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•r accrued within tfceigebftweßfyone year*
feme covert non cetrpot mentis or imprisoned,
that then such petfon or perfon| (hall be at,
liberty, the time of limita
tion fh?»!l have expired, to bring such aftion*
or foitr, so that the sane be brought within
two years next after the coming to, Os be
ing .of full Dge, difcovert of sane memory or
at large, and at no time after the said two
years.'" . And provided also, that if any per.
Ton \v.ho is or. shall be entitled to any such
c* ttcfpafs, stflault, menace, and bat
' ter/ fltil imprifenirefft, be, or shall be at
t'; fc time .my such action (hall have accrued,
within :Jic age of twenty-cne years, feme
rtry oSajos mentis, or’imprifoned,
then such pCifori or p.-rfona (hall be at libn
ty, BOtwHthftanding the rime herein before
IJ.-rifcd for the bringing of such ad ion shall
h?*c fXp* ed, to bring lucii aclion# or Tubs,
so that the fame If* brought within one year
next after the coming to, or being of full age
dlfcnvcrf, of sane .memory or at large, and
at no time after the faiJ one year ; ami that
the commercing an aftic'n or aftions within
the time limited, and afterwards difeontinu
ing or hrcoming non-suit in the fame, shall
nut defeat (he operation of this aft.
Src. 3. .And be it farther enabled by the
arthorify afarefuid, That when any petfon
or perfutw shall remove his property without
the limit* of this fhte, or abfeonds or con.
ccab hiir.fclf ia that his creditor cannot com.
ntfree an aftion, that the per (bn so refso.
ring his property cr abfcondihg bbtf-lf, shall
not be entitled to the benefit of :his atfT, but
(hall be anfwrrTlc for any jufbdemand against
him, her or them—and this aft (hall be deem,
evlj held and taken as a public aft, and the
}“udgcs *»»the fuperfor and jufiiccs of the in.
erior courts and Jufluxl of the pence within
this (hue, shall he bound thereby, although
tire fame mall rot be plcnd. A
fvtCv 4. Ahd be it further enabled, That
all aftidns upon the Case, oilier than for
worcU which (ha'll be said or brought, at any
lime after the pftfing of' this act, (hall be .
commenced and ford within four years next
after thc.caufc of such aftion or suit hath ac
crued, and not after
See. p. And be it further enabled by the
authority afortfaid , 'That the aft entitled
'• an aft for limitations of afttnns and for a.
1 voiding of (nits in law,” parted the twenty -
fix.h day of March; 1767, he, and the fame
is hereby repealed.
ABRAHAM JACKSON,
ufuier of the Hevfe of Reprejn.tati'ves,
JARED IRWIN,
Prefdf at f thi Senate , pro tent.
Aifentcd to December r, iSqj.
JOHN MILL EDGE, Governor.
NINTH CONGRESS.,
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.
FRIDAY, March 28.
* On motion of M*. J. Randolph, the
House rcfolved itfclf into a committee of the
, Wh01e...-Mr. I. C. Smith in the chair,
on the following refnlutions submitted fume
time fmcc by Mr. J. Randolph.
tft. Risolveci; Th? t a contraftcr under
the government of the U. S, is an officer
within the purview and meaning of the con.
fti‘uticn, arul, as such, is incapable of hol
ding a feat in this Houfc.
2nd, Resolved, That the union of a
plurality of officers in the petfon of a Tingle
jr.dividur.l, but more tfpeeiaily of the milita.
*y> is repugnant to the fpiftt of the confli.
tut lon of the U» S. and tends to the intro
ducing ofan arbitrary government;
3d. Resolvid, That ptovificn ought
(0 be made, by law, to render any cflicer,
in thcarmy or navy of the U. S. incapable
of holding any civil office under the U. S.
The question was taken cn thefc resolu
tions without debate.
The firft was agreed to— -Ayes 54
’Nets 37. 1.
The fecend was agreed to... Ayes 75..-
and
The third was agreed to without a divi
iion, ' ‘
When the commtrree rose and reported
their agreement to the resolutions.
The House immediately confidcrcd the re
port.
On concurring with The committee of the
whole in their agreement to the firft rcfolu
tion, a debate ot length and intend enfacd,
which (hall be given in course a; length.
MeflVs. J. Randolph and J. Clay fup
perted a concurrence in the report of the
committee; and JMcflVs. Filk, Eppes, Al-
Ron, Findley, G. W. Campbell, b . NcU
L-n, Early, Smilie, Sloan, Bidncll, Rhea
of Ten. Jackson, Kelly, Daw Ton, Elmer,
and Southard oppoftd it, when the qoeflion
was taken about 4 o’clock by yeas and nays,
Yeas 25. v S 6,
SATURDAY; March 29.
A treflage was received frem the Senate
informing the Hcu f c that they had parted a
bill t« carry into eueft the provlfionsof the
eighth feftion of .ut •* Aft regulating the
grants of 1 J, ard providing for the dispo
sal of the lamliicf the U. States, fouth of
the Tate cfTc^ttfite.”
Tins bill relates to what arc generally
dcncn invtfd ;he YA/JCO CLAIMS.
The bill h iving been read a firft time,
Mr. R. Nelson moved 10 rejeft it,
Mr. Kelly wilhcd jt postponed to al
low time fnr considering it.
Mr. Clark fupprrted its rejeftier^
Mr. Greg® advocated the lame course.
Mr. Cock was in favor of a short poft
ponctrent.
Mrl J. Randolph spoke at cenfidera
ble length, in favor of rejefting the bill.
Mr. Conrad was in favorofapoftpooe
ncni, tko’ hostile to the bill.
S': *
Mr. Smilib declared himfelf of the fame
Opinion. j,
Mr. J. Randolph again {poke at con.
fiderablc length in favor of rejefting the
bill.
The Yeas anti Nays were then taken on
the qucftlon, ct lhall the bill be rejected"
—-and were, Yeas 62——Nays 54. —So that
the bill is rejected.
Mr. J. Randolph moved that the
House adjourn. He laid chat a few, days
ago the Home had adjourned on account of
the death of General Jackson. He hoped
they would now adjourn on account of h:«
refotreftios. For he had told him, that if
he could give a death blow to the Yalsob
bufmefs, he Ihculd die in peace.
Adjourned—-Ayes 58.
From Washington City, March a6.
We undcrft.ind that the latest di (patches
received from Mr. Monroe best date the
28th of January, and that they .Rate, that
in confeqiiehce of the itldtfpofuion of Mr.
Pitt no ultimate arrangements had been made
for the adjeftment of our relations with
Greet Britain, but that hopes cf such ad
justment were entertained from the complex
ion of the new adimniftration.
======*
CHARLESTON, April 9.
EAST-BAY STREET LOT
TERY.
SEVENTEENTH DAY’S DRAWJNS.
Prize of 100 dollars—No. 3162.
Prizes of £9 do!!hs-..Nos. 8947 3073.)
Prizes of 40 dbliafs-—No«. 4 -j.j. 5-219,
2595 3-92. . ;
Prizes of 20 4178 2589
622916432330.
Prizes of 12 dollars-. -Nos. 5743343*
13391084 2664 461-6 2315 3801 2462
773 6017 6964 6169 5713 8781 9697
21 S 3 6773 8791 )225 12.4 6427184929
, *47 3542 2823 8378: 3732 2607 g + io
7662 7756 4092 1973 1456 ISO 5981
8839 1998 8469 1366666 1206.
EIGHTEENTH DAY'S DRAWING.
Prize of 400 dollars—-No. 7339,
Prizes of 200 dollars-. Nos. 6497 77#*,
Prize of 100 dollars.— No. 61 u.
Prize of 70 dollars—• No. 477.
Prize of 40 dollars... No. 7107.
Prizes of 20 dollars.-. Nos. 7210 3191
339+-
Prizes of 12 dollars-—Nos. 1636 1373
4999 * B ?J 9997 2 5°5 5995 T 34322668
*973 6 J7 2 5757 7 6 +7 >o*+ 7° 6 ,477 V
3649 42177031 7892 3447 222 5616.
3794 9864 125.7 2 2896
8 “5; 2650 25526338 1739 1917 9J39'
8668 7778 9054 4177 454.3 K 504 7104’
4827 1633 2077' 199° 95 s * 7i33 *Ol9 1
, 968716162622 6419 1713 617 8(348
37674863 7771 4934 6M 1984 751
lBrj j6O 327 4286 7406 6357 6784. ,
nineteenth day’s drawing.
Prizes of 7q dollars ; —Nos, 2094 4024.
Prizes of 40 dollars-—Nuji, 1723 8207
Prizes of 20 dollars--. Nus. 657 7096
8027701097891036.
Prizes of 12 dollars--'-Mbs. 997 2007
2357 6702 5363 2817 5942 6893 '3014
1289 977 9359 4809 79 5367 91-10 8721
2627 1597 434.3 7176 $ll2 4199 304047
7370 4129 7028 77X2 4232 8101 3970
8.7-55 22.79 75.35 878 37748163298
58744174 710 47822911 8276 7167
3973 33 1 7 6 -5 ‘7*6 3430 4927 .7625
43*7 9' °* 5553 4846 7639
. 3?40 535<> 46934-752 50d» 673 8837
608860296164 4808 2477 1234 8196
49 2 3 2953-
twentieth dat’s drawing. .
Prize's of 200 dollars—-Nos. 9659 ' 6
4’59- / 1 ;■•
Prizes of 100 dollars—-Ncs.- 714.7
5381. ' 4
Prizes of 50 dollars—Nos. 8804 6oco
3673-
Prizes cf 40 dollars-.-Nos. 6976 8227
4910.
Prizes of 2o do!las.-Nos. 8544 2107
7°4 1 54169773.
Prizes of 1 2 dollars-.No«. 9018 7700
7+54 2926 2228 4701 3422 464.6 7994
!06 5793 2579 462 1101 570 7042 4666
9 11 5 6993 923 2226 7497 9434,7701
370 71783317 107 6416 7572 9256 8001
5807 9 7777 3442 878 2737 9727 4728
9663 7507 3757 6443 7817 7199 1741
9413 832 6737 2310 264853497.7.
(Jatudlo the Wheel this day, 382 dollars.
Total ga in, 6678
The following Tich PRIZES jet lemain
in the. Wheel: 17.000 dollars ; 10.000 ;
s>coo; two of 1000; live cf 700; Itven
of 400 ; twelve or fourteen of 200 i and a
van number ioo’s, 50’s, 40%. Sic.
. 1 f { •'
&T The Drawing ‘w iT? 1 -e"conririfirtf Oh
MONDAY, the 14th inlhnr, am o’clock
Holders of tickets which have do»*n prizes,
may have them exchanged for und.rawn
tideecs, «n application to the City Trcafurer.
Dr. Anderfcn Phyfidan General in In,
nets, that the number of pc.Tons ino. 6
enlaced there tor the Cow-pock, amounts, to
250 000—So great has been its success {in
alt places where it has been generally adopt
ed) that the Bramins, in their extravagant
veneration of ch« Cow, havedtfired that the
vaccine matter may be Hykd “ Ihe dew
Heaven,’*
Mr. John Lanodqn is re-elcfted Go
vernor of the ftatc of New.Hampfliirc with,
out opposition, NaJb% Inul%
From a London Paper',
4 The war against the insurgent Polygars
continues almost without inttraiffion against
one Chi«f or other. The following uan
cxtraft of a letter from an officer recently
employed against the Rajah of Ponaghuf :
“ After a march of five days and nights
without intermission, ar.d without deep, and
nearly without food, we arrived lafc night
in two divisions, each having two brigade
guns, before the fort of Ponaghur, ao
miles North cf Vellore ; and at''three o'-
clock this morning commenced our attack.
After a heavy cannonade of fix hours a breach
was difcoveied in the South bastion ; and
'the storming party, coufiftirig of tbe flank
’companies of the ift Battalion of the 4th
Regiment, and the ift Battalion’ of the i6.h
Regiment, with feme gallopcts, and too
pioneers to clear the jungles, were ordered
to advance. Our gallant fellows marched
to the spot with their accuftoincd bravery,
under a shower of (hoc, and in face of 5000
men, who lined the breach and ramparts.—
On reaching the breach, having reserved
their fire, they difebarged a policy, arid the
forlorn hope rushed forward with the havo.
net, wi<h fitch enthusiasm, that the enemy
fled »n all directions, abandoning to us the
forr, and leaving behind them 2,4(3*0 killed
and wounded.
“ Our lofson this occasion was—ift bat
talion, 4‘h regiment, 12 killed, 30 wound
ed ; 2<l batralion, tft regiment, 9 killed, 23
wounded; ill battalion, 16 h regiment,
17 killed, 41 wounded ; arid poineers, '5
killed, 11 wounded—Total, 43 killed, and
1 05 wounded. Lieut, Leith, of the 4th,
was the only officer wounded. Capt. phi.
lipfon loft psrt of his jacket, and federal
buttons from the front of hjs waistcoat, by
a izib. (hot. Notwirhftaoding the great
fatigues which our troops have undergone
the service is fj urgent as not to admit of
their halting for rest, and we ate again un
der march, in perfuit of she fugitives..’ 1
The treasure taken by the army under
general VVcllcfly* at Anamadghur and As
say, is find to have proved to be greater than
was at firft supposed. The specie alone is
now said to amount to four hundred thousand
lacs cf rupees; and its conveyance required
four hundred tumbrills, each drawn by
twelve bulkcks. Nine thoofand camels,
laden with fiiks and mull ins ; fsxty thousand
bullocks laden wirli rice, and two thousand
elephants likewise fell into the hands of the
victors,
A very large gun, 69 pounder, was taken
by lord Lake, ait Agra, made wholly of
gold and film, and supposed to be worth
one hundred-thousand pounds, 1 Gold chains,
diamonds, pearls, and other valuables, worth
of a million sterling, recompenfedtha
enterprise of our troop* on the fame cccafion.
TJw detachment from the Britilh army
on the Churnbull river, which had been in
pursuit of the Rajah bfFebongtr, haa re
turned to Hfad-quarters; the enemy having
taken refuge in the hills, whither it was
deemed inexpedient to follow him.
225CSCSC2
Extras of a letter from Major Poster
t* the Secretary of Wat, dated ,
Natchitoches, Feb. 8, i,g 0 6.
Your letter of the 201 h of November was
received cn the 24th ultimo, and tbe rtqueft
. therein tnendoned, was without less of time
forwarded to, the commandant of Nacogdo
ches, from whom I received, on the 4th
intt. an answer, in which he refufed to give
the assurance required. 1
Deeming this reply decisive, I immedi
ately detached captain Turner, with sixty
men, to remove a party cf Spaniards, that
had a few days before palled and taken post
on this fide of the Adais; and to pat role
the country between this post and the river
Sabine, The former he eaftly accomplifhcd,
: .*30(11$ now performing the latter. r «
> i he report of preparations making by car
Spanilh neighbors for war, are various; but •
generally agree, that a confidence number
of troops are progrdiing from the interior to
the caftward ; -that near three hundred of
them were a lew weeks since, at the great
crofting cf the I rinity, where there were
near, two hundred beeves, five hundred
horses, and a considerable magazine of flour,
I hat they have ten g’ms now mounting
at Nacogdoches, where most of them have
been lately received ; and that immediately
after lieut. Platt, tbe bearer of my letter to ••
the commandant of Nacogdoches, left that
plaee on his return, a Spanilh officer was
dtfparched t* fiayaii aux Pierre, to impress
on the minds of the inhabitants of that set.
tie men t, the allegiance that they owed to
hiy Catholic majtfty ; ordered them to join
his standard whenever required ; and in
formed them that the Red river would be
the boundary line between the Spanilh
country and th« United Stater.
Frem the f'irgtnia Argus,
Extra ft of another litter from a member of
Ceng refs ta the Editor , dated Wa/htr.g.
ton, March 26.
“ The Houfc ofßeprefentatives have this
day palled the bill for prohibiting certain
articles of the growth, produce, or raanu
failure of Great Britain..; :
Ayes—. —g 3-Noes —3 2.
Not a single bedcraliit voted in favor cf
the bill---- Ihe following Republicans voted
against it : V
from Virginia.
J. Randolph,
Garnett,
Thompfuo, *
Trigg,
Georgia. Spalding, t
N. Carolina, Stanford, j
Kentucky. Sandferd, 1
New-Yoik, D. C. Vcrpfenk, 1
8
American Coins]
Number of Coins made at the Mint of the
United States fincc its eftablifliment on the
ift. of March 1793, to the 31st of Dcceta
her 1805, Eagles, 133,824; Half Eagles,
2 f9»489i Eaglf«» 11,315; Dol
ors, 1,4835032 ; Half Dollars, 787,19 7}
Quarter Dollars, 134,278; Dimes, 404,
406; Halt Dimes, 205,543; Cents *6,
659*947 5 Half Cents, 2,570,810. Num
ber of coins 22,594,822 amount, 4,747,853
dollars, 72 cents.
SPARTA, April 5.
Baldwin County.... The Justices of the
Inferior Coijrt of Baldwin having met at the
house of Mr. George Hill, on Tucfday last.
Made the following appointments .
Wilson Whatley, Receiver of Tax Re
turns, Edmund Lane, cfq. Colleftor,
Fitji Difirid... Philip Cook, and John
Miles,' Justices ; Second Diftridl.. .Peter F,
Flournoy and Drury Jackson, Justices,
'Third Drjiridj —Garland Harwick and Si
mon Holt, jun’r. Juftite?, Fourth Dijlritl
—-William Brown and Daniel Zachary, Jus
tices, v j
The election for Clerk of the Superior aftd
Inferior Court, Sheriff, Coroner, and coun
ty Surveyor is to take place on the firft
Monday in May next,
* ‘ » i ■ '
Pierpcint Edwards, is appointed by the
PrefwSent and Senate of the United States,
Diftrift Judge of the Stale of Connecticut,
Vice Richard Law, deccafcd.
Savannah Paper .
AUGUSTA, ig.
On Monday last came on the-Election for
members of City Council, in Augafta, when
tire following Citizens were defied.
Upper iVard —Maj. James Perrie, Isaac
Herbert, Middle Ward- —Samuel Wigfall,
Robert Creffwcll, Ferdinand Phinizy. Low.
er Ward —George Adams, Jcfeph Ashton.
On Tuefday the Council was sworn in,
and soon after chose Thomas Flournoy efq,
their day the Council
■ will proceed to the eieflion of City Officers*
NEWS CONDENSED.
OUR limits, though extended, are yet
too narrow for a detail of all the foreign
and domestic Intelligence, that pours in on
us; we null therefore, condenfc. Admiral
Gravina has bton so ill of his wounds in
Cadiz, that be hud received extreme unlit on.
Matfhalls Barnadctte Se Berlhicr were to be
railed to the dignity cf Princes, for their
military services- -The King of Sweden,
in great dudgeon,-has intimated his royal
pleasure of taking no farther concern in the
Germanic diet...-In the British house of
Commons, Whitbread has preferred a frclh
charge sgainft Lord Melville. Sen, Sf*
Cyr, at the head of 40,000 men, halted on
the frontiers of Naples, waiting the anival
of Mafiena, who was to take pofftffion of
that devoted kingdom—ln addition to the
Gazette accounts, Gen. Walpole was ap.
pointed under-secretary cf State in the
foreign department; Creevy Secretary to
the board cf controul...Earl Lauderdale
was to be placed in the house of peers—
Mr. Curran, the Irilh orator, was to be.
Attorney General in Ireland, and Councel
lor, M‘Mahon, brother to the Col. Solicit
tor General, in the room of Plrnket and
Balh.—A French Squadron, off Gibraltar,
captured a B.itilh convoy, having on board
the 13th and 54 regiments. The new
ministry in England, though pacifically in
clined, are said to have it in contemplation
to incrcafe the regular force, to 90,000 men
more, American produce, except Cotton,
continues to be dull in the Englilh markets
-.-Sea Iflnnd was from j 8 to 2 (killings;
Short ftaplo, 15T to 161. From the move
ments and direction of a wing of the French
army, it is supposed that Bonaparte intends
to teke Turky in Europe, to accommodate
the Emperor of Germany and the Pope,
for whom he destines, it is believed, Cob
ftantinople, as his future papal Sec—Noth
ing impcflible or improbable in all this—
The Kings cf Wirtcmbcrg and Bavaria
were to have received- their crowns in Pans
...Preparations were renewed at Boulogne
on a grand scale, for the invasion of Eng
land ; but Bonaparte is said to have declar
ed that she may have peace, by.reducing her
Navy.--Admiral Sir Hyde Parker, died
lately in England. The annex,ticn of the
Electorate of Hanover to Pruflia, has been
announced by proclamation on the 9th
February-.-George's Arms were all taken
down i./o much for thz King of Pruflia, aa
a man of peace... Parliament has sppropria
ted for the payment of Mr.
Pitt's debts..-Napoleon’s step son, Beau
harnois, is married to the princess royal oi
Bavaria—F. Erfktqe, son of the new Lord
Chancellor of England, is appointed Minister
to the U. S, of America,—.Far many
weeks previous to the last accounts, no
condemnations of American property had
taken place in England—-The Dutch had
seven fail of the lire in thensw Diep, ready
to ft art--. According to arrangements,
15,000 French troops were to remain in
Bavaria at the cxpencc of that country,
6000 in Wirremfaerg, and 4000 in Baden.
A British force of 8000 men, under the
command of Gen. Baird, landed at, and took
poffcffion of the cape of Good Hope, about
the middle of January; previous to this, two f
of their transports were loft, and gen. York
Ct the artillery drowned.—We have accounts
from Philadelphia, that the Leanderhad
rived at Jacquemel, and tha; Mironda s-- 3 ’