About Savannah daily republican. (Savannah, Ga.) 1818-1824 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 20, 1819)
IVJAWAn'^lEPintLlCJlM - FRMBMMCK S. FALL, * eiTVe'kitrrcE. vyn.. rirn R8—tor»T«T.S fi —axsum, ^rj.TAi^R i* xhvixct.. q.I'hxriittnkmt* ’flpf«ar iH l*h paper*—ttU<! 4topt by t>rda\ *nh. £$) »• ?irtfw tHK to-tpos OOCRlfclU the she DAvnr, and The iif. one. 1 ^YFrwn’the T.pihi^ie to it'rrw Tragedy rf9t~vWeJ ' ny‘ Jiiix lloirmn far-st. *Rnt bless The—what. two nondaTtyipts together! * *je» 9 / tf & pile of ribband, ".\v dud teathc-i-i t Her W1;a paBon, alt frV"'e and on it- / S A chore'll W-U ! create ? tower ?—No, faith,* him- i.oti , -’‘Avert'"' an actual woman,™ it*-rY,le ■"TtoifeCbi’.t her tongue. to make that tdwer a Babel. Now for the hr, the MBw nondescript— '"Wlicncr Iifi that mnrleery of than beeh ship! ’Have Koiia'or Sochan brought h.itn, to console “Ti e qnidnune* for the passage to the pole ? 'While, on her ieelmrg, howls tame Greenkiml Squaw, f u ‘'Robbed of her pretty monster till next tliaw! - Hoe- Pari* bat the honor, Klh ywsm” ” x «<r«(7a ,, *-tKc sir, prate, shrug:—smack of Pane! ' .••Jtrmee gave hr step its trip, Vs mngtfe Haptotoe, 'His head it's peruke, ami hi* tvaist its stays 1 * The thinpis fOT.ttaban-1. Let's crush the trade; 2 jL».dies insist em't—ntt is best hear marie. - AH BStisb. frbtr'y otir shor-tye, or your *>n, Ifcwntbtliat nteesSrrv h-ti’.e—call’d man! Now for the wnmpYnind crrsKure—first, the trig, "’With every friaale striving to look hijp >. ' Onylie rotigh’d-cheek the freth dyed-whisker •aprf.cl, * The thousandth avav of dressing a calf's head. * The neftcioth next, Where starch and a hale-bone ' To rrdrc fiic slave a walking pillory. The bolster'd bosom, ah 1 >e envying fair, Hose’little dream vou of flic atulf that’s there! 'nvhat vsrapv ropes, steel, tlie aching ribs com- ' press, To make the Handy—beatitiftilly less! * Thits'lbols, tlieir final stake of lolly cast, " aRvenstfact to strait walstcoatseome at last. ^iitjudging Shakspeare—tliis escap’d thihe eye— JJ?«r though the trains tirt-pvt, the thing vtn’l dir.’ ■DA.YD Y DISASTER! ■’ A dandy (name unknown) in doubling the t* 1 .,r Wo»e.<«rin^ f'fi)vf»i’v slrp.els. 'N.F.. corner of Water and CaJvcry streets, s»on Monday hist met w ith a violent squall, , •which, owing chiefly To the "olxstinacy oi his i’lnaceoinUfodatinfcSron tackle, carried away Tiisxso—?.waiv it'wtnt borne on the wings of 'the bo>i.o»ons clement—the dandy pursued i -•—bill alas! it Was like a Susqueiianrta raft in rlulee -of a foather-Mill at length, as fate ♦ Quid have'it,the hat was tirougtiv up ooib r Tind snug by the curbstone near Winchester’s ^lottery office. The dandy “bbre him down 'majestically ncav,”—but—his arms were •Borne ‘three feet too short—his obstinate ■ironside* would hot careen so as to bring ’the fugitive 'property within reach of its. ‘breathless, half-frenzied owner, lie called ‘for assistance—blit, shame to honor and lm- ^mani! v! every one laughed at his misfortune! ?«nd, he'trns at last red deed to the dangerous ^alternative of bringing himself on his “beam ■•ends,"’ Or, in-other b'-ords of sprawling on ail 'fours' 'fly-n'wondcrful exertion, however, ■ : he righted and went off with flying colors to "the “utter astonishment of a host of specta tors. Several respectable citizens are rea dy to attest to the truth of the above ac- 'Count Balt. -Fed. Reft. ’— Trom the Kichiffond Enquirer. Political eco.vomy. without either, there is ever danger that they will not be permanent Tlie long war in Europe, in Which we were the prin cipal'and almost-the only carriers,produced a fuhgusofcommerce,by whichmciy on this sidethe Atlantic accumulated much wealth from liule corporeal or mental cxcl-tion whilst thousands on die other side, were - groaning under absolutdwant ofsomcthing'tosupport nattire. Thi.<- state oi tl-.ingSwas calcula ted* to produce more or less of the present. Wistlom and calm philosophical fdresighl, would iirttme have taken in sail, and prepar ed for the storm, by saying that a recur retire to economy, and temp^i'ance in its strictest sense, sit'd A diminution- of that de sire to accumulate w ealth, Is indispensably necessary-fbiHfie preservation and enjoyment of wbal 'we have! but not so with ns: it Seems; as if men never become less de- kivbus of wealth by the inereasc of it.— Goaded on bv this insatiable desire, after the termination of the European wars, their cupidity 'rotiMnol be satisfied through the medium ofcortimcrce, they tunied their at- tcjition to the stock of the bank of the Li. States, and aided by a capital accumulated by means of a commerce before alluded to, they gave tlvs stock such alt-artificial ex citement,' as to produce a tnost fatal bank epidemic. It seems to have prevailed with most violence in Haltiniorc and Philadel phia, but sober temperate men who from tlieir habits Of 'living, were least liable to take disease, in .passing through ' the towns took the infection and earned it thrc'gh the cotintry, ibid a malady which should by all means have been C+ fined within the limits of towns and cities where it was generated, has prevailed so’serio'rsly and univcrsallj, that those wlio might otherwise Jiave hceh nurses for the sick in town, have been to* mnr-h afflicted themselves, to lend their frietldly aid,and thus we every day hear <1 vantage of our »wn misconduct, and to drain the specie f om our vaults, nothing but, ruin, bankruptcy and distress, would pervade the continent, from its centre to its -extremities. Eight months have scarcely passed into eternity, before all these awful predictions have been realized.— Without war, without taxes, in the midst of the abundance of a fruitful harvest, lean and haggard bankruptcy stalks along the streets, and enters our principal commer cial' houses: tire laborer leans over his an vil, and beholds the fires extinguished-— thefanner surveys the bounties of autumn, Totting in'his bams—the merchant isalarm- cdfor his credit, the mechanic-'for his jest dues; and thus universality of distress has been brought upon our’ fellow citizens, as pervading, as extensive, as if it bad been occasioned by war, by famine, or by pesti lence. Without descending to d(.sails, a (’•mkgery that we never liked, the following may lie laid down as an axiom, and as the grand result; that if articles of American manufacture, and of American comsump- tion,arc excluded fromall the parts of Eu rope, where they came in competition with their articles of home consumption and of home manufacture,' and all their articles are admitted into our ports, where they do come in competition with our own, such a policy must in evitably in troduce all the miseries that Jwe suf fer; it must bring about pervading bank- ruptev, ruin and wretchedness; not confin ed to this,or to that class, but to all classes alike. Contemplate the effect, the bearing, the tendency ot this proposition for a mo ment! America in such a system of things, and to cope with such fearful odds, must be prepared in -population and in resources, in arts and in manufactures to contend, not with one power of commercial Europe, but with all the powers of commercial Europe. the increase of death, on the commercial. She must be prepared to say to countries hills of mortality, many no doubt expiring whose growth has been that of centuries, for want of ordinary attention. 'Even the l>;inks who should have shewn parental tenderness, have deserted them in this criti cal situation. Having given some idea of tlfpjT.auses of the present gloom, it would lie much more desirable if a remedy could be pointed out This is truly difficult, for we know in the various violent epidemics, that have "prevail, cd, the skill-of the airiest physicians have been baffled, and many must die; o at pres ent, and whilst I can only recommend mod icir.es slow in thair effects, to wit, more hu mility, and a copious discharge of cupidity that those r.ave been only slightly., "What appears to he in the month of cvc- Ty person, is •dmitted to be trtte, that a ’great scarcity of the -circulating medium ■exists in "both town and country; and that evil lias gotten to sunk a pitch, that a genaral •gloom pervades thr tdWns. The man who •could prescribe im mediate relic;'for such a malady, -might with propriety, he. cbn- sidoTcd the ablest physician of the age; but Tie Who looks to the-cause, and has arty ^knowledge oT-lrtimaniUtiire, would as soon •ex pect miracles to be w-ror.glit at-this hour, gis that immediate aid could be afforded by thnrt.an means, for this distressing taste of "things. An invitation was thrown out in a late Enquirer for discussion on tliis head: jMctely therefore, by' collision, to cxcilc •Others, and not with an expectation, that an obscure fanner can throw light upon this sublet u 'd.ies eke Writer pretend to of- Tera short '.-ictv dn the occasion. Whether it blowing to the peculiar organization of •Some minds, that leads them to take a false view <~.f Thi« subject, or whether it be realty true,\it isWiieved) that the most fatal, and Violent .hscases, grow out of sontc kind of intemperance, and that in such eases, scl- xJolft indeed, can the pliysician afford relief. Tilt Cure must fie brought about By the act «of the patient, . ' t)jse:’.ses c.risi lfi governments, semftia- f iea and 'he commercial world, as well as in individuals, and the cause may generally be; traced to the same. When a government has beconw highly vicioCs and oppressive, Ycvokirion is the politicel remedy. From -the ’Cxperieirec of past ?gTs, it seems as if nothing but hloochleuing, in various shapes, w.ll perform the cure. In seminaries, when, professors take a false view rtf human nature, and-believe that it requires little restraint, jgTat laxity in the morals ami bahts of stu dents is »p* to exist, and for want of a Iwld and detenniued feculty, who brill in the first stages of vice, which I caH the disease of the Wcminary, lop off half by expulsion, if ne cessary,’to save the balance; i say, when in- »tc*tl tf this bold practice, applications,cal- Jtulated only to afi’orft temporary relief, like thaag'mg a patient radically and fatally ef fected in bed, to,produce ease are resorted ttit, Sfctt and wrong luibitslinger so long as to COnff.minata the •whole tnass, the semina- toudied with the infection, lend their friend-' iy aid as nurses,-and that where it is clearV anti distinctly understood that a patient Ins a strong constitution, (and although i! ; ) may be restored, that he be Strictly attend ed to: on -the contrary, where there are. re ally no stamina, and existence is a mere out side show, then, however distressing it nay he, let those be given np, rind the whole at tention of nurses lie devoted to curable pa tients, But, whilst it is recommended, what shall be done, it will not be amiss at the same time, to say what shall not be done.— I.ct not congress he callcd-to prescribe fora state of things, which our vise cabinet knew ltiust exist, ns well before as since ft has happened . Tlicrefosc if they did not interfere whilst in session, it was because they knew they ought not. A meeting of congress would but increase the disease. It would be like a wicked imprudent man, win never once cbnsidcring himself a re sponsi ble being, being suddenly taken ill, arid about to the, calls for the parson—It wouM be hard indeed, to give faith to such arepca- lalicc. Eet us console {ourselves with the reflection, that this state of things was to be xpoctcd mere or less, that there never was an epidemic that destroyed every patient, that there never Vvas a gale that blew always, that when we have been chastised for our pride, vanity and cupidity, the smiles ol prosperity will again return, our virtue will lie increased, our health and happiness be ' more permanent; in the mean timfc, Nvc must make up our minds to hear the com mercial death of mauv of our friends, with the confidence that some w ill survive. Letts ne.T'be'dtsp'osed to impair the resour ces ofthe country by imposing restrictions on 'importations, I Hit let us impose restric- “tionspn ourselves, and not buy what it is •lot perfectly convenient to pay for. I.et us respect the memory of the venerable de parted patriots of the republican party, and cherish the surviving few, and say that tlieirprophccics in anticipation of Uu-baneful effects of the banking system arc daily fjl- liUingbeforcour eyes, and We co.tlially wish that we may not have -cause fj acknowl edge a fulfilment in otii day, on the score' of military men and armies Aoiucola. notwithstanding my children are young in entetprize, and'compared with our oppo nents, destitute of resources, notwithstand ing when contested with you,they are but beings ofyesterday—yet we are wilting to meet'you on such uneven ground; we are willing to Income uankriqtt as a nation; we arc willing that all our gold and sill er should be at your disposal; we arc willing to erfeourage all your efforts to ruin us, we are willing to buy cheap, provided you wili only graciously determine to take away on your part, all our precious metals. Leave us but depreciated bank bills, leave us no irculaiingnicdium whatever, ccyou are wel- ccmeto laze aUour money. America must indeed myke a conquest not of Florida, but she must be in possession of all the goal and stiver mines of Mexico and of Peru, to be able to stand such a competition, wi.hout bankruptcy. She must have all the* gold and silver in the commercial world at her disposal, and when these are exhausted, she must have exhaustless mines, where she can dig for more. Mr. Waish’slato work is luminous, dig nified, convincing nu irndportant; he appeals ■o the most authentic vouchers, to histori. tal facts, and to documents; facts and cocuments that completely prove his point, namely tliat the siandus of the Edinburg and the Quarterly heviewei on our native country, are not of a recent growth; that it is a part of the old ieavetl of English hostility fermenting against us, commensurate with the first settlement of America: it has been a persevering hostility, and this pernicious principle has been han ded down from one generation, to another. •In this conflicting crisis our government has adopted such measures as indicate a disposition to be prepared for the worst.— All tljc male population in town and coun try, from 16 to 60 years of age are enrolled, slaves included; and not -even exempting foreigners, who'vere at least, given to .Un derstand, that unless they joined in defence of life country, they must quit it, in a. cc r- tain period. A commission is also appoint ed to d.gest and carry into execution a plan of transporting ail the women, children and aged to the interior cities. • ‘‘The olfi Spaniards were sent under s ur- -veillance, and heavy contributions have been exacted from them. Many of them have escaped trom the country, and others are uintd by executions.——Jt w ill not appear strange, if, .during the execution of this sys tem, the whole community should suffer, and become confused and intimidated. But at the very moment whqn this system is in operation we see indications of a deter- urination in our government, to pcrs.Lt with uncommon energy, in the warfare against the royalists of Peru. This latter circumstance convinces many people that oils, government apprehends no danger from the side of old Spain. All prospects of an immediate compro mise with Artigas are now at an end.” A letter from an officer ofthe army, dated Fernandina, (Amelia Island) Oct. SOth to a gentleman in this city, has the following Postscript: “By the arrival ofthe mail this i. ftant, from Augustine, news has been re ceived that a vessel from the Havana bad arrived at that place, bringing the informa tion that fifteen hundred troops were to sail from the latter to the-former plate in a few days, and that the governor had put in close confinement the captain of the vessel, for giving publicity to the report.”—JYat. Fit. 12.'A inet. The American Insurance Company have again declared another handsome dividend often per cent, for the last six months— which make 104- per cent, given to the ■stockholders since the late peace.—A". 1’orb Gazette, 10,'A inst. Latest FortEioAr Jv-Eirs. By the ship Ath.nl c. arrived at New-York, on the Sth inst. fixhn Liverpool, we understand there was no variation in the markets since our last adi ices. •‘A letter of the 2d Oct. says “there was rather -more general inquiry for cotton yesterday.”— The whole import into Liverpool in the month of September, 24,616 hales, of \\ Inch boby u ere from America. The whole in.port in Sept. llilH was 66,619 bags, being I t,.h/6 more than in'the same month of tiu: present year.” lly another letter, we learn, “that ti e ltevoln finnan spirit lately evinced in the mt.nnfactjr- illg districts lias in a great degree subsided.— The Cloth and-Stilff weavers have now pretty- regular employment. Bombazctts have been particularly in great demand, and tlie Wool 'of w hich tlie article is manufactured lias risen from 60 to oU shillings pr. pick, or equal to an ad vance of about do ur. cent on die raw materi als.” ter the arrival and entry of the ship at the custom house, the 500 chests of tea were, on the 8tli day July, purchased (whether really pr nominally waso great, question at llic trial) by one Warren Lovejoy, who gave bonds’at tlie cfistoiu house, tn the usual form, upon a deposit oTthe teas: anil afterwards, dpon c'lving other bonds as usual, was permitted, to receive the tea again, and (hey were re delivered fo and sold by the defendant. Soon alter these transactions I.uvejoy failed in business, ami has ever since re mained insolvent, add the bonds have ne ver been paid. ^ From Ihe Illinois Tnlelli^nerr. Cruel Murder.'—(hi Saturday night, 25th Sept, a club trf wretched brigands assembled at the house of Daniel Brid- man, 15 miles West of U. S. Saline, bn the roail leading to St. T.buis, where tliey met an innocent traveller, (mil without arty prospect of gain, murdered him, whose name was Isaac Kinglaml. An inquest was held over his body ,(29tli) agreeable tq law who returned a verdict of Wilful Murder. The perpetrators of this deed are most evidently Messrs, doing, Pnstle- v-riglit. B.-in.herrv, Kane & Jacob Browne, who left said place and called at the l T . S. Saline on the following Sunday, in nrdef to pa-'S counterfeit bills on the State Bank of N. C. of which we are now confident they had plenty, doing is advanced in years, lives on the road from this to St; Louis: I’ostlew right is about SO years old, stout form, ebo features, dark complexion, 5 feet 10 inches high; Brimberry is 25 years old, light complexion, full face, near the height of the former; Brown is 25 years old, near said height, dark com plexion, down look, and slender formed} Kane is near six feet high, fair complexion, slim and meagre features, white eyes, about S3 years old. Two culprits are in the dailatin jail, who it is believed, as sisted in the tragedy, and will gravely acknowledge the deed fo any person who will apprehend the above wretches so that tliev tnay be brought to justice. Fostlewright, Brutvn, atitj Brimberry professed to live in this state, at or near Carlyle. They have crossed over into Kentucky. CTerUlte«consumptive patient. Wlien in, the commercial would,composed bffalli- Trom the Balt. Hamfng Chronicle, lOdiinst. Amongst the vasiour wonders that take place in the moral world, far more inexpli cable than all the plnrnomenaofthe phvsi- eial, this fact may be mentioned, that previ ous to, and during the period ofour revohre ternary war, there w as in our legislators a grandeur of conception, a prophetic con ception of fnturc events, a provision for existing dangers and difficulties, a devek>pcment of' resources, scarcely to be paraded in the history of nations— they semed in fact to be legislating for the time, when America should start from the size of a dwarf m a giant. In conjunction with a fact so novel and so unaccountable, Ictus view the contrast. America has arri ved at that period for which our revolution ary heroes, both in the cabinet and the field, were contending; America has started from the size tfadwsrf toe giant; do our present legisla'u*a,-who are required only to bring with them minds sufficiently ex panded and enlarged, comprehend the real state of the cotinfry—the magnitude of the question proposed for their decision? VVe answer emphatically and positively, that they do not; petty pigmy policy has at the last session of congress marked our legisla tive actsjthcj- seemed to forget the gran deur of the occasion, the dignity ofthe sub ject, their own. responsibility, and the wel fare of tlieir constituents. It Was distinctly Q UAH TEFL Y RE FIE If. The -following is the concluding par agraph ol a long article in the Edinburg Scotsman, on the manner in which this country is spoken of by the Quarterly Re viewers: The short career or the United States has thrown more light on the theory of gov ernment-, than the experience of centuries. But the truths it exhibits are gall and worm wood to the hirelings of power. \\ ithout it we might have believed that rotten burghs are the soundest part of a constitution, anti that a fair and full represents ion was vi sionary nonsense. Belolme’s doctrine niiglY have passed, tint it is only the strong executive of a monarchy which cat. indulge its subjects in great liberties of speech and conduct; 'WhHc-a -republic is ntccssarily-sus- prrfouS and severe; and that ill a democracy tCc people n.qst become the prey of quacks, under whom neither person nor property coula be secure. To the conlusion of all these theorists, however, persons, and pro perty arc more secure in the United States than any w here else, if we may judge from die rate at which both multiply. The inter ests of die people arc found to thrive won derfully under their own care; and political (juacks find so litde encouragement there that they are almost the only class which never emigrate from this happy country.— The government, so far from being jealous and cruel, is the mildest and most liberal that ever existed in the world. It creates no fictitious plots, nourishes no host of spies, or mercenary Review ers, and has contrived io getthrougft a stormy.period without the legitimate help of tlie gibbet, so indispen- sible to the strong monarchies of the old world.—Boston Fat. Latest from bvejYos ayres. Extract ol a letter from Messrs-. Lynch, Zimmerman fa Co. of Buenos Ayres, to tlieir correspondent in New-York received per the Buenos Ayrean got eminent brig Indcpendencm, arrived at Baltimore, in die remarkably-short passage of 43 days: Jfuene* Ayre*, Sept. 16, 1819. “The contradictory rumors which still agitate the public mind render every thing relating to business, so unsettled, that any report on the stale of the mar ket would be vain. While some arrivals from the 'south of Europe and private letters from Spain and Gibraltar, represent all the energy o: that kingdom bent on a powerful iavasion of these proviifces; others, againy represent Spain as on the brink of intesdne convul sions and ruin-, Ifhcre is evtn a private correspondence which speaks with confi- vt'as <lcncebTthe success of the liberal party v " minions of Ferdinand; and that their Education.-—In England, (population 9,0(10,000,)—there are 4740 endowed schools,in which 156,000cliihlren are edu cated, at an expense of 3,723,000/.: 21,000 unendowed day schools, in which 552,000 children are educated: 5,100 Sunday schools in which 420,000 scholars attend; Great improvements are making in Ire land in this particular, where liberal en couragement- is given to Erasmus Smith’s charities. In France, the education -of the poor is promoted with ardor and suc cess .* LIABILITY FOR DUTIES. The follow irg is a very important deci sion of the treasury department in rela tion to the bonding of duties on goods, wares and merchandize imported into the l'. States, and the opinion of one oftlle dis trict judges upon the same subject, which established the point, that die original im porter is bound for the jreyim-ut ofthe duties, although the goods maybe sold by httn before they are unladed and the du ties bonded by the purchaser. Debt lies hi Favor of the United States against the importer for the duties due oil goods imported. Tlie rigid to duties ac crues liy the importation witli an intent to unlode; and immediately upon the im portation the duties become a personal charge and debt on the importer. A bond taken at the custom house to secure the duties due by the importer is not an ex tinguishment of the debt so accruing, but merely collateral security for its pay ment. No person but the owner or consignee, or in case of his sickness or absence, his agent or factor, is by the revenue laws entitled fo enter and bond goods at the custom house. A sub-purchaser a!Vr im portation has no sucli right. The collec tor lias no authority to receive the bond of any person as security for the payment of the duties, except such person be legal ly entitled to enter them. Debt lies agftinst the importer for the duties on smuggled goods. So where by mistake c-r accident, or fraud, no bond is given to secure them. So where short duties only have been paid. An information of debt, or an informa tion in the nature of a bill of discovery and account, is a proper remedy for the l!. States in such cases. In what cases the taking of a higher se curity operates as an extinguishment of a debt, and in What eases not. Where such security is given by the debtor, prima fa cie the law presumes it intended as an ex tinguishment of the debt. Aliler where it is the bond of a third person. It seems, that a debt accruing by a sta tue, though a specialty, is not of so high a dignity as a bond. The, United States, vs. Theodore Lyman. This was an action of debt, brought liy toe United States against the defendant for SI7,242 40. being the amount of du ties due on 500 chests of tea, imported into the port bf Boston in tlie ship Alert, in July, 181 fire-Plea, nil tlebet. HORRORS OF WAR.' The following account is literally co« pied from the 11th number of the Annals of tlie Vine Arts, where it is inserted with perfect sang froid, as a thing of course; “The Corporal-Major or the 2d Life Guards, Hodgson, who, wo understand, was one of those exhibited at the Acade my, was the only owe ol Mr, Dayton's models left alive at Waterloo. He hail five models in the life Guards hi that bat tle—four of whom were killed. Shaw was one and Daikin, the ynnng man who sat (or the groom, sleeping on his knees, in Macbpth was another, Tlie last tiuiQ Daikin was seen, lie was fighting, unhors ed, with three cuirassiers, two of whoiti he killed a* two'cuts, dividing both their heads at the nose. He was found dying in the eVennig, across a hedge, rut in rib bands. The first by Shaw, (as related by ■ the third man from him, a corporal, w ho saw it,) was at a cuirassier who rodp up: •Shaw, being on higher ground, waited calmly fur him, and cleaV'ed liis head through his iron helmet, dovvn to the jaw: the fare of the cuirassier fell off as com pletely cut as a bit of apple. This was the corpoial’s expression who related (t; in the inh-Vartl of La Have .Shaw died in the rnh-Vartf of I.a Have Sainte, from exhaustion, and not on tlie enemy’s ground, as some reported.”— 'Match tliis, ye tygers, hyenas, boa con strict! •sharks, crocodiles, anti other monsters, if ye are able! Let it be engra ven on tlie projected Waterloo eohnnn. Democratic Press Silt inst. The Nev.-York Firememln- siirance Company, of New- Yo-k, continues ra int- sure House s, Stores, Merchandize, Household Fur- n:.tire, and Vessels in poit, against loss by fire. 'JAMES REA,’aem/. wet 12 (206 1st DAY OF DECEMBER! Only one month, *and tlie drawing oi* the SA- vassaii POOK.Horsr, and HOSPITAL. J.or- TEHY commences. The first drawn number v. i-* he entitled to £>:ib00—and tick ets d r ad'n on die fij-st day will be all $>r>zcs. Tor tlie convenience of * he public this olfice will be kept open till 9 o’clock in the cvcninp , fi*om the IQth of this month.. Present price of tickets: u hole tickets 25}^; hUf 12 50; quarters 6 25; hut will rse J>n the fust of December. Orders from a distance, enclosing the cash, post paid, will be immediately attended to, and the earliest information gi ven of success. . v C. H, H*A\T)EN , S . nor 2 *21.5 Lett cry nnrl Exchange ojfic* THE LIFE GEXE1L1L GHEE.VE, . At the trial it appeared, that the defen- °* nt - dant was the owner of the-ship Alert and of Ihe 500 chests of tea in question; and that the same Were imported by him into ^ " the 2d day of July Af- CHAHLES CALDWELL, M, D. (if Philadelphia. A few copies of the above vr<5rk are sent to Sal i vannah for distribution. ' if the well established politics! nnd literu mer.ts of tlie author cannot—the political and mfiJ litarv character of the subject of the work oa^hkl to insure the patronage of every citiren of the lip. 1 public, who holds in veneration or respect character and memory of jcuir revolutionary fi c : roes. . The subject of this work particularly ought t beheld irt reverence, and high estimation by i people of the south. • Tlie work can be had CC application to STEEI.K WHITE, i oct 23 [c«207 „ Georgia—Liberty county. By El jali Baker, ylerk 6f tlie ceiirt of or Jr rv for tlie county of Liberty. - John Stacy applies for Lifers of tuftnlantrstk on the goo Is and cliattc's, fights amt crediti were of John Stacy, esq. li.te of said coun ceased.. . 1 These are, therefore, to e'te aS.l a.hnonisi and singulir the kin.l.ed and cred/to s ofthes deceased, tc file their objections (iftuiv thevliaj -n rov office, at Ricehorough,on o heiore thetf ’Monday in December next, otherivse lettt adm it stration will 6c.£raute<l unto the sa d a i^rtuitcd Given finder niy band and seal {Ibis secoa. of November, in thy year of ourLo donok and eight hundred arid nineteen, and atl ' fourth-year of American independence. ZEm™ :*****.«*;