Augusta chronicle and Georgia advertiser. (Augusta, Ga.) 1822-1831, September 17, 1822, Image 3

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and delightful portions of the city, l wear the solitude of the desert, appal the heart with their loneliness.! J The sound of the church-going bells'* is unheard from Trinity, St. Paul’s, and the other churches in the district ; and the voice of pleasure,; as well as the din of business is mute. If there be any thing really alarm ing about the progress of the fever; it fs the circumstance of its having found victims upon the most elevated ridge ofland between the two rivers, in the vicinity of Trinity, Church, where the streets are spacious, dry and clean, and the houses and shops kept neat and airy. Thereis apparently no- : thing in that quarter to produce pes tilence, and loan atmosphere so open and free, one would suppose it difti- ; cult to imbibe disease from sources oil infection. The confidence therefore j which many persons felt of escaping I the fever in such a situation, and the reluctance they manifested at leaving | their houses, cannot,be denominated j rashness, but a rational though in se-j vcral cases, an unfortunate calcula-1 tion on ordinary data. \V e are told I that Mr. Baker’s family at No 4.1 Wall-street, who have suffered so se- j verely the present season, have never i found it necessary to remove at the most alarming periods of the fever in former years. '*’• But to proceed with our sketch., Tiie city above Fulton street, on each side of Broadway, appears much as usual, except that the population is i>vory much thinned in the lower streets, find the quantity of business diminish- V|, The City Hall, and the public places in the vicinity, including Tam fyunyand Mechanic Halls, are open :#$ usual. Washington Hall is crowd ed with boarders who have retreated ftom the lower parts of the city. From this point up Broadway to the junction of the Bowery, a person hardly know the street, In jfead of gilded carriages, filled with idies and gentlemen riding out for easurey you see the street full of pts loaded with articles of merchan ze and the side-walks crowded with en of business. Many temporary hidings have been erected, and al most every vacant spot has been oc- Affod by a shop or shanty of some Mid. These temporary buildings mt of rough boards, wiiich rising by » side of marble walls, and houses jßshed in the first style of elegance, /•sentagrotesqueappearance. The Snt rooms of nearly all the dwelling jHiscs are occupied as stores, banks, iSurance offices, and shops of every Hcription j and the fronts are lite- KHy covered w ith signs. ■Several curious mistakes have hap |pc(l to persons who have come to ■■ city since these changes have ta in place. It is said a Corinthian, Ivii a lady under Ids arm wishing to Ining lounge in Vauxhall, ig the western entrance way, as the most fashion ily found himself in a dry Another gentleman of ascription, in entering the Garden by the usual discovered that he was at of a broker’s office, but dlls to exchange, except a which he intended a bar e-cream, a glass of punch , he twirled his stick in a site manner, and made his e by another avenue. b already mentioned the nctamorphosis of Green citizen who has been ab it fortnight was led blind irae of the streets, and the noved, he would not re vUlage. He would sce| • their shopping in what: barns or stables, find par- j emcn dining in ne>v Ho have been reared and fin-1 t were, by enchantment. I coffee houses of Messrs. I Niblo are now completed, the best accommodations' y. We must not forget among the other conveni -3 village, that gentlemen aved in the best style by into, who occupies avery 1 md scatters his perfumes, 1 y the dairy maid milked! Such are some oftherevo-! :h New-York has under-; course of a few weeks, 1 that any further changes ad unnecessary. fjV. Y. Statesman. Iharlesto.v, Sept. 11. ■hr. Grampus. —A letter d yesterday, from an offi-. d the Grampus, dated at, ;on the 12th ult. It men-1 hey made their run from St. Barts in 11 days. In; •salutes on entering that ; of the soldiers in the fort n shuttered through care i not effectually sponging j 1 the Surgeon of the 6'ram dted, by direction of the to assist the Surgeon of the, mtating it. The officers, received many civilities: overnor, &c. of St. Barts, of St. Barts and St. Thor footed to sutler materially ning of the British West Indies to foreign trade. The letter, mentions their tailing in with the cele brated Spanish privateer brig, Pan- ‘ chi to, on their passage from St. Barts to St. 1 homas, who was desirous of boarding a brig then under convoy of the Grampus ; but this was unhesi tatingly refused by Capt. Gregory, when she made off’.—!t was quite , healthy at St. Ihomas at the above date. W Idle there, a dinner was giveir to the officers of the schooner, by the American merchants and shipmasters.—lu the course of her cruise, previous to her return home/ the Grampus was to touch at Havana. Her crew were remarkably healthy I : at the date of this letter—not a man having been reported on the sick list for a week. : The Greeks. —Mr. Wilrerforce j has been reflected upon, in this conn-; | try, for his sympathy in the cause of I slavery in one quarter of the globe,' j while he could at the same time look* j with calm indifference upon the slave-{ !ry and sufferings of the Greeks.— \ The censure thus cast upon this 1 I champion of liberty and humanity ( |in England, appears to have been, in this instance, unmerited. In a' debate in the British-House of Com- 1 mons, on the 13th July, on a peti-j tiun from Leeds, in favor of the Greeks,“Mr. Wil be force declared, that he knew of no case in which the! power of a mighty, country like Eng-! land, could be more nobly, more gene rously, or more justifiably exerted, than in rescuing the Greeks from bond age and destruction. The Turks, that gentleman observed, arc the ancient and inveterate enemies of Christian!-1 ty and Freedom ; and to endeavor to promote their interest, or even to per petuate their dominion, must entail eternal disgrace and infamy on every Christian nation which should so far set Conscience, Honor, and Princi ple, at defiance.” —Charleston Cmr. The now ship Howard, Hol niimoE, arrived off Havre, in 20 days from this port, delivered her letters, and proceeded for Cowes, where she arrived on the 22d of July. We re gret to state, that Mr. Ralph Tho mas, a passenger, late of Augusta, (Geo.) who wont out with the hope of improving his health, died on board on the 13th of July. The Howard carried out the official news of the ratification of the French Treaty, j.Vcif- York- paper Cheap Flow, or a dear Jack-Ass m Yesterday, the proprietor of a flat bottom boat, lying at our landing, ex changed eighty Jive barrels of flour for a jack-ass, said to be nearly 20 years of age—the same flour has been retailed at $5, and offered by the quantity at s'», 50; which last price makes the long-eared creature, come to $382, 50 purchase money; we will not pretend to say who had the best bargain,; nevertheless, we cannot help thinking that the present master of Grizzle, may, with great proprie ty, call him, “my dear Jack ! ! /” [Baton-Rouge Gazelle. SBOmmt ffrau— m iwsriw ifiwf TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1822. Those of our readers, who are over fastidious, and who can only endure the fashionable poetry of the day, may perhaps turn with some sort of disgust from the verses in our first co i luinn; but the heart of true sensibili : ty and honest feeling, will be over | come by the simplicity and pathos I with which the poetical tale is told. j QJ* To insure the publication of ! any thing further under the signature | of “ Savannah,'’ on the same sub ject, the name of the author will be necessary. We are acquainted with that of u No Monopolist..’ 1 TOR THE CHRONICLE ic ADVERTISER. A writer in your paper of the 10th iust, ’ has assailed the Steam Boat Company of i Georgia, officers and all, in a manner suf- I lit iently plausible, to mislead ’hose unac quainted with the plain matters of fact of the case in question. Now, without dis puting the motive of ‘ No Monopolist,’ in stepping forward in this case, I will pro ceed to examine his premises : —He de clares that, “ before the existence of this Company, there were private boats enough on the river to carry all the pro- I duce offered, both up and down, as fast as ; was desired.” Why then, let me ask, i were freights so high previously ? Why did we pay a cent to a cent and a quarter per pound for freight of cotton to Savan • nah, and from one half to three quarters l per pound for freight of cotton to Savan- I nah, and from one half to three quarters ! above customary, for freight of goods up 1 the river? Why did we have to engage ; the freight of our produce a week or ten 1 days beforehand, and follow, at the heels of the boatmen, all the time, to be sure then of getting it on board ? That these were the facts, I appeal to the disinterest ed opinion of every merchant in Augusta I and Savannah. Jfe proceeds to state that, “one of the | strongest arguments in favor of the incor-; poration of this company, was, that j freights should be placed at a reasonable , rale and kept uniform.” Now, I never heard of any such inducements, and I ap ; peal to the legislators to say, if any such ; was offered. The inducement was, to have steam-boats ca the river; as the expense would be heavy, and the experi ment doubtlul of success, the Legislature granted the company the exclusive right to the navigation of the river for twenty years, as an inducement to men of capital and enterprize, to make the experiment. This was always n hat I understood to be ttia strongest argument, ami I appeal also ’ to the recollections ol every citizen of Au gusta, to bear me witness. But the lat ter part ol his sentence is so absurd and unreasonable, as hardly to require refu j fa.ion; —for 1 conceive that no reasonable ' man could expect his freight lo be always carried and brought at the same rale, in a low as iu a high river, for many obvious > reasons: the boats would requii ea great er number ol hands, be longer in perform ing the trip, be sul jeeted to the expense ol lighting the n, Ac. A;c. That freights have always been lower since the establishment ol the company, than before, and the Conq any has brought j and carried freight tor near ly two years, j unreasonably and unnecessarily low; I rom June 1818, toJan. 11.20, the Steam ! Boat Company carried freights lor but I little more than half what was charged at j the same time by the famous Bole Boat I Company, and that Company tailed for rea:on that their freights did not pay their expenses; and had the Steam Boat Com ! pany laid by their boats during this peri i od, they would have saved upwards ot : $lO ',OOO. If 1 N’o Monopolist’ would en j quire a little, he might readily learn, why | freights from New-York to Savannah, are 1 lower than from Savannah to Augusta. 1 When they have been as low as $2 per ( bale to Europe, I trust he will prove.— j If the Steam Boat Company do not con tinue to ply their boats during the sum mcr months, it can be accounted for in various oilier ways, than that they would expose them to the extortions of any body ; and whenever an extortion is attempted, they hold the corrective, and if they omit : to use it, let the indignation of the public be levelled against (hem. Freights down the river are now at 50 cents per bale, and are at the same rate up as (hey have been all the season, which docs tint ap pear much like extortion on (he part of ihe Bole Boa's "ho happen to be. the sole carriers. Mow “ No Monopolist” can justify his unwarrantable attack on the officers of the com. any, 1 leave him lo explain ; but when their business and duties did not require their presence it! town for w cks together, why they should be cen sured lor retiring during the nights only, to the Sand il.li--, so. their comfort ami health, I must confess I i an see no proper cause. 1 would slate to “No Monopo list,” why the Hamburg boat is continued at this season ; hut if h. kur ws any thing, he must know that it is because she has no competition in I or trade, ami from her 'ight draught of water, is heller calcu lutod for a low river than those of the steam Boat Company ;—and had lie in his essay recommended to the Steam Boat Company the propriety of procuring om or two such, and pointed out the advan tages diey would lu- in saving the import ance of the citv of Savannah, in event ol a low river, iu the busy season of the year, he might have claimed some attention from litem—and could he have forced the company to adopt such a measure by Ihe legislative interference or otherwise, he might have entitled himself to the gratitude of SAVANNAH. PENDLETON, AUGUST 28. Melancholy and Unfortunate. On Thursday morni.-g last, two of the Deputy Slien/i’’.s oflhis district, who had a Bench Warrant ami four Slate War rant* again, t Mr. lessk Gokbiiv, of tills . district—hiving aw or mined he did not intend so he taken, (hey applied to Capt. Hamilton; rommandiijga troopof’mavalrv, to render I hem some assistance.—He ve ry promptly joined them, with some of his men; 1 tie whole party amounted lo nine parsons.—They proceeded to the place in the night, anil ju.-t before day broke, ro 1c up to (he house where Mr. Corbin was, with the intent ofsurrmind ing it, but lie had heard them; and in at tempting to make his escape; was shot at by one of life party as lie i an, and kill ed dead on the .spot. A Jury of Inquest was held, and a verdict returned oi Wil ful Murder. A warrant was then issued against the whole party, and on Saturday they all surrendered themselves, amena ble lo Hie law ; and wore admitted to bail. The Ex-King of Spain, {Joseph B'inn parir) and suite, arrived in Boston and lias taken lodgings at Mrs. Delano’s. We learn that the son of Joseph Bona parte is a candidate for admission into our University at Cambridge, He has been educated in Italy, where his mother, Mrs. Patterson now resides. -Boston Centinel. Dtttr, At Harper,s Ferry, a few clays ago, after a short illness, Colonel JACINT LAVAL, aged about (!0 years. Colonel Laval c.ime to this country during our Revolutionary war, as a cornet of dragoons in the French army under General Kochambeau. tl e served to the end of the war with that gallantry which is the characteristic of his nation, and carried to his grave honorable scars of the wounds he re ceived in battle. At the close of the war, he resolv ed to become a citizen of the country whose rights he had defended, and took up his residence in Charleston, South Carolina. Here he soon ac quired the esteem of his townsmen, and in the course of a few years the respect of the public at large, as was evinced by his election to the respon sible office of sheriff of the city of Charleston, by the Legislature of the state, in opposition to some of her most respectable native citizens. This office he held four years. In the year 1808 Col. L. was appointed a Captain of dragoons in the army of the U. States, and subsequently rose to the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel, which rank he held until the reduction of 1815. Having the confidence arid re gard of the government, he then received the office of military store keeper, and continued in the public sen-ice until bis death. In all the situations which he filled, and in private life, the conduct of Col Laval was marked by fidelity ami strict honor. He was a brave soldier and a true friend of bis adopted country, in whose defence he not only a second trine embarked himself, but placed two of . his sons also in the field. In fals death those who knew him well will suffer a serious loss, but much i greater is that sustained by his afflicted widow and | children. Mo f!n tell tgene r. | On board ihc skip Howard, or. ihe ISA of July i lasi, on his way to France, (having embarked with i 1 a hope of improving hi> health,) Mr. Ralph Thomas^ ■ late of Augusta, tuairgia. * [ In this city on Wednesday night lait, after r.n ■ illness of eight days, .IGSIAH MKltiet, Ksi;. Com ■ missionor ol the General Land Office, a;;cd 06years, i'ow persons having lived more esteemed, or died I more regretted by those to >\ bom they were kuowii, * , than this venerable and excellem man. Tin* purity, philanthropy, and simplicity ol his ehai’arter, were > proverbial, and rendered him an object of general respect. Mr. Mcii-s was a native of Connecticut, * j and having received a liberal education, he spvnt some years ol his life as a professor in Vale College, and was afterwards, for several years, President of the University of Georgia Keliring from that ] situation, and his scientific attainments pointing 1 him out to the government as a valuable citizen for * , public service, he was appointed Surveyor Ge ( neru l United States; this office he tilled for some years, and then relinquished it to accept the gitu.dion ol Commissioner of the General Land Otpce, which he filled with his characteristic fidel ity to the time of his death. It is a remarkable * lact, that although the deceased reached the age of j sixty-live, he had never suffered a day’s sickness > before the attack which terminated his life. An * j affectionate widow, and a large number of children, 1 by whom he was peculiarly venerated, are left to t j mourn his departure. Ukut, t . r aged 19years; and cn the 14ih, her sister, Miss ! Margnnt F/yti, aged 26, natives of the county of i Cork, Ireland. i |)ort of Sana f ARRIVED, c | Sloop Susan, Butler, -Orleans, IRdiiys : * The Companions of i Augusta Royal Arch Chapter, No. 2, art* ; requested to attend a regular communi ■ cut Loti at their Hall this evening. * By order J. M. Kunzc, . September 17 7 Secretary. | Seed Wheat. Just Received, and For Sale, Five hundred bushel? superior ; SEED WHEAT. Apply to Summers & Perry, or B. G. Sims. I So (ember 17 7 tl' > 5 'i RAJfSYLVAJfIA UNIVERSITY. jvfedical Lectures. | rjllJE -MEDICAL EEC TUI! ES in this * institution, will commence on the First Monday in November next, Vml end the Ist week in March follow * iug. The course of instruction will be ou ’ •‘lnutility and Shrgrey by Dr. Dudley. ! Infill idea of Med cine ) . . . ‘ 1 & MUeria Medica. \ l ' Caklwell ’ 1 Theory and Brattice ) r , „ ’ of Medicine. $ Dr - Brown - Obstetrics find Diseas• ) es of Women ami > “Dr, Rh hardson Children, . ) Chemist y “ Dr. Blythe. W. 11. Richardson. Sept mil er 17 7 w4w J Notice. SURGEON'S, Apothecaries, &c. arc cautioned against pure basing a ( POCKET HOOK of Surgical In.strn iTieutt stolen from ilm .Medicine (’best of t; E” Company, 3d Regiment, U. States * Artillery. I A suitable reward will be paid by the subscriber for information that will ead „ to the recovery thereof, or to the con ' t iction of tlie thief. L. A. Rigail, 'Lieut. 31 Artillery Commanding. U. Stoles Cantonment , > I Sami-Hill , near Augusta, flen, \ September 17 7 tit t , 30 Dollars Reward. DESERTED from the U. Stales Ar senal, near Augusta, Geo. on the , night of the 13lh instant, Thomas Gibson, • a private of E” Company, 3d regiment 1 Arblfei y, born in Ireland, 34 years of age, fixe feet four inches high, florid complex - i<m, huzle eyes, dark hair, and by occu r pation a shoemaker. A reward of thirty ) dollars will be paid on the delivery of the . above named deserter at this, or any . other Military post in the TJ. Stale.. 1 1. A. Rigail, Lieut. ?jd Artillery Commanding. U. S. Cantonment, Sand-Hills near Au „ gusta Geo, ® Sept. 17 7 " Brought to J ail, y A NEGRO MAN namedSEATlJ,says J jTjl he belongs Mr. M’Dowall, Jasper county. r - A 1,80, s A bov named Smart, be n •» 7 longs to Mr. Jesse Forman, a negro trad e er, and was hired to Mr. John Binon, in lt Sparta. A 1,90, y A negro Woman named e PEGGY, belongs to Mr. John Howard, e near Edgefield, S. C. * Thomas Stewart, Sept. 17 3tw 6 Jailer. 33" The Trustees of the e School, called the “ Liberty Academy,” e and the public, are hereby informed that 5 the Teac.icr of the said institution has so f far recovered from his desperate stale of . indisposition, as to warrant him to re s sume the business of the institution. , lie now solicits the attention of the Pa s rents, and Guardians of the pupils of the 3 school, and the public, on the occasion, , upon the grounds of his agreement and j obligation with the Trustees. R. Lea. Liberty, Sept. 17 7 U (fT* Wc are authorized to stair, that Richard Befell, Esq. is a candidate for the oltice of Receiver ot 'J’ax Returns for Richmond county at the enduing election. September 17 wde 7 (LT Wanted to purchase or hire, an active, honest, sober Negro .ylhu,,accuslouiea to attend about a Gro cery Sloie —if he has a knowledge of Coopering, will be preferred.—Enquire at this ©nice. Sept. 17 2t 7 TO KENT, And possession given immediately, TWO Dwelling HOUSES, 0,1 l° wtr end of Reynold G street, suitable for final! fa milies, A I.SO, FOR SALE, A first rate second hand GIG. • For terms, apply to Geo. Dunbar. September 17 7 wdt . f For Sale, ONE fourth part of an undivided tract of laud, situated ou the south side ol the upper end Broad street, above, and adjoining the lots formerly M’Kiune’s, ami below the land of Mr. I’. Carnes. The terms will be arranged to accom modate the purchaser—Apply to G. J. Burrough. September 17 7 Jt M TO KENT, Two Cotton Stands, one situa: ted on (he above described land- j the oilier on the uppermost lot laid down in M’Kiune’s plan of lots in Springfield, South Side, G. J. Burrough. September 17 7 3t Look at This! ! fJAHE subscriber otters lor sale his A HOUSE and LO I’ at Columbia Court-House, well calculated for a bouse of entertainment, and as such, has been used for several years past. Considera ble credit will be given if required, and no small deduction made by paying the cash. The subscriber will also sell his plantation, about a mile and a half from said Court House. If any one wishes to purchase, they will confer a favor ou the subscriber by signjfiing the same iintne dia ely, I deem it useless to give a descrip tion of the above place, qsl suppose those who wish to purchase will come and j udge lot themselves. Walter A. Appling, September 17 wtiw 7 40 Dollars Reward. STRAYED, or stolen, Lora my Wag gon on the Sand Hill Road, on the 1 -Ui iii.-1 two likely HORSES ol Hie fol lowing description : one brown horse about nine or ten years old, upward ol five feet high, (nomarks particularly re collected, lame a little in one hind leg at times) with a bob tail, somewhat grown out. The other is a bay horse, also up vvaid.- ol five lect high, nine cr ten years old, with one or both of his hind feet a little v hite, (though not Dow particular ly recollected,) also with a bob tail, somewhat grown out, both of which art in only tolerable order, and marked with the gear. The above reward will br given, (or the above mentioned horses, and all reasonable expences paid i( deli vered to me in W ilkes county n< ar Wash ington, ou the Peti n>burgh road, or to Slaughter ti Lahu7.au Augusta; and i) stolen fifty dollars for the thief. John T. Graves. September 17 7 ts Administrators Sales. WILL bo sold at Linrobiton, Lincoln county, on (he first Tuesday in January next, the following seven Ne groes, vi/,: John and Felix, fellows about ■ih years old each ; Sally, a woman about the same age; Alsey, a girl about I I years old, Betty a girl about 12 years ts age, Flora a girl about 5 years old, and Randle, a child two years old.—Terms of sale will be cash, agreeable to the or derofthe Honorable Court of Ordinary for said county, for the benefit of the heirs an 1 creditors of Jeremiah Gatrell, dec. also if not previously sold at private sale, two likely young fellow's, on accomn oda ting terms, will be offered. William Jeter, JldnCr. In right of his wife. September 17 nids 7 Notice. THE public are informed that IVIr. Isaac La Roche has no title, inter est, claim, or lion, either in Law or Equi ty, to the lot advertised by the City Slie rilfin satisfaction oft wojudgenients, Law rence, Rapelye & Co. and John Kassair, bounded north by bay street, south by a lot belonging to Messrs. A. Slaughter k C. Labuzan, east by Mr. Lamar’s lot, and west by centre street, it belongs ex clusively to the subscriber and others. Thomas S. Oliver. September 17 7 It Georgia , Columbia County. WHEREAS Win. Crabb and Jane Crabb, have applied to me for letters of Administration on the estate of Samuel Crabb, late of said county, deceased. These are therefore to r ite and admon ish all and singular the kindred and cre ditors of said deceased, to file their ol jec lions in my office within the time pre scribed by law, otherwise letters of ad ministration will issue. Given under my hand at office this 1 Uh day of September, 1822. H. Lamar, D. Cl'Jc. Sept- 17 7 It To Renf, THE front and bar k Stores at present occupied by Messrs. Tinney .V Hill, and po-session given on the first of Octo ber next. Edw’d Campfield. September 2 ts. County. WHEREAS Sarah C. Walker .md Sheldrake Brown, have applied Mo me for L* iters ol' .on | 'lie Estate of John C Walkfer, lute o i the said county det cased. ’ These are iheroloueto andadmon all and s-ngularfhe kindred ami cre ditors of said gei o. to file their oljtc tiOTis it| my office within the lime prescri bed by law, oth-rwisc Idlers oCAdu.m istrut 1011 will is u- . Given under my hand at olficc thiis lltii day ol Sept. lath*. H. Lamar, D. Cl'k. September 17 7 It marvla’Sd” Stale Lottery TO BE DRAWN IN BAD I I dORF, Under the su|ierin(cndaiice ol tlie Commissioners appointed by the Go veruour and Council, agreeably lo lue Ad of Assembly,' COriEN’s'op’lCE. Hnttimore, Sepleaibet 3, 1822. In announcing to the public anodic SPATE LOTTERY, in pursuance o tlie Act of the Legislature, the under signed I legs leave respectfully to cc press the high -ense of their very distiaguiMif-d ‘ patronage in the last Scheme, by wlm h j lie was enabled to complete the drawing in a lime so short, and unprecedented.— 1 Know ing the wishes of adventurers in fa vor of speedy result of investments, the present Scheme is so arranged that the "hole will be completed in Ten Draw ings Only. This added to its com para* tire brilliancy, has already caused so " spirited demandW the tickets, that the clay ol drawing will soon, be annniinreJ. In this lottery, as' hi (he last, aclven- J hirers can receive the cash Tor ■ prizes sold at Comen’s Office, the moment (hey are drawn,and the drawings, as in the former scheme, w ill he c onducted un der the supci interidance of the'.Commis sioners appointed by the Governor and Council.,; - T SC 11 EME «r TH K MARYLAND SPATE LOTTERY. 1 prize of $20,000 is 20,000 Dollar?. 2 do - - - 10.000 is 20,0(1(1 Dollars. 2 do - - - 5,000 is 1-0,000 DolliOfs. 1 do -- - a,OOO is ;i*ooo Dollar*. 10 do - - - 1,000 Dollar-. 50 do -- - lot) is SpWO Dollars. 100 do - - - 50 is 6,000 Dollars, 226 do -- - 20 is 4,500 Dollars. 5000 do - - - 10 is 50,000 Dollars. 6391 Prizes 127,600 Dollars. 9009 Blanks 15,000 Tickets .... 127,600 Dollars. All the prizes to be f’LOA PING from the commencement of the drawing, ex cept the following, which will ho depo sited in the wheels at definite periods, vi/.; After the 2d drawing, $5,000 Do. 4th do. 10,000 Do. 7th do. 10,000 Do. 9th flo. ..... . 20,000 NOT TWO BLANKS TO A PRIZE. I]-/ Prizes subject to a deduction c.f fifteen per cent, payable (iO days after the completion. In order to finish this Lottery with the most practicable despatch, the prizes on ly will be (Lawn—(tils arrangement will enable tlie commissioners to c omplete the scheme in ten drawings only. JAMES L. HAWKINS, ) r . NATHL. F, WILLIAMS, ( c,>,nnU3,M '-- JAMES B. RINGGOLD, > crs ’ Tickets, —$9 00 Quarters, $2 26 Halves, 1 50 Eighths, 1 21 To be had in the greatest variety of Num bers at Lottery Sc Exchange Ojffirc, 1 H Market-si. B A I.TIMOR K. Where were sold in the two last Uinta Lotteries, the whole of the following Cap - itals, viz ; —the highest Capital Prize of 40,000 Dolls, (to a gentleman in Jilhe inarle County, Virginia,) —the 10,000 Dolls, (to agenlleman in Lancaster, Ohio,) and no less than .SLEEJV CAPI TA LS of 5,00(1 Dolls, each ! in various parts of the Union. Besides a very large number of Thousands, &e, See. [1 j' ORDERS for Ticket, or Shares, from any part of the Unit* d States (po-.t paid) enclosing the cash or prize ticket* in any of the Baltimore Lotteries ; will meet with the same prompt attention as if ou personal application,* addressed to J. I. COHEN, Jr. Baltimore. September 14. 6w3t 03^Cash will be given foj a young, healthy and sober negro man— al-o (or a good woman, a cook, washer and ironcr. Apply to the printer. September 12. 5 3t uvvoemifcs, Cotton Lagging’, &c. &c. /I/Wt Pieces )2 inch Cotton Bagging, first quality 600 II is. English Baling Twine 90 Coils do Rope 2!f Ilhda. Muscovado ifc Orleans Sugar 23 Bags Green Coffee 60 Hhds. Philadelphia Rye Whiskey 30 Barrels do do do . > 28 do iV. E. Fum )’.* ' 35 do N. E. Giu 10 Qr. Casks Teneriffe W’ine 20 'Pierces London Porter 15 Boxes Whittmore’s No, 10, Cotton Cards 150 Bags Shot 5000 w». Bar Lead 10 'Pons Swedes Iron, assorted IPO Casks Patent Cut Nails and ftrads iJOOO Bushels Liverpool Ground Salt Any part of which articles will he sold unusually lew for Cash or approved pap r. A. Mitchell V S. Clarke. September 12. 5 ts riesh C\\etse And Richmond Sun erior J\"eu> WHEAT FLOUR. 46 Boses Prime Cheese, will land this day from boat No. I, and 50 Barrels New Wheat Flour expect ed this week, all of which will b& sold low at the wharf, by applica tion to . A. Picquet. Mo. 5, Rringt Row. Sept. 7 3 3t