Savannah Georgian. (Savannah, Ga.) 1822-18??, November 23, 1831, Image 2

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'V v i GEORGJI AN«, daily papkr UOIWIUY PATBIt kiiiAt holla its ::: nvk^)ui.i,iRN Jill Jldvtrti»rm*nU "ft* •' I" hath hi/irr*. h\om Iht 17*0*1 Statu Unlit. To Thomas Gri-.hn, Foreman, and the gentlemen Grand Jurors, evet see tlio result!- I sign mumlcBUd to produce dmmeinbcrmeiit tiun I did offer. If you did boo it, arc you oftho States, they exhibited on anient attach- not covered with Rhamo at the gross misrep- moot to llm Union ; and u derided purpose to roHeiitntiouB you have published, under the j preserve the sovereignty of the States. It sanction of your names, and on your solemn only reniaiuB for the Southern States to tn&n- oathe or affirmations 1 If you never have i tfest tho who decision of character, the same m;en tho revolution I ojfered—which 1 would determination of purpose, and the tnrfl'law eharilubly hope—do you feel no rmnpunc- | must and will bo constitutionally modified.— linun visiting* of conscience, for having iibell- i Permit mu gentlemen, again to return you I ed nd denounc' d n frl'ow citizen, who never ' entorlnined an unkindly foi ling toward-you Hl.r.is, i un iiiiii', .him ill ii*i, other livunty-nuo Urn ml Jurors of Ncrivmi 1 ' *>o Hugsrition I did propun, #nd wl.icl. I rounty, in tlio Stain ol Uoorg.., for tho Uc f prn.,J nf having l.rnpomsi, j. no moro like tobf'r tc'rn. 1831 that which you have presented, than Ilypcri- Your ntnUuns iinsnotik you mon nf rospoc- '° “ „ . . I,billy mid lovers of nation I 1 would fain bo. Vot, have, however, Grand Jurors, not I,eve von to bo wlmt your eteUonn presume ; l ’ oe " on yonr oath* and affirmation,. where vou hevo been pudty of injustice I to preeent, o. griovences resoluttonn nnd «i ? . • r . * . . 1 iruullnitu trliWili mu nr liful oveni.l in and slcolod your hearts. Apprehensions arising from looul situation, Room so entire- ly to have concentrated all your faculties in self-preservation, that tho rights and tho sufferings of otliors were but an dross in yout eyns. I pity moro than l blame you, and my mind is'moro clouded by burrow than agitated by anger. It would bo passing strange that, fur an effort to extricate you from tho critical nnd unsufosituation in which nnmcuHitred and unwarranted terms of this presentment you havo iiprend before tho pub- lie, who will not fail to start with amazement, if not with horror, from a picture, not one lineament of which has the fuintest resem blance to the original ; a picture, drawn un der strong excitements of fear and hatred.— My imagination cun suggest no apology for men, win* liavo cither never seen, or have strangely and wantonly perverted a resold my thanks, for this manifestation of your kindness, and in conclusion, to offer the fol low ng sentiment : The sovereignty of the States, and tho in tegrity oftho Union. WEDNESDAY DIOKMNti, NOV’R. U3. l iio Chattel',it Mercury immitoas, that Mr. Char.es Y«ung, of (tin Theatre, arrived in town a few days airier, in order in make the nccovaary arrangt'monla preparatory to opening tho Theatre p>r the ensuing •eaaon. |t «■ cxpic'cd that the Dramatic Company will reach Charleston au as to comniunce operation! on llm I at of December. The Company is rpokon of in the Norfolk pipi r«, as poasataiug much talent. CoMMrnrr. or Boston.—The rcronuo wnich accru ed at this port in Oct. 1831, was S313,510 In Oct. 1830, - , 251,022 Increase, • $292,498 The number of nmvaW ft >m foreign ports tins year, up loNuv. 3, was 691. Oi r oi Debt — It ts stated that the pro-1 bable Revenue of the United States during this year on Customs, will be us follows : New-York, ... $19,000,0001 Boston 5. Ml, 000 Philadelphia, - 4.000,000 Other ports in tho U. States, - 8,000,000 rflJic lAl ’* 1 lourccs of the ment lands The Re- $38,100,000 $5,000,000 Thojgceiptfl ofUic for tho sale of and other sources venue, Making a grand total of receipts during this year, of thirty-nix millions one hundred thousand dollars. Let the government discount their bonds Tho ship Biroc, at Now-York, ha* brought Paris of this year, and pledgo their Bank Stock (if dales lo 20 It Sept.—no later than bef ,ru received. circiMiatancOT, more limn vour own miaoon- \ l ™ l " ">»k« " ‘ho foundation of a tirado ol duct, has placed you, you ,'liould turn upon j impotent threat* and bm-oloss denunciations, and rcml mu il' snoti Imd not been tho coin. \ * ">'• Imwcvur, it would sumn, are not satis, moncnsoofmankliidinollaiiosandoountrios. "od with tho oiotorialo, miro stubble and W.th a disposition to oxtonuntn rather than which vou l.avo erected on which to cxontornic, I toko up my pun lo trouble you [ '"old uti your but you are dny- with somo remarks on that portion of your ;«" to the dim necoocity of resorting to a vile nrcsontntciit in which, without a cornpunc. I inainuation to propup your charges. lions fuclmo, you deliver mo over to your I insinuate, iliut you had previously known mo public exocittionur to indict tho cspital penal- j " , " , „ n “ vcrt, f?? " ll "" r 1 c ™" B one. lies of your laws. ">/• * l , w "" ld bo °“ B y '" r . “?• A friend has obligingly furnished mo will, ninveinoiit of my pen, to contradict the mam- a copy of your presentment as published in u “‘ lon ' an ‘' ds authors, in plain Ian- the Savannah Oaorgian, of Oct. 3d, 1831, i a » bars, but I do not choose thus to 33, 1831, That there may bo no tnistuko or miHmi- dcrstanding, I shall here republish nil tint part of the presentment which l object against us unjust and inhuman, Savannah Georgian, Oct. 22,1831. Superior Court Srrivtn Cy. October Term, IhJI. “Recent occurrence fl in the South render it important, at tins time, that a watchful eyo should bo kept, not only to our mtorost in a certain Bpoci-’R of properly, but nU> to the pamonal safoty oftho community, In which wu livn. In onr own country much excite ment had recently existed in relation to mip- posod insurrectionary muvomenlH uiiiong our colored population; und it io feared that n portion of our brethren in tho North and Rust have been nctivo nnd instrumental in exciting these deluded beings to l lie premedi tation ofacts of violence nnd bloodshed.— This belief is warranted by a string of im politic nnd dnngorous resolutions, offered by John Binns, of Pennsylvania, at n meeting lately hold in Philadelphia ; the substance of which was tho suggestion of aschomu to lib erate thu slavos oftho Mouth ; in lur'lierence of which measure it was proposed to recom mend Congress to apply the surplus revenue oftho United Htutes, after paying olf the National Debt, to tho purchase and liberal.on of southern slaves. We cannot bit present tliosc resolutions us a movement prolific of dungei nnd mischief to tho people of Geor gia, in common with thoso of iho other states of the south, nnd fraught with cotiscquonocs which no good citizen would willingly pro- duoe. We also present thair iuuvov, John jlmns, whom wo have previously known with no advantage to himself, as a covert, and therefore as a dangerous euemyr-as a crim- ntil, who is only protected from tho cnpitul ponultion of our laws by his abscnco fiom tlio jurisdictional limits of the state of Geor- uia. iHignrd] THOMAS GBFiEN, Foreman. And by 21 Jurors. I shall briefly notice all the points in this presentment. I am, indeed, loudly called up- on so to do, when in it I am branded ns uu incondiary nnd denounced ns a criminal. I will not use harsh language, nor rude opi- theta. My cause rejects, I would say, dis dains such won pons. They nro tho rcBort oftho feeble und tho angry, nnd thoso who lire in the wrong. In tfioir hands I lenvo thorn. You express n belief, that "the insurrectio nary nmvotnent M among portion of your colour ed population, and their acts of "violence and bloodshed" were caused by your "brethren oftho north and'east,” and tins horrible dc* uunciation o( your brethren you base upon "a string of impolitic and dangerous roKolu- lions,” which you assert I otic red at a public meeting in Fluladelphin, "tho substance of which was (as you assort.) tho suggestion of a Hcliumo to liberate the sluvcs of the south ” You have so far mistaken,ns to represent an effect as the causa. The "insurrectionary movements, and nets of violence nnd blood shed," had taken place before. 1 made any suggestion on the subject. It was much re flection on the condition of tlio Mouth, and a most anxious, perhaps mistaken desire to render tlio country nnd humanity a service, which prompted mo to net ns I liavo done. Perhaps, gentlemen Grand Jurors, you will 1 highest reward of generous inimU Called by start and stand appal-d, when I assure you, the voice of a large nnd respectable portion that on tho occasion referred to, 1 ollVrod no j oftho people of this State, colluded from its ing" ot resolutions, and that the idea ol i various sections, to represent them in the liberating tho slaves in the South, never was Free Trade Convention, tho nomination was entertainod or breathed by me, ot any time promptly met nnd a choorlul acquiescence or on any occasion. I offered but o single *" ’ resolution, nor in the proamblo to it, nor in tho preliminary remarks I made to tho mee ting, can there be found (they are all in print) n syllabic which can he tortured into the sug- gestion, hint or countenance of a scheme of the nature you havo suggested. My prop, nsitidh was, "to raise a committee of congress lo devise ways and means to cause all the repel the attack. I prefer to Blnte facts, and thus put bock the libel.nnd make the libellers ashamed. No rnen like publicly to bo con victed of the vicious propensity of speaking what they know to be fulse, or dotr.g whut they know to be vicious. You will remember, gentlemen Grand Ju rors because, these ure facts which stick dose to your memories, that the summer before Major, now Gov. Hamilton was first elected to congress, lie was intondiint of Charleston, M. 0. During his intendency, there were many arr ngemonts und movements of an in surrectionary character in that city, and its immodinto vicinity. These evil doings made it necessary to institute judicial tribunals to inquire into the fads ami punish the guilty. Tlinso tribunals wore in session for several weeks, and called forth—not only from the props of the Mouth, but from that of "the North and Fast”—much animadversion. I was, as that time, the editor of a newspaper in thin city. What was tlio language then held by me, may readily bo inferred from the facts I nm going to state. In the winter, 1 think of 1S17, Major Hamilton did mo tin* honor, without any formal introduction to call ut my ofllco, nnd in warm and kind termfi, make not only his own personal acknowledge ments, but those of his fellow citizens, for the uniform language held by the Democratic Press at that memorable period. " Yours, Sir,” said lie, “ was the only press, nor h of : “ the Chosnpuahe, which did justice to our "motives and conduct, and duly appreciated "onr feelings and situation." These fuels demonstrate what has been the language 1 havo held ut nil times, on thin de licate and momentous subject. You, M Green, should^^l the burning blush of shame glow on your checks, when you review the undeserved and unsustainable charges you have put forth against a friend, whom you wou'd persuade his fellow citizens, has been long "known” ns " a dangerous enemy.’ I have no disposition to hoap cauls of fire on your head, or upon those of your equally guil ty coadjutors. I desire to do myself justice, and to place myself as I am, before my fellow eilizons. May 1 not he allowed, to congratu late you and your fellow jurors, rather than myself, upon the fortunato circumstance of my "absence from the jurisdictional limits of Georgia” as an incident which has saved you from tho guilt of having shed iunoront blood. You have, on your oaths and afllrmations, and under your subscribed names, declared, that it is to that aceidcnt " alone** yon nro mdcbl- lbr having boon preserved from having com mitted the crime of Murder. JOHN BINNS. At tho dinner to Mr. Gilmer, after tho toast of Air. Speaker Hull hud been drank, Col. Skadoun Jones, one oftho delegates to tho Free Trade Convention, addressed the com jinny in tho following lungunge : Gentlemen : I cannot ho insensible to the kind feelings manifested by the sentiment which lias just been pronounced, und the man ncr in which it has been received. Ou my own part, nnd in behalf of those gentlemen now absent, with whom I had the honor to act on that occasion, permit mo to tender you my most sincere acknowlcdements. Next to the consciousness of having used every exertion faithfully to discharge our duty, tho npproha tion of our fullnw-citizcns must ever be the frUF' Wo ar>‘. rrii|u<taiC(i lo nnnouiilie Hicham, A. Hum, a« u camli lain for the office of Surveyor of the Clicrukco Lind«, in place of'John G. Scruggs, dec. fCjp’Wnaro requeslotl io unnouncu Cnptoiu War. b. KvAS as it ciutdidalo for Disirict Surveyor of (tic Cherokee Lands, in p'tnc ofJ. C. Scruggs, deceased. We havo received iho first number of ihe Norlh Car. olina Cona'iliiliona'isl and S'.tlo*' Right Advocate, n no* piper ju>l chu'dished in Il.leigh, by M-ssrs. Itansom & Poller. C tNTONMtNT (Joi.p.Tuourc.— 1 The otjoc' l*» view in making ihis ci'v a station f n rcgul tr troops, is nf course- well known. E.vensive and comfortable quirtcr*, »ur* rounded by a flirting picket f-:ncn, were erect'd M an expense nf about $50,000. on a piece of ground three quarters o r a mile from the ccntro of the lown.whirh was suppose I to he us healthy as the city, The reverse how over, in tho t xparionce of l\vn summers, proved to ho the fiic'. D iring tlio fir-1, (1028) extraordinary morn,lily prevailed among Iho soldiers, Imt was sup posed 'o arise principally from the imperfect shelter af forded by their temporary quarters, the buildings being till finish'd, hut the foV. owing Reason, though mil so fa tal, wits atill very sickly. The consequence has btun that for the two 'ast years tho troops havo bean remov ed to Iho arsenal at the Sand Hills, Augusta, ia Juno' and only returned in November following, thus depriv ing uu of dit-ir presence at that season of the year when in si wanted to inspire confidence. It in now a favora ble ti ne f,r the pros, cm ion of measures to secure tln ir permanent residence among us, nn I ns the cause of the unheal li ness of Cantoimn-n'Ogl thorpo cannot ha dir'ovorcd.or ifdiscovered probably cannot ho remedi ed, wo think Iho In Mt plan is to remove 1m 'mildings to. wnrds tlio city on the common opposite or no tr'y so, to the Jad, nn airy, hcnllhy situa ion, superior lo the pro em by i s proximity to town. Tho ejpenso won't] ho hir a f**w tlimi-nnd do'lars, whioh Government would coil.,inly not object to dofrny, providing arrangements «l lie made with the Oily Council fur the use of the ground, particn'arly as the ex icnse of'he annual remo ved ol tho troops would tlc-rehy ho saved. A memorial from the Cily Council to iho Secretary of War, wou'd bring the btihjcct before Congress, who will douhtloss grant an np •ropriatimi, and the buildings be removed before tlio uisu.n * .summer. readily ytohlod. Tho instructions with which that nomination was accompanied, was no restriction upon tts. Feeling an ardent and devoted attachment to tho Union of tho Mtates, wo could not consent to give onr aid to any measure calculated in the remotest de gree to produce a severance of that Union, anti the consequent ruin of our beloved conn- , o. , r j try— On tho other hand, deeply impressed slaves in the United Stutcs to be [not libera-. with the importance of preserving inviolate ti'il] but promptly nn possibio triuporteil to , tint, Conatilulion, tlic bond of our Union rnd Afncit, mnkimj to tlioir owners micli compon. i tlio Arl: of our political safety, wo could not nation (from tlio public treasury] as shall bo liesitiiteto pronounce Iho Tariff n gross mill deemed just and equitable. You will readily perceive, that tho propo. sition I oftered, has no more nllinity to that manifest infraction o( the spirit, and a daring violation of the intent and meaning oftho franiere of that instrument, and not only which you tinpute lo me. than heat to cold, but unjust and unequal in its 0|>erations, and or light to darkness. The effects oftho sttg- j cruelly oppressive upon the whnlo people of gystion you attribute to me, would be to turn j the southern States. On these subjects, there looso upon the South, without property, some j was but one mind and voice among your ro- lumdrcds of thousands of ignorant nml idle; presontatives, nor wits there .much difference human beings, who have no tie, no feeling or j of opinion in tho convention. A very lar« interest in common with the white popttln- The Si. Lui'h Rep'ibieap oftho 1*' ins*. s*ntcs that a letter had bi'cn received from M -j >r Dougherty, A- gonloftliu Pawnee Indians, lo his brother, saying that the Srna'I I'ox had been committing dreadful ravages among the Pawnees; lit a* nearly the who’e of one tribe, the Pawnee Republic, of about 3500 souls, had been swept oil*—lliitt tlio nu ulior dying daily was «o great, that 'hey had not been uhic lo Imry ilium !—and il, ii this exccsiive mortality wax ot* pg lo Ihe circutn- nro, that they iinmodiat ty p'ungcd .lie patient into tlicw.m-r ns-soon ns tho fever makes i n ap,.caruueo— thus driving Ihe disease inwardly ! Cl rv Cou.Nrii—A special meeting was he d y.-st r- day morning. Aldtrm nOwr-n* said, that tho tnreling was called by his reqnosl, and Hated lire object of il, and ruud a niemori .1 and re ivaist ance lo be prcsunlcd to the I."g- i-talnrc, ngainst llicir passing any bill exempting the U uik Sioek in this c-jiy, taxed t y the city, from taxa tion. The yens nn t nays were taken on ihe subject, which were as follows: Yea*—Shadier, Minis, Owens, Gaudry, Stuck and Arnold, Nays—Eppingcr, Ash, Sctiddcr, and Dcns’er. HtnaUxA, That ti e Mayor liavo one hundred cop es ■ flhe rein ’nstrnnce printed nnd sent to MiJcdgcvtllo. On motion of Aldormnn Owons, it was also Rtsotwd, That the Mayor correspond with tho civil authorities of all the corporate towns in the State, in which Banks are located, calling their attention to the trill i.ow hrf.ro lire Legislature, oxompling Bank Stock from corporate taxation. Tho MiUedgeviltc Recorder mentions, that n Comet or meteor, of singular nnd striking appearance, was seen in tho cast, not far above the horizm, on Monday I till insl. at ha f-past throe o’c'oek. Its tail wn* very hr liinnt, ami ofa fan-liko sliupc, as if formed by radii proceeding from the nnc uous or hotly. Whim first seen, it appeared very hrgo nnd brilliant, and nppa- rtntly clungcd it* figure and pos'"lon wi'li rapidi'y.— But this may possibly have been nn optical delusion, caused by tho s'a'e of 'ho atmosphere. It was how ever lire opinion of persons, who saw it at Iho same lime, that it did t'lually, and more ‘han once, clmija its place and figure. This phenomenon was again ob served on Tuoeday morning, at four o'clock. SriAM-B mt Exclomon.—Tho stoain-boat Cygnet, Cai't. Guy, employed in carrying tho mail between Wnshing'nn City and Potomac Crook, when nbout -ixteen milos below town, met with nn unfortunate ac cident. Tho boat had stopped cither to land or ta L e sonic passengers, when one of her boilers hurst, by which explosion one nf the 1'ncmeu, a black man, was Itijcil. We made a passage in th-'sbnat list month, and must confess that her general appearance and very slow movement, ind cod us to keep as much space between ourselves and tlio boi'er as her size would permit. Asnci.r.s is the London Cl-stom-IIovse Stores. Among oilier article* lying in durance in tho bond warcliouvrs of Lnnd.m, according to a Parliamentary return, there are 43 000 prints and drawing*, 923 pic ture*, 370,000 cwt. of bo'-ki, 1S6 cwt, of ens's and busts, 10 manuscripts, 173,000 hambm"canes, 2-20,000 M\oawa8ka,—An official account is pnb- lishod ot't!ioprncoedmq , oftlio Govnrnor nnd Council oftho Stutoof Maine, dated on the 7th inst. A special session was held to take into consideration the late proceedings in the MnkawasUa settlement. The Council mtealt in strong terms of reprehension, oftho British authorities. They recite tho trans actions, ns they have heretofo o been detail ed, and the view token by the National Ad ministration of the mutter, ns explained in nn article in tho Globe, which wo republished. They come to tho conclusion that till consti tutional measures in the power of the Gov ernor of tl.o State, have boon used by him, to effect tho release of the prisoners, nnd thut the State cannot constitutionally take more efficacious moans, without the concur rence of the General Government. The fol lowing General Order was issued : STATE OF MAINE- Head Quartkrs, ) Portland November 8, 1831. \ General Order :—Tho security and de fence of our right# rb citizens of n fren Slate, being dependent on our Military establishment it is not less a duty than the privilego of the Citizen soldier to be ut nil times prepared to repel the invasion of thoso rights, and afford his aid in the due execution of the laws of his country. The exposed situation of the frontier settlements of this State, and tho dangers to which they nrc subjected by continual encroachments from a power hav ing, in the o|>inion oftho Executive Council, rendered it necessary that the Militia of the State should he reminded that events might occur which would require their services ; The Couimnndcr-in-Chief therefore Orders that the several Divisions oftho Militia be in readiness to meet such requisitions as circum stances nnd the laws if the S'nto may require und as the President of the United States may deem necessary, for the protection of our citizens and territory. The Major Generals will cau.-w this order to be promulgated throughout thoir respec tive Division*. By the Commander-in Chief. SAMUEL G. LADD, Adjutant General. Latest from Smyrna.—Tho Editors of the Journal of Commerce have been favored with the following letter fiom an attentive corresjtondent, dated Smyrna, Sept. 21,1831. Gentlemen,—The burning of tho Greek fleet at Pores, and the opposition to Capo d’- Istrias’ administration, need not, as I con ceive, awaken the apjirehenBions of mer chants trading to the Levant. Americans, surely, would justify rcs stance to a tyrant imposod by foreign arms—nnotltci General Gage, whom tho country will not much lon ger endure. Of course the politics of Greece arc intimately connected with tho fute of Po land and the movements of the great allied powers. In some happy hour, she may how- over succeed in breaking from tho "untow ard” and eccentric orbit in which bIic has been compelled to move. Whatever destiny awaits her, thcro is little prospect, as I ap prehend, of Iter shores becoming again to much extent, the receptacle of pirates. Turkey, undisturbed by foreign bodies whose mutual attractions and repulsions suf ficiently balunne each other, experiences the throes and agitations of internal fires. While the formidablo rebels of Albania are said to have gained a decisive victory over the Vizier, there arc indications at Constan- tinople of a dissatisfaction with tho present order of things. Should it have no other ori gin than the general burdens of the pcoplo, or the gold of the traitors, little perhajts is to bo feared. If, on tho contrary, the ulemas are combining ngainst the Sultan, there is still enough of Mahometan fanaticism to cause the tide of civilization to ebb, well nigh to its former limits. Happy, however, our lust advices from Constantinople represent that tho numerous fires which were kindled almost hourly after the great conflagration in Pera, had Hourly censed. In this place there is an appearance of uny tiling rather than turning hack from the work of reformation, or at least of change begun. Groat activity prevails in disciplining an increased body of troops, while most extensive accommodations are in a way of preparation for them, adjoin ing their present barracks. To human view they do not choose to sell) on which they can hire $7,500,000, at threec per cent, and the National Debt can be paid off, ut the close of tills year. Anecdote of a Monkey.—This animal had performed a retreat under Sir John Moore to Corunna, as comrade to its master, Cap tain Barlow, of the artillery. " Pug grinned nnd chattered as tho balls whizzed about him and so powerfully had he been impressed with terror at the noise and confusion of the scene he had witnesed, that ut the inn (after being landed) where his master dined, on tho wai ter drawing the cork of a bottle of wine, he actually jumped out ot' tho window of the room, which was thirty feet from the ground and escaped unhurt." POP NEW-YORK. [schooner line.] The fust sailing packet schr. EXCEL, Edward Hcllihcr, master, Will sail to-morrow. For pns- an go on iy, having handsome accommodu* lions, apply to Captain H. onboard, at An* ciaux’s wharf, or to nov23 COHEN & MILLER. Republican Blues! A PPEAR on your parade ground, in full uniform, completely united and camp* ned, THIS DAY, tho 23d inst. at 3 o’clock, P. M. fuf company drill. In case of default attend a company court of Inquiry, ot the drill room, on Saturday next, 'iOtli inst. at*7 o’clock, P. M. By order, B. IL MTU ROES, nov 23 1st Serg’t. R. B. Beef and Ploughs. I HALF UULS. Fulton Market Doof 1 1 > t!U0K. M. Jeudtcs'loiv priced IMuu^Ls Just received and for sale by nov 23 HAZARD & PENSLOW. This Day. $20,000 DOLLARS. T HIS DAY the drawing of the Virginia State T State Lottery, Class $o. coivod. S CUE M Ei , will be ro» walking ratio*, G,tj00 owl. jnni .cr berries, 96 lh*. of pu Wings and sausage*, 3,300 millstone*, 50,Qt!0,ooo it seems desirable that Mahmoud should be |h* tea, 9,300 tongues, ‘21,200 flasks of Eau «le Cologm (hr belles ntul dandies, 3,200,000 gallons rum, atul 850,- 000 gallons of brandy lor topers. Mr. Francis Cooper has an extensive Tobacco mi!' in rinlhilelpliui, In which a steam engine in tho collar dries hi* tobacco,(for which lie hns a patcut) cuis it for smoking nr chewing, mixes and bolts the snidT*, hoist* and loner* hogshead* &c. JIo dries, cuts and pro- puns lot tlio cily manufacturers, who used to send lo a dis'aucc. lion. The effects of my proposition, would ho to indomulfy tljo master for all that "cor- tain species ol property,” which hns recently rioted "in violenco and bloodshed"—traits*, port it thousands of miles from our shores, und muse it@ placos in tho South to bo rapid- ly filled with a white population, which would not only increase the wealth und strength of flic south, but onablo its people to lay their heads on their pillows confident of their se curity. j pay woJl be excused if I ask, did you. „ o-. A late Cinqinnllli paper observes, that in that place majority entirely concurred, with US in declur- j the weather lias been very pleasant for some dava past, lltg It unconstitutional, and scarcely a voice I Mid that boating from lbovo has been brisk : the river '™„ S , t e », r , l' , „ ! :r Sl '!r! nda ' 1 "'! •° r ' tat r- ■»»•«« to bo from III to ,i|hl r«ol .tmv. hm ^ m J T ^ k' I '*® rrloraI influence j „„ rk . The „ dJl th0 AJ , OTi , crj no ot that meeting, it is b' hoved may he felt uml . . ’. ardently des.ron throughout the U. States— ™'S r "" 1 ' n ' v ' sl - As n, W wp ot Cmamuti,, a. Instend of violence in our feelings, distrac- j c “ n fi, d dwcl ‘"S - '' tion in our ranks, onr opponents found an as- ' fiomblagc of men from all parts oftho United Thc •b'P Moscow, arrived at Portland, railed from States, temperate in feelings, firm nnd united I 8t. Uoe* 6th Oct.—'Tlio captain states that it was re in councils, with a perfect knowledge of thoir I Parted in St. Ubea, that a revolution had broken out n, right*, and a firm nnd unyielding determino- 1 Opo.ie. An Fn s ii,h U «nj i,ipi, ,.rr nmoi.J off tion to maintain them. Instead of any do- ] d.e Fob ic S.,u»res at Lni™. ipared te go forward with his plans of im provement, and that every opening should he seized upon fcy tho friends of humanity for enlightening his Christian subjects. Convention.—At a convention oftho mem bers of the Legislature belonging to the Re publican party of this State, held for the pur pose of nominating a candidate, to fill tho honorable Wilson Lumpkin’s vacancy in Congress, it was considered tlmt tho people have a right to the services of every man in such stations as their ability i6 best suited to fill, and where they are able to promote the good of our common country; that the true principles of patriotism will not permit men to select such service ns will advance their individual interest, but that if actuated by a disintostcd'lovn of country, they are willing to go where ever the common interest calls. Under the force of these truths, and believing that Augustin S. Clayton, Esq. fully ncquies- ccs in their justness, and cannot refuse to obey the call of Itis fellow citizens, the said convention lmve nominated him to fill said va cancy, nnd do therefore present him to tho A schholmaster at Aston, in Warwickshire " was so proud oftho progress which one of his pupils had made in orthography, that he afforded me an opportunity of witnesiing it. The word he selected for the display was the name of tho great manufacturing town in the neighborhood, Birmingham, which, the bov, to the admiration of his master, spelt in the following rnamter:— Birm Brum, ing ,idge Brumidgo, ham utn, Brumidgeuin!" Steamboat Accident.—Loss of Lives!! —'l’lto following extract of a letter dated Memphis, September 22d, 1831, to a gentle man at Huntsville, gives an account of a noth* er deplorable steamboat accident : •« We have just hoard by a flat boat, the steamer Union, which left here Sunday, 18th instant, on her passage up, struck n sung near lMtinih Point: boat and cargo entirely lost, and 16 passengers drowned. These arc all tho par ticulars yet arrived." 1 prize of 1 prize of 1 prize of 1 prize of 1ft prize.-* of lft prizes of 20 prizes of 4ft prizes of &c. &c. 20,000 dollars 6,000 dollars 8,600 dollars 2,270 dollars 1,000 dollars 500 dollars 250 dollars, 100 dollum fee &c. Tickets $5—-Halves 82 50—Quarters 81 23*, Orders attended to at KEDDING’&f- Lottery & Exchange Office. Orders from any part oftho U. States (post paid) enclosing prize tickets or cusli, will be attended to if addressed to WM. F. REDDING, nov 22 Savannah, Georgia. $30,000 DOLLARS. mills DAY the drawing oftho Virginia -fi- State Lottery, Cluss 5, will be recetted. S C 11 E M E : 20.000 doitoe 6,000 dollars 2.500 dollars COMMERCIAL. LIV til FOOL DATtt t ii a v uc dates : : : : : : octoheh 1. : SrPTHMIlEH 21* From the New-Orlcans Price Current, November 12.—Cotton—Ou hund, inclusive of all ou ship-hoard not cleared on the 10th instant, a stock of 10882 bales. Since ours oftho 6th instant, there Ita3 been a brisk de- mand for fine Cottons, nnd selections from choice parcels have readily brought lOJ cents —wo do not, Itowevor, alter onr quotations on that account for tho market in general, for other descriptions remains tho same ns la3t remarked, from 7 a 10 cents. Tho arrivals continue to present the same appearance, in ferior to tlio cr»p« of former yonra, but tho staple, it is said by experienced dealers, is very good, and when color is not an objec tion, will answer tlio purpose of thc manu facturer as well us thc crop oflast year. Sugar—The best quality of new crop con tinues to command 6 cents jicr lb, not much, howover, selling at this moment—u lot of 25 hhds. snid to be very fine, sold on the Levee a few days since at’5^ cents ; this reduction in price, we arc informed, was owing to cir cumstances which always have thoir effect prejudicial to the article, distance from ware house, bad weather, &c. ; wc do not therefore tlii'ik it a correct quotation. Molasses is scarce in the city, nnd in de mand at 22 cents, casks included. Wo have not yet heard of any important sule on plan tation. [BY THE CATHARINE.] " Havana, November 12.—Our market remains without any material change. Cof fee has advanced to the extravagant price of 11 a 12. Nearly nil that coiqus to town is taken for the Ne'.v-Orleatis market. Su gars without change, though some extensive purchases have boon made the past week.— Molasses is still scarce at 820 per hhd. The only salo of Rico since our last is the schoon er Clarissa’s cargo, nt 9>j riuls, all round.— Lard is dull at 9J a lftjj.” On tho 27th of October Iasi, by the Rev. Jos. S'ilo* Or. Henry D. Holi and, of Giynn county, to Mi* Esther Ann Uokiiif, of Camden. MARINE JOURNAL. PORT OP SAVANNAH. men water at tybi.p. : : : high water at savannah 10 18 12 3 ARRIVED, Br. bark Herald, Goliitc, Charleston, 1 day. Bag- gins and Oznitbures, W. Gaston. Sloop Bolivar. Bunion, D irion, wi'li h->nl Macon. 191 bales Cotton to Butt* .V Pntior<on, N. Wallace. Steamboat Governor Tayler, Augusta, with boats Nos. 6 & 12 loC. F. Mills. 1543 bales Cotton to J. P. Henry, Taft & Padolford, J. Gnnahl, Malone ft Sistwe, J. H. Burroughs, HaM, Simpler & Topper, S. B. Parkman, J. Stone & Co, S. D. Corbett, Dunning & Campbell!, and order. RAILED, S'oop Wave, Blankenship. Ogochce. Sloop Macon, Hall, Darien. DEPARTED, Steam Packet John D. Mongin, Curry, Augusta. Steamboat. Carolina, Wiay, Augusta. The ship Tybe», nnd schooner Georgia, c’oered for this port at Ncw-Ynrk, 14th ; ship Mhcon, ami sch‘r. Exact, up, to sail on Saturday. Vessels in thc port of Charleston on Saturday last— 17 ships and barks—10 btigs. Passengers in the brig New Hanover, sailed from Philadelphia lor this port, on thc 14th instant—James Potter, lady nnd two children, Mrs. Grimes, Mrs. Wuchcrer, Mrs. Edwards, Miss Campbell, Miss E. Telfair, M'U W. Telfair, Miss Grant, Miss Peters, Mr. Voting and Indy, Messrs. Grant, Knor, Bacon, C. Campbell, Mott, Peter* and Rudolph. Drawing Received. T HE following arc the drawn numbers of {Jr Delaware & North Carolina Lotte- lass j good peopie of Georgia for their euffrage. j npv ry, Class 22. 32 4 49 54 01 6G 13 26 55 8 Received at RE HIDING’S 23 Lottery & Exchange Office, 1 prize of 1 prize of 1 prizo of 1 prize of lft prizes of 1ft prizes of 2ft prizes of 4ft prizes of &c. 2,270 dollure 1,000 dollars 50ft dollars 250 dollure 100 dollurs Arc. &c. Tickets 85—IIalvos$2 50—Quarters 81 25. O3~0rdore attended to at LUTHER & CO’S Lottery Exchange Office' Orders from any part of the World, ( post paid ) enclosing cash or prize tickets will meet with prompt attention, if address ed to LUTHER & CO. nov 23 Savannah, Georgia. $20,000 DOLLARS. T HIS DAY the. drawing of the Virginia . State Lottery, Class No. 5, will be ret cpived. SCHEME: 1 prize of 20,000 dollars 1 prizo of 6,000 dollars 1 prize of* 2,50ft dollars 1 prizo of 2,270 dollars 10 prizes nf 1,000 dollars 10 prizes of 600 dollars 20 prizes of 250 dollars 40 prizes of 100 dollars &c &c. &c. Tickets 85—Halves 82{50.—Quarters 81 2.5 Orders rccft'vctl at WAI. I. MOORE’S nov 23 Lottery & Exchange Office. Drawing Received. npHE following are the drawn numbers of * the Delaware & North Carolina Lottery, Claes No. 22. 32 4 49 54 G1 06 13 20 55 8 0tT Holders of prizes will call for thc cash at MOORE’S OFFICE, nov 23 2 doors East of City Hotel. Drawing Received, T HE following are tho drawn numbers of tho Delaware & North Carolina Lotte ry, Class 22. 32 4 49 54 01 GO 13 20 55 8 OCrHolders of prizes will call for thc cash nt LUTHER & CO’S nov 23 Lottery & Exchange Office. Iron, Sugar, &c. TONS. Iron, well assorted, round, flat, and square, Nail RoJs, Band Iron, Gorman, American andDnst Steel 15 hhds N. O. Sugar, 5 do St.Croix do 20 bagp Java Coffee, 20 do Green do 10 do Spice, 100 do Shot, assorted sizes 10 bhls Loaf Sugar Ctunl Flour in whole and half bids 10 bbls White Bonus, 50 do Potatoes 20 J casks Marseilles Madeira Wma 5 do Tenortffo do 10 demijohns Sherry do 20 dozen dq do 15 firkins Goshen Butter 10 casks do Cheese, 20 boxes do dq 20 bbls No 3 Mackerel 3 chests Superior Pouchong Te$ Kitchen's prepared Cocoa 200 gross Corks, 150 Grinibfcmcs 20 casks Nails. For sale by nov 23 GEO. HUNTINGTON. Brandy, Gin, Wine, &c. 5 QR. pipes Rasteau & Seignetts Brandy 2 pipeB Meden Swan Gin 5 j and j do Madeira Wine 5 1 casks sweet Malaga Wino 1 j do Teneriffo 12 boxes Negro Pipes |0 bblo Lnmp Sugar 30 pcs Cotton Bagging 75 boxes Herring 50 \ boxes Spanish Segars, 6ic. &c. For sale by W. M. CARTER, nov 23 54p Nofice. L AY DAY’S on Cotton per lighter No. 1 and boat No. 9, will expire to-morrow afternoon, nov 23 expire to-morrow WM. TAYLOR, P. S. B Co. Charts, just received, C tH ARTS of the English Channel, will) 1 directions and oftho latest Surveys. For sale by CLAGlIORN & WOOD, nov 23 *