Newspaper Page Text
» v ,\H uV* itaov^iu,.
AN act to rho’ish I* oitentiary -
n-11 .■ ,• : , mis Stale, except in entail)
rv . oi ’i •«<* i't* mi'll ■"f punishment
i., r '.■,i( inisdetno mors, anil for
nt!vi purp - *.
fti if I'nnc'eii '“/ l'ir Sw.d-: and House "J
KepresenfaHv •« 1 J the. Sir eof (leornin 11
(Sf,V'ra! ihsmb’tf inti, nml it it hereby < «•
n ■/.'■! hi/ the cuihorify of Hie name, Phy
|c in' v I !t •* r !'><■ p.uiitgc of lids ac ,it
nit be lawful to confine or imprison
il iv person or porno is _wi.. ii i the lisnl’en
r , f of (I.h '' nic, f’»r a ■ y cii>:»e or inisile
• ,ij mo or whi li '.e or hey may hereaber com
inii tli' 1 laws <>• tin. Stole.
V.". jju :be if farther enacted, Phat
.l ',j ( >n my pi<>n 01 persons, snail hrrealter
mil.it ;t".v off mi c .gainst th ; laws of tins
Sm ■ w!ii :*i uiw is punished by conli ie
i.i it or im,nisjumetil in the Penitentiary.
11 ii pers in or'pcrsous so oft Hiding, and be -
in; thereof ilnly convicted, shall be punish
rd in the maimer preimnhed lor the punish
inrn! nl <n 1 offences oy the.laws in force
in rim Stale, on the eighteenth day of De
cember, n ">« year of oar Lard eighteen
hundred and ai'tet n.
Sec. 3. Sind he H further enacted, That
in all cases where any person or persons
shall hereafter commit any 1 hence, which
woul 1 by the laws now ol force in this
Suite, subject him or them (•> confinement
in the Penitentiary, and which said offences
were created by s'atute since the add eigh-.
tgenth day of December, in the year eigh
th n hundred and sixteen, such person or
pm son a so iffunding and being thereof duly
convicted, shall, be punished by whipping
on the bare hack not exceeding nine and
thirty lashes, and fine «t the discretion id
the court.
Src. 4. And he ii further enacted, I ha
in all cises wheie any offence may hereto
fore have been committed against the laws
of this State, which would on conviction
subject the offender to confinement in the
Penitentiary, such parson or prisons having
already so (Vended, hut not yet tried and
sentenced, shall on conviction therefor b*
imprisoned in the Penitentiary in ob'dience
to the law now in force.
Bee. 5. And he it further enacted, Iha
if any offence shall here liter ho committed
for which die off ndnr would upon convic
tion lie impiisoncd in the Penitentiary of
this 8 1 ale, and for which no pu lishuient is
presc bed hy this act, the same shaM here
af'er b punished hv fine or whipping or im
prisonment, at the discretion of the court.
Sec. G Sind heii further enacted, Thai
the operation >d this act shut! not repeal
all or ,mv of the enactments of (be las;
L"gislii'uiT, respecting the (iroier; ion of the
G* id region in die Cliei'kee c.-unity as
well os the punishineu* idop u iUrv against
(he same, hut oil sucli offerees shall he
punished io the Penitentiary as il the said
uct had never pass d,and after the occupy
tion of siid Cherokee lands, this section
ahili cease and have no eff’et.
ASBURY HULL,
Speaker ts ihe Mouse ofll priv '«"vea.
THOMAS STOCKS,
President of the Senate.
Assented to. Dec. 24 1831.
WILSON LUMPKIN, Governor.
- •
At a late silting of the Supreme Court
in Boston, the follow'd.g case, which is ol
some importance to the mercantile com
munity, was decided. It was thus repor
ted in the Courier :
Hustings et. id. v < Pepper. —This was an
action upon a bill of lading signed by the
defendant, m »ter of (ho brig Mexican, bv
which he acknowledged to h ive received at
Philadelphia for account and risk of (tie
plaintiffs, a box, containing a quantify ~f
the oil of clover, put up in a glass b tile and
packed with straw into said box, and the
box «.« marked in addition to the initials
of the plaintiff's firm, “ Glass, with car-,
this side up,” Said b>x was proved to
have i>»en deliver.d ti* the defendant at the
wharf in Philadelphia in good order. * On
theaniv.il of said vessel at P iston the battle
was found to he broken end its contents 1
had run out upon the teas whereon it was
Stowed in the hold of said vessel, and .he
milked side of said box was not upward"
but upon the side, so that the bottle instead
of standing upon its bottom lay upon its aide.
The Court decided that as the carriage is a
matter of contract and as (he owner Ims a|
right to judge for himself what position is
bast adapted to carrying goods of this de
scription with safety, and to direct how they'
shall be car ied, arid the carrier lias a right;
ta fix I'’s' own rate .Mr 'he carriage, or refuse j
altogether to take goods with “ueh direct! »n,j
<i the carrier accepts the gi.uls for carnage]
Hus marked he is bound to carry the goods!
on the manner and posi'ion required by the
notice upon <he b ; the. storage of the buxj
contrary to directions is i-uch negligence in)
the carrier that he is- bmnd (o pay the loss. 1
’in! -ss he "S', pr-ve Mtv.riy that toe loss was!
iac \iu’d in whole or in part, by such
Jisregud et the directi jus.
from /Ahern.— V, e Ling Liberia left Li |
betid on the 14th November. Tin- Colon' !
was healthy, ano in a prosperous co’idition j
The brig Cri wion, win h sailed frem Nor
folk on file id kugu.q w.tfi 9 i: ; pli >s for tin
Colony, and 46 em g a- is, had arrived, ami
•W4B discharging lor cargo, No’hiog intpor
tao f had occurred miicc dir date of our pre
vious advice". 1
1 1 he the following rxtract trom ae
j ply id J. F. Coontn, to snfiio of the mis
representation of Basil Hall; it will br
read with interest :
1 ; "As (o the declaration of war, w’.al
jwcie thf (.ids? We complained of depre
-1 )da(iotrs on out commerce, and «i (lie im
,1 presfunent of our seamen. On these points
I vc tn*a I'ia'ed twenty yen t without eltj-r t.
1 Y"itr ord,ns in council neto continued, ami
' Knglanil s'i 1 took our sear n. m iking any
‘lieu cm i it i.i In r own serv ce a judge of the
! fiHtioii il chaiacter of the man. 1 will tell
you an anecdote. About live and Iwen’y
years Hirne, I lira! visited Kngland. — We
unde thi* channel in a suow-s'orm, and ran
into St. Helens' roads and nnohi •• ed in thick
weilh 'i. ' hen it cleared up we found
1 • nurse'. V'.-j lying in shore or an Kngiish licet.
r I remembered Hie character of our crew
5 perfectly, and as it was no bad epitome of
our men of war and other vessels in tha’
• day, f will give it toymin detail. 'Flic
' captain and first mate were Americans, the
21 mate was a Portuguese, shipped only lor
the outward passage. The cook was an
American negro, and the cabin hoy an En
gdiidi l id. Wo had ten before (he mast ;
' ( of these five were American bom, one was
a Scotch lad whose family had emigrated
1 when he was a child, one was a Prussian,
* one a Spaniard , one a D ine and one an
1 Englishman, who had been wrecked on our
' coast, ami was working his passage home.
'{The weather was no sooner clear, than a
' boat was shoved oft" from one of the ships
and pulled towards us. We hid the En
glishman in an empty cask, and the rest of
(he crew hunted up their evidences of na
tional character. We were soon hoarded
and the crew was mustered. Much the
mao aud much the ablest seaman we
jhad, (he first mate excepted, wao a man
from New jersey mmrd Uooke. The Licu
j:eru.nt nicked him out by instinct, Cooke
.produced the usual American protection,j
•I" This will not do,” said th" lieutenant,
•|" I nn buy one of these for two dollars in
' New Y ik ” “ Will this do ?” asked
t Cooke, producing another document, fie
Mind a ceifilicute of his discharge from lie
B i'ish frigt'e Camb isn, signed by her
! Captain, G B Beresford, 1 think, on ac
count of his having satisfactorily proved
■hat he was a native ciiiz u u of the V States,|
' aftei having served in that ship some 18
in"ndis, if my memory does not fail me.
* Die lieutenant was staggered at mis.—
* Looking about him, and hearing so much;
broken Engliih in answer to his questions,j
• he soon faslenel on another man, the se-j
con<l b~st of our crew. This man, whose
: lame was Gaines, was a na'ive of 'he city
!of Ncw-York. He too brought forward hi"
■ protection, but il was not heeded. Game?
8 had served long in the ship, and the offi
cer« interferred warmly in iiis behalf, when
' the lieutenant answered votycooly that he
' would not have his trouble ,‘or nothing;, and
1 compelled the poor fellow to go with him.
We askml (he name of his ship, and he
• (gave us one, pointing to a vessel towards
which his boat Hi I not steer. We could l
never ftod Gaines. Our ship soon went:
. up u> London, when Cooke asked me to go!
with him io one of the public offices to get:
. some prize money for his services in the, 1
Cambrian. We went, and on account of
. some formality Cooke was required to leave,
until next day, his certificate of discharge,
I which contained the dates of his period of
.j ;ci vice. 1 remember the countenance with
which he entered the street, as if it were
but yesterday, “ Here lam without a pa
‘ per, and sis feet high,” he said " for they
'have kept my discharge in this office, and
ii'the lieutenant, who imp*eased G-in 's, car
e|r|ed off with him my protection.” I know
v the latter to be true. In less than an horn
t he w.i" carried off trom before my eyes by a!
,■ pressgaog f never heard of him alter wards,)
f. for nil attempts to trace him were fruitless
From lli« vh.irU'fttoD Courier, January 0
Thirteen Days Later from Eng
j land
j Cap*. U...1D, of the British ship Celia, ar
rived on * u.iday morning, from L veiponl
:h.m favored us with fi.es of London Papers
f |lothe 2f..|, and Liverpool to the 22d Nov.
] both inclusive—four Correspondents regular
‘ files only came down to (fie 14th.J
Although so much later than our previous
, advices we do not find in them any political
intelligence of a sinking character. No ri
ots of a serious nature appear to have occur-
I red since our last advices, and (he country
might be said to ho in a comparatively quittj
1 j state. Reform is otill the all-eugrossingi
j subject of national discussion.
We regret to find that the Cotton market'
was in a depressed siate, and that a decline
jot full l-Bd. had been experienced since our
j last advices.
According to some of the London Jour
nals, Parliament was not espec.cd to meet
j until the fit st week in January—(hero was
ito have been a meeting of the Council at
1 Brighton, on the 21st, when it was supposed 1
jibe mie would b* fixed upon.
A tumour ol a change in the Ministry had;
been industriously circulated by the oppo
sition, and hopes were entertained by them
| liat the Tories would again conic into pow
jer. with Lord Wellington nt their head.—
But the rumours aud their hopes proved to
jbe entirely fallacious.
A meeting was held nt the Clarendon
Booms, Liverpool, ou the £lst Nov. tor tin
puipose <d addressing his Majesty upon the
object of Reform.
lu leferewe to Hie new Reform Bill,
which it is the intention of the Ministers to
■ .rlpg firt';a L-u.d.-.n fouricr of ‘He
• 19 li N v. says—are happy to s'etr
that t iere is not (he slghtest foundation for
j♦h** reports that have been current nf new
'difficulties having icturre-l to ministers, re
11. *5
■ alive to lho reform bill. The success of lha
measure ii quite certain, whatever course
the Government ir.iv 1 1>i• k proper to ad p*,
tor tilt; purpose oI c rrj mg it. 'I he irew bii
; a ill not, t'i principle, van in the s!ig itr<
1 degree fro a that of Lord J ilin Russell. I
f the popular sense \< will if possible, be e>
ven more s'-io > I'm same number of bo-
will b * di-franchised, although then
' m i v bo seme chang.* as to pariieular peaces,
' and tfie membis lak n limn them will b>-
I distributed among the counties and largo
i towns. In the minor details o( the bill, amt
more e/pecially in (he machinery of polling
ami registration, some improvement will be
’ introduced calculated to give a more ex’cn
sive developemtint nr.d addi i rial •'fl\"iencj
to the principle of (his gn at measure.”
A large portion of our English papers ? re
'occupied with L>i>sertations upon the Chul
isra Morbus.
l j The nature of die disease which has re
cently manifested itself at Sunderland and
’ New Castle, of which several new case*
1 have occurred, continues to be the subject
[of so many conflicting statemen s, 'hat it is
1 difficult to form an opinion as to it’s nature
-1 Dr, Diun, the Government Commissioner
at Sunderland, and Dr. Gauller, of Man
Chester, are both of op in on that it is the true
Indian Cholera, and not merely an aggrava
-1 ted form of the disease wnic!) nas long been
. known in that country.
A treaty was signed on Tuesday, 15th
November, by the Ministers of the. Five
Great Powers, and the Belgian Minis ers,
1 recognising the legitimate au.horny o I King,
1 Le pold, and the independence of Belgium
—but the King of Holla id was by . rniv s'
satisfied with the conditions, and some ob
stinacy was anlicpatei! on his part.
| The election of Lord Rector for the Uid
versi'y of Glasgow, took place on the 15th,
Nov. The candidates were Messrs. Cock-!
burn, Hume, a d Lockarl the first named;
gentleman was e'ecitL Tin* votes stood!
for Mr. C. 2i»3. Mr. H. ITO, & Mr. L 89. I
■ It is s ated to a Sale Liverpool paper, that
Washington Lrving was gj ul sailing for
America.
The Council of (he Birmingham Politi
' cal Union, have declared that noy have no
intenti m of arming their mcrabag.
Fhe Ftench Chamber of Dep uies have,
after a good deal of discussion, com« to a
conclusion upon the Pension-List Bill, by
|llie large majority of 280 .to 50 in favour ot
.i* Le bill. This measure, which prostrates
a 1 the fortunes of what a Deputy rather
! I unceremoniously called the “ Court B;g
gar-mcri”p* "i- . ite mercy of the King,
has l--en ....!. i! i its progress wi.h as
' much he Peerage Bill itself, &
j its sue--.* nag estimony of the p e
vailing > m ir Vance against its sac
! tious a
|i Some iII listed in the Oouthl
11 of Franc » li. 'Jov. the Carlists,
!to the i en 2 and 300, in
jiMontpelb n red u post of troops, but
they Scenes of this kind are
isahd to be common, both in the West and
dSouth.
One hundred & thirty vessels were, load
1 ing at Liverpool 19. h November, for foreign
ports.
Subscriptions had been opened in E g
land, for the relief of the inhabitants ol
Batbidoes, S'- Vincents, &c. who suffered
in the dreadful Hurricane.
Mr. O’Connell has proposed the estab
lishmeni of a National Political Union in
Ireland, to aid in bringing about Reform.
New Ymk papers to the 25th October,
by the packet ship John Jay, at Liverpool,
reached London on the 20tb November.
' A shower of FUii is stated to havo fallen
upon the city of Constantinople on the sth
(October, so terrible in its nature, that
Jther tiles nor wood could withstand it. The
j masses were oo heavy that they severed
iboardshalf an inch thick. The whole city
. waa unroofed : and to aggravate the gene
ral distress, it was followed by a deluge of
i rain, against which it had left no shelter,
either to richer poor. The storm was not
• confined to (he cspi'al, it visited the whole 1
of the line of the B igphorus, and extended
i as far as Belgrade, desiroying every thing
1 vegetable and animal that was exposed to
. its fury The lumps of ice which lei! were
as large as a man’s foot; and some’ which
were picked up ha f an hour afterwards
weighed ab.ve a pound.
J Twenty-twohuman beings, men and boys,
j lost their lives by die explosion of hydrogen
■in a Coal P,t, tear Whitehaven on the 12»h
; November. Not a single soul in the Pit
escaped.
Several French Agents have arrived in
England, in order to obtain information as
i to tr.p sy stem and management of rail roads
Application* are to be made at the nn'
[meeting of Parliament, for various rail
'roads from London to South ampttyi, Brim
jingham, and several other places.
Ralph Wright, Esq. died at Flixtoc, near
Manchester, mi the 16th Nov. in the 80li>
year of his agn. lie had been a magistrate
V f the county for upwards of 40 years-
Com. Sir John Hayes, died on (he 3d
July, at the Cocoa Islands, on his passage
|to Cslcuta. lie had served the Eisi India
Company for i peiiod of fifty years.
A new American burleita, called The
iVept of the Hash ton Wish, in which M,.
,'lame Celeste was to make her first appear .
ante in dial Theatre, waste have been per
tunned st the Adelphi, on the 21*t Nov. I
e A n-w coinage of rr.tcey, bearing
ffirv <4 K ng L<-"p )ld, was about to be is
r noi d ai Bi us-els.
a S damage to the Dikes, in the
neighborhood of Antwerp, had been occa
ioned hv high winds, from the 14th to the
J “
e 18 h November.
■, A<ls • • u banco occurred in the Scotch;
.Church, R •gent’-r Square, London, on Sun-j
i lay evening, 20 h N"V. when the Rev. Ed-i
■van! I r vi: g hsd concluded a sermon Imm
- 'is nex*. —‘‘Try tiie Spirit,” in conse-|
- qu t c<‘ nf which be said he would decline j
reaching again, on the subject of “ the
i, gif nf tongues,'” on Sunday.
A Military Court of Inquiry, was about
c io beheld at Bristol, upon the conduct ofj
i! Cut B'-retun, during the late disturbances
g in that city.
e The Cholera Morbus, from Us effect on
- iheprice of Coals in England, has not been
y inaptly denominated the Coal e ra Morbus.
The French ministry are perplexed with
p their p-erage bill : they fear it will not
* pass without a creation of news peers, and
to this project the King is opposed. In (he
■ hope us bringing the peers into farther;
I odium, they encourage the revival nf the pe
* titioo about the removal of Marshal Key’s
1 remains to the Pantheon. His fate excites
* hatred against his judges.
Accounts from Warsaw 'say that there
will be a genera! amnesty granted both for
iihearmy and nation, and it is positive that
! ( Poland will remain a separate nation, bui
jthe Diet will be replaced by the Provincial (
1 States, and the Government will remain at
Si Petersburgh. It is further staled (hat |
* the Emperor of Russia has is?ued a manifes
to, addressed to all the powers of Europe, (
’ relating to the affairs of Poland, in which
’jit i< said he leaves them to remain a sepa- j
[rate nation ; he also gives them the choice J
1 j of a new tariff to regulate their commerce ;
but it is spared that the restrictions are such !
that the Pules may only call themselves a !
nominal separate nation. jj
I The Typhus f> ver is raging violently in j
, I various parts of Northumberland. At New- (
I j castle, scveial persons of »ote have died, (
including (wo legal gentlemen 5 in fact, the |
fever has been more distinctive there than |
. the choleia a< Sunderland. (
It is confidently stated that the piers of«
New London Bridge have sunk miny inch- 1
1 es. Th# work has been inspected by three
eminent surveyors, whose report is unfavor- 1
, abie, and it: is said that the bridge is short- i
ly to be shut up for two or three years, I
Miss Puillips, who is now one of the prin- i
cipal English tragic actresses of the day, ]
, was about two years ago a favoiite singer
at theEJiaburgh the 1 re. t
The publication of (he Englishman's I
Magazine, has been suspended. 1
London, Nov. 21. 1
1 We received last night the Papers dated 1
Friday, those of Brussels of Saturday, and
Prussian State Gazettes to the 15t.b inst,
These. H%.' |! * do not appear to afford any 1
1 J political of moment, and the pressure [
> of d.mi jf c matter of an interesting kind
1 obliges Vis to be brief in our extracts from, as
well as in our notice of their particular (
; contents. Tna most material announce- 1
I meat upon the side of Fi ance, is that of the 1
adoption by the Chamber of Deputies, rather
contrary to calculation, of the. proposal of M.
1 Bricqueville for the perpetual exclusion of
the eider branch of the. Bourbons from
France. The discussion ia pia f cd to hive
been attended to with very great interest ini
! the capital 2 but the excitement upon that,
score had, no doubt, by this time been su
perseded by tnai which the near approach of
1 the Peerage debate in the Chamber of Peers 1
would necessarily create. Tins last sll-im
-1 portanl iffair, it was still expected, would
1 come on iu the Chamber this day. The
intelligence from B ussels, of which a precis
1 will be found in the letter of our Private
1 Correspondent, is speculative, but still de
i monstrative of a considerable degree cfanxi \
! ety in the public mind of the people of Bel-J
! gium. Nothing certain seemed to bo ns yet
known of the precise import of the las' ar
rangement made be'ween the London Con
i fere.ice and King Leopold, and, from the
/continued silence of the Moniteur Beige, the
* official paper, upon the subject, with tlm
-certain knowledge that (he Government was
in possession of all the information relating
»1 to it, some unfavourable auguries had been
’ drawn as to the effect of the treaty. The
King and his Ministry, however, seem to
1 have no misgivings as to the pacific tendency
*of the arrangcmcu'B, whatever they may he,
for we find that already orders had been
> directed to the Belgian troops to retire fom
1 1 the Dutch frontiers. The Ministry, we are
hrather concerned to nee, is notyet definidve
hly fixed, and we cansce no good reasons
'stated why respectable men, and all nf them
'! men professing a high attachment to their
s country, should hold back when their ser
vices would be useful to it. The German
1 Papars sta e that great anxiety was felt at
Warsaw ns to the Emperor’s determination
! with respect to the gai risen ot Ziransc,
i which was the must, obstinate in continuing
r|the unfortunate patriotic struggle. Much
»iwas feared from his severity, but much more
?• from die unrelenting councils of his advisers,
j The final Ukase was looked for daily a'
lj Warsaw. It will be seen by our Lisbon
Corrcspondenoe, that the threatened descent
ot Don Pedro had at last begun to give seri
jous uneasiness to (he satellites of the U,ui
' per. Some attempts were making at resis
lance, and two new batteries had been erect
jed between Fort Belem and Lisbon.
, I'he following are from the last Brussels 1
! Papers ? <
BhUS’KdS, Nw . •'
• l On the receipt of the news, tl.o i;c ’
officialljr, of the existence of the civi le; .1
• bus in the North (>f England, our (.
ment has just repeated the expres
■ not to admit into the ports of the k
any ships but such bi are provide ! ■
certifi. atcs and bills of health, a*, ri-pii • C
by articles 12 and 13 of the decree it i r th.
• lof August last. Ships arriving from an*-
i country whatever are not admitted to Ice
j pratique (ill after their sanatory stale i.f
by means of interrogator! an.!
examinations by the Board of Health nt the
port. Monilmr Beige.
if is Majesty has been pleased to issue .»
decree, instituting a Buatd of Commci. t\
jaod M unufdQtures.
j I'he debates in the two Chambers hatc
chiefly related to financial matters.
Veiy great damage has been done by the
giving way of a dyke near Antwerp.
We have had by the Malta mail Gazettes
from that Island to the. 27th Oct. The Sar
dinian bug the Due de Keichstadt hid ar
juved there from Alexandria in ITdays,
‘bringing a bill of health from Sardinian
Consul resident at Alexandria, dated the
6th, to the following effect :
“This is to certify, that this day public
t health in the city is satisfactory, for since
(the 23d Sept, no attack of the cholera mor
bus has been heard of, the disease having
ceased as well in Cairo as in this place,
where-tbe daily mortality does not exceed
the ordinary number when the city is in per
fect health.”
A private letter dated Alexandria, Octo
ber 5, contains the following ;
“ This terrible disease has ceased, thank
God, on the 20th Sept, after carrying off
nearly 4 per cent, of the inhabitants of
Egypt, The mortality among the English
ships has been greater than among any odu
of the Europeans, Only two of our c
have been carried off—Mr. Crens, the I
ish Consul-General, and Mr. Antacln out
Consular Off. go mart. At Cairo the mortal
ity has been more severely felt—the ships
of the Pasha, the people ol the Arsenal, the
regiments, and those of the manufactures,
havo suffered most of all others. We have
lost about KiO Europeans---a very small
number when the virulence of the disease ie
considered. It seems that it seidotns lasts
more than 30 days.
“From the advicea we received yester
day, from Cairo, we have information of the
cholera having made an equal passage up the
Nile, from Cairo, infecting Siout and the
country round about, and that it reached
Luxor (Thebes.)
“ The Pasha lost, about a fortnight agoj
one of the finest corvettes, on the reefs off
the port, in the most beautiful weather im
aginable. The Commander, a young Ma
med uke, was shot for his misdeed, by sen
tence of the Court Martial.”
Livdiu'ool, November 21*
COTTON.—We hare no alteration tc
notice in the stale of our Colton market last
week j the demand nas continued very
limited, and in gome instances rather lower
prices have* been submitted to, making a
decline of about i-Bd. per lb. on most de
scriptions dunsg the last fortnight.. The
sales amount to 8290 bags, consisting of
3000 Bowed at 4*l. to 6£d. chiefly at.S-Jd.
In 5 7-Bd. for inferior to fair ° s 1220 Orleans
at 5 5 Bd, to 7|d. chiefly at 6jd. to fd. for
middling fair to good ; 1930 Alabamas and
•Mobile 4|d. to 8 3 SJ. 150 Sea Island 10
jid. to lOd. 53 0 Pernambuco 7 3 81. to 81.
|4SQ Maranham 6jd. to 7§d. 220 Bahia 6
sd. to 7id, 370 Egyptian 77 Bd. to 9d. 40
Derncrara 77 Bd. 80 Surinam
bados lld to 16d. 40 West India s|d. to 6
1-4 '. end 120 Surat at 3 7 Bd. to 4 5-Su
per lb. The arrivals are 7058 bags.
FAMILY EXPENSES.
It costs the King of England, or rathe;
the people of England for the Royal family
expense*, we mean the King’s private house
hold, thejollowing sums per annum
9 B'ead, 812,500
Butter, cheese and eggs, 21,000
Vegetables, 3006
Bu cher’s meat, 56 000
Poultry, 10 00C
Alt and Beer, 12 000
Wax Candles, * 19,000
Fruit end Confectionary, 5 000
Mdk and Cream, 6,000
Wine, spirits, #c. 37 500
Washing linen, &c. 12.500
Fuel, • 36 000
Linen for shirts, &c. 1,600
Liveries for servants, 37,000
H tscs, 16 000
Whips, 800
These v/ith other items not mentioned,
such as pocket money, visits, and travelling
expenses, make, the sum of two millions S,
a half of dollars per annum, which the peo
ple of England have to pay for the honor of
being ruled by a monarch ! Habit and edu
cation are wonder-working powers, when
they cause an intelligent, brave and yet suf
fering nation to sit year after year undei
IsX'-s and oppression to pamper the appe
•iles aud minister to the pleasured of a
family of princes not a whit more entitled
in govern than any other persons they ghoul*
choose to Select.
The Columbia the state
ment of a Philadelphia paper, that there is
but one survivor of Braddock’s army, and.
says—“ Mr. John Clark of York district, fa*
ther of cur worthy townsman, Mr. J L.
Clark, was in the defeat, & our gallant Sum
er, the’nut in the battl* was in the campaign