The Georgian. (Savannah, Ga.) 1818-1824, February 05, 1820, Image 2

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/ TUB _ GEORGIAN. ri-HLiHiiri) rt joint m. ifjinxKr. Vovclgn. VI411.* P* PHI) I.UillT IIULLVHH —MM >mt PAPKH, MVP. lltlLLAlIH PP.II AVN.PAMIII.K M OlVAlU’K. dj- III urm anil new (ulvniitemrnit appear in ' 'hath balm*—nil’l ttoflt fill Order Ollhi, ru W Yvt»\t?niYt‘ Vvtrtis CwrvtMrt Savannah, Veh, 5, 1820. Bacon, per lb (ururce) Bi*«T, No. 1, per bl do Biiitcp) per lb Rc.* , m \\ a\, do IIrandy, Cog.4tli proof, per fljiviidy pencil, (none) Castings, pe r lb 0ollVe, per lb Colton, Heu-ifland, per lb do upland, do Corn,-per bushel, Doer Slum, per lb. Flour, Northern, per bl Do Augusta, none Cin Holland, per gal do Ann ncun, do Hav, Northern per 100 lb. , Iron, Dur, per cwt Lead, peril* Lard, per lb l.emitcr, Hole, per lb. Molnsaen, per gallon, NiiiIn,. wruilglit, per lb do cut* do Oil, Florence, 1st cjual. pc do linseed, pel* gallon, do sperm, do do fish do 0ot», per bushel, Powder, (D.iomtt) per kc Pepper, per lb Pimento, do Pork, per bl (prime) DM' > MjSh do Bine, j« r hundred lb Run, New-England <1< Salt, Turk’s Island, per bu Do Liverpool ground, l)o do blown, Salmon, Vo, 1, per bl Shear Moulds, per lb Slut, do Soap, do Stect, blister’d, pet luindri Steel, German, d< Sugar, brown, per hundre l)o white Havana, do Do loaf do Tea, hyson, per lb Tobacco manufactured, p Do leaf, do *1 allow, do Vine, Madeira, per gallon, 2 75 Do TtneriUe^do 1 d() Whiskey, ptfr gallon, 0 42 LUMBER. JlniWdl, pp 1^ ^0 Do northern mcr. H> 00 Do clear ^4 00 Do scant iinjr 00 Timber, ranging, 5 00 Shingles, Cypress, 4 00 Staves, w o 1^ 00 Do MO 1- 00 i/.rrns of exchmve. On Rngliuid, par. Dm Fimdci*, no riles. On Miami, no sales. On I* 1 wide nee, 60 days, $ pr ct dis. On lloMan, 60data, par On New-Vork, 6o dn\s, 1 per cent tliS On Flid.id' lplua, 60 days, ldo do. Dm Daltimflre, Cm) days, 1 do: do. On Charleston, sighh 1 per cent advance. STOCK. i. S. Hank, last sales, g93 State do. of (ietirgia, par Planter’s Hank, par Darien Bank,par Marine !k Fire Ins. Co. (no sales.) Steam Boa*, (no sales.) Pole Boat--(no sides) Ogechee Navigation, (no Rftleft.) Vt/oo 85 eeipH. Spanish Dollars 2 per cent premium A ueriean toil I, 2 percent premium Doubloons $ !>> SUMMARY, FROM LONDON PAFKR8, [ ll'f the Hercules,'] Received at the Office nf the N. Y. Commercial Advertiser. MahchMtf.b, Nov. ». Wrty, lo prevent the people from be-^ratioo-hut 'then lhe 'lovounnr element Thuush 'he morning was very rainy the (o , as perfect as that «f any nf the ami an expectation of Mr. Cnbbatt a arrival if. ttlr ' He t ,4, I | 1U ve just mentioned; Ayr shudder this town attracted great number, of par- b (| „ flJ „ emb jL e ,, tha t they cause f..,un <11It..rniit util- u Hip ronnti-v. ' ... ° f) < % cm 0 16 (1 0 18 15 Ob u 15 50 0 25 a 0 30 0 25 a 0 28 gul. 1 37| a 1 50 60 a 0 65 0 03* a 0 04 0 2.5 a 0 28 0 58 u 0 40 0 15 16 0 HO (i 0 65 0 10 6 i>Q u 7 00 1 os 0 48 a 0 50 1 00 a 1 10 4 50 u 5 UO 0 08 a 0 09 0 16 a 0 18 U 25 a 0 28 0 42 a 0 45 0 12 a 0 14 0 08 a 0 09 r dor. 4 75 a 5 00 1 50 a 1 75 1 20 a 1 25 0 60 u 0 75 0 60 a U 65 cr, 6 50 a 7 00 0 20 a 0 22 0 18 a 0 20 1.5 00 a 16 00 10 00 n 20 00 3 00 a 8 25 , 1 05 a 1 10 o 0 80 a 0 85 > 0 52 a 0 5 itijiul, 0 60 a 0 65 do 0 ”5 a 0 805 do 0 60 a 0 65 18 00 0 6 a 0 06$ 0 10 a 0 1»4 0 10 a 0 12 eillb n uO a 13 00 i 16 00 a 17 00 ill lb 10 00 a 13 00 14 00 a 15 00 21 00 23. 00 1 00 i 1 10 crib 0 15 ( 0 25 0 06 u 0 06 0 th < 0 20 3 00 1 40 0 4.5 a 7 00 a .5 00 a 20 00 An English ex-milifary officer was ar rested at Paris on the 23d Nov. for using I seditious expressions, j 'Hie Princess of Wales arrived at Mar seilles on the Kith Nov. j Large bets were offerer! in Paris, the last of November, that the new Ministry would not continue in office more than six weeks. Twenty men per company are to lie added to the regiments in England. The invalidsnre to do garrison duty. The Directors of the Hank of England have given orders tohav^ bars of gold in readiness for bullion payments on the 1st of February next. On the 16th Nov. the fever at Cadiz, had so far subsided, that a 7V Drum and general thanksgiving was to tuke place the next day. The Persian Ambassador has been on a tour through Ireland and Scotland. A letter from Madrid, dated the 8th of November, says—“ The Ileal Giro (a branch of the'rnval treasury) pays most regularly all the bills drawn by the. embas sies abroad, but on no nrrnuut such as are drawn within the kingdom. Eight mil lions of real VelOui, accepted by order ol government for provisions supplied bv men hunts in the provinces for the expe ditionary army, have been protested.— Nobody will take these bills even at 40 per rent discount.” The grou, <1 for erecting barracks, to hold 600 men, has been laid out near Manchester. The Greek house of Georges Caltachi, at Leghorn, stopped payment on the I3tli Oct. for 800,0',0 piastre's An article from Vienna of Oct. 28, says,’ n cabinet courier bus arrived from War saw.—It is said that this courier brings the iiffelligence that the Emperor of litis*- in accedes to all the resolutions adopted at Carlsbad, but that he postpones to ano ther opportunity several territorial ar rangements relative to Poland, and vari ous secondary States of GeVmanv. In the Douse of Commons on the flDth of November, Mr, Grenfell askdd, whether any. and what provision, had been made by government for the payment of the five millions, that had been advanced by the hank nf England, ami which was fcooii to he paid. The Chancellor of the Exchequer, it: reply, said the House might recollect his having slated last session, that arrange ments were to he made for the repayment of this sum; but as the bank had on ano ther occasion declined to accommodate the government it was not to he expected that the money cmihl he speedily paid,— He was happv, ImVvpver, nmv to state, that a considerable sum Imd been paid to the bank, and that arrangements, with.which the directors we e perfectly satisfied,’had been made for paying the remainder.— There was no reason to suppose that any encroachment-would be made on the plan adopted by Parliament for the resumption of cash payment!! by the bank. Six thousand of tneout-pensioners have not appeared to nrol themselves; in con sequence of which they will lose their pen sions. Accounts 1Ymn Brussels, of Nov. 2 sons from different parts of the country. The local anthoritios were on the alert, nod military arrangements were made, i I were at this moment living “ suppose r ;, .. f : at an inn in Manchester. It is pretty which were as form.dable as those of the i, , b eliove, that an assemblage of Ifilh nl August. Several piecesoleannpn woul( , t , k „ nlac , time that Ihlb n August. never. p,e. e*..am,., would lake p | ace at a ny time that weie brought into he town lust night, R fh f „ wa!k , he Bpot 'where the bn. the Yeomanry ( aval. V. had received K |f , f , , ( ' Hh August Dissolution. T 1F. Popartncrshlp formerly existing under the firm of Michauds & HavrowuN, was dis- ... , . . p P solvedhv vlte itesih of the la*-r. ftmse who (••mplnve.l, beame a -variety ill futures no orders, nor did they make their ap pen ranee to-day. Hussars were stationed J on different parts of the Liverpool road,! in order to give immediate information of Mr. C’s movements. As Mr. Cobbctt did not make his ap- pearanceat the time, the people gradual ly returned to their homes. At about five o’clock a party of his friends, to the. a- mount of one hundred and twenty, sal down to an excellent dinner at the Uni on Rooms; all or which, .Mr. Scott, the chairman, explained the cause of Mr. Cobbett’s absence, which may be learned from the following letter from the Bo- roughroeves and Constables of Manches ter and Salford to Mr. Cobbett, at Irlam. JIa mill ester, JY'o f. 28, lb 19. Sir—Having reason to believe that your introduction into the town of Man chester, on Monday, the 29th inst. is in tended to be public, and to be accompa nied by an usual procession and multitude of people, as well strangers ns inhabitants, we, *he utvlersigned, being Borottghrecve.s and Ooivstables of the toUm of Munches* ter and Salford, beg to inform you that we considdV such an assemblage of the great mass of the population nf this dis t rut, in the present situation of the coun try, as necessarily attended with console ruble danger to the public peace:—-we do therefore caution you against making any public entry into the town of Manchester; and if you persist in go doing, or if y adopt any other proceedings, whereby the public peace may be broken or endanger ed, we shall feel it our imlispensible duty immediately to interfere. We are sir, your obedient servants, (sighed bv the Boroughreeves and Consta bles of Mattel e-lrr and Sallbrd. Cobbett, immediately after writing his reply, left Irlam, for London, in a post- rhaiso, accompanied by his two sons. Manchester, Nov. 30;—The female Re formers of Manchester were yesterday, much disappointed in the non-arrival of }\v. Cobbett, fur whom they had provi d'd a most elegant silver inkstand, with appropriate inscriptions, His reply to the Boroughreeves 8c Con stables was as follows:— “ Irlam, November 29. ** Gentlemen—If it bad come, from any other persons in this world, the notifica tion which I have just received from you would have surprised me. Coming from you, it excites no surprise, nor any sort of feeling towards you which was not be fore entertained by overy just man, in eve rv part of tlie world where your deeds and character had been heard of. “ But, Gentlemen, it is really come to this, Jpiat. a man, upon returning to his country,-jor upon moving from one part of England' to nnmlier, is to be stopped, on in- wav by threats of in! rferntcr (on the part of officers nppoioled to keep the peace,) lest the concourse of people, which draw together, iovoh’intarv aod sympathetic rah thro’ the crowd. M e hop# that this awfO. dispensation of justice mav he attendsil with such salutary effects as to forever preclude the necessity of its repetition.—Jmxusta Chrov. 1st Feb. were exhibited. What then, would you expel me your own town, or compel me to keep myself shut up in a room? And if the people presumed to come to shew me marks of their respect, would you vi sit them with your dreadful interferenceJ Gentlemen, we shall live to seethe day, and that day is, 1 believe not distant., when I shall be able to visit the excellent people of Manchester and its neighbor hood, without your during to step in be tween us with your inte.rlWence. Let me call on you to think a little on ♦he figure you now make in the world Here am 1, ten miles from Manchester; there are. tiie people whom you call an un usual multitude, ready to receive* tne, and to bestow on me all possible marks of re spect; and there are you, sending me threats of interference, and preparing all sorts ol means for making that interfe rence effectual, in order to intercept verbal expression of popular approbation, intended to be bestowed upon a man, des titute of every species of means of ob taining that approbation, other than the means naturally arising from his integrity and his talents, his well known lo^e for his country, and his well known y-eal in her cause, during the whole course of his life, under all circumstances, whether a broad or at home, whether in prosperity or adversity. “Thus the party stands before the world, I disdain to tell you what my intentions :ue; whether I intend to enter Manches ter 1 or not- I have made this comment upon your communication, in order that the nature of your conduct may be the better understood; and even in doing this l have condescended to bestow on you tbo great an honor. “ With feelings such as a real friend of the people, a real lover of his country and faithful subject of the King, must ever entertain towards men like you; “lam, WILLIAM COBBETT.” New South Wales.—The progress of the settlements in New South Wales has been so great, that the inhabitants' are enabled t» make exportations of surplus produce. The population of the territory is 25,0.50 souls, being an increase* in one year, of nearly 5000 inhabitants. Arvos of wheat in cultivation 20,100 l)i» to of ground ready for maize 8,400 Ditto of Burley, oats, pease, and beans, in cultivation 1,990 Ditto of potatoes 7o J Ditto of gardens and orchards . Ditto of cleared ground 40,609 '1'otal quantity of acres held by indivi- ais * ' 290,000 LIVE STOCK. Total number of horned cattle in.thc territory 5.5,450 Ditto of sheep . 201,240 Ditto of swine 22,630 Ditto of horses 3,6p0 As a criterion of’he luxuries enjoyed bv the. inhabitants, in fruit, one garden, from x tensive IN SENATE. Tuesday, Jamiarif 25. On motion of Mr. Macon, it. was Resolved, That the committee of ance he instructed to prepare ind report a bill to remit tbe duties which may be payable on a stnjue of Gen. Washington, to be imported from Europe, executed by the Marquis Cnnova, for the state ol Norm Carolina. Mr. Trim Ms ertmmunirated to the Sen ate certain resolutions of the Legislature cil dhio, in favor m( the encouragement nf domestic manufactures, of appropriations for roads and canids. Some other subjects were partially act ed on and postponed; and the remainder have been already noticed. U'ednenaafl- Jamiarii 2fi. Several repdrts mere made on private claims, which were read, hut not decided, and a number of petitions were received and referred. The resolutions nf Mr. Dickerson for atoendinsr the constitution were turther postponed to to-morrow; and * The Senate then resumed the consider ation of the, Missouri Question. Mr. Smith of S. addressed the Sett- te, at. considerable length, in opposition to the Kestriction, soil in reply to its ad vocates; when he had concluded, The Senate adjourned. his mere nredUnbe may draw . Should produce danger of a breach of the belonging to a gentlemen a lew miles fri public pence? Is it come to this? Is this contn.ns the following exlens the state of England? Is this (Tie Invi Is | W«et», ami which are generally disper- HtHti 1 , tluti a fire broke our on tb.it «lnv, in,I thU one of tlm effects of that svstem, J sei ‘ over the whole ol New .South 'vales, the apartment of Madame Montluihiii,I wihch we nre told is sn excellent, tliftt i vlz * omuititts. citrons, lemons, pomegran- wliicli consumed all her elfegts. She had j it requires no Reform? The laws of Eng- i aU ' 9 ’ l "‘! un ™ 1 ' g','»vas, the olive, grapes ol *»c»rcelv time to save herself and child; the ' land secure to us the right ofloco-n otion, I evel 7 S P PC1CS * ‘pme-apulrs, pouches, nee- • " ' that is to »»v, the right 'of moving our boahJwitie*. apricots, apples pears plums, dies from ode place to another. Now, English, faneand ( Inna .mulberries; your notification be any thing more than walnuts, Spanish chrtmits, almonds, n.ed- k mere empty putting forth of words, it l 1 "?’ raspberries, strawberries, m-lous, presumes llia't vou have a right to prevent and the caper, with others ol mi- • t . 1 ...... V'.Vi.iv* nil.I onon . e 4 1w% .ik,i.wl„ t.AA ..A Rnti-cbnmbiTlu’iui; in a blaze at tire time she passed through it. A public meeting vOns held at Hudders field, in Yorkshire on the. Hih of Nov. to consider tin* besk means of prombli ig a Radical Reform.” Forty-four H;i have unsettled accounts nguiosl said firm artj vo- Duestcdti* hand them in for settlesnenl, and loose indebted lo nubjee immediate payment to A. RICHARDS, M ho will continue the busiucss in his own name. nov 21—48 Jitltn 1. GrioVe (S’ Co. ^ \r0U 1.1) intorm their .Friends and the I’tib^ H lie, that they have now removed to the lower lloor of the brick beildingin Jidinstim’a sun are, rented by Mtssrs. Amu.kw L“\v f jl Ch. where they now have, and intend keeping « general assortment of DUY GOODS. J.u ‘29 ni« Prime Seed Rice, For Sale at ^1 25 cents, per bushel, I F taken before the 1st March, to he had on application to Mr. A. MM .khan, at his Plan tation on Sauumah river, or to John M’Nish. Jan 29—491. Just Received, dud fur sale loir by the subscribers, 2 cases 4-4 Irish Linen, in whole U hJf pieces 1 do .54 do Shotting 2 do ('auto?) ('rape* I trunk Silk Hosiery, well assorted I bait 6-4 Cloths—Cassiim res, all fashionable colors J. & AV. Turner & Co. Feb ■'! is emblems and inscriptions; amtmg which were the followiug:— Black clnlltiflagrt with n figure of a rrovvn •—motto, iu large characters, “Liberty or death!” a\ figure of Justice; “No corn laws; death or liberty: arm yourselves against tvrants.” Weir devouring a lamb:— “Gountrymen be firm:” Grown & laurel: —“liberty and justice.” Flag in four compartments, with figures in each; and in one— ‘May never a cock in England crow, Nor never a pipe in Scotland blow, Nor never a harp Dt mMnml play, ’Till Liberty regains the day A black fiag with white burden ;.i|u*‘draws nigh; it’s just at hand, \t >,?»' nitnmt shall with courage stand; Each uearl united shall he, We’ll have our rights, we will he free: And should the ty ran s y ct oppose, With hellish wit our noble caufe*.*, We’ll never swerve, hut steddasl he, H'c’ll die or have our liberty.” me from eiijuving this liheriy of loco-mo- Vllll '6> “ l " 1 8,lr y 18 (ion, For von te’.l me vou shall interfere, ] peaches, that the swine if l persist in mv intention of making a [ “f 1 * ' Vlt l ' puWie.entry into your town; and alas! we| he currant and gooseberry arepariicuiur- kiimv too well ivliat von mean by inter-1IX * , " e ‘ . . , ... fere nee! \ml what do vou meaii, 1 say, , At an " ,li,, examination of the public 'by public eiitn ? H«.w am I lo make, any I f cl 1 ,on1 '! at P'*';amatta a black native girl. ,liber than a public entry, if I enter it a t | beiongtngto the Orphan School foitnded all? Like other persons,, mv intention | b J h-jug, boro away the second prize; Tlic Suhacriher must have been to enter your town in r carriage, or on horseback, or on foot. Are not these the ways in which all other persons enter? .And have not l a right to enter as other persons do?—Either therefore, you must mean to forbid me to ttuter at ali. or you mean that i shall inova like the women of the Seffglio of the Dev of Algiers, shut up in a box, large air boles in it.—or ride upon a horse, my bo dy and bead being covered over with a species of tub. This is the state, is it, )o which the svstmn lias brought once free and happy England!” . “ To wluit a pitch must men have arri ved, when they cmild set down and look one another in the face, while they wrote Mr. Cobbett bus given a public recep- ami signed a paper, such as that you sent ti»H, in Clayton square, Liverpool, to the j mo! This paper was addressed to a man Deputies horn Manchester and its neigh- having no power and no inclination to dis- horltood, wlm had been appointed to wait-turb the public peace; a man who, with on him with an address of congratulation, (a knowledge of the recent events duly “A crowd ol about 5,000 peisuns collected ; impressed upon bis mind, had taken the to witness the ceremony. Alter thu ad-’ precaution to beseech the people not to dress was read, Mr. ( obbett replied to it mix up a reception of h*nn with even an in a speech ol about ball an hour in length. I allusion to those events. It appeal’s man- I be tone of it w s mild and conciliating. ■ ilest that the public peace could not have He earnestly recommended a peaceable been endangered from mv entra SI- per bushel. Feb 4—'X Tar, and Navy Bread. 140 bids 'i ur, and 100 d" Navy Bread, Jwtl r»*ce»5*ed, rend for*tale bt/ A. M. TAYLOR, and j. SCOTT. J.tt, 2SL—e thus proving the aborigines are suscepti ble of sufficient mental improvement to adapt them to the purposes of civilized association. A newspaper printed at Sidney an nounces, that a new literaly periodical work wuS immediately t.o be published under the title: The Australasian Maga zine and Quarterly Register ofAgricul tural and Commercial Information, the Fine Arts, ike. j5.refTiHow.--Gn Friday last two negro men. named Ephraim and Sam, were ex ecuted io conformity to their sentence, for the murder of their mester Mr. Thomas Hancock, of Edgefield District, S. C.—Sam was burnt and Ephraim-hung, and itis head severed from his body and publicly expos ed. The circumstances attending the crime fur which those miserable beings have suf fered, were of a nature so'aggravated, as imperiously demanded the terrible punish ment whit!) has been inflicted upon them. The burning of malefactors is a punish ment on! resorted to, when absolute ne cessity demands a .signal example. It must be a horrid appalling sight to see a human being consigned to the Haines.— Let even Fancy picture the scene—the pile—the stake—the victim—and the mind sickens, and sinks under theoppre HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Wednesday, Jan. 2(i. The House then again went into com mittee of the whole, Mr. Baldwin iu the chair, on the MISSOURI BILL. The proposition under consideration wan an a mend men buffered yesterday, to the 2d section of the bill, by Mr. Storm, substan tially to'alter the limits of the proposed state, so as to make the Missouri river the northern boundary thereof; [with the view of drawing a line on which those in Javor of and those opposed to the slave restric tion, might compromise their views—his reasons therefore, as well as those of oth ers, for and against the proposition, will be given hereafter.] Mr. St or vs rose and withdrew the amendment which he had offered yester day, and in lieu thereof submitted the fol lowing: Jhtd provided further, and it is hereby enacted, That forever hereafter, neither slavery nor involuntary servitude (except in the punishment of crimes, whereof the party snAll have been duly convicted,) shall exist in the territory of the Fnited States lying north of the 38th degree nf north latitude, and west of the river Mis sissippi, and the boundaries of the state of Missouri, as established by this act Pro vided, that, any person escaping into the said territory, from whom labor or service is-lawfully claimed in any of the states, such fugitive may be lawfully reclaimed and conveyed according to the laws ofthe United States in siich case provided,, to the person claiming his or her labor or service as aforesaid. On this motion a Debate ensued, of & desultory character. M •*bhis. Randolph, Lowndes, Mercer, Brush, Smith of Maryland, Sfoiyr and Clay, successively followed each lather in Debate. The question being taken on the motion of Mr. Storrs, was decided in the nega tive. The reading of the bill proceeded as far as the fourth suction; when Mr- Taylor, of New-York, proposed to- amend the bill 1 by incorporating in that section the following provisions: Section 4, line 25, insert tin* following after the word “states:” “And shall or dain and establish, that there shall be nei ther slavery nor involuntary servitude in the said state, otherwise than in the pun ishment of crimes, whereof the nprty shall have been duly convicted:/Vot*id$!ir/ always that any person escaping into the same, from whom labor or service is lawfully claimed in tiny other state such fugitive may he lawfully reclaimed, and conveyed to the person claiming his or her labor or service as aforesaid; ,>iml provided, always, That the said provision shall hot be^-con strued to alter tin* conditiou*or civil rights ol an\ person now held to service or la bour in the said territory. The main question of the restriction on slavery in the future State of Missouri, being thus fully before the Mouse, aod the usual hour of adjournment having arrived, The committee rose, reported progress and obtained learn to sit again; and The House adjourned, The debate on this main question will he commenced to-morrow bv observations from Mr. Taylor, in support of his propo sition. From (he Ronton Patriot of the 20th vlt. EXTRACT OF a LETTER. Washington City, Jan. 15, 1820. “I have been here a few days, and found every thing in quite a tranquil Mute, and ance into , „„ t ■ i"i<! imtiant tleportmmit'mi tlie part of the I Manchester But, to see suck multitudes EKTnMCB! reUcdon aew'hmCrt oL Sr ^ *l". l,u ’«» »*>« V * B»* I of j.euj.le assembled together to show dicnl Helm m m I ai liament, and declared, | their respect for me. appears to have been Joseph Stiles, ^ av j , t'tt Wittehed the conduct of the >more than you could endure. tVe read . ’ Rulers of all States, Aiitl s^tilieil_ the form, accounts ot the Prince of Snxe Cotouig, sum of its own feelings—what then’ must | a ll nurly feelintt anourentlv ailaved But. nf their governments—it teas'.is dreidtd the Marquis of Anglcsea, ihc Duke of be the dread reality!—From some of the all at once the'Massacliusetts skiriiiis'eri conviction, that that ul England, consist- j Wellington, and other great personages, spectators we learn, that it was a scene! threw a quick match into the political ma-f ing ot king, tuns'*mt commons, with moving here sml tliorc amidst .the public I which transfixed in breathless Imrrur al-' gazine wliicli had caused a terrible exulo-i people fairly represented, w,is th, best 1 plaudits. lnfio>e r tins, at any rate, are I most every one who witnessed it. AsUiBn. r n a word, before this readies voul which could possibly be devised, and mii taken to make Us believe that this is the j h e flames appipa. lied him, the piercing^ vou wilt have seen that Mr (Jtis li! other would he advocate, or wish to see>> ise. What rigHt, therefore, have you to ; a irieks of the unto; innate victim struck ! thought proper to come out with i s-t o make any attempt, either directly or indi- j upon the heart with a fearful, painful vi-1 numbers iu defense of die Hartford Con established.”