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fCOSAM EMIR BARTLETT — EDITOR.]
THE SAVANNAH mercury
~j 5 e published every day in Savannah, Geo.
Jing the business season, and three times a
daring the summer months, at Eight Dollars
* s r annuni. payable in advance.
P T//L’ savannah mercury ,
(foe the country,)
rt- jl be published every Monday, Wednesday,
V, Jjifiay, at Si* Dollars per annum. This 6lieet
be made up of the two inner forms es the
0a:!y paper, containing all the now*, new adver
jgeiucnts, Ac.
THE ARGUS,
Wll be compiled from the Savannah Mercury,
- ntain a selection of the leading and most
articles of the Daily papers. Adver
*rf..lor,ta will be generally excluded, and the
j w jil be principally filed with reading matter.
iiS Four Dollars per annum, or Three Dol
vf'*if paid in advance.
fTf’ AJrttiiscrr'riits will be published in bothva
ters ‘it 75 cents per square of 14 lines for the first
• sertioH and 37$ cents for each continuation.
V rrT All Communications respecting the business
jf u Office, must be addressed to the Editor } post
P g a se s of land and negroes by Administrators
. ccu ters or Guardians, are required by law, to
be Md cn the first Tuesday in the month, between
tb* 1 it“ rs oi ten o’clock in the forenoon and three
• t b e ptternoon, at the Court-House of the Coun
ts in which the property is. situated. Notice of
•licsc sues must be given in a public Gazette
Lfi, previous to the day of sale.
• jfotSce of tho sale of personal property must be
pven in Kk manner, forty days previous to the
JjilV of SidtJ.
Notice to the debtors and creditors of an estate,
insist be published fo r forty days.
dice that application will be made to the court
of Ordinary for leave to sell land, must be pub
jshed four month*.
THURSDAY MORNLVG, SEPT. 10, 1620.
*•— , -
COMMUNICATED
Hk. Editoß :
I am pleased, in the main, with the communica
tion of yoar corespondent, ‘* A Friend to Liberal
Principles,” Ac. and 1 think it will satisfy ail
those who; hke myself, are cute enough to under
stand it. But, Sir, there are many so ineffably
ilupid. as not to know exactly what he means
twill therefore, With his permission, endeavor to
kelp him out, and extend his doctrines to their
practical result*. *
Jo the fret place, Sir, no member of a Christian
Church should be allowed to have any thing to
<L with elections. Church and State, you ftpyy.v,
sriMuiu be kept separate: but how is this to be
done, if the members” of the Church are to be al
lowed to havo a voice in the election of State offi
cers? It Would bo utterly impossible ; they would
carry their religious feelings to the polls, and
might, If a majority, elest a member of a Church
to &u important office New tins would he sap
ping the foundations of our Constitution. They
might, too, by electioneering, canvassing the
merits of the candidates, placing the character of
the one in a favorable light, and another in an un
favorable light, u forestall public opinion,” which
Would interfere mightily with tho “ freedom of
.choice.”. r i his, as your correspondent justly ob
obscivcs, would be an invasion of the rights of the
people—that is, that portion of the poopJe who do
tot belong to any church, and who like to manage
every thing their own way; and therefore style
theoi-elvo# the sovereign people.
la the second place, Mr Editor, no religious ox
moral man should ever be allowed tc vote at all.
“ Religion and politics should be kept separate
and dibtiuct ” But -.ve cannot keep them distinct
if we allow religious men the exerciso of the.tr
civil rights. Supposing, now, we allowed them
to vole, as we do other men, and they chose to
vote for religious candidates ! why tlus would bo
U conspiracy, a religious combination! against
which your correspondent has wisely guarded us
Now upon these principles, l think the c urse
of conduct pursued by Mr. Civihs and his friends,
“belonging to a certain institution” in our city,
has been :nost abominable. They have nomina
ted moral aud good men to office 1 Ani herein is
disclosed the dangerous nature of their designs.
If the moral and good are alone to bo elected to
office, wbat is to become of the sovereign people!
What is to become of candidates, like your cor
respondent and myself, who have no virtue nor
morality ? What is to become of die freedom oi
ch- ice ?
“Your correspondent, “A friend to liberal
principles,” S/.c. vory properly warns us agaiust
holy alliances. Now the sovereign people inay
discreetly moot at u Barton's,” u The Exchange,”
,l The Buzzard Roost,” or any other genteel place,
and resolve tc run a ticket to suit themselves,
Without any harm being dons. But should some
•Hty or a hundred moral ana religious men agree
to vote for their friends for office, it is a “ holy al*
luutce,” and an invasion of the rights of the peo
ple ; and, as such, ought to be utterly discounte
nanced.
After these explanations, I presume the remarks
” A friend to liberal principles,” Ac. will be
properly understood. SINCERITY.
communicated.
Mr. Editor :
The compliment which your correspondent of
rnost singular qualities” bestows on me, is un
doubtedly deserved , for until informed by him, I
Vvas not aware l!i*t I had admitted the truth of
tn y of those facts which tend to substantiate the
c haige of an attempt on the part of Civihsor his
•hends, to violate the rights ot any of our citi
-7f'n - 1 did indeed admit that Civilis, with the
** n *wledge, perhaps advice and concurrence, of
friends, published a ticket for Aldermen ; and
•diu not dony that he was a moral, religious man,
of a ciiurch, &c. But I supposed that
ntorai and religious men had civil as well
45 others; nor did I conceive how a ticket, maile
U P by individuals of this cits*, could be called an
attempt to forestall public opinion,”, to destroy
tht freedom of choice,” more than if the same
f • ket had been r.grcod oh at a meeting at the Ex-
Clia,l il© or any other plaoe. It was, as I suppo?
* usual exercise of a constitutional right.—-
t r,L ‘ nature of the transaction I did not suppose
■° b* any worse, because that the individuals who
THE ARGUS.
fiamed the tieket were moral and religious. But,
Mr. Editor, it seoma that, according to the view
of your correspondent, in tliis single fact consists
the whole enormity of the transaction The in
dividuals recommending the ticket were good
men ; the candidates nominated were good men-
This makes it a “ holy alliance j” a combination
dangerous to the liberties of the citizens 1 The
manner and frequency with which your corres
pondent uses the phrase u freedom of choice,”
would induce one to believe that he deemed them
cabalistic words, of magical power sufficient to
compel the obedience of men, as some dark word
of the magician formerly called up the genii.—
What he means by the phrase, I must confess try
talonts are too “ humble” to discover. If any of
your readers can fathom his meaning, [ must com
pliment their penetration If, however, he wouM
imply that any set of moral and religious men
are endeavoring to influence the approaching
election in any other way, than by placing before
the electors candidates of superior qualifications,
and subduing the violence of opposition by gen
tle deportment, sound arguments, and stubborn
truths—l must say, his assertions evidently run
beyond the facts.
In regard to the decision of the Court on the
Sabbath ordinance, it is possible, Mr. Editor, that,
the information of your correspondent may be
more accurate than my own. I only know that
our city ordinance permits shopkeepers to open
their shops till nine o’clock on Sunday morning,
and under their license to tliis effect that they
retail spirits. This our city authorities permit.—
But individuals have been brought up before the
Superior Court and fined ; the Judge deciding
that the retail of spirits at all on Sunday was vi
olative of a law of the State. To a humble com
prehension, such as mine, the city ordinance,
which permits the retailer to keep open his shop,
which can be for no other purpose than that of
selling, appears to conflict with the law of the
State, which forbids him to sell; and the decision
oi the Court confirms this impression. A lawyer,
perhaps, may reconcile the difference with a quib
ble. lie may say that the license granted to a
grocer to keep open his shop, gives him no right
to sell. But common sense will tell him different
ly. The practice of our grocers and city authori
ties for a dozen years will tell him dnTercally.
SENEX. ■
Post officii and Custom, House. —We
understand that every captain artivi-ug from
a foreign port must, hereafter, produce to
the Collector a certificate from the Post
Master that he has delivered his lotiers'ai
the P-st Office, or his vessel will net be
permitted to outer.
The t r . S ship Ontario, bound to the
Mediterranean, got to sea this morning at
7 o’clock. The following is a list of the
officers and passengers:
Thomas If. Stephens, E*q. Commander J
J. Montgomery Dale, George N. Rollins,
Samuel F. Dupont, Z. F. Johnston, Wm.
C. Whittle, Lieutenants ; R. P. Macomber,
Surgeon; Frances G. M‘Cauley, Purser;
C. 11. D ivis. acting sailing master; J. W.
Plummer, Assistant Surgeon ; G. M. Bache
T. O. L. Elwyu, J. A. Dahlgreen, Ewd.
Thompson, Henry Wulke, YV S. Young,
B. J M >el ler, R. E. Johnson, G Mucoid
ber, J. B minister, Midshipmen ; C. Bowers,
Captain’s Clei k; T. S. Hanefan, Boat
swain; John Deacop, Carpenter; T. Stan-
I V, Gunner; J. W. Hall, Saiimaker; Peter
M‘B ride, Cooper; \V. Gilmore, Pursers
Stewart; J.L. Williams, Surgeant Marines.
Passengers—Henry Lee, Esq. Consul
General in Algiers, and lady ; Mr. Brown,
private Secretary; Lieutenants J as. Glynn
and Rob ot R*ehe / Doctors J. Cowdrey
and C. H. Freeland ; Midshipmen Frank
lin Clinton and D. Lynch, jr. U. S. Navy.
From the New York American.
Frauds nil the ustom House.—A long
exposition has been made in several of the
papers of certain alioged frauds at our Cus*
tom flense, in the importation, mainly, of
woollen goods. The detail would little
interest our general readers, but the result
seems to be, what indeed every person con
versant with the unfailing operation of high
duties must have anticipated, that various
devices are occasionally resorted to, to e
vade the payment of these duties. The
original fault thon, obviously is in the le
gislation that leads into temptation. This
however, though it accounts for, does not
diminish the guilt of the parties, seeking
too often, by perjury, we fear, to escape the
requisitions of the law. One particular
mode of doing this is mentioned—that of
averaging the cost of the various articles in
an invoice—-for instance one pieco of
cloth shall cost 4s. sterling per yard—ano
ther I<K ; cloths at the first price, and un
der the second, pay a lowor rate of duty
than those costing 10s. and over—the im
porter, therefore, by averaging the two pri
ces, makes the medium cost 75., and thus,
without affecting or altering the actual a
rtiount of the whole invoice, ho avoids the
duties on the higher priced merchandize.—
This is obviously a subterfuge ; and, when
lito spirit and intent of the oath, which eve
ry importer takes, aro considered, a very
perilous subterfuge, as it seems to us. So
as it may be necessary to reach and
check this or any other scheme for defraud
ing the revenue, the public will doubtless
lie ir out the proper authorities in the mea
sures they ni.iy adopt; but it is not to be
assumed that all importations are made with
a ’ fraudulent intent; and it should not,
therefore, be the rule, but the exception—
to sn applied at the discretion of the prn
ptsr revenue officers—that every package
of uu invoice is to be examined. Such a
tuje in practice would be more onerous
J--’ I • . ’
SAVANNAH, THURSDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 10. 1
(hatt the duios themselves. Groat difficul
ty must'undoubtedly exist at all times in
ascertaining the value and cost io a foreign
country of manufactured goods* Yet such
is the appraisers’ duty. This difficulty,
unhappily, has been aggravated of late by
the substitution of untried and inexperi
enced men, for others of thorough and in#*
tore experience. We are quite disposed so
believe that the presem appraisers mean,
and try, to do their duty. The wrong to
the country and its commerce is, that those
who to at least equal zeal & fidelity, united
knowledge, acquired by long experience,
were not continued in their stations-*-which
are not, or at least should not be, rewards
of partizan service, but trusts for the gene
ral good It would bo to shut our eyes and
ears against the general conviction of man
kind, to affect to deny that, in the discharge
of particular duties, experience is almost the
one thing needful—-and to no set of duties
is this more applicable, according to our
judgment, than to those of the appraisers.
If, then, for the accomplishment of other
objects, this experience is knowingly put
aside, the responsibility of rejecting it should
at least be distinctly imputed to those, with
whom it laid to make the choice between
ignorance and knowledge.
From the National Intelligencer.
THE CASE OF MR. JACKSON.
We noticed, in our last, the fact of the
rec.al of the Commission of Consul at Mar
tinique, after being issued to John Jackson,
Esq. by tho President of the United States,
and of Mr. Jackson s having made a pub
lication on the subject, addressed in terms
of more than usual energy, to the President,
his namesake. We promised to recnr to
the subject, to place before our readers a
distinct view of the circumstances of this
case, as narrated in the published leUe#. In
the following compilation we redeem that
proviso.
On the 30th of July Mr. Jackson receif- j
ed his commission. On the same evening,
the appointment was announced in the eve
ning paper of this city, and on the follow*
ine morning it was published by authority,
in the National Journal. [At thistime, and
for some days before and after, the Secre
tary of State was our of town.] M. Jack*
son states that one of those compose
what is called the “ Central Committee,”
on bearing .of this appointment, remarked,
that “the President must and should recal
the commission, or that he would desert
him and his cause.” Not believing that
the President would suffer such interference
with his high official dtrty, Mr. J. WuS not
a littlo surprised at receiving, ” in loss tfan
four hours after he had understood these
ibreatv to Have been made,” the following
letter :
Department of State,-
Washington , 31s£ July 1829*
John Jackson, Esq
Sir: lam directed by the President-to
request you to return the commission, ap
pointing you Consul of the United States ai
Martinique, which I had the honor of wn
closiiig you a few days ago, to this office;
the order for making it oui being discover* !
ed now to have been founded upon misap
prehension, as to tho person intended tc be
appointed.
DANIEL BRENT, Chief Cleric.
This letter, Mr. J. say*, was the result
of information carried to the President, by
some person or persons in this city who be
long to the “ Central Committee, to which
he alludes-
fn reply to this allegation of tnistippre*
/tension as to the person intended to be jp
pointed, Mr. Jackson says
“ My testimonials were before yon, and
had been before you for three tnonths;
so also was my letter to the Secretary es
State, id which I say ;jr • Although it (i. e.
* the Consulate at Martinique) is not a post
‘ either of political trust or influence, (but
* created for commercial purposes) or a sal
-4 ary office, or oue that can be desirable to
4 any one but a merchant, who can combine
4 wifh it mercantile pursuits, (as the returns
4 in your Department from the late Con*
*jsul, who resigned it, will show,) yet I deeto
4 it due to the candor and fair dealing to
4 state, for the information of the President,
4 that in the late Presidential canvass I ad
‘ vocated the ro election of Mr. Adams.*—
One of your friends who signed my testi
monials stated, distinctly, the same fatt.—
And I feel myself warranted iu saying, that
my qualifications and political course were
canvassed boforo you ordered a commission
to be made out for me. When I called on
Mr. Vau Buren (after his return to the ci
ty] and handed him the commission, I re
marked to him, that it would be gratifying
to me to know the cause of so unprecedent
ed a procedure. He replied that the ap
pointment had boen made previous to his
leaving the city, and the recall of the com
mission previous to his return, since which
the President had been sick, and that he
had not seen him ; that he could not give
me the reasons—whether from not know
ing them, or want of disposition, I do not
know. Not a word, Sir, about misappre
hension of the person intended to be ap
pointed.’ Am I not, then, justified in say
ing that when 4 misapprehension* is assign
ed as au excuse for recalling the commis
sion, it is not the real reason?’
These circumstances are connected to
gether by some observation to elucidate
them, and commented upon in a strain of
indignant severity, natural enough for a
deeply injured and insulted man, but which
we forbear to copy, because not necessary
to enable our readers to understand the git
of Mr. J*s statement, which, as far as it is
not denied, establishes these factsthat,
knowing him to have opposed hit election,
but knowing him also to-have the most res
pectable recommeiidations as to character
and qualifications, the President of the;
U. States directed a commission to be made j
out for John Jackson, Esq. as Consul at,
Martinique (and abetter appointment to
that station could not well have been made;)
that after the commission was made out and
publicly notified, the President was waited
upon by certain persons who represented ;
that Mr. JacksoJi had been a more efficient
and active a friend of the late Administra
tion than they thought ought to be appoint*
ed to office; and that, immediately after
this interview, the commission, granted af
ter deliberation, and officially announced to
the public, was withdrawn by the direction
of the President, and his solemn act revok
ed, at the suggestion of persons who could
have do possible right to interfere in the
mauer y unless recognised by the Execu
tive as bis proper Councillors of appoint
ment.
Rumors of the exercise of such influence
over the executive miod and authority have
heretofore been prevalent, but this is the
first approach that we have seen to the proof
of the fact.
United States Army . —We publish be
low a Goneral Order containing a regula
tion made by the War Department, deter
mining the question respecting Brevet
rank, out of which so many disputes have
arisen. In a matter concerning which mi
litary officers are so sensitive as the prece
dence of rank, and justly so, since it is the
reward of skill, bravery, and service, it is
impo/tant that nothing should be left to
controversy or conjecture.
Adjutant General's Office, ?
Washington, I3ih Aug. 1829. >
The lubjoioed Regulations, approved
by the President wf the United States, haye
been received ft* m the War Department,
and are published for the information end
government of all concerned.
Regulations concerning Rank Sp Command .
1/ Brevet Rank will give no command,
except on detachments composed of differ
ent corps, and within the meaning of the
6lst Article of War,
2. Detachment means a body of troops
sent eut from ttie main body, to perform a
particular service, and to be absent for 4
limited time; when such a detachment is
composed of different corps, Brevet Rank
will take effect io conformity with the 6lst
Article of War.
3. Under the same Article of War, Bre
vet rank will take place on Courts Martial,
when composed of Officers of different
corps.
4. In regularly constituted commands,
such as garrisons, posts, departments, regi*
ments, corps, companies, battalions, bri
gades, divisions, corps d’armee, or the Ar
my itself, Brevet rank is not to be exercised,
except on special assignment.
5. Officers having rank in the line of
tho Army, the Staff, or by Brevet, though
eligible to command, will not assume the
command unless specially put on duty with
that intention,
G. A.O Officer entrusted with the com
mand of a pest, detachment, guard, or se
parate command, will Dt surrender it !0
another, unless regularly relieved from tbe
duty assigned him, except is case of sick
ness or inability to perform his duty, when
the Officer next in rank,, present and on
duty wRh such command, shall succeed as a
matter of course,
7. An Officer not on duty with, nor be
longing to any of the companies, battalions,
regiments, or corps, composing a command,
cannot assume the command. He must
first have been put on duty by some com
petent authority to make him a part of the
command, before he can assume or exercise
the command.
0. Jf different corps happen to join and
do duty together, the Officer highest in
rank by his commission in the line of the
Army, present on duty, has the right to
command the and give orders need
ful to the service ; Brevet Officers, or offi
cers haviug Brevets or Commissions of a
prior date to tiu se of the regiment in which
they serve, cannot by virtue of such Bre
vets or Commmissions of a prior date, as
sume the command.
By order of the President :
JOHN H. EATON, Sec’ry of War.
By order of
ALEX R MACOMB, Maj. Gen.
Commanding the Army.
R. Jones, Adjutant General.
Animalcula —We wish, with til our
hearts, there was a law against making and
usiug microscopes—a penalty attached to
the crime, that should make every enlarger
of the minute part of animated nature,
shake in his shoes. The world is alive,
every part and particle of it; absolutely
living and moving and having a being; and
we, the human race, who absolutely carry,
each and every one of us, upon our mortal
bodies, more animal* than there are flat
nosed Chinese tn the city of Pekin, shall
be devoured alive. Some time last season
there came a cold blooded fellow, with an
apparatus to display to us a score of rhino*
ceroses on the morsel of cheese we were
preparing to swallow, or a dtoye of those
grunting quadrupes, yclept hogs, on a single
fig. That was the work of yesterday—now
behold what to-day brings forth. Mr; Le
Beaume, a busy intermeddling Frenchman,
has discovered that the tartar on our teeth
is formed iu the same manner as coral, by
animalcula ; which, after having been form
ed, the nidus insinuate themselves between
the gums and the teetb, causing diseases of
both) and their secretion often contaminat
ing the breath I Only to think of a mime*
rous and filthy commnnity actually existing
in one’s jaws—having villages foWiis and
cities,* for aught we know, ii Jte other folk ;
the smoke and other light particles of dirt,
which atise upon the breeze, contaminating
our breath, as our breath contaminates the ’
atmosphere around us! Tho Frenchman
ought to be hanged by the neck, aud Hie
the death of a felon, that his body may be
giyen a prey to the myriads of insects ho
nas so uocerimooiously thrust before us
If there be no stop put to these things, they
will, ere long, haye the impudence to show
us, beyond the shadow of a doubt, that our
liying flesh is neither more nor less than a *
mass of independent beings, with heads like
an alligator, and claws liken lobster ! *?ach
striving for life, be?hh, aud supremacy !
[Pawtucket Chronicle
Reform in Egypt . —The Pacha of Cairo
has turned reformer, and ordered all the
Mussulmans to cut eff their beards. This
was a bold measure, and for 9 time great
danger to the public peace was apprehend
ed. “What shall we do wheo we want to
swear by our beards/'’ asked the Mussul
mans. “Swear by your chins,” said the
Pacha. The cousent of the Uletnis was
at length obtained to this beard-sweopiug
measure, and the Mussulmans were consol
ed by the permission given them to deposit
their beards jo the graves of tfie owners of
them. As an expedient by which no !nugh
ter or ridicule should be indulged against
any mao who might be shorn of his beard
before his neighbors, a particular hour and
day were fixed for the bearded Mus*uimauf
to assemble in the open streets and
They were ranged in line and column—
the shaving executioners were in requisi
tion—and the cherished growth of years
was destroyed in a moment.
mrnmmm j
NOTICE. %
THE subscriber will be absent from the 6tato
for a few months. His business will be con
ducted by Mr- Wilton, who, together with Mr.
Stephen C. Wheeler, wUI act as nis lawful attor*
ai e r A. PARSONS,
may 1$
Fresh Sulphate of Quinine.
A i"k -OUNCES genuine Sulphate of •Quinine,
TC just received from the importer in Char
lest on, and for sale at wholesale price, by
Holl % Skapter Sp Tapper.
may 20
ttAffi.sr
ONE Hundred prime Baltimore, for sale low
Apply to
may 4 HALL t SHAPTER A TUPPER .
EO RTLA ND~RUJVL ~
A BBL3 Portland Rum, (colored)—Laud
ilU ing from ship f*lortan, and ibr sale by
Hall, Shapter & Tupptr ,
may 18
r NOTICE. *
rpHE business heretofore conducted under
JL the firm ofM’Elhiney, Girvin & co. will be
continued on the individual account of the sub
scriber. - wP
JAMES GIRVIN.
may 9
: —-
FOR sale by A. PARSONS, Druggist,
at the Eagle, No 8 Gibbons’ Range
march 26
SMOKED HERRING*
A O BOXES Smoked Herring, for sale by
PAL MRS & LEE,
- Exchange Dock.
april 9
No. S MACKEREL]
/ |A BB’LS No. 3 Mackerel, for sale on
board the schooner Young James,
from Boston.—Apply to
TAFT &, PADELPORD.
may 16
BACON. ‘
Three thousand ibs. middlings,
just arrived. For sale, by
PHILBRICK & BAKER.
mi s
Decimal interest Table.
CALCULATED FOR THE USE Os
IirERCIIANTS and Brokers,at 6 per cent, em
JjJL feraeing calculations c* interest from $1
to $9999 from one day to 0 contained in
six small folio page#
Algo, a Tail of Interest,
From $1 to $9,900 from 1 day to 06 days, and on
Ito $9900 from 1 month to 9 year—on one page.
The whole calculation contained on 13 pages.—
By John Hartshorn. Price $l5O. For sale at,
LUTHER’S Exchange Office
,nw 3 u ; l
Goshen Butter, Herring and Com.
g! A KEGS first Ist quality of Butter
sj 50 bbls. No. 1. Herring from Baltimore
3000 bushels first quality of Corn
20 boxes Codfish
For sale by PALMES A LEE
jnne 18. „ Exchange Dock.
JUST RECEIVED,
By Sch Glide,
IBOX super East India carted stall Combs
15 pieces super colored Gros de Naples
Fine striped and dotted Prints, buff yellow $ blue
Blue and yellow Nankeens
Maraeilles Vestings
India Lavantines, brown and black
Super horseskin Mitts and Gloves
English white silk do
Super plaid silk Cravats
“ black Lasting
For sale low by
M. PRENpERGABT,
3 and 14 Gibbon's Range.
april 30
M. PRENDERGAST.
No. 3 4* 14, Gibbon $ Range y
HAS just received per shooner Oregon,
Pane/ willow travelling baskets & reticules
India carved shell combs,
Plain do do
Elegant Baroge silk A gauze scarfs,
Do do do dress h’kfr
Black, blue and brown Itali&netts,
Super blue & yellow Nankeena
Swiss & jaconet needle-work dress robes,
Do do do Collars A Palatines,’
may 15 .’
PORTLAND RUM AND HAMS.
/f A Bundles Prime Hay
tl* * 20 barrels Portland Rum (coloured.)-*
landing from ship Florian, and for sale, by
HALL, SHATTER * TUPPER.
june lfr
(No. ir—Voi. if.