Georgia republican. (Savannah, Ga.) 1806-1807, February 20, 1807, Image 3

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DOMESTIC POLITICS. I'so.'.t thf. .Mi /70 XALJEGTS. Federalists in valu attempt to conceal tn. ii- exaltation at Bun’s conspiracy.— They rejoice,for'the very reason tltat v iia.e-.cr’ for abodes misfortune to the t.ciicval government proves 11 grati fication to their envious malignity.— Tlu y seem confident that should the traitor succeed in dissevering the union, at.d area.ing a cnturaalous civil war, the popui; rity of the administration would Share the live of their predecessors, and fall a sivratico to apper e the indignation of,the people. Hut they will hnd them selve most cgregiously disappointed; , and this favorite expectation, like all j their other hopes, will prove a visionary j deception. The timely discovery old Burrs's plots and machinations \t ill eilec-’ tuaily preclude the possibility ol any 1 tiling more than trim! success. The Universal, knowledge of his intentions, j and the danger of an enterprise so rash j and injudicious, will destroy that energy ! so absolutely necessary for the prosecu tion of his design and the active suspicion of an alarmed community prevent any well ripened sysiimutie el torts by a pet ty band of conspirators against a power ful people, so united in one general sen timent of indignation. The plan is truly federal and will consequently prove ab ortive. It raltsM appears in all its fea tures it seems to be guided by federal principles, and will meet with a federal e;ul. There is nothing republican in Burr’s nature, and we trust there is not one republican among his desperate ad herents. He lies found a powerful rc iijfon Cr.icjit ii the quid party, who,, fol lowing the example of their file-lenders, have dcsf.eru and me republican stanor.rci, | and enlisted under the bauuar, <>l opiposi- j tjon. Nowonder th,.n that federalists! should feel a hind of involuntary uffecti- j on for them and their cause. Federal-! ism and quidir.m have u propensity; to | assimilate and embrace; their politics: are but slight obstacles to their unioi)— r they are soon tied in the firmed bonds of Friendship, and lose all recollection of the virulence and animosity they once entertained for each other. This has been exemplified in more than one instance. Burr when yet steadfastly and correctly republican, was represented by his po litical enemies as •• cunning, artful, and intriguing,” .aad for once they drew a correct ikcucss of the man : when nio:- tfiled munition and blasted prospects of future grandeur,, induced him to aban don his democratic friends, and gradual ly draw olf to join the Federal party, he was viewed by his mr associates in ■Snore favorable .light, and received their cordial support in ainining at the chief magistracy of the state of New-York.— When however he ended a private quar rel by the destruction of Hamilton, in a .duel, federalist were again exhasperat ,ed:—the idol of their affections, the hopeful champion of their cause, lay murdered by. his barbarian rival.” and. - Burr was demanded as a sacrifice to the names of—*' **’ departed virtue” ! I—Time however has mellowed their affliction,’ and softened their anger, and the •rvil ‘Han” against whom they denounced the .United and consuming v.engacnpe of • heaven and earth, may possibly in the lapse of a few years be reinstated in their love and esteem. They will not yet ac knowledge this strengthening reconcilia tion; they pretend a patriotic abhorrence j of his treasonable designs ; yet a little j penetration will discover in their mode rate language, and their aversion to re -! /torts and rumor*,” the reluctance with i which they engage in the developcment ’ of his plans, and the scrutiny of his con duct. The failure of Burr’s plot, midi the extinction- of the federal partv, are • esqually certain, and wo trust not fur! distant, thou >h the one may by eurspre- - Cede the the other. From the iUnORA. A man wn > sh mid say, I wiil raise a thousand basnels of corn on an ac;c of! la.id, would be deemed mad ; yet lliose J v.'.io arc the ora .v ,e rs lor a nav.d estuoiish-l rneuti arcs iiol preposterous i.i their pro-1 jeets or pretensions. We have 1 th msand limes shewn, that I a naval, establishment is in compatible, fc impruvpicuble in our natiptgd circum stances ; arid that even if it were pictica b:e to form and fit out and support such . an establishment, that it would after ail, be wiser to have no military naval cst blishiaent whatever. 1 he readeis ot the Aurora, inav per haps recollect a series of essays publiah ’ c-d last year, under the tide of the Sovr rriguty of the Ocean. — We Undertook the discussion of tout subject, which cost us much labor and uppliea ion, merely to shew the futility of the supposed ad vantages derived from the soverignty of the tr ee that a superior naval establish merit, has always been productive of greater. evil* than advantages, to everv nation that has possessed a naval superi ority ; anti that the only advantages de rived from such a force, was the enrich ment or riggruntlinc-merit of a few per sons of Die nai'ioii, at the .expense of the liberty, virtue, happiness, and security,,’ of all the rest of the nation. Another view we. had iff that discus sion, was to shew, that the affected a- I vrms set aQpat by the connivance of En lish emissaries, of danger to be ap-i p ehended from France, was so far from . being renh that the vefy necessity! which was i np’ s. <i on France, by the j conduct of the infatuated powers of Eu- V"po of. keeping Iherii in subjection, would render it eyialiv neces.aty to keep the whole force of that nation, to Watch them, and to suppress promptly, auy tfiat might arise ; mwelTof our anti-tip -.ti.'-ns an ’this topic. bee..- u.i endy iululled j we i hen shewed, the pohev which coilcen- - traces all ti c force of France, will also i-.ci > that force contiguous and oisposa* hie ; and for that reason, the arcumu l.viuil of s/r'fts the augmentation of com merce, and the establishment of celt/tie* ! will be not remote, but cc/.tiguctis. j These were our views in that discus sion, time has strengthened them. A military naval force, has been pro ductive only of disaster to France, Hol land and Spain for the last century ; and; what has it produced for England. Let) its debts, its poor-houses, its prisons, and j it.-, declension from civil liberty declare ir. But she has conquered Asia—and for whom ? for the people of Asia's hap piness ? read Burke’s speeches on lias ling;:, in which with all his capacity for hi ah c.oloriiur, lie has fallen far short of o _ o the picture of misery produced by Eng lish conquests in Asia. The English company after ravaging all Asia, is in debt 17 5,000,000 of dollars ! was the conquest for the good of the people el England ? Nr, the people of England have retrograded from liberty and com fort almost in the same proportion as the monopolists of Asia have been aggran dized. Her national debt is 3,000,000,000,! three thousand million of dollars! These then are the effects of a naval superiority and a competition for naval! glory. In the arinafs of naval achieve ment, nothing car. be more awfully splen did. and horribly brilliant than'the battles of Trafalgar and the Nile. But what: liar; they accomplished ?—-The battle of Aboukir only transferred Egypt toTur kirit barbarism or Mainalrir.e anarchy, and Trafalgar lost its object—it has not Saved Naples, nor yet secured Sicilv ; it | has not prevented the. conquest of the j | whale European continent, it lias not ; kc it a foot of land or an accessible port I for 1 bigland on the whole coast, from the! i Cape of Otranto to the Cattegat. ! Yet idcots—for none but knaves or i. ; d.cys can talk of our establishing a navy 1 to contend cither with the victor or the ’ .Vanquished—competitors for the sover eigity of the ocean. A military naval j Rover can be of no ofher use than de feme on the high seas ; we have not the | interns to build a navy Tor this purpose ; • defence on our coasts and harbours, is the inly eligible or even justifiable sys j ten) that we can adopt,, But a martial navy for the high seas v is the most ex travagant notion that can be conceived, becaasc physical impossibilily meets it on the threshold. | A navy from the ocean must be at ; least equal to the navy which commits ‘the.aggression.—This brings the ques tion then to the simple point.—Can we build and support such a navy l This is ; a question of simple arith vet.se. To see j tiiis iu its simplest fight, we have only to j state our actual revenue, and let us sup- J pose as a necessary consequence that | our,revenue would be doubted to maiu- Uuiu a navy. j Our whole gross revenue let us sup j pose to ire exclusively applied, to tin ! naval establisment; and that the 50,000, ) 000 of revolutionary debt is paid off— j Dollars. Say our present revenue 15,000,000 j Add new in.ernal taxes to support a navy 15,000,000 30,000,000 ! This would urcly be an ample al | lowance, comparing the present state of 1 our country with such a contingency. | What would a navy cost to buiid i What j annually to support it. The sum rcqiiir ’ ed to buiid we shall not confound our 1 readers hv noting—if-lhey cliuse to mu!- i tipiy the number of ships by the cost oi tiie frigate United States, built iu this j port; due-average amount will be about j one half the first expense. But the subsistence of a navy, what would it cost, supposing the fleet had suddenly sprung up or tiiat the British government, instead of using them to ’ transport their monarch and regulih to • Bengal, had made us a present of the j whole . A judicious and dispassionate pam- I phict lately published on this subject I : w.e presume a pmduction of Mr. T ench j Coxe.) iumishes data ready prepared, but oyer cautiously put down; in that pamphlet the average annual expense is. however, set down near twenty mil upntt of dollars short oi the real expense ; yet it states the average at 70,000,000 ol .dollars a year. Deduct your 30 mil lions even from this and you would have still 40 000,000 more to provide for. Your acre of land, citizens of Ameri ca, could not then produce youa thousand b'usludsof corn; and you must be content tp lake your land and cultivate it with care, and lx; satisfied with what it will really produce, tho’ it were only from 10 to 35. But there is another circumstance— w here w ould the men come from ; Great’ Britain, although she has Ireland and Scotland to drain from by impressment, is forced to seize and make slaves of 3000 of our citizens ; and the Danes, Swedes, Italians, Lubeckcrs, Hamburg ers and Dutch seamen, arc allowed to compose a lull third of the seamen who navigate and fight her ships of war. Are you farmers readv to send vour ‘ sous on board the destructive den of din-’ tUHPy crimeJiy iniui/si'iility y and hunuen dc-\ bast men!, culled a ip.anof war. O ! God forbid I—remote i*e that duv when na tional infatuation, or corruption, or dc uasement, shaft tear our yeomen from the plough to carry murder and desso lation on the ocean—murder for .sordid gain— a country Indore us blessed by na ture with all that can be required by vil’- tuous men, and to invite the love of peace and tiie blessings of which peace, which liberty <uwl jutUv is capable of ( ccnfoi jqam REPUBLICAN. S.IVAXXJH, bj-.nRU.iRr 20, 1306. 11. S. CONGRESS...In the House of Re prelentativcs, January ‘26, a confidential mef iage was received from the Senate... The doors were elutedfo- a fiiort time... When the report er entered, the clerk was reading a lupplement ary meilage from the president, containing iur ther teflimony from general Wilkinson against Messrs. Bollman andSwartout.and a Mr. Alex ander, an attorney, of New-Orleans, (who has arrived at Walhirigton City.) Alter taking oft the injunction of fecreey, the house proceeded to difculsthe hill received from die- Senate, lufpending the writ of Habeas cor pus... MeflVs. unveil, Elliott, Eppes, J. Ran dolph, Snulie and Dana, Jpoke against the bill, and Messrs. Varnum, R. Nelson, and Bidwell in iavor of it. 1 hole who opposed it argued, that the conffttution did not julty the suspension of the w rit of Habeas Corpus, but in cases of a Anal rebellion or invafion—;hat the present was not one of l'uch magnitude as make the fuf penlion necellary...*! hole in favor of the bill j contended that a rebellion did at present ex id; ! that the onfpiracy was an extenlive one—that i it was pofiible Burr might have foreign aid at his command—and that the public fafety abfo folutely required the suspension of the writ... Mr. Sloan laid he should vote againd the bill, but he diffeitd in opinion with other gentle men who oppufed it—for he thought the con spiracy w as a ivrious and a dangerous one...The ■ yea. & nays being taken on rejetfting the bill, were, yeas—ll:l—,r.ays—ly. Wc have perused the affidavits of James L. ! Donaldlon,and Dieut. VV. Wilfon,dating what they knew respecting Burr’s conspiracy... l'heir tedimonv tends only to drengthen that of gen. M ilkmlon, bung in fubdance, pait of the fame. Joseph Addon efq. (son-in-law to Burr) in a letter to ha Excellency Charles I’inckney, Gov. I ol South Carolina, unequivocally denies having ! the lead knowledge of Burr’s premeditated in trigues, nuch lei's any hand in it...He dates, that indead of roLLowiNU with a corn’s or tvoK rniei,he is at home Peacahly prepanm*- h lan:. t.on &c lor the ©nlutng crop, andthat io tar non being guilty of the lealt impropriety, he is eftntent that every presumition which he cannot repel by positive proop, may be conliderec ooqf) xvin kck— and the flighted suspicion that he cannot satispactorilv expeaiu, ihall be admitted as ouitr. The Repeal of the Tax on Salt lias been clamored for by the Feds for years past; and now that the state of our finances admits that measure, it is strenuously opposed by the leading f eds in Congress, Mr.” Quincy, one of ihc Massachusetts “ Hole of Nobles,” declaimed against the repeal in a speeclu ticaUou ol tlirec or lour columns in length.—Buch is Federal consistency 1 Trent oil True Mnerican. A Paris paper of the 17th of Decem ber, says — u Mr. Hultz, the Prussian as tronomer, residing at Frankfort on the Oder, thinks at this time the sun is undergoing a great revolution. He found his cojecture on a group of new spots which he has discovered on its sur face, and which according to him, occu py a fifteenth part of its diameter.” ’ MARRIED on Wednesday evening last by the Rev. Mr. Kolloek, Charles Horjurd esq. to Miss June Wallace, both of this city. COURT OF V ICE-A DM 1R ALT. Xassau, 23 d Januara, 1807. Sally, Johnson, m.s er.—T he Solicitor General prayed the claim by him given, (in befalf of the citizens of the United States o! America) to be admitted and the s id ship and cargo, to be restored as claimed. Mr. Kerr prayed the said claim to be rejected, and the said ship and cargo to !>c condemned, His honor the judge having herd the said claim and proofs read, and the ar gumen’s o! advocates and proctors there on admitted the said claim, pronounced •! the goods shipped by Lewis Gron ; ing and John Haslett, to belong as j t l timed,- and by Interlocutory decree, directed the same to be restored to the ! claimants for the use of the owners and j propietors thereof; and by further inter locutory, directed further proof to be j made within three months with respect t to the shipments made by Kirk Lukcns, and Margaret I) Scliutt. ITT* THE friends and acquaintances ’ of Mrs. Mary Webb, arc requested to attend her funeral THIS DAY at ten o'clock, at Messrs. Tucker 6c Clark’s new building, Buy lane. PET* We arc authoriseed la .say, that Mr. UIGNAL N'. GROVES, is a can didate for the Offices of Clerk of the Su/te. rior and Inferior Courts of Chatham Coun ty- February 20. te. 1 5, To the Electors of Chatham County. I take the liberty of informing you that 1 homas Boubkk, offers himself as a Candidate for the office of Clerk of the Superior and Inferior Courts. a rorr.ll. February 19. 15 Oie Diftridt Court, b- adjournment, fits on Mo no ay next, at 10 o’clock, of which those interested will take notice. Aliens desi rous of naturalization can then apply for ad iruifion. BEN. WALE, m. t. c. February 20 / 1.5. SHOES. JttST RECEIVED at the Savannah Shoe Store by the brig Two Friend* from Bolton, 8 trunks of Shoes assorted, Among which are Ladies black Morrocco Slip, pars with heels ALSO II Nells of Trunks, • Printing Ink and Papery Writing ditto Chocoltate, ’ 1 “ , l-k-GLy ht H, . . T-HB ROBIN. By the kite Sir. Clifton, of riulatltilj'liia. FROM Winter so dreary and long, I.leaped—ah ! how welcome the day— Sweet Bob with his innocent long, Is return’d to hi favorite spray. When the voice of the temped was heard, As o'er the bleak mountain it pafs’d, He hied to the thicket, poor bird ! And iluunk from the pitilels bind. By the maid of the valley furvey’d, Did (lie melt at thy cumfortlels lot f Her hand, was it ftretch’d to thine aid, As thou ptek’ded at the door ofher cot ? She did ; and the wintery w ind, May it howl not around her green grove ! Bo a bofoiu so gentle and kind Only fann'd by the braathings ts love! She did; and the kifsof her swain | With rapture the deed fliall requite, j That gave to my window a ain Boor Bob, and hisfong of delight. SHIP XJ U S EXTRA. A bottle, containing the following Writing, was found among the rocks on the lea fhoie, near Dante, a Iniall place the wed fide of Te lierifle, in the month of Auguff 150.3. Had that revered and renowned patriach Job experienced the forbiddings and the bat terings and the opes and the fears, the elationa and depreflimis, that 1, his ltfs patient deice i ’ dant, have of late, he would have followed I the kind, yet bkifphemous advice h s loving I fpool'e gave him, or plunged into a grid mill ! (if any inch thing there were then) ar.d fufler ! ed hiinfelf to be pulverized into a coufiftency, • capable of enjoying umuoleded liappmeU. Ve j who may chance to pick up the bottle contaiij- J ing this manufeript written on birch hark, may, ! peradventure, have troubled yourselves to ob ! tain it, and therefore, to recom.penfc you, 1 wiil I elucidate the tendency of the foregoing excr {ilium. I ‘l'hirty days long metre have now tlnpfed, . since the writer hereof embarked in the brig ; i.tvant, Thomas Harding, matter, from Bos ton, Madacubfetts, to Savannah, Georgia, and during all that period, nought but a continual , leries of ill luck ha 6 attended —calms, florins, ’ gales, lqualls, rains, fun, moonlight, flarlight, 1 head winds, fide winds, no winds,and all winds, i vertical, horizontal, antipodial, and oblique . waves, good, bad, indifferent, curious,-queer, , non delcript, and undelcribable weather ! ■ Ail, all, and a thouland other odd particulars ] and circunidances, have we been inccffantly and iucceffively blefled with, to this woe fraught day. And now as an addition to our ill fate, we are becalmed in the Gulph Stream, i lat. S4, N. long. 75, where in all probabil ity, the veflel will continue to dilit for thirty i days to come ; as for myself, a puffciiger 1 am i now hall familhed, and the crew ate little bet iter—therefore despairing of ever reaching land, without a miraculous interposition, I *-ave pen ned this, and committed it to the (to mt) iner cilefs waves, expedling ere long to be m Davy Jone’s locker, from which prelt-rve me, O ye kind genii. Tlius fare* it with Augustus Moore, of Auguda, Georgia, this 14th day of aVuguit, JBoj—Amen ! FORT OF LAV AM NAIL ENTERED. BhipTiconic, St John, Rotterdam />'. <S J. BAton—Luilcul. Schr. James, Adams, Martinique *>. is C. lianoardSugar ISCajfee. Eterprize, Bludgct, Barbadians Master— I ulia.\t. Efther, Wright, St. Marys CLEARED^ Ship Golden Rule, Davies, I.ivtrpool —— General Eaton, Moore, New-York Brig Georgia, Jocelin, do. Rambler, Elliott, Jamaica William Gray, Saunders, W Indtss Schr. Gabriel Duvall, Watt, Nassau The brig Philanthrcphift, Capt Copeland, of New-York, on her passage from Kingston, Jamaica, to this port, loaded with logwood dec. fpruqg a leak and was abandoned-by the ccw, on the 19th ult. (in lat. JJO, dt) Jong. 80, 10.) who reached the Ihore. on the 20th about fix miles louth of St. Augustine, in at temping to land, however, the Email boat, in which was the Captain and two young men, and a trunlc 1 eoii taing considerable money, and all the velfeis pa pers funk—one of the young men drowned, i The captain and remainder oi tne crew got into I St. Auguitine on the 2111. Chatham Rangers. REGIMENTAL ORDERS, Lavansaii, 17 !h February, 1807. AN Election will be held a; the Court IT ufr, on Friday the 27th mltant, at 11 o’clock in the forenoon for a Captain to the command of the said Company, VUE Captain Johnion j ;o, .yu and and for a .Lieutenant and Ensign, v.i r L out. Montmollin and Ensign Ansley religned. Ulrick Tobler and John Pooler cfqs. are to superintend said election. Jiy order of Col. James Johnson. CHARLES MeKENNA, 0. iS. Chatham Rangers. February 17. 14. Chatham Rangers, Com/iany Orderx, February 17, 1807. YOU are to parade in full Uniform i t the Exchange on Friday the 27th inst. at 3 o’clock P. M. precisely. CHARLES McKENNA. O. a. Chatham Rangers. February IT. 14, TAXES. IN conformity with the City Tax Ordinance the Treafuier give* notice, that he is now rea dy to receive the Taxes impoied by said Or dinance... Executions will be ifiued ih thirty d-uyslrotn the date hereof, against all defaulters j marshall, c. Treufurer. February 16 U NEGRO FT- and Ptrfonsof COLOR, arc palled upon to pay their TAXES to the lubfetiber b’ it/re the expiration of thirty days... after that period executions will he iiiued by J. MARsHAIL, c. r. February 20, 1 s F? The keeper of the Presbyterian Church, informs the petv holders that the Bell veill be placed p and rung on th> njr :- \j; hum 1 vat the hour *( K, 9, ami It) 1-2, irnthe morning, V’ w c[ 1,2, a si-2 in the evening. a urn ok. TIIIS DAY ~ct 11 o'clod * 1 be Sold b farc t/u- Suoscnbn * c Akcli • i Slu\ , WITHOUT RESERVE. 30 Pimdicouti X. E. Huai 4 Diito )\'. I. Do. 4 Ditto old Jam. Do. 5 Pipes 4tli proof Frenciv Ilrrndy 2 Ditto old E. R. Made j:a Whio n Bales sewing Twine 1 Case I’i.itillas 1 Ditto Cheeks 3 Pieces Sinehews 1 Bale blue HuuiiiUinS 1 Feather Bed 1 Piece b’ankets Y ith a number ol other artAlcSv A J. S O, Ten Prime Ne\v-N’e;>;r<)es. Conditions Cush. S. 11. STACKHOUSE, February 30 lj Aucfr Wm . Woodridge, Respectfully acquaints l.m friends and the public, of liiu re nt. ivai to the North Eail corner of the l EXCHANGE, where lie has f.d’c and convenient (fines for every kind of pro duce and offers his bill it-rvict-s in the FACTORAGE Ah D CO Mills- SIOX LIKE. He wtll keep qonftautiy on hand a j>e rural aflortmeiK of Dry Goads ex Groceries, With moft articles requeue lor l'lanta tation ule. Just Retcimtl an Consitno eat, kegs TONGUES and hOUNDU zy ditto pickled Salmon t* pipes and qr, calks French brandy io bi xes Carets, no. 8, 9 and 10 2 bales blue Nankeens 2 blsds. Trenching tools to boxes Candles 500 Demijohns ** 400 ps. white S: Brown v Piatillas j r . , . 50 piecte Ravens Duck") ‘ “ U '’ 10 30 cases assorted Gla, ( ware T 10 tons Swedes Iron J February ao 1 >w if. 11l Council, Savannah, 1 f/.h FA-nary, 1807. RrfolveJ, That an election b - belli at the Exchange on Friday ih 27111 1 It. for an Alderman to repi rfcnf Darby wa-l, •r. the room ol John p. Williarnfou t q. fige;el, and that Edward Stebb s. Calwn Baker sut! Gtirfon I. Srynv ur ■q s lie and tiny aie hereby appoinieti n agers to fuptrintend the fan e. Ami that an election be held at tins Baptist Church, on t‘ie lame day for an AMoman to rrprefent Franklin ward, in the room of John Gumming efq rc fig ti ed, Doctor Love havint; agreed to the illegality of his election, and that Dr. Uarru), Benj. Wall, Sc John Dillon citjrs. be aud they are hereby appointed mana gers to superintend the fame. hr tract from the ‘iinutlt, JOB T BOLLLS, C. C. S her ill’s Sale. WII.L BE ‘-OLD, at the Crutt fftiufi in the 7 own o Isrtinfwicl , Glynn Coun ty. on the first Tuefd/ty iu ptl next, h etwee a th hours of 10 and 2 o’c oik. A 1.1. the right and title of th es tate of Jofliua Morgan a, and of John G. St-.ead, coi filling of a vaiurhle tract of Land on the Is'auti <>f St f’.i. monS contaii.itiiY ico seres more or lens, with the improvenri'.: te vheir.oD. also, one ol Eves'Cot on Jinz. and .a keri ui der execution as the properiy of J fliua Mor, an and J or,. G f-nea •, to fatn-fy a Judgement obtained by i lutniL ton and Goofier. Conditkn.’S C.fo Willi.-in aync, s a c. Bru’ fwiek, February 20. 1 NO f ICE. TPE Snhfcaiber having elofed his bufi E at B unfwink in G ynn County, generally folic is so b persona who are in sircars to him, to call for im mediate fertlement, e tfier on lohn San ders efq near Biunfwick, whom he has appointed his agent there, or upon him in Savannah at his house, near ku-ket Square otheiwife they mult expiet u be d'.-it with agrabie to law P. MENARD. February zo 15. To Leu ■* ACONVr.NIFNT two ffory HOT7SK la Klbert v.aid, rucerriy occuiped by James BtiD'e k, efq. deceufed...! cflellion may he- had next week. Apply to JOHN BIMNGKR, leftruary 20. 1 7 10 Lely AND POSSKSSIOX GIVUN 1 MMEDIATT.Y. r |'HAT convenient Dwelling hou o. x 1 liens, ficc. £te. behmgiug to the < Itote or John 01d.,, tit’ceafed, well calculated for .1 I o— tel, they w ill lie icnted togerh .r ot f rate... lor term* enquire of Mar y l.r wo’ N, or P. J. Y ALLUiON. February ‘2O. FT. FOR SALE OR EXCHANGED, IT' OP. A RMAI.I. PixitM near the City.. 1 a valuable tract cl LADD in Baldwin County, 4tJt-di*trict aon. ing th-* ‘I ihcr fifth...her particulars, euqaii :at tin 1 nit''. February VO. if.. 13 Aiv 11V nC j,-)l'.T\ ANI ED CNAh’ll will he p-D 100.1 till; ‘f a MV; j Nur!’- ; ■ itht nt a chit I will L : yv-s fcifed. Emjuix -a thi pnr.’.eu, Fiftxir.rv Yd