Newspaper Page Text
s A V A nnah.
1>,1829
<- ~„o u dett —A.B. is unavoidably post-
C orr^r
*jDcd’ •
1 , Meeting of pouucil was licl 1 yester-
A* l fCso lution authorising the enclosure
jjf jTI . g ..q U are, at private expense, was taken
jfJob^’ 0 -j ere d Aftsr a full discussion, in
$ p ft ,position was supported by Aldermen
* S * RLyon, an( ! Cuyler, and opposed by
giu.ftall and Shaw, it was finally ear-
,ll [’ e atfirmative. The subject of a public
ffi t j lC sufferers by the late conflagration
!va was ca^ U P Airman Shcftall,
till the regular meeting of Counci
“ elt :
r of the Savannah Ogechee and
o a
A j ia Canal Company, at the Long Room of
diange yesterday, the following gentle
& Directors on the part of the
*<* iaen * r , s viz:—Alexander Telfair, W. C.
} °” T Voung, John D. Mongin, R. F.
1!5;,,C! ‘ c and Geo. W. M‘Allister.
1! .iIiUS, * * -
NeW York Evening Post of the 27th ult.
” ‘lhc United States sloop of war Natchez, (
nand of Capt. Shubrick, was towed I
vr ll‘ e COII1 ‘ n (
aVV y a rd this morning by the steam
1 ,, f Livingston, into the North |
r q ifere g h e anchored. She has orders to j
J ,ver ’, -.i, possible despatch to search for
r . all j freebooters that mlest the seas m
•D* . i iw,rhr.od of Havana and Matanzas, and
aeig* l ® 0 * 1 *
* , „ rpceiitlv captured several American
•ho a “ ve reC J 1 . , . 4 ,
i iii the most cruel and brutal manner
esseii, an,i
, urtiered tbc crews.
communicated.
y, Editor- — 1 ->end von an article which I liope
pill republish, extracted from the last Athcn-
} llU p( j w hen 1 state to you that that paper
i„.,r-a keen understood to have been under ,
direction of the Hon. A. S. Clayton, and tha
t C paragraph is no doubt from his able pen, no-
more will be wanting to give it a fair con*
, j • editorial squibs on the oilier side of the <
£* ‘ CANDOR.
fowlani Stephenson. —In another part
j,,,per wiii ue touud an account of
ktopping and carrying away of this
A'.ni'US swindler, tv hose acts have lately
Wl jj.;eil so Uige a portion of the netvspa
ptfi. We are somewhat surprised to find
from the Savannah papers, that much in
ll/wiioft wa fi ll in that place at his al
d.ciioii, and some <4 the good citizens put i
to much trouble to afford hint
flection. Now as to ourselves, we cou
fcs we have no such let ling; and upon the
ilmh, consider hs a I ninety oil a pretty gen
ttl idfdr, and applaud the abducets for
keir dexteiity. ii was a violence, it is
uni, done to ihe* sovereignty of the state.
AvaeeJ. But what tin,.] Does it impeach
liflii/imur and good faith of the state?—
Kiliii the least. The slate has nothing to
Midi it —the state does not r cogu ze the
transaction —and it the perpetrators are
twined of the art (we cannot sav crime)
tie) will he punished by the statute in such
ties made and piovided. But ii is saiii
kbenson has never been tried in his own
ttiuif) yei—that tiie humanity of pur laws
pfsu.nes every one innocent until pioveil
pilty. Right again,—but she inference is
trong. Faunah has been published iu tlie
iiuld t<> convince any i (■asui.aij.e man of
h guilt—lns flight proves it —the changing
ksname proves u—.iis Coining to this conn
tjpioivs it —and nf V other circmuslances
tfiiidi might he m ntioneJ wi.nl* prove it.
Ttitre enu he no douhl that tiie in in is a
|it;lfugue; and tratisporialion, which we
ircposc will he !os final si no-nee, will be
t i-eud for him. The fact is, flu feelings
wllie gum! pnople of S >vannah have got a
F'-e ilie better of their jvi £jf meets. We
Iwfe u iiigli a re spect i> tlie laws and tile
litnily of the state as othetsj but we con
tins one et tiie cases ouiitteil in our
iti!utebm.k; and one that is vtiy well sup-
Mby public spirit.
1- tiiir lamentations for the violated
®i l sosi >of the state, the oeople of SaVannnh
heinuusmss of the crimes of which
“*pl€iisan has been guiliy. A partner in
coufiJeitee \va> placed, in a very
fepectable im ream.le coitcet n, whose cha
heretnfoie remtiitted unsullied,
“hose reputable head had been l<ii*oiir>
nis hie by intense application to sos
-8,11 Us lejiutafton,— lie forgot every obliga
honour and honesiy f violated all
aiid brought the house with its re*
‘ er 'ii(, head, at the age ol eighty-odd years,
J wtikrupicv. Is lb s a small offence?—
i'O iiiurdereil .Mr. Renitngtou, execra
a,td deep would have Lrnen his
a t> tiom every mouth. And has he not
J Rf * rSfJ than death upo.n lhem? At
la k* W * U 11 * iP a - r *t‘vipated almost momen
)f r ' J *” Irom the fatigues and bustle
k counting-room into ttie bosom of ins
*ei’ * ? Ui t>l *j°y a splendid fortune with ;
u l! o\eti reputation tlje few remaudtH:
of T 4t ,J 1 J he endearioen's !
Ifiij .’ * , |. es^p , hehohJ Iso is stripped i
fjnfi''’ U '"*y r(,< * l!^t; d l‘> poverty, by hi* I
partner. And not Mr. Re
s " isl he sufltrers, more or less, bv
j>t*’" Blin * g defiult Even his fvmale i
it h S • . 1VL * !I< ’ l —Miss Stephens,
L i,! * loses twenty thousand pouhds
‘‘Cti Qinnev
B i
lam * s another light in widen tins
I°far f l *° n s^ stewed; and which,
St e .* r uo,n cieaiing ihe least sympathy for
biivt’ * n ivannah, should raise a
tflii , “ iUi^U||: *tii n figainst him—at least
|l j 5 *j n, ei canide portion of her citizens.
blow which bis conduct is cal
*° “dficl upon commercial confi-
Dkr ’ ho jo be confided in, when a
n 'trr f f ,i . c
ph Pll ~‘ L * btuse of Rtif. melon, Ste
*tci *, a And what is to
It % i. e /'* business vridu ur confidence? —
Vr ia 11 '* i high— mi tided and ho
* : ' u ' r cliat;t, whose word is consi
■ if.*’ iIS h'md with fdS to the level of
There is one other point in this matter,
” Midi if we are correct in the view we have
“I tt, we hardly know how to express our
selves upon. ‘Fite Georgian says, that
Stephenson, on his arrival, reported himself
l the Secretary 0 f State. Did he really
. ei* hvfieve that government would inter
fere and protect him in Ids rogueryt Ar.d
have well-inf. rmed men, as he must he,
*neh an opinion .f our government and oar
laws, as to suppose that the United Stains
not only stands open as a receptacle for all
the overflowing vice urn] vinhny of Europe,
hiit that it will also be haih and and protected?
Il they have, we ;no dotibly pleased that lie
has been caught; and fervently hopo lie
may be carried safe within the jurisdiction
cd the laws ofliis own country, and iCceive
the lull measure of their punishment for his
lolly, to teach otheis like him to go tdse
wlieie.
Upon the whole we rejoice that Stephen
son has been taken; and as to the modus
operand i, as it was the only feasable one, }
no law existing in thi state under which he
could be seized and delivered by the legal
authorities, it is about as good a plan as
could be hit upon, provided the individuals
concerned, choose to risk it. Let the pro
per authorities now do their dutv, bring
them to punishment for a violation of the
laws, and thus appease the violated dignity
of the stale Bui let us hear no more sym
pathy for Stephenson, or regrets that he
has been taken from our state and stirren—
dt*re*Mo the offended laws of England.
Since ihe above was written we have seen
som** foil her accounts of this hopeful would
be citizen of the State of Georgia. We
have no room to publish them. In one it
is said that “he kept six women, had three
country houses, had ptivute boxes at ail the
theatres, and ih.t he generally spent three
parts of the night at gambling houses.’*
The “uiifoitunate Stephenson* has been
the aulhour of his own crimes, let him
work out his own salvation.
From the Baltimore American.
The United States and Great Britain. —
The London journal*, o! a certain stamp,
accuse us of overvaluing our importance
in the scale of nations, and we remember
one of them to have rematked with much
triumph, that notwithstanding this undue
estimate of ourselves, European affairs
were settled, their balance adjusted, the j
‘Turkish question agitated, and Greece li
berated, without a European politician ev
er thinking of such a power as America.
It is very true that we do not meddle with
what does not concern u>; but while Eng
land is i.i thinks liersell swaying the i.fifurs
e! the East, her domestic concerns are
more involved in oin prospeiity than site
chooses to confess. ll.tr (ruv<diets never
iail in examine our dockyaids: her ship
owners look vviih jealousy to our co.:mer
ciai marine; her maimlaciiireis are not un
concern* and respecting our tariff; and her
pseudo politicians, in their despair at see
ing tiie progress 1 our mamdacturcs, can
think of no hetier device for staying it,
tli oi prohibiting the exportation of her ma
chinery nnd other manufacturing improve
ment*.
This is the proposition of a writer in
Black wood s Magazine, who says, too, that
England’s fiist great blow should be struck
at tint siiqs of A nericn, tml that the reci-
P>< c iy tiea y should be annulled at once.
1 he superiority, also, enjoyed by America
tii the fidn -lies, ought to he taken from her,
and given to British North America, by
me employment el duties ami other means.
e refer this wiiui to the (fleet of the
bokiny system on tile fisheries.i.f Scotland
half ii ccuimy since, as the best lepiy to
his pioposiimn. Our cotton, which it is
reluctantly coni, ssed they must have at
present is to he gradually turned out of the
eaaiket by encouraging its growth in their
own possessions. -INay, tiie very emigra
tion to this country ought, sttys our writer
to have another direction given to it; for at
present the Irish pour themselves into Eng
land, displace the English labourers, uud
thusdrive (lie latter to America.
All these proposed expedients, while
they would we are convinced, do nothing
or worse than nothing for England, show
on whit points we come in collision with
th*se principles of wealth and strength
which enable her to interpose with such ef
fect in those affairs of tin* East which it
s mis, we ha/e m t the honour to have the
least hand in. The lemedies proposed for
evils which !io more deep than our Eng
lish fiiends like to acknowledge, are on a
level with the judgement and knowledge,
of a writer who expresses his astonishment
and humiliation “that America without a
church establishment, should so far excel
Biitain, us she does, in her care of mor
als!”
From die Baltimore American.
The Jitlaii ic Slope. —Mr Darby di
vides die territory oi the United States in
to liree great sections; the Atlantic Slope;
the great Central Valley of North America;
I and the slope between the Rocky Moun
: tains and the Pacific. The fust, being that
winch we inhabit, he characterises as fol
lows.
The great Atlantic Slope extends from
Florida to New Brunswick, a length of
2ICO miles, by a mean width of 100, and
contains 308,000 square miles, ii contains
: two regions ol veiy different characters; first,
a diluvial shell of sand, clad in nine foiests,
ami extending fioni the Atlantic to the
fills of the river*; secondly, the teal prim
itive slope, rising from these fails in an in
cliiVid plane to the tops of the Alleghany.
Tiie shell of sand, if we extend if to Cape
Cod, is more than 1500 miles in length.—
I From Georgia to Jersey it averages 120
| utiles in Wreadt.fi; thence to Neversink Hills,
60 miles; snd from these hills it runs out in
ito the narnyw cones of Long Island and
Cape Cod. This sandy legion is a great
deformity to cm- continent. It is generally
sterile and unwlt* lesome, ary! filled with
swamps aiu! marshes not easily ft claimable;
I and pushes the population au.ty from the
comforts ut-d facilities of the sea-
The real Atlantic Slope, which
uionces at the western termination of this
sfindy region, is the bill and dale region of
j file United States, and makes up for this
j, unfavorable foreground of the picture. Its
j gentle swells and picturesque hills form the
| fine rural scenery of the country, and are
j equally auspicious to health and agriculture.
This’ region is a!! arable, and either nalui
idiy ferule, or susceptible of improvement.
Hero is seated our best an*l most comfort
able population. The mineral resources
. f .i : oi • .
ol iliis are rich and various; Iron
abounds ihiough of its whole extent. Gold
is found in considerable quantity of a space
°f 200 miles square, in North and toutli
Carolina, and nearly half a million of dol
lars have been collected thence. Lead,
zinc and copper appear in many places.—
The cold region of Pennsylvania is liter
ally inexhaustible; the finest anthratciie
exists in mountain masses; while bitumin
ous co dis lotind in basins in Virginia and
Maryland. Throughout this slope the
marbles abound, and present a great vari
ety; the kaolin clays, the alumiue earths;
and other mineials necessary to the arts,
are found innumerable places; and, on the
whole, this district may be considered ri*h
in mineral productions than any part of
the Union of equal extent, and contains
I he seeds of great future advancement in
agriculture, commerce and the arts.
Pile sandy shelf,however unfavorable in
its general characteristics, is not, we would
observe, so utterly barreu and useless as
the leader might be led Com these to sup
pose. Rice, vegetables and fruits may be
drawn abundantly from its soil, and some
huge and well known districts, not unfer
tile or unpeopled, are comprehended with
in it Fish and other delicacies abound in
it. Its worst feature is its insalubrity; a
feature which it is likely to retain, as dis
tricts more favorable to agriculture will
drain its population, and keep its surface
in its natural, uncultivated and undrained
stair.
The Tunnel, 8 miles below this, at
Reed’s [fill, has at length been visited by
the rays of light, in a!! its distance. The
aperture in tne narrowest point, or where
the two working parties met, is at present
large enough to pass the body of a horse,
and already is the travelling, along that
part of the line, much facilitated. Ibe bill
through which the Tunnel passes is very
high and abrupt, and washed at its base by
the river; therefore passing from one mouth
of the tunnel to the other was a very con
siderable task. True you passed through
a smart town on the top of the* hill, where
all kind of notions might be had or enter
tained. Put the ascent and descent were
precipitous. What is to become of the
Tuiinelhill town now, the stream of trade,
of travel and of life, passes through the
bowels of the earth far beneath it. Rever
sing the fate of Pompeii and Herculaneum,
its exalted elevation, its nakedness, but
augments the rapidity with which it will
now decline. The concave is at length
opened, and its absorbing influence com
menced.
It is said the sides of the Tunnel have
met with vei v great precision, there not
being six inches of a variance.
[Blairsville Record.
Day and Martin s Blacking. —The fol
lowing are said to be the materials of
which Day and Martin’s blacking is made:
To one pound of ivory black, in which
has been mixed half an ounce of oil of vi
triol and an ounce of sweet oil, and one
pound of pulverised loaf sugar; mix the
whole with a gallon of vinegar, and let it
stand three days, when it is fit foi use. It
should be stired often, and kept from the
air to prevent evaporation. The cost of a
gallon of tins blacking is 75 cents, and it is
retailed at the siort) for $4. —B al‘. Am.
Bar met*
LA \ V~OF ~ GEORGIA
An Act to amend and enlarge an act, entitled an
act to grant certain powers to the commission
ers of Pilotage, and for further preventing the
obstruction of the Savannah river.
IT 7 lIERRAS, the river Savannah is frequent-
VV ly injured by the projecting of the wharf
heads into the river, beyond the line of the au
thorised survey of the wharf lots, and by the slid
ing, washing, or caving in of the material with
which the wharfs are filled in, in consequence of
the defective manner in which said wharfs are
constructed, or in consequence of some decay, or
want of reparation.
sf.c. 1. lie it therefore enacted by the Senate and
House of Representatives of the state of Georgia
in General Assembly met, and it isheieby enacted
by the authority of the some, That it shall be the
duty of the commissioners of pilotage tor the Bar
and River of Savannah, and they are hereby au
thorised, to visit, inspect and examine, annually,
in the month of June, the several wharfs on said
river between Ray's Hall and the ocean, and
should any 7 wharf seem to them to require repair,
whereby injury to the river, in their opinion, may
he prevented, they shall cause the same to be in
spected and surveyed by an alderman of the city
of Savannah, a wharf holder, and a master carpen
ter or wharf builder, and if said surveyors, or a
majority of them, shall be of the opinion that said
wharf requires repair, then the owner or owners
tenant or tenants thereof, his, her or their agent
or agents, representative or representatives, shall
within three mouths thereafter, well and suffi
ciently in the opinion of said surveyors, or a ma
jority of them, repair, or cause to be repaired,
said wharf,so deemed to be in need thereof; and
if he, she, or they, shall refuse, fail, or neglect so
to repair said wharf, or cause it to be repaired,
within the time aforesaid, it shall he the duty of
said commissioners to cause the same to be re
paired. and the owner or owners, tenant or ten
ants of such wharf, his, her or their agjnt or
represen tat ives, shall forfeit and pay to the com
missioners for the use of said river, the sum of
two hundred dollars, together with all the costs v
charges and expenses of the repairs, to bofecov
nred in any court of competent jurisdiction; and
which mav be levied by distress and sale of said
wharfs and the lot or lots thereupon appertaining,
or bv any other execution or process against the
person or propert y of the defendant.
§ 2. And be it further enacted by the authority
aforesaid , That if any vessel, boat, Hat, ark, hulk,
wreck, crib, raft, or erection, shall be stink, or
caused, or permitted, or suflered to be sunk in the
river Savannah, between Ray’s Hall and the
ocean, or to drift up and down said river, or to
sodge to the injury or annoyance of the naviga
tion thereof against the wharfs, banks, shores or
lines thereof, or any of thorn, the person who shall
so sin’.*, or cause to he sunk, or to drill or lodge,
us aforesaid, or the ow ner or owners, master, con
signee or consignees, or other person or perwr.s,
j having charge or such vessel, boot, flat, ark, crib.
| raft or erection, as aforesaid, shall forfeit, and pay
. to the said commissioners, for tho use of the river
f aforesaid, a penalty not exceeding five hundred
J dollars, to ho assessed by said commissioners,
• which may be recovered in ary court oi'comoc
| ter + jurisdiction.
I §3. And whereas, it frequently happens that
vessels, hulks, or wrecks, condemned or deemed
unseaworthy, are dismantled, and partially hro-
I ken up, at or near the wharfs, where they are left
in a state liable to sink, or otherwise become an
obstruction to the navigation of the river.
Re it enacted by the authority aforesaid , That
whenever any vessel, wreck, or hulk, deemed by
the commissioners to he, or likely to become an
obstn/ction as aforesaid, it shall be the duty of tho
comjnissi oners to require of the person or per
sons, their agents or legal representatives last
* having had charge of the same, to remove, or
cause to be removed, said obstruction, or threat
ened obstruction, as aforesaid, to some spot on
the shoal ground between Hutchinson’s and Fig
Islands as shall be designated by the chairman of
the said commissioners, and whenever any ves
sel, wreck or hulk, so deemed by the said commis
sioners an obstruction or likely to become so,
shall be sold, it shall be the duty of the auction
eer, or person or persons selling or otherwise dis
posing ot the same, to demand and take as one
of theeonditions of sale, or other disposition there
of, of and from the purchaser or purchasers, or
person or persons otherwise coming into posses
sion thereof, a bond with good and sufficient se* j
curities, to be approved by said commissioners or
their chairman, in the sum of five hundred dollars,
payable to said commissioners, conditioned to re
move, or cause to be = moved, such wreck, hulk,
or vessel, to some spot on the shoal ground be
tween Hutchinson’s and Fig Islands, to be desig
nated as aforesaid; and if such person or persons
having charge, or having last had charge or pos
sesion of such vessel, wreck, hulk, or other ob
struction, as aforesaid, on requisition made to
them by the commissioners of pilotage through
their chairman, shall refuse, neglect, or fail, to re
move the same within such time as said commis
sioners may think the exigency of the case re
quires, and to such spot as shall be pointed out to
him, her, or them; and also, if such auctioneer or
auctioneers, or other person so selling, or other
wise disposing of said vessel, wreck, hulk, or other
matter threatening to become an incumbrance or
obstruction to the river, shall refuse, neglect, or
fail to lake such bond, he, she or they, as well the
party so neglecting to remove, as that so neglect
ing or failing to take such bond as aforesaid, shall
forfeit and pay to said commissioners, tor the use
of the river, a penalty not exceeding five hundred
dollars, which may be recovered in any court of
competent jurisdiction.
§ 4 And be it farther enacted by the authority !
aforesaid, That if any vessel, wreck, or hulk, |
condemned or hauled up, or deemed to be unsea
worthy, shall be broken up, or caused or attempt
ed to be broken up elsewhere in said river, than at
a spot in said shoal space, which shall have been
designated by the chairman of said commission
ers, in writing, any person bieaking up, or caus
ing or attempting to break up the same, or the
owner or owners, master,consignee or consignees,
or other person or persons having charge ol such
vessel, wreck, or hulk, shall forfeit and pay to
said commissioners, for the use of said river, a pe
nalty not exceeding two hundred dollars, to be
assessed by said commissioners, which may be re
covered in any court of competent jurisdiction.
§ 5. And be it further enacted by the authoriUj
aforesaid , That w henever any vessel, wreck, or
hulk, in said river, shall be deemed by said com
missioners to be unseaworthy, or liable to sink, it
sliall and may be lawful for said commissioners,
and they are hereby authorised to cause a notice
or requisition to be given to or served on the own
er or owners, master, consignee or consignees, or
other person or persons having charge thereof, or
ariy of them, requiring him, her, or them, tore
move such vessel, w’reck, or hulk, within three
days, to such spot upon said shoal space, as shall
or ruay be designated in said notice or requisition;
and if such owner or owners, master, consignee or
consignees, or other person or’ persons having
charge of such vessel, wreck or hulk, shall refuse,
neglect, or fail to remove the same within said
time, to such spot as aforesaid, it shall be the duty
of said commissioners, and they are hereby autho
rised and empowered to remove such vessel,
w reck, or hulk, or cause the same to be removed,
and the owner or ow ners, master, consignee or
consignees, or other person or persons having
charge of such vessel, wreck, or hulk, shall forfeit
and pay to said commissioners, for the use of said
river, not exceeding the sum of two’hundred dol
lars, together with all costs, charges, I 'and expens
es of such removal, to be recovered in any court
of competent jurisdiction.
§ 6. And be il further enacted, That if any per
son or persons shall place or lay any vessel,
w’reck, or hulk, or cause any vessel, wreck, or
hulk, to be placed or to lie on shoal, bunk, bed, or
bar, in said river, between Ray’s Hall and the
ocean, except by and with the permission of said
commissioners, signified in writing, and unless se
cured in the manner specified m and by said per
mission, such person or persons, owner or owners,
shallforfeit and pay to said commissioners, for the
use of said river, ape Ity not exceeding five
qundred dollars, to be assessed by said commis
sioners, which may be recovered in any court
of competent jurisdiction.
§ 7. And be it Jurther enacted by the authority
aforesaid, That if any person or persons shall re
sist, oppose, obstruct, or beat commissioners or
surveyors or them, or either of their agents, or
servants, or any of them, in the performance, ex
ecution or carrying into effect of the services and
duties, or any of them herein before mentioned
every such person shall be deemed guilty of a mis
demeanor, and on conviction thereof, shall pay a
fine or be imprisoned in the common jail, or both,
in the discretion of the court.
§ 8. And be it farther enacted by the authority
aforesaid, That wdienever an action, or cause of
action shall accrue, or arise within the intent or
meaning of that act, the affidavit whereon to found
an attachment or other legal proceeding,or to hold
the defendant or defendants to bail thereon, may
be made by the chairman of said commissioners or
their agent.
§ 9. And be it further enacted, That this act
shall be published at the expense of the aforesaid
commissioners, once a month for the term of three
months in each of the gazettes in the city of Sa
vannah.
IRBY HUDSON,
Speaker of the House of Representatives.
THOMAS STOCKS,
President of the Senate.
Assented to Dec. 20,1828.
JOHN FORSYTH, Governor.
feb 21
notice:
It* OUR months after date hereof I shall make
application to the Honorable the Justices of
the Inferior Court of Chatham County, when sit
ting for ordinary purposes, for leave to sell Lot
No. Ninety-eight, (98) in the first District of
Carroll County, as the real Estate of William
S. Phillips deed, for the benefit of the heirs.
SUSAN I. PHILLIPS, Administratrix.
jan 29 1829 . ’
NOTICE.
OUR 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 belonging to
Simeon and William Sheffield, of said county.
SARAH GEIGER, Guardian,
dec 20, 1828.
One hundred dollars reward.
Jt Runaway from the subsen
ber in November last, his negro man
Normono —said fellow is about 2fc
f .Vf ars age, 5 feet oor 8 inches
high, speaks remarkably quick and
well. The above reward w ill be paid on deliver
ing him at the Fort in St. Augustine, or at my
plantation, Tomoka.
John Buloio. Jr.
Tomoka, April 15 1828 48
| Fresh Drugs and Medicines, &,<•-
X ( I OUNCE a Sulphate Quinine, (Genuine
*9 l f French,)
60 doz. cold pressed Castor Oil, in quarts,
very superior,
50 do do do do in pints, do do
50 do do do do second quality,
50 do do do suitable for plantations and
low- priced,
20 Baskets Sweet Oil, suitable for the table,
2ft Bhls Glauber Salts, of a superior quality,
50 Boxes do do 25 lbs each, do do
Ift Bids Green Copperas,
2ft half do do
20 Kegs Salt Petre, double refined,
6 Bbls clarified Honey,
2 Tierces do dt*
Received and for sale by
LAY HENDRICKSON,
Druggists, No. 2 and 15, Gibbons’ Buildings.
march 4
McELHLNEY, GIRVIN & Cos.
(have IX STORE and OFFER FOR SAlv)
£TdAHHDS. Whiskey
vr4so bbls do
50 do sth proof do
CO do Bth 9th 10th proof do
110 do NERum
85 do Peach Brandy
6ft do Apple do
90 do Gin
10 pipes do
6 do domestic Brandy
300 bags coffee
28 do pepper
8 chests Y H Tea
10 do Hyson Skin do
8 half do Powchong do
6 boxes Gunpowder do * 1
28 bbls I.oaf Sugar ‘*
30 do Barnes’ Ale
12 do cider Vinegar >;*, f ■
10 do Jolesand Chines
9 do Buck Wheat Flour
135 kegs No 1 Leaf Lard, (new’
60 do Butter
25 do Tobacco
45 half do do
38 coils Bale Rope, and
12,000 lbs Bacon
jan 16
WINES, FRUITS &. CORDIALS.
4 DRUMS Large Turkey Figs
‘X 10 kegs Zante Currants
20 hags Almonds
Filberts and Brazil nuts
12 cases Was dale’s London Pickles,
Citron, Ketchup
Olives and Capers
5 dozen Guava Jellies and W. I.
Preserves
20 whole and half boxes Bunch Raisins
30 dozen Parfait Amour, Noyeau,
Annised and Rose cordials
FYontignac wines
50 dozen Madeira, Sherry 7, Port, and claret
wines
Hibbett’s double brown stout in quart
and pint bottles .
For sale by
Charles A. Woodruff,
dec 24 116 Baystreet.
GA UDRY & LEG RIEL,
Offer for sale,
ONE hundred bags coffee
15 do Java do
40 bbls new Orleans sugar
10 hhds do do
30 bbls st. Croix do
10,000 wpanish segars (silvia’s brand)
50 kegs no 1. twist tobacco -
20 boxes cavendish do 1 i
50 bbls canal flour O
70 do howard street do
25 half bbls do do
50 bbls whiskey . .* ’
30 do monongahela
20 do apple brandy
15 do new-england rum
10 do domestic brandy
6 ] Qicheons Jamaica Ruin
8 pipes Holland Gin
7 do Cognac Brandy
10 bbls prime Pork
15 do mess do
Hyson, Gun Powder, Imperial ahd Pow*
chong Teas
20 boxes Mustard
20 do Chocolate
40 do Spermaceti Candles
50 do Tallow do
60 do Soap
40 kegs Scotch Herring
Mackerel Nos 1 2 and 3
Codfish
150 doz old Madeira Wine
Sherry and Port
15 casks Hibbert’s Brown Stout
Teneriffc, Malaga, French Madeira Wino
in qr casks
50 doz Claret Wine in boxes
70 doz assorted Cordial
Allspice, Pepper, Nutmeg, Mace, &c.
jan 2
VIRTUE AND USE *
OF THE
CORDIAL CEPHALIC SNUFF ,
V V b y lon £ experience, has been found
v ▼ an effectual Remedy for most Disorders
of the Head, especially the Common Ileadach,
o which it hardly ever fails giving immediate ease,
and by frequent use prevents its return.
It admirably opens and purges the head, strength
ens the nerves, revives the spirits, and has a most
grateful aromatic smell.
It removes Drowsiness, Sleepiness, Giddiness,
ann Vapours; relieves Dimness of the Eyes; is
excellent in curing recent Deafness; and has been
of great service in Hysteric and Paralytic com
plaints; and in restoring the Memory when im
paired by disorders of the head.
It is also extremely proper for persons who
visit the sick, or go into unwholesome rooms or
unhealthy places, and hot climates, as it fortifies
the head against noxious exhalations and infec
tious air.
A pinch or two may be taken at any time, and
indeed several in a day; but for a cold, or stoppage
in the head, a pinch or two should be taken just
before going to bed.
Those who are in the habit of taking much of
the common snufis, (and thereby injure both head
and stomach,) are desired to mix some of this Ce
phalic Snuff with them, and their bad (fleets will
in a great measures be prevented.
Is on hand and for sale hy
A. parsons, Druggist,
At the Eagle, j\o. 8, Gibbon's Range.
march 16 *
Ladies’ white satteen and stuff Slips.
A. <& E. WOOD
HAVE received by recent arrivals from New
York and the East,
Ladie’s white Satteen and Stuff Slips, of
the finest qualities.
ALSO,
An additional supply of almost every other kind
of SHOES——all of which will be sold st low prices
jan 28
ALL persons having demands against the Ee
tate of captain Abraham Nichols, deceased,
are requested to present their acc rnnts, duly at
tested, to the subscriber, without delay.
N. H. OLMSTEAD, Ex'or.
march 10 tfc