Savannah Georgian. (Savannah, Ga.) 1822-18??, March 15, 1823, Image 1

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SAVANNAH GEORGIAN NliW SEIUKS—VOL. U. SAVAA'JYAU, SAvURD.iV MURJYIATQ, MARCH 15, 1823. WO SAVANNAH : FRIDAY MORNING, Ml!ll II 14, 1823. A bill to abolish imprisonment for debt is before the New York Legislature; Y The owners of the Steam ship Robert Fultoo, intend to establish a line of ves. seis “ . f the species and class of the Robert Fulton, to ply betwei n the ports of Ne.4 Orleans and New-York, touching at the intermediate porta." The steam boat Tennessee was lost a- bout 180 miles above Hatches, on the hight of the 6th ult. by striking on a snag. She sunk in five minutes ; many'lives and a raluuble cargo were lost The amendment to the second section of the bill to regulate the commercial inter course between Great Britain and the U. States will, it is said, “ Defeat the importa tion of colonial articles cirsuitously in Bri tish vessels, on better terms than English or American vessels could import them directly. Without this amendment, Bri tish vessels could export articles from one colony to another without payment of ex port duties, and from the latter colour to the United States, free of export duties which are imposed by the colonial laws in the sugar colonies, when such exports are lent to foreign countries, but which are Dot imposed when such exports are sent to the mother country or to a sister colony ” The fourth volume of Peveril ofthe Peak, Tvhich forms the third volume of the Amc. xican edition, was sent from New-York to Philadelp’na on Wednesday 26th til', at three o’clock in the afternoon; and on Friday morning, the 28th, at six o’clock, . Messrs Carey 8c Lea, had fun thousand Co- pi ; of the volume in boards—the whole period of time being thirty-nine hours. Senna is produced in the state of Ala* .diaina, and is said to be considered of very good quality The Intelligencer of the 3d inst. con- . tains, in detail, the Report of the Second Committee on the affair of the ’• Suppres *ed Documents.” The mountain was truly in labor, and brought forth nothing. There never was a triumph more complete— more honorable, than that ofthe Secretary Of the Treasury. The little dogs, and all *• Tray, Blanche and Sweetheart,” who raised the cry, and have continued it for so Ion-a period, against that statesman have been ofthe must essential service tn him In this business, which has proved tlia' he is invoice able to an attack which has been in preparation a whole year, and which was to have crushed him—and has placed him on'an enviable heighth above his opponents But their efforts in llii3 case, as in every other, against the same indivi dual— << Like gun well aimed at duck or plover Bear wide, and kick their owners over *' The foil -wing extract Irom the report of jjte committee gives a more full and cor rect view of the ubsurd rnture of the charge than we hnve y et published : — The Committee cannot conclud this report without an expression ol 4he conviction, founded as well on the character of the transaction to which the suppressed paragraph re fers, as the circumstances under which it has been communicated to the House, that Ihere docs not exist the semblance of a reason for charg ing upon the Secretary nt the Treasu ry any agency in its suppression, or for connecting him in any way with the mutilation of this document. The transfer tiom the Bank,of Chillico- the to the Bank of Columbia, and (hence to the Bank of Stubenville, of ihb sum of eighteen thousand dollars, which was held by the former insti- fur,.\D as a special deposit?, was an or dinary tanking operation, weakening in no degree (he security of the Go vernment, and which has eientuated in no loss to the Treasury. There could have existed, with the Se cretary of Treasury, therefore, no mo- tive. tor this suppression. lie had mi end to attain, no purpose to subserve, Lv the practice upon the House of a fraud, alike iusulting to its dignity, and discreditable to the agenl who should hazard its perpe tration. The circumstance that the Seciet.iry of the Treasury, in res ponding 1o Ihe call of the House comniunicaWtl the original Utter ol Which the suppreseyl paragraph is a part, is decisive, in the judgment ol the Committee, to negative the idea, if ever indulg,*., that there cuuld have been entertained by that high officer any in’entinn to keep out ol view any part of its contents, particularly as it, is usual, in answer to calls from the 11 nuse, to communicate the copies o! documents, rather than the original, which has l»esu transmitted in this On the night ofthe 7th inst.the dwell ing house ofMr.Wulkup, in Micklcnburgh County, N. C. was consume ! by fire ? and wlmt is truly melancholy, f ur promising a us and another relative of the family perished in the flames ! On the subject of the deposits from the Treasury in the Western tynks, which hi>g •dso been magnified into a. subject of the most immense importance by the same gentlemen who have been so indie* fatigable in their exertions on the sub* jet: of that bubble yclep’d the •* suppress ed documents,” 'the following letter was addressed by the Secretary to the Com* mittee—which places that affair on its pro. per toundation Letter f i m the Secretary of the Treasury to the Committee appointed on the above subject. Treasonr Department, ? February 24, 1823. 5 Sir : In reply tn your letter of the lOlli inst- enclosing a resolution of Ihe Hou8e,of Representatives,ofthe 6.I1 nf the same month, and requesting the communication ot any infermalum not already cummunicateil, as may be in possession ofthe Department, I hove the honor to observe, that when the Bank uf tiff: United Stales went into operation, an effort was made to sim plify the operations of the Tteasury, through the instrumentality of that institution. To give to this effort the greatest • fficiency.it was agreed that the Bonk should have (he selection, ot only uf the state banks in which the public money should be deposit ed, in places where it had established no office, but ul - those whose notes sooulil be received as revenue ; and that all money, so deposited, should Ue entered to the credit of the Bank of the United States, in trust for the Treasurer of the .United States, It was further agreed that the Treasur er migh- draw upon the bank, at any place where the public money was deposited, whether there were any public money at such place or not; with the understanding, however, that reasonable notice should be given to he Bank, when it was intendsd to draw for any considerable amount beyubd the sum on deposite at such place. This project was generally carried into effect, in the course of 1817,' after the stale banks had resumed specie payment. The notes nf all ueb banks, in the western slates, were received by the Land Officers, and deposited, as specie, in the offices nf the Bank ofthe U. States, and in the state banks, employed as offices of deposit. This plan of simplifying the opera tions of the Treasury, was in the course of 1818, interrupted, on the one hand, by the complaint of the late banks, employed as offices ol neposite, that the Bank of the United States acted oppressively and capri iously towards them, by subjecting them to all the inconveniences inci dent to the relation they held, and depriving them of most of the advan tages which they had a right to ex pect from that relation ; and, on the other, by those of the bank of iheU niteil States, alleging that the stuie banks were desirous of appropriat ing to themselves all the advantrges of their situation without bearing any part nf the burthens imposed upon it by its charter, or bv the ar rangement m-:de with the Treasury, une of die most onerous of which was the implied obligation it had incurred of guarantying riot only the solvency of those banks, whilst they were em ployed as offices, but also nf the other state banks, whose notes were receiv ed on account ofthe revenue. This state of collision and irritation conti nued increasing until the autumn of 1818, when the bank not'fl d the department that it could no longer execute its arrangement, without sa crificing the essential interests of the institution. At the same time, it,de clared its determination to receive from the land officers nothing but its 11,1m notes, ami the current coin of the Union, except as special deposin'. Shortly alter this determination, ma ny nf the western banks stopped payment. The experience of the bank, had a- bout this period, led to the conviction, that it was impracticable to keep its notes in circulation in the western states, and orders were,consequently, issued in the couise of the autumn, or in the early part of 1819, forbid ding its western offices to is«ue their notes, even on a deposite of snecie. The determination which it had'tunn ed in relation to payments on ac count of the public lands. Was, there fore, practically, a determination to receive nothing but current gold and silver coin, which was nearly as diffi cult to be obtained, iu the western Btates, as the notes of the Bank o 1 the United Stutcs. At this time, there was due the U. States nearly twenty millions of dollars, by the purchasers of the public lands, great part or which debt had been contracted during the suspension ol spacie payments, and >Q the years 1817 and 1818, when . the nole* of nearly all the western banks were receivable in payment. It was man- itest, upon the slightest reflection, that this determination of the hank would greatly reduce the receipts inln the Treasury from that importani branch ofthe public revenue, but that consideration would not, alone, have been sufficient tn have, induced the Executive Deportment tn have assum ed the responsibility of the measure which was, with great deliberation, adopted upon the occasion. . To have permitted the distress nnd ruin in which Ihe purchasers of the. public lands would have bern involv ed, by the refusal to receive from thrm any thing in payment but the curren coin of the Union, and the notes of the bank ofthe United Slates, under such circumstances, wilhuut an effort by the Executive Department to a- vert them, would have excited feelings in a laigc and meritorious body nf ci tizens, which no prudent government even if despotic, could have seen with with indifference. It is confidently believed, that, if no such effort had been made, the Executive Depart- mei t nf the government would have bern charged with the most shameful imbecility, ant) that the Treasury D" pertinent would have hern loaded wi'h execration. If an i-ff.rt was to be made tn iifford relief, the -Itcrnniivc presented wns to continue to receive the notes nf the few banks in the west which still continued to pay specie, and enter them to the credit nf the •Treasurer, in the offices of ihe bank, as special deposite); nr to deposite them in state banks, upon conditions which would make it their interrst to return them into circulation as soltn as practicable, on account nf the govern' ment. In the first case, they would have accumulated in those offices, without the possibility of being put again into circulation on account of the government, as those offices would have had no inducement to make ex- rtions to convert them into specie, or transfer the amount, by purchase of hills of exchange upon New Orleans, or upon the Atlantic cities. To effect either of these operations, it Was ma nifest that the employment of the state banks was indispensable. The arrangements proprosed.were maturt- ly consioereu ana Tioojneiij ntm nis approbation of Ihe President, who was fully sensible of the importance of the crisis which had arrived. The inducements which were of fered to those banks, to resume and continue specie payments, and to transfer the excess ,d the public re venue collected in the western states b.yond the expenditure, to place where itcould.be expended, were be lieved to be both justifiable and suffi cient to ensure success, and the re sult has proven that nothing was tie cessaay to the most complete success but the want of integrity in those who had the direction of some of those in stitutions,* Against this cnnlingcn cv, the Department availed itself of all the means within its reach, and corifidid in the representations of of gentlemen who occupied high and responsible attiorta m the public councils, whose judgment anil inte grity were considered unqaestiooa hie, and whose means of information excluded almost the possibility of mistake. Notwithstanding the want of integrity which has been manifest ed by the directors of several of those banks which have failed, it is still confidently believed, that, offer mak ing a liberal allowance for any loss which possibly may occnur, by the Firmer* and Mechanics’ Bank of Cincinnati, the Banks of Vincennes Edwardsville, and Missouri, the be . nefits which have resulted from those, arrangements will greatly prepon derate over such loss. 11 is impossible to state whether any loss will eventually he sustained bv the government from either of thnsv batiks. No apprehension is -inter- mined of loss from any other, The Farmers and Mechanics’ B ink ol Cincinnati is, therefore, the only one in which public money has been de posited, where the Bank of the U d ted State§ had established an office, from whichV'here is any danger of loss. That bank, in a very short time al ter it resumed specie payments, in conformity with its agreement with the Treasury Department, atoppeil payment, and has never made any return, or answered any of the de mands which have been made upon i lor information. The impression, in relation to it, has, therefore, been very unfavorable. A suit has been brought against .it, in the federal court, for the amount of public mo ney in its possession, which has not yet been decided. » The arrangements made with the * This is proven by the fact that t h Banks oflllino'.s, of Madison, and of Co* lumbos, have fulfilled their engagement’ with fidelity, and still continue to full’ ihemi and that the Bank of Chillicoth faithfully fulfilled its engagements, us lung as they existed, Farmer# and Mechanic#’ bulk nf Cin cinnati, the Ba k of ChiHicntlie, nnd the Branch of the Bank nf Kentucky, nt Louisville, where offices of the B ink of the United States had beet established, Ivy which the money col- lected at the land offices, in the vici- • of those banks, were deposited in them, were not communicat' d at the next sessinr afier their date, from nfere inadvertence tn the provi.ion of the charier to which the resolution re fers. Tliev were, however, matter# of general nntmiety, not only in the western tales, but in the other parts nf the Union, Omissions nf this na ture have frequently occurred in the Departments,»nd, itjispreaumed, will occur hereafter, withiifficera the most alter,tive. The notoriety; however, which attendi'd tliesB arrangement# with the banks, it is presumed, will satisfy the committee, that there was neither a wish nr intent! o' to witli» hold from Congress ihe fact of Ituch deposites, and the reason up. n which the measure was lonoded. The papers which are herewith transmitted support the views pre sented in this letter. I remain with respect, Voiir obi client servant, WM. H. CRAWFORD. The Hon, .Tous W. C.Mpnr.i.i* . Chairman r>f thr Select Committee, ' Mobile, Feb. 24.-There has for •he last week, been no in:i»erinl alter iHion in the cotton market, prime, in sqmre bales, may hi* quoted* 10 a 10$ / noil,fail 8$ » 9 cis inferior 7 a 8ci». Cotton fa ^iHilurtlly ducli- nintr* and the quantity in mark'd innoflfting -Hales hhve been at 42 » 44 cts. per yard. Whi-key has ol fate somewhat improved in price and probably will still continue to advHticn, is it is understood to have risen in N»*w Orleans, ami the quantity in market, at present, is not Urge, The Delaware Watchman cautions the public again 8' a villain, he the name of James lllake, alias James M. Blake, who a tew mouths since came to Dover in that suile, professed groat piety—couted and married a female ot the village, and 8«»or, aftei eloped and left her. It has beer dready usee’Mined that he has two other wives in d tf. reni places, and he was on ihe eve of taking to himself another at Carlisle, where he wa« Hawn* competent to the task, stand, by with fold ed arms, whilst our flag 1 is Insulted, our merchants robbed, ^nreitixen* exposed to wrongs contumely and imprisonment, and whil t their vessels remain in the hands of plunderers, under the Royal flap of **paiti ? i.et government issue orders to capture every nne.ngnins* whom a charge ef pi racy is made, and, at the same time, let our minister at Madrid he instructed to claim restitution for all captures made under a blockade, confessed by the Spanish gov ernmem to he il.cgal. by their recent ad mission ofthe British right of remunern- tion for captures math- under it It may be objected, that’ we should not take the present opportunity' to oppress a nation which appears lobe on the eve of ft con test for principles, which must enlist our sympathies with heri but there is « part* mount.-duty to our chisens, nntl ouV’fla- tionnt fK»»*br,ft*r wtituh-w-mtitil ritfttrcf, fd* pect, without regard to the feelings of those under whose jurisdiction it is insulted. The government have, we know, remon strated with the loCal authority .'of "i rto Rico on this subject, nnd fair words were given in exchange ; but since that period, and since the capture of tlu- Panchitn and her acquittal in a U. S Cou't, the pirates oIt that island appear to have received a new impulse, and emboldened by impunity, they run riot in their villa ny. ’t hese no vations are suggested by the case of ill • American ship Budget, of Baltimore, from London to Laguirn, which was captured bv a Porto Rico privateer—robbed - the ct mmanding officer forced to remain on deck eighteen days without a shelter, in the most inclement weather- her passen gers imprisoned, and left to the clmrity of the American Consul and other Americans in' Porto Rico—uml finally the vessel con demned by a Spanish lodge, without a hcu.ing from the commanding officer, who wa u compelled to remain in du- ’ranee on board. It these acts be suffer ed, our flag will be despised nnd our vessels comiidered as lawful prey to every contemptible cruizer. On tliis account wc must look with peculiar interest to the expedition of Com. Porter. One of the passengers in t is vessel, who were robbed a .cl thrown into prison, wus a youg man ofthe name of Bloomfield, (ne phew of Sir Benjamin Bloomfield) who h as addressed a letter to the editor of the hhrlestou Mercury, containing a d< tail of his harsh treatment. To allow the state of feeling at Porto Rico, and ihe eflect the discharge of the I’anchita, captured some time ago by the T). b.sehr Grampus, 1 send you the following extract - the effect upon the minds of ruffians whose trade is robbery and murder, is precisely such as might be expected “ Plie crew ofthe Panchita returned from Charleston while the other passenger and myself were in prison. Nothing can ex ceed the brutality and excesses committed oy these barbarians upon their arrival No mmrter vtcrcihev landed ban they «Hwiuv The Drama.—Mrs. Inclib fid’s excellent, wlWcdHrprcrttftn- -.*>■ lemnoath to massacre every American -'ntertuining and chaste Comedy of ” 'In Marry, or not to Murry ?” with the Jauglf able farce of “ Monsieur Tonsoo,” wer< performed here for thof'at time, on Wed nesday evening—and marvellous to relate, to a thin hous It is true, the limes are un* usually hard—we know &m\feel them to he so—but when such choice fare is catered for our amusement, it is really astonishing that so few should have p. esenied them selves to partake of it. However, not. withstanding the performers needed that generally indispensabU stimulus to pro. lessioual exertion—a numerous audience — we do them, but sheer justice when wc state, that both play and farce were mo e ably supported than any winch have been represented this season. Mr. Bimwd, Mr. Faulkner, Mr, Placule, Miss TiMen, Mrs. Brown, our old acquaintance (f twenty years standing, Mrs. Barrett, and we are reull, nappy to add, Mr. Kenyon, all—all—sus tained their parts to admiration, particu larly in the C imedv—and Mathews only nan excel our favorite, Spillet, in “ Mo w simir Mo.bleau.” It is a very unpleasant pai l of the duty of u critic to find fault with a performet—but as we really mean him well—we shall casually observe that Mr Hughes might have performed tlie part ol “ Lavensfarth” to admiration if he would’ Nature has been m >at bountiful in good gifts to this gentleman and pity *ti» he does not avail himself ot them—but he ; most always t o co d and too tame, >nd nut un frequently too economical of his voice, which is sufficiently capacious f -r the New-York or Philadeldia Theatres, if properly ma naged. Let him oidy remedy these de facti—he cun easily do so if he chooses— :t .jd be shall soon discover that he wili In,id a very different rank in the estima* Vton of ti e public. Of that charming ac- ti ts* Mrs. Hughes, the legitimate “ Widow Cheerly” of Cherry, we shall take occa sion to speak in our next, this being our first appearance as ft Dramatic Censor th» s season* MASSINGER. Mn RoBEiiTSoir, If you think the following worthy ft place in the Georgian, you will please in sert it: Has Commodore Porter instructions to capture Porto icico, rs well us Cuba, Pi rates ? If not, it is devoutly to be wished they maybe sent to him with the least possible delay. I can perceive no dif ference between the legalized n racies of the one, uml the permitted robb- ries and murder-ofthe others Is it not just, in ei ther case, to hold the government, sanc tioning these outrages, responsible for the acts of those who reside and draw their pow- rto injure from within its jurisdic- lioii ?—if the mother country has not the power, and the local governments have I .iot the will, to give these desperadoes their ju*t uuttft-wh/ uhould wc, who we duty could find. Iu pursuance of this bloody determination two of them entered the guard room in which my young cumpuni* hi and myself were confined, at about 11 ’ lock at night with drawn •tille.tfoe^ xciuimmg that they were Spaniards, who had been disgracefully treated, imprisoned mid tried aspirates in Charleston,and that they were resolved to avenge their wrongs u ion every American with whom they might come iu contact. They had under stood that we hud been taken under the American fl’-g, and believing us to be A. merians, they proposed commencing their operations by making an example of us both-It was only by the most solemn us- sui'aiices of out being Englishmen, and tlie strongest denunciation of the Americans that we contrived to avert the meditated deadly blow of these assassins. Next morning two American sudors were found murdered upon the beach, supposed to have fallen by the hands of the same men who had visited us the previous night.— Th«y expressed fervently their ardent de sire io meet with an Unprotected Ameri can vessel at seu, an t vowed that notu soul should be spared, but every life fall a sacrifice to their vengeance, as some a- toneiuent for the unjustifiable injuries they Jeclured tljey hud suffered at Charleston. I should trespass too much upon your li mits were I to detail the numberless atro- ojtiei daily comnuted by these Spaniards, esptciully against the Americans. I have however said enough to convince you how misapplied was that mercy which spared tlie lives of villains whose only thirst is for blood, and whose chief desire is to prove by some fresh piracies and murders the strangejrralitude they feel for the indul gence ^Undeservedly extended towards '.item lnth.ehope that his hasty sketch may prove useful by preventing the in judicious exertise Of mercy on any future jeerfsion. I remain, Sir, your obed't servant, JOHN BLOOMFIELD.” Charleston, Feb 28, 1823 MARINE. POIIT OF SA VAN,YAH. ARRIVED. Schr Cornelius, Biskey, Martinique, IB days, with molasses to 1 Cohen. Left scln Eliza Ann, Jurden, from. Savannah, for Ba vannah in 18 days* Feb, 28, in lat 41 4H long 63, spoke U S schr Greyhound, Join Porter, commander, of Com. Porter's squa dron, from which fie had been separated in a gale. Rtyrch 7th, in 1st 26, long 73, spoke ship Uiama, 14 days from Boslou for Havana. At Tybee, schr Polly, , from FI • rida in 7 clays, with timber, put in on ac. count of head winds, bound to Charleston, UP FOB THIS PORT. At New York, 4th fast, ships Garonne, Mott, and Neptune, Rich. CLhAUED POH THIS POUT. At Charleston, 12th insL schr Esther, Perry. ARRIVALS PROM THIS PORT At Reedy Island, 5tb inst ship Georgian, Bailey. The f Rowing vessels remain wind bound: ships C’ott n Plant, Fash, for New York . Hazard, Childs, Providence t brig '<nccd- wcilj >V«fwuuib* Livetyoulf at the lwww Msty, Brown, I’/chr o.ul'V J,'" 1 '' Mn '‘ ru'tlu. '>, H <'l!’,’. ’Kfe 1 *1$ ■Jj'.V°°P *<>»»", Bradley,forth s port, Ktl f "”" Cliurlrston the Util lust. 1 Teh. 24-r.lcsr<Hl bn> Spar- tui?. 1 *. u, vMayo, Bos- I fufinal. Dll Intel', Kingston, .’am, SSTu? fri ’ m N * Viirk. CI1AULM ON, Mure' 12-,'fr, lit buff Fniieis, I'lilerson, Dm,r,9, su,r U. numi Lovell Wilinlnp-t illtisreil.Br hriy v.tldletoi! Tlu.m. Wm, Liverpool i B r Imp " illijfii, tun. do ! hiip F,repress, Bant.s. Ne w Yurki ,ctl.*s Pa ket Kmpht.N tllluu^^ uboJ- ny. Dot elll Mosqtdto, K F , Nurli laiTlil nil, .lores Mtitfn esburo’, MIL VDM.VHI' Man'll S. Cleared, packet ship I’hiltutelpliln, Bowen, Liver- pool: brig I'rcBident, Wooten, I ort-iui. Prince Arrived at New r mtlc yesterday, brip (Min, l)orklmi.t, 43 duvsvjh m Mi i ieV.deo. Arrived nt 1 eedy Isltiid, brie iMnt’ WM op. from liitiada', (Vie,, scliv Mury & Folly; Eldridpe. from lt'\un. NEW YORK, ''arch -I—Cleared -I p A. enstu, Griswold London j brlsp Union, I’aterson, Rotterdam i YumacL;iV| Clark, A ntwerp \ • Below last night, ship Jos ina\Almy, Liverpool 83 ; s.Jir Rose ip Bloom, from North Carolina. Fresh 'l eas, China and Troy Candles. ’ r 'E N catty boxes Hyson Tea UojQJ 50 do do do Gonpowder 50 do do do Imperial 50 five catty boxes Impel ial 30 ratty oannister# of Imperial (c Gunpowder Tea, Freeh imported ISO boxes Chinn Ware, containing Breskfasi, limner & Tea sets "200 bines Troy Candles Landing from ship Garonne, an sale by .1 B HFRBF.RT 8. on. L. I*. Tencrifie Wine. QR. casks L. I*. Tenciflu Wine Just received. For sale by J. 11. HERBERT 8* CO. fob 10 64 Cotton Bagging. PIECES 42 inch Inverness Cotton Fop sa!« by BAKEU & MINTON. jan .3 *32 Runpi flno. Flni ».»» DARRELS Superfine Flour Just received and tor sale by BAKER & MINTON. jan15 42 For Sale, A MULATTO WOMAN about 25 year. old, a good Washer and Ironer, a seamstress and plain Cook, with her son. eight yean ofage. Apply to BAKEU 8c MINTON. jan 15 '42 Prime Leaf Tobacco and Hams, Just received per ship Savannah„ flfl HHD8 prime Kentucky Tobacco all 3000 lbs Hams , For sale by J B HERBERT ii CO, eb 22 75 N. O. Sugar. HHUS. Ne *v-Orleans Sugar of gooi^ quality—For sale by BAKER & MINTON. march 3 82 Molasses, Rum and Limes. «> HOGSHEADS Molasses IS# 2 puncheons Jamaica Iium 16 bbls Fresh Limes Landing from schr It nown—For sale by SCARBROUGH U CLARK, march 8 p 87 I’evcrU of ti>e Peak. —-'VWwvvw—w w. t. williams, nn AS just receivedPEVERII, OF THE wU PEAK, a romance by tlie author of Wsverly, io 3 vuls. march 8 p 87 Whiskey. BARRELS Northern Whiskey* Just received and for sale by BAKER U MINTON. feb t 57 Hay and Oats.. BAGS (400 bundles) first qua* lity Seed Oats 100 bundles. Hay Landing fromsbin Cotton Plant, and for sale low from the wharf XN STORE* 10 hhds St Croix nugar . s 30 bbls Roman Crrm nt GEORGE GORDON march 3 182 Riee and Coffee, &c. /\fj\ CASKS prime River Rice in whotQ and half casks 20 bags Coffee 20 bbls Philadelphia Rye Gia 5 casks Lonrjkn B Stout 50 bushels L Potatoes For tale low by # M'KEKZIK & HERNANDEZ* Exchange' Dock, march 4 |p 83 Axe Bar Iron. TONS Swedes Axe bsr Iro . Fa sale by HALL, HOYT U CO» jan 39 43 ’