The Argus. (Savannah, Ga.) 1828-1829, August 28, 1828, Image 3

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I n\ ie tacts to give an explanation of I rieot affair. | th’S sI ‘ ears that several vetfrs since, I * £ lV d was for a short time stationed I liel,t ’the command of Col. G. and that I!ifl'’^ r * act of insubordination, the latter l}(i r 's° c | iar ges agrinst him, on whicn lie I p refrr -Id found guilty of the charge speci- I * 15 tn /sentenced to six months suspen- I fi?- a °his it is believed forced the ■ i work of t* ,is attack< ■ ground jy. y y a t m Ad. Aug. 15- I \\Vflnesday.a coloured man named I r% )S (er, stole from some person, |T^ S not learn who, his Savings Bank ■ v e “’ r j e d it to the bank on the same | book \d olitained $196; in the evening ■ *■?* rrPSt cd him, and on the following ■ (he Grand Jury found a bill a ■ within an hour he was tried, Bp llo *! n te( j’and sentenced to three years | c t Prentiss of the brig St. Anna, ar ■ • /yesterday from Guay ana, informs ■Cendays previous to his sailing a no. Id pirate with six others under Ins direc lion had been taken up by the authorities I t Crab island, and sent to St. John’s llp R ) They were fifteen out, at the time I ; be ‘y were taken, small vessels to carry on I ibeir operations.— ib. 4 fine, healthy male infant, not more I iht„ three days old, was found the other I nioruing in a passage in Green street. It I was inveloped in a blue calico wrapper, I which may be seen at the Alms House, and I we hone, will finally lead to the discovery I of the inhuman mother — ib. I The Philadelphia Riot. —We gave yes- I terday some account of the riot in the Nor- Ithern Liberties, which commenced on I Monday evening. A gentleman who is ac- I quainted with some of the particulars of the I business, and an owner of property in the vicinin of the troubles, called on usyester day accompanied by another person, well fciifwn and respected, who resids near the seen* of confusion, and mentioned that our statement was defective in many particu lars, and incorrect as it regarded the cause of attack. We comply cheerfully with his teq.iesf, (both from a respect to him, and a desire to do justice,) to state the circum gtaoces as he related them to us. On Monday some celebration or merry making, (a foot race, we believe,) took off from their ordinary occupations, several persons in the neighborhood, and among them the watchman in the district near Beaver pud Third streets. A substitute was found, who, at the proper hour com menced his rounds. The wife of a Mr. Weldon, who resides in Third opposite Beaver street, had been for some time seriously sick, and on Mon day evening, in consequence of the excee ding heat requested to be placed at the door of the room, which was the front door. fthen Fred. , the substitute watchman, rame to that house, he asked of the inhab itants why the door was open. Mr. Wel don answered somewhat roughly, intima tingthat being in his own house, he had a right to keep what iypirs he chose. Some other words passed, and the watchman en tered the house. Mr. Weldon’s son then struck him, upon which the watchman left theheuse. He then sprung his rattle and calledfoi aid, and many persons came from neighboring taverns. Meantime, a young soncfMr. Weldon left the house, and no tified some of the neighboring friends of the family, that his father's house was in danger, and that the lives of the whole family might probably be attempted. They SC °B gathered, and the scene ensued, and lie tragic consequences resulted, of which our readers are already informed* He have no other object in our state meins, than to Make our readers acquaint cd jrith the facts, and always hold our -s'ivts ready to correct any errors into “iiich we may fall in detailing events. The cxcitinent among a very large portion of citizens of the upper pari of the Nor !iyti Liberties, is so great that v.e find a jihculty in arriving at facts, and feel fenrful of giving names, lest we should do to individuals.— U. S. Gaz. *^ r P. H. Hawk. —Some time since ‘-’copied a toast given by this bird some- J' !ere ifi this state, at a 4th of July dinner. e have since met with another, given on other occasion, in which Mr. Hawk soars too high for our unfledged w ings 10 0, JJ p V Wm.— Here it is: ~i, Uawk, orator of the Day. May “C bagle ol permission evaporate to all Not terraqueous Globe where Aristoc .f- ><tt prevails, and cast the crowns of - r * n, *.v into eternal abyss.” IJr . H awk, it will be observed, is styled ® Orator of the day. After giving us J S t J CUck °f his qu.dity, * good heavens! ones he not publish bis oration? We c M Q| —Philadelphia Demo 'Wic Press . S fafes Hank. —We copy the fol *r man paper, which shows , bo ;-> W something about our affairs, r e .s 1 , w * l:it km wis not always cor. • 1 • inquirer. A merchant, just come from N. York, J* es . Us the export of silver thence V f occas,oned the bank to re tlje j ‘! e,r so extensively, that 4h o " r i S are ,itteral, y aski ? 1 i-2 per A< r p i )er ce,l *> P er annum, for the in|4 i‘, s’‘ 5 ’‘ , j le pressures are so great, that to i; ? n,ak ing a large shipment of dollars BajJ w’* g m- llouse the United States 0 I'ged to ship them in the night to prevent disturbance ” Dieter paper. r £iJr , *-T Th ” c * na j°i i| *sic (x. y.) ?f I lXtgom me " ,lOn V hat ca P ,aill Machili, ‘•"ofVlfe n ry q ’ and Alle H. Jackson, • corps of Engineers are now in mat village, and are immediately to commence the survey of a. rail road from that place to C-tskill. Tlie same paper contains the following paragraph “The Schenectady and Albany Kail Road, we learn Vill probably be a bandoned from apprehended effect from a cause not in existence when that road was first contemplated ” Importation of Slaves into Ireland.— I lo ro is one tact in the history of Ireland which has not often been adverted to by ‘the English historians, and to which it may not be quite irrelevant to call the attention of the reader, when speaking of the former condition of that country. It is, that at a period even earlier than the Norman con quest, Ireland was ihe greatest; as probably the nearest mart for English slaves. Mal mesbury, in his life of WuJfstan, Bishop of Worcester has given a minute account of this extraordinary traffic. In those times, and long before, when any person had any more children than he could maintain, or more domestic slaves than he chose to keep lie sold them to a merchant, who disposed of them in Ireland, Denmark Italy, or else where, as he found most profitable. The people of Bristol were the chief carriers in this trade, as far as it related to Ireland Malmesbury says, the young Women were frequently taken to Ireland in iheir preg nancy, that they might bring a better price. The Ecclesiastical Council of Armagh, held in 1171, passed a resolution to liberate’ English slaves.— Jones's Recollections of Royalty. J W e have seen i curious time piece, made for one of the Departments, by Mr. Mon tandon, an ingenious artist, who has recently taken a residence in this city. The instru ment is called a JMicrononieter , being a measure of time in very minute portions. It indicates, with great accuracy and dis tinctness, portions of time so small as the one sixtieth part of a second; and these small divisions are measured with as much ease and accuracy as seconds or minutes are measured by the ordinary time keep ers. v The instrument is designed for determin ing tho time ot flight of projectiles, the velocity of running streams, and for astro nomical observations. YV e are informed that instruments for these purposes have heretofore been imported from Europe and which, although purporting to measure time in very small portions, were no better than ordinary pocket watches. 1 In ingenious artist, who lias so sue* cess fully accomplished this difficult under taking, we hope may receive the patronage which his skilfulness merits.— JSat. Intel. Mr. John Jacob Astor, of Nevv-York, was lately requested, by the directors of tbt’ Jardin des I'lantes , at Paris, to procure them a skin of the Bear of the Rocky Mountains, commonly called the Giizzlv Bear; no specimen of which, it is said, has ever been seen in Europe, mr. Astor, in stead ot a skin piocured a cub, which is now at New-York on its way to Paris.— We extract the following remarks, on the beast, from the New-York Evening Post, as interesting to students of Natural His tory ; among whom, we know, are included several of our readers:— “This animal has never been described by any European naturalists; the celebra ted Cuvier even doubis of its existence.— It has however, been often mentioned and figured by American authors, and travel ers in this country, and an imperfect technical deset iption ot it, under the name of ursus horribilis , will be found in the account of M jor Long’s expedition to the Rocky Mountains, in 1819 and 1820. It differs fiom every species of tlie bear in the pro file of its face, which is nearly rectilinear, m the great length of ns claws on its fore feet which it employs with great dexterity, nd in the remarkable flexibility of its snout. It is an animal ol great fierceness, prodigious strength and wonderful tenacity of life. In Major Long’s expedition it is said, that from the concurrent testimony of those who have had an oportunity of obser ving its manners, it is without doubt, the most daring and truly formidable animal that exists in the United States He fre quently pursues and attacks hunters,and no animal whose swiftness or art is not supe rior to his own can evad# him He kills the bisn and drags the ponderous carcase to a distance to devour it at leisure. These bears were frequently seen and killed by- Lewis and Clark. They killed one which weighed, as they judged, about six hundred pounds, and measured eight feet and seven inches aud a half from the tip of the nose to the extremity of the hind feet, and which after having received five balls through his lungs, and five other wounds, swam to a considerable distance and survived twenty minflies. The fore foot of one of them measured nine inches across, his hind foot was eleven inches and three quarters in length, and seven inches wide, and a third had claws six inches and a quarter long.— Governor Clinton in the notes to his In troductory Discourse published in the transactions ol the New-York Literary and Philosophical Society, says that he had been told by Dixon, the Indian hunter, that this animal had been seen fourteen feet long, and notwithstanding its ferocity had been domesticated. An insult offered to these tame bears by striking him, is related to have produced a war between two tubes on the head waters of the Mississippi. Dr. James, the compiler of the account of Long’s expedition, thinks there is reason to believe that the species formerly inhabited tlie Atlantic States. “ The Ind ians of the Missouri,” says i the account of Major Long’s expedition, “ sometimes go to war in small parties against tlie Grizzly Bear; and trophies obtained from his body are highly esteem ed, and dignify the fortunate individual who wins them. V\ e saw on the necks of many ot their warriors, necklaces composed of the fore claws, separated front the foot, tastefully arranged in a radiating manner; and one of the of Pawnee warriors, that encountered a detachment of our party, near the Konzn village, was ornamented with the entile skin of the fore foot, with the claws remaining upon it, suspended to’ his breast.’ The same work relates, that upon one occasion, when several hunters were pursued by one of these fierce ani mals, gaining rapidly upon them, a boy belonging to the party, who possessed less speed than his companions, seeing the bear close to his heels, fell with his face to the ground. The bear raised himself on his hind feet over the boy, looked down upon him for a moment and then bounded over him in pursuit of the fugitives. The bear procured by Mr. Astor for the Jardin des Plantes , is twelve months old, and is between three and four feet in length. His color is grey, nearly of that of a wolf or perhaps more closely resembling that of a woodchuck. This color, however, it should be observed, is not constant with the species; it is sometimes a dark brown, some times a tawney white and generally becom ing ash colored with age. He is fed on ripe Indian Corn, apples and raw flesh. He will put one of his paws through the bars of his cage, and pick up an apple from the ground with gi eat dexterity . YV hen he has got it into his possession, he places it between his fore feet, and cuts it in pieces with his long claws before taking it into his mouth. YV hen visited by stran gers, he generally lies down, and begins to iick the bottom of his fore paws with great industry uttering at the same time a surly, monotonous; uninterrupted growl. The present of a little food, however, seldom fails to bring him into better humor. His physiognomy, when viewed in front, does not give any idea of ferocity; but when seen pacing his cage, as he sometimes does, swiftly and heavily, with his head near the floor, the animal has a fierce and savage as pect. The cogue of Chili is one of the most extraordinary climbing plants ever noticed by naturalists. It is not, like the hop, con vovulus, or the vine, contented with the support afforded by a single tree, but when it has reached the top of one, it shoots down again, and in a short time, attains the summet of another. Proceeding in that manner, it has been known to extend over a space of more than two hundred yards. 1 lie toughness and pliability of its stems render them valuable for making baskets, and even cables. From the N. Y. Commercial Advertiser . LORD BYRON, &c. An intelligent and pinch esteemed friend, now in this city, has favored 11s with the following article, elicited by the article lately copied from the London Litterary Gazette, under the head of Byroniaua. REMINISCENCES OF ENGLAND. Lord Byron — Sherwood Forest—Henry Kirke White. Early on the morning of the 15th, we left Soutliwell. Its fine old Cathedral toweriug above the trees by which it is sur rounded, gradually faded from our sight and in a short time the venerable pile was lost in the distance. By ten o’clock we had arrived at Mansfield, and after being detained about an hour, set out forNew stead * Leaving our carriages at a solitary inn on the road side, we started on foot for the Abbey. \V e had not walked through the grounds more than half a mile, when its towers which had been hitherto concealed horn our view by a grove of trees, suddenly burst upon us. The well known lines be ginning, “ Though the hall of my fathers art gone to de cay,” immediately came to memory, but no marks of ruin are now visible Col. Wildman, who purchased the estate of Lord Byron, and now resides at the Abbey, had carefully romoved every mark of the decaying hand of time, and been careful that no memo rial of its late noble occupant should be disturbed. VYe wandered through the grounds and stood by the fort and lake in which he used to take so much delight, and read,not without emotion,the misanthropic lines he has inscribed upon the tomb of his dog. Col. Wildman was from home, bui we readily obtained permission to see the house. Everv thing remains as it did when his Lordship inhabited the Abbey; no piece ol furniture has been removed ; and to the credit of its present occupant be it recorded, he has given the strictest orders against any alteration. He is himself a man of taste and letters, and can compre hend the enjoyment derived from associa tions One old servant, who had been in the family when his Lordship was a boy, spoke of him with the greatest affection aud described him as an excellent master. \Y e left this interesting spot with regret, and cast many a lingering look behind us as we travelled oftwards to Nottinham. At this place 1 accidentally saw Mary Chaworth, Lord Byron’s first and only love. She was sitting in an open carriage with her two daughters, and appeared to he in ill health . She is not what a painter would term a beauty, but an air of pensive melancholy, heightened by disease, gives a character of attractive sweetness to her features highly fascinating. She seems to be just the thing a poet would fall in love with. It has been said that she subse quently regretted having refused his Lord ship’s hand ; but this, I believe, is not true. At the time he first became attached to her, both were children—she was a little the elder of the two, became a tall girl while he appeared yet a boy, and despised her youthful lover. She afterwards gave her hand to Mr. Musters, a neighboring country gentleman, and he took her name in order to inherit the estates. He is a very handsome and agreeable man, but fond of company, lavish in expense, and not at all select in his acquaintance. His gaities have been the source of her dis tresses, and to the neglect she has experi enced from a man she devotedly loves, may perhaps be attributed her melancholy. There is not the slightest reason to suppose it was occasioned by any penchant fi r Lore. Byron. I could not have been in the neigh borhood at a more interesting period, lot on the very day I had intended to le.ve fliis part of the country, the remains of the departed Poet arrived from Greece for in terment in the family vault at Hucknal.— / .determined to remain, in order to witness this melancholy spectacle. The body ar rived ab <ut noon, accompanied by his Loidship’s domestics and Mr. Hobhouse, who immediately gave orders for a private funeial on the following day. The coffin was deposited at one of the principal inns, the rooms of which were crowded with visiters of every rank, anxious to obtain a glance even at thi* wood, which now im prisoned dust, through which had ouce beamed so much intellectual greatness. The following morning the cavalcade set out, accompanied by thousands of specta tors, and attended by several members of j the Corporation, who were to bear the pall. There seemed to me something irresistibly ludicrous in this accompaniment. Grocers and tallow chandlers, “ dressed in a little brief athority,’’ bearing the pall of Lord Byron! Justice Shallows, who probably never read, or, if they read, never under stood, ten lines of his poetry, sentimentally, , honoring his dust !—I am no aristocrat. YVortli makes the man, the want of it the fel low, The rest is all but leather and pfunella.” But I could not help imagining what would have been the sensations of tlie haughty poet could he have known the extent, of what he would have deemed Ins degrada tion. Peace be to his ashes—the grave has no sympathy with pride, and worms know not tlie difference between patrician and plebian clay. A great part of the Byron estate has been taken from the forest of Sherwood, which formerly extended fora distance of 50 miles, and included part of the county of York It was, at this time, the theatre of the exploits of “ Robin Hood and his merry men all, Who robb’d the rich to pay the poor withall.” j So goes the ballad, or in some such rough and rumbling stanza. The author of Wa \ verly has immortalized him iu Ivanhoe, Hinder the name of Locksley. The real hero, although not quite so gentle a Knight as the novelist has made him, was a singu lar specimen of the rovers of the lawless times of Richard Coeur de Lion. He is said to be of a noble family, but disinherit ed. He and his followers roamed the forest for many years, levying contributions on the rich, and giving free to the poor. His cap, and bow and arrows, are still shewn to those who have sufficient antiquarian faith to believe in their identity. Ashby, the scene of the tournament in the novel, is about 20 miles from Newstead, and a fa vorite bathing place, some salt springs have lately been discovered in the neighborhood. Invanhoe coaches, and Ivanhoe baths now occupies the places of Prince John, the Jew and Rebecca, Norman Knights, and sturdy Saxons. But to return to Nottingham. Before leaving the town we visited its castle, and after .threading the long subterreanean bas sase, by means of which the Earl of Mor timer carried on tlie illicict intercourse with the queen of Edward, for which even tually he suffered, and wandering over the Court yard once so bravely defended by the heroic Hutchison, who, after signing the death warrant of Charles, as determi- resisted the usurpations of Crom well and whose memory has been forever embalmed by the classic pen of his virtuous and accomplished wife, we set out for the village of VVill'ord and Clifton, spots con secrated to the memory of Henry Kiike Whiter The life and remains of tins ex-I traordinary youth, published by Mr. South ey, are well kuown. It was to him Lord Byron thus beutifully referred in his Eng- j lisli Bards and Scotch Reviews. “ Unhappy White, while life was in its spring, And thy young Muse just w r aved her joyous wing, The Spoiler came ; and all thy promise fair Has sought the grave to sleep forever there, Oh ! what a noble heart was here undone, When science self-destroyed her favorite son ! Yes, she too much indulged thy fond pursuit, She sowed the seeds, but death has reaped the fruit. ’Twas thine own genius gave the final blow, And helped to plant the wound that laid three low ; So the struck Eagle stretched upon the plain, No more through rolling clouds to soar again, Viewed his own feather in the fatal darts And winged the shaft that quivered in his heart; Keen were his pangs, but keener far to feel, He nursed the pinion which impelled the steel: While the same plumage that had warmed his nest, Drank the last life drop of his bleeding breast.” Clifton was his favorite retreat. We w ere shown the tree on which are sti.l to be seen the name of the fair maid, whose loves are related in one of his earliest po ems. The scenery of the neighborhood is beautiful,and tlie views from the grove equal to any thing I have seen iu England. I lelt a melancholy pleasure in seating myself under tlie tree in Wilford Church where he wished to be buried, and could at the time almost have fancied my self a poet. An English friend who was with me embodied bis feelings in a sonnet, which I iiave preserved as a memorial of this pleasing visit. “ Here would the martyr student oft retire, And watch the shades of eve descending, till Meek twilight robed the valley and the bill; Then would lie s\yeep his sad melodious lyre And bid such music from the chords respire So melancholy, soft, and sad and sweet. As angel choirs might waken where they meet Around tlie bed where holy men expire, Henry ! that lyre is mute, that song is sung, And we may list thy plaintive notes no more ; But thou hast waked a happier strain, and struncr A sweeter harp upon a fairer shore. Oh ! Minstrel, let thy mantle fall On all who love the lyre, on me the least of all.” The puet died and was buried at Cam bridge, and for many years “no marble marked his tomb of early sleep.” The re proach has now, however, been removed by an American citizen, Francis Boott, Esq. who, visiting this country a few years •go, enquired for the monument of Kirke White,and finding none hod been erecte* , raised a neat marble table to hi3 memory, on which a fine profile of the deceased and a suitable inscription have been sculptured. It is fixed above his grave in the Chapel of King s College Cambridge. Whether bis mantle has fallen on his native town, I knew not; but it is a fact that no oilier place of its size has been so prolific in po ets. W r illiam and Mary Howitt, whose contributions are so frequeut to the Eng lish annuals, are residents, and (which is somewhat singular,,) quakers, they were married a short time ago, and keep a drug | gist shop. Besides them, three others j who have published volumes of poetry, | and a tribe of versifiers, good, bad, and in different, live amidst the smoke of this pt etic manufactory And now farewell t thee, Nottingham, forever. The coo i is ready—accept the passing good wishes of a trans-atlantic friend. Ilasselquist tells us,- that the Pacha of Tripoli once raised an army of 4000 men to fight fii ‘ lo custs that had invaded his dominion -. G'y :i Christiana, on the same principle, had a tr uof artillery in her study to war against the fie is. CANDIDATES FOR CONGP v pSS. ELECTION #V THE FIRST MONDAY IN OCTOBER NEXT. T. U. P. CHARLTON, of Chatham JAMES M. WAYNE, “ JOHN A. CUTUBERT, “ Monroe. DANIEL BRATLSFORD, “ M Intosh. THOMAS’ F. FOSTER “ Greene. CHARLES WILLIAMSON, Baldwin. WILEY THOMPSON, “ Elbert RICHARD H. W ILDE, u Richmond. WILSON LUMPKIN. “ Morgan. JAMES MERRIWEATHER, Clar'k. GEORGE R. GILMER, u 00-lethorpe. CHARLES E. HAYNES, “ Hancock. WILLIAM TRIPLETT; “ Wilkes. CUM M ERCIA L. FROM OUR CORRESPONDENT. Courier Office. Charleston, August 25. Cotton.— The stock of long staple cotton is now reduced, by shipments on planters’ account, to a- I bout 100 bags, and until the new crop begins to come to market, quotations must be nominal. Up lands continue very dull; the entire sales of the j week probably did not exceed 300 bags, the prin cipal of which were good quality at JO a Ilf i-2 \ cts. and some inferior at 9 cts. We quote nine and eleven cents for inferior to prime, though a little very choice would perhaps brinr-’ 11 1-2 cents, of such, however, there is none in market. The stock of Uplands since tlie Ist of the month has been reduced about 3000 bales. Rice. —The supply of this article continues li mitted, the lively demand for the YVest India mar ket, particularly in the early part of tho week, ad vanced prices, and sales were effected at lor some not considered prime, w hile a tew prime par cels were stored for higher prices. In the absence of sales of prime we quote it at the highest rata which a sale was made, viz : prime, s3s ; inferior to good 2J a 3£. Flour. —ln this article w T e have no change to notice ; sales of small parcels continue to be mada at our quotations of SO4 a 0 1-4. Corn. —During the w eek the arrivals of Corn have been very heavy for the season, amounting to 32,000 bushels ; consequently the prices have given way, and we now quote 37 a42 cents, a, range embracing all the sales. Groceries. —ln Groceries there has beep noth ing done except for the city trade, wdiich was fair. Prices are without variation. Freights. —Cotton to England has been shipped at and tor square bales, and 5-ed asked for round bags. We have heard of uo engagements at the latter rate, but from the scarcity of vessels here, it is probable it may be obtained. There is little or nothing shipping coastwise. IMPORTS Os Foreign Merchandize during the week ending the 23d inst. Brig Billow’, from Port Royal—4 pipes, 10 halt do Brandy, 50 casks, 200 boxes Claret, 90 do. Mus catel \Y ine, s(j bales Almonds, 100 baskets Sweet Oil, 1 bale Linen, 2 boxes Lace. EXPORTS Oj Cotton and Rice, to I oreign ports, during the week ending the 23d inst. COTTON. RICE. Sea Island. Upland. Tierces. Liverpool, 373 626 00 West Indies, 00 00 4a2 Total, 373 828 442 CONGRESS HALL,(LATE JUDD S HOTEL A'o, 27 South Third-street, Philadelphia. THIS well known and extensive establishment, ; lias lately under gone a thorough and complete re pair, having had thirty new and commodious sin gle Bed-Rooms added to its former conveniencies, with iire-places and grates in each. The Parlours have been enlarged, Chambers mach improved, and the Dining and Reading-Rooms, will, it is be lieved, compare with any in the United States.— The I urniture, which is entirely new, and put up by the most experienced hands, was selected and arranged with a view to promote the comfort of guests and visiters. The Tables are well provid ed with all the varieties of the season, and the stock of Wines and Liquors, such as to suit the ; most refined and experienced taste No Hotel in the city pf Philadelphia is so happily located, be ’ ing but a few minutes walk from the steam-boats, and in the immediate neighborhood cf the Banks, Post Office, and the Theatre, and other places of public resort, whether for pleasure or business.— The great Northern and Southern Mail starts from the door. There are belonging to this establish ment, two elegant Private Coaches. ! COJYGRESS HALL STABLING. —The Sta bles are kept by Mr. Samuel Hunt. They are good and commodious, having been recently en larged, with Yard and Shed for Carriages. The charges are the same as at other Livery Stables, j The subscriber, thankful for past favors, confi dently hopes by unremitting attention, to merit a continuation of public patronage. | july 4 2aw2m—lß D. SAINT. ~ aTg. oemler J 7 AS received, by various arrivals from Balti more, Philadelphia, New York and Boston, a fresh supply of GOOD MEDICINES, which he offers for sale on moderate terms. Besides the simples in which every body deals, he lias a Vcaricty of articles not to be met with in every Drug shop, mostly his own composition, viz: Ammoniated Alcohol Do. do. aromatic Spr. Saponis Sulphuret of Potash—do. Antimoni Acetate of Potash—lodine—Morphium Tinct. Musk artificial—Piperine Sal Martis—Turbith Mineral—Phosphorus Phosphate Soda—do. Iron Denarcotised Laudanum—James’ Powder English blue mass and mere. Ointment Osburn’s Pills—Schley’s Pills—and every Tinc ture prescribed in the American Pharmaoope ia. july 28 28 SWEDES IROn7~ HP HE Subscribers are daily expecting per brig I Atlantic from Stockholm a cargo Swedes Iron (250 tons) comprising a full assort ment, ordered expressly for this market, and will be sold at northern prices. HALL, SHAPTER & lUPPER. July 4