Newspaper Page Text
I Joseph B. lireene,
addition to his former Stock,
receiving from New-York, a
upply of
iiiff and Fancy
GOODS ,
he wiH sell on accominodat
:nls. He invites his friends
j public to an examination of
and solicits a continuance ol
"jflcGehee's
UXE OFFICE .
Waiving Received.
following are the Drawn Numbers
the NEW-YORK CONSQLIDA
OTTERY, Extra Class No. 15, for
..G0... 47...27...41...63...3G ..55...15.
endid Capitals*
,-VORK CONSOLIDATED Lot
y Extra Class, No. 16, for 1833.
tving is expected at ray O ficc on
tor 14th of June,
timber Lottery—lo Drawn Ballots.
SCHEME.
prize 0f 520,000 is 20,000
« “ 10,000 is 10,000
! « « 5,000 is 5,000
[ « “ 3,160 is 3,160
o « “ 1,000 is 10,000
q “ “ 500 is 5,000
0 « “ 400 is 4,000
0 « « 300 is 3,000
0 •< « 200 is 6,000
3 « « 100 is 4,600
; « « 50 is 2,800
j « « 40 is 2,240
; «, “ 30 is 3,3b0
> «’ “ 25 is 2,800
3 « “ 20 is 4,480
> « “ 10 is 19,000
' “ “ 5 is 77,000
?RTCE OF TICKETS.
iolcs B’>—Halves @2 50.
LOOK AT THIS.
f.VOKK CONSOLIDATED
LOTTED I*
50.9 for 1833. The drawing will
i:red at ray Office on the 4th July.
umber Lottery—lo Drawn Ballots
ii a
Pri/.C ol 40,000 Dolls.
>• “ 10,000 Dolls.
“ “ 0,000 Dolls.
“ “ 5,000 Dolls.
“ “ 2,451 Dolls.
“ “ 1,000 is 20,000
“ “ 500 is 10,000
10 ,‘ “ 300 is 6,000
!0 « “ 200 is 4,000
15 “ “ 150 is 5,250
>6 “ “ 100 is 5,600
.6 “ “ 70 is 3,920
) “ “ 60 is 3,360
16 “ « 50 is 2,800
2 “ « 40 is 4,480
54“ “ 24 is 52,416
10 “ “ 12 is 184,800
nvest Prize, 12 Dollars.
PRICE OF TICKETS.
tholes 910 Halves9s
Quarters 2 SO.
sscashed, and prompt attention paid
rs, at
N. McGEHEE’S
Lottery & Exchange Office.
, eville May 27, 1833.
J
PUBLIC SALE
valuable Gold
mines,
ILL be positively sold at pub
lic out-cry, in the town of Mil
lie, on the 15th day of July next, I
owing lots.
,otNo. 1031 12 dist. 1 sec.
dodo 1053 12 1
dodo 1195 12 1
do do 746 18 I •
do do £6l 12 1
dodo 859 12 1
do do 893 12 1
do do 820 12 1
do do 932 12 1
do do 817 12 1
do do 999 4 1
do do 976 4 I
dodo 1039 4 1
do do 20 13 1 N
do do 80 13 1 N
do do 399 3 2
do do 885 21 2
do do 946 21 2
do do 638 33
>, Lot No. 677 4th rlist. 3d section, j
Dawson's Ferry. In the above list!
omprized the most valuable mines, j
'■' r veins and deposite in the whole}
kee Country. They are those which J
■enpurchassed during the lottery, and
and for the purpose of settlement a
l>e Companies. Capitalists are as
diat the sale will be positive, and
1 reserve. The terms will be one
ash down—one third in two months
'do remaining third in four months
do date of purchase.—Notes with
f, ‘ security for the payment of the
wots as they become due, will be re
■ The titles will be undoubted.
THOMAS J. PARK,
JACOB PAGE,
JASON H. WILSON, i
URIAH I. BULLOCK,
Z B. HARGROVE,
william WARD,
SAMUEL TATE,
ROBERT S. PATTON,
Thomas b. ward,
'VMS. RUTHERFORD,
HENRY M. CLAY.
®dgeville, May 6, 1833.
ilescope, of Columbia, S. Caro
f ouricr of Charleston, S. Carolina;
slonrnal, of Charlotte, N. Carolina ;
Raleigh, N. Carolina, w ill publish
’ re till the day of sale ; and the Na
otelligeneer of Washington City;
otter of Nashville, Tennessee ; Ad
-01 Huntsville, Alabama, until the
y next, and forward their accounts to
thwitJi f o r payment.
’EC*. W. MURRAY.
SnertlrSales for July
Cass county.
Lot. Dis. ?ec. Property of To satisfy
40J 2 3 B. M. Owen John Evans
73 10 2 .Sidney Forbs Richard Butler
326 17 2 Owen Tyler P. T. Bedell
589 1 2 Amos King W. M. D. Osborn
208 20 2 G& W. Jeffreys Nathaniel Fish
700 17 2 Jo! n Webb Mordeca Sheftall
777 19 2 Wnt Davis Benj. Brewton
699 17 2 B. S. Williams do
943 17 2 W. Daniel W.Moor
102 17 2 J. Partridge Kelly & Cos.
780 17 2 E. Bing J. Morrel.
Floyd county.
179 3 4 John sands label Askew
87 23 3 Elisha Wylly Nathan Brewton
284 16 4 Edward Hicks J. Maxcy & co.
69 23 3 J. Bailey R. T. Banks
321 4 4 James Skaggs A. F. Durkee
374 16 4 James Trevice C. C. Johnston
38 5 4 J. Watson Eliza M’Crary
793 3 4 Wm Cheek Aaron Turman
202 14 4 H. Holms W. Alexander
109 24 3 W. Johnston C. B.Cole
295 24 3 W. J. Weighttnan T. Glascock
Forsytli county.
423 3 1 Robert G. Hendrick
446 2 1 H. Whittemore F. C. Andoe
622 3 1 do do
345 1 1 John Hubbard C. J. Atkins
1104 3 1 David Collins J. W. Houghton
861 3 1 Jas. Drummonds T. Smith
727 3 1 H. Jones F. Collins A Sons
765 14 1 JamcsCarrell B. Tarver
483 1 1 Abel Cain S. Rembert
345 1 1 John Hubbard Chapman & Atkins
1117 3 1 W. P.Glover M. Chisholm
137 14 1 J.W. Glass P.T. Biddle
180 14 1 Joseph Roe E. & H. Byne
487 2 1 E. B. Reynolds J. H.&WPope.
1335 14 1 Henry Huff P. J. Murray
427 14 1 J. W. Wilson L. W. Flemister
1221 14 1 W r . Patrick S. Ripley
959 3 1 Allen West T. Hargrove
303 14 1 J. Brannon John Gillet
911 3 1 John McKinney Keltog & Sanford
561 2 1 W. Elrod P. J. Murray
1240 3 1 P. Chitwood do
699 14 1 F. Thurmond do
297 5 1 Isaac Lindsey do
966 2 1 Wiley Pierce do
I 693 14 l John Priest do
334 1 1 T. L. Martin do
140 11 S. Kilgore M’Junkin & Smith
948 14 1 C. Sledge James King
.Hurray county.
27 14 3 T. Johnson Spencer & Mays
88 25 2 W. W. Young B. Brown
235 10 3 J. Slaughter John Thomas
139 13 3 R. Bush H. H. Tarver
311 28 3 S. W. Stephens James Long
189 9 3 R. Johnson M. L. Nall
114 14 4 B. Morris J. H. Lumpkin
193 11 3 T. Hogan, Officers Carroll S. C.
2il 25 3 James Tilley Pemberton, et. al.
236 28 3 A. Scott A. B. Sturgess & Cos.
257 28 3 E. Nash D. G. Baldwin
102 8 4 do do
109 12 4 J. Harris F. C. Andoe
322 7 3 S. Paxton P. J. Murray
38 13 2 B. Pace W. Graves
236 7 3 T. Ussery Officers Houst. I. C.
290 6 4 J. Leverton A. Crawford & Cos.
262 8 4 R. A. Talbot Wm. Meroney
36 14 3 David Holland High & Wiggins
244 7 3 J. Linsey Reynolds & Watts
319 10 3 Isaac Gray R. Ashley
10 8 3 I). Brown H. H. Tarver
185 26 3 J. Galliner J. Long
230 14 3 T. L. Brown H. W. Sharpe
Cau County.
431 21 2 G. A. Parker 1,. L. Lynes
631 17 • B. Brantley F. Cullins & Sons
805 21 2 R. Love do
275 6 3 W. Gregory and
534 4 3 . J. Turner B. F. Thornton
19 17 3 A. B. Huggins J. Johnson
1240 21 2 A. Johnston E. Ormsley
44? 4 3 H. Fullingin W. Porter
1149 21 2 JdinCftots T. M. Darnall
642 21 2 J. Lanear Irwin & Bryan
1146 21 2 Win. Strange Lewis Jones & Cos.
868 21 2 A. Hightower N.Slay
155 5 3 G. W. Wood A. M’Bride
1240 l 2 A. Johnston Kimberly et. al.
1174 17 3 Joseph Boclker J. Howell
942 21 2 M. A. Franks A. S, Clayton
876 21 2 Stephen Potts N. Legg
312 4 3 P. Clements Hall & Kendrick
Lumpkin County.
222 13 1 W. Ridley R. G. Lane
943 4 1 J. Newman, J. A. Tippens.
372 12 1 J. Hollingshead, J. A. D. Childers.
817 4 1 M. Gray, J. Perry.
293 13 1 T. Gourdey, J. Grubbs.
190 4 1 H. McNorril Court Ordinary B C
1003 12 1 Eli Champion Bachelder & Cos.
838 12 1 Isaac Fincher 1.. P. Hargrove &co
155 12 1 D. H. Banes F. Cullens & Sons
1197 12 1 J. Langston W. Railings
501 13 1 N. W. War.slec J. I.igon
458 15 1 John Burk F. Ally and others
1169 12 1 J. Jourdan J. R. Stanford
118 13 1 B. &G. Lathrop Planters Bank
153 15 1 W. Cooper H. H. Cone, et. al.
1170 12 1 W’. Vaughn P. T. Bedell
752 12 1 John Ray J. Abney
406 4 1 T. Knight G. Jones
41 13 1 J. Riley T. Livingston
526 13 1 VV. Westbrooks, Burt ii Cato
413 13 1 Luke Welsh Saffold ii Porter
Cherokee County.
1284 15 2 J. Martin F. Cullins &. Sons
56 22 2 S. Vickery S. Griffith
37 15 2 D. Kabely Cleveland & Tate
1247 21 2 VV. Ferguson James Edmonson
303 2 2 A. Seymore JP. Winn
150 14 2 J. Parker W. C. Osborn
799 15 2 VV. Arnold J. Wardlaw
883 15 2 L. Gregory C. D. Stewart
931 2 2 J. Lovett J. VV'. Scott
216 4 2 S. Grace J. E. Bachelder
971 3 2 VV. Whatley Saffold & Fiears
Kilmer County.
258 10 2 S. P. Smith J. P. Turner & Cos.
190 6 2 J. Sturdivan M. Womack
Paulding County.
1285 33 J. H. Faulkenberry E. D. Cook
60 18 3 D. M. Jackson N. & H. Ward
619 18 3 Basil Lowe E. Case
1000 2 3 John Portwood John Hull
1046 3 4 R. H. Caldwell Case & Goodrich
575 2 4 Z. Slayton Thompson
698 18 3 M. Willhight H. H. Field
178 33 Mary Page S. A. H. Jones
584 1 4 J. Johnson A. Crawford
183 20 3 A. McGrady VV. Meroney
259 3 1 J. VV. Howard J. Weeker
932 2 3 A. P. Garliugton M. Pollock.
fINHE subscriber offers lor sale a valuable set
tlement of Land on Long Cane Creek, 6
miles south of LaGrange. There is on said pre
mises a large improvement with a Saw and Grist
Mill, (in good order) commodious buildings,
good orchards, a cotton machine, &e. Persons
wishing to purchase will please call on me.
ELIJAH HARALSON.
Tronp comity, Ga. May 4, 1833. 19 2tp
Will be ptibliso'l in a few days,
ADOPTED in Convention, by the Judges of
the Superior Courts. Price Ono Dollar.—
Orders enclosing the sum of ono dollar, address
ed (postage paid) to M. D. J. SLADE.
Sintinons Crawford
j | AF Columbia county, is a candidate for Comp- j
1 " * troller General, at the approaching election J
May 15 * 18—3 t |
! William .leflivKOii Jones,
ATTOHXEY AT LAW,
*yiLL Still continue to practice Law. Any '
" * business confided to his management will |'
I he promptly and faithfullyattended to.
Milledgeville, March 82, 1833.
pumii & susax,
B are-House and Comntuion Merchants , 1 1
MACON, GEORGIA.
BLANTON & SMITH. Wan-llouse and Com.
mission Merchants, Macon, make liberal a>'-
| vances on Cotton in store, and on shipments;
I also on NOTES and other property deposited in S
| their hands.
Their Ware-Houses are more convenient to tie
| business part of town than any other, possessing I
j the advantages of a Wharf, and are more exetipt
I from danger by fire than any other in Macin.
huhe SUBSCRI BEK continues to make inks
i ■*“ and gudgeons for tub-mills at ten dollars i
j a set, and other castings for saw or griss mills,!
lat sixty-five cents per pound.—He also repairs j
: guns and pistols at very high prices, and shoes \
J horses at $1 00 if the cash is paid down, or if’
] done in payment of a debt, hut if charged, $1 j
j 50. He also sells new scooters at 14 cents per j
pound, or makes them when theiron is found at
137 j each.
I. T. CUSHING i
| Fehruary, 1833. ts i
FOR SAUK—LOTS OF LAND
WOS. I S5. aihDisl. 4th Sec.
182, 2d “ 2d do
21, 2«11i“ “ do
47, 11 Hi u “ do
AIso— GOLD LOT 1187,3d Dist. 4th
Section.
Apply to JOHN M. CARTER.
j Milledgeville, May 20
WATCH-MAKER,
&sra> asrasi&wasa
THE subscriber respectfullyinforms his friends'
and the public, that he has taken a part of
S the store occupied by James M. Green & Cos.
'where he will attend to Watchrepairing in all
j its branches—Also, Engraving of every de
j scription. Ladies and Gentleman's visiting
cards, neatly engraved—door plates, newspaper
j cuts, &e.
N. 8.~-Jobing and copper-plate printing, neat
ily executed—Gold melting—the patronage of the
public is respectfullysolicited.
WM. VV. lIOOPEB.
Macon, May 12. ißtf
FOUR months after date application
will be made to the hon. Inferior Court
of Jofferson county, when sitting for ordinary
purposes, for leave to sell the laud and negroes
belonging to the heirs of John Marsh, dec.
ASA IIOLT, Guardian.
May 8, 1833. IS-4m
M. D. KIUSOA
LATE of Milledgeville, and his mother, have
taken the establishment in Macon, formerly
kept by Charles Williamson, Esq. known as the
WASHINGTON HALL.
The house has uudqrgone thorough repair, and
with other improvements, a Dining Room, eigh
ty feet in length, lias been added to the south
wing of the building. The bedchambers have]
j been re-painted .and the furniture is entirely new,
; particularly beds. His servants, the same as
were employed in his house at Milledgeville.
From the central situation of his establish
ment and hislong experience in the business, he
confidently looks to the public fora liberal share
of pattronage.
Macon, Oct. 29, 1832. 30—
OF every description, executed with neatness 1
and despatch at THE TIMES and STATE
RIGHT’S ADVOCATE Office,by
M. D. J. SLADE j
THE NUMERICAL BOOK
Os all Frizes
AND drawers names and residence,-
in the Gold Lottery, lately drawn, is now
preparing, and will shortly issue from the Geor-!
gia Times Office, price Ten Dollars, bound. 1
Orders for the same, will be received by
M. 1). J. SLADE.
May 1, 1833 |
ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE.
Postponed.
A GREEABLY to an order of the Inferior
iV Court of Bald win county, when sitting! or
ordinary purposes, will be sold at at the Coirt
house in the town of Milledgeville, on the frst
Tuesday in August next, within the legal hoirs
of sale three lots of one acre each, in said tovn,
known as lots No. 1,2, and 4, in spuare numoer
70, as the property of John Troutman deceased.
Sold for the benefit of the heirs of said deceased.
Terms on the day of sale.
HIRAM B. TROUTMAN, Adm’r.
May 14 7—9
TOBACCO.
Inquiry. —What is the cfi'ecton the human
system of tobacco, chewed? smoked? and u
ken in the form of snuff?
Ans. When chewed, it always causes a
large portion of the saliva necessary for per-;
feet digestion of the food to be wasted. Bv
consequence, it lessens the appetite and the j
ability for digesting food, and therefore leads!
to stomach complaints, and leanness of the!
body. Smoking produces very similar effects.!
Snuffing tobacco produces the same conse!
quences, but in a greater degree, in conse. [
quence of its being lodged about the jKtsterio - j
parts of the nostrils and throat, whence it it j
carried into the stomach, in considerable 1
quantities with the foot!. Snuffing blunts the!
sense of smelling, and disorders the head in!
a peculiar manner, whilst chewing and smo
king pervent th*e sense of taste, so that every
thing in the mouth becomes insipid, unless it
be pretty highly stimulating. Every mode
of using this article produces also a soothing
influence, quieting &• composing mental feel
ing, hut the certain consequence of blunting
nervous feeling, and diminishing the pqwers
of the system in the end, if long or rarely
used.
Inquiry. What disease has it a tendency
to produce, and what effect in aggravating
diseases which it has not produced ?
Arts. The disease u hich it lias a tendency
to produce, are dispeptic, and nervous com
plaints aggravated by its use.
FOREIGN. |
From the A T . f. Commercial Jtdc. May 29.
LATEST FROM ENGLAND.
England— The recess of Parliament having
expired, the Speaker of the House of Commons
resumed his seat at 12 o’clock on Monday the 15th
of April. A great numberof petitions were pre
sented, most of which were for the abolition of
slavery.
Rumors were still in circulation of an intended
change of the Ministry ; tut it would be difficult, I
on this side of the water, to assign any probable (
reason for such a belief. The London Moning;
Post contains the following contemplated minis- '
aerial arrangement, but we place no reliance upon !
it whatever. The Duke of Richmond has no
pretension to the station of Prime Minister. His j
talents are not of a superior order, and the sugges
tion of such a post for such a man, gives an air :
of burlesque to the whole:
Duke of Richmond, Prime Minister.
Lord Brougham, Chancellor,
Lord Aberdeen, Sec'ry for Foreign Affairs. |
Mr. Stanley, Sec’ry for the Colonies.
r Secretary for the H ome De- ,
Sir R. Peel, J partment, and Leader of the ■
(_ House of Commons.
Mr- Baring, Chancellor of Exchequer. !
Sir James Graham, First Lord of the Admiralty,
i Mr. Wynn, > President of the Board of
J > Control.
! Lord Warncliff, l Pre » « f ll,e Board of
5 i rade.
Mr. Lyall, Vice President of do
’ Sir H. Harding,-, Secretary for Ireland.
| Sir R. Vyvyan, Secretary of War.
I Lords Mansfield, Harrowhy and Carnarvon to
have offices and seats in the Cabinet. Messrs.
; Spring Rice, Frankland Lewis, Henry Hobhoiise,
| and E velyn Denison, for under Secretaries.
| The Times of the 15th says, “We are glad to
| hear that Ministers will immediately bring for
ward an ample measure of reform of the Church
!of England, This will be readily taken by the
nation as a set-offagainst their late faults, both of
omission and commission.
I In consequence of accepting the office of Se
cretary for the Colonies, the scat of the Hon. Mr.
j Stanley became vacant, and he appeared again on
| the 12th of April before his constituents, for re
election as knight of the shire in the Northern
j division of the county of Lancaster, lie was re-
I elected without opposition ; but he availed him
-1 self of the occasion to express his sentiments on
some of the important measures now in contem
plation, and in progress under the auspices oj
the Ministry. Among them were the proposed
revision of tl)e criminal code, and the abolition
of slavery in the W’est Indies.
Ireland—The papers by this arrival contain
the Proclamation of the Lord Lieutenant, for the
suppression of the Itish Volnntees. After the
preamble reciting the whereas, the operative part
of the proclamation is given in the following
terms :
“Now we, the Lord-Lieutenant-General, and
General Governor of Ireland, deeming the said
association, called “The Irish Volunteers,” to
be dangerous to the public peace and safety, and
inconsistent with the due administration of the
law, do, by this our order, in writing, prohibit
and suppress the said association : and we do
further, by this our order prohibit every and any
adjourned, renewed, or otherwise continue meet
ing of the said association, or of any part thereof,
under any pretext, shift, or device whatsoever.
“Given at his Majes-y’s Castle of Dublin,
the 10th day of April, 1833.
By his Excellency’s command.
“ W. GOSSETT.
j Although Ireland appears to be somewhat more
i tranquil than it has recently been, yet crimes of
a desperate character are not of unfrequent oc
currence. On the night of Good Friday, Mr.
! Brou n, the steward of Sir T. Chapman was fired
at in the yard of the Castle of Dublin by three
persons who made their escape. An outrage was
also committed recently at Kilkenny on the per
son of a soldier by a gang of ruffians who struck
him a violent blow—saying, there’s martial law
for you.’
The VVliitefeet, it is confidently said are leav
ing Ireland in great numbers for this country.
The moment it became known that the county of
1 Kilkenny was proclaimed, a considerable num
! ber of these miscreants tied to the adjoining sea- 1
port, in order to emigrate to the United States or
| Canada.
j Turkey —Intelligence from the East is not so
late as before.
The subjoined response of Meliomet Ali, the
! Father of ibrahim, to the French Minister, Ad
j miral Roussin. is an unique but not discreditable
! document. It is as follows: '
“ M. L’Ambassader,
i “I have received the dispatch dated Fehruary
■ 22, which vou have forwarded to me by your
I principal aid-de-camp.
] “This dispatch intimates that I have no right
! to claim any other territory than St. jean d’Acre,
: Jerusalem, Naplouse, and Tripoli in Syria, and
that I ought immediately to withdraw my army;
■ and that in case oi refusal I shall expose myself
to the most serious consequences. Your Aid-de
camp, according to the instructions which you
have given him, has added verbally, that if I per
sist in my pretentions the combined French and
English fleets will proceed to the coast of Egypt.
“ Fray- (IJe Grace,) M. L’Ambassador, how
have you the right to call on me to sacrifice my
self thus :
“ I have in my favor the whole nation. It on-'
ly rests with me to raise up Rumelia and Anato- i
ha. United with my nation, I could effect much.!
Master of so many countries—victorious at ail j
points—when 1 heard the organsof public opin
ion decree to me the possession of all Syria, 1 rs- j
tarded the march of my troops, with the sole
view of sparing a useless effusion of blood, and
of consulting the dipositions of European policy.
In recompense for this and for the moderation (
I which I have shown, and afterso many sacrifices j
| for a nation which had invited me, wiiich had !
tnited itself with mo and enabled me to obtain so!
| many victories—to demand of me now the aban- j
j dor.ment of tho country which 1 occupy, and that
’ I shall withdraw my army into a small province |
j composed of four districts which you call Pacha- \
1 licks—is not this pronouncing against me a sen-;
! tence of political death ?
“ But I feel confident that France and England ,
will not pretend to deny mo justice. They will;
acknowledge my rights. Their honor is oppos
ed to this step. But if unhappily I am wholly
deceived in this expectation, I w ill submit my- 1
self, under such circumstances, to the will of
God, and prefering an honorable death to ignomi
ny, joyfully devote myself for the cause of my i
nation, happy to consecrate to it the last breatli
of my life. Upon this I am determined, and;
history oilers more than ono example of a stini-;
tar immolation,
“ Under all circumstances I hope your Excel- ■
lenoy will recognize the justice of my rights, and i
recommend the acceptance es the last proposi
tions which I have made through the medium of
his Excellency Ali Pacha.
“ It is with thin expectation, M. L’Ambassa
dor, that I write you this friendly letter, and Tor-1
ward it through the hands of your aid-de-camp.
“ Seal of
MEHEMET ALI. Pachaof Egypt.
“To his Excellency Baron Roussin, Ambassa-j
dor of France at the Sublime Porte.
“ Alexandria, March 8. 1833.”
According to letters from Alexandria of 13th
March received by the way of Trieste, it ap
pears undoubted that Mehemed Aii has rejected
the conditions of peace offered by Admiral Rous
sin and guarantied by the latter at Constantino
ple. It is said that the condition that he should
deliver up his vessels to the Ottoman Porte has
particularly irritated the Pacha; it is added that
he caused a second squadron to sail immediately
from Alexandri and gave orders to Ibrahim again
to advance. On this news the Sultan had again
declared the Pacha and his son rebels, and the
Russian fleet had quitted the Bosphorus.
IMPORTANT FROM ENGLAND.
The packet ship Napoleon, Capt. Smith, ar
rived at New-York from Liverpool, wiience she
sailed the 24th of April. By this arrival, the e
ditars of the Commercial Advertiser have re
ceived London papers of the 23d of April, aud
Liverpool of the 24th,
ENGLAND
Tire British Parliament had many iinpor
irnportaqt subjects presented far their consid
eration in the first week after the recess, in
the Commons, oil tlm 17th, Mr. Grant
brought forward his motion for the etnancipa
tion oi the Jews', which, after an interesting
debate, tho motion was .put, and prevailed
without a division.
Mr. O’Connell called the attention of the
House to the Proclamation of the Lord Lieu
tenant of Ireland, requtriug the government
to give the reasons far applying the late act
to Ktllkenny. After some debate the ques
tion was taken, when only 28 voted in favor
of Mr. O’Connell’s motion. There were
143 members present.
On the 18th Lord Althorp moved for leave |
to bring in a hill fur the Commutation of.
Tithes. Ilis Lordship stated that the amount
of the whole Church revenue in Englaud did
not exceed 3,.’>00,000/., and that the average
income of the Clergy, including Deans,
Archdeacons, and Prebendaries, was not
more than 300/. per annum. The measure
he proposed was, in the first place, to give
permission to the'tithe payer, and the tithe
receiver to make a perpetual commutation at
acorn rent, varying according to the price of
corn; and rs at the end of the year the parties
should not have agreed, then to make a com
mutation of the tithe eompulsoty, at the wish
of either the payer or the receiver; the amount
in such case to he fixed by tithe valuers ap
pointed by the Bishops and the Magistrates
at quarter sessions. The tithe receiver to
have the option of being paid in money or
grain ; and in cane of his preferring the latter
mode of payment, the payer to have the sp
lectionof tile kind of grain in which payment
is to he made. Sir R. Inglis thought the
commutation ought not to ho compulsory.
Mr. Hqjne, Sir R. Peel, Dr. Lushirigton,
Mr. A. Baring, Col. Torrens, Sir M. IV.
Ridley, Sir R. Price, and Mr. Holcomb,
expressed their concurrence in the principle
of the bill, hut objected to many of the details
oftlie measure, especially as regarded the
mode of effecting the valuation. Leave was
then given to bring in the bill.
Mr. Hr me moved two resolutions relative
to sinecure offices; the first of which was,
“that in all future vacancies of sinecure offi.
ces in the civil and colonial services of tiic
country no new appointments to such vacant
officers shall he made with any salary, fees, or
emoluments thereto attached;” and the se
cond resolution was, “ that no person shall re
ceive any salary, fee, or other emolument,
from any office to which ho may he appointed,
the duties of which are or shall be performed
by deputy.” Lord Althorp did not object to
either icsolution ; and after a few observation
from Colonel Davies, Sir John Hope, Lord
EbringtoU, Lord Sandon, and Mr. Kennedy,
both resolutions were agreed to.
The Budget. —On the 1 9th. Lord Althorp
made his financial statements. After going
into a detail of the receipts and expenditures
| of the country, he proposed that the stamps
! on newspapers should remain as they now arc ;
! the advertisment duty to be reduced from 3s.
Gd. each to2s. for the first insertion ; Is. Gd.
for two insertions, and Is. for every subsi
quent insertion. The duty on Marine insur
ance to be reduced, one third on Foreign
Policies. Os the assessed Taxes, his Lord
ship proposes to reduce the Window Tax.
i where business is carried on, one thaird.arid
the same reduction on the inhabited house
duty belonging to such establishments: the j
house and window tax of private dwellings I
to remain as they now are. The duty on lax
ed carts to be taken oil'; also the tax on
clerks, porters, rideis, stewards, &c. The
taxon raw cotton to be reduced one Half—
mail tax to remain the same.
| Colonial Slavery —On the 19th, a depula
! tion, consisting of more than three hundred
i persons, representing the sentiments of those
who are desirous for the immediate emanci
pation of the slaves in the West Indian Colo*
nies, waited upon Lord Alihrop and Mr-
Stanly at the Foreign Office.
JOHN RANDOLPH,
Os Roanakr.
At a meeting of the Scottsborough Debating
Society, held June Bth, 1833, the following pre
amble and resolutions, introduced by Mr. Lataste
and seconded by Mr. Day, were unanimously
adopted :
Whereas, we have learned with the deepest
emotions of regret, the untimely decease of the I
hon. John Randolph of Reanoke. We regard !
this as an affliction that will be severely felt j
throughout our country. Asa man, lie was hon
est, upright and uniform in all his dealings with j
the world; —Asa politician, firm and nndeviatiug
in hia;course; as a patriot, none more ardenC j
none more devoted ; and as a debater, unrivalled
in our council-halls. We believe that in his
death, a star of the first magnitude in our politi
cal firmament has become extinct, whose place
can never be supplied ; — Therefore
Resolved, That, as a testimony of the profound
respect wo entertain for his character—of our
gratitude for his long public services—of the sin
cere reverence in which we hold his memory, we
will wear crape on the left arm for the space of
thirty days.
Resolved. That the foregoing proceedings, sign
ed by the President and Secretary, he handed to
the several Editors in Milledgeville, with a re
quest that they be published.
ANDREW J. HANSELL, President.
John 11. Osborne, Scc'v,
THE LATE JOHN RANDOLPH.—RE
MAKRS OF Messrs. SERGEANT
& BINNEY.
After the organization of the public meet
ing of the friends and admirers of the late
Sohn Randolph, held at the District Court
Room, in Philadelphia, on Saturday—
Mr. Sergeant, said he rose to offer a reso
lution upon the subject wiiich had caused
this meeting. The very distinguished citi
zen who had here terminated his mortal ca
reer, though he had died away from his home,
had not died among strangers. He wa3 well
known, in the city of Philadelphia. He was
known throughout the U. States. He Was
known-, he might add, in every part of tho
world where the language was understood in
which he sjKtke, and there were men capable
of appreciating the extraordinary powers ho
had exhibited in a publiclife of between tliiftv
and forty years. In one department of high
intellectual extortion, he had justly acquired
a pre-eminent reputation, and by it had added
to the reputation ofour counrry. He had
contributed te place her, at least, on a level
with other nations, and to enable her to put
in a well-founded claim to the palm of elo
quence. It was due, he said, to this commu
nity, it was due to the personal friends of the
deceased, it was Hue to the State of Virginia,
whose eminent and honored son he Was, that
the occasion should not pass without soint«
public expression of the sensibility which
the death of our distinguished countryman
so naturaily excited.
In the course of a long public life, full
of keen and ardent contest, Air. Randolph, it
was not to be denied, had often offended
those who c: nic in contact with him. This
kind of irritability, perhaps, belongs to the
constitution of a highly gifted nature. Ge
nius is apt to be irritable. The flame that is
to be seen afar off, must burn intensely. It
overheats the frail vessel that contains its ele
mental fire, and scorches those who are in its
immediate neighborhood. Death strips off
the covering, and with it should fall into the
grave the memory of its infirmities. What
remains, is light, purified by separation.
Shining, ?,tit not consuming, hut spreading
its in all directions, it enters into the mass of
intellectual light, which adorns and enriches
our country.
He said he would make but one more re
i mark. That Mr. Randolph should have
1 come hereto die, was, to us, merely acciden
i tal. And yet there was something in it,
j which one who loved th’e Union, could nbt
but heartily welcome. Virginia’s eminent
son loved and honored his native State as
| much as any man could do. It was his prido
to be in all things a Virginian ; and Virginia
; requited his affection with continued confi-
I dence. At her feet he had laid the trophies
lie had won, and she rejoiced, and sent him
forth agaiu to cam new honors. That ho
breathed his last here, in Pennsylvania,would
scc:n to signify that Virginia’s eminent son
was also a son of the Union ; that the title of
citizen ol the United States wasstill the para
mount title, and that the whole Union was his
! country. lie said ho would detain the mcet
j ing no longer.
When seconding the resolution, Mr. Bin
i ney said, that while he could add nothing to
the force and beauty of tho remarks with-
I which the motion had been introduced, it
i gave him unfeigned satisfaction to second it.
It must be confessed tlrat Mr. Randolph was
an extraordinary innn ; extraordinary in ma
ny points, and particularly in Iris command of
the public car for so long a period, by his sig
nal accomplishments as a debater. He has
probably spoken to more listeners than any.
other man of his day, having been unrivalled
in the power of rivetting the attention by the
force & pungency of his language, the facHi
ty and beauty of his enunciation, and the.
point and emphasis of his most striking rnan
, tier. No man who has heard Mr. Randolph,
can ever forget him : and no man who ever
heard him once, was ever unwilling to hear
him again, except when, under the sway of
an excitement to which allusion has been
made, that was sometimes said which his
most partial admirers, w ished unsaid. The
recollection of these occasions lias however
| passed away, and there remains only the re
membrance of those powers which have added
another name to the list of our eminent coun-
I tryrnen. Mr. Randolph lias been in public
l life from nearly the dawn of parties in (his
| Government to the present time; sometime
a leader, thoroughly prepared and efficient,
and always, even after sickness had impaired
j his physical powers, a man whom every ono
was more willing to have on his side than a
gainst him. His reputation now belongs to his
country. His career is closed, after enjoying
for nearly forty years the confidence and af
fection of his immediate neigldiorbood ami
connexions, and the respect of hi:; native
State—unexpectedly closed in this city,
where it may be said to have begun. Asa
| distinguished son of Virginia, distinguished
by her confidence,and by his own talents and
station in the public councils of the nation,
dying at a distance from his friends and home,
it is the duty of hospitality, as well ns of sym
pathy and patriotism, to honor his remains.
I therefore cordially second the motion of Mr.
Sergeant.
FROM THE STAR.
j “ lean now send my children to school .”
I This was the language of a lady who keeps
a very respectable boarding house in the city
of • The occasion of the remark was
as follows : A friend and former acquaintance
1 called upon her one day just at the laMe was
being arranged for dinner. He saw the bran
rly bottles placed upon the table, and conclu
d rl to notice how many of her Itoarders used
them at dinner. To his surprise only two
used the liquor. After the boarders had re
tired, the remarked this fact to the lady.
“V os, she replied, “before the Temperance
reform commenced in this city, I usually paid
•S2 50 daily for liquor for inv dinner table,
The consequence was, that I could only sus
tain myself, and my children remained unedu
cated. Now my liquor docs not cost me 25
cents a day, arid 1 can send my children to
school.”
Cork-Screws have sunk more people than
cork-jarkcts will ever rave.