Newspaper Page Text
I '3 l '*"'' -f-' 1—
,» ... .-—*— ,:■—-— —■■ ■!(,'"■;!»*"
.. ’?t '■■ »o»«Hi«i» £* ■ >
KEJIJV (J CJMttll'OM ;
■ . _ .■' •ffiv'fjl.'. ‘.’iX- - l ‘‘*'' ',
■ IP ipw|p.; r;!
To the General, Ml>*n the
■Jri, the (<u»rn ol England,
cobbett.
PTcUIUKII,],
-However as to his power over the
'Queen, the fact not only becomes glaring-
Jy false, but the very idea ridiculous,
when we look at other parts of her Ma
jesties conduct, which are matu re of jmb
''lie notoriety. Firs', observe, that Bergis
mi was auxious-to get hit -family shout
the Queen. To get them in to be living
upon bet. To get them to share largely
in the pickings; and last be got an Estate
from her- Thus, -then, he was anxious to
enrich himself. Thm is represented to us
by the Attorney-General. Secondly, ob
serve, we are told that his power over live
Qii'.en was absolute-: that she humbled
herself in all manner of ways to gratify,
him: that she even mended his. cUnthet ; t
and, m short, -was ready to do any thing
even to. the Washing-of his shirt, and the
blacking of his shoes. Thisis the .picture’;
-which is given us ot her submission to bit
will- Spaniel dog was never more sub-i
missive to his master than uurQ"een was
to this Bergami ~ t hirdly, observe, that
the Queen received acleare/urtyfve thou
sand found* a.year from England . which:
money, if the other port of the story were
true, which money, -niVid, If the fact of
-his power over the-Queen were not a lie,
wasjustsu much money placed at the ab
solute disposal of Bergami.—Fourthly,
observe, then, that he did not take this;
<money to himself, that he did not lay jit'
■ out upon Estates in Italy; but that he," 1
who, one would have thought, would haVfei
diked travelling no better than « tootman
likes to whet knives,-chose to lay this'
money outTd long and-wearisome jour
n ys about Italy, into the Austrian Ter
ritories, through Germany, over the Alps;
and« In tiresome, fatiguing aud-dangerous
Voy ages by sea. Is not this a monslrous'
supposition? Mind, the money was his;
it was his choice 'that 1 was to be followed •
it was his taste that was o bo consulted ;
he had about him adlmtUing woman who
was as a mere worm under his foot, and
he chooses ip embark on boaru English
men of war; ho cnooses to visit all the-is
lands in the 'Mediterranean'.; he chooses
to sail to the Barbary coast; he chooses to
purchase a polacre, and to sale in that
mast uncomfortable sort of vessel <rom
.port tc port,from island to island, amidst
-all sort* of inconveniences and.perils; he
-•chooses to visit ancient Greece, and even
to Jerusalem, to see the ruins of that once
famous city, to view the spot where the
temple of Holomon stood, and to visit the
sepulchre of Jesus Christ, a low, illiterate,*
vulgar minded Courier, who had beeniiaif
harrassed to death a -few years before in
Buonaparte'sHuas'iancampaign; yea, this
man chooses to spend thirty five thousand
. pounds a year in this manner, hying it out.
upon attendants, upon innkeepers, upon
captains and crews of vessels, upon cam
els,guides and God knows what, ins tea-...
of keeping it to himself; living at a snug
house in thb Milanese, which, by the by,;
the Queen must have best liked, 100, tfm>
purchasing estates till they ewe lied out in"
to principalities! every tongue will ex
claim, this it a .lie ! i
Then ran it possibly be-believed that ii
was his uesire to expend -the money n,‘
tlhf way; and yet, if it was not his deair. ,
it was the Queen’s desire—as it unques
tionably wa». -Look, then at her journeys
and her voyages ; read the list of p act s
that she visited AH lhat is ’venerable, in
-antiquity; all that is great in nature, all
that could tend-to enlarge and enrich the
mind, «U these were manifestly the oh-,
jects of her enquiry and her pursuit. Let
me ask, then, whether a mind could have
been so occupied, and be, at the same mo
ment sunk into the lowest and filthiest
enjoyments of the lowest and most filthy
sensuality ? Would a woman abandoned,
to lustful enjoyments, have encountered
•fatigue's and perils almost every day of her
-life for a senes qf years, and that too, for
•the manifest purposo of storing -her mind
Avith knowledge ? would such a woman
have spent her money and her time in vis
iting Athens,-Utica and Jerusalem, would
a oman so lost Ip all souse of eve y thing
hut mere criminal lust; would such a Ivo
■man nave spent her time and ene mnier
ed continual peril lor the Sake of acjdr
ing a knowledge of-countries and of Si he
relics of antiquity. To believe this is ut.
lerly impossible; and yet we must be.
lieve t ils, or believe the Attorney Gene
ral to be the most viperous slanderer that
ever opened a pair of lips,
-Observe again, that the Attorney Gen
end tells us that this power «of .Bergami
over the Queen, and consequently the li
editions and foul intercourse between :
ihtm, continued up to the time of her ma
jesty's departure from St. Outers for Eng
■land. Now then, behold a woman sunk
in sensuality, lost to every feeling of lion
or and of shame, dealing Upon a man,
clinging round him every night and lol
loping upon him every day; caring for no
thing in the Whole world but for the en
joyment of the person of this man; behold
thia woman thus sunk, thus possessed, up.
on the hare reading of an Eiigluh New*s
paper, by which slie finds that the king
is dead and that her name is left out of the
liturgy, wiiles instantly to the prime min
ister, remonstrates with him upon the in
justice of such omission, auirequests that
her name may be instantly put into the
mouths of Hie English people in their
prayer. This ve knbw to he « fact ; and
this simple lact gives the fie direct so all
the disgusting representation of lipenti
ousness, and to all the base attempts to
Inake us believe that Bergami possessed
an absolute (lower ovei heri If he had
possessed that absolute power; if she had 1
been the mender of his clothes, and worse 1
than his spaniel dog, would she ever have 1
written that letter ? The Attorney- Gen
eral spy* lhat she saw with none hilt bis
eyes. Would he, a Human Catholic, have
suffered her to write that letter? would
he have cared a straw about tfie liturgy
B»e church, the crown, or about Knglaii i J
itself ? would he have cared about any '
thing but the money ? . and could any 1
thing in the world have beetj so Contrary
to lits natural wishes as for the Queen to
door say anything tending in the most .
distant to4he rtmovtl of **r
tune out of bis clutches? To belike
■ hat the Queen »nd that Bergami could
nave thus acted with regard to the litur
gy, at the same time that they were Hv
iiigin the state which the Attorney Gene
ral has described, is impossible 5 at)d yet
\ve must swallow this impossibility* or tile,
Attorney'General is the vilest bf slahder
•ers. v , \
W« know, too, that the moment hen
majesty heard qf the king’a.deatli, she re
teived »n her return England. This is;
a fact well known. We have the word ot
Mr. Alderman Wood for it—tor to him"
she wrote to send her a vessel to Leg.
horn th bring her home. From this time
forwards, all was impatience on her part
to return to England. These are well
known fads- These ?est not upon the
assertions of an Attorney Aieneral, not up*
on the swearings of Italian Witnesses,
brought forward by the solicitor of the.
treasury. Now, then, look ofipe more—
disgusting as the picture is, H>ok once
more at (he slanderous and wicked des
seripllon given r-f ihe-tineen by the attor
ney 1 general. There she was living in all
t lie luxurious enjoyments of debauchery.
She was in the arms of a man that she do-*
ted upon. She was lost,- totally sunk and
gone, as to every thing bill this man.
From this man -she must seperalq if she
came to England—and yet, she is teasing
he'ivfriends to death to, ge- her back lb that /
very England. And at hut, her impati
ence become so great, that amidst a host
of difficulties and dangers, she encouiv;
ters a journey; enough to half kill a stout'
man in order to do that«lnch must nccef
sariiy-sepcrale., her from her .paramount
As if this were not enough forms to bj
lieve, we must furllver believe that thia s«l
powerful paramour, who was very foijd
,cf enriching his family, not only ,ga» e* ifs*
consent to her departure, but still servtd
her as one of the persons necessary to
success of the. expedition, and became;
himself instrumental In sending away-fn «i
Himself the sum of at least thirty five
thousand pounds a year! This true;
evqvy word of it is true, or, the statement
of the attorney general is tin impudent and,
attVocious lieap offalse hoods.
At lost, the queen actually arrives’at St.
Omers, and if aiy man can believer, uu, I
will not put jt in that shape: if any man
can look at what passed there, and after
having looked at, it fully and fairly,
can deny that the statement of the attor
ney general is a falsehood, such a man;
must be a malignant and black hearted
villain. Before she arrived at St. Omers,
they? might possibly exist doubts in her
mind, or -rather in the mind of Bergami,
'for you will observe, she saw only with
Ins eyes; there might, 1 say, possibly ex
ist doubts, previous to this time, us 'to
whether the same sum of money would!
be furnished her annually, if she did not
return to England. This is almost impos-i
siple—but it is possible. However, when’
she arrived at Bt. Omers, and Bergami
with be 11 not only was all doubt-of this;
sort removed, but they found that they
cuuld iiow have the security of receiving
fifty thousand pounds a year instead of
Uhirty five thousand pounds a year, which
‘they received before. They found, on ths
other hand, that if the Queen persisted in
coming to England, site was to be prose ’
culed by this tremendous government,
and, if found guilty, deprived of all main
tenance for the future, and probably for
dfe. Yet in the £ice of ail tins, with con
iciousaess of guilt, the queen instantly re
solves to come ami face her enemies, while
with the certainly of loosing fifty thousand
.minds a year, the interested and alt pow v
- ltd paramour sutlers her to hasten to
tie English shore !, Any thing so mon
strous as this, was never before tendered;
nr (he b dut of man; any tiling so cut of
reason and nature; any .hing so complete
ly impossible never was before slated in -
die way even of hypothesis. And yet,
ibis monstrous absurdity-; tins thing out of
reason and out of nature; these facts, to.
oelieve all which we muslbeiieve the par-!
lies to have luted themselves: even aU ;
tins we must swallow and beheve -to be
true, or -we must believe the state ment of
the attorney-general to be a lie. To rea- -
son further upon ibis -subject would be'
irksome to myself and offensive to the un
derstanding of my rsaders, who will long
ago have exclaimed, “ say no more, we
' are satisfied- the queen is innocent, and
her accusers, the basest of calumniators.”
Let those accusers now work their way.
They think that by sending forth daily
portions of swearings from the fortress;
they shall, by little and little, wear away
the honest indignation of the public.
They at e deceived. They have this time
overeached themselves; and they will
hud to their cost, that though they have
been able to gag the mouths und cramp
the lingers of English men, they have nut
madeo.ie single step towards blunt
ing their feelings, towards enfeebling
their minds or corrupting their hearts.
It has always been a distinguishing charac
teristic of the people of this country; to
sympathise with the oppressed, and 16
- tend assistance to the weak m their strug.
gles against the strong. And this char
acter wilt now be displayed in protecting
against her 1 nemits a queen, whose only
real f.rtd s are her generosity, her love of
the people, and her hatred of tyranny and
oppression. Her majesty has, even in
her tyavels v d voyages, in her pursuits,
while abroad, 1 endured herself an object
worthy of the highest admiration. i\o
,hing but greatness of mind; nothing but
a mind, worthy of a queen, worthy of a
woman, placed above other women—no
thing but this could have produced a de
sire to see so many countries and to re
el-lire so large a stock of knowledge. Out
Her base enemies, instead of joining in
the admiration which this is so well cal
culated to excite, seem to have received
an additional stock of hatred from the
sources ol the applause and admiration of
others. The Queen's char -ter and con
duct are an honor to the country. They
are, too, a promise of a possibility qf our
seeing better days,; and, whatever her
enemies may think, the nation will, upon
this occasion, be true to itself, and will
stand by her with thsj steadiness constan
cy and valor, fur-wkisU it lias always been
lamed. ■
WIL^MGOBBET^,
SCIiOOL Hd*HLESJ x
Juif Met eyed and/or eule by the Subecrber
cases SCHOOL BIBLES contain,
mg.iu esch—ashisji will ke,:spld by the
case very low at private sale, - A ;
I. Thompson.
November 26 6t ” -;|j
i. *
AUGUSTA.
. I'K’i II t 1 ,
TUp USD AY, DECEMBER U.
I EROVTia
the IT w«« ifounling ’aoag Knight* 6t the Catch-pole
ing «j»n, i , =. l '
And U«‘W\«nd Bailiffs; sane rate and some ran;
'iliere whs I l acing and ahating 4Vr highland
and lej.,
But the lor Chief of Duamag-town ne’er eould User
see. . I ’ Sentianm.
' i , . i ; '»»
Tbrfl’ loop-hol'd retreat it it pientant to laugh
At the buttling ttir Os the Knights of the Suif,
a ~, Cmfcraxa.
j«- k * | I f\l >TJ' <, * J i'-i > " ".» 1
Come Puias,.andt)end a hand to laugh <
lA«U sec “t fault, iny friend l ip-Suiff. >
. MakeJpcaruna,
< , •■ , • \ In
In Chambers, Dec. 13.
Editor 'Still indisposed, a la Ca .?«
heidlh net very bud—inclined to be -Giro,/.
icfl/-ly room-attic —“cant get
ihep bad weather for room-ewics*
'Sterniaiuu . '
, N,All pccouiils-and note? dug the
lifdis of'Kean.Jdiiyckiiiclc & Charlton, and
Kean, and Charlton, are placed in the
Jiftnds of J. P, King, E«j. for collection
and he is duly authorised to act as their
Agent .
—wo« ® -»0 o>
Latest from England.
Chaiukstov, Decembers,
By the ship Jntthtum, Capt. Merrill, ar
rived at this port yesterday, in 39 days
from Liverpool, we have the papers of
that place so the 27th, and from London
to the 25t1» October, both inclusive,—At
usual for some time past, they are almost
exclusively occupied with -the trial of the
Queen—The’evidence' ih her fatter baa
been'closed; .and one of hercouusel, Mr
Denman (im.»hed his address, and sum-'
ming up of i#i evidence, at- 4 on \
the 25tb—*>He would be 'followed next
day by Dr. Lusliington, on.-the came aide;,
alter which this celebrated trial woulu*
close w#l, the replies of the Attorney and
, General. The last papeis con
tain Miv Denman’s Speech at full length.(
The opinion now appeals to be general,"
that hfr Majesty will be, acquitted—
llets offive to one were offered in Lon-‘
donon Vie 25th, dhat the Bill of Pains and
Penult ids would not pass
ihe thaw of public processions, The
presentation of Addresses to her-Majesty,'
&c. continued lobe kept up.—Among
the processions noticed on the 25th, we
observe one of about 40 open carriages,
filled with elegantly dressed ladies m»ti :
gentlemen, .bearing an address from the
i inhabitant* of the parish of St. John: a;
procession of glass-blowers, bearing vari!
ons emblems and devises ih cut anddJlown i
glass, of their own manufacture; and the.
rear Was brought up by between fourapd
five thousand journeymen bakers. i
A man of the name . of Franklin; alias;
■ Fletcher, who is charged will* having,
I posted up seditious placards, had fled, us
was supposed, to’ France—-The subject
had been brought before the House of,
Commons. Ihe 'Opposition quints round- i
ly charge the Hmistry-jwdthi having, lido’ ■
their agents, instigated the business.
The London Courier, speaks oft lie fe
venue of tire bounfry, as being in the
most flourishing condition. The total!
produce for the year ending on the 10th •
October 1820, exceeded, by no less a sum
than 2,723,443 lbs. the revenue of the
preceding year.
The Cotton Market, both at Liverpool,
and-London, remained much in the same
slate, as our advices of the 13th October
left them.—The quotations of ‘ Upland
Cottons, are from 9d to 12.1, the best
Cottons only, ami in small lots, would
bring I2d, Mice, at London, ou the 25th,'
u quoted at 16s a 19s 6d,
Extract of a Letter.
"LivEnrooi. October 28—Cotton has
been in steady demand this week, and
prices rumain without alteration, The
sales are 8340 packages, consisting of
3500 Mowed, ordinary to fine 9d to 12d’
950 Nc w-Orlcnhs, very inferior to fine 9d
to l2Jd ; and 10 very Sue at 14$; 40 Ten
nessee 10| a 10 5 8d; 120 Sea Island, in
fenortoffrie 16jd a 21d, 20 stained at
16$d; 520 Pernambucoo, 13|d a 14 l-2d;
750 Babin, 12 I 2d a « 13 12d, 1100 Mar
anham, 12 7 8d a 13$d, 80 Mina Nova 124 u
SO Mina Gereas lid a 111 Bk, 2s) Dema
ma, -very ordinary to very fine lid a :
I4id; 60 Barbwloes II l-2 ; 280 Surat, 7,
1.2 d a 9d; 650 Benge I 6 l-2d a 7 l-2d
per pound,
‘‘For Kentucky Leaf Tobacco there has
been a speculative deipand .and 250 hogs
heads were sold at 2 l-4d s 2 3-4 per lb,
for ordinary to good fair quality, being
a decline of fully 1-4 J per pound: and
some small parcels of Strips were token
by the trade at 4d a 41-2 per pound. A
bout jQOO barrels Turpentine brought 9s
aUs perewt. as in qua ky; The sales.-f
P;il and. Pearl Ashes are limited at our
quotations. There is ah increasing do
.maud for Grain, and prices ale steady.
American Flour in bund sells at 22s a 24s
per barrel for export,,but the demand is.
inconsiderable. Small parcels of Caroli
na Mice were sold at 18s 6d for. good, and
20s per cwt for fine.
Liverpool, October 2 7.
The speech of Mr. Denman will,
preclude.the necessity of our going
over the evidence which, on the part
ot the prosecution, has been present*
ed to our aristocratical judge* and
legislators f-that speech must occu
py a large portion of our paper, and
ithighly merits the earnest attention
whichiLisriiive t/obtain. .As;tins
estfitppainkay case, draws neat* its
the anxiety of the pub
lic necessarily increases; but sorely
ihe aristocracy must be aware that,
anxiety is no longer Concerned in 1
the actual guilt or innocence of the
Queen. Her innocence is pronoun
ced by every man wltovdares to utter
what he thinks and what he (eels.
The public' are new anxious to disco-:
ver , what'degree of respect is left ini
the'aristocracy fji r the opmfer of the!
nation at large; the people fige aw-T
• ••
iou* to see whether there n really 8
majority in the Peyrs» whe ; cin
grasp the.emoluments of the state,
and scorn, at the same time, the pub
. lie sense of justice; who can live up
; on the purse, and set at naughf the’
• institutiens of the country. ,Tha:
queen is acquitted by the nation at!
: large; it remains for the House of
; Lords to fix a judgement respecting:
themsei'es in (hcptiblic mind-
The funds are improving gradual-;
- fy; the advance to day has been
j full 3-8 percent. r Fiic public ap-
I pour to have become bu versos stocky
which hasbeen Sfcarce since thepay
ment ol the dividend*. 'At the close
of busjnesS the following were the
prices!—Red. Ann. C7: Consols,
Do. for Aect. 68';- 4 pen
Jents. 85 18; Navy 5 per cts. 104
1-4; Kxdrequer Rills, 4s* prriniunij
India Ronds I9s, Omnium 2 S-k dis
An Algerine squadron has been
observe*! in the bay of Tankers: with
a Spanish pt>)acca,niive urrerchati'tmen,
ond seveial European captives.
S Mn has in consequence sunt out a
74 and a frigate of 30 guns towards
the African,coast.
Polices were opened on Monday
se’nightin the city, to return ICO
guineas, <m the receipt of Iqs if .shes
Bill of Pains and Penafties shonltl
, pass, and at the gambling houses at
the west end of .the town, the oilds
were considerably more.
The Queer. The following has'
been published as a correct report ol ;
the Queen’s answer to the Message,
iltdivered to ber nt St. Omer’s; “Ne
ver, exclaimed her Majesty, (and in !
a tone expressive of her highest in ;
dignatiouv) I command you, jspt'ak
< money to me when my honoris in
‘ question. I can endure the loss of
father, mother, brother, daughter,^
, and all-my nearest aiuUleiircsft rela.
\ tive», witli a becoming resigHation
to the will of our Divine parent; but
• I will not suffer a single reflection
: directed against, my honor, to pass
unpunished, be the slenderer ever so
: exalted. Tell those who sent you
on this treasonable embassy, that I
scorn their bribe, and defy their mo
-1 tives. Net conscious of error, I shall
return immediately to England, and
voluntarily throw myself on the pro
j tection of my generous and beloved
subjects i will deserve their aflcc
; tions, and I may be certain of pe*.
‘ sessingthoin; but I shall never yield,
; nor ever listen to any proposal that
! has a tendency to compromise my
! honor Take this answer to your
• emplßycrs, and quit my presence im
, mediately.” - , ,
WRECK.. On Wednesday night
last, a vessel was totally wrecked
. of Mock-beggar. We hear she was
' a brig from Wexford, laden with
corn, and that most of the crew were
lost,exccpf the pilot. Some very
, disgraceful circumstances are added
■ relative to the plundering lof the
wreck, which, we trust wiH be inves
tigated; but Hvhich, we do not feel jus
tified in stating at this moment.
1 f’Oi'ULAII FEELING,
Oi>e o! die London journals re
cording a recent performance of the
play of yrabeline, at Covent XJar-:
den Theatre, proceeds thus*—lt is
not :urprising, considering the uni
versal interest and sympathy exci
ted by the wrongs of an injured
queen, that these were seized upon
with great avidity and enthusiasm.
•In the 4th scene of the second act,
liichimo dies to convince Posthumus
of Imogen’s infidelity, by producing
•nc ofber bracelets. The liusband
is staggered, but his friendly host
thus rc-assureshim.-
“Have patience, Sir;
It may be probably she lost it; op
Who knows if one of her women being cor
rupted,
■ Hath not stolen it from her?”
The most vehement applause followed
thisfs.ijfgestion, and, lasted for two or three
minutes In the next act the following
pn.sage was received bp tumultuous .and
repeated shouts:—
“ Oh master ! what a strange infection
Is fallen into Wlmfahe Italian,
As poisonous-tongued as handed, nath
pi evaded
On thy 100-ready hearing? Disloyal! No:
She’s Punished for her truth.”*
But the climax of sympathetic exult a
tion was reserved or the last act, when
die I Jug Italian the records his penitence
and the lady’s wrongs:
“The heaviness of guilt within my bosom
Takes off my manhood! 1 nave belied a
lady,
The princess of tiiis.country”
•At those words the house rung with ap
plause.
TloridaTTeaty.
A letter from Liverpool, by the Are
thusa, dated October 26, saya—»My ob
jeot irt writing, is, to say that)[ yesterday
received a letter from Samuel WiUiamt,
Esq. of London, in which he uses fol
lowing words.—‘My correspondent in
Madrid, confirms the report of the ratifU
cation of the treaty, and cession of the
Florida* to the United This is
importont, especially to the Scudiern
Stalc* —-There can be -no doubt -of the ‘
This, cuupled with the report via
Hstfta, (published yesterday) renders
ihie ratification the treaty highly prob
1*
■a “ ■ -T-111 -Ti
Is, A*<m mj ricardo Slack.— According Jj’ll
[4hc latest advices receivd from Engla# fl
* * # .
■ apustioN ™ u * n
A letter received by Mr. r
a respectable commercial hon> H! '' !| ' n
a<k-Pmlcej dated the Ist Ut, j!“
close you papers up toih o folV lilu
The events parking here will h!> ct ""
tr resting. At the same timi iJ Lk '" d %
tipn to you* that it is expected lb [ s ' ,4mf '-
ment mil. in the courie oftt, *"*•'
adopt measures that will Sf
to curtail American commerce t,'*-
prevent vessels from wJL j’ a f. to
I ftom any State ot place vl„.V‘" , '"“ 4
and people of jcoloui-are held ; n s "J»«a f
I
recollect, that the SavL*l Vu 110 % I
20th of last Februaryi S&JS 1
place to Charleston, <y as rn uL M
sulkcy of the mail driver 1 !?’ lunl «W
the 21st. about fifteen
vvhatcliie, containing a i,.,:”*" 1 I
post and bank notes, & c v,f! am ° unt of I
contents of that mail have I
till yesterday, when s w b ?®f. d, * cover «l I
calling himself Patrick si.ithf*' I
for payment at the .P|-,Qj„i x n ,J I
notes,•, of gIOG each
to a merchant of this city, the , I
with six other, Jr^" 1 " f I
denomination, remitted at tfia* "i 1 "* I
bepo stopped,and tlieaaoimt ‘f 4 I
yeal owner ms the notes o n a L?ni / be I
dem.nty. The man, oiibcuW*• oh "’ I
gave contradicl bry slate me,ht * fV 31 "* |
evidence of guilt- While I
dive, ted by various question* ilt T I
a Clerk went to the Police i iffi* , I
turned with Messrs Hays at I
apprehended the I
two other notes of the li* I
descriptor, and a considerable L*° I
gold. He underwent an er*m' 1:1 I
the Police Office, and wi tCtTV I
Oyiiigsloii, I
Hr «> «m*wl I
prison. From his examination, it snneip I
ed that he had been employed as I
at Savannah,and arrived in this cK I
Sunday, in the brig Telegraph. Lc t l
lic has provided'himself wth anewsdirf I
clothes. It has been ascertained •hatke I
brought a considerable quantity cf bar I
gage, although he denies the fact, kll I
are entertained that ffis'apprehenginn L I
lead to a discovery oMhercmaimlsi oi the I
money.— Gazette. I
Prices Current. I
TT &«u I
Do. Bacin-8 ’23 4,J5 I
Tomcc* i.' 4„45 i
sucau 11«13 I
SAtT Ut jrj ■■
rtout 500 I
■ Sf «owi I ma 50
WEAt 50 a 611 *J
cofvbk »30032 I
Units! Matt ! Hats! I
Henry Eld $ f o.|
AT THE SION OF THE OOIDEN BAT, BITIVBI I
the roST-omcE and oiobe TATm,
Have just Received and teill from lime It B
time Receive, fl
An extensive assortment of
FASHIONABLE BUAVEU fciOTBEIJ H
HATS, I
Which fbr Elegance and Goodness ate H
equal to any ever offered to tli public, H
1 —Among them v/ill be found— B
F MIST and second quality Beaver Halt H
latest style, black and white, bread ■
and narrow brims, I
Castor ditto . ■
Uoram ditto t V t S
Youths Fancy ditto I
Drabs and I thick plain ditto H
Children’s Jockeys H
Mena’ and Youths’ best Merino Wool H
Hats, ( h - ■
Old gentlemen who want large brim but k
quality heaver, will find them here, Hi
The above manufactured under th pm I
ticular inspection of one of (he partrui Hi
at the north, and known to be giwJ. H
Gentlemen wlio are in want, and country Hi
I merchants will do well to call—they wwH
be sold wholesale and retail on acceinit- H
Rating terras
fcoots ani SUues, -C
Os all d.-scription as usual; ll
December 15. ■■ vt. . lit :t SM
— 'H
Uaces! Ilaces! I
rililK Augusta Paces; will coaiinv.-oe«■
JL Tuesday the 20d* FdbjfMari arxt
The first day, a purse pl‘4iXJ ccimH|
four mile heats and rypeal, liee ll,r HR
horse, mare, or gelding; .HI
Tiicseioml day (the 21st,) a P ;rs- ,Hi
30d dollars, ti.ree mile heats »«d
The third day (the £2d,) apnisroi- ■■
dollars, two mite heals and isspeat
The fourth day (the 2dd,) the ■||
ntuney to be run for, the thr e h:s * mat
five. ,
Letters on the subjcctto.be directe-* mat
J arobStulfj’ anjl H
Willitini; Lauikin, ■
Prnfirieiorsofthe Rm*
c 'ey Each day’s purse to be hung
the Judge’s stand. . |||||
Deacmber 15. t(i LJB
Mai’shal’s Sale. I
ON the first T.iesday in January,
be sold, at the Market
city between the hour* often » 'HR
b’cloek. i. ■
Twenty-five Negroes,
vied on as the property of..H
at the suit of President D,re«<« «
Company of tf.e Bank of the U. ■B
said Burns M'Kihne et. «. - K/A
John H Morol,*-”
December 15 —^Hb
* * Wo are authorj^«|
toaunouncc Capt. aM/m
didate for TAX COLLECTOK, '
suing electron. W -, ■jf
December 11.
■Wurns, for Kidunostu
IKiig election. ■
ffoveigfeer 7 I