The Argus. (Savannah, Ga.) 1828-1829, August 02, 1828, Image 1

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r 0?A M EMU* BARTLETT— EDITOR.] } ‘THE, 8 *3T ■ B^ V „bUed every day, in Savannah, Geo. 1 jj US ; n eps season, and three times a ■ {jie the summer months, at Eight Dollars during b j e in advance. ARGUS B jled from the Daily Papers, and pub- V£ fo®. ur( j a y morning, at Four Dollars |Snect eVPT ’ r Three if paid in advance. ■r annum, °\ (ments ir M be published in hoth pa- Wm? ‘H-Znts per square of 14 lines for the first rents for each continuation. |B(rfio n l un ications respecting the business IMX •*“ , au st be addressed to the Editor,post lM’ f , and p n d nesrmes by Administrators, Guardiansf are required by law, to ^ !ltor the ft r st Tuesday in the month, between f ](icn n „ n o’clock in the forenoon and three Bn’ ioon at the Court-House of the Com- B 1 * ‘w rt the property is situated. Notice of t , £mst P be P given in a public Gazette the'MlVof personal property must be lint Uj days previous to the fcy-? to the debtors and e-editors of an estate, ■ , VwTnublished for forty days. ■ v. ttthat application will be made to the Court BfOrdinary for leave to sell land, must be pub fcd/Wnionths. luFon sales rr rtir RESERVE LAXDS, THE TOWN Qt 4 LOTS, AXD the bridge, IT* ILL commence on Wednesday the first day of next October, and will continue from ij 0 w ith the exception of the first Mon -v- and Tuesday of that month. We shall then loose to sale in Macon, to the highest bidder, in nforinitvwitiia late act of the General Assem |ly • All the town lots not heretofore disposed of; upwards of one hundred in number; on the •stem side of tiie river: among them are twelve jjioining the river, and a few other choice lots for iu,esis = Tiie residue are in more retired situa jons. and generally afford good building sites in a ileasant and growing part of the town. * fortv-two gardening lots of 10 and 20 acres each; laid out from 1 to 1 1-2 miles distant from the town in two ranges around the Western Com mon Also, twenty eight lots on the Eastern side: tint it to say, 4 of twenty, 8 of ten acres, and lb of jnetcre each These last include the place some times known as Newtown; and will be sold, sub ject to certain leases from the United States, to expire next January. The residue of the lands in the two reserves, ire laid out in tracts cf 100 acres, and fractional puts of such tracts. Os these, the uplands will [e next offered; the last numbers first; beginning {nth those on the w estern side. On Wednesday the22d of October next, at 11 o'clock A. M. will be offered at the place of the Other sales, the BRIDGE AT MAC OX, Together with one acre of land on the eastern side of the Ocmulgce river, as one of the butments; tod the privilege of using so much of Fifth or Budge street on the western bank as may be ne the other hutment of the Bridge. On Thursday the 23d of October, we shall pro ceed to sell the swamp and bottom lands within the Keserves. those on the Western side first; and continue from day to day until completed. The particular numbers that will be sold on each fcv cannot be specified ; hut it is intended to put up the several kinds and descriptions in the order here mentioned. The Reserves are generally well watered and Contain several good mill seats. The area of the whole cannot be exactly known until the platting i completed; but twenty-one thousand acres is the estimated quantity contained in both Reserves and the adjoining fractions, exclusive of the town surveys. Perhaps no body of laud of the same extent can be found that embraces a greater va riety in iis surface, soil and timber. Situated just in. that region where the pine of the lower country changes to the oak and liickory of the upper : it includes both these growths, and soils in most of their varieties; in some portions entire, in others interspersed or blended. Tracts of very hilly land, or that which is quite level, or gently undulating, maybe had of almost every quality ; either of oak fcnu lathery, or pine, or river lands; and several of these kinds occasionally united ; m tracts of 1 ‘ acres nd fractions of various sizes, adapted k ...osi of the purposes for which land is wanted. 1 roin the pressure of the times ; and more es pecially from the quantity of lands and town lots, that will have been lately in the market, these Must unavoidedly sell low. And, lying at the *iead of navigation, immediately around the third town of the State in population and trade, thera is every reasonable prospect of their soon rising l m value. Purchasers have now’ an opportunity, and appa rently the last that will soon offer, of obtaining on cheap and very indulgent terms of payment, choice situations for residence, for trade or for shrining. TERMS OF SALE./ . Purchasers of lands and lots ar,to pay the Com missioners on the day of the*spurchase, one fifth Part of the purchase money* in Cash or current yilis of chartered banks of this State ; and the re sidusin four equal r/inual instalments. JVo stcu ft* *c iil be t e quire A. 1 he Bridge” will be sold on the same terms ; ex copt that the purchaser will be required to give hand with two or more approved sureties for the payment of the four subsequent animal instal ments. W. N HARMON, ) C. B. STRONG, ? Comm'rs. . O. H. PRINCE, ) Macon, July 5,1828. Oj The Editors of the Charleston City Ga the Tuscaloosa Mirror, and of the several public Gazettes in this state, will publish the fore weekly, nine weeks, in their respective pa pers, and forward their accounts to MARMA- BbKE J. SLADE, Esq. Clerk of the Conimission cr °. in such time as to reach him by the Ist of No vember. ’ 22—ut COMMENCEMENT. . FRANKLIN COLLEGE , ) University of Georgia, 23d June, 1828. \ HE final Examination of the present Senior Institution, will take place on Mon ina o The examination of the Fresh er* n , on VVednesday the 30th, and of tho P ° ni <>re Class, on Thursday the 31st of the j u ® On Friday, the Ist of August, the ] ass he examined, and on Saturday Oil SaKK can di ( lates f° r admission into College, viinf , *he third, a commencement Sermon Afii c nelivered in the Presbyterian Church in on Monday the board of Trustees will of .i ’ 1 uescUy, the sth, a part of the members bj (v/ U tt * or . * lass attached to the two Societies po 8 it /e ® e deliver Orations of their own com win Ul #b Wednesday tire fithday of August, asir annua ! commencement. During the Olavt* n ’ ail j ora^‘on will be delivered by Judge tt alS °ri by Ju< Jg©. Berrien, as Re P rc ’ Pieties 01 tie emost keman and Phi Kappa ASBURY HULL, julv 4 ccr otary of Umm r situ of Georgia. id THE ARGUS. fll AMTO* JBDXDAYMORXIXQi JULY 28,1828. Though the politeness of our friends, we have received commercial letters, and prices current, under date of Liverpool, June 16, received per ship New York. It cannot but be remarked, that those sections of our State, where the operations of the Tariff are more clearly seen, and better understood ; and where its ill effects—if such there be—must bo immediately felt—evince but few symptoms of irritation on account of the late law. While in other sections, where they neither see nor feel its effects, some considerable uneasiness is displayed on the subject. What inference can we draw from these facts, but that ignorance and mistake, are the true causes of the excitement. And that disingenuous politicians, taking advantage of these fears and these errors, unworthily labor to get up an excitement, which may subserve their own dishonest purposes ? On the mercantile interest will the burdens im posed by the Tariff, be first felt. Yet in Savannah and Augusta, where these interests are predomi nant, we hear of no meetings, no resolutions, no threats to dissolve the Union. Yet in the back country, among the middling farmers, where nine out of ten have alw r ays dressed in homespun, fears are excited lest they should be ruined by the duty on broadcloth ! People who never purchased a yard in the whole course of their lives, are rendered desperate with the idea that it may advance in price ! People who know notliing about the ope rations of commerce, who neither understand nor regard its rights, and wdio would scarcely know’ a sbip from a wheel-barrow, have become obstrepe rous in their fears, that their shipping interests will suffer in consequence of the Tariff! Surely these things need explanation. SUMMARY. Iron Ore. —A bed of iron ore has been discover ed near the line of the proposed railway from Ithi ca to Oswego, about nine miles from the latter village. Great masses have been found in a ra vine, two feet from the surface. A small speci men which ha 6 been analyzed, has been found to yield thirty per cent, of pure oxide of iron. A numerous meeting of tiie natives of Ireland, was held at Rochester, N. Y. on the 28th ult. and resolutions entered into to form a Hibernian Soci ety in that village. Ohio River. —The Wheeling Gazette of July 12th says the Ohio is about three feet above low water mark Loiter Canada. —The Quebec Mercury of the Bth. states that it w now certain that Lieut. Gen. Sir James Kempt succeeds the Earl of Dalhousie, as Governor-in-Chief, and that Sir Francis Bur ton will follow Sir James Kempt, in the govern ment of Nova Scotia. A letter received in Philadelphia, from an offi cer of the United States schooner Grampus, W. K. Latimer, Esq. commander, mentions the de parture of that vessel, on the 15th June, from St Jago de Cuba, for Port Royal, Jamaica. All on board tvere well. The Legislature of Maine, at its next session, will have to elect two United States’ Senators.— The term of service of Mr. Chandler has expired, and Mr. Farris has been appointed a Judge of the Supreme Court of that state. Miss Frances Wright has taken charge of the New Harmony Gazette; and in the first paper is sued under her superintendence, quotes with appro bation an argument to prove that marriages are invalid, where the dispositions of the contracting parties turn out to be uncongenial. The jtate of Pennsylvania (says the National is going ou with gloat power and rapidity with her Canal. About eighty miles of her Canal, that is, from Pittsburg to the Northern Turnpike, will be in successful operation, it is be lieved, in about three months; the residue, about thirty miles, to the Western base of the Allegha ny Mountain, will be put under contract on the first of September; and the Rail Road over the Mountain, about thirty-five miles, will be under contract this Fall, to be completed the next sea son. The average number of hands employed this season has been above four thousand, and the monthly disbursements of money eighty or a hun dred thousand dollars The Pennsylvanians have reason to be proud of this great work, which they carry on in the only way in which important pub lic improvements ever can be effected. A little girl (says the Philadelphia Democratic Press) about two years of age, was found yester day morning, about 4 o’clock, asleep in the road, near the Asylum in Arch street. She had on a green bonnet, a white cloak, and a calico frock.— A note was found in her bosom, stating that her parents had come from England, and were both dead; that the person who had kept the child since could afford to do so no longer, and that her name was “ Eliza.” She is now in the care of Mrs. Small, corner of Callowhill, and Eighth streets from Schuylkill. Mr. Editor : Amidst the various vicissitudes of human life,, the wants of poverty, the vengeful iro of the rich, “the proud man’s contumely, or the oppressor ‘s w rong”—there is one attribute of the human soul, one privilege given to us by nature’s God, that cannot be subdued, but with life. ’Tis the privilege of thinking to ourself. And in the exercise of this great natural privilege, I presume 1 shall be excused for giving utterance to reflect tions, when the motive is not personal. When I see young men repeatedly visiting dram shops, thinks I to myself, you had better take two or three doses of Dr. Chambers’ medicine. When I see one whose means are small, indulging in ail the vaif ties of life, thinks I to myself, you are hoarding miseries. When J 6ee children playing in the streets on the Sabbath day, thinks I to my self, an incontestible evidence of the immorality of parents and guardians. When I sq,e people run ning horses in the streets, thinks 1 to myself, what a police ; a I: 4 %insurance would break here. — When I see a splendid sign over a merchant’s door, thinks X to myself, you anticipate better SAVANNAH , SATURDAY MORNING , AUGUST 2, 1828. times. W T hen I see people exhibit their T uest dresses, or most splendid apparel, ingoing to wor- i ship God, thinks 1 to'myself, as the Royal Psalm- j ist thought to himself, all this is vanity. Whea ’ I see people, candidates for office, extremely firio i- I ly before election, and indifferent aft-arv. rds, j thinks I to myself, a vote given to hypocrisy>- When I see officers solemnly sworn to keep and upport the laws of the State, guilty themselves of breaches of it, thinks I to myself, is this perju- ‘ ry ? When I see people selling cotton with fair samples at each end of the bag, and inferior cot* j ton in the centre, thinks I to myself, the seller is , more knave than fool. When I see poople stand- l ing in the doors of Churches, either before or af- > ter service, to the detriment of those who wish to . go in or out, thinks I to myself, you have more impudence than brains. When I see people irri tated at the little trifling jokes passed upon them by their acquaintance, thinks I to myself, * “Little children never let such angry passions rise, Your little hands were made to tear each other’s eyes. When I hear people talk about restrictions—un constitutional duties-,—State rights—dismember ment of the Union—awful consequences of a Ta riff—denouncing its makers—anathamizing Nor thern manufactures, and Northern influence—and they themselves working, screwing, twisting, and even borrowing, for the purpose of raising money to spend at the North, thereby impoverishing the ‘ State some hundred thousand dollars—thinks I to ! myself, these political declamators remind me of the story of the mountain in labor—that conceived and brought forth a mouse. X. Y. X. THE YANKEE IN GEORGIA, MILLEDGE VILLE, MARCH, To Mr. Ichabod Flogginbottom, Blossomdalc Vil lage, Vermont. Dear Sir : My last letter informed you of my 1 arrival at Louisville, in no very pacific frame of mind, owing to several accidents and misadven tures, which had happened to me on tkc road.— Louisville is one of the oldest up-country villages in the State—contains some 60 or 80 houses and stores ; but the trade and prosperity of the place have long been on the decline—wealth and enter prise have all “moved to the purchase.” It was for many years the seat of the State Government; but every thing is on the move in Georgia. On acquiring anew slip of land from the Indians, the State House “ wa3 bundled up,” and “moved to the purchase.” Tho citizens of Louisville exhibit ed the appearance of more refinement and intelli gence, than I had been led to expect from a de scription of the trackers , which had been given to me in Savannah—and who were baid to be “ half horse half-alligator.” I accidentally fell in company with judge , of the circuit. He has the reputation of being the soundest lawyer in the State ; quite plain and republican in his address; uniting the most polished and gentlemanly nvmjars, with the highest talents and most unexceptionable princi ples. On the rad from Louisville to Milledge- : ville, I met with no incident worthy of notice.— i I could not, however, but observe the wretched ’> system of agriculture, which seems every, where * to prevail. The people pay but little attention to . to the improvement of their lands, and none at ’ all to the comfort and convenience of their dwel lings. Even those who are above middling cir cumstances, mostly live, or rather eiry, in log cabins, neither wind nor water tight, and their usual fare is bacon and greens, the year round.— ‘ This all results from the “moving” spiiit which seems to possess the people of ihis State. I have not yet met with the planter who considered himself; settled for five years. “After next crop, I expect , to move to the purehaso,” is in the mouth of eve- ; ry one. I arrived in Milledgeville just as the ear ly sun-beams were glittering on the tops of the houses; and the various groups, scattered over the “seven hills,” afforded a beautiful and picturesque prospect. I took lodgings at the Farmers’ Hotel , and met with accommodations which are not of- ten exceeded. More than all, I admired the ele gant and extensive arrangement of the Reading Room—where may bo found the leading from all parts of the United States, with the liter ary periodicals, new novels, &c. ; Milledgeville is the present scat of government of Georgia, situate near the centre of the State, on the Western bank of the Oconee, contains something like 200 houses and stores, and a po pulation of about 1,500. It was within a few years, a place of some trade and commercial im portance. But that “moving spirit” which pos sesses every body, appeared, and changed every thing here. On obtainingnew lands from the In dians, the people, as usual, “moved to the pur chase,” and they took a fancy of carrying again the State House along with them. This town having grown up under the patronage of the State, and deriving much of its business from the location of the public offices, and the annual ses sions of the Legislature, was parali2cd at the first opening of the project, 5.3 if struck by the rod of the enchanter. Houses unfinished remain so; those erected were suffered to tumble dow r n ; ca pital left the place, and enterprise was annihilated. But the good sense of the last Legislature pre vailed over the besetting sin of the people, and a renewed pledge was given that the “State House should remain at Milledgeville.” The effects of this measure arc already perceptible, in the late improvements of the place. Yesterday, in ray rarnbK over town, I strayed into the village Church yi*rd. It is situate in the Western suburbs, on the summit of a gentle ‘■‘mi nonce, elevated rather above the busy part of town, and divided from it by a natural ravine. It is a beautiful and romantic spot. Here the eye may catch tho earliest beam of tho rising sun, and hie last depar ting ray. A silent and appropriate spot, for the long and drearn ; ess slumber of the dead. It has always been u. favorite employment of mine, to saunter among graves and tombstones, and the fast mouldering monuments of frail hu manity. It never fails to awaken that pensive, dreaming mood of temper, which carries back the feelings and the recollection to the days of light hearted youth. Ip ft village ChUfcb y aid, hew i nuny objects strike the attention, which awaken reflection, and interest the feelings ? How morti lying to human pride, is the contemplation of that defaced and crumbling monument which va nity has erected to render immortal some petty greatness ! Yet how dear to the heart are those evidences of strong and enduring affection ! Here have the tears of the parent blossomed forth in the white and delicate rose ; and there have the sighs of the widowed bosom spoken out in sculp tered marble ! Here droop the slender fibres of the willow over the ashes of a brother, the last stay of orphan sisters : and beneath yon nameless and unmarked mound, reposes the clay of the homeless, friendless stranger ! I loitered sometime in reading the inscriptions, and gave myself up entirely to the flow of feelings which they induc ed. My attention was at length arrested by the following inscription:— Beneath this Tablet Repose All that is mortal of Henry Denison, Who died in Milledcreville, Georgia, October 31st, 1810, aged 23 years and 4 months, . Son of the Hon. Gilbert Denison and Huldah, his wife, of Brattleborough, Vermont. Reader! Art thou a parent ? Think upon thine own offspring and sympathise w T ith them : Art thou a good son ? Mingle thy tears with his parents, for he was the best of sons : A Brother : Mourn, for h'o was the kindest of brothers: A friend ? Sorrow r , for he was the firmest of friends : Does the muse inspire thee ? Grieve, for he was of thy kindred : Art thou all that is manly and upright ? Be moan his untimely fate,for he was thy companion: But if thou art a Christian! rejoice,for Henry “is not dead, but sieepeth.” It is chisselled on a plain marble slab, and surrounded by a neat white paling—l read the touching inscription—the memorial, as I after wards learnt, of one of those ardent ana endur ing friendships, which this world’s destiny has neither power to chill or change—again and again. It awakened reflections of indiscribable interest, for we had been old friends, in those days of unsophisticated feeling—our joyous school-day hours. We had clambered together over the crags of our own native mountains—flew like the wind over lakes of burnished glass, and had sat to gether in the village school-house of , be neath your birchen sceptre. You will pardon this reminiscence, for you also have dropped a tear to his memory. You, yourself, have wept over the untimely fall of genius, whose earliest blossoms you had assisted to unfold ; but whose sweet and flagrant flowers were scattered on a distant soil. The following touching lines to his memory arc from the pen of one whose fate has not been dis similar : “ Though thou art lowly laid, Thou'rt not forgot: Strangers thy grave have mad* A sacred spot! Memory twineth now The wreath around thy brow, That fadeth not. Yes, there are hearts that feel The holy fire; Hearts, whose bright flames reveal Thy funeral pyre ! Still in their inmost core, Warbles its wild notes o’er, Thy deathless lyre. Spring’s fairest flow’rs shall bloom Around thy Urn— Genius shall on thy tomb His incense burn, — Caught by its heav’aly light, Fancy shall check her flight, To pause and mourn.” Boston, July 15. From Smyrna —By the brig Samos, Capt. Parsons, which arrived at Quaran tine on Sunday, in 70 days fiom Smyrna, we have obtained ths following particulars, derived from two American gentlemen, passengers, direct from Constantinople. The brig Delos, Smith, was at Con stantinople April 20th, being he firstAme rican merchantman, hearing the flag of the U. Slates that had ever visited that port. Very great excitement was caused by the arrival of this vessel in sight of the ‘ erag* lio She was immediately visited by many Turks of distinction, some of whom even carried away pieces of rope as memorials of the event. It is stated to have been determined by the Divan, though not yet revealed to the people, that in case theßussians reach Con stantinople, that capital shall immediately be set on Are, after the example of Mos cow. The Sultan continues, according to law, to visit in state some place of Mohamme dan worship every Friday He is followed by his Court, aud thirty led horses, through double files of soldiers reaching from the gates of the Seraglio to the Mosque where his devotions are offered up On these oc casions, it is common to hear the remark that he -may not return alive. The heir to the Ottoman throne is a hoy six or seven years old, the only acknowledged legitimate child, though the Sultan has many others.— An oldei son, who by this time might have stood in his father’s way, has been missing several years. The principal favorites of the Sultan at the present moment, are an English physician and an Italian riding master, who enjoy a greater share of his confidence than he has ever been known to bestow upon and other individuals. Business was very dull at Smyrna ; there was no demand for articles of any descrip tion and nothing in the market for export. Captain Parsons was informed by a boat ofi the Island of Poros, May 7th, that a Rus sian squadron of 12 sail had arrived at Na poli di Romania, the day before, the salutt from which he distinctly heard. Betweei Malta and the Cape de Gatt, the Camilla, of Boston, exchanged signals,with the Che rub, bound up. Passed, May 25th, off Al- giers, a French squadron of two ships and two brigs. One of the passengers in the Samos, (Mr Post,) was supercargo of the Jane, which sailed from N. Y ork in Sep tember last with supplies for the. Greeks. A gentleman w ho rame passenger in th© Q amos, has commuuicated extracts from his diary to the Boston Courier, among which are the following:— May 7th —Ofi’ Poros, letfrned that a Rus&iau fleet of 12 sad had just arrived at Napoli di Romania, the present seat of the Grecian government, where Capo d’lstrja was present. Salutes were interchanged through the day. This fleet, it was sup posed, would join two Greek brigs that were already blockading Athens by laud, while the Grecian camp, under General Church, was at Agara or Eleusis, about to invest Athens by land. Capo d’lstria has established a national bank, organized a system of taxation, in a great degree ex* tirpated piracy, ordered statistical tables to be prepared in every district, town, &c. is doing wonders. May 15th—Touched at Malta. Learnt that five Russian vessels of war had just left that port to join, as was supposed, the fleet at Napoli di Romania, to blockade the ports of the Morea in the Turkish posses sion, but probably also to co-operate with the army in the invasion of Turkey. From the New York Gazette, July 12 Melancholy Catastrophe . —The editors of the Gazette have had the perusal of a letter from Portsmouth, New Hampshire, under date of July 8, containing the follow ing paiutul intelligence:-* 4 ! regret to inform you of a most melancholy circumstance which has thrown the town into gloom.— Captain Creighton, of the Navy and Na* thaniel Lyde, Esq. a worthy and highly es teemed citizen, and the U. S purser on our station, were riding through town yesterday about 4 o’clock in a gig ; the horses took fright and ran Mr. Lyde, thinking they would do injury, seized the reins, and took the power entirely from Captain Creighton. Th is directed them against a pump oppo se! Mr George Long’s, and the wheel wag forced over a large trough, which upset the gig. and threw both mi the stone pavement with great force. Captain C. had a deep gash cut in his head, hut is doing well, and entirely out of danger; but Mr. Lyde had his scull fractured, and the hones forced entirely into the brain. He was taken up insensible, and expired at five this morning, in great agony. The operation of trepan ning was resorted to, but the fraciure was ioo deep. I was w s th him all night, but at no time after the accident was lie in a state •*f sanity.’ tw e had the pleasure of know ing Mr. Lydj, and the high estimation in which he was held as an oflicer and citizen; ind we do not wonder that a general gloom in that town has succeeded his demise.] COMMERCIAL. Extract of a letter received in this city via JVeto Vo* ft, dated LIVERPOOL, 16th June, 1828. For the last fortnight Cotton has been in limit ted demand. The trade have a difficulty in mak ing satisfactory sales of goods and yarns, and con sequently buy sparingly—The last week’s sales do not exceed 10,000 bags. At a public sale, the 13th inst. the lower and middlo qualities of Sea Islands went ofi*at a depreciation of 1 -2d per lb. while the fine qualities commanded fair prices— Uplands, &c. remain the same, but in consequence of the import last week being rather heayy (29,- 300 bags) they are offered rather more freely. Liverpool Markets, 14 th June.- —Our Cotton Market this week has been rather dull; but hold-* ers have not shown any disposition to submit to lower prices, except in Sen Island, which by pub lic sale yesterday, went off at a reduction of and to Id per lb. Os 2200 bags offered, 900 were sold at 13 to 14d for inferior to fair 10 l-4d to 18 l-2d for food fair to fine marks, with a few choice at 20 -2 to 21 1-2; and 409 stained at 5 1-4 to 12d per lb. The private transactions comprise 20 Sea Islands at 16 1-2—3130 Bowed Od to 7d, with 40 at 7 l-Bd—-1050 Orleans 6 1-2 to 7d, with 10 at 8 l-4d—950 Mobile at 6d to 7 l-6d, with 40 at 7 l-4d —lOlO Pernambuca 8 3-8d to 8 3-48 990 Maran ham 7 7-8d to 8 l-4d- > riaina / /-t>d to 8 3-8d —IBO Demerara and Berbice 7 3-8d to 8 l-2d— -380 Egyptian 7 l-2d to 9d—730 Surat 4 l-8d to 5d and (by auction) 45 at 4 l-4d, and 4 3-Bd, and 20 Bengal at 3d per lb. making the total sales of the week 9940 bags, of which 800 American and 700 Brazil have been on speculation. 750 bags East India Rice have been sold at 13s a 13s 3d, and 80 tcs. Carolina at 16s 6d to 19s per cwt. The sales in Turpentine amount only to 400 bis. at 11s 4 l-2d per cwt. There has been more enquiry for Carolina Tar, but the holders at present do not S3em disposed to sell. Liverpool Cotton Market, June 14.—The Cot ton*market, to-day, is without alteration; about 2,000 bales have been sold at yesterday's price. Liverpool Markets, June 7.—The demand for Cotton this week has been rather limited, but the market is steady, and prices are without altera tion. The sales comprise 50 Sea Islands Is Od a Is Bd, with 90 Stained at C‘d a 10£d; 2420 Bowed 6 1-3 a 7 1-4; 2250 Orleans G 1-2 a 8, with 10 at 8 l-2d; 1510 Mobile 6 1-8 a 7d, with 73 at 7 3-4d; 460 Pernambuco 8 1-2 a 8 3-4d; 730 Maranham 8a 8 l-4d; 550 Bahia 8 3-8 a 9d; 70 P'<ra 7 l-4d; 40 Mina (Nova) 7 3-4d, and 20 Cera 7 3-4d; 150 Bahama 6 5 8d a 10 3-d; 150 Barbadoes 6 3-4; CO Demerara 7 3-4 a 9 1-4; 40 West India 7 3-4d; 250 Egyptian 7 1-2 a 9d; 640 Surat at 4 l-4d a 4 3-4dper lb. making together 9,450 bags; of which 500 Brazil, 500 Surat, and 1500 Americans have been on speculation. Tobscco remains dull, but prices are without change. No improvement has taken place in the demand for ashes, the sales con sisting only of 100 bis. Montreal Pot at 29s for old. 30s 6d a 31s for new; 35 bis. Pearl at 28s a 295; 20 bis. New York Pot ot 325, and GO bis. Pearl at 30a per cwt. Rice has been dull, and the sales have been confined to small parcels at former prices.— Nothing has been done in Tar, and the sales in Turpentine amount only to 300 bis. at 19s a 11s Gd per cwt. SWEDES IRON. THE Subscribers are daily expecting per brig Atlantic from Stockholm a cargo of Swedes Iron (250 tons) comprising a full assort ment, ordered expressly for this market, and will ie sold at northern prices. HALL, SIIAPTER & IUPPER. July 4 [No. 10.—Vol. 1.