Newspaper Page Text
Tuesday, Non. 2ft, \ft2ft.
BY MYRON BARTLET.
Yo\twn$ \ JVo. 5.
•Si
PROSPECTUS
OF THE
MACON TELfeGflAFH,
A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER,
PRINTED AT MAC ON, GA.
THE local advantages of the town of Ma-
L 0 n, as an emporium for Literature as well as
Commerce,—situated as it is, almost in the
fery centre of the State; at the head of Na
vigation on a beautiful river; in the heart of r
hew, fertile and healthy country,—were a-
non" the inducements that led to the propos
ed undertaking.
The rapid strides this infant settlement has
.nade, in the short space of four years; the
Importance, in a commercial point of view, it
lias already acquired; the attention, the in
terest, it every where excites; the tide of
business, of capital, of talent, so rapidly flow-
in" there; already^direct the public miud to
[lie high destiny which awaits it.
Though there is already one neatly printed
iaper in Macon, yet the peculiar situation of
\hc times—the increasing business of the place
-the intelligence, the public spirit of the com-
aunity—the increasing population, wealth and
importance of this section of the State,—call
loudly for the assistance of another Press;
vhich shall not only disseminate useful infor-
nation, but advocate fearlessly, the rights
OF THE PEOPLE !
With regard to the Political course intend
ed to be pursued by the Editor, he presumes
[ few remarks will suffice:—He pledges him-
Eeif to no faction or cabal. Warmly devoted
lo the cause the people, his constant en
deavor will be to promote their interests—his
(richest ambition lo merit their confidence.—
Though lie does not deny a preference to the
rinciples of one of the contending parties
that agitate this State,—yet such measures,
End such men, only, as to him may seem
pest calculated to promote the public good,
vill receive his support, without respect to the
party which claims them,
j The Editor sees with pain, the dilemma in
Ivhich Georgia is placed, in regard toiler rela
tions with the General Government, and the
kwful crisis to which she is hastening. With
out stopping to inquire, whether, in tho origin
pf this dispute, she had justice on her side, he
fcledges himself, to use his unwearied exertions
Jo preserve the rights and dignity of the State,
|nd to avert the evils that threaten to over
whelm her. In supporting the rights of Geor-
lia, he shall not feel himself bound to assail,
with unmerited abuse, the Government of the
Jnited States; or to ascribe to others, the e-
lils which may have arisen from our own ini
prudence. Wherever, in his opinion, censure
pay be deserved, it shall not be withheld.—
\sa Georgian, in feelings and interest, he
vdl contend, strenuously, for every iota of her
ights! As a descendant of the Martyrg^f the
Involution, every attempt to weake« die Gov
ernment of his Country, or sever the Union
of these States, will meet with his utter abhor
rence, and determined opposition.
TERMS.—Three Dollars per annum, if
^airt in advance, <*• Four Dollars at the end
If fii t: y C ar. Diftant subscribers must in all
Vases pay in advfrc.
Advertisements inserted at the. usual rates.
M. BARTLET.
'FOREIGN/'
uATE FROM ENGLAND.
j Charleston, November 16
L. B >7 te ship Sarah & Caroline, Pritjce, ar-
pivedmis forenoon, in thirty-one days n om Li-
crp/ol, we have received our files of London
pip/s to the 12th, Liverpool to tho 1-lth, and
LW’d’s Lists to the 11th October. I *
the London Stock Maiket underwent a de
cision <>n the 12th October, in copswuence
r dm falling oil’ of the last quarter’s tetenue.
Lord Cochran was at Messina at ihq latest
. A London paper says, “it was retorted on
loniiay, but we do not vouch fol tho fact,
Put the American minister [Mr. Galjitin] had
Pceivcd despatches from his government, and
pd proceeded to Paris, to confer ' ith Mr.
fanning.
1 Tho French gen. Boyer has quit the t irvico of
pacha of Egypt, in conscquenco if a con-
|ant conflict of authority between hiu and tho
•mister at war. ^
1 The fever in Dublin still continue on the
(crease. In September last, an offici J report
lys 300 cases -existed—two thirds mjre than
pd nver been known.
I The continental meteorologists pr( lict that
pc nppioaching winter will be as sevcip as that
U812.
A dreadful mortality continued to prevail
i Groningen—the deaths during the wbek end*
I? 5th ult. were 158; the week previous, 162.
The number of sick was estimated at; nine or
p thousand. . J
I Sir Francis Burdett Was at Toupuse last
fetes,
[The health of the duke of York had so much
proved, as to enable him to transact business
■ *jj s °wn house.
I, , r ®de was improving at Manchester, Leeds,
adtord, Wakefield, Macclesfield, Glasgow,
etc.
■ T Liverpool, October 14.
Ll hi - acco "nt of the quarter’s revenue, u
I I bo seen from this, that in comparison with
P corresponding quarter of last ycar^the fall-
olf is above £800,000.
I bis' is about the sum that it was expected
T ,ev cnuc would be short. We have not
PJb to make any remark,
he presence of Canning, in Paris does not
** 10 * Javc given any now vivacity to poli
tical speculation in the French capital, or to
have had indeed any effect upon any depart
ment of political business, except that it has a
little increased the number of arrivals of cour
iers and statu messengers in Paris, which the
Parisian journals have had to announce.
The intelligence from PortugqJ informs us of
no fresh symptoms of insubordination to, or.
discontent with, the present system.
From Spain we learn nothing new, except
an account of a trivial tumult at San Ildefouso.
% The official notification of the concurrence of
i-nho French government in tho changes that
have been niade in Portugal has been given to
the court of Madrid.
Some changes jhave been projected, and are
about being carricii-into effect, in regard to the
organization of the Austrian army. As well
as we comprehend them, these are to the end
of placing tho army in such a condition that it
may be more promptly called into action, in all
its force, than it can now be.
A new ministerial department has been or
ganized in the court of St. Petersburg. Its
duties seem to be those of a sort of courtly po
lice.
The grand duke Constantine has returned to
Warsaw.
We learn milling of the new war with Per
sia.
The London papers have published a state
ment of the force of the Russian army, commu
nicated to them by Dr. Lvall. It isj summed
up in gross to tho number of 747,000 men.—
But Dr. Lyall says, the effective force for
prompt operations cannot be reckoned at more
than 300,000 men.
Under date of Naples, 23d ult. we arc in
formed, on the authority of private letters, that
lord Cochrane had been some time at Messina,
under the name of Mr. Baring. The latitude
of Sicily is conjectured to be that fixed on for
the rendezvous of his force, if ever it is to be
got afloat. “Tho differences and jealousies (it
is said in that letter) arc so great among the
Greek leaders, that no reliance can be placed
on the hopo of their co-operation with lord
Cochrane.’’
There has again been rather a dull week in
business; the sales of cotton having only been
7500 bags; and of sugar 400 hogsheads, at
somewhat lower prices for both articles.
The following is (lie quantity of cotion im
ported since our last: Alexandria (Egypt) 1(500
bales; Barbadoes, 453 bales; Bombay,‘710
Charleston, 799 bales and 2 half bales; New
York, 780 bales; Philadelphia, 733 bales.—
Total, 4975 bales and 2 half bales.
The Commerce of Liverpool.—The annual
finance accounts have just been published, by
order of the House of Commons. By this do
cument, it appears that tho whole export duties
for Great Britain and Ireland, for the year end
ing 5th January last, amounted to £125,072
19s 2d—thus showing an increase upon the a-
mount of ihc preceding year. Of this sum,
nearly #50,000, or the great proportion of
two-fifths of the whole, was collected at Li
verpool, whilst London contributed scarcely
£30,000.
London, October 3.
A letter from Constantinople, dated the 7th
ult. states the number of houses burnt during
tlio late fire at 3,000, and that ,o( individuals
who perished in the conflagration at 400, which
was considered a miraculously small proportion.
Most of tho educes consumed were of the nest
order, and inhabited by tho higher classes.—
They included many palaces and khans.
The Austrian Observer of the 24th ultimo
brought some interesting details of the tremen
dous conflagration which has laid in rums the
greater paid of the city of Constantinople.—
The number of houses destroyed is raised to
6,000, forming nearly one eight of the whole
capital. These nro not merely private resi
dences, but public buildings, embracing the im
mense magazines, known under the names of
Khans, Bezetins, and Tschartschis, the hotels
of almost all the ministers and great officers of
the empirp, tho palace of tho grand visier, call
ed tho Sublime Porte, that of the Armenian
patriarch, with the patriarchal church, and ma
ny other grand edifices. The loss of the gov
ernment alone was estimated at more than six
millions of piastres, and that of tho Turkisli and
Armenian merchants at above fifty millions.—
That the fire was not accidental, seems to-be
proved by tho fact, that ilbroke out at once in
very distant quarters where heither the direc
tion nor the force of the wind could have carri
ed it. Had not the most energetic and rapid
measures been adopted by tho grand visier and
the serasj<icr, it is probable that in tho midst of
the tumu\t and confusion created by so dreadful
an event' some serious attempts would have
been raadl on tho lives of the sult?.n and his fa
mily. TI prevent this, above eighty thousand
troops am four brigades of field nrtillery were
immediate y drawn up in order of battle in the
interior c tho seraglio, and tho adjoining
streets wc o occupied by soldiers, so that no
body of r iters or conspirators ventured to
show then elves. Meanwhile all the gates of
the sultan’] pulaco wero thrown opon to re
ceive die uilortunato families whoso houses and
goods wereliurning, and thousands of women
and childrci filled the places belonging to the
government and standing beyond tho reach
of tho flame. To the sufferers amplo pecuni
ary relief hi) been afforded; a part of tho ma
gazines was o be rebuilt at the expense of the
government and tho new barracks for the
troops were o lie discontinued, until tho edi
fices indispc sablo to trade should ho restored.
As die peon i ascribed this calamity to the w*
vengeful spi; t of the Janissaries, they are bc-
como real ol ects of universal oxecration.
, Wc leart from London, that, on Tuesday
last, the chat tellor of the exchequer made ra
ther an impo :ant communication, in reply to
aa npplicatio to take off the duty on printed
goods. He said that ministers have resolved*
in the next session of parliament, to introduce
some measures for the .relief of the manufactur
ing interest, but that to prevent any imoroper
use being made of it, diey withheld all state
ment of their views for the presont. It seems
Sot improbable, however, that the duty on
printed goods will be taken off, as it amounts to
£1,500,000 annually, of which not much more
than £400,000 reach the treasury, so cnot
mously expensive is the the collection.—Ed
inburgh Obscrrer.
Michael Kelly.—We announced yesterday,
the death of this amiable man, after a long and
painful illness, which had deprived him of the
use of his limbs for many years.
London, October 4.
We understand that the editor of the Glas-
.trow Free Press.had an interview, yesterday,
^vith the chancellor of the exchequer, for the
purpose of inquiring whether any, and what
measures, were intended to bcftaHCri by gov
ernment, to relieve the distresses of the manu
facturing operatives of the west of Scotland.—
Mr. Robinson, in the course of his remarks,
paid a high compliment to the 'excellent con
duct of the manufacturing population of Scot
land, in the most of their privations; of which,
he said, government was deeply sensible. Cer
tain measures were in Contemplation for their
relief: but it would bo improper and premature
to meniion what those measures were, as in
terested speculators might Lake advantage of
their publicity. He allowed, that the average
nett amount of the duty on printed goods was
not more than £500,000; while the amount
collected was upwards of £l,200,000. But
he declined, for the reesms already mentioned,
to state what were his intentions regarding this
tax. The tenor, however, of his observations,
was decidedly encouraging the manufactur
ing interests.
London, October 6. '
M. le compte d’Horeouit writes as follows,
on the 27th July: “I arrived at Hvdra o» the
23d. The fleet set sail 'o tho‘ number of tven-
ly-five brigs of war, besides smaller vcssclspun-
dcr Sachturis, far Samos. Great energy and
activity ore observable at .Hydra. A second
division, nearly equal, remains under Miauls,
intended for the attack of‘he Turkisli and I>
gyptian fleets offCnron. The sailors being a.
1’raid of leaving dio/r wives and children bei
hind fhein without protection, the chiefs re
quested me to funvsli the pay of 1,800 .bravo
fellows who iwrnpud from Mi'iSoWigVl’. I ac
cordingly supplied thirty thousand francs, and
have taken every means to prevent it from be
ing turned from its proper destination. Yes
terday I saw Nikitas; his flags, previous to his
departure for the Morca, with 800 men, were
blessed. Ho is an honest and disinterested
man, who has the confidence of his troops. , In
three days Kuriaskaki will set out with 2,000
men to assist Attica, and .vill bo. ircftiitod on
the way with the like number; Mon aro want
ing here loss than money. Rescind Pacha is at
Lividin. He had led 40,000 men before Mis-
solonghi, and scarcely seven thousand remains.
He guards Romclia from Missolonghi to Ath
ens. Fabvier is in Methnnu, opposite Etbin.
He has provided for tho defence of the istbmus.
A large steam vessel is expected in it, com
manded by captain Rosting: it carries eight 46
pounders. Polamis is supplied .for two years;
Corinth, Albeits, and Malvoista for a year. M.
Bailley is very zealous, and renders groat ser
vices to the Greeks.” Here follows an extract
from a letter from all the administrative com
missions of Greece to count d’Harcourt. In it
they expressed the liveliest gratitude for tlio im
portant and innumerable services which they
had received from all the nations of Europe,
and particularly from' France, t'rough tho
means of she count. Whatever might be tho
efforts of dieir enemies, they doubted not, by
'their assistance, shat Greece would triumph o-
ver them all. . In a letter to M. Eynard, after
thanking him for h.s zeal and activity, they an
nounce the arrival of several caraocs of provi
sions from France, Ger any and Switzerland.
It adds that sieam vessels are inilispensible to
continue the war, and prevent the supply of Ib
rahim’s army, and which would end by exhaust%
ing Greece. The Greek commit'ee, by the
last Courier, has received nows from England,
which give some hopes that the steqra vessel
constructed at London may depart at tho be
ginning of the next monili. ,
Extract of a private letter, from Algiers, dat
ed September 9t “By the tinio you receive
this, you will have heard of the depredations
committed by the Algerind cruisers on the flags
of powers tn amity with the regency. The
fitst was upon a largo Dutch ship, laden with
logwood, for English and American account,
front Cumpeadiy, bound to Marseilles, and de
tained for want of .a Mediterranean pass. No
sooner had this vessel been released, through
the united efforts of the Dutch, American and
British consuls, than in comes an Ionian ship
bound from Zatt'e to Leghorn, with a cargo of
Valencia wool, etc. detained on the same cause,
thus taking the bull by tho horns at once. Our
active nnd excellent proconsul (R. M. Thomas)
lost not a moment in making tho strongest re
monstrances to tjio government, which, I am
happy to acquaint you, wore productive of the
desired effect, the dey having not only, ordered
restoration of tho ship and Cargo, but indemni
ty for tho demurrage, etc. terms to which his
cars had never before been accustomed. In
deed, tlio conduct of Mr. Thomas on this as on
ovety, other occasion, wherein the honor of tfie
English flag has been concerned, merits .the
highest encomium, and will, no doubt, bo duly
appreciated by their government at home.—
Two Russian prizes have lately come in: one
a very rich one, laden at Genoa for Civita
Vccchi.n, supposed to he on Genocso account.
It has, however, been sold, notwithstanding
the remonstrances of tho Sardinian consul. We
have heard from Tripoli, that a strong report-
nay, almost an authentic one—had arrived there
of poor major Laring, and all his party, hiiviii?
been murdered by one of tho tribes in tlio de
sert called Twarnies. Wliar a melancholy ca-
trastrophe, if true! He married the consul’s
(colonel Warrington’s) daughter, the day be
fore he se't off on his expedition.”
London, Octi^jer 7.
Under the head of Vienna, September 25,
we find the same news relative to tho capture
ot Athens, and the route of the Greek troops
in the neighborhood of that city, which we
published several days ago. The result of this
lamentable defeat is, that, with the exception of
the Acropolis of Athens, the Ottomansttrenow
masters of Eastern and Western Greece.—
The inhabitants of the Motca and the islands
alono continue the struggle.
- ' • London, October 9.
We have received the French papers of
Friday', and the Etiole. dated Saturday: the fol
lowing arc extracts:
From the Etiole.—The Monitcur has pub
lished the Treaty of Amity, Navigation, and
Commerce, concluded and signed at Rio de
Janeiro on the 8th of January, 1826, between
the King and his Majesty tho Emperor of
Brazil.
We have received this morning, tho St. Pe
tersburg Journal to tho 24lh of September.—
The differences between Russia and Persia are
not alluded to. The Emperor Nicholas has
ordered the formation of a new Ministerial De
partment ; it is to be called “the Ministry of
the Imperial Court.” Princo Wolkonsky is
appointed the head of tho new department.—
lie is to receive orders from the Emperor alone,
and to him only is he to render an account of his
administration.
Manchester—Wc are happy to say, that the
general interests of trade hero continue ‘ in
that progressive course of improvomcn?which
we have adverted to for several weeks. Ad
ditional factories have commenced working,
and a number of power loomsare again put in
motion which had for some time been disused.
Of course, many more hands will, from these
circumstances, be called to active employment;
and thodgli in conscquenco of [Trices not hav
ing yet risen adequately with the increasing de
mand for manufactures, wages must, for h time,
be unfairly low; yet wo trust that this evil, the
effects of wlticlt are not confined to the indus
trious workman, but are injurious in their bear
ings upon all classes, from tho extent of claims
which they cause upon benevolence, will, ero
long, be diminished.—Manchester Chronicle.
Glasgow.—The trado continues very steady
! hero. No advance has, as yet, taken place in
wool. Sellers are holding in expectation of a
rise. Some of the spinners aro shy, and are
asking an advance on yarns. Manufactured
and primed goods remain steady, and the hold-
ors are not disposed to push sales at the present
prices. We hear that a great many Bands have
been taken on, and webs freely given out, but
no advance in prices.—Glasgow Free Press.
JLondon, October 12.
It is out of our poworto make our postscript
as complete this week, as we commonly en
deavor to do, being by chance much pressed
fpi; room in our paper.
There is an article from Frankfort, publish
ed in the London papers, in whiclt it is affirm
ed that the Sultan, feeling in the present crisis
of his empire the imperative necessity of peace,
has sfent instructions to Akertpann, to withhold
no longer the concessions necessary to effect an
amicable arrangement of the relations between
the Russian and itis own empire.
Paris, October 7.
“Several Journals announce the breaking off
of the conferences at Akcrmann, and add that
the army of Bessarabia, is concentrating; that
it daily receives reinforcement, and that the
Austrian army is about to be cousidcrably aug
mented.
“All those Papers have chosen their time
badly, for endeavoring to disturb men’s minds
respecting the negociations relative to the af
fairs of the East. It is on this very day, the
7th October, that the time fixed hy Russiafor
a definitive answer from the Divttn expires. It
can then be of trifling importance, that the con
ferences-at Akcrmann are suspended for want
of sufficient instructions to the Turkish Com
missioners from their government since a de
finitive answer must bo given to the Russian
Minister, at Constantinople,'on the only points
which have raised any difficulty at Akcrmann.
With respect to the army of Bessarabia all the
world knows that it lias been concentrated for a
considerable time. This pretended nows shews
that the Journals which give it know nothing of
what they talk about, and what they say, respect
ing the augmentation^af the Austrian army, is a
new proof of it.
FROM AFRICA.
The following letter, relating to tho Ameri
can Colony of Free Blqcks,is copied from the
Natioual Intelligencer.
"Monrovia, August 3d, 1826.—On the 28th
July, the packet brig John, Captain Clough,
from Portland, and the “Bona,” a schooner
from Baltimore, then laying in our Roads,
were boarded from a piratical brig mounting
12 guns, and manned chiefly by Spaniards, and
plundered to the amount—tho brig of 02,500
-—the schooner $2,862. Tho brig is discov
ered to be a slaver—-and is a sample of nearly
all tlio slavers at present to be found on the
coast.
Wobavo intelligence that not loss than eight
of iheso vessels have combined thoir force for
28th July, was manned from this depot, for tho
expedition. Tho/English cruisers capture sla
vers, oil the presumption of their piratical char
acter, with very little discrimination, and sel r
doin fail to procure their speedy condemnation^
But what is to bp our situation, if the establish
ment of tlio marauders at Trade Town is suf
fered to take place and become permanent."-
“Tho purchase of Factory Island was de
finitely concluded early in July.”
“TJte boats sent out by the Government pro
mise to be of incstimablo utililty to the colony.
Our establishment at the Gesters, although
within fivo miles of Trado Town, is still sus
tained. Cultivation, building and trade are
carrying on there on a small scale; but for
want of rainy scaso&Qfaft, little has been done
to advance it since the month of May, Bam
Factory is the source of vatuablo supplies to
the colony. Wo keep up, at this inclement
soason, an intercourse with this place along tho
Beach, ttui the transportation of goods or pro**
duce by this route is expensive and laborious)
and there is a considerable amount of proper
ty remaining there which we leave to tlio dry
season.
“I cannot well express to the Board die gen
eral gratification felt hero in the establishment,
at length, of a lino of packets between the U.
States and this colony, in which it is bcltovod
dependencies can be safely placed. Tho en
tire cargo of the brig John, tho first of the line,
which arrived July 22d, from Portland the 9th
of April, was,instantly purchased, and another
vessel is expoefed early in October.”
“The great'work at tho moment in hand,
and in which ivc have called upon all tlio colo
nists to assist, is the construction of a Battery
at Thomp.iontown, on a shelf 80 feet above tho
water to overlook ‘and command our roads.—
Wc arc transporting tho heaviest of our guns
there, nnd erecting a roofed breastwork of turf
ed mason work, which is intended to be shot
proofl* Our bes.t-gunners say, that, from tho
position chosen, the loug guns will hull a vessel
lying at the customary anchorage, ‘oftonor than
evory second shot; and from repeated trials, I
'do not doubt it.”
AFFAIRS IN IIAYTI.
A correspondent at Cape Haytien, under
datcof October6th writes to us in.these tefmsr
Paltry as tlio debt duo tg Franco is,or would
be to any other government, these gentry aro
reduced to the most miserable straits to meet
the annual instalments of tho current year, and
pay the troops. The only alternative, as the
bank plan has failed, is to have recourse to the
desperate expedient of issuing paper after hav
ing called, I hear, on every merchant in Port
au Prince, to whom a vessel was consigned, ,
requesting him to anticipate his duties, in order
to alleviate tho distresses ofgovernment. The
President has issued his proclamation, making
it a legal tender in all transactions; and singu-
l.ir enough, in a matter of so much importance,
he has forgotten not only the usual form enjoin
ed by the constitution, of having it counter
signed by tho Secretary General, but lias made
use of the regal appellation WE. I can ac
count for it in no other way than fry giving ere*
donee to a report circulated a short time since,
that tho Senate, which are now setting, are a-
bout not only investing themselves with that
dignity for life, but also the President with 1 re
gal powers. This report issomowhat strength
ened by another, that this body (the Senate,)
had advanced the pay of the First Magistrate
to $100,000 per annum, in order that he might
bettor support his dignity, or else like “my un
do Thomas,” he chooses to exercise the pow
ers of grand regulator, with privilege to regu
lates nnd mfs-rcgulate^ at his pleasure, a Prag
matic power ho has long exorcised. /
“Thero aro strong symptoms of ti revolution
ary spirit in this part of tlio island, and should
the paper system he attempted to be introdu
ced here, not, even tlio deserved popularity of
General Macny will be able to buy all the cof-
Tee that may arrive at market between this and
the end of the year, the time when the inst il-
ihcnt becomes due to Franee, it would .not pay
half tlio amount, and they arc without any oth
er resource.
“Yesterday mprning. wo had reports in a
creditable shape, of an actual insurrection in
the north.”—Halt. Gazette.
SELECTIONS.
■Sc
Eleven, of the counties df this State gave ma
jorities for the administration, nnd three for that
of tho opposition. The Administration majori
ty of Monmouth, averaged 48. Nearly 25,000
votes wero polled in the State, two years since
there wore 18,217. The averago number of
votes given for the Jackson electoral ticket in
1824, \(’ns 10,344; in 1826, they averaged
9,734, being 610 loss than they rocoivcd two
years ago. The number of Adams’ votes in
1824, was 8,406 : in 1826, it was 14,784; a
gain of more than 6,800.
Trenton True American.
Cot. McKenney, superintendent of the In
dian department, wiU speedily publish au ac-
oount of his late tour in tho north west, to lie
embellished with numerous engdevings. From
the well known talents nvul capability of this
gentleman, we bavfe every le ison to expert a
work of unusual interest r..! fidelity. We are
pleased with any thing which may be relied on,
as handing dowu to'posterity an account <>f tiie
rapidly disappearing aboriginals of our oimri-
try, whose history will some day be re- d with
extraordinary interest and feeling, and of which
we ourselves of the prescut generation, really
have but little information.
the restoration of Trade Town, (the slave sta
tion lately destroyed near tho Colony)—that
they have commenced a battery on shore, and
intend to sustain tho traffic iatho inu**l.lbeUotM gitte*Henttc by bom
the cruising force that will bo likely to be sen the Uoueral A-isomUy uf Rhode Waml, in join*, coin-
again3t it. The brig which visited us on the 1 miucc.
The Hon. Adirr Robbins has b is been re-elected to
his seat In the United S ate* Senate by both bmin:- of