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Volume X]
PUBLISHER WEEKLT.
BY PHILIP C. GUIEU.
OCF NEW ARRANGEMENT.
A* experience has discovered ‘ n us the little
attention paid o printing 1 debts, and the great
Difficulty and expense in collecting such debts;
8c as a few only can be called liberal in paying
punctually wha* they owe justly, to the printer,
we have, after due consideration, come to this
Conclusion, that wi ouofiT sot to give credit
We are compelled, therefore, to adopt anew
plan In consequnce of his determination,
our terms shall in future bo,for the paper three
dollars per annum, if paid in advance—four
dollars, if paid'vithin six m inths—and five
dollars if paid only a ! the end of the year
For advertisements, they are to be paid in ad-
sheriff tales excepted which are to be
paid qnar’erly The above rules shall be
•triciv observed, and no one need apply who
is not ready to comply with them
Terms of Advertising, 75 cents per square
for the first insertion, and 62 4-2 cent* tor
each continuation
General Elections.
CANDID4TB9.
FOR CONGRESS.
George Carey, of Columbia
Alfred Cuthbrr . of Chatham.
John Forsyth, of Richmond
do Charles E. Havoes, of Hancock.
James Meriwether, of Clark
M Edward F Tattnall, of Chatham,
d|Yv ~ r* y Thompson, of Elbert
’ FOR THE STATE LEGISLATURE.
4. WILKES COUNTY.
SEN vTE.
Bolling Anthony Thomas Witten.
HOUSE
John W. Cooper L> -nnis L Oent*
John T Graves Felix G Hay.
William C Lvman. John M P-pe
Ja Os M R^mber 1 Jam-s R older.
.* tV” are rrque-'ed n a mounc • BEN
JAMIN WOOTTEN, as a Candida e at
the l x ‘ l*c*mn, for Tax Collector.
V- a-e requested to announce DRURY
CUNNINGHAM, E-q. asacanddate a he
Bex decuun. fur Receiver of Tux Re urns
CO* We are auhonzed o announce SAMU
EL BROOKS, Esq as a candidate a; the en
suing election, foi Receiver of Tax Returns.
fT* H R tubiiriber returns his
I grateful a-knowiegurntt to
(hose persons wbo have heretofore
given him their encouragement and
patronage* and Inform* them that he
has returned* and now oe upies bis
former stand fronting the .Court
lsollgg where bo lisa *.g*i > opened a
ROUSE OF .
Entertai unent.
He trusts that his expe**ienve in the
business* will b* sufficient to war
rant the oon'dusion, that those who
favor him with a rail* will be polite
ly and attentively an'ocnuiedated ;
he invites bis old friends on <e nj u'e
(o favor him with their custom- and
assures them and the public, that
nothing shall be wanting on his part
to afford them every eomfort and
OooTeuieuee in his power,
Samuel B, Head.
Washington, Sept. 11* 1 <24.-38 6
\ N. B. Any person wanting i hii*e
fortes and gigs* nan be aocom >nnda
fbei by the subscriber. S. B, H.
ALL persons indebted to the es
tate of J din Li gdon, deceas
ed. are required to make immediate
payment; and those wh > have de
mands against said estate, are re
quested to present them within the
time prescribed by law. either to
Isaao Langdoo or to the admini
strator.
Wm. Robertson, adm’r.
Bept. 6, 1824. 37-31
FOREIGN.
,0r -t
i LATEST FKOM EUROPE.
New York. September 7.
By the parket sit ip Edward ({lies
nelt. Capt, Hawkins* arrived yes-*
terday from Havie, we have recei
ved from our correspondents* Paris
papers to the 301 h July inelutive.
•Vat. Advocate.
Extract of a private letter of the
16ih of June* from Constantinople:
—“Persons who have been at Ipsa
ra* relate that the defence preparing
(here, reminds them of the times of
Ihe ancients* The men have taken
arms without exception* the aged
priests, the women and children
•re shut up in the oastle under the
guard of an Milanese battalion, who
is charged to put them to death if
the Turks should obtain the victo
ry. On the 17th, the women re
ceived the communion in puhiin and
afterwards entered with every sign
of cooirEace ia the castie of death.
The Washington News.
fPASHINGTON, (georgia) SATURD AY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1824*
Since the massacre of Scio, they
have never ceased to take a nuit
active part in the insurrection.
When the Captaio Pan ha passed be
fore the island last year with his
fleet, they assembled by thousands
upon the shore, and invited him to
land. They are determined to die
rather than live in slavery. Some
letters mention a disembarkation of
Egyptian troops upon the side of
Gasso; and we learn from Santonin,
that a brisk firing was beard off
that olace on the 16ih inst. Up to
the 19 h inst. the excesses 00mmil
ted at Smyrna by the Asiatic troops
had anted -he lives of 6 persons.”
Extract of a private letter of the
16th inst from VI idnd: —“lt is
said that a decree will siiortly b*
issued, setting forth that all per
so is who have belonged to Masonic
lodges* will be required to give up
to the police, wi bi i a delay of 30
days, their diplomat and other pa
pert and documents relating to the
lodges; and that upon having fufiiled
this aondilion they will be. compre
heeded in the aol of amnesty, j
Those who refuse to comply, will
have a month allowed them to q m
(he kingdom. Upo <he expica ton
of this delay* all pet s i ts auspeoied
of being m isntis, aij whose anu
ses papers to prove it ma> be found*
Will be hung within 24 ti mes. Tue
ultras consider this measure as a
triumph and a pledge of their ear<y
victory. A great number of per
sons arriving from the province,have
been thrown into p is Among
them is the brother of E npetmauo.
We are assured that tue Spa usii
conscripts of the new lev.,, ti e 10
numbers to Portugal,; a id the mere
mention *f *be >,s of that
country to Amen> a sulli-e to oc-a- ;
sion a multitude of § id e s to de
sert* Maay well informed person*
think that the Bacon d’E-’oie* will
bo the new minis’er of war.**
Latest fro u England.
# , 1%
Boston. Septem'ie 6
By the* packftf ship Amethyst,
Capt. Bussey* which a* rived at
this po' , t yesterday from Liverpool,
we received our files of Lmdon pa
pers t July 30
A letter from the Agent to Lloyd’s
at Smyrna, dated June 18. says—
•‘Yesterday sailed to join - he .>aptaii
pacha at Vlilyleoe, a Turkish fri
gate and a brig of war, having un
der escort small oral**, with about
five thousand troops.—Report says
a large force is destined o attack
the island of Ipsara We are sorry
to say some disorder* were yester
day committed by the troops; to
day perfect order and traiquilliiy is
established.”
ATHENS, June 6
Odysseus, united wi*h Pa 1 rius
of Saloua, and Nicetas sumamed
the Turcophage, has for the fifth
time disti tguislied the Straits ot*
Thermopy' by the defeat of the
barbariaos. When news was re *ei
ved at Athens that the Captaio Pa
oha had succeeded in reviutualling
\egropont, anew attack on *he
side of Beotia was expected Plea
sures were therefore taken in anti
cipation of this event, and Dervisob
Pacha, who commands a- Larissa*
having advanced with 10.000 men,
ihe combat recommenced oo the
20th May (Ist of June.)
The action was bloody that day ;
the enemy* was kept in check at Di
oa, where Odysseus having been
joined by the Snaltzo Dimas and
Nieetas* the Turks were put to the
route. We are ignorant of their
loss, but at this moment all the
mountaineers and the peasants of
the plains are going* according to
their custom, to enrich themselves
with the spoils of the Turks, and
the villages resound with cries of
joy.
HEROIC .IFF HR.
The following account of the re
capture of ihe brig Frederick, of
Stoni igton* from the Pirates of the
Pacific, exhibits oue of the most
brilliant feats we ever heard of.
We understand that wheo the Fred
erick arrived at Callao* the owoers
weie -o much pleased with the gal
laid conduit of Capt. Burrows, that
they immediately presented him
with the sum of five thousand dollars.
The Frederick, Captain A H.
Burrows* was captured on the 261i
December, near the port of Qoiloa*
where she was biund. with a cargo
of dry goods,* Capt. B. t elates the
<‘ircums(an<<es as follows:—At 10
p. m. the Frederick was fired into
by an armed brig, and ordered oo
board with my papers. After get
ting on board and being closely ex
amined respecting my vessel and
cargo, they took possession of my
vessel and transferred the trew to‘
the privateer. During the night
they stood to die southward for
MouUendo, where they intended
discharging my cargo; but the next
morning, when nearly abreast of the
port* saw a ship flooding in which
they took for a man of war, when
the privateer brig hauled off
from the .*apian of
the privateer Histoid me that he
should send my hrfg to the island of
Cbiloe, a<id i I chose to go in her*
and she arrived safe, and after dis
charging my cargo, he would give
me up my vessel Thinking there
might be some change f recovering
her, and knowing that if I left her
I should not get her I chose
to remain b* her, and yrfter much
persuasion I prevailed on him to let
me take my son with* me—-hut he
would not n*erit to my t iking a
uy more of my crew. After plun
dering my vessel of about gt 2.000
worth of dry goods, rice, rigging,
and other arii Jess as fhev were
then i want of, they pur a prize
matter and nine med o? board, and
ordered us to make sail for the isl
ad of Cuiloe S.jo:i after leaving
111*’ privateer. I earned that her
name was th** K tarsealia. captain
M tai na, Torn the rstand *>f i'hi
sve, Uia* they had previously
take Several I nglish and Patriot
vessels, tome of which they had
burnt, h• and ie?.i st 4 c other to Uhaloe,
aud tua’ s-ie had a large amount of
money on hoard, taken from them.
1 also teai-ned ma* apt, Watfalena
had toi inerfv been a*s ffi er under
Benavides, and had head and a guog
in taki ,g iie \ n*** icau brig Hersi
lia. at 1 lie Mu, and of St. Marys,
F om thin 1 if e oiation, a*td bis*on-.
tin t in pluridcri g my vessel* I had
no reason to expe- t getting her a
gam, u I took her by forre,
win- it I ‘e'erin'med to do whenever
a lavor.djle opportunity should offer,
1 then loatled my piss Is, aLo those
ct the mate., which I had taken rare
to stow away r.n my first arrival
on hoard, from the privateer. I
(hen informed my son f my inten
tion. and ordered him to hold
bim*etf in readiness After being
in possession f the captors 7 days,
we succeeded if retaking her. drove
the Spa mat dh below io the middle
of the day. and then ordered them
on deck one at a time, and tied their
hands behind them, as K had no I
ront on board to secure them with.
1 then shaped my ourse for Callao
—I he next day I put seven of the
prisoners io a whale boat, with pro
visions and water to lust them to
the land—the other three I took
witb me to Callao, where I arrived
two days afterwards, and delivered
the balance of my cargo to the form
er owners. Two davs after my ar
rival, the privateer arrived off the
the harbor of Callao, and the Uni
ted Stales’ schooner Dolphin, Capt,
Connor* and the British frigate
Tartar, Capt. Brown* made sail in
pursuit of her* but night coming
on, the made her escape. A short
time after that, the crew of a French
ship arrived in their boats, having
been captured a little to the leeward
by the privateer, who had taken
from the shipg6o, 000,manned,& or
dered her for Cbiloe. On the 24th
of May, a lew days before (he
Franklin left Valparaiso* (he £ttt
tanealia arrived there, prize to a
French sloop of war, who had cap
-1 ured her off Quitea. She had been
to Cbiloe, had landed her money*
aod was then 00 her second cruise.”
Mercantile Advertiser.
From tbo Lunrion Mirror.
Powerful effects of Sudden Fear •
Nicolo* marquis of Ferrara* was
taken ill of an ague* which continu
ed so Yioleot, that his physicians
gave him up* and sent him to a
country house he had on the river
Po, for change of air. His servant*
who loved him with the utmost ten
derness* having heard that sudden
fear was a sovereign remedy for
that complaint, resolved to try it
oe his master; wherefore* having
observed that the marquis walked
every day on the banks of the Po,
and knowing it was not deep* he
resolved to push him in. He ac
quainted a miller who lived over a
gainst the plane* with his design*
and having ordered him to he rea
dy with his boat to take his master
up* if there should be occasion, the
next morning he threw him in, af
ter which he immediately fled to
Padua: in the mean time, the mil- .
ler took up the marquis, who was
ivdeed thoroughly frightened* and
vowed to be reveled.
So extraordinary a case was the
subject of general conversation* the
marquis caused his servant to be
summoned before the courts of juc
tice, and not appearing, he was de
clared an outlaw, and condemned*
if he should ever return, to be be
headed. This news soon reached
Padua, notwithstanding wbi *b the
servant in a few days came back to
Ferrara, and desired admittance to
the marquis, whi h was denied*
and instead thereof* he was appre
hended, and ordered to prepare for
execution.
The marquis* however, finding
himself cured of his ague* bis re
sentment began to abate* and he
was determined to save him, but to
seem resolved to let the law take its
course. A day was fixed for the ex- ‘
erution, aod all Ferrara throoged 1
to see it. The servant appeared on
the scaffold, and after protesting
that be had *0 other motive than
the cure of his master, be laid hie
bead on the block, and gave tho fa
tal signal. The executiooer* ac
cording to previous orders, at that
instant poured cold water 00 hia
neek, and ibis was oo sooner done
than the color left his cheeks* bis
eyes sunk in his head, and he died
in a few momeuts without speaking
a single word.
A friend has handed ut a copy of
the petiti on to the King in Council*
noted at a meeting of merchants and
bther inhabitants of Liverpool, re
lative to the reoognltioo of the S.
American government. It is stat
ed in the petition* on the authority
nf documents presented to Parlia
ment, that the direct exports of
British produce and manufactures
to South America and Mexico a
mounted, in the year 1822* to 3,-
367.9571., aod. in 1823, to 6,648,-
7691.; that, during the four years
from Januaiy, 1820* no less than
766 vessels oleared our for those
from the port of Liverpool
alone* containing an aggregate bur
den of 136.432 tons; and that, in
the five first months of the present
year, 124 vessels, of 24,657 tons,
tailed for the same destination; that
in the year 1820, the experts from
Liverpool of cotton go ds to the (J.
States amounted to only 882,0292.
and the exports in the same period
to Brazil* Buenos .Ayres* M nte
Video, Chili, and the West Coast
of America, amounted to 862,6542-;
and that, in the year 1821, the ex
ports of cotton goods to the United
States amounted to .1*033,2062.,
while those to the other countries a
bove named amounted to 1,111,5742.
The petition represents that great
losses aod iooonveoienees have re
sulted to the trade from the want of
those political relations whieh would
be formed with (hose countries on
the acknowledgment of their inde
pendence, and that, by the establish
ment ofthrse relations, loans, negoti
ated in London with those govern
ments to the amonot 0f12,800,0001.
British capital, would be rendered
mere seorre.— Bost. Daily Adv.
A litigious fellow of an attorney
brought an action again** •
r.r i..v:..g called him a rascally
lawyer.—* An old husbandman being
a witness, was asked if he heard
the man call him a lawyer? *‘l did,”
way the reply.—“ Pray,” says the
Judge, M what is your opinion of the
import of tho word?” “There can
be no doubt oft hat.” replied Hie fel
low. “Why, good man,” said tho
judge* “there is no dishonor io the
name* it there?” *! know nothing
ah'Jut that.” answered he, ‘•but this
I do know, if any man call me a
lawyer I*d knock him down.” “ Why,
sir.” said the Judge, pointing to
one of the counsel, “that gentleman
is a lawyer, and that, and that, and
I too am a lawyer. “No, no,” re
plied the fellow; “no my lord; you
are a Judge, I know; but you are
not a lawyer , lam sure.”
We are authorised to say*
from unquestionable authority, that
Judge Lonostreet has declined
being a candidate at the next 000*
gressional election.
Columbian Gentinel,
Profligacy of the Opposition
Press and its Editors
The priots which are io opposi
tion to Mr. Crawford’s election are
forever preaehiog up deoeocy and
forever violating the rules of deco
rum. The Portland St* esrnan in*
forms its reader* that the Secretary
of the Treasury is more deserving
of elevation to th e gallows than to
the Presidency: The New York \-
morioan proclaims that Ge t. Root*
the lieutenant governor of the state*
was drunk io the Senate at Albany
when in the performance of h* du*
tv as President of that body; ihe
Columbian Observer, of Puiladel
phia, denounces Mr, Crawford as a
murderer, a counterfeiter, aud a
perjurer: the National Journal of
Washington* denominates Mr. Gal
latin a whiskey insurgent: and the
Philadelphia Franklin Gazette, de
clares that an editor friendly to Mr.
Crawford is a white livered hind , In
the political vocabulary of the pi
ous Mr. Adams and the still more
pious Ge t. Jackson, all this passes
for The editor* who are
in their interest, aod who write
these falsehoods aod vulgarities, ne
doubt say their prayers, go to bed*
and thank God that they do no? of
fend against good manners, like oth
er men Suppose that Mr Craw
ford’s supporters should retaliate
this language* would they not he
justified by the insolence of their
antagonists ? But they are very
far from tracking the seurrilousde
farner* in their own mire. Whate
ver is strongly expressed by the
presses which sustaio the Secretary
of the Treasury* is strmg only i
facts and not indelicate in words;
and when the adversary prints ean
not pervert or answer, they set to
sooldiog, and boast of their gentility*
—Heaven save the mark ! Were 9,
score of these unhappy scribbler#
brought into a room together, ac<|
their deportment measured by ft
standard of graceful action* oourte-*
sy of behaviour, or easy colloquial
interchange of sentiment, the grojpn
would appear divertingly
We apprehend, if Mr Adams km 4
be elected, his regal court would bo
curiously adoroed by those self-sty
led gentlemen. Etiquette itself
would be put out of oou.uenance by
some of them, whose physiognomies
are badly oaloulated for the brilli
ant apartments of a palace. We re
oommend it to Mr. Adams to open
a school for polishing his pupils a 4
refining their voioes. As to. tho
latter, he might begio their tuition
by causing them to ehaunt his fav
orite verses of‘dusky Safly ,> wtlU
tey io ridiuleof Mr. J -ffe/sjo. In
other particulars, he might find, a
mongbis editors, without departing
from Washington, a person emin
ently qualified to give instructions
as master of oernmonies. Should
there be any thiog still wanting to
perfect bis establishment, he may
call upon Geo. Jaoksoo for the cer
vices of file gentleman who under
stands miking carpets of the skins
of the General’* enemies* aod draw
ing room decorations of their scalps.
With such accomplished cavaliers*
(he Court of Washington, under
Mr. Adams, might vie with that of
Paris, London, or St. Pe<ersburg.
Washington City Gazette.
——
BLANK Dri&DS
For sale at this offices
[No. 39.