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city FHrV'rjik. ,f
IWty i’»f>cr„ Eight Dollars ;:er annum:
KStfelrtry^’aper ......Six Dollar? per annum
rKruni* sir AriVxxr*
*tjt/ All newa and new advertisements appear In
both paper* £3
&* •ft'ution 'al Nomination.
At V meeting of the Democratic Mem
bers ol Congress, in the Chamber of the
House of Representatives of the United
States, February’ 14; 1834, the following
Resolutions were unanimously adopted.
Resolved, As the sense of this meeting,
igwt '< - -
W.M. It; .CUAWVbUD,
of Georgia, be recommended 16 the people
of IheUnited States as a proper Candidate
([or the office of President, and
ALBERT GAUiaTtA*,
pf Pennsylvania, for.theoffia: of Vice Pre
sident, ol the United Status, for four jeavs
vom the 4th of March, 1835.
',*ar
SteVA.Y'ff&M) ...
TUESDAY EVENING, JlNE 1, 1824
A Pennsylvania paper informs ui that in the
•^puraeoflast winter Gov. Randolph son in law 5f
j#r Jeflerion, stated to a friend in Richmond that
Mr ,k fit won was tits friend of Mr Crawford, and
that he w*a desirous to sce<hitt elevated to the
.^residency, <>-'
It is stated in s Boston paper that general Dear
horn has expfoWd* wish to return home from
the Court of Lisbon,which ha) been granted.
(ana Tea xareasioa*.)
INTERNAL IMPROVEMENT, NO. 6.
The United St.tas formed by nature for the
YDo-f intimate Union has not been Inattentive to
U.e improvement of her natural capacities by in.
terns) navigation | but much remains to be done
Be tore her imthense resattree* will he fully de
yt tnped, anl her many extraordinary advantages
Brought into full and complete operation by the
fond of art and human inv ention.
The ftcilitiea of inland navigation renders the
g ftununication between Florida and New Hamp
ire infinitely pore practicable and expeditious
than between thn*« of Provence and Picardy in
frapre, Cornwall and Csitbnesa in Great Britain
fft Galliciu and Catalonia in Spain,
The United fitatea might be converted into a
duster of large and fertile islanda, communicating
with each other, with ease and little expense, and
thmsny instances without the uncertainty find
ganger of «he sea. - . <*'./
The important pan between the Chesapeake
and Delaware Bays from their respective beads,
teems evidently to any one who understands any
lB>ng of the Geography of the country, to invite a
union of the trade of these immense waters, which
Can be done by a canal of 10 or 15 miles, other,
wise requiring, a navigation of 500 miles round—
Xt hBS been commenced and no doubt will be fin.
{shed in time 4 but why bas h been delayed so
l6ng» , , - 'V , ' * .
Many other canals in different parts of the union
have been projected, some of which have bebh
Commenced and others finished to the great hena
ft «*f the adjacent country by opening new and
ber.elieial communications between tbe interior
and tbe sea board and between the different
tytys,.., . . . . / J
But tbe state of New.York has astonished her-
H'f and the whole union oy^a work of this kind,
which will make the city of New York the empo'
'Bum of the United .States, notwithstanding the
Uforeelegible natural situation of Orleans or even
of Norfolk in Virginia.
Tbia bold and important undertaking leaves all
t other attempts of a like kind entirely in the
e, and shews bow much may be done by the
moral and pbysieal energies of a few enterprising
men when perseveringly and industriously direct
to a single point . ' v
On the 4th July 1817, the work wa* commenc
ed It was intended to open a communication
between tbe Atlantic ocean and the Western
token. The.Champlain and the great part of the
jfirie canal are now in a navigable state, and in less
Bum a year the whole comprising an extent of 425
miles will be finished f and all this is the result of
the enterprise 6f one of tbe States of the union—
Unaided by any other than her Own gigantic exer
tioav. As an organ of communication between
the Hudson, the Mississippi, the 8t Lawrferibe, the
great lakes of the nortfi. and west, and their tribu.
tary rivet's, it pill ceate the greatest inland trade
ever witnessed. On the middle section of 'this
«|a«fuf d«mn&,wUb all its immense embankments*
apble aqueducts, and massive lottos, one level ex
YendvfiS (/rodeos distance which itnot unequall
ed, is qe^nly oue of the most considerable in
tbe world* Qn this section there are nine locks
built in stone, and laid id an excellent water ce
{nent,discovered in excavating the canal, 1526feet
of squeduc^eitbcr entirety of stone or composed
Of" wood and stone, 1$31 feet of atone and . iron
invert* of various dimensions, and 1860 feet of
W«te ruin.
x ^TRAcrfg
^ r. HiHmii.vu's Speech on Hie Tariff ltd’,
u the House of Kcprcrcntatives, April l.Slb, 1821,
copied from a pamphlet received at the Office of
tbe SjvanaihrJleppbUeiik’ We wish ohr lUbitR
would have allowed us to publish the whole of
thi# excellent-speech. We must, therefore, con
tent our,elves with the following extracts t
I am, said Mr. Randolph, practising no
deception upon myself, much lest upon the
House, when t say, that, if ( had consulted
my own feelings and inclinations, 1 should
not have troubled the House, exhausted as
it it, and as I am; with any forther remarks
upon Ibis subject. I come-to the discharge
of this task, .not merely with reluctance,
hut with disgust; jaded, worn down, abrad»
ed, I may Say, as I am by long attendance
upon this body, and continued stretch of
the attention, upon this subject. I come to
it, however, at the suggestion, and in pur
suance of the. wishes of those, whose Wish
es are to me, in all matters; touching my
public duty, paramount law \ I speak with
those reservations, of course, which every
moral agdnt must be supposed to make to
himself.
« o » • • i a
Sir, when are we to have enough of this
Tariff question! In 18 MS,- it was supposed
to be settled. Only three years -thereafter,
another proposition for increasing it pas
sent from this House to the Senate, baited
with a tax of lour cents per pound on brown
sugar. .It was,fortunatelyrejcctedip that
body In what mariner this bill i* baited,
it does not be came me to say r but I have
too distinct a recollection oft he votcin com
mitteeof the whole, on the duty upon mo
lasses, and afterwards, of-the vote in the
House on the same question; of the votes
of more than one of the slates oh that ques
tion, not to mark it well. I do not say that
the change of the Vote on that question was
effected by any man’s voting against his,
own motion; but I do not hesitate to say,
that it was effected by one man’s election
eering against his own motjon. *
I am very glad, Mr Speaker, that old
Massachusetts* Bay, and the Province of
Maine and Sagadahock, by whom wo stood
in the days ol Revolution, now stand by the
South, and will not aid in fixing on Us this
system of taxation, compared with which,
the taxation' of Mr Grenville and Ld.
North whs as nothing. 1 speak with know
ledge of what t say, when | declare, that this
bill is ah atte'inpt to reduce the country,
south of Mason and Dixon^s line, find past
of the Alleghany mountains, to a state of
worse than colonial bondages a state to
which the domination ofGrakt^Britain Was,
in my judgment,"tor preferable i and 1 trust
l shall always have the fearless Integrity to
utter any. political Sentiment which the head
sanctions anil the heart ratifies i for the Brit
ish Parliament never would have dared to
lay such duties on our imports; or their ex
ports to us, eiether “ at- home’* or here, as
is now proposed' to be laid up'on the im
ports from sboatd. At that time,<vu had the
command of the market of the vast domin
ions thert subject, and we should have had
those which have since beep subjected to
the British ettipjre: we enjoyed a free trade,
eminently superior to any thing we can en
joy, if this hill shall. go into operation. If
is a sacrifice of theanterests of a part of this
nation, to the ideal beifttfit of the rest. It
marks us out as.fhe victims of a worse than
Egyptian bondage. It is a barter , of so
much of our rights, of.so.much pf the fruits
of our labor, for political, power to be trans
ferred to other 'hands, It ought-to be n\pt,
and I trust it will be met, in the Southern
country, as was the.6tamp Acl, sind by all
those measures, which I will not detain tjie
House by recapitulating, which succeeded
(hi . Stamp Act, and produced the final
breach with the mother country,, which it
took about ten years to bring' atyoiit: Us I
trust in jny concieoce, it will not take as
long to bring about • similar . results from
this measure, should it becojnc a' law.
There is no case on record, iu which a
proposition like this, suddenly changing
the-wfioie frame of a country’s policy, tear*
ing asunder every ligature of the body po
it tic, was ever carried by a .leari m.ijority of
two or three votes; unless it bg the u&urpa
lion ol the septennial act, which passed the
British Parliament, by, 1 think, a majority
of one vote, the same that laid the taxon
cotton bagging. I do not stop here, Mr, to
Tbe passage of the Senesa lake Is made by an
j^ueduct of S3 feet high, and tbe mouth of tbe
Cayuga is also passed where the elevation is 183
feet, The valley i| a mile broad, apd a mound of
.^ufficienl height and bredth to jprpss if, was a work
f$: enormous diqiens'u>&. ” Already fine passage
boats provided with Jieds qnd other comforts, at
Yurv the traveller. »n<j carry ^im' rtong at the rate
I miles, ai> hour..
"FULTON:”'
througli a Dutch
jhabiiania had been build
• asked a boy, pointing to
bat building it Wa si He
hurch^-but i; don’t so
power of the genera! government, and the
power of,tbe states—that ts the constitution.
You D&ay entrench yourself in parchment te
the, teeth, nays Lord .Chathum, the sword
frill find its way to the yitals of the qonsti,
lotion. I have no faith : ih parchment, sir,:
I have no faith in the abracanabralof the con
stitution; I have no faith in it. lhave"faith
in the power of that commonwealth, of
which I am an unworthy son; In tjie pow
er of those Carolinas, and cf that .Georgia/
in her anpient aud -uimost extent,, to the
Mississippi, whioh went with ys through
tbe Valley of thjr shadow of death, in the
war ol oup independence, I have said,
that I shall'not stop to discuss the constitu
tionality of this question; lor that reason,
and fotf a better: that thefe never was a
constitution under the sun, in Which, by an
unvyise exercise of the powers of the gov
eminent, the people may. not be driven to
the extremity of resistance by lores “For
it is not, perhapa, so mqch by the assump
tion of unlawful powers, as by, the unwise
0* unwarrantable, use. of. those which are
most-legal, that governments oppose their
true eud and object» for there is such a
thing as tyranny as "well as usurpation”
a P“wer [jo regulate trade,' you
prevent exportation'c if, with the most ap
proved spring lancets, you draw the list
drop of blood from our veins: if, eetttndum
arteiri, you,draw the last shilling from « u r
pockets,,what f re fhe checks of the constj-
tutioi) to us j!, A fig fpr ttye -constitution’!
Wbfia tbe ^eorpiotitt sting,is probing us to
thp quick, shall we stop to ' chop' logic ?
Shall we get Home learned and cunning
clerk to say whether tbe power to ’
. * Ho h5ie.4l!udes to Mr. Vlxg...
\b to helbuftd \n the constitute, ahd
if be, front whatever motive, shall niamtAin
thb affiwiriailve.rikd the animal whose fleece
Ihrtns so material u portion olf this bill, qui
etly lie down and be slihtn ?
» e w
Can you find men of v^sttforiune, in this
Country, content to mavis iti the lower cir
tlds—content as the ox under tlte dhily
drudgery of the yokef It is true, that in
England; some of these Wealthy people tako
it into their hdads to buy scats in Parliament.
But, when they gettbere, Unless they pos
sess great talent*,, they arb mere nonenti
ties; their existence is only to be iound in
the Red Book which contains a list of the
members of Parliament. Now, sir, I wish
to know ill in the Western country, where
any man may get beastly drunk for three
pence aterling-»in England you chnnot get
a small wine glass of spirits under twenty
five cents; one such drink of grog as I have
seen shallowed in this country, would there
cost a dollar—in the western country,where
every man can get as much meat nod bread
ns he can consume, and yet spend the best
part of hil days, and nights too, pdrhupa,on
tiie tivorii benches, qnloitering at the cross
mads asking the news; can you expect the
people of such a country, with countless
millions of wild land and wild Animals be
sides, can be Cooped up lo manufacturing
establishmonta, and made to Work sixteen
hours a 'day, under the superintehdance of
a driver—yes, a driver, compared with
whom a southern overseer is a gentleman
and man of refinement; for, If they do not
Work, these work people in the manufacto
ries, they cannot eat—and, among all .the
punisHments that can be devised (put to
death oven among tbe number,) I defy you
to gel as much work <>Ut of a man by any of
them, its when he knows that he must work
before he can eat.
« » v « . A • r-
And what, said Mr. Randolph, are we
now about to do!. For what was the Coosti
tution formed? To drive the people of any
part of this Union from Jlte plough to tit*;
distaff! Sir, the Constitution of the U S.
never would have,been formed, and ir form
cd, would have been scouted, uHa uoce, by
the people, if viewed as a means for effer.
ling purposes like this, The Ccnnlitution
was formed for extenal purposes, to raise
armies and navies,and to lay uniform duties
on imports, to raise a revenue to defray tin
expenditure for such ' dhjecta. What are
you going to do now! To turn the Consti
tution wrohg iide out; to abandon foroig
commerce and exterior relations—I an sor
ry to use this Frenchified Ward—the loreigt,
affairs, which it was established to regulate,
and convert it into a municipal agent, to car
ry a syfetem of espionage and excise into
every log house in the U. States. We went
to war with Great Lnlain for Free Trade
,nd Sailor’s Rights i We made a Treaty -ot
Peace in which.I never could, with the [aid
of my glasses, see a Word about cither the
me or the other nf these objects of conien*.
font we are now,-determined never to be
engaged in another for such purposes: for
we are, ourselves,'putting'hn end to them.
A nd, by the Way of cotprOt t in,this statu of
things, we have been told, by the doctor as
well as by the apothecary, that much can
not be immediately.expected from this new
Scheme: that years will pass' away before
its beneficial effects will, be fully realized.
And to whom is this toldr-to the,consump
tive patient it ia said—here is the remedy;
persevere in it for a few years, and jt will
infallibly cure your disorder: and this infal
lible remedy is prescribed ibr pulmonary
consumption, whitli is an opprobrium of
physicians', and has, reached a stage, that,
iu a few months, not to spy. .days; must ine
vitably terminate the existence of the pa
tient. This is to be done, too, on the plea
that the people who catl for this njeastie are
already ruined.; I will do any thing, sir, in.
reason, t<frelieve' these persons; but, I can
never agree, because they are ruined, and
tve are half ruined only, that we shall bo - en
tirely ruined. for,the contingent possibility
of their relief We have po belief In this
new theory—new,for it'came in with .the
French Revolution,.and thai is of modern
.date—of the transfusion, of plood from a
healthy animal to a sick one; and, if there
is to be such a transfusion lor the benefit of
these ruined persons now, we refer the gpin
tlcman to bulls and goats fop Supplies ol
bfopd, for We should be the veriest asses to
permit them to draiv our own,
[Here some sparring took plfice between Mr.
Randolph and Mr. McLine, of Delaware, after
-which Mr. H.^ proceeded.]
In all beneficial chatiges in the natural
wdrld—and-the sentiment is illustrated f>y
one of the most beautiful effusions of ima
ginatiop and geniiis that |,eydt read-*-.in all
•those changes,'which are the- work of an
all.wise, ali-seeing, and superintending pro
vidence, as in the inscfnslble gradation by
which the infant bud expands into manhood;
and from manhood to.ccrtility : or, if you
will, to caducity itself,—you find nature
tfever working but by;gr.adual and imper
ceptible changes—:you cannot «ec the ob
ject move, but take your eye frOm it for * 0
while, and, like the index of that clock, you
can see that it baA'rpovqd. The old pro-
da
^ • Ay jy %
nrttWtSitieti o{[a prolate ypbhg heir,lend-
ing him money at Uh iiSury ofcqOt. pcP crtii,
ever acted mpru patornally thaO the ad.vo
cates of-cutk bill, to those upon whom it is
to operate I advise you, young man, for
your good, says the usurer. I do tlfose
things very reluctantly, says Moses—theve
courses will lead you to ruiij. But, no
/orftv-no lir, no force short of Russian
despotism, shall induce me to purchasd,or,
knowing it, to use any-article from the re
gion of country which attempts to erdm
this bill down, our throats. On this,', wc
of tht south arc as resolved, as were ttur
fathers about the teav .Which they refused to
drink—for this is the same old question of
the stamp act in a new Shape, via, whether
they, who have no cbmmon fueling with us,
shall impose onus, not merely a burthen
some but a ruinous tax, and that, by way of
ekperiment. and sport. And I say again, if
we are to submit to sttf h usurpations, give
me George Grenville, give me Lord North
for a master. It Is in., this- point of view
that I most deprecate the bill. If, \said
Mr. R.)from the language I have used, a
ny gentleman shall believe 1 am not as much
attached to this Union as any one on this
flooV, he will labor under a great mistake.
But there is no -magic in this word wnioa.
I value it as the means of preserving the
liberty hnd happiness of the people. Mar
riage itaelf is a good thing, but the mar
riages of Menentius were not<so esteemed.
The marriage of Sinbad, the sailur, with
the corse ot his deceased Wife, was an u-
nion, and just such an union will this be, if,
by a bare majority in both Houses, this
bill shall become a law. And, I ask, sir,
whether it will redound to tho honor of this
House, if tliis bill should pass, that the peo
pie should owe their escape to the act of a
ny others rather thah to us !
• • • •_ v * W * 0
I had Bo moro to say, Mr Speaker, cobld
I have said it, on this subject. But I cab
outsit down without asking- those, who
were once my brethren of the church, the
riders in ’the youtigriamily of this good old
republic of tho thirteen states, ii they can
consent to rivet upon us This system, from
Which no benefitcaWpossibly result to them
selves. I put it to them as descendants of
the renowned colony of Virginia—as chil
dren sprung from her loins—if, for. the sake
of all the. benefits with which this bill is
.pretended to he freighted to them—grant
ing such to be the fact, for argument's sake
-*they cobld consent.to do such an act of ouau
violence to the unanimous opinion, feelings,
prejudices, if 4 %u will; of the whole < south
ern statcB, as to pass it ! 1 go farther. I
ask of them what is there in the condition
of the nation, at this time, that culls for the
immediate adoption of this measure? Arc
the Gauls at the gate of the Capitol! If
they are, tho cacklings of the Capitoline
geeso will hardly save it. W^at iq there
to induce us to pluhge into the vortex o f
thbse evils so severely.felt in Europe from
this very manufacturing and paper-policy !
For, it is evident that, it we go Into this sys-
tem of policy, we must adopt the Europe
an institutions also,
# • ' . • . ..1-
I bless God that taasaachusetls and din
Virginia are once again raiding under the
same banner, against oppressive and un
constitutional taxation—for, if all the blood
be drawn from out the body, I bare hot
whether it be by the British Parliament or
the American Congfess-T-by an Emperor
or a Kjng abfoadA>r by a Prcoident at liome.
Under these views, and With feelings of
mortification and shame at the very weak
opposition I have been able to make to this
bill, I entreat gentlemen to consent that it
may lie-over; at least,until the next session
of Congress. We have othet* business fo
attention to, and our families and affairs
need our attention at home—and indeed I,
sir,would not give.ope farthing lor any inSn
who prefer^ being here to being at. home—
who is a good public man and a ba^-private
one. With these views and feelings, I
move you, sir, that tbe bill be indefinitely
postponed.
I
th'e wrow&, confusion ftnt1>bu8tllfe<iit u
tuck , d -y description and we ,10,1 Jjj*
t,u ;y have ever bCCn excetlcd L ,'
.mat busy scones of the kind, which V *
occurred even in our iaigesV comS*!' 1
cities—Am. Dem, 6 co '»merci a |
^ Hartford, C.ConJ A/ ay , r
Yesterday morning two -ladiCs w e L
ing a walk in the South buryfoc ak 1
whenThey discovered *
piecq ol cldth which upon examinaVa"!'
found to be .the piece that was IhccJ '
Miss Jane Benton’s.lace, who ca me tn T"
death MKwBiAg and'Was burled 1
day& since... The ladies then went
grave and ,found that it had been db l 'l
—that ahe waacrawn out of her coffin
a rope around her neck. ThecircZ’.,!"'!
haa ptoduccd great excitcmeut in t/,1 TJ
lie mindjihd every one is'go Uni^r
discover ih^ perpetrator* of this u2 to [
brutafact;-'' 1
uiai act.—. / .. ^‘"si \
Thocilifitena tumedout in a hod,,-,
y and intered the coruse nemtn »» ,WVM *
4 -- intered the corpse again.’ 1 ■
P S It is said they have got i(iibn w .i.
tyack of the fellow*., 5 potMbi |
The City of Boston appears to be a good
.deal distracted in its politics. The two
parties.no loader move in solid eolutnns to
the polls, like welj-taught regular cohorts,
gpning to battle for empire.' The ranks are
broken,, and new lines separate the adverse
parties,.which are more or less changed at
every election.. At the late General Elec
tion, the Federal party were not able jto elect
more than half ,of their ticket of Represen
tatives, and, owing to scattering votes, qot
more than one or. two of .the other ticket
got in. .'A second election , was -held, i when
the Federalists elected their candidates for
the vacancies but by very small majorities.
verb says, God works good, and always by
degrees. ;T>e devi), on the otner haud, ts
bent On mischief,'and always in a hurry.
Hi capnrft stay—his object is mischief,
which can best be effected suddenly, and he
must be gone, to work elsewhere. But we
have the eomlort, under the pressure - el
this measure, that at least;no force is exer
cised upon us—We.are npt obliged .to buy
goods of foreign manufacture, It js true,
siy, that gentlemen have not said you shall
not send your tobacco or cotton abroad—
but they nave-8'afd the Same thing, in other
words—by preventing/tbe importation of
the returns which we. used to receive, and
without which, the sale or exchange of our
produce is impracticable, they say to u>,
y u shall sellohly to us, an we "will give
Thousands of p«H>fo attracted: to Fail
Mount by the magnificence of . our water
WoifiS, were on Sunday highly delighted at
the display of Messra-'lIawkiris 8c Pfontou’-
little model)of a steam boat, which like *
butter llyplayed ovei the silvery surfaceot
the Schuylkilj, Many oft he beifoldera hbd
seen it starting-about eleven o’ , clo.ck from
Kensington,pass tho city where Was a crowd
pf people and[ they were not a little sur-l
brisqd to see U-arrive'at about three o’clock
P. M. at the Sciiuilkiililam* a distance of
about twenty three miles, and a considera
ble part of it agajnst wind and Jide. On
Sunday, seeing the machine and the safety
it uffcrsjwe called to.mind the late explosion
of the steam'boat Eagle: hut on Monday,
r aWfol accident'cries aloud to
you what we pieofie—you shall buy only of
us, but at what m ice wo please to ask. But
no force is usedl You arc at full liberty not
to buy or to sell.
• • ' * *-*.%*
us to rtin from boilers and to patronise Mr
Hawkins’ happy invention which, -can be
so safely applied to 1 thb smallest as well as
the largest'steam boat; ’ '
Tbe machinery which bSs propelled a
commoa ferryboat, Withjthirteen passenger
in it, is only threejfeet long and two ibet
ft/ifif** 1 hn rvlonrton O/hABo trim >kU»a4s
Wide: the cylender where the piston works
:is only seven inches )iigh arid the generator
ony two inches aqd a half op the largest
part inside,—Phil, f)emo% Pretb,
Canal /—There were, on Saturday after-
noon, about one hundred Hags flying at our
ddcj* pver bout* which h<)d decrihdeii the
met ws *. w
The schooner B , Captain I
has arrived at ,\ew Huven from flSj
witbacagri)oUachusees Noreflectiq,,J
hope on the C llpge in the vicinity. ^
J^at, Aiv.
AteXs «ra.
POUT ,OF SAVANNAH.
v -. ' axaitu, / - 1
A g Suiter 0 '"* Ver “‘ rd * ^"^^CottonJ
iritiSw? r Ctmeii ‘ , ‘° r w vh 8> & 1
P*88a$i f(U' J\ w Twit,
[FIRST LINE OP PA KAT8.)
G A R O N N E.
JjdwSS s, ri»hen^ comnundtr, .
Will tail On Sunday nun kliinSJ
only, having elegant sccummoJu
n board, or tq
‘ions, apply on I
E. WILLIAMS, or
0; C Gltrswoij), ,
The elegant and (■.« sriljfe-4
, CLlFFpRL) WAYV
Isaac Whit, eoramaide ,
Will succeed the.Gsronue, awldl
13tti Inst' 1
junrft 1 t129
Paiwge for New Fork,
4 - [liSTAEUBHEB LINE,]
LOUISA.CTSa?
• D, WUori, mutes
Wilt nail on TIiOrmLy 3d mat. F«
g superior accominrnlfttiuns,aj.ply i J
on board ut Jones’ upper wharf, or to B
, HALLtfiiorr.
junrri <29
For Philadelpf id.
*\ - ' .to r Vi Brig
June-1
„ » v-'Tfrt Bri ?
F R . A N C K S,
_ Gi-ii. UuntuR, mailer,
will positively sail on VtW’.y muraj |
• freight dr passage apply to
NICHOLAS UStH.
A129
For Providence.
. s-SVffSo^
l A,
Cilpt Jennings,
UP tell on d»uira*y »«,*< Cal
dottpn on deck.- Has esteiniw»|
cuinoiodotions for passengem, and the lerm.-rjl
be low—upoly on huaM ut Taylnr’a wharl, or t« 1
S U PAItK.UAN,"
Who 'offer» fo r sals,
ISO Barrel# qupt rfiw i'lour' s
40 Barreli No 3 Mae Jure I
10 Htigsheada MdidoVailqSuMr'
2 Pipe# Oogr.ac Hrandy,9eignel(i Bnmj
60 Keg) Cut Nails, iibtOned I
tegs Cut Nails, ia.Sh
.. do first quality Tobacco
100 Bundles MV/
junel . ' ul29
Attachment Salt .
W ILL be sold on- Thuradvy the 3d iwt. «< 1
Court Houae, between the bos»ofl < " l ' | d
4 o'clock, « ' -V .. . ,
The Sloop Albert, as ahe layi.it utism I
whark near the Fort, Uhder an attachment,inf*"
vor or George 8. Hteelton, again* Wm. 1» Hy»n.
1. DU.YON,.»««• 1
. Jtiael. - 189' ■
MdFEttS % MMILTOX'l
H Areceived by the ifop Savannah,:
aasortoieni of
FASUIWAlfLJR SUMAtM
Direct from their Yah*-: luyaa i» New V -
listing of.many new not to be obtained#I
Srty otlibf Store in Uil« city: 4 1
eragiiHu vigonm, ivUBSiiieu,
. . mere, BomBizetv. Batteen,
PANTALOONS—Of Denmark" Satin, Kng
Silk Drilling, blkuitriped Silk, blk N«w
Crape, blue and blk silk,Camlet, whits**
colored plain and striped Drilling, r ‘ bb .
Yigonia Casaimere, blk Cireasaiaot o
nett, strip'd cotton Florintinc, cottonCi
mere; Sattecn, Hombuaette, Nankeen, a
8(c' ^'
YE8Ta—0f blk figur’d & strip’d English,Iff**
and India Silk; of a great variety V ...
terns, white Margeilfes, strip’d
uiliita ailk Walpnlis. CCl u W
KullPi WHitv MHlfiviliCB) miiy , ui .
do., white silk stHp’d' Yalentit, rid ®
apttoel
Hound Jackets, Puck T»o»sew,linen and e0 '
Shirts, Stockings, DmWera, • l °v e '» ^
penders^yCrtvat Stiffiev**: black Bt*s»*
Cloth Pr^k^OATsf"»”ea^O
LOONS and VESTS, of all quolitiea. .Tbs«ff|
comprising Sn assortment, rifely tri be
ami will be sold wholesale of vetail a) BpWfs
responding whh the time#. Comer tfWJU'
and 8t. Julian Btree:s, oppoaitelfriungs'fluild P
may. 28
ant
„ t Brand.
BUSHELS riyueat 'Wwlj9
with 8bort# an eweflent ^^
t«u. ' '
—•I
nun
by
\tnuy 28 *. '
' - —
NOTICE. . B i
J. LL ddniahda'against the f
William Atkerwn deceased, rnu(.ti>e«n« f| ;
ed iii dqly authenticated, within the tiin P vj |j
>t d by law, and thoae indebted to awl e«t
nake lo isA
AdtnnWM! W
msy F) y
Ad«nni»84 1