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Whr Paper Fnght Italian par annum
OMnHyrsaw—naMmpat .hub
imm ta uutri
try All ne«i aO'I new advertiaemenu appear la
both paper. -CO
sATAiriTAiat r
TtiUUf.tHY EVENING
|S~.- i^Sal nr
hirmiiia 4. I*«J
SAVANNAH KMf.P. SCHOOL,
At an annual meeting of the Subaertber* of the
Savannah Tree Scbdo’ Society, at tlie I’rvshjrte
flan Church, on Tuesday -ith NovcrnWr, an e
JtcUon mas bcld foethirteen l)lrectrca<ea, to |*re-
ti-le ovrr and goTem the lmtitutVen foe one year,
u hen un counting the ballots the fulloaing La-
*'■ * were declared duly elcCwJ
i'tf Taylor,
Korr,
Ur* lUctl,
Mr* MerMcfh,
Ufa Lloyd,
Mrs Pracier,
l iu* Ikrun.
Hits Mims
Mio Johnson,
Mr* Ifilg,
MU 5 (eci! #
Mim, Armour,
Mrs tlichar l*on,
I. B ARRON, See'ry.
fkoii iiaVAHA.
By the ahlji Columbia, »m*rd ymleriWi
Dm Havana, wa bar* received lha Week-
I, Mercantile Report of lha ltd ill. N
new,pa pen were received but web aa
(rere directed to Charleston. We learn
«ei baity, lha- iutalhgenca bad been recciv.
ed V>m the mother country of the libera-
lion of Ferdioind; aerompanird with order*
for restoring the government of the itltnd
to the old footing, which bad been carried
tmo effect.
It i, tatireated that the e- flee crop, at
lean within the compass of the jurisdiction
of Havana and Matanz-is, will not he more
than equal to one half of that of laat year,
or between 6 in ' 700,000 arrobet only, for
consumption aim exportation The sugar
is expected to reach the average maximum
of past years. It is estimated for Havana
and Maiaiua* at between 4 and 500,000
boxes.
Expoit, to the U. S. from the 15- h to
the 21st Nov Inclusive—S100 arr. coffee,
4 tns. homy, 2->5) It <!s. molasses, 107 ltn>
Sct*m, 368 boxes sugar, 15 lihds. musco
Vad<>, 50 arr. tvax.
Rice, sound and clear grain, 4 50 a 5,
plenty; beef, citgo No. I, fatal 10 a II.
sales: butter, American, ql. 10 a 15, fliut
14 75 a 15 sa ,,f P .tlaile.phia; coffee,
1st qual, 16 50: 2 ' anil 31 f2 a 15; sugars
3 Stlis Whit, air. 7) all): 2 5ih» brown
do 9 a 13 dull, white 11 .,14: brown 8 a 9.
On Mcmdzy the first l)-evml,er,j.B election , c>n . c dll(1 ih j oll , an j. Bxcl.ai.gc on tire
~~ “ " “* ' U. .S. 7 prem. scarce; Loudon do. 16 do.
%-j* field si tin* School H .use fit ufficfNj when
the I* l>*ing I-.Me* were Bppoiaiedlo the Free
School Society.
Mr* Taylor, Ut Directress
ilr. Kerr. 21 do
Miss Minis Treasurer,
Mist Ban on, Secretary.
1 it AII RON, Scc’ry,
to tli -S F.S Society.
freights dull.
The interruption of the trade between
Havana and Mexico has had a sensible el
tect on the vales of such dry goods as are
adapted to the latter market
Georgian
flUEI—The Steam Hast Carolina, which las
been laid up on the opposite aide of the river for
several weeks past, wa, discovered ta be on fire
between 12 & l o'clock this morning, but by the
prompt asa.lauc: or prisons from this side, fc a
Ik,,y shower ut r.in st the time, it Wss citin-
gui-hed without doing an) material damage to
the boat A black man who had charge of the
h rji u at found ly ing across the cabouse, burnt to
iSvatli: and Irom circumstance., iffs supposed tftst
tie was .niuxicated, end fell into the fire j and that
it was communicated to the building orer the ca.
boose by means of hit clothes.
The Charleston papers by last night's au.il fur
niih ns with extr.sts from New-York papers to
the S7;b ult. inclusive, m.king nur intelligence
comp'cle to the 29,h
The man murdered in New York, was a Mr.
Mruati, who had just arrived from Boston, sod
1-ad between four and five hundred dollars with
).im He had takeu up bis lodpngs with John
von far A few days, previous to going to New Or
lean, and while he ns asleep Johnson murdered
And tubbed him—the succeeding night lie strip
ped the body nearly Baked, and dragged it to an
■Bey in tbc vicinity, where it to found by a
■watchman. The next day the body was identi
fied. and Johnson, together with his wire, dsug i-
tci .nd son, t ml • boarder in the house, were ap
jireb' nded. Johnson has since mauea full con
frssion of the orime, but says that be hid no ac
complices
Peak's much admired painting," TheDtaet of
ifv" which has been exhbited in New-Yuik,
tor • me time past, accidentally took fire from the
upsetting of a lamp on the evening of the 24th
ult. and was totally destroyed.
. There was ,fight fall of snow in New-Yofk on
tbc 25th ult.
The New-York Mercantile Advertiser of the
Jl7th ult says- We hear, in at madner that in.
ducet us to believe, that information actually
reached this city some days since, ind has proba
bly been nude known to our government, that
almost the first act of King Ferdinand, after his
liberation, was to sign a trea’y ceding the bland tf
Cuba It Firmer. Infonltation is al'* aaid le bare
rea :ned this country, of tlie particular terms of a
treaty which has been executed by thepoweti
composing t' e holy alliance, for subjecting the
si,tea of South America to their former vassal-
*S« ! ”
RRITISH WF.STINOIKS—Letters from Bar.
badoi-s cr the 20 h Oct. at >te that an attempt wo
made a lew a nights previous to burn that town,
and tlwt on the preceding night, ah infuriated
mob of white people attacked U literally levelled
sveh (he ground the Methodist Chapel, a large
And beautiful brick buildings nod compelled the
preadier attached to 11 to fly fo» his life Serious
consequence, to the peace and comfort of th. 1
habitin'* stole apprehended, from suds lawless
proceedings. The two house, of (he Legislature
of the island, were to meet on the 23d.
In Kingston, Jam. it wo generally believed
■that an nttempt bad been nude to organize a con-
(piracy in that dty i sjversl Aliens of color were
(taken up in consequence, and one sent off the
island. A letter of the Uth CM. state, thst the
conspirators had formed a lodge of pretended
masons, and were initiated into tome mysteries by
A brown man from St. Domingo, who correspond-
Ad with admiral Padilla, on the Colombian coast
The master bf the Lodge wu n Black man named
Nicholas Pinero, n barber. From numerous o-
kher suspicious cirrumstinees. It was found ne
ecssary to ptohe the business, bnt no material
discoveries had been made. The ferment on the
bland in consequence of the attempt made
England to legislate for the colonies, and emso.
eipate the alive* was rathe* ioercuisag than di.
The mail frodl New Orleans, for Florence, Alab.
ufsa robbed on the 35th Oct. bet.
Emtnonheiser one of ihe persons committed to
fall in Baltimore far robk.ng thef Mai* b*. been
eend fultlj* (Ad wateneedto ten years hapn
wkkb -w . . ;J
Yr-m the Phila-te'phia Sentinel
Tlir. GRREKS.
The fuiloHiiig is Irom an eloquent article
on the atlairs of Gre.-ce, in the last North
America.. Review.
America hat done tome'.hing for Greece
Our missionary societies have their envoys
to the Grectau church, with supplies of
bihlesand religious tracts for their benight
ed Rocks. But in the present state of this
u ,happy people, this is not the only succor
Pity require. They are laying the founda
no" "f rut! freedom, without which, even
Ihe blessings of the Gospel will be extend
ed to them in vain; and while they are ce
menting with tneir blood this costly rdifire,
:he< arc in the condition of tlie returning
Jews, of whom “every one with one of lit.
lands wrought at work, and with th; other
held a weapon.” \Ve would respectfully
oiggest to the enlarged and pious minds oi
those who direct the great work of mis
sionary charity, that at this moment, the
cause of the Grecian church can in no way
be so effectually served, as by contributions
directed to the field ol the great struggle.
The war is emphatically a war ol the cres
cent against the cross. The venrrable pa
riareh of the Greek faith, torn from his
alter and hanged at the portals of his church,
gave the signal of tlie unholy outrages which
were to waste his Suck. And now, wher
ever the armies of the Sultan prevail, the
village churches are levelled with thd dust,
or polluted with the abominations of Ma
hometism, and (he religious houses of the
Greeks, the oldest abodes of Christianity in
the world, are wasted with fire, and the ta
cred volume thrown out to be trampled un
der foot by barbarians. At this crisis the
messenger of the Gospbl fraternity should
come in other guise than the distributer ol
the wold, and could the broad and deqp
current of religious bounty be turned, into a
channel to reach the atat of the principal
distress, it is not going loo far to say, that
it might be the means of giving another in
dependent country to the ci.drch of Christ;
and do more to effect the banishment of the
Tencent to the deserts oi Tariary, than all
that has been achieved by the counsels of
Christendom.
The same considerations call upon our
wealthy citizens to extend their aid to the
citizens of a country possetsed of more than
»ne bond ol com unity with ours. The
Common Council ol London have voted
I COO pounds-for the relief of the sdfferers
in Greece. Let Boston appropriate ten
thousand dollars Fir the sanv object; New
York, and Philadelphia and Baltimore, and
the cities of the south in propoition to
their means, will heartily unite in the cause;
and i sum ef money may be transmitted to
Greece, either directly or through the En
glish committee, which will teach those
who are now toiling and bleeding for free
dom, that we prize the blessing too highly,
not to aid them in attaining it. We have
seen on Ihe wharves of Boston the hous-
hold utensils of brass and copper, gathered
up from the desolate heat Is of the butcher
ed Sciotes, bought as old copper in Smyr
ns, and as such sent to this country.* Does
not this bring home to our minds a picture
of distress to awaken our deepest sympa
tby? To ace reduced to old copper in our
aulla, the furniture of the firesides of men
and Christians who have themselves Weari
ed the Turkish scimctar in their slaughter,
and whose wives and daughtera hayo been
sold into an accursed slavery, to $>• nxm
her of thirty thousand? We know not whe
iher the sight of these humble wrecks of
household existence bb romantic enough
for the sen'.imenlslisti but we ask onr read
ef s by an effort of imagination, to make the
case their own: to fancy an overwhelming
force of Inrbarians, speaking anolliei lan
guage, following a strange faith, let loose
upon <-fte or onr largest cities, (fair Scio,
now « detect, had a population of 100,000)
to putju men to the twbrd, endedl itama
trons tnq virgins in the open market, into
the most revolting and hopeless staVrry,—
We would ask our readers but (o conceive
uf a fate like this, as in reserve for one of
the cities of onr own country, and then aay
what claim Greeks have on our ' ‘
balfe net insislad ee tk« topic ef the gleti
•ret descent ol the Greek at ef the duty of
htateeing to Ut* succor uf those wheat Te-
there were etMCrv «f the world, In the
school of civilization. Ilia not because we
are not sensible ollhc power of this appeal
alsot bet because '%e think e much stranger
appeal may be matte. To take en interest
in the fate of a people, whose ancestors fill
to important a place in the history uf the
world and or the human mind, is certainly
natural. The geographical names, which
fill the accounts from Greece, excite an in
terest of themselves! and we feel • double
eagerness to hear that the Tnrks have not
only been beaten but beaten out of (tie Ac
cropolis, of Athens: and that Odysseus is
is still auccetsful on the aides of Oeta,—
While, however, this kind of sympathy is
perfictly natural, and nothing ought to br
neglected, which helps the cause of a auf
fermg people, we believe (he Greeks havr
stronger and more imperious claims upon
us, than any that grow out o these associa
lions. We may differ as to the degree of
respect to which their ancestors are entitled
Wo may differ as to the degree, in which
the modern Greeks are really the descend
ams of the ancient inhabitants of the soil:
i <d more than one i.aVcUer thinks lie has
settled the quest! <r,, w -.ether the Turks
have a right to hold the inhabitants of
Greece in bondage, by maintaining that the
Greeks area nntigt-d race,descended from
the barbarians, who, in different ages, have
overrun the land.
The alias! in to antiquity, moreover, or
ten borders on the'idiculons, and we en
tircly agree with Ur. I'orav, in condemning
the name of jrcofiagut, as given to the
judiciary of the new slate This revival of
classical names, in an application'totallv
different, was one of the practice., in bail
taste " h ch prevailed in the French revolu
tion, and though more excusable in Greece,
is better avoided there. There is enough
without these names to awaken our sympa
thy. They derive their power from book
learning, they belong to scholars end to
dilettanti; but there is that in the cause of
the Greeks, which ought to speak to the
heart of every freeman in Europe and A
merica It is not merely the countrymen
of Aristides, the fellow citizens of Phorion.
the descendants of Aratus, that arc calling
upon us. These glorious names are a dead
mr i
U to *>• blasphemed *'
while ut the world. Dot M will still be
taught and still be repeated, and must be
learned by all: by oM and degenerate com
munlHes to revhe tbefryoutbi by spring
ing colonies tu hasten their progress With
the example before them of a tree repre
sentstive government—oft people govern
ed by themselves—it is no more possible
that the nstionr will long bear any other,
then thst they should voluntarily dispense
with the an of priming or the manner’s
compos* It is therefore plainly no age for
Turks to be stirring.—It i* sa much as
men can do, to put up with Christian, with
civilised, yes, with legitimate misters. The
Grind Seignior is a half century too late in
the world. It requires ill people's patience
to be oppressed and ground to the dust, by
the parental sway of most faithful, moat
catholic, meat Christian princes. Fatigued
as they arc with the Holy Alliance, H were
orepoalcrous in suppose they can lung sub
mil to a horde of Tartarian infi 'tli—
The idea that the muit honorable, the
most responsible, the most powerful office
in the state, can, like a vile heirloom, follow
the chance of descent, is quite enough to
Uik the lurbcaraacc ol this bold and busy
time. What then shall berotue of viziers
and sultans, when ministers ate bewildered
in their cabinets, and kings are abuken tut
then- thrones? Instead of arming their
misbelieving hosts aguinst a people who
hav.* taken hold of liberty, and who will iie
free, let them rejoice that great and little
Uucharia are still vacant, and take up their
march for the desert
iv iht Peopli o/ciadm I
sBfife
area, and aaiicit yaw bran bfu^L h
ir( 33l|
Seal Skin ani
4 FKW Gentlemen’! elegant Seal ti
Miwaa Cbincklli Capa, jmt tre2rm
twrosl
•ala by
BUILER (J jq
IFto A rt* to Asa//, at anal.
wmwVstb
mss*
■ .4 MO,
R«ram Youths’, and Fine and Common w-a.
■ita start Wain
UMBRELLAS
A FEW doqn'n wperinr30 melt 8,11
just received and for mIc t>»
BtriLf- U SOL.
Gi *.', Building, Mirko
■231
deo 4
£'S ro «.
2’eo, Jamaica Hum, and H.
//at
24
Gil
AN OHUIN vNCr,
Entitled tn ordinance tn fix the profit of the
Baker, and the nr.au r to assize the Bread ex
posed for sale in (he city of Savannah.
Sec. 1. Rc it ordained by the Mayor and Al
dermen of the City of Savannah in Canned sssem.
bled, sad it is hereby ordained by the authority
of dye same,that from and afier (lie | assage of fill* 8cie.i.z u Soda Purl
thUordinsnce, the profit of th* Baker on each AudlenMlsiatic Lenitive dtp., Ac, ”1
barret of Flour by him manufactured, shall be *’— J '— **' —*
fixed at four dollars and fifty cents.
Sec. 2. tie it further ordaiued by the authority
-fore,aid, that the following manner shall be a
dopted to ascertain the correct assize of 11-
.■xnoved for sa.e n: 'In-eirv ■■ S
Christendom. But It is chrivlians bowed
beneath the yoke ufbarbirous infidels; it is
fathers and mothers condemned to see their
children torn irom them and doomed to
the most cruel slavery; it is men like ouiv-
selves, bereft ol all the bounties which prov
itlence has lavished on their land, obliged
to steal throughlife, as through the passes
of a mountain, before the blood hounds of
the pursuer. No cxhilirating prospect of
public honor, no cheering hope of private
success in lire; no thrill ai the name ol
country; no protection at the fireside; but
all one blank of leaden, dreary despotism,
which turns the vety virtues and excel
lencies of character into a crime. It is the
great curse of a despotism, like that of the
Turks, tbit it inverts the taws of conduct
for its subjects, and connects suffering and
death with those principles and actions to
which providence attaches the rewards of
life in a healthy state of society. We are
able to pity individuals among us, so ut.f it-
innately born and bred, as to be surrounded
with con upting examples, and taught to
find occupation and pleasure in vice.—
What a spectacle do not the Greeks pre
sent in this connexion, to the practical phi
lanil-.ropist! Arc they zealous in the pro
fession of their religion and in the obser-
vance of its rites, they jeopardize the con
tinuance of the jealous and contemptuous
toleration beneath which they live. Do
they love and serve thq land ol their birth,
they are guilty of treason against its bar'os
rous master. Do they with industry and
enterprise acquire wealth, it is necessary
studiously l» conceal it from unprincipled
extortion, and to invest it in foreign coun
tries Do they found schools aud make
provision for education, they expose them
selves to exaction, and their children ta
outrage and are obliged to proceed with
the greatest possible secrecy and circum
spection. What a monstrous complication
of calamity, to have the best, the worthiest,
the purest designs and actions loaded with
all the consequences oi vice and crime; to
be deprived not oniv of all that makes life
joyous, but to be punished for doing wel) t
and to be forced to go privately about those
good deeds, to which men, in othor coun
tries, are exhorted as to » source of praise
snd honor. These things ought to be con
•idered; snd a reprehensible apathy pre
vails as to their reality. If liberty, virtue,
and religion, were not words on nur lips,
without a substance in our hearts, it would
be hardly possible to pursue our little local
interests witn such jealousy; to be all on
fire in one state, tor fear Congress should
claim the power of internal improvements,
endup in arms in another against a change
of the tariff, and carried away in all, with a
controversy between rival candidate! for an
office, which all would administer in fbuch
the same way, if a narrow telfishness did
not lie at tlie bottom of our condtct; we
could not do all this while men certainly aa
good as we, who have nerves to smart,
minds to think, hearts to feel, likeoarselvcs.
are waging unaided, single handed, at peri>
out odds, a war of extermination against
tyrants, who deny them-not only the bless-
ingsof liberty, but the mercies of slavery.
But we hone better things ol our couptry.
In the great Lancastrian school of the its
Uons, liberty is the lesson, which we are
appointed to teach. Masters we elaim not,
we wish nut, to be, but the monitors we
■re of this noble doctrine.—It is' (aught in
our revolution, taught in our government.
ahd (he nation* of tne world are rqsolvet!
re. It may fo written in Sand and ef-
I, but it wifi be written again and
indt now fettered in slavery ihatt
■trimmer at (he noble word, qball round it
otH in tbk ears ot their despots, with,an
it
1*
!
a
l 5 "
if
o
»•'-.* 1 » -i*.
LBS. OZ
LBS. OZ.
20
19
18
17
16
15
1(
1>
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
1 4
1 $
1 6
1 7
1 8
1 9
1 11
1 12)
1 14
2
2 2)
2 S
2 8
2 11
i ,/a
a^aSaSSTa —„
ty aforcsaul. That it shall tfe the du.y uf the tht,
Marshall, and of the. City Constsbki, to inapec
the bread so expased for ask- ,t least once in each
and every week, according tu the ordinances in
that case made end provided
See. 4 —And be it further ordained by the ut,
thority aforesaid, That .si much of the ordinance,
pissed aa is repug unit to nr militates u-ith ltd,
ordinance he and the ram.- is herebt ri pealed.
Patted in Cow.cil, 271/i-Aov. 183,
J. SlOUItlSlIN, Mayor.
.illeit—M UYEUS, c.c
By the above ordinance, the twelve and a •
eenta loaf murt weigh tkret tuncet mint than by
the ol: one.
* In ^a-^.rk^i^n 0U cL*J mp 'f h J' i flirty (race it, and Kps; th* now
jsssgsusarjisa
«•**-««*•ndjfMt«ft*sarsoMred^ B * tfe'"fin! "“(ifljii ptoctfriit at l>< fan
others amt wrestle long with** eld fht
lf4W&
< r or S-W ANN fi
AH*I VB0»
Ship General Kemp. Drown, Liverpool, 43 day4
with merchandise, to A L dolyncMux, A Low U
Co XV Gaiton, II Lord & C-j. and/ M‘Nisti. Spoke
ship Emulous, from Londonderry, fur New Or
leans, 12 diys out. .
Shin Lolumbit, Vickery, of Providence, lit
van»» 9 dnys, bound tu r.lurlctt'*n -put in in dii
trest with Iocs of rudder, braces and tiller.
Stetm boat AlathnuUa, Harford, 3 days from
Augusta, with boats N *.2l And *8 in tow, 1140
bales of cotton, tn W Gaston, Petersen, Hammond
co, J If Reid & co, GII Lamar, S B Parkmafc,
Ponce & Il'Kenti'*, G Gordon,J Gumming & Son,
I) Burroughs, 8 Wright, H Lord 8t co, Jobnach,
Hills Scco, O Tail and others
•'iSABtD.
Ship Plato; Dii uett, Liverpool.
J. H. HKUBKK r a
Wave Received per akib H urt m
•.iKSt' 8 tg r
6 bhda pure Jamaica lt um
5 pipe, do II Gin
For roll- on accommodating term.
Genuine Hatant b'amilfJhfi^
'13HK Sabsciitwr iia-just recetv.J
A 'he Entente s, the following bjyy tl .
ed Medicines, via: '
Chu-ch',y.
Chin*. ■„ 2J, j
lissom Honey
llenryi Cikml w_ I
neaia • I
unci,
Lees B.lious Pillls,
Coil'*, do do
Rdf* Aathnutic do
jtelfs Botanical prons
lurch's Cough do
Aiidera mi do do
Amiiican do do
Tooth MC'ue do
Uugea'w Vegetable Pul
motic Detergent DslbA iwJSF
Anderson* U Hoopers Ba>mQiit' ^
Urandins Rheumatic
Ointment
Which togetho^ with s v c «y general txartm
forwSeSSw * 8luff * tadHertu,nci /'^offei
dec 4
FRANCIS I.LAT, Dninit,
r.23, S^BuMnn.l
JUILY ti. Wlrtc
Hat -luv dir: r inr
Blacksmith’s .iellows,
W HICH lie wi’l S.-II It the laarpst intcwA
which Ihi y can be nvJMfa^t,.^.a- ■
contract to fumnh anv size that may be wanted. 1
dec 4 . .|2n23l 1
1 2'Ae Subscriber
r AUKS thi ..pportuuit) of iiJoraung the
prest.itauvev of the estate of John “
t-ceued, as Well as n'l ether persons c!
property in the ctuioty ef Effingiam u
aiding out of the slate, v.ho have not reti
their prnpexty othe receiver 6f t,t reio
the year 1S2 i, to come foi-Wah! and mil
riMitni on or before the l-.at day cf April
otitetwiss they wi:lbcil'*sbk tax-d-
tVM. uPE.V: IT
dec 4 rijgdl
THEATRICAL
eanectfullr lorj.ined (hat thj
I’tdl
T tEput.....
THBATtt i'FFAfiBIONVofwlticliJ. PAM
public arc
_ THBATK
(S :g heart per funner ^ -g n- W npt-n met ‘.h%t i'«
pt.H ,rm in> i Might uf TVirii, such a
Cutting Ilair, Shaving, &c. Etc. |
in »lie mobt bco jming manner, so us to >nakE
o/«/io»k ynu if. He will also convey his C
Scitio 1 *, JinuP, Z*c to any : art of the d y i
m.tv deem proper tu comm ind, atter wiiicl I
will receive tire Cash in u ie hind, width he j
pQche! with the greatest facility with' o
tod many other tricks too numerous to m.
liouiN open at 6o’clock, A. M, andperfc;
commence as saon a* a headapfitar*- Upp
S f performance, *5 ccnta—c un 12J. .Ck>*i
u JOURNEYMAN, who will ciert bo d».«t
to plca.c.
(lee 4
Assize of Bread.
(Jj-The avenge price of Floor being eight
dollars, the weight of bread the present month
must be ss follows.
12) Cents Loaf 2 Ih 8 ox.
6) do do _ 1 lb 4 oz.
Of which alt Balters and sellers of Bread will
take due notice.
JNO. I. ROBERTS, City Treasurer.
dep 4, 1823 3JI .
Union Lodge JYo. 3.
T HE Memben of Union Lodge No 3 are here-
by summoned to attend a tegular meeting
YIlls EVENING, at 6 o’clock, to elec' olttcen
for the ensuing masonic year and transact other
busiaeaaof importaiace—general and punctual at
tendance is particularly requested.
WU. TURNER, Master.
dec 4 231
. James mohrison,
H AS removed hit office to the room directly
over the Auction Store df Calvin Baker. ' Bp-
trance the same as to the Republican office.
nov 28 22ft
Harbor Masters Ojfice.
711HE sabscriber liaviog-received the appoint-
J. meet of Harbor Muter it uuw ready to at-
end to the duties of Ids .office —H* will be found
at Ur. Morrisons office. In esse of absence oftbe
subscriber a blank book, will be kept at the
a which all Masters Of Vreatk are request
note Josrn whatever ehaagealr births the, may
Sttipiub, nov 28 ,33$
.. IValthuurville Academy*
'flHfcCommisiJnuera oi the Walthmirf' t.t
L tlemy, with pleasure announce t” the p=i
thst they have prueure.1 a Teacher lor the V
whose recomm'-ndations are higlih flauerio,
who/e attainment* are of a supetio' onw.
MaticusJob's., tlie gerilltman whom tlicyW
keted, will open School the 1st of Ja-.u-y I
attended by Ms Brother Mr. Foawsu Ji
who, In the capacity of an assisttuih “f.
missionen are confident will be tn a«*|** J
the institution. As it it presumo) im' “1* ‘3
vantages which Waltourville prawm ,,o:D
ua.ion, healthfulness and good **“'>• “•
render its Scmina/y of Learning. * n ,
inent of extensive utility s the Co 'iminsioiMoa
the information of tiio-e who maybtonfo*>
tend Fupita ihither for i-utrucikn;
that genteel hoarding for any ni'niber ufnt™^!
may he lud at Mr. Ifm ./si/.tww’i. St
rate as that of Sunhury, viz: St- 1 ® P tf
one half payable in advanci, boarders, p
tlicirown bedding ami candles ™»\.
would be mofe efiglbh; st they will be
immeditte inspection of the Teacher* *»
be accommodated there. A respectsb*
lady, will also take m limited numherw
It is needless to add thst no,endes»«|"".
spired to render the condition of Pop®
eomforttbleinil agreeable . :
Tu rata tf 7uM.ii are atf‘' lrM '
Forthe Grerk and Larin Languages -.a
For Geography, Arithmetic and Gratnm ,r j
For Reading, Writing and Spelling .
per quarter. ^
Chairmm of the Dotnl Coi
Liberty County, Dec 3^ -2^0
] The Subscriber
C ONTINUES th- LU.UBKX.
and COMMISSION BUSprESS-*'
chine L also in complete order for rvp* c *"*
“^TgSSd, Fin Wood
Oh hand, which will be told low W T
Ply, ° JOHNEviRmGHA^l
4206—2m..
SO (HG., .-.Ja a- —
Marshal’s sale, contmt;-^
m&j&gsd
13 o’clock, r
10 cod 3 o’clock. ‘ .
AH tbit tract of Lwd