-l; trade with Key West 226; revolt of slaves in 300; arri- vals with slaves 322; bishop of Havana 352; French fleet at 370 "Cumberland road," continued 323 Cunningham, Miss, murder of 112 , Mr. his patent to supply pure and cold water 302 f.uthbert, Mr. 405 D. Deaf and dumb Institutions 114, 211; number of such persons in the U. S. 282; printers 416 Delaware river, obstructions in the 66; canal 84— see "Canals." Denmark — decline of the value of piopcrfy 1S4; loan to, in Eng- land 215; suppression of pira- cy 270; births and deaths 344 Dewey, Mr. on emigration to H. 228 Dickson, gen. Joseph, dies 224 Divorce — decree respecting 229 Doanc, capt. Isaac 152 Drake, Dr. a letter from him on certain opuiions of Mr. Clay 84 Drayton, Wm. 207 Drou)^lit, great 387 DucllinK-^a bill lo prevent it 35; prohibited by Arch Masons 407 E. Laithquakc at Alivors 166, 177; jntlic Ionian Islnnds 213, 279 oitlndits — of thf- native troops in 107, 116; of the Durmcsc S16, 360, 40l>i Uurmoso war 116, 215, 216; rise of the Gan- ges 389; (British) finances 153; British possessions and popu- lation 328; an old law about dirorces 229; trade with Chi- na, &c. 271; plunderings 369 Eaton, maj. his correspondence with Mr. Clay 87; partakes of a public dinner at Franklin, S25 Edinburg Review 162 Editorial— temnrki on the state of our country 1; on British feelings 2; occaiional, er desultory articles 33, 194, 241, 257; do- mestic manufactures 33, 97, 241, 257; In- dian marriage in Connecticut 298; on cer- tain remarks of Mr. Canning, respecting British commerce 50; on private opinions ascribed to gen. Jackson 65; on "Mother Britain" 67; money raanufactaries and re- lief laws 81, 209, 308; pardon of pirates 118; advanced price of British goods 84; progress of improvement 113; on slavery 114, 357; essay on commerce and produc- tion, and speculation in cotton, &c. 83, 97— see "cotton;" British 'free trade' 161, 225, 241,257,305— see Mr.Huskisson, in"Briti3b affairs;" on certain remarks in the Edin- burg Review on the subject of slavery 162; right of instruction 193, 305, 363; progress of the U. S. 194; steady habits of Virginia 210; afTairtof the Creeks 212, 306, 401; on the subscription to the Register 241; state religion in Kngland241; protection of do- mestic labor 257; internal improvement 258; manner of electing the president 267; Afri- can colony 273; Lafayette's visit and nn ex- tract from Blackwood's magazine 274; on proceedings in Georgia, the slave question, 6'c. 274, 3^7,401; letter M the editor, with a cask of wine 305; British princes 3E6; inde- pendence of Hayti 338; Haytien statistics 403; naval courts martial 353, 402; crimes and punishments 354; essay on the power, ire. of the free states and the slave states 357; duke of Saxe Weimar 386; equal jus tice, Andre and Hale, Coikburn and Jones 386; on the product and cultivation of to- bacco 387; case of com. Porter 402. Edwards, T. killed by his slaves 32 ^SVPf' — progress of the pacha 107; European officers, &c. in 154; arrivals at Alexandria 154; cultivation of sugar 184; culti- vation of .indigo 389; its com- merce and products 215, 389; the talari 409; British trade with 270; great canal 389, 409; plague reported 409 Election of president — on the manner of 267 Elk Ridge Landing 159 Emancipation 336,341,353 Emigration to the west 161 England, Jno. bishop of Charles- ton, address to his dioccss 53 Episcopal clergy 101,272 Erie, the lake — progress of im- provement on the south shore of 148; commerce, &,c. 161,415 Establislied religions 241 Europe, on the state of 153, 165 European monarchies.statistics 198 Exchange, price of bills of 99 Exports of the U. S. from 1791 to 1824, inclusive, a valuable table — see "Commerce." 329 F. Fish, falls from the clouds 416 Fishing— great drafts 160, 298; for mackerel 182, 208 Flax, machine for dressing 101 Fletcher, rev. Mr. 353 Florida — census ordered 0; pro- l>osed canal in, &.c. a-l, 117; naval station at Pcnsacola 192; notice of the soil, &c. 197; yf tiiC new capital 20S ; elections S2u Flour, speculations in 129, 147; losses on shipments to South America 147, 161, 194, 307; ' on the demand for and supply of 209; extraordinary load of 272 Forgery, a singular case of 181 Forrest, col. Thomas, dies 64 Forsyth, Mr. and the Am. press 34 france— relations with Colombia 2, 54; slave trade 5,279; importation of cotton 3; Napoleon's executor and La Fitte40; of the coronation of the king 40, 183,300,311, 312, 326; regulation of marriages 40; do. of com- merce 230; proceedings respecting the Am. republics 40, 52, 179, 263; descendants of Corneille 40; Sth of January celebrated at Paris 40; France and the holy alliance 40; Tal)eyrand 49; M. Constant 52: Talma 229; notices of Lafayette 54; finances 104, 311, 388; arrival of an Egyptian Sarcophagus 14; antiquities from Egypt 169; Ouvrard, the plunderer, 104,229; law o( sacrilege 107— at length 124; naval fittings 117. 279j law of indemnity 154, 228; silk goods 154; steam engines 154; military establishment 165, 169, 279; great canal projected 169; return from a voyage round the world 183; libraries, literature and journals, &c, 199; the dau- phin and bis wite 408; plenty of capital 21S, Beranger, the song writer 229; law respect- ing piracy, 230; fat noblemen at court 230; character of the king 264; trade with Kgypt 270; coinage 270; dutchess of Berri 270; paupers, patients, &c. 270; rise in the value of property 270; debt due by Spain 279; receipts 311; preat oxen 311; manufactures —Mr. Tetneaux— Cashmere shawls, winei, forests 327; fire at Bordeaux 328; arrival of La Serna from Peru 343; value of the crown 344; fleet arrives in the Chesapeake 385; Segnr and Gonrgard 408; Macdonald 408; La Vallette 408; the Leda, a painting 408, a gi^nt 408. Franklin, Dr. his old press 106 Franklin Institute, Phila. 3, 297 Free-labor company 27? 'Free states' and 'slave states' So? 'Free trade,' British, remarks on 145; regulations I5j Frog found in the body of a tree 229 Furnaces, improvement in 230 G. Gaines, gen. in the Creek coun- try, &c. 297— see "Georgia" Gait, William, dies li:; Galvanism — experiments in 36 Gamble, major, of the marines 211 Game laws, British 160 Gazlay, Mr. his circular 207 Generation, the fifth living 112, 304 Georgia— The people to elect their gd- vcrnor 144; extent of the Indian lands in 160; proceedings on the death of Mcintosh, notices of the treaty and remarks and facts 196, 197, 271, 353, 369, 385; messages of the governor 238, 277, 315; reports to the legis- lature 259, 271; governor's correspondence with Mr. Andrews 314, 332; the same with Mcintosh 3<»9; the same with gen. Gainns 314, 392,412; gen.Gaiurs' letters to gov. r 366,392,397; correspondence with the de partment of war 314, 333, 398, 412; the sainr of the commissioners and gen. Gaines 41?- Mr. Andrews' letters to col. Crowell 33.', 415; col. C. reinstated 336; Isaac Smitli'i slatemeiit 333; governor's "slavery or vv slavery" message— letters of the judges, Jio. to Mr. Wirt 347-;irtfo/> furnished by gov. 1 400; a "fair hit" at the gov, 326; his ton*' 353— toasted 405— loaslings405; remarks oi. Ins proceedirigs 271, 374, 357, 401; muiiu nientsto Greene and Pulaski 882; for col- lecting hisiorical dacu.nents, 8tc. 29J. Gorman E. L. synod of Pa. 29 i j Germany. A female buried wi'h military honors 54; an Ameri- can mining company formed 169; bankrupt law 181; emi- grations 184; migration from Hesse 224; dc&cription of ;>