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rususimn nr
KFJt.\& CHARLTON. \
Monday Morning.
tiiuTio UNT.
From ihe. Etonian.
If ever mvi died of love it w«* Ed
ward Morton. Tltelady to whom he became
rally tiVahtd wasimnr'cd to another.-
Morton r nr. presi'W at the ni ami
v. as never Sacn to smile af.ei-vvards. The
In !y, it is,said, wan unhappy in her uni or;,
and did not survive it many years. Mor
ton died at Corfu. A■ portrait ot the lady
v as (mint! in his portfolio, wrapped Up in
the follow!. •£ lines: — ,
1 mw thee wedded—though didst go
Within the ascred aisle,
i 1 y young- check in a blushing glow,
Helwixt utenr and smile.
j hy heart was glad in maiden glee,
Hut he it lov’d so fervently
Was faithless all the while;
I hale him for the vow he spoke—
-1 hale him for the vow he broke.
I hid the Icvc that could not die,
Its doubts and hopes, and feats,
And burnt! ailtr.y misery
lit secrecy and tears;
And dais pass'd on, and thou didst prove
The pang of unrequited love,
K'enin tlnne early years;
And thou didst die, so fair and good':
Insikncu and in solitude !
While thou wert being, ,1 (lid hide
Affection's secret pains;
I'd nuthave shock’d thy modest.pride
For ah the worl) contains;
Hut thou hast perish’d, and the (Ire
That often check’d, could ne’er expire.
Again unhidden reigns;
2 1 is no crime to speak my vow,
For ah! thou ctmst not hear it trow.
Thou slei p’st beneath thy lowly stone,
That dark and dreamless sleep;
And he, thy loved and chosfch one—
Why got 6 he not to weep?
lie dues not kneel where I have knelt.
He cannot f cl what I have Iclt,
The anguish, still, and deep,' -
The painful thoughts of what has been,
The canker worm that is nut seen.
Hut I—as e’er the dark blue wave
Unconsciously I ride,
Aly thoughts are hovering o’er thy grave,
My soul is by thy side.
Thctcis one voice that wails thee yd,
< »ne heart that cannot o’er forget
The visions that have died;
And aye thy form is buried there,
A doubt—an aD^mah —a despair !
iiOUS.
■*T ■—— -’ 1
the ladies.
We extract It out t 'nwpbeWsJfonth
ly Magazine, the.follow ing rather c
■quivoca! defence of the fair sex. It
is vety doubtful Avhcther the author
eillu't merits, or will receive any
t'lrnk.i lor his left handed compli
ments. Ihe assiduous courtesy and
modest reverence of the early Eng
lish writers, lies been superceded, we
;ue sorry to say, in u. odeum times, by
un uucereinuiaous, forward ait.) sar
castic familiarity. —Vhavleunn Cour
ier.
“We shall not nt.prestut enter in
to a formal reputation of all the ca
lumnies which titan in the lordliness
and vanity of Ids heart, has poured
forth against his fairer/half ;(but we
do heartily widt that all such offen
ders may he brought to speedy and
condign punishment, for which pur
pose w e recoumend a jury of mat
rons to be iinpannelled.) There is,
however, one accusation, which is re
ally too unjust to be passed over in
silence a:.u we shall therforc say a
word or two on the subject of female
constancy. J
“Fickleness has been an imputed
female faulttrom the time of Horace,
«§T hmg before ; <§" this sentiment lias
been reechoed dy every misogyuistic
satirist —‘Ihou art not false, bat
thou art fickle,is the lightest; of their
accusations. The charge, however,
com-« nut badly from the mouth of
roan. What is the advice which a
great philosopher, who looked »quite
through the devds of men.’ hits given
to his son.— 1 Remember when thou
Wert a sucking child, that thou then
didst love thy nurse, and that thou
were fund of her; after a while thou
didst love thy dry nurse, and didst
forge i the other {.after that, thou
diJxt despise uer ; so it will be with
%hce, in thy 1 iking in elder years ;
and th* refore* though thou canst not
lurbeui, to love, yet forbear to little
wid alter a while thou shall fmd at
alteration .in thyself, and see another
far more pleasing than the first sec
ond and third love.’ Thi* is old craf
ty Sir Walter Ualeigh ! How much
tru*h and how much guile is there in
this sentence ! ‘And this.is roan’s.fi
delity !’
“It is strange that man shoould be
so jealous of his superiority, as to en
deavor to degrade the character of a
woman, in order to exalt his own.
It is only one made of playing the
tyrant —apart capable of being-.cnact
ed in so many •different shapes. The
civilized man complains that they
art talkative, jealous, narrow min
ded, and hence assumes a mastery—
the Indians reasoning is shorter—he
makes them carry his but dens.
“There is one mortal offence in
women, for which they have been,
more than once, rated roundly by
the satirists. “ All women,” says
one of oar malevolent old dramatists,
“have six senses; that is, seeing,
hearing, tattling, smelling, touching,
and the lust and feminine sense, the
sense of speaking ’’ Wc feel rather
inclined to suspect, that the lords aivd
masters of tldsgoodly creation would
not be very well content to allow the
last of these senses to be the exclu
sive privilege of their fair partners.
So far indeed from such a concession,
(hey have absolutely monopolized
the power of speaking (par excel
lence) to the exclusmn of those who
they contend are so much their su
periors in the exercise of it. Who
ever heard of a lady Making a speech?
Wc certainly do not mean to con
tend from this that cur ladies are
speechless f but we do say it is un
ion- in a man to attend a public meet
ing, and tire his auditors to Heath
: with a speech of two hour’s length,
tilled with all the common places of
all the common writers of the day,
and then to Return home and chide
his daughter, for pout ing Hath a gay
ten minutes’ tattle, tu the overflow
ing gaiety of Iter youthful heart.—
While a man is talking stupid sense,
you hear a woman uttering lively
. nonsense-; and the latter commodity
is infinitely more estimable in our
\ opinion.
“ There are very few n>en that
know how to converse. see
many a man like Addison,
draw on Ids banker for
who has not ninepence in ready
to contribute as his share m«spnvCNk
sation. Women, on the cotrSraryv
arc always both ready anti wil ingtn:
speak. Women have a most-gtSd'fcjJ
tul way of talking about nothings
which men, in their wisdom, esteem ,
beneath their powers. .-The French
ladies are,pre-eminent in this art, and
afttr thqm the UisU ladies hold the
most distinguished place. It is ab
solutely marvellous to listen to two
sisters, who have been parted for
three weeks, edifying each other
with their mutual stores of intelli
gence, of which their brothers would
' have disburdened themselves in one
tmhoiThe time.” »
WONDERFUL!
There is not, perhaps, on earth a
a nore wonderful scene, than in the
tow nos Trenton, county of Oneida,
and state of New-Y'urk—-a scene
that comprises at once the pleasing,
-the beautiful, the grand, the solemn,
the majestic, the sublime, the aw ful,
the tremendous--.aU that can tom-j
mand the delight, the transport, the
admiration, the awe, and theaislo
ishment of the mind. Other stt-ieu-'
dousmiracles of nature, the Yalis
of Niagara, lac Funza, of the An
tics, ihe Pistiir llhaiodr of North/
Wales, <kc. have been sounded in I
the trumpet of tame, «$• attract thecu
j-iosity of the traveller ; but the more
wondertu! cataract of Trenton, tho’
only two miles from the village ofUl
denbrancvuld, which is on the great
post road from Albany to Sacked V :
Harbour, bay, because never duly
announced tutbe public, been jia.-s
--•cd by thousands, who have journey
ed from the city of New York and
other more distant parts in order to
witness (he Falls of Niagara and
who would even have renewed their
journey to Trenton, had they been;
apprized of that extraordinary com
bination of curiosity and wonder
witiiwhich 'that ciUaraot is attend-:
ed. it is unjust that so interesting
an exhib tiuu of nature should re
main lunger in obscurity, and the
curious traveller be defrauded of
that enchanting gratification which
it never fails to anord its visitors.
It is however, vain to attempt a.
i description with the pen. Eve a lue
inspiration of the poet must prove
unsuccessful in leading the imagin
■ Hti«*n to comprehend the reality.
, Suffice it to say that as wonderful as
F the highly celebrated Falls of Nia
: gara are, those who have visited both,
' have given preference to the cataract
i of Trentou; which, though it does
i not oppress and stun the senses with •
i iU appalUng thunder, nor can boast'
t of the waters of all ihe lakes de
i scending in a sheet of 150 feet per
t pemiicular, yet extends its diversi-
J Bed scenery between two and three
ii miles with several lofty falls, per
; pemiicular and acute, beautiful,
a zrs 'd and sublime. They are the
l, falls of East Canada Creek. The
n river, has worn dewn its bed of
limestone more than a hundred feet
—has hewn out the lofty sides in va
rious fantastic forms—presenting
elevated towns—fortified castles,
and grand amphitheatres, the pend
ant tools of overhanging mountains,
concave and convex curvatures in
geometritan order, that now wel
come the descending stream, now
turn the mad torrent .from its
course and force it u;!on opponent
rocks. On a level with its waters,
at its side, the visitor is furnished
with a smooth pavement, from which
the river has retired lor his accomo
dation, sometim-'s retreating twenty
or thirty .feet, that the large party
may walk abreast, then crowding
them into small platoons, then com
pelling them to march Indian file,
then forcing them.to climb the side
rocks, to creep round over hanging
projections, when it suddenly opens
upon them a most -stupendous and
enchanting scenery- where mure
than can be described arrests the as
tonished eye—where the Cloud-tow
ering hemlock with other evergreens,
crowding to the verge, from a station
of 150 feet ft'oft, bend over their
tall heads, and reach forward their
branches, to witness the wonders
beneath, conspiring, by their verd
ure, contrasted to naked rocks, to
embellish with a beauteous charm
the superb majesty of the grand ex
hibition But why am I insensibly
led to paint what nature alone is here
able to display. I will only add,
that amidst its great variety of cu
riosities, are putrefactions of divers
animals, which thousands of years
of years ago sported and swam to
gether in this onoe yielding.element,
now converted into adamant,—a
mong which are fish of several sorts
and dimension, from nine inches to
, four feet in length, lying hori/.outal
ly in the diffeient strata of solid
rock, 50 or 100 feet below the gene
ral surtace. He who visits this
wonderful scenery, will desire to
visit it again; and those to whom it
had been described, confess uno ore,
that the half was not told them.
JOHN SIIE'IM AN.
Oldenbarncveld, July 23 1821.
Uuea Sentinel.
From tiie New York American, August 5
We understand that a pleasant
farce was played oil’, not long ago,
ai()«n the good people of u certain vil
iygge, within a few miles of the Capi-
Albany.
£ A'young gentleman (a dandy of
‘course, and perhaps a cousin-german
of the Carlisle music-master) arrived
in the village, and .inquired for his
relations, ’i hey wc-c made known
to him, and he expressed much plea
sure in the recognition. The relation
ship was indeed somewhat remote;
but, «n their part, they became more
and more interested in proportion as'
his prospects were disclosed. In ac
cents of wo,gradually brightened by
raysof consolation, heinfurmpd them
that his father ,(who was but Little
blest by Plutuß,so,long as he resided
in Ilenssclaer County) had gone over
to Ireland—accumulated a 'fortune
of more than £IOO,OO0 —at a suitable
time had died, and left it all to this,
his, hopeful son. Their longitude of
face diminished on hearing the tale,
as its latitude inerrasd. An unusu
al prominence of the eye became ap
parent, and pleasure lit up a smile
upon the grave and care-worn coun
tenance. The cordiality of his recep
tion was no longer mingled with re
luctance or distrust. Nor was it,
limited by cousanguity; it spread
with his spreading merit. The doors
of hospitality are thrown open; for
who would close them against forty
thousand pounds ? The father'setefcn
ness is softened, and the mother's
caution soothed to rest, by the fair
inheritance. The maiden's harness
is drawn more closely, her eye glis
tens as it meets his lanquishing gaze:
and -she sweetly smiles the signal if
welcome; for what heart is preof
against forty thousand pound, intadt
He attends a bin., and wears lu?
hat. The managers, with as much
caution as if they were addressing
the Grand Vizier, breathe a sugges
tion of its impropriety. He modest
ly tells them, in reply—When you
are as rich as 1 am, you may wear
your hat too.”
A lawyer in W*******had an ele
gant chain with about nine seals, and
other fashionable appendages, to Ids
watch. He is employed to buy up
mortgage*-for the young heir, who,
in the mean time, admires the ti in
kets, buys them, at a good round
pi ice; and agrees to pay, as a gen
tie man should—when convenient.
lie casts his eye upon a Urge brick
store, and is about to commence
merchandize. A keen old wiscucre
hires it from him, in order to induce
him to receive his son as a partner,
it is d'*nc* A clerk, too, is waited.
A young man is in good and regular
employment; but better offers induce
him to leave his patrons, and he is
engaged by the man of wealth.
Generosity, however (rifling in
amount, is always highly valued, if
the hand that bestows* it is rich.
Our adventurer bows with complais
ancy, and promises with liberality.
He is ready to patron’je all who
■ look to him for support, and, with
no small adroitness, contrives to
lay those under obligation,- from
whom he purpose* to derive con
tributions Accordingly, .after mea
suring out his kindness to his nu
merous friends, he buys a great
coat of one, a surtnut of anothei,and
a dress coat of a third not because:
he wants, but because he fnc cs
them ; exchanges a silver watch for,
a gold one, and borrows a quantum
suflicit of money— onltf- because lie
happens to be out of change ! t ;aving
thus replenished -his wardrobe and
his purse, and rioted a month or two
upon “ the fat of the land.” he is
ready for his departure to draw (he
dividend* due upon his stocks, and
to purchase his goods. But that no
malicious wight may .raise a suspi
cious to his disadvantage, he solicits
two of his relations, a tinman, and
and a tanner, to attend him to New
York. They comply—and the trio
arrive in this city. But here alas,!
the he r of forty thousand pou ids
suddenly disappears ! Whether an
envious mist has obscured him from
their sight, or a malignant demon
has spirited him away—no one can
tell. Nox aha ciotuuivolti num
bra.
And now the tinman and the tan
ner went their weary way to their
native village. The old maid de
plores the profligacy of the age ; the
young maiden unbraces her corsets
-Slyboots pays rent for a vacant
store, and the tea-lable is supplied
w tli a fruitful theme lor mfcny a
iu’od ih to come.
Extkaordinakv Escape. — Last
Wednesday night a chief in the vil
lage of the Lake ot the two Moun
tains, when going to bed, incautious
ly stuck a lighted candle against the
wainscot of a garret where he and
hi* household, amounting to 18 per
sons, had retired to red. After
some time, the tallow by which the
candle adhered, melting, it fell down,
unfortunately into a basket, wl-ere
there was a bag containing; about £4
pounds rs gunpowder. The conae
q ience was an immediate explosion,
which blew ott’the roof, rent away the:
sides, and, in a word, reduced the
house-to splinter*. By such an ac
cident, one would expect, that many ;
were killed and wounded : pa-tit was
quite the reverse ; for not a single
person,-though all were blown out cf
an upper story to the distance of ab
out 30 yards, was Juju red material
ly. '
The chief, whose -name U Jacob
Commandant, alighted on his feet in
a canoe on the beach, through which
Ids logs penetrated as far as the an.
cles and held him fast, as it were in
the stocks. There he was found bv
some of the i-rthabitairts, in inexpress
ive terror, imagining his situation to
have proceeded from some malicious
demon, whose exitand entrance had
destroyed his house- A child was
sleeping with its head near the
basket suffered no other hurt than'
having its hair singed; and ti
crown all, a leathern bag, containing
3 pound* more of gunpowder and ly
ing in the same basket was found
near-the house unexplodcd,
DOMESTIC
From ihe Louisiana Advertiser,
Pensacola. May 29.
You can have no idea of the dearth
not merely of literature, but .of the
most ordinary, nay, the most indis
pensable books, in this place, -k is
with difficulty I have procured a co
py, in the original, of (he Spanish
Constitution—a translation of which
lias been published in almost every
part of the Union—l do not believe
that there are ten copies of it in Pen
sacola. And although { have had ac-‘
cess to the best sources ot informa
tion, I cannot learn that -there is a
single cepy of the Ilecopilacion de
las India* in the whole province.—
There may be cue-in (he Beanreau
of the Government. The -tribunals
have, probably, some surer guide than
a written code. But rs we- are to
come under the dominion of Spanish
law*, and not sf Spanish practice,
ive must look for Jhose laws .in t!u
statute books, and not in the record
ot the Courts. The ‘translation of
the Partidas lately published under
the authority of your state, and which
is not less remarkable for the.ele
gance and accuracy of the version,,
than for the correctness of its typo
graphical execution, is too meagre to
be of any service here. The com
mission of all those cases provided
for by the Statute law of Louisiana*
renders it useless to ns on whom all
parts of it are equally obligatory.—
There is a latitude in this expression
of which I have just made use to
which perhaps, vou would not readi
ly assent—yet 1 conceive, notwith
standing tfieclumsy manner in which
Congress has interpolated the Flori
da* into the territories of the Union,
that the Constitution of the U. States
is (he paramount law of all countries
that become subject to the Federal
Government—in any other way, at
least, than by hostile military occu
pation—and, as the Spanish laws
have of,coarse, been adopted in su-‘
bordipation to (he constitution, and 1
will be controlled by it in every in
stance in which they conflict, so in
all respects in which they are not re
pugnant to it they will maintain their
away. This is making the best of
our condition, for the President un
der the authority of the act of Con
gress providing for the occupation ot
these territories, has been pleased to
create Geu.JacJisnji Governor of the
Provinces-of the Floindas, ami to in
vest him with the powers heretofore
exercised by the Captain General and
the Jnlcmlunt of the l&biud of Cuba
over the Provinces, as well with the
powers severalty exercised by the
Governors of Fast and West Flori
da ; amt were it jaot ..understood that,
the same relation must obtain be
tween Governor Jackson and the
President, as existed between the
Captain-General of Cuba and the
King oj Spain, and that Gov. Jackson
receives only the same proportion of
the powers of the
as the President acquires of the pre
rogatives of his Catholic Majesty,
these sonorous titles would sound
portentous 10 a republican.ear. hut
as it is not the deposition of his-Ca
tholic Majesty do concede but live ca
pacity of the President of thetUniiei!
States to contain and execciso pow
er ; as it is not the bore of the Span
ish monarchy, but the calibre -of the
American Constitution that must re
gulate the chaigc, we have no reason,
to apprehend the establishment of
despotism amongst us- 1 lay out of
consideration tjie security we derive
from the steady patriotism and genu
ine republicanism of Gen. Jackson
which would sufficiently allay any
idleness of the abuse of delegatee!
power: we have au ample safeguard
in.Jhe law itself.
But where am I i—oil, speaking of
the scarcity of books. You will be
lieve them scarce when 1 cun find
time for suJi let'ers, and such di
gressions \ liy a natural transition,
however, I Will puss to the scarcity
of otl , r things. Newspapers are ex ;
ceedingly scarce—d hope you will
keep me better supplied with them in
future,furniture is lamentably scarce.
Mosohetos, I confess, are .tolerably
plenty- -Juot4Jiat ivie vie, though, with-
Orleans in this establishment-of so
; -cial life ; but moscheto bars are very
scarce. .Books* 1 have already men-'
tiened as desiderata-- ink too, con-,
gr tulate yourself, ink,is getting dis
tressingly scarce—mine, as you will
observe, has been pretty freely ciilu
ted. Gigs, dearborns, and pleasure,
boats, arc much wanted A lew good
fishing boats, with ears, to preserve,
the fish alive ace also a little needed.
In fact, there is hardly a ,good thing
that could come amiss.
But why swell the catalogue of
our wonts, when we have so many
good .things in possession, on which,
we can dwell with complacency.!-
Let me dilate on & more grateful
theme. I have, already* spoken in
general terms of the climate and pro
ductions of West Florida—but a few
facts will carry their commentary.
The most luxuriant, and most pro
fusely hided grape-vine .1 ever -saw,
is growing opposite my .window in a
seeming sand bank, and within 30U
yards of the bay. <Jt will, from its
appearance, yield its vintage towards
the end of July. A flourishing fig
tree stands beside it—its fruit is al
ready fit to pluck ; this is the fust of
three crops which the fig tree annu
ally yields in this climate. On the
pomegranate both floweis and ripen
ing fruit are seen ; the fruit will be.
in eating next month. The peach,
treesgive unequivocal indications of
the congeniality juf the climate, and
a sure promise -of an abundant pro
duct. The sweet and sour oranges
are common, and thrive well, ’the'
melons of this country arc said to be
of a very superior flavor,, and so plen
tiful, that swine are fed with them.
On the estate of Mr. Biannual, about
seven miles up the bay there are.
growing, in vigorous condition,-oran
ges, figs, apricots, nectarines* grap s (
of various kinds, the Spanish dies
nut, young dates, young plantains,'
pine-apples and yams, as well as the
more common, but not le s estimable t
trees of our gardens and orchards,
the apple, pear,quince, cherry, plums \
of various s i ts, peaches and pome
granates.
Judging from those facts, we may
form some estimate of what these
provinces ere capable of producing
Coffee trees, planted more than 20
years since, are, I am credibly infor
med, in good bearing at this d .y, in
East-Worida. Cotton and rice arc
already brought in considerable quan
tities to this market, by the rivers
that-empty into the bay of Pensacola
There is in East-Florida a great deal
of rich land, well adapted to the cul
tivation of sugar, and there can be no
doubt of the success of the sea-island
cotton, on the numerous fertile isl
ands and keys which stud its coast.
The prickly-pear, of that species;
which nourishes the cochineal, is in
deginous. Tobacco and indigo need
not be mentioned—but the almond,
the olive, the date, the yam, lemon,
lime, citron, guava, ginger, caper,
banana, plantain, anana, cocoa-nut
and cocoa; will naturally increase
our luiwries and comforts. Our mul
befty, too,g-ows Bpqpt»neously,and
would afford the means f
innumerable silk worms u-H
moreover, two of the m e 4
and useful forest treesT |H
the splendid live flak . 4
of timber % r v - ; suJ
exhaustablc. f£■ emu,; J ,
m null seats, and there is *L !" J
white pme and o press 1 H
shells make escdleul I
inconsiderable part of New , I
is built and covered with the J
®uinil'aty.rp(| inti
ty of Pensacola, there I - i
no part of this reputed sterile r J
t-iat is not convertible t „ Eo * I
table purpose Even 1
lion I°°’ b . esi(U ‘ H i!9 J
tiou to making mwt a ir i' i. 1
'-in, ',]
iN«er met mth. (Ju both J 1
the bay, for miles, the
posed of a fine flint Baml 1 1
salt, and entirely bee fro,,, ‘I
Ihe American gU« s i tas j,| ,1
Urobglit to . qua! the Luronea,; I
|'. tl,e " 10sl uifScult and WI
bines, and, ud, she «.q.,i s i t :JJ
'his .cxqmsde luaioriaj, \ uj | J
;giwii an ackiimvleilfflcd 1
J ne cl,, bj Kit Im-.t, tl islJil
hood m utmost line enuu I
ware, '
M itli all these n«lvan(a«>*o9 ( f|
and climate; with the b.thny 1 J
borne on the wings of flic iraO
. winch fan this whole peninsuh I
its great extent ,f sea -coast,' ill
merous navigable streams ail I
mudious harbors, at present ilj
sort of pirates and siaugn-!ers—-H
such a variety of products of sol
ferent cultures—we may npedl
tlie.Floi id as will attract settlers I
, every section of the lVu, n . I
southern planter will bri :g(,i ss i
to raise the -great staples of cJ
sugar, cotton, rice, tobacto.kc.l
farmers of the west will fatten I
.flocks and herd, on the immense!
- ges of pasturage, which even mJ
berally supply this,market n-iilJ
! and mutton, and fresh butter|
cheese. '1 he atlantic ailien!
will fix.lus residence enfhesea s
where he can enjoy all the wl
of his beloved element, with the!
* li:ies it,affords -for,carrying (■
commercial emporium all the I
ducts of his toil or Lis ingenuil
v T.) foreigners, must bfl
. the enterprise of cultivating, I
more-extensive scale, the tin*
fig* the date, &c. and of prqA
wine, the sun ; raisin, the ilrieA
and the date of commerce. J/*A
mi hi ante ocules. Already do lA
- in my mind’s eye—but ala?, lA
- see nothing yet of the UnrnetA
remembering of the miiiil an A
milk-pail, 1 shall leave it to I
lowing imagination to sketch sH
picture of oiu future greatneA
these hints may suggest. I
W in. 11. Thonvpsnn &■
Have just received, andiferjoiM
100 Raps Prime Green Coffee ■
,10 HhJs Superior St,-Croix Sugsr.H
40 Do Muscovado Sugar- I
20 Qr. Casks Teneriffe Wine. B
500 Qr. Boxes Spanish Sagan. ■
5 Pipes Cog Brandy. ■
10 Do. Holland Gin. ■
5 Hhds Jk- Hum. I
10 Boxes Speim .Candles. ■
12 Kegs Ladies Twist Tobacco ■
20 Do. Sweet-scented I)o. I
5 Boxes London Mustard. ■
10 Casks best London Sorter. ■
100 Pieces Inverness and Dundee IkH
50,-0 Bushels Liverpool ground *»ltA
august 20— ——3 m L _H
KheriT’s Sale. (I
n 4 7 ILL be sold at the
7 Warrcnton, on the Ist !(.'£■
in September next between iheH
hours of sale, A
All tlie interest ot JA
G. Andrews, with Uichurd Guiw.A
consisting of Dry -Goods, Grocer;, m
counts and Notes-*l ( -'Vicrl ciilo -- ■
execution upon the fnrec-.stire
gage in favor .of .James Pollull vs. W
Andrews. ALSO, A
-Will be sold at the Co “ rt '! W A
Warrenton, on the first 1 iicsu.vj
next, between -the -usual l l,,ur! ’ " A
One Negm an »A
name of Tout—-levied on as tlie
of Andrew Miller, to satisfy
in favor of Ifailpb «. Andre «
ALSO, A
100 Acres of
on the waters of Brier-creek.
Neal and oth rs—taken as * P ■ ■
.Jacob and William H ‘ r |>«‘ k - uf | l
veral small executions in - l , ■
Neal, and ..thcrs-levrcdon andr-|
to me by a e-Mistable. A
A. H. M‘Cormick,A
July 6 wds ——
Notice. A
Nine -months after date apA
will be made to the A
Itave to .ell two Imnare.J
and known as lot Nr 4 " ,■
the real property of Emanudfc>«
ceased, and sold tor the bent A
cerned. ,I,A
Lewis Gregory, A
may 24,1821 "A
Notice. A
Nine months af:e y.
will oe made to the , 01J A
Inferior Court of M
leave to sell all the 1
Kt-nnan, deceased, fu a .eA
h c i„...dcrdUo«of.»J* ■
It. 51‘Coo!iil'-.-
Noveuiber ■