Newspaper Page Text
SAVANNAH
GEORGIAN
NEW SERIES—VOL. I.
SWANN All:
SJlV.WJYJlB, TUESU.il' MCItA'UYG, OCTOBER £9.1884
NOt in
MONDAY MORNING, OCT. 28. 1822.
|[ ? No Northern Mail last night*
By the fast sailing ship Garonne, arrived
on Saturday, we teceivcd New-York pa
pers to the 21at inat. inclusive. There is
nothing df very great importance in them.
Thej^ollow fever nonlinued unahated in
its ravages. The cases reported on the
Till were 9, and 5 deallia; on the 18lh 6
eases s 'on the 19th 10 cases and 7 deaths
and on the 20th 4 esses and 5 deaths.
The ship Bichard Plaskett completed
loading on Saturday, and will probably
clear this day. She is the first vessel whuse
cargo consists entirely of the new crop of
Colton (about 800 bales.)
CONGRESSIONAL RETURNS.
TlhB Milledgeville papers of Tuesday last
contain the Returns from all the counties in
the State but five t which, together with
returns from three counties already pub
lished in the Georgian, but not received in
Milledgeville, give the entire result through
all the counties in the state with the excep
tion of Early and Appling, which are yet
tn be heard (bom. This gives the candi
dates the following votes:
Forsyth,
19,318
Tattnall,
17,184
Abbott,
15.C94
Cobb,
15,218
Thompson,
14,813
Carjf,
14,689 »
Cuthbert,
12,999
Glasscock,
12,913
Haynea,
8,554
Golding
5,625
The above it seeording to
the Journal—
the following is according to the returns
famished by the Recorder. It will be per
ceived there is a variatiou in the votes git-
en lo the two accounts to two of the candi
dates, Outhbertaud Cary.
Forsyth
19,346
Tattnall
17,484
Abbott
15,694
Cobb *
15,218 '
Thompson
14.813
» Cary
13,729
Cdthbert
12,981
Glasscock
12,913
'Haynes
8,5 '4 •
Golding
5,623
An arrival st Baltimore, in 19
days from
The Greeks.—A writer in the Bits,
tun l’atriut,in an eloquent ‘‘appeal to
the citizens nf the U. 8. in general,
and of the city of Boston in particular,
in behalf of the suffering Greeks,"
proposes that public contributions be
made, fnr the put pose of supplying
them with money, arms and ammuni
tion ; that a part of the abundant
missionary funds he devoted to this
object j and that a meeting of the ci.
tizeosof Boston bo held, to make the
necessary arrangements.
The keel of s Line of Battle ship
is to be laid in Philadelphia which is to
be built under the superintendence of
Commodore Btinbritige. She is lobe
the largest iu the navy.
The Mayor ami Alderman of Bos
ton some time since extended the
Debtor’s limits tu the' limits of the
Couuty, which amounts tu an abolition
of imprisonment for debt, at least, as
far as their authorily extends. Re .
monstrances having been presented a-
gainst the ordinance, the subject was
taken up on Hie 14th insl. and post
poned, by the casting vole ol the
Mayor, to March next.
Another gang of Coonterfeiters have
been detected at Cherry Valley, (N.
Y ) by the names of Isonc Cleveland,
■lolin Armstrong, William Crissy ami
John Francisco. Cleveland was ac
quitted and Criasy escaped on the
way to prison. The other two were
imprisoned.
The bills fuund in their pnssessioh
were—-Fives, on the Mechanics Bank
in the ci'y of N. V. i 3s on Washing
ton Bink, at Westerley, R. I- ;3>on
the Plienil Bank, Hartford ;• S'* on
Westmoreland bank Pennsylvania;
one dollar and filly cent hills on the
Ontario Branch Batik at l T tica ; none
of them were well executed.
A Line of Packet ships has been
established in London ; one shift to
sail regularly every six weeks lo Ja
maica,
lignin, brings intelligence '.bat General
Morales had taken Maracaibo without oppo-
aition. General Pace with 500 men, bad
marched for Maracaibo, and Gen.Soublettc
was to leave Caraccas fur the i.imo destina
tion, with the same number of troops. The
patriot fleet had also sailed to co-operate
with them.
Philip P. Barbour, at present Speaker of
the house of Representatives, has been ap
pointed by the Executive Council of Vila
ginia, Judge of the Williamsburg und Fre
dericksburg Chancery District of that state.
Incuse of the acceptance of Ibis office by
Mr. Darbot.r, another contest may be ex
pected fat tbe Speaker’s Chair, at the open
ing of the next-session of Congress. Mr.
Clay will no doubt be a candidate, and pro-
bably successful.
-The richness about Philadelphia and the
later part of Jersey, has, it is said litis year
bfcen of the must fatal description. It is
stated as a proof of the great prevalence ol
disease, that a Physician in Mooreslown,
about ninemitesfromPhiladelphia, has now
one hundred and twenty patients down with
bilious and intermittent levers, and that on
the banka of llie Delaware and Schuylkill,
tn many families, there are not enough of
well persons lo attend to the sick.
The Hvcrage .number of deaths by yel
low fever in New-Orleans, were, up tu the
3d inst. abbot 6i) per clay. The number ol
deaths from the 1st to tbe 27ih September
it is said were between seven and eight
hundred.
The three men who robbed Mr. Samuel
Dana’s Exchange office in Boston, in Au
gust lust, have ail been detected and con
victed of the offence. Mr. Dana bat since
recovered 3,500dollars of the money, which
was found concealed under a sited iu Cam-
bridgeport.
Ten of the slaws, in Charleston,
whose sentence of death was commut
ed to banishment lor life, have had
the executioif of -llmir sentences fur
ther postponed, to December next, in
consequence nf the representation ot
their owners Hist they coultl nut com
ply with the conditions of the pardon
at the present time.
The underwriters at Lloyds' have
raised'the rates ol Insurance to India
U per cent, higher upnn the single
voyaye, and 2f. per cent, upun the
double voyage out and home, than
those previously charged.
A Beilin article of the 3d August
stales, (tint tiro King of Prussia, has
by an artier nf Cabinet, (in council,)
condemned a number of sludgnts. tn
three months imprisonment in s for-
ir.-»e, for factious intrigues (nteitres
demagogiyues.J They belonged tn
» secret sssocialieti called .flrniinia,
after rfnninius or Hermann, who beat
Varus and delivered Germany from
the yoke of the Homans,
On IheexamTha’inn of a noted conn,
terlciter in New-York, before the pn
lice, it came out that he was ihe third
husband of a Woman, who had already
two husbands in the state prison—the
one for dealing largely in counterfeit
money, the other for Grand larceny.
Inability of Jllail Carriers.—The
Supreme Court of Massachusetts, in
the case nf Dwight vs. Brewster, a
mail carrier, who undertook lo enrry a
packet rifbankilntes from Northampton
lo Springfield, and failed of his un.
dertaking, that is, ihe packet tvns
lost on the way, huve decided for the
plaintiff. The Court decided, that as
such a packet was not within the prir.
hibitory clauses of toe U. S. Law pro-
hibing mail camera from carrying let
ters not mailed, past an estnbiied post
office, there could be no objcctin to
'the maintenance of the action nn the
ground of a fraud practised upnn the
revenue by the parties ; hot that in
the transportation of packets other
than lettei B, (written massages) inde
pendent nf the mail, the undertaking
of the stage-driver was that nf a com
mon carrier, and as such nnthiitg could
excuse the loss, except the act id God
or the public enemy. The court held
farther, Ihst no packets of merchan
ilise, ike. are within the Baid prohilii
tury clnu-esol the law/ even thongli
the envelope contain a written com
tnutiicatfoiiiif the communication re
late to the contents of the packet.
High Style.—A splendid B ill was
given at the pine nichard, on the Cat
skill mountains, on the 18th ult. The
Ball Room was at a height of 2800
lest from' the level of the river. The
room was beautifully decorated—and
the company of course highly elevat
ed. Tfie Recorder says “ the ancient
solitude nf the mountains seemed to
have been driven frotqthis her favor
ite abode, and to have retieated to
the higher ami denser forests. None
thought ol sadness—
'»Nor made the nigbt
A gloomy vigil, but a festal time,
Merr-er titan day.”
Nothing could be more enlivening
Ilian the appearance of this ample-
green arboflr, radiant with life and
beauty, resounding with music, and
itfiecting with its numerous lights
the lively and animating gestures of
its iumates.
The ” Constitutional Diary nf Us
vans,’’ of the 13 It ult. re publishes an
article, of several columns, un Piracy,
from the New-Oi leans Courier. To
this piece the Havana editor has au
nried some long, able, and very spi
riled mites. lie tresis as utterly
false and scandalous, the charge that
the authorities of Cubs protect and
encourage ttie piracies which are
praciised from and near that island
lie retorts upon the Americans, nl
leging that our government winked
at the equipment ol the numerous
privateers which, in (he course of se
veral years sailed IVotn Baltimore,
Charleston, and New Orleans, slid
made such havoc of Spanish com
inerce. Me avcis that on the 14th
August last, the schooner under the
Culombiii llag, sailed un a cruise from
New Orleans, with an Jlmtrican cap
loin, and a crew of-fliino-icaiis, French
and Italians; and that, on Ihe 07Mi
of the same tnunlh, only four days
alter the article nn which he com
ments appeared in the Nctv Orleans
Courier, a piratical bnal, with fourteen
men, some of whom were Americans,-
failed from the same port under the
command of an Italian—a wpll known
pirate. He asks, whether there be
not then clearer proof that the*New
Orleans nutliurii ioa are abettors nl
piracy, than can be adduced in sup
port of (he same accusation agiinsl
the government nl Cuba. lie tic
ides Ihe idea suggested by the Ame
ricsn writer of our attempting to in
vmle the Island ; he insists that she
has not thought of separating Iterselll
from Spain, and 'hat if she ever he|
driven to this extremity, she will nnl
callAipon any foreign power for pro
lection ; and he Anally exhorts all
good citizens to he vigiiant and unit
eil, in order tobaffia the wild projects
of a few domestic intriguers, and -ihe
ambitious views of foreign countries.
The extravagant passion of Ihe Chi
nese lor superb tombs is well known.
The whole gains nf a man, for mrny
years previuus tn his death, arc fre
quently devoted lo Ihe gratification
uf this posthumous vanity. A Chi
nose paper of September, last, stales
that ‘‘one of the litnprrm’s uncle-
ha- requested to h ve CO,000 tael-
advanced to fit up his own buii.il
ground ; nr as ho calls it, Fun yuen,
1'umb garden." »This old prince,
Yung scncn, is now in his 70th year,
and lias already spent 50.000 taels nil
his “ Tomb garden.” According to
his statement, (he plate is lb cost him
120,000 taels. The Emperor her
granted (he request. The money is
given under Hie form nf six years ud-
vatice of his allowance.
Charleston, Oct 23.—A letter has
been received iu this city, nt a recent
date, from Havana, containing infur
mation which may be of importance
to Insurance Offices, and individual
Underwiiters in the United States.
It asserts, that a plan hud been enter
ed into by certain individuals, of
diiubtlul character, in that city, the
object uf which wus to charter an A-
merican vessel for some port in this
country; that she was to take on
board two or three hundred hags ol
el coffee, and sume few other articles
and then obtain a clearance from the
Custom House fur double or treble
the amount of cargo on hoard—alter
this was done, a few boxes nf enure
nient size, filled with old lead, double
headed shot and other Valuable thetals,
were to be shipped, nn board as specif.
dollars—bills of lading were then to
be signed, sealed, and Cut wauled in
triplicate for insurance on an imagin
ary umuuut, to suit the avaricious
views nt these vile rubbers—a coasting
vessel is ilicn hired,with a competent
crew, to follow the vessel out tn see
and to plunder her of every tiling!—
I'he consequence is, that the vessel
either puts into some port in distress,
orarrivefi at that uf her destination
robb.d by Pirates of all her cargo,
Sjie.de and all! !—The sailms aie
Ignorant nl eveiy thing ; they nffinn
that the vessel was attacked nod rub
bed at sen, on the Coast of Cuba, by a
Pirate—the agent or Ihe shippers,
who i ffects the insurance is equally
ignorant ol tin-deception. YVItal then
billows f—Why, ihe unsuspecting
Underwriter,confiding in Ihe honesty
of the Havana merchant, is cruelly
obliged to answer his bond ; the plot
in all its parts, is executed to the full
d sire of the wretches who conceived
it, and they escape with impumiy,
exulting in their unla wtul gains. There
is but too much reason to believe that
ihe ..bovc is a plain matter of fact—
let those who are’ interested in the
different purls of the union look to
it.—Courier.
FROM MATANZAS.
Baltimore, Oct 18.—Captain Ter
Yell, of the Dandy, ill 7 days from
Matanzss, arrived this morning states
that that place was full of pirates,
who spoke openly of taking the Dan
dy at all hazards, she being the very
thing fur their purpose. This deter
red several merchants fni-.it shipping
in her. Two boats, laige and lull ol
desperadoes, left Hie harbour a few
evenings before, to way lay Iter as
she came out; (bis too, with the know
ledge of several persons on shore—
they were observed crosiipg the bay
from time to time, w telling her mo.
lions. At leng'll they yxvowvd their
intention or cutting lur out nf port.
Capt. T. had no gflernative, hut tak
ing advantage of a strong breeze dur
ing night, came Out withuut seeing
them.
The achr. Gen. Strieker, capt. Her
risnn, srrivetl her#i«st evening in 13
ilavs from St. John’s, Purln Rico.
'1‘he day belorshailing there was a
report at 8 . John’s, hat au American
man uf war achr. hail dismasted, sunk,
killed and Wounded every soul imi
hoard one nl'the prriateers from that
place, which hail nbimed so great au
excitement against Americans, that it
was dangerous for ttrom to go about
the city.
Toe U. S. ship John Ad mit, Capt.
Ili-nshsw, arrived fifth trupi. and sail
ed 30th Sept, for the Spanish Maine ;
the-privateers nut ol Porto Rico, still
continued depredations on American
com merer,—Patriot.
JUDGE STRONG’S DECISION.
.Milledgeville, Oct. 23 -Thn fob
lowing is llie decision ol Judge Strung,
un the case of Col. Hammond, which
has excited so mnen interest among
ihe cnit'ena of nur Stale t—
Statk, K.v ret. , -
Mner Hammond, J MANDAMUS.
vs. f
Simon It hil ktr J
On the I8ih day of September last,
Abner Hammond, by Ilia petition, ad
dressed to this court, in Chamb-rs,
staled on his oath, that on the I5ih
lay of December, be was elected and * 1
leg illy admitted into the office of Sc
cretury of State, ol tlio Slate uI Gcor
gia, according tu the constitution und'
laws uf said Sttue, and that he conti
uued ill the performance nf the duties
uf that office, until the 13th of August
1822, when Simon Whitaker, the do
fondant, without reasonable cause, did
unlawfully remove him from his said
office of Secretary of State, and has
rince that time infused to restore to
him his said office, but has continued
lo oiciciso and rtijov the ptivilegev
hereof, in direct violation ul the laws
ot this state, and to the ma ilest in
jury of the said llammuntl. Upon this
application, the court directed s Writ
ol Mandamus to Said Whitaker, com
manding hint to restore to the Said
Hammond the said office uf Sou clary
of slate, ingnther with everv thing per
taiiling thereto, or show cause lo the
contrary, oil Frida} the 27lti iluy ot
'lie then present uvonih, ut Ihe Court
House, in and fur (lie county of IItill
win. It was nltunvaiils agreed be
tween the parties, mot the time for
shewing cause should be extended
bom the 27ih of September, to the-
Tuesday .,tier the first , Monday in
October thereafter, at which time tin-
panics appeared before the court, and
lie said Simon Whitaker, by bis
counsel, shewed fnr cause why he did
out restore the said office lull immnnd,
that although said Hammond Had been
at the time set fmtli in his petition
duly elected and regularly qualified
and admitted lo lui'l office, according
to the laws and constitution ot this
Slate; yet the said Hammond did nut
continue well and truly to act in Un
said office ot Secretary of State sc
cording to the constitution and laws
of (lie slate, but on • the 12th of Au-
gu-t and for many ilaya previous to
that time, absented himself from the
seat ol government, without the per
mission or knowledge uf the Kxecu
live authority, thereby leaving his said
office vacant, there being no law nr
resolution aulhorizihg a Deputy tn
perforin the duties of that office, anil
tbat it was onleretl by the F.xeculive,
that the said Simon Whitaker be, and
lie was thereby ordered to fill said va
cancy, upon his attending at the Exe
cutive office for the purpose of enter
ing into bond and being qualified ac
curding tu * the constitution nod law
nl said , slate, which the said Simon
Whitaker did, and was thereafter
regularly admitted and placed in the
pos-essino nl s-nl office. And the
said Whitaker lor lurther cause, enn
tended that the facts set forth by the
plainlifi' in his said petition were not
sufficient in law to maintain a writ nl
Mu idamus. Upon these grounds, the
ran was submitted to the considers
lion slid opinion of tins court.
In whatever light this case esn be
vi-wed, whether as to its peculiar
delicacy, its novelty, or the important
rights and principles to be determined
it must be considered of tile first iin-
portauce. With becoming diffidence
and due respect to those in authority,
on the one band, and a sacred regard
tor ths constitution and laws ol the
land, aud those rights which they se
cure to individual-, on the other—
without any desire nr intention what
ever, to intrude or intermeddle with
the rights, duties, power, or privileges
of any other co-ordinate branch of tin
government, except an far as the le
gal claims of the plaintiff render such
lulei'ereuce necevsxry, and the eon
atitution warrant^ this court xp
proaches the merit! ol this cadse.
It il to be regret ted, that a case of
where recourse can be had to but few
id the many authorities relied •ot.atid
where, without the neglect of other
duties, full time cannot be taken to
sysioinatise an opinion. The plain
I Iff however, urges a determination
id • case in which Ms rights arc in
volved, and duty compels the court
to proceed.
The mat its nf this esse may be emu.
prised in the consideration of (he tol-'-
lowing questions i
Firs —Whether a Mandamus si.
ford- the proper remedy f
Hoeoodiy—Whether the writ is di
rected to me proper porsuo j
And, thirdly- Vvhether, nn the me
rits ot this rase, the applicant is sin.
titled tu succeed f
rzr
■p
Hhckstime, ami indeed. It If Ihe cle
memory wo iters, Itilnrni ns, that s
.Mandamus (in England) is a p re ruga
live writ, issuing out ut the court of
King’s Bench, and it isllto proper re
medy to enforce obedience to the acts
uf'l’arlisment and to the King’s char
ters. anil in such cases is demandnhle
of right. Under charters nrc compre-
In-tided all grants of the crown, whe
ther id lands, honors, franchise!, nr
aught besides, 2 111 tcktlohc Com. 346
— In this, (and the nmst.il nut all the
statesj it lies tu enforce obedience to
the constitution stnl wets of t ,e Le
gislature, and cointnissinns luuiidnl
thereon. The 7th section of the 3d
article of the constitution of the State
of Georgl,, declares that," the Juilges
of the Superior courts, or any one uf
them shall have power to i-sue writ*
of Mandamus, prohibition, scire facias,
anil nil other writ , which ate ttecessa-
y for carrying their powers fully info
effect." Here is an express grant ol
power to (his court to issue tms will,
by the people themselves And where
puwj’r is thus granted, anil s nocessa-
y occasion occurs for its exercise,
the court would be guilty of a deaer-
Ittm of its post, as well as u shameful
dereliction of duty, were it to refuse
iromptly to exeicise it. This writ
ies to compel the admission nr rest a
ration o! the pxrty applying, (onMV of
fice of a public nature, 3 Rise. Corn-
110—D. w vs. Judges of the Sweet
Springs Circuit—3lien, shd Moot.
Rep. p. SS—The office here is claim
ed by viitue of nn electinn of the
Legislature, pursuant to the 12th sec
lion of the 3d article uf the constitu-
Uun. In the greut case MsrbUrv t».
Madison, then Secretray nf tbe Untied
Stales, 1 CranrU’a Repot tv, page 163
the Supreme Court of the U. Slates
maintained that there can be nu wiring
without a remedy, ami that this tviit
A-oultl lie against tiro Secretary of the
U. States, although they subsequently
disclaimed jurisdiction, noon the
ground that they had no*, jurisdiction 2 Atwood. J llsrptiy
by the constitution of the U. States,
notwithstanding Ihe act of Congress.
Nut so here. The constitution ol this
stale expressly gives (his court cxclu.
ive and final juiiadictiou of such ca
ses, The right to issue this writ, anil
to hear and determine such causes,
was granted te. prevent disorder horn
a failure ol justice and defect of poli
cy, and ought to he utitd un all occa
sions wln-ie lire taw ha* established
no specific reinedv, 4 J-c. Law Die.
223 — S Bur. 1203 -l Blac. Ri-p’ts
352. 552. 378 Bur it is contended,
that it there be* Judicial remedy in
this esse, that the party must pi need
by information in nature olQur War-
rgntp, and that * Mandamus tics only
where the party has a legal right, anu
no other specific remedy, lo the case
id Dew vs. the Judges id (lie Sweet
Springs Circuit, before referred tn, I
Hen. and Munt. p. 23, Judge Tucker,
a very learned and able American
Judge, observes that, “ we are told
otherwise by Blackstone, that it may
be issued in. some cases where the
party hath also another more tedious
method id redress, at in case nf ad
mission or restoration to an office," 3
Blac. Com. p. 110. And t will say
with him, that this is Us i veiy o«»e
under consideration. The applicant,
in thin case has no other direct aped
lie remedy—for, if an information in
nalucd of Quo Wairanto was filed in
this case, a Mandamus would have to
follow before the parly could be re.
stored to the possession of his office
—nor caulil he file an iufonnatiun in
nature ufQ in Warranto, withuut the
couseoi ol the Solicitor General. In
mo n) should he speedily restored, if
entities*, as on ml the Judge, „f ,h,.
sta if ha*, already il«c!ar«tUVhitiker’a
grant* InW—t' c Slate vv. Vessel*
But, it i4 lintlier contended, by
Mi-tsra. Rockwell and Morgan, of
counsel Inc the itefi mlsnt, that he it
the Secretary*id State tie facto, at
least, that** his been admitted and *
sra orrt, aud,is in, by colour of tight,
Hid that, therefore Maudamu* will
hot It”, 'but Shat in suclf * c«se j, •
tyto Warranto is the remedy. Anil
in support uf this position, they citu
and re ly upon the rhae or the Peoplu
vs. the Hu»p. «f N- York, Jon. Cases,
p. 76. By tn examination ul that
ease, it rWII be seen that the reason
ford,mu lag the inutiuA was, "heca’isa
'he cnipjgAlip being a third party
may PMT "r Rot at pleasure, ai d
die right* of the party in office, might
be injured without Ids having an op
portunity to make a iWfencv, he ooC
brings party to the Causpn-a very
tronil reason ton, si I will shewiaano-
(tier branch of thi* esse. Bet, hero
Whitaker is served with the writ as
the immediate d./radmit, and ia hernf
upon every ground of defence. Ri-
1.1 t"S. therefore, upon the law, and thy
oundlderatinnt relative to the genius
ami spirit of the constitution, aud Jo,
diciary nets of the Legislature, tins
I'hjet t of which, as b.-forc stated, is to '
oil ml pieties a speedy and direct ad.
ministration nf justice, as well at thu
great c.t*e before referred lo in l Ilctl.
qj* Mont. p. 1, 57, where this precito
question w.x« raised, and ably argued
by counsel, (inferior, to perhips nona
in the United States) slid determined
by the concurring union* of the whole*
of the Judges of thu' Supreme Cuyt '
ol Appeals of the state of Virginia
this court cannot for a rqgment doubt
of (he legality nflhis remedy.
C Te he nsetwkiHa mr nr.rt J
LETTER BAGS
ffsmuVayoi RYft.rsw 1 luternry and Cm-
mereiul ttfAitiug tieem. ,
Ship Richaid I’liiket, ft. Campbell,
Liverpool, to tall 99th iaut.
MARINE.
PORT OF SJtVuLYaVjtU.
ARRIVED,
Ship Luoina, Candler, Ilnslon, 10 d*7H
with iron, cliff e, Wo. to E Crane, Jr.
Ship Aegwsla, Wood, N York. 4 dnVS, to
tt,ll ty t|..)i ns nets, J U Herbert (J co.
DuogLn Sr Smretl, T Rutter It co.' SO
II,huiim.c. J Kupmsit, Milter & Port, Cantos
Inn Jr l.rmaiy Hill 'Penny, Lawrence A
rhntnpson, Guidry ft Dufaure, D D Nichohk
J Me g%, I. Ilcult, A Xtornn, W Puller, H
$ Atwood, J lljrptr, S J Uryan, Johnston
A M ,11a, R U’CurJy, J P l.loyd, E Ulitv (J
ro. I) Judah, J i* Setae, J Ilreitmsycrtrco,
2 Dry (t cn. A Pattons, it Campbell, J Ne»«
lull, A II Panmn U cu, F Udh.il UfaAk
E Woo I, W I'lUerton, J Andersen U co.
W Hose, f It Price, Uuhaind U Auae,
lllaiitlurd, llniiher* 4t co. U Burtouijhv
•ml the master, /‘msegyrrs. Mr Ko|,nu*
•ndtsinily, Mr Moueiil amt fsinil.r, Mr Ju
dith and t»mily, fitr Valmei and Isir.ily, Mr*
Puller, M,ts M tgie, M.a Houlr, Mestra. Pi»
icier, Reed, Woudbridge, Scott, cHantl,
VfCtmly, Vail, IWtel, Miller, tlesbcrtand
Willard. Left ship Superior, Jocelyn, aud
brig Telegraph, Snell, to sad next day.
Ship Garonne, Mott, N York, 4 ilats, with
a lull cargo to nimby persons, /■lusenyriv,
1) U Nirhols and Ismilv, A Wade aud limb
ly, Mr Wsiker and family, Mr Whitlock soil
family, Uijor Stephens amt lady, Mrs Kots
lock, Misi Clark, Mu* Wayne, 8 Uowarrt,
net and,laughter, Rev W U’Dowill, Mew
Young, d.rk, MnVetHliiilcKi. MTnlyra,
Main, Whitlock, W aistap.Knspp, Wells,
Wnghltml others,
Ship lliiing Sistes, Petree, Providence,
11 ili) j, will! s fill! csrgo to l> Tell cinulgs
-1 days, _ „ _ .
nee, S C ti -een, J C Whiting, W It Du ling,
A,Sibley, W Battey, B P I sylor. Usihbohu
JssAodraws, W II Pesrce, K Wstermsn lx
co P Hill, A U F. Wood ami other*. Pam
tesyrrOV Bsttay, l«!y and thrvv childteo,
U Jewilt, tsdvami taw , hddran, IK I*f>
lady and two children. Miss Siblay, Mrssr*.
Waterman, Greene, Taft, Arnold, N-lvm.
Hitt. Pratt, crane, G'lmly, Maxwell, Toy tor,
Tompkins, Paine, Manton, Andrew* Dar
ling, Ithistea, Pshoer, Ddlon, Oubbtett, Itas
ca) I, Hoaatd, King, Carter, Bailey. Wslk-
e-, Branch, Alartch. Kelly. Wctdwrby, Sit)-
1 y, Chamberlain, Wins!}*, Fcaroe, flicks
ail HrookE
Brig Psnthea, Bradley, New Haven, #
days, IO l Cohen consignee, with a full car-
go to J W Lflng, T Bradley, lUU A Hoyt,
Roderlf ScrdntQo l Cohen,J tlradtcy, J D
Herbert, Mansfield A Bor* in. Miller A Port,
II Cle land. Worth A #“»*, U S Atarood,
W W Johnson. I NoHo*. J'orKMwr, l
casesf doubt, -here the facia ate tf?.$b £d fiT»IW3»
. ... * .LttJ U.aaM Dills.
complicated, such inlarmttian ought
to he fifed, but where they ar* all cm
braced in the return, and ar* plain
anil simple, ihi* dneot remedy is ad
missible.
I tee no re-son why a p'Hj in sue',
a case should be driven to a cnruitv
or multiplicity of actions trkuA the
law nbhars.
Indeed, a cheap, direef and speed)
administration of justice Rems to
have been a primacy object with our
law grveis- This prinrtple pervades
the whole of “or judiciary system,
m t forms one ol (tie brightrtt traits
in cor sets cf legi-Ltion. Besides, a
Quo VVarraota will not lie where tb<-
term of office would expire before Ihe
case cootd he tried, 2 Jous. 184, 3
and son, Mrs. ttahn and child, Measra- Bura
till. Brown, Partly. Clark. Daggert. John-
son, I'ratcott, S'.oddaid, Gxlpm, and 6 >U
the itevrige.
Sloop Fa write, StoJ*Urd, Ne«r LondM»
5jHv*, with produce to Ch^hom *******
•eu, Ptlmc? fc Hoe. Chittenden, tod othen.
iijup Uatou, bffikjffifich* Suubar,)'.
ilUfkU FKOft TUtt WIT.
At B ct^ iS’h »“»!• ^ Manroe, Ew
ridge.
• Aefrcvideace, brif Wbi lUrrtBgtoo, S
days.
X* S Vork. *b»n 8 asp*
At Darien, 231 .~t-1Vgt* Ja*’", D-uil.
PtXS dw»»; lUi>re»x,P»trc€b}. .
such vast importance should nectMa
i il J hijt to \hi dcCiJcU on Uk Circuit,' wiU WMt*ui U/UaI
crrjs WiswsT. #
A4N York 2!ai iaau dtipt AtWfe TXy-
y,- I, sajfwiib dwpatch; Savasaalb Wtoie.
d^Taraiim. Bearaa. 25tb i
Mata. Report. 285. ToUcy ra^ira. |