Newspaper Page Text
Prom the Charleston Courier.
Eleven days later from England
The fast sailing ship Mary Catharine,
arrived last evening in 38 days from Li*
verpool, brings bur files of Lofidon papers
to the 26th, and of Liverpool to the 27th
of June, both inclusive—together with the
London shipping Lists to the 24th
We are sorry to find that the Cotton
Market had declined at Liverpool the im
ports, it will be seen, were heavy, while
the sales were comparatively light.
A postcripi of a letter, dated Liverpool,
21st June, says—“ A bill is now before
Parliament to admit all sorts of Cottort,
coming through British possessions, at a
duty of Is. per cwt. There is no doubt it
will pass. I presume this has been sug
gested by the new Tariff; its operation will
more particularly favor British shipping.”
The Russians had crossed the Danube
with very slight resissance from the Turks
and an invitation from the Porte has been
forwarded to the English ana French Am
baseadors, inviting them to proceed imme
diately to the Turkish capital to treat for
peace
It was expected that Parliament would
be prorogued by the King,in person, about
the 22d July.
Portugal appears to be in a wretched
situation. A rumor of the latest date from
Lisbon, received via Paris, states that Don
Miguel had dispersed the Constitutionalists
at Oporto by merely presenting himself be
fore that place—this account was not how
ever, credited in England Spain ap
pears to be alarmed at the state of affairs in
the sister kingdom the Constitutionalists in
the former country being ready to ava 1
themselves of any opportunity to raise the
Standard of revolt.
The Conde d’Asseca sent by Don Mi
guel, as an Ambassador to England, had
arrived in London—but he had been given
to understand that no communication could
be held with him or his master, in the pre
sent posture of affairs
The affairs of India, and its multifarious
interests and concerns, are beginning to
agitate the British Parliament and people—
the course to be adopted for the future go
vernment of ihat country, inhabited by per
haps 80,000,000 of people, when the pre
sent impolitic and barbarous system shall
have reached its natural end, is a subject
of the most serious consideration. Tiie
whole trading community of Calcutta are
petitioning upon the subject.
Mr. Monck had presented a petition to
Parliament from Moses Levi, praying that
further religious freedom might be extend
edtothe Jews—and the Morning Herald
expresses its satisfaction that this oppressed
people *re beginning to stir in this matter
Mr. Hume appeals to be indefatigable in
his endeavors tj induce Parliament to abo
lish imprisoment for debt in England.
The people at the west end of the town,
had two fertile subjects of conversation
presented to them at the same moment—
these were two bloodless duels, one be
tween Mr. Long Wellesley and Mr. De
Crespiny, and the other between Sir Jacob
Astlev and Colonel Garth. Each of these
duels grew out of the criminal connexion
of one of the parties with the- wife of ano
ther
H. B. M sloop of war Scylla, arrived at
Portsmouth on the 19th of June, last from
Nassau, with about 650,000 dollars, ship
ped at Ve/a Cruz and Tampico.
A Russian 74 and frigate, which had been
in the battle of Navarino, and suffered se
verely, arrived at Portsmouth on the 22d
June, from Malta, oil their return to Cron-
Stadt.
Lord Stuart, of Rothsay, who resided so
long as Ambassador at Paris, under the ti
tle of Sir Charles Stuart, is, it is said, to
resume his diplomatic functions there, in
the |jlace of Lord Granville.
The appointment of LordFrancisGower,
(who had left office lately with the friends
of M.‘ Canning) to the post of Chief Se
cretary for Ireland is considered an auspi
cious indication of the designs of the Duke
of Wellington towards that country.
It is said that the Duke of Wellington
has it in contemplation to make some effort
for the relief of the dense population of the
low er classes in Ireland, and that his pre
sent intention is to introduce some measure
analogous to the English poor laws.
Kean was to close his engagement at Pa
ris on the 20rh June, in the character of
Shvlock for his benefit.
A furious attack upon Mr. Cooper’s new
work “ Notions of the Americans ,’ has
been made in a London Journal, even be
fore the work was published The Times,
however, thinks “ there will be found in
th** work a great deal of curious and im
portant information respecting that inter
esting country, which will be quite new to
the English reader.”
A dreadful accident happened at the
Church of Kirkaldv, on Sunday, the 15*h
June. The Rev. Mr. Irving was to preach,
and an immense concourse thronged the
galleries, when, just as the hell stopped,and
before the minister had entered the Church,
the north gallery, from the extreme pres
suie upon it, came down all at once, carry
ing every thing along with it, and burying
in the ruins the multitudes underneath It
was calculated that there were at least 1800
persons within the walls at the time the
catastrophe took place, 29 persons were
killed outright, and about 150 were more
or less injured.
A Mr. Tingle, his wife, and their five
children, perished in the flames of their
dwelling in Red Lion street, which was
consumed on the morning of the 15th of
June
From the Richmond Constitutional Whig.
lien we alleged that the Governor
of V urgioia had expressed opinions unfa
vorable to the Union, we did not speak
without the card. Certainly, we have ne
ver been more surprised in the whole corns,
of our lives, than at the denial which ap
peared in the Enquirer of Tuesday, the
language of which indicates that that den
% 4 *
ial was authorised by the Governor him
self. We do not hesitate to say, that there
are twenty individuals in this city, in the
habit of associating with Mr. Giles, who
in a court of justice would establish, that
he has repeatedly expressed, hostility to the
Union, and that this is the burthen of all
his descantations upon the Tariff. His pre
cise language may not be so fully remem 1
bered but the impression left upon their
minds to this effect is distinct and indeli
ble.
Every man has a right to his opinion, and
to express it when, how, and where he
pleases ; for under the broad and ample
piivileges of our Constitution, opinion is
; exempt from legal censure, as long as i’ re
mains distinct from action. The question
then is, not whether Mr. Giles has a right
; to entertain or express opinions unfavora
ble to the Union, for that no body doubts,
but whether a man who thus thinks and
speaks, is entitled to the confidence of the
people of Virginia
j V/e owe it to ourselves to say, that no
! thing but a sense of duty, induced us to
make any allusion to these opinions of
Mr. Giles, and that nothing but necessity
causes the present publication
The following note to us is from a gen
tleman of in elligence and respectability.
His name is not given from considerations
of delicacy, but it is at the service, and his
note is open to the inspection of any per
son whatsoever
31st, July, 1828.
Dear Sir : I did inform you that in a
conversation between Mr. Giles, several
other gentlemen, and myself, in the office
of the 2d Aud tor, some time in June last,
he expressed opinions favorable to a disso
lution of the Union, raiher than submit to
the Tariff of *B2B ; and when it was sug
gested by one present, that we had derived
benefits from the Union, he considered these
benefits nothing compared to the oppres
sion of this law. It was also suggested by
Mr. Giles, that in the event of a war with
the Northern States, England would aid i
us for the benefit she would derive from the
Cotton and Tobacco trade and other arti
cles, which would be worth to us 150,000
men and the British Navy.
** The Ist and 2d Auditors were present,
and 1 have no doubt will recollect the con
versation.”
One of the gentlemen referred to, (we
h sve seen only one,) does recollect the con
versation, and its substantial agreement with
this account of it
3lr. Gilts is a great, incessant, and un
connected talker. He talks to all descrip
tions *f people, and never thinks of adapt
ing his conversation to his audience. He
has a few chosen themes, which he mounts
on all accasions, and talks quite as-earnestly
and learnedly to one as to another. In the
unbounded verbiage in which he indulges,
he may have forgotten what he said, and
what he did not say ; jut if the above shall
not suffice to revive ins recollections, more
can be added.
VVe submit the subject to the Public.
It is now ascertained with certainty, that
Judge Thompson has consented to stand
as a candidate f.<r the office of Governor
incompliance with the nomination made by
the Utica Convention. The Committee ap
pointed for the purpose waited on him at
Poughkeepsie, & received from him the as
surance, 44 that he will not withhold himself
from the claim so unanimously made upon
him by the Con< ention of Republican
Delegates which met at Utica on the 23d
instant ” Smith Thompson and Francis
Granger will therefore be the candidates of
the friends of the Administration in this
state at the ensuing election. We shall not
venture at present to guess who will run
against them. It is already rumoured that
Mr. Van uren will decline the honor of
a defeat; and that Mr Silas Wright, near
the Canada line, in the Chateaugay woods,
is spoken of. The present Lieutenant
Governor is also talked of. The combi
nation are caucusing, and are down in the
mouth.
N. F. Com.'Advertiser, 1 stinst.
We have conversed with a gentleman
who left Marseilles on the 13th June, who
has communicated several facts worthy of
being made known. Several transports,
which had for a long time laid idle in that
port, been ordered to prepare for sea,
& at that time they were waiting,with their
sails bent, for the reception of troops. A
ft*w of the vessels had been sent to Cadiz to
take on board the French troops there
Their ultimate destination was wholly un
known, and was not even guessed at. Or
; ders had been received in the provinces of
i Marseilles and Toulon for the reception of
! troops. The orders were communicated
by telegraphic express.
A T . F. Gazette, Ist inst.
From the Baltimore American.
The following letters have been handed
us by a highly respectable gentleman, of
this city, they will tie pursued with great
interest by such of our fellow citizens, as
are interested in the Mexican mines.
Extract of a letter from an intelligent gentleman ,
dated Mexico , 31s/ May, ls2ri.
Everything is now quiet in this country
and I see nothing to fear unless it be'tjae
state of the Treasury,—from financial dif
ficulties., however, I hope government will
be relieved, when the effects of the late at
tempts of Bravo are felt in the additional
strength added thereby to the present eru
dition of things.
‘‘There ought to be no fear among the
capitalists of England as it respects the se
curity of Mexican loans, after what has
happened They have seen a strong par*
ty put down with the utmost ease and pat
riotism, and good principles triumphant
•ver treachry and corruption It will be
a warning to traitors that may still exist,
which will not be forgotten. J
Extract of another letter dated Mexico , June 7.
“I send yt\iu a letter from Zacatecas.—
Those mind yield a clear profit to the
English comp toy of eighty thousand dollars
monthly. The morning'concerns of this
country are becoming prosperous and pro
fitable. By the next packet I expect to
send you a budge t of good news.”
Extract of a letter fyom a respectable Merchant
dated . Mexico June 7.
“In mining openlliou we are improving
every day. The Bonanza in Vete Grande,
Zacatecas, of the miites, belonging to the
“Bolamas Company *\ still continue with
every prospect of an immense return.—
That negociation is no\v leaving eighty
thousand dollars per mo uth, clear, from
two of the mines, the Gallega and Messi
asr My house here holds tNe agency of
said company, therefore you may rely u
poti the information.
From Halifax.— We havt\ teceived
Halifax papers to July 22. Sir .las. Kempt
returned to Halifax from Canada on the
18th. He had received, by the May packet
from ; ngland, the notification of his ap
pointment as Governor in Chief of Lower
Canada, and was to embark for Quebec, in
the Challenger, which was shortly expected
From England. There were various con
lectures respecting the successor of Sir J
Kempt, in the government of Nova Scotia,
The most probable of the candidates for
the office named, seems to be Sir Howard
Douglas, Lieut. Governor of New Bruns
wick, who by his judicious and paternal
administration of the government of that
province, has acquired a remarkable degree
of popularity. The supposition, however,
that he will receive this appointment, is
hardly consistent with the report that ho is
to proceed to Russia, to assist in the dis
cussions for the adjustment of the Maine
and New Brunswick boundary.
J Boston D. Adv.
Loss of the brig Emily. —Brig Ann, at
Newburyport from Porto Rico, lias on
board the captain and part of the crew of
the brig Emily, of New Bedford. From
the mate’s log book it appears that the
Emily, West, sailed from New Bedford in
February last on a whaling voyage On
the 16th July, lat 29, 39, lon. 79. was struck
by a heavy squall, and immediately cap
sized. All hands were below except the
watch. In this situation, after being thrown
about, part of the time almost under water,
the mate dove out of the cabin window, se
cured a rope and passed It over the stern,
by which the captain and cooper got on
deck. At the same time two men dove
out of the forecastle gang-way, and an at
tempt was made to cut through the side to
save those below ; but unfortunately the
hatchet was lost overboard; they however
effected their object with a boat spade, and
relieved three more, just alive ; they were
by this time all on Iter side, except the
cook, who perished below—soon after cut
ting away her standing rigging, she righted
with her foremast out of the step, which
was afterwards cut away, the weather still
squally. All hands were then employed in
procuring provisions ud clothes, and clear
ing the wreck. They remained on the
deck setting a watch in the boat, till the
19ih, when they were taken off by an En
glish brig from Havana : ami on the 23d all
hands (fourteen) were received on board
the Ann ; and-on the 26th the captain and
eight of his crew went on board a Provi
dence schooner, the mate and remaining
four arrived at Newburyport.
From the Boston Daily Advertiser.
Earthquake at Lima.— e are permit
ted to publish the fallowing extract of a let
ter from Mr. S. YV. Pomeroy, jr. to his fa
ther, giving an interesting description of a
violent ear hquake at Lima, on the mor
ning of the 3uth of March. The letter is
dated,
Lima, April 21.
I wrote to you last by the Brandywine
.to Panama, to go across the Isthmus, under
date of 20ih ult. Since that time this city
lias been visited by one of those dreadful
earthquakes which are looked for about
once in a century, and had it continued a
few seconds longer the whole of Lima
must inevitably have been laid in ruins
The calamity occurred on the morning of
30th Maich,at about half pasi seven o’-
clock, and although only 30 or 40 seconds
duration, was of such prodigious violence
as to prostrate many building and injure
all including the stupendous churches;
some of which are so much shattered that
it is contemplated to take them dovvu, their
missive walls of 5 to 9 feet thickness, being
literally lent from the top to the bottom.
A great number of houses have been pulled
down by order of the authorities, and se
veral have, since the shock, fallen of their
own accord, in one instance burying two
or three persons in their ruins.
The amount of injury to this city is esti
mated, b} an official survey, is S6OOOOOO,
a sum quite witlun bounds, when it is re
collected that f om the nature of the budd
ings they caunot be repaired in many in
stances, but must be rebuilt. The house
! occupied by Alsop, Wetmore &. Cos. is
considered one of the strongest in Lima, and
is said to have cost $90,000. Some of the
rooms are cracked perpendicularly in many
places, and in others the upperpart of the
liouse (which is composed of bamboo sticks
and mud, of about 2 feet in thickness, sep
arated itself from the “adobes* or sun dried
bricks, of which the walls, to the bight of
3 feet auove the floor of tire second story
are composed; and had Che shock contin
ued three seconds longer the whole top,
with its brick root, would have fallen in.
About 30 persons perished; that is the
number of bodies which have been dug out
from the rubbish, but others are supposed
to be still undiscovered. Had it been in
the night the loss of lives, would, no doubt,
have been greater. I was awakened from
a sound sleep by the most terrific noise, and
jumping up, saw the walls of many rooms
vibrating violently. I concluded that no
time was to be lost, and made the best of
my way into the street, amidst falling plas
ter, and stumbling along over the floors like
a drunken man. In the street all was dis
may; the heart appalling noise which us
hered in this frightful phenomena and the
sounds of the cracking walls were still ring
ing in our ears. The poor natives were
upon their knees, (many of them just as
they had risen Irom their bed,) beating
their breasts, and calling upon God, the
virgin and all the saints to save them; and
expecting every instant another and over
whelming shock Indeed when I reflect
ed that this was a danger against which no
place afforded security, (as the earth was
expected to open as it had done during the
great earthquake of 1740) I was very well
disposed to join the cry of “misiricordia,”
and seek protection from Him “who but
looketh upon the earth, and it trembleth.”
The great shock was followed by five
or six slight tremblings in as many days,
which excited great terror, and I must con
fess I have been more alarmed by these
harmless shocks than by tfie great convul
sion: and it is remarked generally that a
person who has never experienced an
earthquake, cannot, when the alarm of
“Temblor,” is given, enter at all into the
feelings of him who has witnessed one—the
first has merely a vague idea of danger -
the last the full possession of extreme ter
ror and dismay.
The excitement has in a great measure
abated; but for a week or ten days after
the shock, you would see every night, hun
dreds stretched upon mats in the squares,
alameda, and whenever an open space
could be found, almost afraid to close their
eyes, and starting upon their knees at the
least alarm to repeat their ‘aves.’ Even
low many are seen sleeping at the open
doors, and when the subject is mentioned,
cross themselvf s, adding, perhaps, their
common exclamation, “Jesus, Maria !”
The depth of superstition and ignorance
to which the common people of this coun
try are degraded, may be seen by their
implicit belief in their stories inculcated by
the priests, as the causes of this calamity.
Os course these designing men lose no op
portunity to endeavour to regain their for
mer ascendency, and feeling that their oc
cupation is almost gone, do not hesitate
about the means for effecting their object.
They look upon foreigners as decided en
emies; not only as heretics but as neces
sarily imparting to the people with whom
they have intercourse, a portion of their
liberal notions. The residence of the
heretics in the country was first preached
up publicly as the cause; that the earth,
indignant at their being suffered to remain
among the catholics, would as it were
shake them from her bosom; and we could
not walk the streets for a day or two after,
without -hearing knots of cholas and ne
groes gravely assigning this as the earth
quake’s origin. Ii is said, Gen. La *“ar
ordered the monks to take iieed under
pain of his displeasure, and that since, they
have been more cautious. Some other
reasons were assigned even more absurd
and rediculous.
At Callao the shock was felt after the
dust were seen to rise from Lima, so that
it would seem that ii proceeded from the
mountains to the sea. Those persons who
were on board vessels in the harbor, des
cribed the sensation to be the same as
when a ship thumps violently against the
bottom, and the noise like that produced
by “twenty chain cables running through
the hawser holes. * The water was very !
turbid, and for a considerable time after
wards large air bubbles came up in every
direction. Several vilages on ihe coast to
the northward have been destroyed. It
was not experienced at the southward but
a few miles I have ale ter of the 12th
April, from Arica, where it was not felt at
ail
I have almost filled ray sheet with this
engrossing subject. There has hitherto
been a stated period for the occurrence of
these heavy shocks, and people here feel
very confident that in their lives such ano
ther will not happen.
Yesterday the new constitution, which
was proclaimed the day before, was sworn
to publicly, and with great show and cir
cumstance, by the authorities, &c. who
have sworn to six before , since the decla
ration of their independence! It is said j
that in Cusco and Arequipa there are some j
symptoms of revolt but we know little I
here of the plots and counterplots, and
think it safe to make as few inquiries as
possible.
Arctic Circle. —The immense accumu
lation of ice within the Arctic Circle, for- \
ming in many places perpetual mountains
on land, and perpetual islands, in straits
and bays,* andjfilling up bays, which might
be more seas, with one un
interrupted mass, during most part of the
year affords to the mind a perpetual source !
of interest. YY hen it is remembered that
Parry was confined in his winter quarters, t
a: Melville Island, for ten months, a hasty
glance at the subject would iduce us to
think that the ten months of excessive frost
would soon conquer the remaining two
months of spring, summer, and autumn, and
embrace the whole in the arms of eternal
ice.f
It can, therefore, be oasilv understood,
that a permanent congelation ot the Arctic
Sea, or any large portion of it, cannot ex
ist in the temperature with which we are at
present acquainted. Indeed Captain Par
ry says in his third voyage, he believed
“Barrow’s Strait was not permanently fro
zen during the winter.” Ou land, in ma
ny parts of the frigid zone, however, the
eternal ice holds its rigid sway. At the
entrance of the Strait of the Fury and Ile
cla, where Captain Parry passed the se
cond winter, on his second voyage, the ice
of the preceding year was hot detached
from the shores, when that of the new be
gan to form. In the morasses, at the mouth
of the O i, one of the great rivers of Sibe
ria, the ground at the depth of a foot, is
permanently frozen, and the same thing
exists, we are told by Kotzebue, on the
shores of Icy Cape. This commander al
so im a mountain ofpure*ice 4 < >
icebft, b> J * n Kotzebue’s Inlet, nn v ;
the pi rt y travelled some time, w t ( j 4
knmvi. ig or suspecting its compositE,! 0 ”
Moss a ud grass covered it onevejyVT
but one * where cliffs of pure ice YM rfl e
be seen. Upon further investigation tV”
found lai ? e quantities of ma ninoth* n ?
and boot sn this ice. ei ”
The icebergs, those monuments off.
? and ‘‘won L,<rs °f die deep’
towering c ver the waves, and resisting
storms of t be ocean, present to us an f > 6
ject worth} ’ of contemplation. All n; ,
gators of tit e Arctic Ocean, have g*zed f .
these great natural curiosities with am
ment. Thi se huge masses are
to be avalarn generated on .and,and gjj
ing up valley 3 an '* recesses of mountain?
down whoss , sides they are brought by p,’
rents This may be the case with jjj*
smaller ones— -tho largest can only be p er ,
formed by the sides of high perpendiciil ,
cliffs, whose h ise is washed by the
The accumulat “and mass of ages here, by j*,
own gravidity, overcoming the force cf
hesion, falls wit h a tremendous crash inj
the deep, anc ‘ these “thunder-bolts
snow” are carri dby currents, to the south
It has been a matter < f speculation, ho w
large rocks, and other extraneous matter
could bejplacedo. 11 the icebergs ‘I cp.n e ‘i
says Fox, “by on e piece of ice, higher thp ; .
the rest, whereupon a stone was, of tl le
contents of five oi tons weight, wit| l(j ;.
vers other smaller stones, and mud thtr fc .
on.” Captain Pa r *7 says, “the quanritf
in which these sul ‘Stances, (stones, slu-li s
sand, mud, weeds, < See.) here occurred,l
really surprising, aid puzzled us extremely
to account for the i Manner in which they
found“*their way upc n the flokes.” R ( , c u
may be placed on masses ol this kind j Q
two ways. Ist. YV hen an -Avalanche
takes place from the s, de of a naked rock
large pieces, detachec b y the host, would
he carried away by ; the ice, and remais
firmly attached to it. 2d. These icebergs
often remain aground 4 *° r > ears , and vvlieo
removed from their nu orings, by the ri
sing of the waters, by th ; effects of storms,
or by the diminution of t heir bulk they are
launched into the current. ■ an< l their centre
of gravidity becoming cb, ,n ged by ihe de
taclunent us considerable portions, from
abrasion their equilibria. ‘ n destroyed,
and the summet may be ii verted, and be*
come the base.
Solar heat frequenrly ac ?s u P°n their
masses, and by melting at the sides,
portions fall into the sea, wit ‘ J a tremend
ous noise. This is technical y ca.led cal
ving, and the crash is heard s . retimes se
veral miles. VV liilo jr )i,ts this rolling mo*
tion, the mass sometimes lal • to pieces
“like a wreck.” The strait! of Hudson
and Davis, Fox’s Channel, at id Baffin’s
Bay, are prolific nurseries of icebergs
Ellis saw one 500 or 600 yards thickness,
and Forbisher described one t ‘> be ‘near
four score fathoms above wat .” Cap*
tain Ross mentions the almost * incredible
number of 700 being in sight at onetime;
some of these, too, were of an . enormous
size. One was aground in 150, ar :d sever*
a! together, in 250 fathoms. All accrr.ie
calculation of the dimension of oi ie, which
was aground in 6l fathoms, was made by
Lieutenant Parry, and was estii nated to
weigh 1,293,397,673 tons. It rna ybe well
to remark here, that the specific | gravity of
ice, being one-sixth less than Wi iter, oce*
seventh part of the whole bulk only ap*
perrs above water.
*“Two islands of ice have continued sta
tionary for half a century, in t! fie bay of
Disco. Dutch whalers have visit ed them,
and have given them names.— Me Ite Bfun,
from Olafsen's Voyage to Iceland.
Capt YVafer confessed he r ustook is
lands of ice, five huddred feet his h, for teal
islands.— Malte Drun.
f Scoresby calculates the dis; solution and
ice in the Spitzbergen Seas t< jbe about
20,000 square leagues, annua 11; v, while ibe
quantity formed in the seas ik vigated by
whalers, is not more, probably, than one*
fourth that area.
The following letter from tl ie Treasuft
Department, is an answer to one from J
merchant in New York, askii g for infor
mation in what light certain and escriptionciß
goods were to be considered. By the
tariff Bombazetts and Rattinel s pay a (k ! M
of 23 per cent ad valorem ; bi it by this le®
ter it would appear that if the y are priii’tß
into shawls, handkerchiefs o r scarfs,
no longer retain the charactm of the oriffl
nal fabric.
Treasury Depart! nent, Comp’ .1
trailer's Office , July 25. J
Gentlemen—l duly receiv ed your if*®
ter, of the Ist. but a gteat prei sos
has prevented an earlier attent ion to it. I
I Being under the impression that
primed into shapes, for shaw Is,
chiefs or scarfs, although comp .osed of
same materials as Bombaeett 4 and
netts, are yet, in commercial * parlance,
considered Bombazetts or lfc 44mens. Dfl
of opinion they can neither b e to coush! £, B
ed in a fiscal sense.
Respectful!} , &c. I
JOSEPH AND! ON, ■
COMPTROLI JER,
From the Emerald.
Baltimore Fashions for the Gintl®,
Short coatees, long waists and abort J
covering the hips, and hanging Tower j
right and left than at the centre: *
breasted ; pockets comme an saede mrVL ‘1
and collar reaching to the occiput. V ■
plain—stocks of various colours—did ■
or gills rising above the uppei extreff
of the ear, well stiffened, comme unepb ■
die. Ribbons generally worn instead It
watch-chains, which have become vulg H
Hats, Leghorn or common straw, brr Bj
turned gracefully up on each side and 1 ■
hind, ala Doctor Syntax. Pantalo® Bi,
loose enough to take in four legs, narrow* B
at the bottom and strapped. Yellow on B
spectacles—green and white have bee® 1
vulgar. * B