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VGLUME X]
rrEusar.D weerlt,
BY PHILIP C GVIKTJ.
rr NEW ARR WGEMENT.
A experience ‘i,H flis<'ov’Prl *o u*; the li*t’c
attention paM o p deb's md the
difficulty a:id exppnst* in cnllec’ing such debts;
&a? a onlv can be callH liberal : n paying
punctually whi’ *hev ow® justly, to the printer,
we have, after due consideration, come to this
concbision.tlla’ wi; ororir \or to oivk credit
Wo are romoellcd, thereft>rc, to adopt anew
plan In conseqnnceof ihU determination,
pur terms shall its fii*tre b®,for ’he oaper three
Ad tars per annum, if paid in advance—four
if nai l vithin six mm’hs—and five
‘dollars ifpaid only a’ ’be end of th® year
For a lvr*rtis''rn®nts, they are to be paid in ad.
vance sheriff sales excepted, which are t 0 be
paid quar’erlv The above ru ! ec shall be
tjv observed and no n® need apply who
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We -® req ®d to announce BEK
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♦ “*
S Oj*WfT authorized >o announce S\\lU-
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flum/ ® e®i n, *>r R j ce : ver of Tax Returns.
FOREIGN.
latest from Europe .
CHARLB9TOW, Oef. 1.
Wc have received by the Pc* feet*
arrived last evening, our Hies of
London Papers and Lloyd’s Lists,
to the iSth August, and Liverpool
Papers to the 20fh. We give to
day m many extracts from them as
■we had time and room foe
I'liG intelligence from Greene, if
true, is of a disastrous nature. Ip
sara was a most important position
for the Greeks, and it being one of
th“ir principal naval points and re
asa kable for the skill and vigour of
its people in naval affairs, the fall
of su<*ti a place, from whatever
oaue, is likely to he attended with
Melancholy eons^quenees.
London, .August 17-
Despat'dies dated the I9<h June,
were Veceived this morning at the
Colonial Department from Sierra
Leone fbe Colony, we are happy
to say. wa in a healtfiv state.
His A1 j sty’s ship Thetis, Capt.
Sir John Phillimnre. having on
b ‘a and a number of ofH ers for the
Royal African Colonial Light In
fant rv aud 2d West India Regim
ent, with a Detachment of 100 non.
oommissi *ned odicers and privates
of the former corps, arrived M Si
erra Leone on the 13th, and sailed
thenre on the 17th June for Cape
Coast.
Advises have been received from
Sir Marry Veale, rom nanding the
squadron before Algiers, confirm
in * the anaouit received s me days
since, hy the way of Marseilles, of
the submission of die Dey of Al
giers. The Gazette of this evening
Will eon tain a not id ‘at ion of the
cessation of ho’Hides.
London, August 16.
Frim e.-mrier Francois.
CiivstaNTijroPLß, July 12.
Tntrigu<‘s are at present very nu
merous, and torrents of blood will
yet be shed. If the unfortunate
Greeks should be exterminated,
they will owe their fall to the Chris
tian of Europe. They transported
the tr ops of the Captain Pacha and
their flag* Heated in the midst of his
fleet, i lu* siians were negotiators
between him and those Albanians
who sold Ipsara. The Christians
are row selling themselves and their
vessels to he Pot*ha of Egypt. The
policy of Europe is delivering up the
Greeks to their Mussehuau exeeu
tiaoe: s.
Lond x August 12.
The following extract of a pri
vate letter from Smyrna gives some
addifimal details respecting the
capture of Ipsara. To what de
gree of confidence it may be enti
tled vet know not, as it reaches us
through the German papers; bur if
It he : imp woe;by, what heeomesof
the amp pi* L eulogies we so con
tt'S’ofly ii®ar upon ilio gulla*i*?y aud
heroism of the m dero Greeks.
** >*¥*♦. July a,
xv> ( ' !,n e-.r vi, i piece of news,
the det 4iU oi vvuiea we nave e;veiv
ed li yttt the mojth of the FVeuuU
The Washington News.
IFASIIINGTON, (georgia) SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1824.
Captain, who was au eye witness of
the event.
“Ipsara was attacked on Sunday
the 3;J. at four o’clock in the morn
ing: 1 fe.ooo men were landed from
the finer of the Captain Pacha: the
G'.-eks, seized with terror, scarce
ly attempted to defend themselves;
dreadful confusion arose aindng
them. Flying on all sides, they
took refuge in a fori on the summit
of the mountain, and there they re
ceived the Turks with a well sup
ported fire of musketry. This last
eff r* did not hinder the Turks from
carrying every thing before them,
a id a seve i o’clock in the evening,
Ipsara was entirely in their power.
An i finite number of whoso aid
children, who had endeavored to
escape in the co fusion, on hoard
the large and small boats in harbor,
almost all peristied in rSie waves.
The French schooner sailed through
(he midst of dead bodies. It is
oeedlcss to ask wiiat theflet did;
already at break of day it had fl *|,
carrying avvuy the Chiefs and the
money. It is a catastrophe which
‘•onfi-ms the ruin of the u ihappy
G e<*ks. It is the second iustaoye
of (lie baseit cowardice ou their
part.”
T'From the Journal dea Debats )
Pahh. Augos; 9
A letter from Madrid, dated Ju
ly 27, says—‘Contradictory vers
ions are i* oireulaiion here with re
spect to the'causes of >hat unfortu
nate event which ofiL *ts ull the
friends of the pnhli<‘ tranquillity.
Some blame the French, otnei g the
Spaniards. We must therefore
wait for the account which will he
given hy the proper authority, in
order to discover the truth What
concurs certain is, that Ferdinand
VII. has written a letter to Gener
al Digeoti in which he promises the
speedy and severe punishment ot the
guilty. It is even said that the
Ki ig has granted the French Gan.
the right of disposing of the Spanish
troops. The French General has
already availed himself of this right,
hy placing French troops in the
posts formerly ooaupied by Span
iards i.i Madrid; and this day Qle
seda’s division has left \I id rid. and
marched towards the frontiers of
Portugal.
It is oot possible to doubt the
news relative to Ipsara. The Aus
trian Observer contains minute Je
fa:is which could not he invented
Whoever knows the strength of Ip
sara, the enthusiasm of the people,
and unskiilulness of the Turkish ar
tillerymen. wiil fi id it difS all to
understand hy what means the Capt.
Pacha conquered it with his fleet,
it seems that there must have been
some treachery. Nothing is said
of the resistance of the Greeks.
The loss is, at all events, very
great, the Geeeks and every friend
of humanity may deplore it, for it
will permit the Turks to work a
great deal rf evil
Hie Journal dcs Debats, eom
manti.'ig on a letter which appear
ed in the Courier on the 5 b, stat
ing that the French at Cadiz were
lull f gloomy speculations on the
espected coming of the yellow fe
ver, says. *‘vVe hope the French,
in spite of the Spanish and E sglisii
Doctors, will s op the yellow fever
as they stopped the plague in Fgypt.
It is at ieat certain, that they make
wo gloomy spei'ulaiions.”
From the London Gazette . Aug. 17.
TERMIXATXON OF THE WAR WITH ALGIERS.
Admiralty ffice , ug 16, 182 L
Despatches have this morning
been received at this office, addres
sed hy Vice-Admiral Sir Ilarrv
Neale to John Wilson Crocker. Rsq
and dated io (he Bay ©f Algiers,
the 26th of July, reporting that dif
ferences between this country and
the Regency of Algiers were on
that day satisfactorily arranged,
and that the hostilities between the
two countries had accordingly ceas
ed.
Foreign Office, Aug, tr, 1824.
The Right Hon. George Cao-’
oi.)g, oue of his Majesty’s Priori
pal Secretaries of State, has notifi
ed, by the command of his
to Cue Mini*ter* ©PForeiga Powers
resident at this Court, that in <’onse
quenee of the satisfactory issue of
the negociatinns between *!ie Com
mander of his Majesty’- N ival for
ces off* Algiers, and the ts ivern
ment of that Regency, thebVM-kade
of that port has been diseoD'inued.
Liverpool, Aug.\lß.
The Greeks Hie intelligence
from Smyrna is unfavorable the
cause of the Greeks: and the bore
so as it indicates a pusillanimity on
their part, which has a very sinis
ter aspect upon a struggle which
can only be supported by constancy,
and brought to a favorable coaclii-*
sion by a valor which arises to he
roism. Ipsara is said to hare been
taken on theS’l of July, by (he fleet
of the Captain Pacha, anil altho’
strong, waa surrendered/ almost
without a struggle. Such, at least,
are the representations in tie Smyr
na letters; hut it is possible that
treachery, quite as much as cow
ardice, has had its share In produ
cing this disaster; ind, has! as trea
chery is, we had rathef see this
made our against the Greeks thao
cowardi-e. Certain it is, that
without great efforts and great lira
very, they could no’ have obtained
the advantages they have achieved,
nor maintained the warfare of lib
erty for so long a time. With tol
erable discipline and whh good of
fii'crs, there would not he found hra
ver troops in the world, but the lat
ter can only be obtained from for
eigners, and their prejudices are
unfriendly to such a measure. In
one only of two ways, we appre
bend, will Qreeee he made free; ei
ther by more extensive and efficient
foreign assistance, or hy the san
guinary infatuation of the Turks.
She first the Greeks are not likely
to receive since .England has hound
herself to neutrality;—she second
is the more probable result, A
mild and moderate pokey of the
P >rte would do much to divide (lie
Greeks, and to affect their subju
gation; but these are councils not
often within the comprehension of
haughty and half civilized barbari
ans, and desperate measures may
still produce that courage and con
vulsive heroism which results from
the despair of the oppressed.
Late from Gibraltar.
By the schooner Lucinda, Capt,
Fletcher, from Gibraltar, papers to
(lie 14’h ult. inclusive, have been
received at New-Y *rk. Capt. F.
confirms the intelligence, via. Phi
ladelphia, that the Constitutional
ists had possession ot Tarifa. He
informs that the Royalist & French
armies were in the rear of that
plane when he passed on the 15th
ult. He at the same time saw two
Freneh frigates lying off and on the
harbor. It was reported at Gihral<
tar that 800 cavalry, which were
sent to Tarifa, had joined the Cos >-
stituiionnlists. A revolutionary spi
rit had also discovered ityeif ii sev
eral ©!her parts of Spaing and the
inhabitants hid takeu up arms a
gainst the King, and it was expec
ted that the whole country would,
in a short time, be ia a state of re
volt.
In addition to the above, we learn
froui letters received by a respecta
ble merchant in this city, that the
French had been repulsed three dif
ferent limes at Tarifa.
We abo learn froui Capt. Fletch
er that he came down the Straits in
company with a British /quadroo
from off Algiers, bound toLngland,
the Dey having aompromised his dif
ferences wiih Great Britain.
The Gibraltar Chronicle of the
sth ult. contains the following arti
cle from the Cadiz Biaiy: ‘*lt ha
ving come to his Calhoi/o Majesty’s
knowledge that negocilitiong have
been entered into, in several parts
of his American dominions, by in
dividuals who styl# themselves
Commissioners appointed by the
Constitutional Government to treat
with the dissidents io those provin
ces, respecting the pacification
thereof; in whieit negotiations it
has been attempted to lay it down as
a preliminary basis, that tbe Span
ish government is not far from ac
knowledging the independence of
those countries—His Majesty has
annulled the powers of all those
Comm issioners or Envoys to Amer
ica from the soidisnnl Constitution
al government, and, nonsequenfly,
whatever they have done, or may
hereafter do, by virtue of the same,
tliat shall he contrary to (he lawful
rights of the orown of Spain, and
to His Majesty’s sovereignty, so
happily restored; commanding them,
at the same time, to cease from
their functions, and immediately to
come buck to the Peninsula.”
The Cadiz Board of Health have
absolutely prohibited persons from
landing on ifie com, In (he neigh
borhood of Cadiz and hie of Leon,
from eight io the evioing to five
in the morning. They have also
prohibited the carrying of fresh pro
visions to vessels in quarantine, for
the period of ten days.
A garrison order was issued on
(he 3d ultimo from the stuff*of the
district in the neighborhJbd of Gib
raltar, staling that a number of
ruffians, belonging to Ximena, had
assembled the day before, in the
town, for (he purpose of repeating
the late Constitutional forces, and
succeeded at first in securing and
committing to prison come public
functionaries and respectable inhab
itants. A Lieutenant of the Prin
cess’ regiment happened to he pas
sing through the town with a small
party, when they fired on the Re
volutionistSv who immediately fled
to'the mountains.
‘A royal decree was issued at Sa
cerdon on the 21st of July, the ob
ject of which is to prevent any hut
sound doctrines being taught in the
Spanish universities, and other lit
erary institutions, and to exclude
from the same professors and stu
dents infected with revolutionary
principles.
Letters received from Gibraltar,
hy the Lucinda, give us further par.
titulars of tbe efforts of the Con
stitutionalists to re-establish liberty
io Spain The following is an ex
tract under date of istU August, at
Gibraltar:
“There is every reason to believe
that a simultaneous struggle has
been planned throughout Spain, and
if in other they have been
as successful as ar‘ Tarifa) “ God
take good King Ediv ird to his mer
cy,” The Cmstrationalists have
been completely successful there—a
strong body of Freneh marched
from Cadiz to attack them; (hey
suffered them to advance to the 2d
gate, when they opened a destruct
ive fire upon them, and routed them
in every direction: the French Com
mander is among the killed; Alge
siras is crowded with the wounded
French of that expedition. A boat
has been seut fr*m (his garrison to
Tarifa to aseertaio the state of af
fairs there, am| has returned with
the particulars, in every respent
glorious to the Constitutional cause.
Even (lie women took an active
part against the French.
“We have accounts from various
parts us Spain, and ail combine to
show that great events are following*
apace; but I shall repeat nothing to
you but what is offi iai. Wherever
the Constitutionalists go, they tri
umph completely. The struggle is
dreadful; for their enemies, as they
observe, expect little mercy: all
Spain is now’ in arms, and although
the period of revolt is most unfor
tunate, (just as they were about
securing tbe vintage) they abandon
ed their limited crop for a nobler
harvest—the cry again is ‘viva la
constitution, death to the French
men’—we are on tbe rtitfji of anxie
ty here, and every hour brings us
fresh assurances that, io a short
period, Liberty will once more wave
her bauuers over Spain, aud her en
emies be driven beyond the Pyre'a
oes. The proclamations issued
from Tarifa, are calculated to
rouse every Spaniard; a few only
have reaehed us here, but they are
sought-after wuh such avidity, that
1 fi (and it impossible to procure one
to seud to you. They are ingeni
ous; not a word is said about the
king; every thing is directed against
‘The French, the foreigo foe, in
the very bosom, and eatieg out the
vitals ot opaio.’ In the affair ot*
Madrid; which seemed the sigaal; a
great many French were killed, fi
this conveyance is detained a day o' 1
two, I will be able to give you s Mm
interesting particulars; at any ra'e,
my next will; till then, look or.
; Spain as you would o a volcano,
I threatening by iis inward thunder?
an immediate eruption.”
PORTUGAL.
The Barhadocs papers to the 3d
inst. inclusive, after mentioning
that the Dey of Algiers had submit -
ted to the terms proposed by ttie
British Admiral, and’hat the bloc
kadiog squadron had been ordered
to the Tagus, states that suj h v.as
the anxiety to expedite (tie sailing
of the (> *ean of 80 guns, the ting
ship of Lord Amelius Beauderk,
she was towed by the Steam boat;
out of the harbor of Algiers. Tilt?
Vengeance of 84, lately launched at
Milford, had been put in oommsii
sion. and w r as also supposed to bo
destined for (ho came service
“Th s information, (observes tht?
editor of the Barbadian of the 3d
insiaat,) connected with that whimi
we learn from good authority, tbe
Ganges and Superb being ordered
to the same station as the squadron
from Algiers, excites suspicion that
something is brewing bet wees Franco
and Portugal.*’
Io our London papers we observ
ed that some of the editors indulg
ing in speculation as to the probabil
ity of a renewal of hostilities in Eu
rope, in consequence of France ar
ryiog her interference farther ia
tbe affairs of tbe peninsula thgn was
agreeable to the cabinet of tiaiuC
James. It was remarked that since
the lofaut Don Miguel had arrived
at Paris, and received so much at
tention from the governmeii;, the
latter had despatched a fleet to the
Tagus u*>der pretense of exerehing
the French seamen, whereas it hacj
been ascertained, that the object ita
view was to give countenao e to ilia
Queen’s party, a'd create a prepon
derance over British. ii.fiueqce.
Fully aware of this fact, the Eng
lish government had issued orders
for purchasing au immense
of provisions, and other
for supplying vessels destined for
foreign service, and had transmit
ted such instructions to the outporls
as indicated au apprehension at
that hostilities with sme one wera
on the eve of taking place. The in
telligence by the way ofßarbaJoes,
winch wc have noticed above, is la
ter than our last accounts front
Eogland, and would seem to war*
rant the saspicion, that something
serious existed between France and
Portugal, whi h might lead to a
rupture, aid involve G. Britain,
who is bound, oot only from com
mercial policy, but from treaties
to protect her anoient ally.
JY* JT. Evening Post .
From the Savannah Georgian .
The following letter written by %
gentleman recently from South A*
tncrioa, and who was on his passage
to Great Britain, for the be efti of
his health in the brig West-Indui,
when she put io here by stress of
weather, has been handed us for
publication.
Savannah, Sept, 22 d, 1824.
Dear siiu—- As 1 have seen some
erroneous statements io the papers
of this place, respecting the aff’tirs
of Peru, I have the honor to iafonu
you, that on the sih of July last*
tbe Intendant of Magdalena, Gen.
Soublette received an offi dal com
munication fr ra General Carine,
lotendant of Panama: sitting (hat
by the last advices from Bolivar, he
was then at the head of 12.000 In
faotry, and 1500 Cavalry, (be Span
ish Gen. Oiioeta, having passed o
ver to him with 2,300 men 1,200
were in Panama ready to eiuba ; ,
aod a division of 3,000 had sailed
from Valparaiso to join him, mik
ing his aggregate force of 17,700
men. Callao was at that time ri
gidly hlookaded, Bolivar was at
Truxillo, aod the Spanish General
Canterao, in Lima; distance of 45
leagues- Two expeduions, the one
from Porto Cabeilo aod tbe other
from Charthagena, have since pro
ceeded io Pauama with a of
4000 men. Camera© has only 9000,
and should ho be foolish enough to
[No 41.