The Argus. (Savannah, Ga.) 1828-1829, October 16, 1828, Image 2

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fUURSDAY MOUSING, OCT. 16, 1823. CONGRESSIONAL ELECTION. We have received few additional returns since our last; the aggregate of the following *27 coun ties is published below ; via: Baldwin, Bibb, Bry an. Bulloch, Burke, Camden, Chatham, Clark, Columbia, Effingham, Elbert, Emanuel, Franklin, 1 Glynn, Hancock, Laurens, Lincoln, Liberty, M'lntosh, Richmond, Scriven, Twiggs, Tattnall, Upson, Washington, Warren, and Wilkes. BRAILSFORD, 5235 CHARI,TON, 3799 CUTHBERT, 4092 FOSTER, 5822 . GILMER, 9812 HAYNES, . 7272 LUMPKIN, 4139 MERRI WETHER, 4098 THOMPSON, 7934 TRIPLETT, 3253 WAYNE, 8373 WILDE, 9671 WILLIAMSON, 4185 The Barque Philetug which cleared at the Cus’ tom-house yesterday for Havre, carried G7* bales cotton the crop of the present year; this shipment to a foreign port is earlier in the season, than any which has been made from this port for several years past. Savannah continues remarkably healthy. We have yet some few new cases of the Dengue; but tho of reviving business, with consequent cheerfulness and alacrity which so generally pre vail, have in a great measure superceded the symptoms of that troublesome disease. We have had, says the N. Y. Commercial of the 4th, a month of delightful weather. The Equinox lingered a-week beyond its usual time, and then let us off very gently; whereupon the weather became more genial and pleasant than before. The city is full of people; strangers from abroad- merchants from the interior of our own state, and from every part of this widely ex tended and flourishing union. The business sea son opened well and continues fair. Indeed the merchants tell us they have no cause of com plaint. All is life, bustle and’activity in the busi ness parts of the town The clerks are kept up oivtlie run; the employers walk with heads up, smiles upon their faces, and firm eleaalic steps. The fashionable streets arc enlivened with the bright eyes of beauty, all around speaks health, prosperity and happiness. /gle aur .Yoir. —lt appears that this post on lake Champlain, will not be abandoned by the p -itish government, though sickness lias caused a temporary romoval ol its garrison. We are informed, says the National Intelligen cer of the 7th, that official information has been received at the Deportment of State, from Mr. Tud r, our charge d'affaires at Rio de Janeiro, that he had effected satisfactory arrangements with the Brazilian government in the case of the brig Spark, which secures to the owners of that vessel the payment of the indemnity claimed by them. viz. the sum of $35,000; and that he is as siduously employed in the prosocutiou of all oth er claims committed to his charge, of citizens of the United States upon the said government. The case cf the Spark produced the rupture between Mr. late charge d’affairs of the United States at Rio, and the government of Bra zil, and led that gentleman to demand his pass ports. and return to the F nited States. An order from the king of Spain has been re- ; ceived in this country from Madrid via Liverpool I Its effect is to remit the duties hitherto exacted on Spanish flour, imported into Havana in foreign vessels, and thus give the article imported from Spain an immense advantage over that from the United States, whish is charged with au impost of 750 cents per barrel. The sale of American Woollen Goods, of the well known manufacture of Mr. James Sykes, near Baltimore, was weil attended yesterday, and wo learn that the goods generally went off briskly, at fair prices. There were sold 400 pieces of Cloths and Cacsimeres, and 450 pieces of Satti netts. The prices of the Cloths ranged from $2 50 to $5 77; of the Cassimeres, from $1 45 to $1 95; and of the Sattinetts from 70 cents to $3 45 per yard.— American . Dye for Cotton. —Cotton, at Smyrna, is dyed with madder in the following manner: the cotton is boiled in common olive oil. and then in mTld al kali; being cleaned, it will then take the madder dye; and tuL is the fine color we seo in Smyrna cotton yarn. I have heard that the sum of £SOOO was given in England for tills secret. The New York Statesman announces the invention by Dr. Bell and Mr. Dyer of New England, of a machine for spin ing of fl ix, which is now in operation in N**w York, and produces about the same quantity of thread per spindle, fineness be ing equal, as the throstle spindles in cotton manufacture. This is a most impoitant in vention if it proves in practice what is here anticipated of its operations. North Carolina Gold —The New York Post has been favored wiilfthe sight of a letter, from a correspondent at Hampton* ville in North Carolina, giving an account of the quantities of gold lately found in that part of the country. Anew mine has been discovered ab ut five miles from H nmptonville, which is thought to promise well. At a mine in Anson county, a lump of the metal has been found weighing 13 lbs avordopoise, entirely solid and estima ted to be worth from $2500 to S3OOO Os course, this success h is produced some ex citemeut in a neighboring county, anc many workmen have abandoned their usual occu pations to search for gold. At Capp,s mine about 100 hands are at work finding from one to five dollars worth of the metal a day. D is generally found in fine par ticles and perfectly pure. Large pieces are rarely met with. The. largest ever found in North Carolina was that found some years since in Carbaras county. It weighed 28 lbs. and was worth about S6OOO. The writer proceeds to sa\: “It is .x fine source of profit to the pro prietors of the soil, for it is the poores’ land which the most is found. lam told that two merchants in Charlotte, sixty miles from this place, have bought this year fit y thousand dollars worth of gold dust. Tiitn pay at the rate of about ninety cents per penneywtight. f From Guafalama. — Capt. Hull, o! the brig Joseph, at this port from Truxillo, in forms, ih.it the misunderstanding between the Guatamalinns and St. Salvadorians still continued, and there appeared to he no prospect of a speedy termination to the un happy difference. Both parties had then scouts out, and skirmishes often took place between them, but nothing farther. Capt. Hull understood that an ordel had been made by the government of Cen tral America, prohibiting the introduction of any article of Spanish growth or mail* ufactuie into the country. Privateer taken. —lt will be seen by the following account from the Boston Palladi um of Tuesday, the privateer which cap fhred the British Brig Caraboo, has been taken at St. Eustatia There are probably others fitted out ai St. Barts, now commit ting depredations at sea. The St. Thomas Times of 10th Septem ber with which we have favored, contains the following article. St. Thomas , Sept. 10.—The sc hr. which captured the English brig Caraboo, was taken on .'hturdav last by the British sloop of war Victor, ; t St. Eustatia. The following extract of a letter will put our | readers in possession of the particulars. Extract of a letter from St. Eustatia. | dated Bth insf:—“l -am glad to inform you tint the little schr which captured llieCar rabo, of Liverpool, is now in possession of the British Government; she came here on Saturday, to inquire after her prizes, and there happened to be an English sloop of war here, which had just made sail to pro ceed on a cruise, & after having got about four miles to the southward, she met the schr. and gave chase. The man of war fired on her, upon which the schooner hoisted the Dutch pendant and flag, and c *nsequent!y the former ceased firing, but followed her into this port. On getting into harbor, the schr. lowered the. Dutch f! ig, and hoisted that of Buenos Ayres.— Tlie ship immediately anchored about ten or twelve fathoms outside of her, and sent on shore to demand her from the Govern ment, stating that he could have taken u< sunk her, had it not been through respee.i for the Dutch flag, which she first hoisted; the Government called a Court, and founc by the log-book of the schr. the time sh captured the Carraboo, she was then, to gether with her people, immediately giv en up to ilie maa of war Captain J >s<. i says, the Carraboo had a Brazilians Por tuguese Register besides her English one. 4 I am persuaded that this vessel must have done a great deal of mischief, and I hope if they have been guilty of murder, that they will meet their just reward. “The schr. might have escaped, >f she had gone to the north of the Island, as she could outsail the ship; but the fellows did not suppose their villany was discovered, or they never would have ventured into port. Had she made an attempt to pass the road stead, tho garrison were ail prepared to bring her to or sink her.’’ From a London paper. Disastrious Shipwreck: —A narrative fuller of painful interest than the subjoined has seldom been perused. The heroic de votion of the fisherman who was instfumeu ta! in saving so many lives and his generous sacrifices afterwards for their comfoit, can not be too highly extolled; Ilis Majesty’s ship Tyne, Halifax, July 26. Sir— l have just arrived at this port, with 152 passt ngers, men women, and children Sived from the wreck of the brig Dispatch, of Workinton, commanded hy tiie late illiam Lancaster, who was drowned short ly after tiie vessel struck on a rock, three qu liters of a mile from the main, and 18 miles to the Eastward of Cape Rav. Tiie mate (a brother of the ind the crew nine in number, were all saved, and are with me. From the statement of die mate. it ap pears that the brig sailed from Londonderry with 200 passengers, on the 29h of May, hound to Quebec; that from the 19th un til the 29'h of June, they did not see the sun, and from the 30;h to the 7‘hinst they could not get an observation ;on that dav they made the land, which they supposed was Cape Chapeau Rouge. From that time they had constant fog, hut having run with a S. E. wind, till it was supposed they were abreast of Cape Ray, the course was altered to N. W. \ N. about SP. M o* Thursday the 10th. At 6P. M. a roci was discovered three points on the lee bow; the helm was put down but the brig struck almost immediately and filled. \r attempt was made to land the passengers from the lower studding sail boom hut it failed. The pinnace was got out and instantly stove; the jolly boat was lowered to try to save the women, hut tiie surf was too high, and af ter hanging on by a rope for three hours, j the boat was thrown over the quarter and the master with two passengers w ho were in her drowned. The mate succeeded iii'get ting long boat out, which fortunately swung clear of the brig, with about 30 pas sengers in her; they held on all night by a rope from the hows, and the following morning the mate and three seaman drop ped from the. jib-boom With two oars in ihe fu>at, and landed on the main those in hei. The stern of the brig fortunately fell on the rock when she parted, and the niaji.rity of | the passengers got to the rork >u a ropt from it. From Friday to Tuesday evening was occupied in getting them off in small parties, through a tremeudious surf to the main. Four men and ten children perish ed from fatigue on the rock, and between thirty and t rty were washed off or fell be tween tiie brig and were drowned. Those who are saved are indebted for their lives to the exertions of a fisherman named Har voy, residing with a wife and children on Dead Island, about four miles from the spot where the accident happened. He had picked up on Saturday evening, a keg and straw bed, close to his house which led him to suspect a shipwreck. The follow ing morning fSuuday) at daylight ho start ed in a boat only 12 feet long with his el dest girl, aged 17, and eldest son only 10, as~4iis crew, aud hy six o’clock reached the spot where those landed at first in the long boat, and only six others who had been got •flflhe rock with ihe wreck of the jolly ’•oat, which had been thrown on shore.— [J irvev’s knowledge of the place and tides enabled him to direct the exertions of the mate and throe seamen in placing the boats. On Sunday evening at 6p. m. 60 men, wo men and children were saved that ni”h t ; during Monday, 30; and on Tuesday, ad who were alive; the whole were obliged to efiable the seamen in the boat to drag then* with a small line through the surf, and were afterwards barely covered with clothes washed on shore. Harvey, during each night, had conveyed to his house those most in want f support, and shared with them half of tlfe stock of previsions provid ed fin* the support of his family till the au tumn; the other half he gave to those on the beach After all were saved, he madh two trips to Port aux Basques, with the first party, and was about to return to the wreck for the remainder, when I arrived in con sequence of intelligence he forwarded to Cape Ray, where this ship was. I remain, Sir, your obedient servant, R. GRANT, Captain* To John Bennett, Esq. SecYy. Lloyd’s, London. From the Boston Palladium. Singular Discovery . —Mi. Horton, a gentleman who has been engaged in boring for water in providence, lias presented to the public some remarkable results. In his second experiment in boring, he selected the extreme point of a wharf, many yards from the original land. He bored through the artificial soil—then through a stratum ; of mud—then through sand, pebbles and quartz gravel At this point water impreg nated with copperas and arsenic broke forth, but desterminating to proceed, Mr. Horton next struck a vineyard and drew up vines, grape leaves, acorns, hazle nuts, pine burs, and the seeds of unknown fruits together with pure water. This was 35 feet below the bed ofthe l iver? The various mo- es of writing a name now so familiar to every one— “A name you all must know very well, Nobody can speak, and nobody spell’’ have been noticed in another part of our paper. We have since found *an allusion to the subject in a London Journal, which -fates that the name on the French maps is Citimla in the French papers Ciiutnla, in the Berlin papers Choumla, and in the English papers fr equently Shumla, but that the true name is Tzchowmliew\ We should expect sucli a place to be impregnable.— Atlas. Boston, September 29. It is said that the steamer Fulton, which has hern hither drawn from the Pi evidence and Now York line of steamers, has been purchased in New York to he sent out to Cuba, to play between the ports of Havana and Mutauzas Crim Con. —An action of this nature, in which Valentine W. Rathhone was plaintiff, and Luther Tiumbull Jr. defend ant, was brought before the County Court at ns present term at New-Fano Tiie action was defaulted; and the Court con sisting of hedges Hutchinson, Roberts, and Starks, assessed the damages at — Draftleboro ’ ( Vt ) paper. From the Philadelphia Aurora. A singularly outrageous act was commit ted in the Police Office yesterday, during tho examination of a prisoner on a crimin al charge; a young man named William Forepaugli, was called as a witness to tes tify on the part of the commonwealth On passing the dock where the prisoner was seated, and within striking distance, the prisoner sprung on him with an unsheathed dirk, that be had secreted on his person, md made two well directed blows at the | body of the witness, but which were war ded off by him, ns to prevent his receiv ing hut one of them slightly on his right breast Hu was instantly secured by the officers, lisarmed and tied, and after his hearing and committal on several charges of lar ceny, he was also committed for this as sault and battery, with intent to murder, I which he openly and repeatedly avowed. Forepaugh was an accomplice in crime,; and was marked by this villain for his vic tim. The name of the prisoner is John ! Brad ford, alias John Stewart, or better I known among thieves as English Jack, an Id offender, having been frequently con victed fi r larcenies, and, we regret to sav, hut recently turned loose upon us by a par don from the Governor of the common wealth. NEWSTEAD. Bes. re the gate stands a fine spreading oak, one of the few remaining trees of Sheervvood forest, the famous haunt iff Ro bin Hood and his associates, which once ci vered all this part of the and whose centre was about the domain of New. stead. To this oak, the only one of any size, on the estate, Byron was very partial. I is pretty well known that his great uncle (to whom he succeeded) cut down almost I) the valuable timber, partly to pay gamb ling debts, and partly for pure mischief’s s <ke, to injure the property which he knew would pass into another branch of the fami ly, all of whom, in consequence of his hav- ! ing killed Mr. Chatworth, had forsaken 1 aim. So that when Bvron came into pos session of the estate, and indeed the whole time he had it, i( presented a very hare and desolate appearance. Unluckily he hau not fortune enough to do what lias since boon done on such an enlarged scale, and with so much taste, by the present own e Lieut. Col. Wild man, and which alone can render the property intrinsically valuable. The soil is very poor, and fit only for the grow th of latch and firs ; and of those up wards of 700 acres have been planted.— By ion could not afford the first outlay which was necessary in order ultimately to increase its worth, so that as long as he held it, its rental did not exceed £I3OO a year. In a cabinet, at tlie end of'lie room, carefully preserved and concealed in a slid ing case, is kept the celebrated skull cup, upon which are inscribed those splendid verses— “Stait not, —nor deem my spirit fled,” &.C, People often suppose, from the name, that the cup retains all the terrific appearance of a death’s head, and imagine that they could “Behold through each lack-lustre, eyeless hole The g ay recess of wisdom and of wit not at all—there is nothing whatever start ling in it—nothing can he clearer and less “offensive—in fact, nobody would know, were he not told, that it was not a common bone bowl. It is made of the crown of ilie head cut straight off, so that all ihe disgust ing portion of a skull is avoided; is well polished; its edge is bound by a broad rim of silver; and it is set in a neat stand of the same metal, which serves as a handle, and upon the four sides of which, and not on the skull itself, the verses are engraved.— It is, in short, in appearance, a very ham - some utensil, and from which the most fas tidious person might (in my opinion) drink without scruple. It was produced after dinner when Byron had company at tho 1 bbey, and a bottle of claret poured into it. It was wrought by a man at Notting ham, who was seve ely reproved by a wor thy divine not far from Newstead, for this profanation of the dead. The reply of ihe workman, that he should be happy to make) a similar one out of his head after death,! upon being equally well paid f* r the trou-j b)e, so alarmed the reverend gentleman, j that he was taken seriously ill, and confined j for considerable time to his house. An el- } egant round library table is the only furni-l ture in this room that belonged to Byron, j and this he constantly uod. Beyond ihe 5 refrectory, on the same floor, isßyron’sj study, now used as a temporary dining room, the entire furniture of which is the | same th t was used hy him; it is all very plain—indeed ordinary. A good painting of a battle, over ihe sideboard, was also ins. This apartment, perhaps beyond all others, deserves the attention, of ihe pilgrim to Newstead as more intimately connected with the poetical existence of Byron. It was here that he prepared for the press those first effusions of his genius, which were published at Newark* under the tide of Hours of Idleness. It was here that he meditated, planned, and for the most part wrote, that splendid retort to the severe critique they had called down, which plac ed him at once among the first poets, and stamped him as the keenest satirist of the diy And if was here that his tender and beautiful verses to Mary Chatworth (after wards and now Mrs. Musters) and many of’ those sweet pie ces found among his miscel- ! laneous poem were composed. Then a place of deep and abstract thought—now of merriment and rrj icing; but the memory of Byron flings over it a charm which at tracts more strongly than the most sumptu ous banquet. Byron first sold the estate to Mr Claughton, for the sum, as I am inform ed by the then bailiff to it, of £135,000; and upon the agreement not being complet ed, Mr C. paid a forfeit of £25,000; hut J do not vouch for the accuracy of this state ment It was then st ld to Lieutenant Co lonel \V ild ham for £94,ooo—much more than its intrinsic value Coming from An* nesley, nothing is seen till you are at the top of a hill close to the Abbey, when the south front bursts suddenly on the sight.— Putting aside all association of idea, 1 th ’t a more mournful, dreary looking place was never beheld. In w inter especially, noth ing can be more desolate; the bleak coun try around, the thinness of the population, and the miserable villager—all impress one with feelings of me! un holy. For an abbey this is so much the better; it would require but little to put it into a state which would realise ail our ideas of monastic seclusion. Literary Gazette IMPORTANT FROM THE SEAT OF WAR!! NoRFOfK, Oct. 6 -A gentleman who came passenger in the Ship Helvetius, • C apt. i ay]or which arrived in Hampton Roads on Saturday, in the short passage of 36 days from Nieu Diep, (Holland,) in forms, that a sanguinary battle was fought at Schtmda ( ate not precisely remembered) between the Russians and Turkish armies in which tho Russians were repulsed with I a loss 0f20,000 men. in killed, wounded, and prisone s, and so formidable were the Turks, that it was found expedient to order a reinforcement of 100,000 to ensure pas sage through the Balkan Mountains. The Russians however, being reinforced were, again advancing. [The above informat ion corroborates the news of a severe battle between the belli— > gerents reported in London, on the 3lstj Aug, to have taken place before Sc.humla | ° n or about the 16th of that month, with j this exception, that the London repott states the less of the Russians at 40,000 and our informant at 20,000 men.— Uca osi Kovel auction sale. —This afternoon, twelve thousand and; liars in notes ofthe! Franklin Bank of New Jersey, were offered at auction, in lots, in the Exchange sale room. The first lot wen: for ten ct nts on the dollar and the sale of the remainder was postponed until Tuesday next The elegant and extensive steam be longing to Mr. Otis Lincoln, an enterprising and worthy citizen of Newark, Tioga county, N. Y. was consumed by fire on the night ofthe J 7th ult. Mr. L’s loss is estinraledat from 3 to S4OOO. for the Savannah Bmiccftr. Art thou asleep ?—-wilt thou not l tear My parting sigh, sweet Iris, dear ? J amp of the night! refulgent break 1 h rough vine clothed lattice, gently The drowsy god away. Wake, Iris love ! sleep envious hides Those azure orbs—all nature chides— Why sleep > the moments wing their flj,a 1 come, my last adieu this ni ht T 6 • In Sorrow’s strain, to sing. She does not hear—l sing in vain • She sleeps, still heedless of my pain. O ! Iris, when night’s shadows floe I’ll then be far from peace and thee, On ocean’s billowy breast. Echo receives my last adieu The flowers each tear-drop shed so, n And when the breeze, at twilight nic- Shall lightly touch thy lovely cheek * My parting kiss will be. IXISILLa CANDIDATES FOR ELECTOR* TO BE CHOSEN ON THE FIRST MONDAY OF \n t ’ * Ticket nominated by the dark party Geo. Daniel Newnan, of Baldwin. Gen John Stewart, “ Gen. Henry Mitchell, “ Hancock Col. John Cunningham, “ Elbert. Maj. John Hatcher, •• Wilkinson, Benj. Leigh, Esq. “ Columbia, l Pitt Milner, Esq. “ Monroe.’ Col. John Burkett, u Glvnn. Maj. Wm. Pentkjost, “ Jackson. Ticket nominated by the Trcup party Col. John J. Maxwell, of Bryan. Robert Reid, Esq “ Richmond. I)r. Wm Terrill, 14 Hancock. A. S. Clayton, F.sq. “ Clark. Gen. D. Blackshear, 41 Solomon Graves, Esq. 44 Newton, Col. John Rutherford, 44 Baldwin. John Moore, Esq. “ Oglethorpe, Maj. Oliver Porter, 44 Greene, Individual * nominated by the Administration fa vention at Wrightsborovgk. ‘ Col. Thomas Murray, of Lincoln. John Burch, Esq. ; Wilkes. COMMERCIAL. EXPORTS. Cargo of barque Philetus , Mcrril, for Ham. G7B bales Upland Cotton, and 2*2 tons Logww Cargo of srhr. Emma, H right, for St. Tkomi 43 casks Rice, 1360 bushels Corn, 222 pair a Slices, 50 do. Boots, 9051 b. Cheese, 10 barrels Tar 3 do. Oil, 30 do. Bread, 19 do Cider, 28 kegs Lard 668 lbs. Bacon, 8 Cradles, 11 rn. Shingles; ‘M bunch Onions, 7 barrels Potatoes, 24 Baskets, m 6 kegs Manufactured Tobacco. FROM OUR CORREPONDENT. Office of the Courier, | Charleston, Oct. 11—8 p. n.\ Cotton. —ln long staple cotton our marketrai tinues very inactive; but a few bags low qualit of the new crop has yet been received. In Uj lands rt considerable reduction in price has take place since the receipt of accounts from tiie Livei pool market to the 2d !Bept. {Sales to some eitei have been made of new Uplands at 9 3-4 a 10cl for very good lots. V* e quote 9 1-2 alO l-ticts but little has been sold above 10 cents, thong some very choice favorite marks are held ihr* our quotations. Old cotton is very much negied ed; we quote it at 8 1-2 a 9 1-2. Rice. —This article continues in moderatel mnnd, and at about old prices, viz: $3 25tbrprii and 2 75 a 3 fur inferior to good. Flour. —The stock of flour is not heavy; t sales made during the week were at $7, ffhi price we quote. Corn. —There was no arrivals of corn duri the week. We continue the old quotationof3S 42; it. is retailing at 50 cents, but the demand limited. Groceries. —During the week a fair busine was done in Groceries for the country trade,the! being a number of country merchants in toun-H Most, articles are at the prices cl last veek.eJf'M whiskey, which lias declined. Sales were mafl on Sat urday of Baltimore and New Orleans H 27 cts. Sugars are in good demand and pncß firm. 15 pipes Marseilles Brandy, 3d prool,"fB sold at auction at 81 cts. Freights to Liverpool are 1-2d per lb. There are three vessels taking in for that but none for any other port in Europe. York, cotton, in square bales 62 1-2 cents,in bags 57 1-2 cents, and for rice 50 eta K Review of the Sew-York Market, OctobvyK Coffee. — Import 1110 bags San Domingo. hK article has -been unusually heavy since our the only demand of importance being for h‘ use. For exportation at present rates purely* do not appear. There is no prime green a J-* ket, and but little of good quality for tiie 60L ‘r market. The sales, as far as we learn.com®* 500 bags San Domingo at 12, 2 per eentuni*; 75 bags good La Guayra, from 12 1-2 a ’-.mt GOo to 700 Brazil, in lots, to the grocers, * mos. with various small lots within the ran;* our quotations, which we do not vary. .H Cotton. — Import from 27th ult to Ist i nst yH Portsmouth 73; Virginia 32; North Carolina■ Carolina 100; N Orleans 891; Georgia lhy™ tal 2713 bales. There has been no particu nation in the cotton market since our last r The sales ofthe week amount to about fa* 1 ’ fjK say 600 L T plands 9 a 11. chiefly at 10 a h ’’’B 550 Tennessees and New Orleans at 10 a 50Alabamasll al3 cts. and 60 evv . fine quality at 14 cts on time. \\ e quotations except on common Uplands, v 11 ’■jy reduce J-2ct. per lb. Uplands lb. 9 New Orleans 10 1-2 a 13; Tennessee 9 l-* a ‘B Alabama 10 a 11 1-2. ri B Flour. — Prices of some descriptions J |3( UB declined, owing to the increased receipt of later intelligence I'avoiable lish crops. There have been consider**... during the week fi r export to the Br> vinces and West Indies. \Y'estern wheat has commenced coming lorward - ate quantities, and from the south p,u have been considerable since our l ast : which however was sold previous quote. New York superfine, bbl B do. (i 67; w estern do. 6 tt7 a 7; Phila.de P Baltimore city 6 50. . . Molasses. —There is verp little arrl '; e fi-B coastwise, which sells in small lots, . loupe at 32; Antigua at 34; 3 rinidad t a 44; Cuba good 31 1-2; Martinique j];B loupe 26 a I>2; English Islands 30 a ■[ and Matanzas 28 a3l 1-2. ‘ Ajg <B Rice. —We have heard of no sal* worthy of reporting. The stock con lS - Bl 150 tons, generally inferior. . (( ,B : Bi Spirits. —About 100 pipes of di^Bl has been sold at 115 cts. In Bordea 0B gins to be considerable enquiry, bu By ,