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SAVANNAH
GEORGIAN
hEW bElUES—VOL. II.
AViKdAVWiU % tid TUHD.iY JANUARY 25, IS23.
NO 27
SAVANNAH :
FRIDAY MORNING, JAN. 24,1823.
The Intelligencer announces the ap
pointment of Hugh Nelson, of Virginia, by
the President of the United States, to be
Bkvoy Kitroardinary and Minister Pleni-
. piotentiary to the court of Spain, in the
piace of Mr. Forsyth, who is about to re-
turn home. A letter received in Charles,
ton from Washington, states? that the no
ruinations of Ministers to Buenos Ayres and
Colombia, as published in our last, had
just been sent to the Senate for confirma
tion^ and that in a few days, similar ap-
.pointmenta to Chili and Mexico would be
made.
Theatre.—A. letter from Richmond, of
Jhe 17th inst. mentions that the Manager’s
power “ is on the seas.’* Their arrival
may, therefore, be expected hourly. 1 he
company sailed on the v 15tli, in the schoon-
Ann, Capt. Brownell.
A passenger in the James Monroe
States, that Mr. Zea, the agent for the Co.
Jombian Republic in England, died at Chel
tenham in the beginning of December.
The last papers from Cavaccas co tain the
official announcement of Ins power having
been revoked at a period antecedent to
contracts made by him for extensive loans
in England for the ui^e of the Republic.
It has been recominended to Congress,
1>y the Secretary of the ^nvy, that Com
modores and Rear Admirals should be ap
pointed in the American service. The
former to rank with Brigadier Generals in
the Army and the Utter with Major Gene-
-Sals.
Some difficulty has occuredin the legis
lature of the state of Maine, in the election
<>f a Senator to supply the vacancy which
Will occur on the expiration of the term of
aerviceofMr. Chandler, The House of
Representatives has passed a vote to d -
fer the subject, but notice has been given
that a rc-consideration of the vote would
.be moved. The dissention is betwee .
the friends of Mr,Crawford and Mr. Adams
Congress.—In the House of Representa-
fives, on the 15th inst. Mr. Reid, of Geor
gia, moved aAnmendmentto theConsiitu*
lion, that “ Congress shall have power to
construct Roads and Canals.” The House
afterwards took up the bill supplementary
to, and to amend a i act, entitled an act
to regulate the collection of the duties on
imports and tonnage, passed the 2d of
.March, 1799, and to repeal the supplemen
tary act of 1818, The following is an ab
stract of the bill, which is very long, from
the Intelligencer .*
See. I provides that from and after
the fid March, no goods, subject *to
ad valorem duty shall be^dinitted to
entry, unless the true invoice of the
same be presented to the collector at
the time of entry, or unless the same
be Admitted in the mode authoriz (I
anil prescibed in the ensuing section'
w this act. •
. Sec. 2. Provides that »vhen no in
voice of such goods has been recei
ved, the owner, &c. shall make oath
thereof, nod the Secretary of the Trea
sury shall be authorized to cause them
to be appraised«-the owner to give
bond to produce the invoice wirhin
ei^ht monlhs if from European ports,
&nd fifteen months, if from beyond
the Cape of Good Hope or Cape Horn,
or from the Cape of Good Hope.
Sec. S. Directs that, where »onds
are not entered in pursuance ot this
01* any other revenue act, the same
deposited in the public ware-
.■bo:j;iT. Alter remaininginrihe ware-
*v>r v’ght.ot' fifteen months, us
till case nay be, the said "nods to be
aoW, &c- Perts!;:*ble article to be ex
posed to earlier sale, il necessary.
Sec. 4. Prescribes, the oaths, in
cases of goods entered by invoice, to
be taken by the owners, importers,
consignees, or agents.
Sec- 5. Prescribes the manner in
which the ad valorem rates of duty
ttpongoodsshali.be estimated, viz, by
adding to the actual cost, all charges,
except commissions, outside packa
ges and insurance, and also 20 per
cent, on the said, costs, &c. if impor
ted from ocfbeyord the Capes.
Sec. 6. P ovides that no goods sub
ject to ad, valorem duty,belonging to
residents, but nut at the place where
the same are intended to be entered
*ehai! be admitted to entry, unless
bond be given to produce to the col*
lector within four months the invoice,
duly verified by the owners’Oath.
i fieri 7. Provides that no goods im
ported dud belonging to non-residents
■hall be admitted to entry unless the
notice be vended by the oath, of the
owner to his ownership and to the ac
tual cost of the goods.
The bill enninius in all thirtywveri
factious of uiuute detail, of which
the preceding synopsis of seven of
them may give nil idea. The apprai
sers are to continue lobe appointed as
now provided by law, The occasion*
al appraisers*are to be allowed five
dollars per day, and to be fined fifty
for each refusal to act. A third dis
interested person may be called in to
join the appraisers where a first ap
praisement shall not be satisfactory,
&c. &c,
Several amendments were proposed,
and made to the bill, one of whioh was
to extend the time allowed for voyages be
yond the Cape of Good Hope, or Cape
Horn, to eighteen months. After some
discussion on tlic bill the Committee rose.
The U. S. Steam Galliot Sea Gull, with
Com Porter on board, went to sea from N*
York on the 13th inst. for the purpose of
jnipingthe squadron now fitting out at
Norfolk to act against the pimles. He is
to be followed by the U. S. store ship De
coy, Captain L. Kearney, destined for the
same service.
The Philadelphia papers complain that
“ that city is at present infested with a
horde of desperadoes, who seem intent
upon doing all the mischief they can.”—
Several att- mpls hnd been made, but with
out success, to set fire to the Circus.
Beautiful Phenomena,—The Heavens, at
Philadelphia, on the^l3th inst. presented a
n’vel and and beautiful appearance. It
seemed as if there were four or more
suns, in the radii of the sun’s rays, each
emitting a mild transparent stream of light
The phenomena were interesting for their
beauty and singularity.
The New York American informs us
that the new Memoirs of Napoleon by him
self, are announced in the foreign papers as
neatly ready for publication. The adver
tisement states that they were commenced
by Napoleon on his passage to St. Helena,
and continued as his constant occupation,
during the 3ix years of his captivity. He
rarely wrote himself, as his pen could not
keep pace with his ideas, but dictated to
h J 3 Secretaries, who w;ere obliged to write
so rapidly, that it ofteh happened that the
night sufficed with difficulty-.to reduce to
order what they had taken down during
the day. Ths copies were carefully revis
ed by the Emperor, and corrected with his
own hand. The manuscript is preserved
as a valuable relic of this great being, and
a proof of the authenticity .of the publica.
A young lady was barbarously murder
ed, on the 26tli ult, in Tyrrell Goun'ty, N.
supposed by four negroes, who have
been arrested. She was found in an up
per room with her throat cut; and died soon
after..
A letter from New Haven states, that
Lieut. Governor Ingersoll died on the
10th inst. alter an illness of ten days.
Canuto.*—Gov. Yates of New York, in
his message to the legislature oftluft state,
convened on the 7th inst speaks in the fol
lowing terms of their canal system: w It
gives me much pleasure to state : that the
canal system, so wisely adopted and suc
cessfully pursued in the st« *•, promises to
realize the expectations of the community
The convenience already afforded to the
inhabitantants, by the facility with which
the products of the count$ may be
brought to market, has exceeded the
most sanguine hopes of its warmest sup
porters.”
• 0
Cheap Living.—The Cincinnati Inquisitor
says, ” The vast quantity of produce which
has of late (noth withstanding the wretched
condition of the roads) been poured into
the city of Cincinnati, has introduced an
era'of extraordinary plenty. As an in
stance of the cheapness of eatables, the
following may be related. On Friday
last a person was disputing with a coun
tryman the price of a turkey, for which he
asked 25 cents. The bargain was at.last
concluded by an offer of the countryman,
that if thef purchaser would give him the
quarter of a dollar for the turkey, he should
have four chick cut in !
.Lord Effingham was this year, 1633, ap
pointed Governor of Virginia and express
ly ordered “to allow no person to use a
Printing press on any occasion whatever.”
This must no doubtf have been very ac
ceptable to those politicians whose nerves
were too delicate to bear the cogitations of
the “kennel newspapers.”
In 1692 the Legislature of Massachusetts'
passed an act'prohibiting any of the French
Nation to reside, or be in any of the sea
ports or frontier towns Within the pro-
vince without license from the Governor
and council.
The U Sfiigute Constitution, arrived at
Gibraltar, 22a November—remainder of
the Mediterranean squadron expected
there in a few daya.
FROM OUR COR ICESl’ON DENT,
Office ef the Mercantile advertiser }
New York, Jan. 15.3
From Montevideo,—The brii; Ho-
rnliij? tilings advice# to the 20(li of
November- Affairs remain unsettled.
The troops under Gen. Lecor were
stationed about 18 leagues from the
city. It is stoted that three Ameri
can ships had been engaged to carry
Portuguese troops to Lisbon. Flour
was obout 9 dollars on board. There
was 28,000 barrels afloat ot Monte
video and Buenos Ayres. The price
of ox and cow Hitli'S was 52 to 51
rials—bulls, 44 to 40—horse, TO to
75 cents each.
Fire.—Yesterday morning, be
tween 3 and 4 o’clock, a Are broke
nut. in the Engle Breweiy, No. 63
Crosby street, which, with a stable ad
joining, were reduced to ashes- The
wooden dwelling house on the north
side, was also burnt to the ground.
—The wooden dwelling house on
the south side, and the brick front
house No. TO, were nearly destroyed.
The Brewery was a considerable es
tablishment, owned, we understand,
by Mr James F Drpeyster, and was
occupied by Mr. Wright, who also
carried on the distilling business in
tlu-some premises, Most of the ma
chinery and stock was destroyed.
Guillaume Echtiusse, whose death is
announced in the Courier’. report, is
the character known in this city loi
some years post, to (lie terror ol all
naughty children, as "Old Shoes'’—
He had once .seen better days, and
conducted u respectable business here
but meeting with losses, and falling
into poverty and distress, his mind be
caine impaired; he secluded himself
from the society of man, and in a
wretched hovel, surrounded by nomer-
ous Dugs, he passed several of the last
years of his life. It was his occasion
al practice, when driven from his den
by the wonts of nature, to prowl about
the streets,attired in the most wretch
ed habiliments, with a long matted
head, and dishevelled hair carrying
over his shoulder a large sack, into
which ho crammed old rags, paper,
ropes, iron, ullals, ami every filthy
thing which he cuuld find, in one
Undistinguished mass. ■ The former
were selected at his leisure and occu-
sinally soldi -whilst he and Ilia Dugs
regaled thcmselvcB upon the nauseous
masses of vegetable and animal ufflls
collected in these his peregrinations.
I.ately, he had given himself to intox
ication; when he could procure the
tneanB, he would drink to excess, and
might be seen lying for a whole day or
night in the streets—Whilst his Dogs
would keep up the most discordant
howling until his return. Not hav-
ing been seen out of his retrent for
some days and attention being attract
ed by the incessant howling of its in
mates, the door bf his hovel was forced
open, and his miserable, lifeless re
mains found, surrounded by his faith-
lu Dogs, who with suily fidelity de
fended their ben ," clor, even in death
against the approach of the human
form—and it was not without some
difficulty, arising from this opposition
that his body could be removed foi
interment.
On the same day (Saturday) were
committed to the grave, the remains
of another no less celebrated character
—celebra .cii, indeed, by other traits
than tho-.e nhioh marked the closing
career of tile unfortunate Eschausse
— this was Primus Swain, a black
man, the oldest Branch Pilot of oai
harbor; who had been upwards ot for
ty years engaged in that arduous, and
perilous service, His repeated hair
breadth escapes, in the course of his
professional career have heretofore
been adverted to; and his death was at
last occasioned by a fall from one ol
our wharves into the dock, when about
to take a vessel to sea, and when the
tide was low, by which lie was so seri
ously injured as to cause his d -ath in
a few days.- [Charleston Courier,
Mexican”affairs.
Translated from late Havana papers, for the
Charleston ' tty Gazette. .
J^ew Spain, jlcayuyun, Wth Dec. 1823.
Muitaut CV.m-ia.su ufthe 4tii Division.
“ I inclose toyuur excellency a copy
of the act decreed by the Junta ol war
formed yesterday iu order to proclaim
to this people, the republican govern
ment.
At 4 in the afternoon, I united my
self at the Consistorial Hail with this
illustrious Junta, to whom 1 manifes
ted the orders and proclamation of
your Excellency, as likewise (he acts
of my own Junta, which after having
duly discu-sed The matter, gave their
concurrence, and immediate promul
gation to the new system of republican
government. The troops having been
harangued, they joined themselves to
Ihe Junta, reiterating with joy “ Viva
la Uepublica.” We merched "id pro
cession to the Church where a sol
emn te deum was chanted, amidst the
ringing of bells and repeated, dischar
ges of artillery.
,1 caunot omit to recommend to vnur
Excellency, these worthy officers and
suboidinato troops who when they
learnt that your Excellency was chief
and mov- r of this happy and henifl-
rent system shewed every enthusiasm
in your favour. 1 hope you excellen
cy will favour tne with further orders,
as to the management, of these events,
as I am fully persuaded that Iht'hntly
under my direction is completely
determined in favour of our much
desired republic. Gad and thellepub-
lie! 'il
Jlcayucan, Wth Dee. 1822.
To the most Excellent Sr. Marcos dc
■ Oliva,,
Antonio Lopez be Sant* Anna,
First Chief of the llepuhlicunWrmy.
Proclamation directed to the officers
and tfoojis of the columnbl Gt'ena-
diers by qne of the Officer*.
Companion'; in arms ! M.V friends
and Children.—One of youn company
by the orders of a chief who deserves
all your love, i. spoakiug to you
through me, to explain to you how the
ambitinn of one man was leading you
to slavery—a man who trampled un
der feet every law—destroyed the
supreme constitutional congress, ami
imprisoned and exiled tho Deputies.
Among the first of these, we find the
deserving liberal, patriotic, and vala-
rous soldier Sr, Brigudicr, Heiieha,
your Colonel, wllojso often conduct
ed you to reap crowns of laurels
in victory, and treated you as his cltil.
dren— Will yog then suffer with
indifference, the Attempt of a tyrant
against an innocent man ? Decide
tny friends ; unite to those who are.
about to liberate America from slave
ry, wherein she; is already sunk.—
Have no other guide to your operu
lions, discard self interest and ambi
tion, let your motto be liberty or death.
From this step, there is no doubt yurt
will be able to drive from the capital,
the tyrant w ho already trembles at our
approach. No (Inubt there will be'
some evil disposed among us, who-tiV
their intrigues, will endeavour to
persu ide you, that you are going to
be the victims of our resolution.—
Hut you, valiant grenadiers, who were
die first to proclaim liberty and a
republican government, Ihoonly one
that becomes us, will not be last to
proclaim liberty which will render
us happy in our union and hereafter
leave it tu our posterity,
VEtuCnuz, 20lli Dee. 1822.
To the Liberating Jinny.
Citizen GenSrid of the Liberating
Army, D. Antonio Lopez de Kan
ta Anna, says ihe WWiAving to me:
"It is now 5 o'clock, A. M« I have
just takenhy suipize (his point mak
ing 45 prisoners of the culum nl gren
adiers, and of the cavaly corps No. 1 1
and 2—1 piece of artillery and a re
gular park. Thu fire lasted fur about
half an hour, I have observed that
the onemv suffered much. Par our
part only T killed have been reported
to me. isend you this for your sat-
isfaction, and that of the troops, in
order to celebrate this happy begin
ning with the necesary demonstrations
pf joy. Give it all the publicity iu
your power to the. whole proving)* un
der my command. Gail and liberty.
Plains uf Bio, 9th Dec. 1822.
Anto. Lopez Santa Anna, Sr Brig
Governor of Vera Cruz, to citizen
Petro Madeira.
Every event which I have commu
nicated to these brave troops both
tiere and in the province for their sat
refaction, and so interesting to the na
tion’s felicity, does at the same time
-hew visibly the dispensation uf Hea
ven to the ju-t cause of liberty we are
pursuing, and which we shall tint a-
oatidun unlii its consummation. The
Artillery and Soldiers ol every deno
mination and the Oii’xens are here
participating in ihe g> tieral Jubilee,
on Bccnuni ol the abqve communica
tion lied desire unanimously to live
free or die. Very Cruz 20th Dec
1822. 3d year oi Independence, noil
Istol Liberty.—Diariode Vera Cruz
MAttniED.
Last evening, by the Uev. Mr. Animnv,
thoWv. Mr. LkIihok Wiiitk, of Charles
ton, to Mrs. Duzaustii Uuotis of this
-.ivy:
Prisoners Escaped — The jail of
Newberry district, was broke upen on
the 5di inst. knd entered by several
persons unknown, who with tools of
various kinds, which must liave been
prepared for the purpose, literally cut
to pieces the doors by which they en
tered The doors of three .cells of
the dungeons were thrown open and
three prisoners made their escapei
viz: —
The three prisoners were confin
ed in separate cells, and as soon as
they got out of the walls of Ihe prison
mounted horses, widen, had been pre
pared for them, and galloped off.
Sheiiffs. magistrates, and consta
bles should look out for these fellows.
The governor will no doubt oiler a ie £
ward for their arrest.
[Columbia Telescope.
At the Salisbury (I n.".) sets! na, M ry
Pike wasconvicied ofste-iiinf? ♦ ric'r * t»* the
value of thr e firthings t : ml in consequence
of her having b en he <.fUhe mo-t b ne*
volent women in Salisbury, nnd'oi'>
able character* 'n nlace of aevei/ye-e bin
nishment has only been sfr.unctu to f-w
mwtfAVimprisonment- costs of suit to li»e
city, 35 pounds.-The value of all the voo«?f
f r wh ch prisoners were tried* at fie-e
a Fiiousi does not aiuoiint to 40h While the
charges amounts to 275/.
A recent English Traveller in France
bus published the following verses on
the fate of the late Mrs. Juitinn who,
after living with the Duke utOlarcnce
•a* Ilia wile, fur tt long series ofyedVs,
and havintj borne him many children,
w.ih left tvi die in penury und deaola
lion, near Paris.
1 could not close this desultory lay
Nor speak of Violonte ! she was not
Sunk into disrepute, vwt stole^awny
From the world’s honours—lost, but
nuforgot,'
'Ti» sweet her sad and simple tttle to toll..
Whifc the. lull bosom at her mention
Warms j >
And thoughts,like magic, on the memory
swell,
As tWi'fty called her back dressed in her
tliou.vttnd oharms.',; ^ r
She died in a strange land—he .rt-broken
died- ; '
Left in her worse than widowhood—the
tie.
Of wenty summers snap! forayming bride
Younger than her young daughter!
None was nigh
To smooth the desolate couch, whereon
she lay
Withering; but—like the tempest strick
en leaf,
Tlmt wuitsfor nature’s summon to decay—
She shrink before the fury of her grief,
I stood beside her grave: her grave—
whose tone
Was melody to millions—and I wept i
Remembering that ev. n that was not her
own,
4 But there - by casual charity**she ri-pt!
For she died destitute, nor left withal
To buy the rites of sepulture \ yes, sho—
Whose life was one rich boQnty -"lucked a
pall,
While //(jithat should have mourned kept
bridal revelry.
Poor Violanto! there she lies at last
With all the Perditus i but one strange
band,
To twine a coronal for all the past,
And one chance pilgrim at her stone to
stand !
His conscience be his curse, who left her
so—
I name him not, his name would slain my
page: 1
Sw »pt down oblivion’s gulf I let him go,
Mixt with the meaner base who scanda
lize the age.
MARINE.
POUT OF 4MKWmi&
(JLKaVHED.
Ship Mount Vernon, Kuwson, Liverpool,
Win Gastoin
Ship Indus, Brown, Liverpool,
■ * 8 Wright*
Bchr Maria, Trewin, Brunswick,
Sloop Mary, Brown, charleston,
' T. Cohen.'
Sloop Cynthia, B-nrir, Charleston,
ARRIVED.
Ship >Vill*am Penn Philadelphia, 10days,
in ballast to Wm Gaston. Passengers, Mrs.
Willis ami servant, Mr .V VUl and ser
vant, Messrs Smith, Pieraol, and DeLaugli-
ery% \ i
Sclir Efiza & .fane, Salowich, Ossaba, 4
days, with cotton to Bulloch & Dunwoody.
sloop Mercy, Uolles, Riccboru, 4 days,
with cotton & rice, toR&J Habersham,
Bill och &. Dunwoadv, Tufts & Reed, John
M'Nisb, J A Maxwell, und Jl Richardson £.*
co. •
Steam boat Samuel Howard, Augusta, ,3
data, with boats Nos 1 8t 28 }n tow; with
cotton lo J Humming & on, C (J Gris void,
J Latin op 8c co. Perry 8c Wright, 0 Taft,
B Burroughs, d Campbell, Petersen, Hum-
mond& co. and A H Fannin & co,
up von THIS POUT.
At'New-York, 14tli inst. ship Charlotte,
Simcs, to sail in three days,
clkahkii foii this four.
At Charleston, 22d tnsL brig Clnriian,
Bossieurc j tfchr Stephen Jones, *r homas.
At Ncw-York, 13ih inst, ship Clifford
Wayne, Allen.
The sclir Ann, Brownell, sailed from
Richmond, for this po.t, on the 15th inst.
The brig Punthca, Brucllny, for Charles
ton, was to sail from'Ncwriiaven, the 14th
inst. '
The Br brig Fountain, Howard, from
[ rinadud for sit 'l lidums, has be n wreck
ed near Porto R|co. She wus iisurei t at
Boston. The tqmnish au.horities^ took
irom capt II, $4000.
Thp Luacllcs, capt Seiihouse, from Mu-
raiihsm, was driven on th banks of South-
port, in attempting,fo*make the hurhor ol
Liverpool/during die pr vulenco of u vio
lent gale on the 18th Nov. and every per
son on board, consisting of 23 or 24 pe
rished. It was supposed, the vessel went
fo pieced us .upwards of 400 bales of
cotton had been washed ashore. v Another
vessel, the Brunswick from .’Smyrna, wus
lost the following warning on Barret’s
Wharf,and it is supposed all hands perish
ed.
A line of packets lit* been established be-
tweenNew-YorkandHavreto consist of the
ships Niagara, Beebe j Marmion, Hawkins:
Bayard, Vun Dyke * Cadmus, YVhi lock*
ana a ship now building one of which
wj'l sail on the 1st of ev ry month. The
line to be commenced dn th* 1st ofFe-
bruary, by the sailing of the Niagara.
Providence Harbor, on the 10th inst.
was so much obstructed by ice as to pre
vent vessels coming nearer the town than
F eld’s Poi.it, about 3 mites below. v
BALTIMORE. Jan. 15-Ari* brig Ala-
bama, Parrott, Rio Janeiro, 41 j schr Nu-
thaniel Potter, TiiompeOn, Jeiemie, 13.
* NEW-YORK, Jan. 14—Arr brig Hnp-*
tlu, Ball, (hue .-.now, who dif4'ftf tb?pa*.
jPEasiipaaica
Of livery Uescrijlion,
IS DONE AT the '
GEORGIAN JOB OFFICE,
IN THE BEST STYI.fi,
Oti New utid LuMspi£uuu3 Typfc,
» AND OR
MODKRaTE terms.
In nddition to Law, Notarial, and other
Blanks, which me furnished ready printed,
or executed at the shovt^st notice, are
the following Commercial Blanks
Shipping Articles
iCommonWl Let tor-sheet Bills of Lading
Foreign and DotiMtlc' Bills of Bxchauge
Retries of Merchandise
Foreign out ward, Vcicign inward, and
Cdashag Mauifekta
Charter Parties of AllVeightment
Ihded Tables ot Exports of Rice, Cotton,^
Labels fur Counting Rooms
*5team Boat Yard Receipts
ftfcrciiaut’tf LMJtils'j.for marking the dif*
foi but depart men ik of HuHiiit'M
Chec.ku on the djfferent Bunks in this city.
I’atroon Receipt a
Sleilm Boat Receiptfl
Ship Surveyor’s CeriificatV,
Slatements of Damages, foMhr Recovery
of Insurance \
Muster Roll and Articles for \VmhIj
Seamen’s Warrants and PiotecVoni
Custom-!Ioiiso Bonds , \
Couniingllouse Almanacks \
Sjatements of Exports
Torcign Export Entries
Passengers’ Entries
Dray B Hi ;■ *
qj* Apply lit tho Job Office, the sam^re*
v»utly uceupie.l'by il. P, Russell, rat the
ffieeof the Gronouv.
dec 28 23 \
, • MNWO,
GILDING, GLAZING and i’AFEU
HANGING.
'■HIE Subscriber begs Uave to inform
JL Ihh C’ustomcra and the Public In gene*
al, that he bus removed to Thompson fit
Bouneys buildings.
No. , WHITJUCER-STRFsKT,
Near the Buy, where he continues to carry
on the above business in all its various
brsnohes, nu the most modern und approv
'd principles.
Walls Painted hi Oil or Distemper
Colours,
and Ornamented iu the most Fashionable
European Style,
OVHAND,
London White Lead, ground in Ot)
American do do do . do
Lihhoed Oil in barrels, In Uio besv order
Barrels Spirits Turpentine
Window Claw in Hove# of various sizes
English Crown Gloss ih'cratca, suitable fof
large I*aiic9, Pictures, tie,
Fine Colours of ail Aimls
Painter’s Brushes of all sixes
White Wash do
A great variety of dido rent color Frosting
Blue Smalts, (Jc. Me,
All of which will be sold ot the lowest
nrices. Orders from the Country punctual•
in attended to. Colours mixed ready for
use, and dircctlomt. glyen for using them,
if required.
, PATRICK MARLOW,
nov 15 |lQl
Cod Fish.
QUINTALS firHi quality Coil Fish,
lor sale on host'd sloop Paragon at
l’ii) iur’n whlif. Apply to
J 1) HKitUKUT (J CO.
dec 2/ 2T
dre 27
S A LT.
UUSIIELS Salt afloat. Pet
aa|c hy
IIALI, HOYT V CO.
•XT
CORN.
ltu»hels. White Tliot Corn
afloat, for sale in lots tu -nut
imiChalera, on rt'aaonnble ternia. ’Applp
tu HALL, HOYr y ’CD.
dec 18 30
b'rcsli Teas, China and Troy
Candles. . ■
TF.N catty boxes Hytnti Tea
150 do do do Gtthpbwder
50,do do do Impc-risl
5‘» five catty botes Imu- rjal
3o catty,cmnistfr!* of fmpevhd &
Gunpowder 1\ j, '
Fresh imported ■
50 boxes China Wire, 6»i>t*iiiiriif
BroukDim, Dinner ii Ton «ctsj»
200 boxes Troy Candles ,
Landing from ship Garonne, and’for
sale by J
% D.lIEUnP,nTA co.
dee 25 2fi
ft T OYi ¥< Js*
VTOROM the Hoiibu ofliid subscriber, Ten .
sJ? half Eagles undone English Guinea, ii
u metal purse, gilt. The theft was com
mitted about throf weeks since, as appear®
from circumiitahtial lest mony, anil the
thief is s^pectcd. If the money is return
ed, no questions will be asked j if any of
the Game denomination should be offi red
under susp'cious circumstances to any per
son, they are requested to stop it.
JOSEPH CUMMING.
* dec 28 ft 28
—7-7~y.-; , y -
Apple Rraully. ; ; .
A» BAIUIKLS Apple Rrandy
Juatteceiv<!d,andf'or s l-br*. ;.
UAKEK-W Mlh
pn I f c 42
i Landing, ^
From hrtg Levant, from New- Yorkf
S> BOXES Muscatel;Ilaisins
For sale
4«•«
ichcun. Jamatct Item
J. B;a£fiBEBT<fca
ftoni
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