Newspaper Page Text
vwi AIPB
TUESDAY MORNING, FED. 24, 1829.
By the schooner Francis, 7 Mays from
New-York, we have received the N. Y
Daily Advertiser of the l6ih. It conlain s
no later foreign jjews, thau heretofore re
ceived.
Three 2 story dwelling houses on the
Sixth Avenue corner of Anaity-st. N. Y.
-were destroyed by tire on the night of the
15th
- Theatrical —Last night Miss Clara Fisher
made her debut to a Savannah auditory in the
interesting character of Letitia Hardy, in the
Belle's Stratagem. It is the fourth or fifth time,
during the present season, that this sterling com
edy h as been presented to u, for the purpose we
presume of locighing the relative merits of Mrs.
Barnes, Miss Kelly, and Miss Fisher. There is
a general tone in the character of Letitia which
each of those charming actresses preserves
throughout—they only differ in manner , and in
that respect we must give the palm of superiority
to Miss Kelly—there is an indescribable nairctte
in her delineation or the character which is felt
but cannot be described. Were we to enter into
a critical analysis of Miss F s. Letitia, we should
say that she made too much of tiie scene where
she describes to Lady Rac*et her interview with
Doricourt—she threw too much emotion into it’
A descriptive picture of the passions should never
come up to the reality; if it doe's, it violates na
toro In unveiling herself to Doricourt, there
was also an unnecessary degree of agitation as;
sumed, particularly when we consider hgr sudden
transition to composure. Miss F keeps herself
too much for particular scenes, and in conse
quence, occasionally destroys the unity of her
character.
In the pretty little ballad of “I have fruit, 1
have flowers,” the costume details of her dress
were imperfect: She ought to have appeared as
a pretty little Florist, with a basket of fruit and
flowers banging on her arm. This omission took
a way much of the characteristic interest of the
6ong.
Miss Clara will excuse us when we tell her,
that she impairs, by lisping, the full effect of her
Tound and mellifluous voice. A little discipline
will correct this, for she has a tongue which she
can use at pleasure.
In the 3d Act, some untutored brute threw an
Orange from the Gallery on the boards. This
occasioned a momentary interruption. De Camp
in a polite, but poignant manner, noticed this
shameful violation of common propriety. IVe hop®
that a rigid and effectual police will hereafter he
,n readmes* to punish a similar offence should it
again occur, and prevent a repetition of the out
rage.
‘Use of Liquors in the Army. — The Se
cretary of War, in reply to an inquiry
made of him by the House of Representa
tives, whether the use of ardent spirits can
he dispensed with in the army of the* Uni
ted States, has made a report, fie gives
it as nis opinion that the habitual use of ar
dont spirits, r even in moderate quantities,
‘S unfavorable to health, and that the chan
ces for vigor, health and long life, are in fa
vor of him who abstains from it altogether.
He, however, thinks that so small a quanti
fy as a gill a day taken at difte ent times, is
not calculated to impair the health of per
sons engaged in active employments, and
that the sudden abandonment of it bv per
sons who have been in the habit of using it,
might prove injurious to their health.
We have already published, says the
New York Gazette several articles from
London papers relative to the failure of
the Banking House of Remington, Steplien
son &, Cos. and the sudden disappearance
of one of the partners. The London Cour
cr of December 3ist, states that further
discoveriers were daily making, and that
tho amouut which had disappeared
was £230,000 sterling. It also adds that
when tike unfavorable reports respecting
the H > ise were circulated, it had a balance
of £200,000, over and above its pay
ments, and that all demands could have
been met, but the other partners immedi
ately determined to stop payment in order
that distant creditors might have the same
chance as those in London and its vicinity.
A letter from Buenos Ayres, of the Ist
December, says:—A singular circumstance
occurred a few days ago. A swindler suc
ceeded in passing oiT a large amount of
counterfeit piper money, say SGO,OOO, and
then’vanished——no body knows where
he isa kind of Rinaldo Ritialdini, known
by every body, and known by nobody.
latal Sport. —On Sunday last, ns we are
informed by a man named Marslf, says the
Lockport Courier, a resident of the village
of Lewiston, in this count)', was killed in
a public house at that place, by a blow on
the breast, given hi in in <port, for a wager
ol a glass of bquor. Several persons, i l
seems, were engaged in the ajnusement of
striking each other, for the consideration
above mentioned, when the deceased con
sented to receive a blow—it was given,
and on his being asked if it hurt him, he
replied in the negative; but in a very short
time fell and expired. An examination of
his body was held before a Coroner’s jury,
bnt do internal injury was perceptible. L
is supposed the porsoo who struck him,
aimed his blow too low, striking him in the
pit of the stomach, or immediately over the
heart.
Remarkable Preservation. —The Boston
Commercial Gazette states, that a gentle
man in the western part of Nw Hampshire
lately purchased for a trifling consideration,
a copy of the Bishop’s Bible, so called,
folio edition, printer! in London in the year
of our Lord 1573, with Arch Bishop
Crannier’s preface appended to-it. It was
printed on good paper, with the old black
letter type, and is now entire, with the ex
ception of the title page, which is wanting.
It is truly a singular fact, that this ven
erable piece of antiquity should have been
thus preserved, when it is considered that
it has been for the last two hundred and
fifty years, a pilgrim and stranger in the
world, and probably for the last hundred
and fifty years in the wilderness of New
Hampshire. It is a valuable article and
should now be deposited in some more se
cure place for its preservation, than it
ivouid seem to have had in times past.
A Country Dance. The Wheeling
Gazette mentions a dance held in the neigh
borhood of Tyley county, Virginia, where
the father, tlie grand father, and the great
grand lather; the daughter, the mother, and
the grand mother; the mother, and daughter*
and grand mother; the son, the grand son,
and the great graud son, all in a dance on
the same floor at tho time.
Ncio Discoveries —The Nantucket En
quiiei, i t me 7lit iHSt. informs, that Capt.
Wm Worth, 2d, of ihe Rambler, has made
the following discoveries in the Pacific
ocean:
Turk’s Island, bit. 17, N. lon. 155, E.
very low arid thickly inhabited. Worth’s
islands, 5 in number and a reef lat 8 45,
N. lon. 151 30. Tuck’s reef and said
rocks 9 in number, hit. 62 >, S. lon 159
to 160, E. Rambler’s reel, lat. 21 45, S.
lon. E. do. do. lat 23 29, 1011. 178 13; do.
do la 23 30, lon 178 31.
In the II use of Representatives of the
New Yrk Legislature, a bill has been re*
ported, to oblige vessels lying in the harbor
New York to show lights during the
night.
Solomon 11. Currier, Esq. is appointed
and commissioned Collector of the Port of
Newburyport.
A gl turner of Lighin the Middle States.
—We copy tin* fullowi >g from the Phila
delphia Gazette:
“A commttee of the Common Council
of New \ork, have reported in favor of
a relaxation of the quarantine laws of that
port. A similar reform is needed Phila
delphia. Some year or two since, a cargo
of mahogany was unloaded at the L izaretto,
to detect the yellow fever which it was sus
pected was lurking among the logs/ If a
vessel is clean, its cargo in good condition,
and its crew and passengers healty, why
hould it be detained at the L izirettoT
’ FROM COLOMBIA.
Trial of General Santander. —We are
irdebted to the politeness >f Capt. Crow
ell, of the brig Edwin, which arrived yes
terday from St. Thomas, for the “St.
Thomas Tidende,’ of Jan. 21. The only
article ot interest which it contains, is a
sketch of the trial of Gen. Santander, late
of the Colombian army, on a charge of
being concerned in the corspirncy against
the life ol Bolivar. —JV Y. Jour. Corn’
It.appears to have been a veiy extensive
conspiracy: for, from the examinations of
Com. Rmiecine, Silva, Lieut. Iguatio Lo•
pc?z, Captains Emiglio, Bnceno, and Ra
fael Menboza, it is evident that these indi
viduals, although they belonged to quite
different places, where the conspirators
were distributed, and stationed to carry on
their intrigues and again proselytes; the
whole of them had an intimate knowledge
that Gen. Santander was the principal agent
who directed the conspiracy, and that lie
was reserved to conduct affairs in case it
succeeded. Col. Guerra, in his last exam
ination, previous to being shot, disposed
that Gen. Santander spoke to him concern
ing the conspiracy, which that General, on
being confronted with him, denied Tpe
Commandant Pedro, Carnjo, desposed to*
the same, and furthermore his having com
municated to him the project 10 assassinate
the Liberator in the village of Soucha, on
Sunday, the 21st Sept, which he, Gen. San
tander, opposed This last, the Cenertil
himself, on being confronted, acknowl
edged. Flor intino Gonzales also deposed
as to having spoken to the General con
cerning the conspiracy; and that, in reply
lie said, “it was not a fii season; * and
pointed out the mode of establishing Juntas,
in the various departments, under the name
of “Republicans,” dependent upon the
central one which ought to be established
in the capital, to direct the operations of
the su >ordinate ones, whose object would
be to gain over proselytes, as well as the
influence of some Generals attached to the
person of the Liberator, in order thet the
movement might be more general and sim
ultaneous.
1 he whole of the conspirators that have
been discovered and tried, agree in their
respective deposit! ms, that plan failed on
the night of the 25th Sept, but that there
was no particular day appointed to give !
the blow, a circumstance which proves ■
What Florentine* Gonzales and Pedro
Carnjo says, with respect to Gen. Santan
<lei, that he was opposed to the deed, for
it was not the proper time, and that he-di,
not wish it to be perpetrated whilst he was
yet in Colombia, but consented that U should
be done when he *ould|be out of the terri
tories of the Republic, and that he should
then be ready and willing to lend his ser
vices.,,
The Court, as is well known, condemned
him to death, and confiscated Ins property
to the State —the senate “being subject to
the approbation or the alteration of the
Liberator President.”
The Liberator having convened his
Council of Ministers, it was resolved to
camnvute the sentence into ‘deprivation of
rank and emoluments from the Republic
with a proviso that if he should ever alter
wards tread upon the territories tl-ereof,
without especial permission from the Su
preme Government, the sentence of death
should be executed upon him by any Judge
or Military Chief wherever lie may be
apprehended, and that his landed property
be kept as a security that he will not break
the restriction, giving to him the proceeds
thereof to subsist upon.” A number of
other officers, who had been condemned to
death, have had their sentence commuted
to six, eight, or ten years solitary impris
* onment.
An Italian paper (“II Giornale and Amo
dei’ ) of October last, contains an extraor
dinary account of a case of total abstinence
from food of every kind during the long
period of two years, eight months and ele
ven days. The patient in this case, was a
woman named Gar hero, of Racconis, in
Piedmont, who died on the 19th of May
last, aged 48 years. During the period
above stated, she had remained without any
sort of sustenance solid or liquid, hut she
appears to have retained her mental powers
until within a few hours of her death.
This woman was regarded in the place
where she resided as a Saint, and was daily
visited by crowds; but from the examina
tion of the body after death, by two eminent
professors of anatomy at Turin, Rolando
and Gallo, it’ appeared that the abstinence
was to be acounted for by one of the rare
(‘fleets of pathological pheuomina. These
professors, after describing the appearance
ol (he body, which had become similar to
that ot a mummy, state that the cause of
the abstinence arose from a mechanical
injury by winch the traverse colon was car
ried into tlie cavity of the pelvis, and the
stomach, oesophagus, and pharynx so acted
upon, that deglutition became painful, and
at length impossible. The patient being
reduced, like some animals, to live upon
their own supstance, no longer sustained
loss by cutaneous or other secretion, except
pulmonary, which was so slight as nolto soil
a glass when applied to the lips.
These gentlemen imagined that the ab
sorption by which she was sustained was
assisted by some principle in the atmosphere
—the nutrive support derived by tlie patient
from her own substance and absorption
from the atmosphere being no longer suffi
cient to repair the losses sustained, the
substance which was in (lie digestive canal
previously to the mechanical injury brought
on a’ slow inflamation accompanied with
fever, which produced gangrene and death.
CaT.sk ill, Feb. 2
Red Jacket . —There was a timr when
we looked upon this chief as a pmod rem
nant of that heroic race whom we must vet
mentalh honor as lords of tlm soil. We
had even viewed his intemperate habits and
h .tred of Missionaries, if not with compla
cency, atjeast with charity. The former
had the plea of habit, planted by intercourse
with the whites, and confirmed by an old
age spent in that intercourse; the other the
plea of ignorance, and that experience in
the insiduous arts of the white men, which
might easily lead stronger minds to spurn
what they would offer, however plausible it
might seem. But when we see him—the
herq of the forest—the oak of his tribe —
following the sickening fashion of travelling
lecturers—holding talks for money—danc
ing in museums and theatres—\ye know
which to despise most, the vanuy which
moves him, or the cupidity of his flatterers,
who hang around him, and make him a
mere mountebank for their profit. Red
Jacket, twenty years ago, would scorn to
hold a talk for money, or to exhibit the
sacred dances of his tribe to be stared at by
curious .and sneering strangers. But his
country is in ruins. His warrio.s are wast
ing away. The strength is departing from
him. His forests are cut down and his
game has been driven far from his hunting
grounds. Why then should he be proud
any longer. There are none among the
mighty of his tribe to make him glad, or to
nt'i'im v hen he is no more.
COMMERCIAL.
SAVANNAH EXPORTS.
Ship America, for Liverpool, 971 bales Upland
Cotton.
Ship Hantonia, for Liverpool, 80G bales Upland
Cotton.
Baltimore, Feb 16.
The Market. —The continuation of very
cold weather, and the partial obstruction of
our navigation by ice, prevent many trans
actions at this season—add to which the
recent intelligence from Europe*and it will
not be a subject of wonder if there should
be a small decliue in the price of one of our
most prominent staples.
Flour —There has been a decline of
fully 25 cents per barrel, perhaps more,
since our last weekly report, notwithstand
ing considerable shipments have been made
to foreign ports, and coastwise; but these
were not all recent purchases; for we have
understood that the transactions were but
few duiing the last week. On Thursday
a lot of ’ harf was sold at $7 75, and sales
were made on Friday, of Howard street,
from the wagons, at 7 62—and wo did
learn, that od Saturday it was even lower,
but think it must have been ol an inferior
br-nd. . The total amount of inspections
f..r the week was 11,555 barrels of Wheal
Flour; 896 bbls. Rye Flour; and 36 hhds.
a ;tl 209 bbls. kiln-dried Corn Meal—Ot
e Wheat Flour 8359 wholev, and 63 half
bbls. were Howard street; and the remain
der 5164 whole, flhd 1 half bbl. of City
Mills. We quote for Howard street, $7 75;
and far City Mills 7 75, nominal. Rye
Flour and Corn Meal, remain without
change.
Grain. —There is little or no Wheat in
market; at all events not sufficient to estab
lish a price oilier than nominal. A tow
sales of Corn have been made at 47 to 48,
and 50 cents.
Groceries. —There have been some
sales of Havana Coffee, during the last
week, at 13 1-2 cts and of Brazil at 12 1-4
the latter of an inferior kind. For good of
all kinds the prices remain unchanged. 30
hhds. and 20 bids. New Orleans Molasses
have been sold at Auction at 33 a 35 cents
per gallon A cargo of 4000 bushels Turks
Island Salt w as sold on Thursday at 52 cts
per bushel, and sack has declined about 10
per cent There is no alteration in spir
its—Whiskey is very dull at quotations.—
Sales at Auction wore made on Thursday
and Friday of 300 hhds New Orleans Su
gar at $7 a 8 65, and 8 20 a 8 50 per 100
’ lbs.; and 500 boxes Havana white, at 14 50.
| MARINS* JOURNAL
fort of y-ir.t.y.y.ni.
cleared; ‘
Ship \mrica, Kilson,for Liverpool.
S H Fay 4 co.
Ship Hantonia, Watson, Liverpool.
S H Fay & co. 7^
ARRIVED,
.Schr. Francis, Nichols, 7 days from New-York.
ship Statira sailed day before.
Bchr Agenoria, Fox well, from Baltimore, and
7 days from the Capes, to M‘E!hemy, Given &
co. Sorrel & Andorson, R. Habersham, Bayard &
Hunter. D. A Weed, D. B. Herbert, T. Ryerson,
J. P. Henry— 2 Passengers.
Sloop John Chevalier, Sisson, 2 days from
Charleston, to J W Long, and others.
Sloop Thomas and Mary, from St. Marys, with
Oranges to the master.
Sloop Angel, Luce, 3 days from Darien, with
327 bales Cotton to E. Bliss and R. Malone.
SAILED,
Sloop Catharine <& Elizabeth, Fitliian, for Da
rien.
Schr. General Elinor, Long, for Darien.
~ THEATRE.
HE CO AD NIGHT OF MISS CLARA FISHER.
?*IIE Manager lias great pleasure in announc
ing to the public, that he has made an ar
rangement with the highly popular actress Miss
CLARA FISHER, oi the Theatre Royal, Drury
Lane, whose performance, throughout England,
and most of the first Theatres in the United States,
has created so powerful an interest, and will ap
pear in Savafinah for
FOUR NIGHTS ONLY.
This Evening Febhmry 24,
Will be presented the elegant Comedy in 5 acts, of
MAN & WIFE.
Charles Austencourt, Mr. De Camp,
Helen Worriet, Miss Clara Fisher.
In the course of the evening the following song
by Mies Clara Fisher, “Ishould very much lihe to
Kauai. 1 ’
After which, the Popular Farce of
OLD & YOUNG.
Old Winter Mr. Green,
Matilda Mowbray, Miss Clara Fisher,
fob 24
FOR CHARLESTON. j
UT The steam packet “John David Mongin
Captain W. Dubois, will leave Bolton'® wharf,•
MORNING, 24th instant, at 9 o'clock,
j tor freight or passage, having splendid accom
modations, apply on board, or to
fob 24 _____ J- W. LONG, Agent^
NEW CAH I NET FUR N ITU E.
FINITE New Cabinet Furniture advertised by
F the subscribers’ comprises almost every ar
ticle in that line, is made ofthe best materials, and ,
First Rate Workmanship. This sale will posi• ■
tively take place TO-DAY, the 24th instant,
at 1J o’clock, at No. 2, Penfiefds Ranwe.
PHILBRICK & BAKER.
IFF N. B. The above is the property ‘ *
son declining the Cabinet Business,
fob 24
FOR NEW YORKT
Established line
The regular packet ship
ILORIAN,
.-jnp F. Harrison, Master,
Having half her cargo engaged will sail
on THURSDAY next. For balance of
freight or passage, having excellent accommoda
tions, apply to Capt. H. on board at Jones Upper
W harf, or to
HALL, S'HAPTER & TUP PER.
fob 23 .
FOR HAVRE.
T&e First Class Ship
jSgK * MACON,
l&iteffiJaZL DL. Forter , Master ,
W ILL be immediately despatched For freight
of 200 bales only,applv to
HALL SFI AFTER & TUPPER. !
fob 23
DRAWING.
Os the Virginia Slate Lottery ,
CLASS NO 19,
42, 22, 17, 41, 39, 85,
Holdors of prizes will call for the cash at
i EPPLNGER’S
Lottery and Exchange Office.
. fob 20
J. WAGNER
RETURNS his sincere thanks to his friends
and those kind gentlemen, by whose exer
tions he saved a part of his property at the late
fire—and at the same time, takes this opportunity
to inform his customers and the public generally,
that he will be ready to supply them w ith BREAD
this morning, at A. Sibley & Co’s, store, corner
J of State and JetFerson streets, back of A. Telfair,
Esq’s, dwelling
fob 18 o*
EVENING SCHOOL.
MR. PHILLIPS respectfully informs the Pub
lic, that he has opened his Evening School
at his dwelling, in South Broad-street, nearly op
posite the residence of Authony Barclay, esq.
He instructs gentlemen m English Grammar,
Arithmetic, Book-keeping, and in a few’ lessons
will improve their Writing considerable. He also
teaches Navigation and Nautical Astronomy, and
be method of taking the Altitudes and Distances
of the Heavenly bodies.
D 3 Terms moderate—payable in advance,
nov 7 * 75
‘W hall shapTer & rrr : *
Offer for sale on very mod, v,\ ‘
ji (s*o T OK * Sveedßlron ass^rtr,;
A \ * 500 Casks Thon>r.stottn J
> 56 Bbl* V, hiskoy, lgt proof “ ’
30 Hhds. Prime St. Croix Su/n r
50 Bbls. No. 1 Mackerel fe
50 do. No. 2 do/’
50 Half Bbls. No. I do.
50 do. do. No. 2 do.
30 Pngs superior old Java Ooff.,*
2o Bbls. N York City insp R . „ t
2 > co. do. do do. .1 ‘
100 do. Canal Flour, best brand ‘
H'tnlT ins P’-prime P-.
t 0 Half bbls. Canat Flour, best
100 Old Barlo w Cheese,
100 Drums Fresh Smyrna Fi<r S
150 Pieces New Bacon, (shnuWrcO
100 Bbls. Howard-street Flour
10 qr. Casks Sweet Malava ’
10 Pipes Cogswell Old Canary Jr; n „ •
* 20 qr. Casks do. do. “ .
10 Eighth Casks do. do. $ f
5 qr. Casks Romano Sherrv
20 do. do. Marseilles Made rig
10 Pipes “Seignetts” Brandy *
5 do. “Dupry & co’s.” do.
5 do “Wrifs” (j 0
10 Pipes Holland Gin,
3 Puncheons old Jamaica Rum
ver, prime Green C* c
100 Bags fair * do. A n
50 Bbls. Albany Beer,
10 do Bottle Porter,
50 Kegs Baltimore Lard,
250 Coils best Bale Rope,
150 Bbls Northern Gin, (“Phelps &
„ Brand)
20 do New-England Rum
20 boxes soap
20 bids calcined Plaister
1 cask socket spades
300 Grindstones, small sizes
feb 10
BACONS ~
10,000 i£?i£ss sass l
Flour, Whiskey and Bacon
I2o)o a^ws:; ,owudßt ‘^
100 new Hams )
150 do Shoulders \ a an c °n
Landing from schr Meridian and for sale by
jun °7 Half Chapter Puppet*
BRANDY, GIN, ~
9 Pipes Brandy (Dupuy s4- co’s;
5 pipes Holland Gin
50 bags Rio coffee
10 bags Java do
G hhds St Croix Sugar
5 chests Hysou Tea (
10 1-2 do do ( Splendid’s cargo
Imperial and Gunpowder Tea 0
6 kegs butter
5 1-2 bbls Fulton market Beef
50 boxes and 50 half boxes soap, brown Nol
i toil share Moulds
3 bags Trace chains
40 kegs superior Tobacco
5 bags Pepper
2 bags Allspice
In store and for sale bv
A. & J. CHA MPION
ov 3 V
GEOHGTa"’iVL 1\ A Übii ‘ ‘ ,"/■
TYY Y tlie Honorable the Justices of the Inferior
Court ofM-Tntoah county, sitting for Ordi
nary purposes ;
To ah to whom it may concern.
Whereas, Patrick Gibson applies.,for lettir*
dismissury, as executor with the will annexed, oa
the estate and effect® of John Currie, deed
are, therefore, to cite and admonish all arid singu
lar, the kindred ami creditors of the said deceased
to file their objections, (if any they have,) in my
office, in Daiien, in the terms of the law, other
wise letters of dismission will be granted to
the applicant.
Witness the Honorable Jacob Wood, ona
of tlie Justices of said Court, this 25th
day of November, one thousand eight hun
dred and twenty-eight.*
GEO. T. ROGERS, c.e. 0.
rmv 2fi
SHERIFF'S BALE
ON the first Tuesday in March next will bg
sold in front of the court house in Mc Intosh
county,between the hours of ten and four o’clock,
4 he sclrooner Flora, with such oflier tackle and
apparel that she now has on her as she lies at the
wharf, in the city ot Darien. Levied on as the
property cf William Tommerson, to satisfy an ex
ermtion issued on the fbrelosure of a mortgage in
favour of Andrew May bank.
THOMAS KING, Sheriff.
dec 20
English White f Wustard Seed.
T u ST received, for affections of the Liver’s in*
rnal organs, and to-restore tho loss of action
m the nervous system generally. For sale by
A. PARSONS, Druggist.
No. 8. Gibbon’s range?
16
NOTICE.
FOUR months after date, application will be
made to the Honorable the inferior Court of
the county of Bulloch, while sitting for ordinary
purposes, for leave to sell all the land belongmgto
Simeon and William Sheffield, of said county.
SARAH GEIGER, Guardian,
dec 29. 1828.
NOTICE ‘
FOUR months after date hereof I shall make
application to the Honorable the Justices ol
the Inferior Court of Chatham County, when sit
ting forbrdinary purposes, for leave to sell ot
No. Ninety-eight, (9o) in the first District of
Carroll County, as the real Estate of Willi®*
S. Phillips deed, for the benefit of the heirs.
SUSAN I. PHILLIPS, Administratriz.
jam 29 1829
T~ : notice: 7
ALL persons b; ving demands against the
tate of Joshl a For ty, late of Camden coun
ty, deceased, will please present them to the sub
scriber, duly attested, according to law, and thoee
indebted to said Estate will please make iuiniw*’
ate payment.
Charles S. flenrv. adm r -
One hundred dollars reward.
Runaway from the subscr
ber in November last, his negro n ®
JR- / Normond—said fellow is abo
/ years of age, 5 feet 6or BijJ c 1 .
—mufti Ir — high, speaks remarkably <l°* er .
well. The above reward will lfe paidoadej
ing him at the Fort in St. Augustine, or a.
plantation, Tomoka. ,
John BnUr, J r -
Tomoka, Ap*l 15 1828. —-
LOST, . ffli
4 SUM of Money, among which were _ y
jl V low ing bills, viz : tw-o twenty dollar j
Bank State of Georgia, one $5, bank no
lected, one $2 bill bank of Macon, toget
several other bills not recollected. ptic'.’lc-
The bills were contained in a black silk r
Any person finding such a parcel,’ is requ® 8
give information to the Printer.
nov 28. _——
Eure W inter Strained Sperm-
A supply of the above article is just
and offered for sale at wholesale an
A Parsons, Drg&'*-
sept. 10.