Augusta chronicle and Georgia advertiser. (Augusta, Ga.) 1822-1831, November 07, 1822, Image 2

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I It ' AND j GEORGIA i BY T. S. RANNOK. • *“■ “ ' ’ " ~ ( TERMS. for the City piiprr, (Ibricc a Week,) Six Dollars jut rnirntm jiavahle in ndv.inoe, nr Seven Dollars 1 fr not paid before the end of the year. • , Fur the Counter/ pot" a-, (on. ea week,) 1 litre Do • * I irs uer n«a»w. iiny'-iOU* iii jjjHanci 1 . or l*o4r Dol- | tars, if not paid Imlore live end of Hie venr. Any order from a resjioiisitile sulw-enlier to dis- I continue his paper will he complied with w a set- | lUm\ent«f dues, and tint before. MvetliicmCHt* wilt he ns,Tied »' 'he foUowm? ( rates: For the first Insertion, per square. Sixty two and a half cents; for each sulis.yjuenf, awrt'- I s( >r insertion, I'oiiv thi-ee amUhraitttnrtcr cents; , In nil other cases K 2 t-2 cents per square. When an advertisement is sent, without aspen- s fieation in xvritinpr f»f the hutW*r of insertions, It . will he piihlislte.l until or,loved out, and charged I aci'ordinglv. ■' . . , 1 I.KrTEHS. (oh business) 1 most he post-paid —or they may not meet With attention. \ —*— S fy In this paper the Laws of the United States are pnhiished. For the Chronicle and Advertiser, t TO “SNIP” IN TOWN. h So. so, you’ve come to town friend Johnny, . A thumping laic 1 .;-woods Macaroni 1 j Tipt off In the Virst rate dandy style, So i,tally, one can’t suppress a smite, — Have you ia earnest left niV di* hing) ; Or, is’ l , only a vi’lent itching, ( T flourish a pseudo gentleman? , fan’t the unthinking rannrry clowns ( ■Keep you engaged hi cutting gmmt Dr,lias your country si,op got out Os needles, tapes, am! berrramot; Pots, pa',ls, and pans, and Windsor soup ? Or have you onlyjust stint up, While foitnne moves hy w heel around, Kuddonably, to lake— u cup And ,/av ten shillings in the pound ? Thus lo seemlhgly go buck ward, ,ts you’re silly creeping forward, Like 'he players at hack-gammon. Perhaps, your partners made a rout, And in their passion turn'd you out ? Pruv let me .have Man reason Why you’re here In harvest season, Fur Taylors and for Merchants ? TAKING LECTURES! ah! now I guess— On the newest fashions; ye-; yvs i In that there’s wisiann I coofesß If folk can't eat. they’re sure to dress, As starving’s but a mere eliauce. What! the Materia Medina u Cry you Mercy,” hut, it’s fnct you sr.y ? Ueav’n help me, whata stupid bear! 1 might have known it from your air, And strut of new gentility. But it’s a dangerous course you’re sailin’ In the wake of old long-heard Galen, One of Aisculapius’ scholar ,—- You’ll now have, ’stead of ttitehivf collars, To itw tc-aiUh gusltes and contusions, And put'h up ihrailJimr eonstitutions, 1 That ton, for the mobility. Hut take advice friend Linkum Feedle, tjuit Physic, and resumethrnr'J/r; To you the trade’s a danp’rotn one; ’Tis a bus’nesa that w hen once begun, Draws on tlic brain’s fertility. i. in crus. For the Chronicle and Advertiser. PINDAR to JUNIUS. “ On«*i* on a timo,” a slhy u‘ p, *\Vith venomVl spite, would !»ite a rasp, As ancient faints say. But Snaky soon found out his error, Then quickly back recoil Min terror, And fool-like skulk’d away. MO* At. Thus some poor wight attempts the abuse, Os Ibols he knowfr not how to use; And having 1 cut himsc{J'-~-\oo luit* Curses las thick ami a'idled pate. QUERY? Now, tell me Junius— could you try, The H.tsp for petty tk LARCENY ’’? If not—why Issue forth your WRIT\ And prove the spake, u a biitr bit? 1 From the Biijfalue Balri it, ('Holer 1 r>. Tfie facts contained in the follow-i ing article were furnished ns by a 1 gentleman who recently visited the battle ground. - j Battle of Niagara. —During (her late war with Great Britain, uo fic tion with .the ciMriny added greater reputation to the uioritan arms limn this sanguinary -conflict, wilh some of the best disciplined troops of I .mope, who were also .superior in numbers to the Americans engag ed. I iiis battle was fought about half a mile below the Cataract of Niagara, on the Canada shore, at a place called ! .unday's laue, and about 'one mile below the place called Bridgewater, by all which names it has been designated. The Chippe way creek’ near which another des perate and bloody battle was fought, is two miles above the Tails. '1 he army occupied a po sition in Llinday’s lane, with their i artillery on an eminence command i ftie the ro;.ul by which the Americans advanced, and all the adjacent couti- I _ try, within the range of cannon shot, i From this position they were driven t by the Americans, and their battery J taken, at the point of the bayonet, t fay the troops led on by (lie gallant t Col. Miller. Their battery wusse- l veral time” taken and retaken, dur- x ing the battle, which combated until hear midnight ; and in their charges f the bayonets repeatedly m. t before g die lines fired ; and a great number * of men were bayonetted at the field gleces.j which finally remained .un disputed in the hands of the Ameri cans ; wjiio were,, however unable to ! rempvg’them from the field, in eph- 1 sequence of the loss of all the hos- 1 PCS, ami the excessive fatigue of the troops/' ’ ( On the morning after the battle the , American army retreated towards j lii;ie, and having no carriages were , obliged to leave their wounded and (le;nl to the care of the eneffiy. To , the wounded we are willing to be- , lieve the necessary attention was ( paid, but in disposing of the dead a ( more expeditious method than usual ( was adopted. The bodies were strip- ( pod and dragged together into an immense pile, intermixed and cover ed with dry fence-rails, and set on lire, which soon reduced them to a heap of ashes. To this mode of fu neral no objection is made, as the: |jot wottilici mid situation of the ar my would not admit of any other, j But, will it be credited, that among a chi istian people this pile of human j bones and ashes should remain unco-; vered until the present time ; and such we are assured, is the fact. Col. | Hubert Carr, of Philadelphia, pass ing near that place a few days since,: visited the field of battle, and ob-| '■ I i served a number of hogs ■ turning up, the loose ashes and bones, on the I, spot wheie the field pieces had soj gallantly been won : on enquiry, he; learned from a person, who keeps a 1 \ school a few rods from the place, and was himself wounded in the J battle, that the dead bodies of the] soldiers were burned on this very spot, and that they had never been covered, lie belonged to the Fn-‘ glish army, and staled that their own dead were collected and buried, and j that the Americans only were burnt, and that it was said at the time, that i it was in retaliation for similar con duct of the Americans ;;t Chippewa;, On being asked what became, of the bodies pf the officers, he pointed lo a place were they where interred, but observed that a number of them must have been burned, as they had been stripped during the night and very early in the morning, and could not 1 be distinguished from their men. Colonel Carr employed a number of school boys, by permission of the teacher, to collect a quantity of stores laying near the place, and covered the remains of his gallant fellow sol diers, at least sufficient to protect them trom the hogs. 1 From Ike Baltimore Mo: ning Chronicle. | “I can qui’ wieui I rhorsc." These few words have perhaps, done more mischief in the world than can be conceived. Youths, just, entering the threshold of life with the bright anticipations of their friends, [ allured by the syren pleasure, wilh the sparkling cup in her hand, al though sensible of the dark abyss yawning at their feet, too often stillo the disagreeable monitions of con science and friends, with this sophis tical and false consolation, “ I can quit when ! choose.” Alas! link by link, is the chain forging, which soon is to bind such unfortunate youths, and bid defiance to their noblest re-1 solutions. To true was the assertion ! jof Lord Bacon, that “ all the crimes! on the earth do not destroy so many of the human race, nor alienate so 1 much property, as drunkenness.” J; Expels reason—drpwns the memory —is ihe beggar's companion—and the true and only cause of the vast in crease of crime in the Woi Id. . There is certainly no character which ap pears so despicable and distrusting as that of a drunkard; he displays ovei v little spot in his soul in its utmost de formity. When once the youth be comes a devotee at the shrine of l.ac- I elms, and fond of his Gbatious, it is Tiling for him to think Lei him not , hill his conscience with the delusive I idea (<(“• quilling when he chooses,” i but lake a nohle and firm stand, from ■ that moment to cease indulging in his: clip, and shun those cemeteries off morals ami reputation with which 1 our city unhappily abounds. Drunk-1 enness, that fell destroyer of mind and morals, |ias elicited the exhorta* tion of the preacher—the pen of The moralist—the warn of die physician —the pleadings of wile and children ! with tears in their eyes—the remon - strmien of the parent—4lnd the pawn ing of'ill. - grave—but all will not do. j ft has reached an aw ful, and alarming 1 height it daily increases. It is I known to require an ekir,(ordinary | and noble of heart to resist! its blandishment and allurements. Is j it then the temptation you arc so easily to withstand, and tile habit Von are to “quit when you choose ?” Alt! no—-my dear young friends hearken to ray advice; when the so- ■ dnetive goblet is offered to your lips, 1 think not you will oiice more sip the ] liquid poison, because you “ can.quit J when you choose,” but consider that j that cup may probably be the one i that,will ( stablish that habit with you, which you will never lc able there- ' after, to conquer, and dash, the prof- ' sered cup with indignation to the j gr mud. Ckoffrjby. 0 ' n From the London Tree Brian, .Jug. JO. LORD LONDONDERRY. We have received lie following remarkable commimicaion respect ing the late, (secretary lor Foreign Afikirs : V; • U lloufosrnp-sur-Moi-, 17, 1822 ' u Sir—The accounty. the suicide of Lord Londonderry packed nie at this place, where it hasPxcited much interest, for there are ft n who deny tliat the Noble JMarqu > had many ; amiable qualities, in doiestic life, al though millions are gunning under the lamentable effects « his public career. Readdressing nn.», however, on this subject, I havtjuo desire to offer any individual opinion. My object is to call the attention of the public to a singular hcj. About 12 mouths ago, I was aTlied to bjea seafaring mail, whose Mine, for *y obvious reasons, i sim/l'uot commu nicate, to insert iii /i daily paper j which I then held hr town, an ad | vertisenient,. by Irim called a Petition, ; but, iu sass a very sevena attack upon ■ the Marquis of Londonderry, whom !he accused, of broudi of promise, and wanton disregard of his Claims as a spy,employed ujjOn foreign ser vice. On my refusal comply with ins request — compliance would been daigcrmis in the existing ■stntrt* of the hw upon libel —-the individual relemci to, uttered some expressions relievo to lord Londonderry. which 1 forsidered so alarming as to fed conscientiously bound to warn tire noble IMarquis a gainst assassination.* Upon inqui ry, arrangements were found to exist which made it too reasonable to sup pose tint,but fanny information the noble Maiquis would have been ex posed to serious danget, and notwith standing Lord Londohderry’s politi cal hostility against' lie, i received fro/n him a very polite letter of ■ thanks. I was naturally led to expect that Ithealii.r would have terminated in (he way recommended by me to his Lordship—viz. by dejriv'mg the, in ; dividual, of,a 11 motive for complaint j and irritation, being partly jniprc.'isrd with a hi Hcf that he had some cause I at least for complaint—On the day following the receipt of Lord Lou- S domlei ry's Inter. I was, however, waited ifp«/n by the tlten cliief stipen diary Magistrate o) vVesiiniilister, on ’ the part of the noble i ord, and re ■ quested to effiible Lm;il LoiuloUdei ry i to bind over tie* irritated indivicluul ! in sureties to keep the peace, !n i; ■; at 1 the same time told tint die Noble Lord was determined to investigate his pretended clams, ane if there j existed any grounds for them..to do ! him justice Upon this assurance, I I promised To c\i.;enCg against the man,but reflecting subsequently that vengeancy, and not security, might be j sought for, i wrote to the’Chief Ma -1 gistrate two hours after his visit, to ■ say that i would have nothing to do with the business. Notwithstanding ( this communication, the agents of the Noble Lord wen- so intent upon pun ishing the already wretched man at the expense of honour, dirt two Row street officers were desp itched to his I'esidence, with instructions, in the i event of their finding him from home, | to leave word that 1 was waiting for 1 him at my office. | 'i he same officers were then in structed to call at my house, and se cret thebiselves uulil the arrival of the individual in. question which tliey did without ceremony, ij had pru dence, enough to conceal /from them my indignation at the conduct of their employers, and to keep them in a back roem, whilst my publisher look ha opportunity to put the mmi whom tiny sopaht to entrap upon his guard, and to inform him that 1 was so far Horn dusking my house to be made 1 a rendezvous tor thief-catchers, that 1 would willingly assist him to remove to a distance, which 1 have reason to believe (hat lie did. When he was gone, 1 told the officers what I had done, Wild desired theta to inform theif master that in all Countries ex cept England, a Folire Magistrate is a Gentleman, and would scorn the j unworthy act to which lie (had re | course. W hat followed is irnmateri j al—- reproaches were made against | me front more quarters thw one; but 1 liftd awed conscieiftiouJy, and j cared little lor tlic cliief magistrate or my Lwd Londonderry. » My object iu stating ilrfse facts, j which I have hitlterto kept (join the I public, is to throw 1 some discredit } upon yie assertion that End Lon donderry never dreaded asstssiuation until his derangement; and at I lie same time to caution other ministers against the folly and wickedness of *' * hrn i, moristratei.l will) hi life horrible tin turn ol hi- i lentioii, lie man *cp toil, ‘J b,i\ e bred ev ry. ue'ispaper ;m Londoa—' irlirV wavtlxj Lit. lit I had been'ablclo expose the /my co voiigt; Would lia'vo been coin,, let ( I ni as i in rl bury my i u iiptduU, I vld have his Id'.’ 1? not tins »ti imiphau proof of the value ofth:il Press which i linisters madly route to dea'rov ?” t [Noth —,\? we.wore erei'/iricarits Willi I or I boiidomlcrry on 1 hi? <rc>oinn, we can safely as-ert that h cMien had ?lo fears. v\> thought hi? and hi? friends far 100 inditfuroy* and lints warm j oti tile 'subject.— (On / trilling with the feelings of any man - who has once served them, and who, have claims upon their attention, tj 1 am, &c. “ GIBBONS MERLE.” j - NEW Die ■ IONA 'Y. '■[ Age, an infirmity nobody owns.— At Home, the domestic amusement , of three hundred visitors iu a small t room to yawn at each other.— Bore, i every thing one dislikes. It also J j means any person talking of religion. ■ 1 Buying, ordering goods without pur- | | pose of paying.— Cirns-icure, some- i thing to swear by. —Common Sense, a vulgar quality.— Coachman, a gen- 1 tleman or accomplished nobleman. — Chariot, a vehicle for one’s servants, the dickey being the seat for the la -1 dies, and the coach box for the gen ■ tinmen.— Charity, a. golden ticket to . Catalan! or any other favourite per-- ■ former. — Debt, a necessary evil.— . Duty, doing as other people do.— lores, half naked.— Decency, keep i iug up an appearance.— Day, night; i or, strictly speaking, from 10 p. m. , y to (3 a. tn.-— Fronomy, obsolete. — j ‘Fortune, the summum botuvn. — 1 . Fashion, the Je nr seal quoiofex- 1 i cellcuce. Friend, moaning nut > i knownu—a person to pay j • > your ' debts, thane, every one’s , [• house but ynuf own.— fl. yjlfali.ty, . 1 1 obsolete'. IhnoHr, standing lire: [ 1 wi 11.— flighty ttcromythhfd, reading 1 i; mnsijir at sight; painting tlowels for; r i tlit* border ol’p. screen and a tali nt . j for guessing charades — hmt;\ Ittcati- j . ing cot liiiovyipmow tliat the ossified-j i turn of tfie heart has become a tiish . ionuble disease; but the world is still . to lie found in novels and romances'., . j — Matrimony, ti bargain.—iUoru/.-Vi/, | .I, a troublesome iuierruption to plea-1 . j sure.— Music: execution.— Modest, | | sheepish.— Morning, from noon to j f sun,-set. Nonsens:, polite coiTvcr-j satiou. Note, delightful. Not nt I j Home, sitting in your own drawiug i room. Prurience, parsimony. j 1 Pay, only applied to visits—Prorli . j gnlity, generosity —— Piety, hypo t | crisy.— Religion, occupying n''seatin I j some genteel diapehr— Syirit, con ’ tempt of decorum and morality t Style, splendid extravagance.— Time, only regarded iii rriindc.— -Tenth, , meaning uiicertiiin.— /Tec,,any fault in liaises and .servants'. Wi'dad. i in'esistibly agreeable. ICo rid, line the circle of fashionable people when iu town. I —.«»— 1 DrnrHng Inferences. —Two cleri cal gentlemen having called on a re verend brother in the country at ra ther an early hour in the morning, ■ found the minister in bed,' so vveio 1 usher.-d into the garden toluol; about them till ins reverence could get him -1 sell in a condition to receive them.— L ' Finding John, the minister's man, busy at work, one ul them entered 1 into a familiar conversation with this ' “ lesser prop of the church,” and a mongst other things inquired, Wcel, Jehu, how long litre ye been wi tin - minister r” “ Indeed,” quoth John, 1 “ I have been twa score years, sir.” 1 11 Aye, twa score years ! then ye’H be s able to preach yourself by this time, ? John r” “Na, na, sir,” replied 5 honest John, “ 1 canna preach, but i 1 dinna tliink but 1 could draw a few iufeicnees.” “ Wee] John,” Cun - tinned Ids interrogator, “ What in ference'wouhl ye draw frac that por- tion ofdcrij/ture which says, t( the ass > srtuffeth up the east wind ?” *• if t were to draw any,' replied the niin -1 ter s man, shaking his head slowly r and significamly, ‘-it would be, that ' he would siuilf iailg at ye ere he would • get lat ou t. ’ —Caledonian Mercury. | r The fqllowii grecipe must recom , mend itself at once to the palate, of [ everyone who is fond of something , comfortable at going to bed. , Plij).— Keep grated Ginger and i 5 Nutmeg with a little line,dried Lem- I on Foq[ rubbed together in a mortar. , To make a quart of Flip ;—Put . the Ale on the tire to warm, and s 'beai up three or sous eggs wiiti foui ; ounces of moist Sugar, a yea-spoonful . of grated Nutmeg or Ginger, and a J . quartern of good old Rum, or llfan-i [ fly- W hen the Ale is near to boil,I . put it into one pitcher, and the Rum ; j and Eggs,Ac. into another; turn it y from one pitcher to another till it is as I smooth as-Greajit. Tawatiduhllc.—A pint of Table ! Beer, [ot Ale, if you intend lor sup-! . 1 plement to yonr « Night Gap.”) al . tablespooiiful of Brandy, and a tea-1 spoonful ofbrovVn Sugar, or cledriiied by flip ; —a little grated Nutmeg or Ginger may be added, and a roll oi l • very thin cut Lemon Peel. Übs. —Before our readers make i any remarks on this Composition, we beg them to taste it; if the materials are good, and their palate vibrates in I unison with our own, they will find it < one of the pleasantest beverages they I ever put to their lips, and, as Lord Ruthven says, *• this is a right Gos sip’s Cup, that far exceeds all tko Ale, , that ever Mother Bunch made in her •/ file ilin".” - Ti ■ ■■iwrxwm, Job Printing, ' i Neatly exeCiited’At this Office, c . --- in i ■ —* T ium i ———a— —— — |.. THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 11123. We believe the ravages of I'ever in the United j States lure been more extensive the last summer | than at any former period within the recoUer.tion | of any living being. The most distressing accounts ■ of mortality to the human species continue to crowd the newspapers fromi various quarters. In New- Orleaas tiie deatiis have been between thirty and forty per day, and frpm seven to eight hundred oc curred in twenty-seven days! Not less inelanciioly are the accounts tra\n Pensacola, in which jdace most of the officers oPgoVernment have died, i’lie fever still existed at Nyw-Vork) on the 25th nil. but with some abatement; and parts of Kentucky, Ohio,Maryland, North-(sarolina,and .Michigan Ter ritory, have been awfulll scourged. The Destroy ing Angel lias passed wilt fearful swiftness to and fro, and what has been Spared from disease, lias beea destroyed by storing Much cause,on couijia rison, have we i.i this seftiun of the country, for gratitude ami tlianKliitnek. A daring oulra -e was committed in this city on tin- 6rh imp. |jy sever. I persons, in entering by force, through t lie from window at .Mr. Paul Uel land’s New Cunlecllomiry Store wbo after regal ing tlinic.ielve-, in t).e dark, with Whales er they Could find, j-.receedci! to the despicable work ofde molishiiig ami otherwise injuring many of the arti cles, sooie of which were carried oil'. Mr. 1!. is an old mill industrious man, and is recently from Sa vannah. lie (hick* thin their object was still more horrible, eveh that of tt&assinhtiiM! as will lie seen by bis advertisement in to-day’s paper, in Which a reward lias been offered for the detection of the depredators. , .... The follow big extracts of letters will give the t caoer some idea of the state of die t.' itoa Crypt in iVussissipi 1 iioj New-Orleans. They are copied fi.oin a [ irierVif the stb of Ortohyr. JjUien J rout tx.i/uii ii.tr if La j_. ** i"c nil mid whi ms Jr*vc- m id.:, some hu’.o.: in our ci>ons.” Letters from mar Purl Gibson , {JJiss ) 4 Uhl ly oi- quantity nigh equal in what they wery lust season ; so lb.it crops ttt tins quarter Which have lain order the yftui*, will no Uaubl- pay better than the new crop.” Lnltsr front Jffi.rson county) (Jli/.vs.) — The Col Flops of this sidle will un questionably bo very short .the' ensuing rOUSOll.” LtUr.rfrom Feliciana.y— ii The weather at present i favorable for the Tops, and a it continues, will I hope chock the rot vv .iich hits been so destructive hitherto, i he cotton h aoi so good as it was just year of the your before,’’ Letter fn.tn lFuodril!e x ) — ‘ 1 The Tops of Cotton in Mils' neighborhood an at least 0 1" third injured by the rot.” Letterft on, near I■ InkiuyriiU, (.I Lis.'} —*" It thd £0 oend0end crops of !lie cattniry hare suffered ifi pioporlfon with Uwmi of oir n- i,;,')bor'.ood,'fj:otli our oJJ enaiiiv lh rot, Tun crops moat prove very in did rent this t ear.” Letter from ’ - v 7, .'I urt :t,r .iji e..— * f Thf chenille in tilt parish ol tin Cary, hotr committed great ravages in the Colton, an 1 w ill injure much the crops in (lack apas. On our planlatinn weshou d have nt .do 1 d) halos) as i( is, v;e earnest cal CMif.it" on more than lit).” Letters fruti) Nit tehee —“ Severn! to -i me effort above, from one.third to one-half short.” Abraham Touro, Esq. a Jew,and a respectable merchant, of Poston, who lately lost his life by being thrown from a gig, has in the following lega cies, evinced a liberality of disposi tion worthy of the remembrance and example of those who are professors of Christianity. na sachosotu (Jen. Hospital, slo,Ode Syving gne, Vcw-York, jnptoo Synagogue, Newport, UV'OO Boston Female Asylum, 0,000 Asylum fur Indigent Boys, 5,001) Humane Society, 5,000 [dV Y. Daily Advertiser. Letters have been received in this city from officers of the U. S. ship i Peacock, at Havana, by which we are sorry, to learn that Midshipman Christopher Lowndes, than whom wo have never known a finer youth, Idled on the 28th,September, lie | was taken in a fit on the tup-gallant j forecastle, was conveyed to the' whrd i room, and, hi a few minutes expired without a iiifHtiuur. Lieutenant Thomas 11. Bcwvkr, also a most meritorious officer, after : a severe illness’of three days, depart ed this life on the (ith ‘ • yptral Ini. Th« following gentlemen have been named to succeed Mr* Cheves, j as President ol the Hank oft he United States—Mr. Lloyd, of Boston, Mr. Call in, ol i\ew-\ oi k, Mr. Chatmcey and Blr. Meredith, of Philadelphia, Mr. Ellicptt and Mr. White, of Balti more, and My. Tazewell, of Virginia. By a gentleman recently from Lincoln, frq understand that TiVIT- Ti, the notorious has been convicted, at the last Superior Court for that county, of passing a Virginia Bank note, aliened from five to fifty dollars.—The Judge had not passed sentence, when our infor mant left Lincolnton. At the same term, a man named Fortune was tried and convicted for the murder of his wife. Also anoth er man lor murder, and a negto for burglary. [ Carolina Observer . A new way of packing Cotton. — Maj. Watkins, of this county, exhib ited a few clays since, a couple of hales of cotton, of the new crop, packed in oak boards. The bales appeared to be very compact, the cotton of good quality', and well secured from the weather the' i.eaance* s u sc „f,h isu E“2- I tule tor cotton bagging. ll " H [Hunts nHe Repulli cah I Bit*, I In WrightsWongh, on ( !le 2 8th I I in JOHN />. HNDREWS. I This Day, at 10 o’clock, I HHDS. Jamaica Ru m I I’ipes Hoi,hi,j (;i n> ■ Quarter Casks Wiac, I Fiikin.- Uiitior, ■ Do. L’li'J, ■ Barrels Northern Uu m , ■ I Jo. Ca«ks Nails,- ■ i ranks Shoe, and Boots, & c I November 7 ’ «-c. ■ Arrearages dutTTo the I -National Keffister I ; ’ipuest Who,owe subs. * I to me National liegtiiter li»p I wMla, or any part bf the p t Hod between I Um M *V%, mia, and the 31m oi I cennber, are rypn.l. dtotr i t I U.e on, by mail wltho.rt delay and , I save,lurtfier trouble. 3 mto I Jonathan Elliot I ,i C/iy of (J i. i,; * I ’ wbabare been authored (, v I work°ar T ,f '* ?,rrrai 01 th- above I J-E. I I J. In. (.’lenmi, I 1 1 ( ‘ Vc ' r/ dt>o> 10 / tV Thoniat's I u-iidingsA I PAS KOI! SAIJ2, t K Coksicmkiivt, I th;\l Hags Coffee I oMQi tV • ’ ( - fJRrt 'Wrior I old S . Donupgo, thought to be « equal in quality to Jam,) ■ o 0 barrels superior North-rir Floor A quant,t v oflow pri-ed S{>.»„j-h S e . . in quarter and half boxes (, No vell he, 7 Wit City Collector and Treasurer’s tIJVAL iSOXICE. Y IK'-*I. person- who have not had a„ ~, opportunity of paying their City 1 axes, for the year I and those who bare not end their Retail and Dray hi s " Ul l ,l ‘'a-e rail on the sui >, riber aud settle the. same beioie „ 01 December next. oduu w, . exc-utanfs a-. 11 be issue f against them imme.ti udv without distinction to peisou*. lie may »» lira, at tin miner in./, m-' t ’ .’Kiijue and l//s Hridgfe 1 i>nui\ '' ’riMfii? John W. W ilde, c. Ik t. c. a. No-, em or 7 2:. (I To Kent, i he Ildus' and Lot at pre -cut oer-tipied by ,rs. Eliza '•» "" Reynold street, anu the j range of Warehouse imm-dlal-h i-.ithe rear. Apply to ’ John VV. Wilde, AttorneyJ\.r John />. gu/t. Not ember 7 ‘ ‘2B ts 1 To i.eut, Mflie (louse at present in the oc'-apancy of the stibsc riher. on ElUs-,-treet. J John W. Wilde. , November 7 ‘op p , ) / 1° iAeut r r.“ £ ?B *be Dwelling-iibtise next -dtl!ooi- below the brick buildings, «", u ns ’Kiiirie and t-ibqltz’s b’uilc | buildings. Possession will be gi ,:i im mediately. Apulv (<> | R. H. Wilde, 1 , Or, in his chsanei, tu Joitx W, , iijje. 1 j Nuvvmb, r-7 up ( f .’j To be,it • .<?‘-sL Tim up,>«r par! of the Cm k ■ HMOB 3 St '"’ e of ~Jr- U i| liam H. j o_.ikm. lu . Ihc stairs are on tile ■oul-ide and the rooms would answer for a JdrrViH family. Enquire at this olßta. j November 7 28 ts Wanted, 4 0000 Couk, tN usher and Ironcr. ■s-V Good wages will tie given. Enquire at this office. , November ? 28 If 1 INotice. t, REWARD will be given to any , * ('ecson 'vlic will give inlormatiou of | those persons entering the LIT fJjfi > ••• A.V’S Coulee(iona.y Store, on I,he ■ night oi the Bth hist, between the-hours , "f 12>nd I, destroying some of hi«Con lionnrie*, having perhaps also, the in • tpntlon to assassinate him, as the pro perty they destroyed was very small. Stolen or Strajed, FRO'I ;*lr. David Smith’s door, on Tuesday^night Jast, a bay florse, saddle anil Bridle; the horse is al>out 15 hands high, rather slow in his move ments and well known in (his flare, as he be 1 mg- Jo the subscriber. Woo ever returns tjie same will receivO five dollars reward Slid no quedioos a>ked. John Marshall. Novemtier 7 ' 28 dt Will be Sold, ON the 23d December hext, at the late residence of Dixon Ligun, dec. all (he personal estate of said deceased, • ccbsistjng of one negro woman, house hold and kitchen furniture, and crop of cotton, and'other articles, too tedious to mention. Thomas Lyon, ndm’r, ■November 7 v’3 2t[>