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SAVANNAH GAZETTE.
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SAVAXXAH,
TUESDJr .VOR.VI.YC, Dec. 2.
By the politeness of capt. Dwyer, of the
brig Gen. Broclc, from Barbadoe3, we have
been favored with Barbadoes papers up to the
11th noveniber.
The governor of Dominica on the 29th Octo
ber, issued his proclamation, permitting the
importation for six months, in vessels of all na
tions, of all kinds of provisions; with the privi
lege of a return cargo, consisting of one third,
Value, sugar and coffee, and the remainder rum
and molasses.
rnOM THF CHARLESTON COTTRIEII, NOV. 29.
FROM LONDON.
By the brig Henry-Clay, capt. Thomas,
arrived yesterday in 46 days from London,
we have received the papers of that city to
the 11th ult. four or five days later than
before received ; but on an attentive peru
sal, find nothing in them of much public
interest. <
The editor of the Ghent Journal, lately
prosecuted for a libel on the duke of W el
lington, tells his readers that he is again
*o be brought before a court of justice for
opposing the measures of the royal govern
ment, and for spreading alarming reports
relative to the. high price of grain.
In and that part of France
bordering upon the German empire, ex
cesses have been committed by the popu
lace, in consequence of the attempts of
speculators to raise the price of corn, &c.
The opening of the new French legisla
ture is fixed for the sth of November. The
ministers have a majority, but they are still
making advances to the ultra-royalists, in
order to join them to their party.
A mutiny had taken place on board the
Chapman, convict ship, bound to Botany
Say, but was frustrated by the early dis
covery of the designs of the mutineers.—
Their intention was to murder the whole
ihips company, and carry the vessel to
America. The same arrangements had
been made on board the pilot, a transport
which sailed in company ; and it was fear
ed the mutineers on board her had succeed
ed in their attempt.
London*, oct. 9.
Yesterday viscount Castlereagh and the
earl of Liverpool had audience of the prince
regent at Carleton-house.
The accouchement of the princess Char
lotte is expected to take place within 10 or
1! day.; —that is about Saturday or Sunday
se’nnight.
OCTOBER 10.
The French papers of Monday have
brought us an ofiicbd statement of the pe
riodical administration of the sinking fund,
down to the 30th ult, whence it appears
that the sum in the purchase of French
stock from June 1816 to the day above
mentioned, v.” 51,257,123 francs, or about
2,135,713 pounds sterling; and that the
interest thereby redeemed, amounts to
4,1 56,3(10 francs—l73,lßl pounds sterling.
The funds, of which we on Wednesday
noticed f!. gradual rise, experienced some
fall TCsterday. Soon after the opening of
the market, the consols were as high as 83,
after which they sunk to 82. We have
heard no worthy causd assigned for this
fall,arid being uncertain of the reality of
the unworthy one spoken of, we merely
state the fact of their decline about one
pfr cent.
Jt appears, from accounts from Ireland,
that the fever is abating in all parts of that
country.
PARIS, oct. 4.
The result of examination into the im
ports and exports of the various ports of
France for the year 1816,i5, that their com
merce increased, and particularly in the
town of Dunkirk, Chesbourg, Havre, Brest,
L’Orient, Rochefort and Toulon. The ba
lance between the imports, valued at 42
151, 511 fi lines, and the exports amounting
to 20 10*1 923 iiancs, gives the sum of
22,046, 535 fianCS in favor of the iinports.
ocronF.it 6.
The kirm received yesterday the Duke of
© 1 J
0/leans, the Neapolitan and Spanish Am
h.isradurs, tl daisluils, ( ardinals, Mini
ter* ol stmc, h c.
I'he ten persons implicated in the affair
of tin* Black a ‘in, and at quitted ye >terdav
by the court ‘Jhsm/c, tint si t ut liberty a,
’ o‘ilot k tin* morning
Extract of a letter from Fort Royal, Mar
tinique, to a gentleman at St. Pierres,
dated Oct. 24, 1817.
“The vessels we have had at anchor in
this bay on the 21st inst. were as follows:
The corvette echo, capt. De Median j put
to sea, not since heard of.
The King’s schr. Papillon, capt. Thebo
dere; drifted to sea, and not heard of yet.
The Portuguese schr St. Andre, capt. Rc
mez, (missing); not known if put to sea.
Brig Csesar, of Boston, (missing); not
known if put to £ca or not.
Schr. Mary, of Newburyport, captain C.
Davenport —7ooo gall’s molasses on board:
parted her cables, and seen lying on her
side—fearful her cargo shifted.
Brig Montgomery, of Rhode Island, capt.
S. Peck—a few bbls. fish on board ; parted
her cables ; gone on shore to windward of
Pigeon Island—vessel bilged, crew saved.
Brig Dispatch, of Duxbury,capt. J Smith,
parted cables, cut away her masts, drifted
on shore to windward of Pigeon Island-had
about 4000 gallons molasses on board.
Margarita, king’s gabane; stranded at
Pigeon Island. In the Carnage, 2 drogers,
3 ships and a brig on shore. Two other
vessels have struck the ground and proba
bly injured.
In St. Ann’s, Marin and Vauclin ; the
damage is incalculable; nothing remains
but toe Soil, the negroes and the cattle;
many lives have been lost.
Besides the vessels mentioned in the
above letter, the brig Johanna, Caldwell, of
Newburyport, and schooner Mary, El well,
of Gloucester, are both Stranded at Morent
Bay.
From Trinity I have received no partic
ular account, but every vessel there is on
shore.
Here the schr Mentor, Biglow, ofN.Car
olina, went on shore after parting her ca-l
bles, and is lost; crew saved.
About thirty French vessels were blown
to sea, and three Americans ; nothingheard
of any of them since. Capt. Cully, of schr
Union, was left on shore sick; capt. Glud
ding of brig Nancy, was at Fort Royal; capt.
Wilson, of brig Alice is on board the brig
Edganora, Lemuel Crabtree, master, of Sul
livan, upset about 60 miles to windward of
the Island. He and four men were taken
off the wreck by boats sent out from this.—
Three men were drowned, the captain and
the others are under my care.
A French frigate went on shore to wind
ward, and upwards of one hundred persons
were drowned.”
Societies for the support of the national
interest have been recently formed at
Brussels, Ghent, Louvain, &c. Their ob
ject is to give a preference to their own
manufactures in opposition to those of
Great Britain.
Solomon and queen Sheba. —The follow
ing well pointed story is taken by D’lsraeli
from the Talmud : “The power of Solo
mon had spread his wisdom to the remotest
parts of the known world. Queen Sheba,
attracted by the splendor of his reputation,
visited this poetical kinjr at his own court.
There, one day, to execise the sagacity of
the monarch, Sheba presented herself at the
foot of the throne, in each of her hands she
he'd a wreath of flowers ; one composed of
natural, the other of artificial flowers. Art,
in the labor of the mimic wreath, had ex
quisitely emulated the lively lines of nature
—so that at the distance it was held by the
Queen for the inspection of the king, it was
deemed impossible for him to decide, as her
question imported, which wreath was the
production of nature, and which the work
of art. The sagacity of Solomon seemed
perplexed ; yet to be vanquished, though
in a trifle, by a trifling woman,irritated his
pride. The son of David, he who had writ
, ten treatises on the vegifable p: /auctions
“from the cedar to the hyssop,” to ac
knowledge himself outwitted by a woman,
with shreds of paper and glazed paintings !
I'he honor of the monarches reputation for
divine sagacity seemed diminished, and
the whole Jewish court looked solemn and
melancholy. At length an expedient pre
sented itself to the king, and it must be con
. fessed worthy of the natural philosopher.
Observin'; a cluster of bees hovering about
a window, he commanded that if should be
opened; it was 1 rvned—the bees rushed
into the court and alighted iinmediatelyon
one of the wreaths, whilst not a single one
fixed one or the other. The baffled Sheba
had one more reason <0 be astonished at the
wisdom of Solomon.
Sueh is the story. Mr. D’lsrmli thus
turns its moral : “T his would nvike a pret
lv poetical tale. It would yield an elegant
desn ipfion, and a pleasing moral; that the
hoe only rests on the natural beauties, and
never slops on the painted tlowers, howev
er inimitable the color may lie laid on.
I Applied to ladies, this would give it pun-
I v.”
I “ J
OFFICIAL.
Members of the Fifteenth Congress,
convened on the first Monday in December•
SENATE,.
New-Uampsh ire — David L. Morrill, Jo
. seph Store r.
Massachusetts— Harrison Gray Otis, Eli
. P. Ashman,
Rhode Island —* William Hunter, James
Burrill, jr.
Connecticut — ’“David Dagget, “Samuel
W. Dana.
Vermont — “ Dudley Chase, *l. Tichenor.
New-York — “Rufus King, “Nathan San
ford.
Netv-Jersey — “James J. Wilson, Malilon
Dickerson.
Pennsylvania — ’“Abner Lacock, Jona.
Roberts.
Delaware — “Outerbridge Horsey, Nich
olas Van Dyke.
Maryland — “lt. H. Goldsborough, “Alex
ander C. Hanson.
Virginia — “ James Barbour, tJohn W.
Eppes.
North-Car olina —“Nathl. Macon, “Mon
fort Stokes.
South-Carolina “John Gaillard, Wil
liam Smith.
Georgia —“ Chas. Tait, * Geo. M.Troup,
Kentucky —*John J. Crittenden, Isham
Talbot.
Tennessee —“ John Williams, “George W.
Campbell.
Ohio “Jeremiah Morrow, “Benjamin
Ruggles.
Louisiana —“E! igiu s F romentin.tW m. C.
C. Claiborne.
Mississippi —Thomas S. Williams.
Indiana — Noble Taylor.
I
HOUSE Or REPRESENTATIVES.
New-llampsh i re —Josiah Butier, Clifton
Claggett, San 1. Hale, Arthur Livermore,
John T. Parrot, Nathaniel Upham—6.
Massachusetts —“ Jeremiah Nelson, Wal
ter Folger, jr. “Benjamin Adams, John Wil
son, Nathaniel Silsbee, “Soloman Strong,
John Holmes, Joshua Gage, Timothy Ful
ler, Marcus Morton, Henry Shaw, Ezekiel
W hitman, Samuel C. Allen, “Albion K. Par
ris, “Nathaniel Ruggles, “Elijah H. Mills,
Zabdiel Sampson, Benjamin Orr, [two va
cancies.] —20.
Rhode-Island —John L. Buss, “James B.
Mason—2.
Connecticut —Nathaniel Terry, Charles
Dennison, Uriel Holmes, “Jona O. Mose
ley, “Timothy Pitkin, Samuel B. Sherwood,
Thomas S. Williams, [one vacancy]—B.
Vermont —Heman Allen, Samuel Crafts,
Wir.. Hunter, Orasmus C. Merrill, Charles
Rich, Mark Richards—6.
Netv-Vork. —“Oliver C. Comstock, Dan
iel Cruger, John P,Cushman, John R. Drake,
Benj. Ellicott, Josiah flasbrouck, John Her
kimer, Thomas H. Hubbard, William Ir
ving, Dorrance Kirtland, Thomas Layer,
David A. Ogden, John Parmer, James Por
ter, “John Savage, Philip J. Schuyler Tred
well Scudder, John C. Spencer, Henry R.
Stores, James Tallmadge,*John W.Taylor,
Charles Tompkins, George Townsend,
“Peter 11. Wendover, Rensalear Westerlo,
James W. Wilkin, Isaac Williams—27.
New-Jersey —“Ephraim Bateman, “Benj.
Rennet, Joseph Rloomfield, Charles Kin
sey, John Linn, Henry Southward—C.
Pennsylvania —“ William Anderson, Hen
ry Baldwin, Andrew Boden, Isaac Dar
lington,Joseph Heister,“Joseph Hopkinson,
“Samuel D. Ingham, “William Maclav, *W.
P.Maclay, David Marchand, Robert Moore,
Alexander Ogle, Thomas Patterson, Levi
Pawling, “John Ross, “John Sergeant,
tAdairt Jacob Spangler, Christian
‘Parr, “James M. Wallace, “John White
side, “William Wilson, [one vacant] —23.
Delaware —William Hall, Louis M.Lane.
Maryland —Thomas Bayley, Thomas
Culbreth, “John C. Herbert, “Peter Little,
“Geo. Peter, Phillip Reed, Sand. Ringgold,
“Sami. Smith, “Philip Stuart—9.
Virginia —Arch. Austin, Wm. L. Ball,
“Phillip P. Barcour, “Burwell Bassett, *W.
A. Burwell, Edward Colston, John Floyd,
Robert S. Garnett, “Peterson Goodwyn,
“James Johnson, Win. J. Levis, “Win.
M’Coy, Charles F. Mercer, ‘ Hugh Nelsqn,
“Thomas M. Nelson, “Thomas Newton,
James Pindall, “James Pleasants, ‘Ballard
Smith, Alexander Smyth, Geo. F. Strother,
“H. st. Geo. Tucker, “John Tvler—23.
North-Carolina —“Jos. 11. Bryan, “Wel
don N. Edwards, “Daniel Forney, John 11.
Hall, Alexander M’Millan, Geo. Mumford,
Tims. Settle, Jesse Stocumb, J. S>. Smith,
Jas. Owen, Lemuel Sawyer, Felix Walker,
Louis Williams-—l 5.
South Carolina —Jos. Relinger, “John. C.
Calhoun, Elias Earl, James Krving, ‘Wil
liam I .owmles, ’ 1 leurv Middleton,'Stephen
D. Miller, Wilson NisbrP, Sterling Tuck
er—9.
Georgia—Joel Abbott Plum W.t’obb,
“Zcdock Cook, Joel Crawford, “J. “Forsyth,
Wm. Terrill—6.
Kentucky —Rich.C. Anderson, “Henry
Clay, “Joseph Desha, “Rich. M. Johnson,
Antliy. New, Tunstall Quarles, Geo. C.
Robinson, Thos. Speed, Dav. Trimbal, D.
• Walker*—lo.
Tennessee —*W. G. Blount, Thos. Clai
borne, Sami. Hogg, Francis Jones, W. L.
Marr, Jno. Rhea—6.
Ohio —Levi Barber, Philemon Beecher,
J. W. Campbell, “W. H. Harrison, Samuel
Hereck, Peter Hitchcock— 6.
Louisiana —Thos. B. Robertson.
Indiana —W. Hendricas.
Mississippi — t Geo. Poindexter.
Illinois Territory —“ Nathaniel Pope.
Missouri —“ John Scott.
* Those having this mark, were members
of the last (14) congress.
t And those marked thus, have been
members of former congresses.
The heads of department — (complete.)—
John Quincy Adams, secretary of state ;
Wm. H. Crawford, secretary of the treasu
ry; JohnC.Calhoun,secretary of war;Ben
jamin W.Crowningshield, Secretary of na
vy; Wm. Wirt, attorney general.
NEW-YORK, NOVEMBER 20.
The commissioners appointed to settle
the northern boundary line, have arrived in
this city. D. P. Adams, esq. one of the as
sistant commissioners, proceeded to Wash
ington on Tuesday morning, with dispatch
es from general Peter B. Porter. Major
Fraser is still in the city. The utmost har
mony prevailed between the commission
ers, and there is reason to hope that the
business has, or will, terminate to the satis
faction of both parties.
Port at .tnmtimah.
ARRIVED,
Frig* Adeline, Rich, Boston, 13 days, to 8. 15.
Parkman, consignee—with rum, beef, butter,
shoes, paper, hats, oats and hav, ‘a Stebbins £•-
Vason, B. M’Kinne & co. A. B. Fannin, Dr. 1..
Kollobk. A. Gould, Clarke St Tileston, D. Brown,
and mv. Fessenden. Passengers, mr. and miss
Adams, messrs. Fifield, Flint, Fesseiiden, and cap
tains Jlayiv'mdand Upton. Spoke, Nov. 7, ship
Albert Gallatin, 45 days from St. Petersburg!!,
bound to New-York, dismasted.
Brig General Brock, Dwyer, Barbadoes, 12
days to the capes, to Robert Scott, with specie
and ballast. Captain D. informs, that the ship
Severn, Haladay, had just arrived from Bristol,
F. the day lie sailed ; and also reports that the
brig Amelia, which left New York about the Sth
Oct. had arrived at St. Y’incents, not being able
to reach Barbadoes, her destined port; and final
ly that two brigs (one the Rosewarn, from Fal
mouth, the other not known) arrived at Barba
does on the 11th ult. had been boarded off’ Ten
erifte by one of those piratical vessels, (which,
tinder pretence of cruizing against the flag of
Spain) and plundered ofprovisions &.c. A squad
ron was immediately dispatched in pursuit of the
robbers.
Sloop Adeline, Bradley, Charleston, 1 day, to
G. F. & O Palmes, consignees—with wine, rum,
sugar, raisins and crates, to I. Cohen, T. 11. Con
dy &c co Gumming £c Moorhead, J. Guer.in, F.
If. Welman, Gillet & Milne, and A. l.eonard.—
Passengers, mr. Habersham and family, capt. IF
Bron-a, and 11 others.
Sloop Joseph, Nye, Rochester, n. i. 9 days, su
gar, butter, meal, bricks and furniture, to T.
If. Condy it co. J. 11. Greene, T. Crapcn, M. &
A. Smith, and Potter & Ingraham. Passengers,
messrs. Hull, Briggs and Isaacs. In lat. 3a, long. !
40, saw a dismasted schr. could not learn her
name—the day after, saw a ship apparently hav
ing her in tow.
Sloop Hermit, Bachlett, St. Mary’s, e days,
with hides and cotton, to Olmstead St Battelle.
Sloop Planter, Tew, Freetown, it. i. 8 days,
with stone ballast, to the master. 7 passen
gers
(Tj- In the River last evening cotn.ng up, with
light wind, 2 ships, 1 square rigged and 1 her
maphrodite brigs, 1 schooner and 4 sloops, names
or where from unknown..
CLEARED,
ship Oglethorpe, Jayne, Liverpool ;
„ Hibernia, Graham, do.
j, Factor, Hamilton, do.
Vessels tip for this port.
At Newburyport, Mass. Nov. 18. schr. Des
patch, Folsom, was to sail in 1 or 2 days.
Baltimore, Nov. 22.
Arrived, schr. Col. Ramsay, 12 days from Ha
vana, sugar and coffee. In lat. 32, spoke a ship
from Boston ; and Mary, from Gibraltar bound
to Charleston, which it was supposed they reach
ed next day. Two patriot sclirs. were cruizing
between Matanzas and Havana; they captured
a schr. from the coast of Africa, a few days Be
fore, and had landed at Arujo, a small port be
tween M and H. where they committed some
depredations. Ar. at Havana from Ist to 6th
Nov. dutch brig Elizabeth & Rlenora, 67 days
from Rotterdam ; Am. schr. Wm. Sc Joseph, 60
days from Norfolk via St. Jago; Am. brig Han
nah, 84 days from Bremen ; Am. brig Mariana,
from Philadelphia; Spanish brig San Jose 50 ds.
from Africa, with 337 negroes; Am. brig .Maria,
Ducoins, from Neyv-Orleans for Havre Ue Grace,
put in.
Brig Criterion, Seadurne, 43 days fr. Havre.
Left there Oct. 7, ship Martha, Joy, to sail in a
week ; ship St Paul, Wheelwright, to sail as
*unii as afloat, probably next day. Spoke in lat.
12, lon. 63, brig Augusta, of Boston, for Cadiz,
4 days out
Gloucester, Nov. 16.
Ar. brig St. Paul, Wheelwright, of Newbury
poit, 38 days from Havre de Grace. Sailed in
co. with ship Atlas, of Boston, for Alexandria.—
E.etraet fnrn thi lut'-buok’ of the brig St. Paid:
Ort. 28, lat. 41,32, *. 47, 47, w fresh bn ezes
and rain, attended with thunder and lightning ,
at ledt past 1 o’clock a. m u flash <>t lightning
struck the mam royal must, then down the top
in >st in a serpentine direction, to the main mast,
with sin'll fury as to split it entirely through,
within 8 feet of the det k, where it came in coil
tin t uni, a pigeon house that Stood b* fore the .
niaittmu.t, when it flew tiffin every dim ti(u ; I
■ the Iphut i** < (Hut in w>• almost irs'ipnert tont I
For freight or charter
To the ll est Indie;
The fast-sailing brig Little-Frank, T
Moore, master, carries 1300 barrels. For terms
apply on board, or to HAZEjV KIMBALL
dec 2 s 81
For Charleston,
The regular packet sloop VOLANT,
■sc*aE£ Allen M’Lean, master. For freight or
passage, having good accommodations, apply to
the captain on board, or to ISAAC COHEN.
dec 2 81
For Charleston,
° sa ’t first fair wind, _)
92k8*> The regular packet sloop Adeltts,
Z. iiradly, master, for freight or passage, having
superior accommodations, apply on board at
Moor’s wharf, or to
G. F. (3 OLIVER PALMES,
<ic c 2 sBl
For Darien and St. Mary's
The sloop HARRIOT, Pardv, master,
sail in ail tins ts eek. For freight
or passage apply on board, or to
G, F. tS* Oliver Palmes.
tor 2 i__ J 81
For Darien,
The new and fast sailing sloop ROSF.-
BLOOM, captain liamiiu, having*
part oi her freight engaged, will be dispatched
immediately. For freight or passage i*pply to
the master oil board or to
OLMSTEAD L J BATTEL IE.
dec 2 81
For ihir&ii and St. Mary’s,
The sloop EXPERIME VT, captain
.Ssjjrftdfw Bradley. For freight or passage, apply
to the captain on board, or to
Butler, Clarke co.
dec 1 li SO Telfair’s wharfl
For Freight or Charter,
” tie schooner . VA.YCY., Elisha ITan*
dy ma: ter,burthen 112 tons, high deck,
a very substantial vessel. For terms, apply to
the master, or to J. BATTELLE.
Who has landing from ship Susan,
14 hhds very prime Muscovado Sugar
50 kegs prime Butter
6 casks Cheese dec 1 80
For Baltimore,
The fast-sailing sloop F.xperimen*,
Bradley, master, will sail on Sunday
next. For freight or passage apply to the mas
ter on board, at Bolton’s wharf or to
dec 2 ‘tl ISAAC COIfFM.
I
For Alexandria Washington,
* The schooner Freemason, John Lvm
burn, master, burthen 96 tons, sails well,
and in good order. For terms apply to F. 11.
Welman, or to Girrr.xE & Liepitt. dec 2
For any port in Europe,
yJimfSX The very superior fast-sailing Jip
VfOijh. Niagara, Lambert, master, stands A 1,
is nearly new, having made only two voyages,
and carries 1000 baies cotton. Apply to the
captain on board, at Bolton’s wharf, or to
JOILY THOMAS, Rice’s wharf.
Who has for sale, on board said ship,
ISO hhds. liverpool coarse Salt
4sooo superior quality lirick*
8* bundles I*.ay
45 boxes Herring
40 firkins Butter
5 barrels Apples
I2 do Cider
160 bushels Potatoes 81 dec?
For Liverpool,
The gyiofl substantial ship JUSTIN A,
Andrew* Tombs, commander, having
half of her ready to go on board, and will
soon be despatched ; for freight or passage, ap
ply on boarder to Wm. TAYLOR,
dec 2 tel* 8i
“ ... -*r,j * ■*■•*•
For Liverpool,
The yfell known packet ship JOHN &
V'hWAIII), S. S. Webb, master. For
freight of 300 bales cotton (the rest of her car
go being engaged) or for passage, the ship hav
ing elegant accommodations, apply to captain
Webb, on board, or to
nov27 77 RICHARDS Sc IIARROWAY.
For Liverpool,
The ship Liverpool Trader, captain
Fcnno, wants freight of 250 to 300 bale's
cotton.
The ship F.dmn Belton, capt. Gardner, wants
only 300 bales.
The British brig Seipio, capt. Madders, wants
half her cargo, or about 250 bales.
Also,, the ship Belfast, capt. Bunker, for Havre,
has all but 300 bales of her cargo ready. The
whole will be immediately’ dispatched,
dec 2 81 It. RICHARDSON 8c co.
For Liverpool,
The ship REMITTANCE, Coffin,
master, is now in readiness to receive a
cargo. For freight or passage apply on board, at
M’Kinne’s wharf, or to REA &BL CLEIt.
Who have for sale, on board of said snip,
38 chaldron best Liverpool COAL, which wiß
be sold low, if immediate application is made.
IN STORE,
40 boxes Raisins
8 bbls prime Fork
20 firkins Goshen Butter, first quality
130 half boxes Soap
20 cases Claret
20 qr. casks L. and T. Wine
6 do. & 0 si c ;iy Mail. NVinc
7 pipes S :
1 bale English sewing Twine
2 chests imperial Tea
4 boxes tea setts China
10 bbls Brooklyn Gin
1 mahogany counting-house 1 eric
300 pieces cotton Bagging
1 fine toned Pianna Forte, and
A general assortment of Windsor and fancy
Chairs. noV-’S ‘! r ! L-
Russia Duck.
4? holts Russia Duck, for sale hv
nnvV w- 73 H-.W T. I> >
A iMiirksmitli W :ii*tl.
To go into the country—m* wi'h “f
; tools, may hear of Ml tulvanUtgemi* sitna'm"* 7
I application to GF i* OI.UI'H P.llMLo-
I det 1 H