Newspaper Page Text
ttEPUBLICM.
FREDERICK S. FELL.
citv rniNTF.n.
Daily Paper eight dollars per annum.
Countiy l\apaV ..six dollars per annum
rWAIJI.r. VN ADVAXClv
All News
and New Advertisements ap
pear in hmh paper*. . .*,*
JE9R S. J^MteMMS*******
' change,between Hull and Drayton-streets-
SAVANMi
SATURDAY EVENINQ. Sr.PT. 14.
By tlio ship Flortan ami barque Arrhadit-
lo,in 98 hours passage from Now York,
wo htivo received the paper, of that city to
Monday last, whickarilicipiitc the mail up
to Wednesday, next. There is nothing of
Interest in them.
T.<nn Boat,—The editor of the Salem
Observer .ays', being in No>v Hampshire, a
foe. day. ago, we founda great excitement
there on the subject of a .missing Its.*-,
, which had been passed at the last session
of their Legislature. . The Sccretasyeould
not find it, slid the Governor could not re
collect whether it had ever beon approved
by him. It wkione of (he mpst important
laws which wein passed durim»,.t!ie session,
arid, as it was represonlod.'u> us, occasion-
ad more than any other,. It is not a little
markable, iliataiKh a law should ho miss
ing. AVedonlri whether a parallel case
can he fniM in the history of legislation.
[ A similar occurrence happened in the
legislative transactions of Georgia in the
year 18^1. A bill Was’introduced by a
member from Chatham County regulating
and defining the fees of Justices and Con
stables. and authorising them to receive
fees in certain cases not specified before.
Much discussion tool; place when' the jbill
nftc
was introduced, and it was'passed
many objections which were obviated hy
the supporter of the Bill; Enquiry was
made for the bill in tlfo proper office at
Milledgevile, and it'wa.sUted tlrat it could
notfoe found —yet in the aols oftlro Getter
at Assembly the title of this act is Indexed
and rcferedto.as the act was embodied and
Ji*d been published.' How should the Le
gislature In such a 'caio act!]—ed.'sxv.
axe.
- An election for officers and Director* or
\he Columbia Bank, took place on Alon
day the Slstulr. at the town of Columbus
When Col. Seaborn Jones was'chosen Pres
ident, and Mrl A B. DaVh, at present,
Clark in the State Bank at Milledgyviile,
Cashier. .
DIRECTORS.
Seaborn Joans,
J, S. Calhoun,
L. W. Hudson,'
John Mitchell,
Hampton Smith,
Daniel McDougald,*
S..KV Hodges.
The Bank is expected to go into opera-
tfon this fall—perhaps in a few weeks.
' Extract of a tetter dated
“Johns’ Island, (S. O.) 3d Sept. 1829.
“The.lhjiliy done to tlio crops liy the
late storm is serious, and they were bad
enough before, none or at least few, expect
ing to ninko over a half crop; my inipics-
liori is a third of a crop, is ns much us will
be made. Mr. B ■, told mo the other
dav, that ho did not oxpecl to make over
ten hags, from the'samo mimbor of acres
I have heard several gentleman say,. that
of a compulsory course to effect the remov
al of this uiifortunalo rar e of people,- lias
ever been thought of by tho President, al
though it has been so nscetted. 'Tho con
siderations which controlled, In tho coins*
pursued, svevo such, as Be really and In
fact believed, ivas required, as well hy a re
gard for ilia just rights which tho State of
Georgia was authorised to.asseit, ns fromo
conscientious conviction, that by inhumani
ty towards tho Indians would more eflhctu
ally he subserved. Of this.they have beep
assured, and in that assurance,'no other .dis
position tvns had. ihuo to explain fully to
them, and the country, the actual ground
they would not make over from twenty to op which it was believed they were right,
forty weight per aero;”
Monsieur Ton eon again.—Another Clay
Bnr beetle.—The crops in Ken lucky must
he goody the soil must he fjuilful.. How,
otherwise, could it sustain the eating order
of politicians. Mr. Clay has got tip ano
ther Barhehue—has spoken snothei 1 'speech
—and alurmed the flour and provision titer*
chants throughout the Great West.
Cupt. Thomas C. Legate, who was for
merly stationed at Cantonment Oglethorpe,
is, we find, Superintendent' of the a Lead
Mines lit Galena in the Slate of Illinois.
1*he Philadelphia Chronicle ehye t—“A
letter received in this .city from Vera Crux,
dated July <9, states that' lira Ann, Rid-
ridge, trad been ami was still detained on
account uf an embargo existing at Vera
Crux. Tiieexpedition from Havana bad
not appeared, A convoy left Mexico on
the 26th, with * large tom Intff.cie, apart
[of which was for the support of the troops,
and was accompanied by a strong escort.”
Rraui.—The editors of the New York
Daily Advertiser have received Rio de
Janeiro papers to.the lath July. .
- On the 4.lh of July Com. Creighton was
presented to the Emperor, by the Ameri
can Charge d'Affaires t. and Rear Admi
ral Grivel by lit. E. De Pontois, Charge of
his Most Christian' Majesty, as French
Commandant for the station, In the place
of Baron Roussafn. who on the same day
taokhis leave. . ...
The Chamber of Deputies ha'd been oeii-
pied 9days in discussing the question ofan
ini'pcactiiiient-against lira. Minister of Wai,
and expected to conclude on the 18 th.—
The speeches are said to have been - in,a
style’of moderation, ami marked hy. no vi
olence oVpaisigo.
A lottery Iras been granted by the Empe
ror.for the support of the Royal Theatre of
Ran Pedro de Alcantara.'
fully Entitled (a stand,
llow cat) the IJiiileil Status Government
.The Cincinnati Daily Advertise! states
that Table Salt, equal in every respect to
the English basket salt, is made by Messrs.
Burhon, at Ihs ShortlCreek Saline, in that
stale.
One Philip: Bosquet, who lately- died it
Amsterdam, has bequeathed a legacy to a
benevolent society, on condition that two
- fruit trees, shall be planted over his grave
and that the fruit shall be publicly sold at
auction every year, in order drat the recap-'
fociesof tho dead may be rendered useful
and beneficial to the living.
\Ve would remind those (rays the Wash
Sngton News) interested, tlrat tlK.extenslon
of tune allowed for taking out grants in the
Land Lottery of 1818—to;.will expire on
thb loth day pf November rtext.after which
gny person disposed will be at liberty'to a-
vnjl thefnselves of the privilege in the same
-ipanner as if they had been an' original
jfrhwer.
IMPORTANT FROM COLOMBIA'
‘ AND MEXICO.
Capt. Boissiere, of the lirlg Seraphim,
who came passenger io the steamboat Nor
folk; and left his'vessel below, in sixteen
. days from Cbagres, informs the editor of
tfie Baltimore-Gazette that in the llih of
August, a Government vessel arrived from
Guayaquil at Panama,the Captain of which
Crime down bearing despatches from lloli-
fjr. Nothing official had transpired; bat
*bb verbal reporfof the officers ami others'
on board was,’that Bolivar had jiist' enter
ed'Guayaquil wheri they sailed—the Pern
tian array having abandoned It some, days
previous, after destroying or carrying off
eytiy thing like ammunition or articles-of
Vai, and were tYeriat Plura.
Thero had been a revolution in Roll,via.
General Gamir'ra had sent the President of
Bofevia, General Lamar, On board a vessel
sailing for Chili, with private orders to shout
hidi on tile passage.; General Santa Crirg
tliid been elected PretWerit.of Bolivia, ajid
had dissolved the Congress. It was the
general opinion';!t Panama that thero was
much important information suppressed by
■ the officers and others who arrived in thu
vessel at Panama Capt. B. came into the
„ capes with ffte schr. Spartan, from Hava
na, Whose Captain informed him that pre
vious to’havlng .loft Havana, part of the
Wert of war'gnd transports of tho expedilibn
against Mexico had returned from Tampi
-CO after landing'arid taking possession of
' . tlrat place—Ira further, atafe.d, that the
"Mexican troops had immediately joined the
* Spinish army, at the Spaniards had made
no resistance in landing. £
Too hdndrSd and five thousand poxes
of Sugar, 'were exported from Havana
front khe 1st of January'fo tho 18 th of Am
giurja-i, •• . ' ' f •
\Ye learn from a communication in the
Richmond Enquirei, that thp- Secretary of
i he Treasury haa adopted thk following
rules to faeililate^lhe payment of annuites
under the act of Congress, providing for
the surviving officers and sofdiors of tbtar
my nfihcTfevolution.' . .
“He has issued a certificate lo each enti
tled under she law, .upon fine vellum, pa
per, in cop|>er-plata, signed-'with his own
proper signature, with .the emblem and
seal of the United States;' winch' it wilt be
difficult to cdbnterMl. These rertifieatea
are to be .produced semi-annually io some
Magistrate by the elalmantr in person, arid
by him identified to' thecerltficit&ef allow
ance, on oath, and the certificate and conn-
ty or corporation teal from under'the bnml
nfihe clerk, that the person' adminiatering
the oath, is a magistrate, or the certificate
of the magistrate who qualified the claim
ant to the original declaration,without such
repeated certificate Of the clerk.' •
“This certificate and affidavit from The
magistrate and clerk, or Wther, .nr-both, a«
Ihe caso may. he. is to be remitted loutfae
Treasury Department, and'-a draft will then
be sent to the claimant, on lira most conve
nient llranch Bank of the United States to
him.’S
THE INDIANS.- ’
IVecopy the subjoined letter of the Sec-
letary of War to a Convention oj' citigens
in New York,'called the Indian Board,
from the Evening Pifat, of-thal city. Th«
Cuaiition editors, finding 'that the people
have approved of the tomuval of violent
and abusive opponents ofthe Administra
tion, as well the ejection of defaulters rand
clieats from office, and being at a lo'is foy
something to carp at, have pretended-tp tip
wonderfully diets Cased for‘the “poor In
diana” and woefully grieve,! - at the Inter
ference of the General Gnve'rnuipnt be
tween, them and the Srate'bf Georgia.
The letter of Mr. Eaton expjains the view*
of ihe-Preaident, and-will be emirely^satis-
faclory to every honest, well meaning aud
unprejudiced man : its arguments ani clear
and satisfactory and plpee the subject in
.Its proper light.
ftip Rapt; Virginia, Aug. 23, 1849.
Sir—Lasp evening by the steam boat
Norfolk, from Baltimore, ynur.Ioiiertothe
President was received-al this placo, with'
a transcript gf lira Constitution, relatingio
the Indians, recently .adopted at New-York
by your Conveiitioh. . With the course
pursued at your meeting, the PrCsident is
much gratified,ami desoesme so to declare
to you. He eanmn but apppreciare high
ly the viows taken by you of a course of po
licy, which justice to ptiricipjes. recognis
ed, and humanity rewards our - Indian bre
thren, constrained hiunas matter of coocei-
ved duty to adopt, ’ He regrets that so
many inaccuracies, both as to object and
motive, should have found a place in the
public; Journals of tjie day, evidently mis
representing, add calculated to prqduge in
correct impressions. The great..consola
tion entertained by him though, is that
time will prove that his only end, and ob
ject and purpose ia to io foil ant) impar
tial justice to the extent that his official dis
charge of duty will sanction..
Ibegl&ve to assure you r that nothing
■> fc0SI5l'DNieA i #XD. < l
T would beg leave lu.call tilt 1 attention of
all good republicans and uuuslenttiliuus
CHUts'rtANa, to the 15th und’4&tlvoliapie,s
of the gospel of St. Mattow. Many ex-
collent and “sdimmilory" sermon* may he
given frouvtho holy toxts of tliove chapters,
and some attempts may be probably tnado
by A LAY PREACHER.
contest with Georgia the authority to regtt
guVate.her own internal affairs? If tho
doctrine'every where maintained be true,
thill a Slate is sovereign, so far ns by the
onnititmW adopted it has not bceti parted
with to the General Government, then
must-follow, ns matter of. certainty, that
within the Ihniuofa State there can he
none other, than her own sovereign power,
that can claim In axeroise the functions of
government. It is certainly contrary to
every idea entertained of en independent
government, for nny other <o assert adverse
dominion and authority, wlthili liar juris
dictional limitit. they are things that can
not exist together
Between tho Statisof Gtnrgla and the
Indian tribes,within her limits no compact
or agreembnt was ever entered' into;—who
thee is tt> yield, for it is certain in tha or
dinary course of exercised authority, that
one or thaotber' mini? > '^Ire-answer here
tnfnre pratrnted from the Guvermnerif.aud
which you, by your adoption liave sanction
ed a» eorraet, is tl\e oftly one that nan be
otfered.—Georgia, by.Irar acknowledged
-tonfederatl.i e authority may legally - and
rightfully govern and control throughout
her own limits, on else our. knowledge of
the science and principle of government, as
they relate to our enn fotms, are wrong,
rand have bee wrin'iy misunderstood.
Sympathy indulged Is e noble and gen
erous trail of character, but it should nev
er assume a form calculated tonutraga set
tled principles, or to produce in the end a
greateater.evil than it .would.remedy. Ad
tnit it were ill the disposition of the Gov
ernmental Washington to hold a coarse
and language different from that tbay
have heretofore employed; and io encour
age the Indians to the boliefthat rightful
ly they may ‘remain nod exercise civil
government in despite of Georgia ? Do
those who are the advocates of such
courts, and consider it reconcilcablo to
propriety, dream of the. consequences to
which it would lead, or consider after what
mariner soratvange an idea could he put in
practice ?• Have they looked to the.State
or Georgia, conscious in the-rectitude of
her own'construction of right, demanding
Of the United States tfieir constitutional
authority to intertero, and appealing to the
States to sustain her against encroach
ments, which,.ifoqbmlitcd to, might in the
end, prove destructive of-tire whole ?'-If
nothing else can be traced through tech atf
appeal and in such an issue,! think the good
&the humane may at least percrive that in
it peril ia to .be discerned, and that the
weak rand iindisciplined:Infiian», in such a
contest would bo so utterly destroyed, that
the places which now," know" them, would-
presently know them no mn[e. ,
From tho conversations had- with the
Prestden'i recently and formorly, bn the.
subject of the IndfaniJ ' am satisfied, that
no man in the country ente'rtaida towards
them fietter feelings, or has a stronger de-
sire.to see them placd.Its- that condition,
which may conduce to their advancement
and happiness, But to encourage them to
the idea; that uiihin the confines of a Hlate
they may exercise'all the forms and requt
sites gf a government, fashioned to their
own condition and necessities, hedoetnot
enn-.ider can Ire advantageous to ,them,'.pf-
that the exercise of srinh i right cen pro-
perlv be conceded.—Whit would' the au-
thoritiet-af the 8tate of New York say to
an attempt, on tHe parf of the Six Nations,
to estahlish, w ithin their Umits, a separate
and independent governmentfand yet their
authority, to do so, would be as (iudenia-
hle as that of the Creek*, or Chevolrtfes,
fllhiji the territory of Georgia, or Alab.a'-'
ma? Would they'agree, that the Indian
law of retaliation on the nexrpf kin,should
be enforced for the accidenlaf killihg of
one oftheir tribe? Or,'that nothing of trade
and commerce, bv her citizens, should
take place within t)ieir limits, except in
conformity to the provisions of their muni
cipal code? . Would they assent to It aye
their citizens rendered liable to be nrrnignr
ad at theltar of an Indian court of justice,
and to have meted out lo.them the penal
ties oftheir criminal code?-- ■
Ij it,_qbvious, that no State of this Union
would ■ print such . authority. Concede,
however, that these Ihdiaria are entitled to
he considered sovereign within 'their own
limits, and yob concede every thing else-as
blatter of consequence. Admit ‘thi ■ prin-
cipie.jtntj all is admitted—and what tlieu?
•The swordV'the alone arbiter in any coin-;
munify, where questions of adverse sorer!
, [commusicatko.]
Mr, Fell—LMouso lo itiieruha follow
ing ticket in yiittr Useful paper, and. you
will obligo the ftiondsof merit and consis
tency.
For Coventor. v
JOEL CRAW’FORD.
For Cengresa.
THOM A S U I*. CIIA IlLTON.
Slate Senator.-
R. W. HABERSHAM.
Repreeentativee.
a M. MYERS.
. RICHARD WAYNE.
ROBERT M. CHARLTON.
[Bv the Fldriati fc Armadillo.) •
NEW-YORK. Sept. 4.
rjoek at Home.—We- hinted some few
weeks, sineetliat it might be well to look to
lira length, and breadln &o, of sortie ol'uttr
domestic- manufacttlres,'; to aee wllettier
the Mcrchabti wore the only persons
chargeable- with frauds. We yesterday
were called to look' at several packages (if
Domestic imitation Rornall fltlkfs. which
were sold by tample as.having two selved
gas.—On,exaii|iiiatioii, hpwever, it wns
descovereff that there was but one sel
veilge. ■ ■ - - .r i
Instead of being put up in'-ilozcns, the
piocot are of various lengths, so -the buyer
uunt.unpnck ilia lrales before lie can test
the accuracy of the invoice ns to qhantfly.
FortugafeljR.only one bale was exported,
and lira samples hud not boen sent off be
fore tho discovery wns mode, or reclama
tion would have been made of the exporter,
aud he would liave - been charged with
fraud! .-.Tho invoice Inthiscaso amount
ed to about gl,800.
Valuable Application -Tho rcum from
boiling molasses spread upon tarred brown
paper, gives, wo nrf deihcd to say by ono
who Iras recently tried it, effectual" and
prompt-relief to tho most violent Iprains —
.Our informant states that lie met with so
severe a sprain-on Monday; In jumping
from a vessel to the tvharf, that he was un
able to walk, and had the cords of his leg
and foot so diawn up that ho was for some
time in the most 'excruciating pain, '"fi
friend sriggeated the altnvb named applied!
Iinn,|»'h'icli gave immediate relief, aud he
was able yesterday, to walk to Ins place of
business. ■ '■
■ Change in tie Weather On Tuesday
and Wednesday the tjiermometer rose, ill
9 P, M. to 84 degrees, nhd yesterday at .the
la'me hour- iPtlood at 08. a difference ol 10
degrees. The heat was very oppressive on
Tuesday and Wednesday, arid continued
until 11 o’clook on Wednesday night,when
lire wlndtauddehly; changed from 8, W. to
N. W. and blew with violerice all night.
The Gazette states that- Jeremiah -G.
flarpham.who is now in prisun on-a oharge
of attempling to roh'a man of his watch,
was recently discharged from'prison nt New
Orleans. On reaching Louisville,', nftcr
liis (lisoharge, Ira robbed a gentleman of
<4000, and was: pursued to Cinciunatti,
where he-acknowledged the theft, nnd the
owner recovered all his mbitcv except about
$00 dollars, anil was then suffered logo at
large. The gold shuff box which.he threw
away when recently taken, was stolen from
a gentleman's pocket atonecf tho Gar
dens. •»
A T. . SEPT. 5.
Exploring Expedition.-*-Since the fail
ure.pl the aimva emerpriso, under the sanc
tion and patronnge of governntent, at tho
last session of congress, we ha ve occasion
ally heard that Sontcaplrited exertions liave
been made, and with success, to carry, the
expedition into effect, by uniting it with
some enlarged views of the.Fui Trade in
the South- Sea and Pacific Ocean, We
have rpason to believe this repnrt well
founded,' and that tire public will ero";long
'in the end, have to he appealed - too; and
when this shall be the case, the humblest
prophet in-.our land cannot but discern
what will b/r- the finale ofinhe enniest. Is it
nojr prereraltle^.apd does not their owa
pegee, and qqlpt, and happiness, demand
that tliey.should Sgrrandcr,' at- once; sticli
visionary opinions, and', bv retiring^beynpil
tile. Mississippi, .place themselves where
'every-conHicl, as to stale authority, will
cease; and where the most enlarged and
generous efforts, hy| the.; Gdverfuncnt ( will
be made to improve their tnitids better their
condition, and aid them in their, efforts of
self-government? i For' yopr efforts, and
(hose associated wjth' you;'it convention,
.furthering this liberal at)d only practical
scheme, thetimo nillcoine wlteri ail good
.and gepetopamen willlitrank you,
In Iconclusion/ihq'-President,,desires ma
to thank yim for the communication made
taltim, and to offer you an assurance, that
every, legitimate power ofhls will be freely
bestowed to^orther and assist the iauilnltle
mid humane course Which your convention
hqs adopted.
1 have the honor to be, with great ri
•pect, your obedient servant.. ;
JOHN ILEATON,
be-put' in possesion of particulars reflCctirtg
lltoenterprisB of our
the highest credit on
merchants and others engnged in it.
.Mswico.—I.eltBrs from ‘Vera Cruz to the
90th July, rare received in this-city. - They
slate that a number «f wealthy individuals
had voluntarily made a loan to tho Gov--.
eminent, to aid in repelling the Spanish
invaders, ■ -
Ship Building.—We .arts credibly in
formed that nt the present .moment thero is
lesydoing'jn ship building, in this-, port,-
than has been for-lhelast twenty year*.—
•"Only ghaut four vijssola.of any magnitude'
—tho largest, not over 850. tons—are now
onthestocks in ilris-city! This is one of
the most striking facts we have hea/dj of
the picsent stagnation of trade. Whalers
tit e causes ? ... ,
- Corning the Canal.—Two gentlemen in
Rochester, advortiso that they liave deter
mined to abandon the trafipek in spirituous
liquors,' and offer their extensive atock of
liquors for snlo. ‘ Call soon,''say they “as
United Slate*’ Naval Asylum-foe
M i. n - t ~ a „ Sta . te P«nifontiary—two spacious
edifices for Litetary and Medical depart
ments of the University—ia Hali for Medi-
“nta p'r-’T." H u U f i r the So6ie «y »<
“Old Fellowa”—three Presbyterian Cltur-
eltes, besides two just completed—a Ger-
eithet hy sale orb,, feeding the Erie ,Can
«/• -Wo dd not think that they, have’ any
right to.make the canal tipsy. .
Slave Cate—A, case involving 'a point
of law, wasyesterday hroifoht heloreAlder-
maii Valentine and J. Ilopsoa, Esq. Police
Justices, ft appears tint a Woman of col
or liad secreted Jierself on board a ship ly
ing, ia the port of. Mobile, and -bound for
New lork. On the passage, the GapUin
discovered Her, andaiuw that lie has arrived
here, he brings her before tho police jos-
tiees, in necordance.wilti a Inw in such cases
provided,which obliges, him.tinder a heavy
perialtv,-In certain circtinistartc'es, to take
back the person secreting herself to tho
port whence she came with him.
Mr. Justice Hopson holds on opiriidn a
freeing with some humane gentlemen, who
interest themselves imthe case, flhaf foe
Captain oannot tnko Iter back until. Jto
ptovesghe wasra slave tvhon jhe accreted
heraelf. Whilst'Mr. Valentine contends,
that the fact of her secreting hersel f is suf.
fitftent for tho Captain to prove, and it-rosis
with her fo prove she has been made free.
I he case ts adjoin lied to tjiis day,and coun
sel ardfotained Upon enclf side.
A f"w evenings since,, at .8‘o'clock, a
frro e r, n ,t' v u' , ' eppingpn ,l,ore rr ^ono
oftlicNortli River steam boats, with a buna
d e of mriney in each hand ;■ when noth
cing a Indy aboyt going.onrahore also, he
>^ U! ?aTrt pilrce J int0 " hi5 pocket, in order
to rehdfir her seine assistance. But anin-
f ,r., eI "P‘ e f wh « n mturning his hand
l,e r H w "" "I »<" rob.
S „ h . e exclaimed “There goes the seen-
ell.’, ro. ‘ n ? l , h 5 r ^ H'mleman, and gave
ninl®' ^ 1 lie . f fi,,din 6 Win pursuit
oipg upon him, thow the bundle, into the
dock, when it floated upon lira pier and
was talicit up in litc adjoitiiitg slip. It
comttit-.cd Si.OflO.
It was nscoil,tilted yesterday, liiaA the
old snuffbox dfoppbtl by llarpltnm wltcn
he was at rested on Tuesday, wns the pro
parly of Dr. Whitehead, ol llurho County,
Georgia, dmi had beutt stolen Iroin hint ut
Nllilo’s gulden on tho night pfecodittg.’—
'I hit gentleman having left tlio city for
I’hllndO'qthin, Ills ftieml who nCgompaitied
him to the garden, called ttt tho. Police
Ofiit c, staled tho circilmstaucos attfriding
the tlteft, and made '' ~' hV
ly. It appeared t
ttd a seat directly
men, and was disposed to make hjmselr
agiceable during tlife wltolo evening.
From the New York Commercial Advent 1
scr, e*fpt. 3. u »«ru«
LATER FROM KUIIOPP
TIid sltip Ronian, Capt. Uuiicil‘»ii.
amved yesterday from Llvtrpnol, b, D fc$
Livnrpuol papers to tliu 29.1, of J U |v
t.tiniug London dates oTtheS7th, . Cs / ' 1 "
,, S ‘ al .‘ °f Ireland.—It is ovidefit IboKc t
Lailtolic Emancipation Act, Ins at vji
gotta but a vety littlo way |„ nmetC T I
disturbances of Irtlinid. Bysmurai offf! I
lata arrivals, We hirvo been fiirnlslied° ^
l'‘rqnt tlio Haiteook Advortlsor.
Brat this who can .'—Thero was, wlitm
weighed last, a SQUASH.' growing In
Capt. William Mahon's garden, Fiilnam
county,that weighed seventy-seven pounds!
Fout feet nine and a half inches jit circum
ference, t«o feet five ihcltes from lint blos
som to the stem.iuid growing very fast from
a frame. :•
Aug. to, 1829.
The eliotre is.certified hy William Mahon
& Calvin Stratton. We si, u- like tolicar
again from this parugon on its arrival to
uiaturify —kd
Tito Dolnsvaro Jamiia) states tlrat,an
embezzlement trf a considerable extant
has lately hecn detected in life I’nst.OAIcn
at M, Georges, Delitanro. Seve'ral letters
containing sums ofmonay having. failed
to .reach tlieir .ffestlnalmn, circumstances
lead to the belief that the fraud uai perpe
trated byn youth of about IQ years of age.
who was employorf as u clerk In the office.
He had been-djachargeri or left the office
from some cattle^ a'itd was residing iu \\il-
mington with his parents, wlien the.post
master, convinced oftlra youth's guiltj ob-
talned a senrch warrant and found altout
S500 which tho - culprit'' ttckhriwlcdged" he
had purloined front differed.: letters. He
was'Committell to prisori, wfiere lie now u
whits his trial. '
BALTIMORE, Sept. 4.
From Bio Janeiro—By the thlp.'Cinctn'
niittis;Uapl. Mintiirn.at N. York, Rio Ja
neiro papers to the 19th of July inclusive
have liken received. Tltcre is nb political
or othtr news of imjfoYtntreo,' oilier'-titan
tlrat received by the late'arriVaf nt Alaxau-
‘dri*. .- .
Capt. Ifflntnrn, repoftSThar a letlef wai
received at that place front Buenos Ayros,
of the lOth.Jane, stating that atlie Federal
Army commanded, by Gen. Hossas,’ had
'withdrawn to tfie neighltourlioo'd 1, op Chat
aontui, about SO leagtiai in tiie interior, in
consequence of n pledge having been.giveti
liy tho Guverntncnt of Buenos vyreirthey
would'onter ictoAt treaty of fence
Captain Hathaway, of the brig Milos
Sianiiish, at this port from (tfaravaibo
wltonce site sailed 'Aug'. 7th; rcpflrts' that
a smalt schr, having on hoard da passenger
Thus Mnore, Esq our minister to Golom-
bib, from Curacoa for Maracaibo, passed
pVBr Ute bar 'Attg.,7, .end- put on hoard
Capt. H’s brig, a letter for' the U. State*,
N. Y. On. id inst,
Tit* author, of a recent and able Treatise
on the Police arid Crimes of London stafos
there are, probably, seventy thousand per
sons in that metropolis who regularly live
hy theft nnd fraud. '.‘Most of these," he
adds, "Itavo param'outs, and tlrair.0flipring,
’a matter of com so, follqw the example
oAhcir parents, and recruit the general
mass of nramiicancy.ptnstiiution dferime.’’
Supposing that the population qf London
haa increased during lira last seven years
in the same ratio astko interval from 181 ’
to lust the presant number of inhabitants
amounts to one million'four hundred and
ninety-tan thousand. The population with'
in a radius of eight miles round St. Paui't
Cathedral,, is estimated at pear ' seventeen
huhfired thousand, Tiie total 6lyil fdret
of lira metropolis is 480S, to which tniiat
be added one Utmisand justices of theipbace
in Westminster aud Middlesex. The an
nual amount of foe depredations’ , commit
ted .on property even exceeds" two millions
sterling,
lfeu> YarTe Fashions— A lady ih. New
York, writes thus to her'friend .in Haiti
more. • • • '
“You said, when 1 left yeti, I must tell
you as.to tiie fashions.—Well then every
thing is rasliioruiblo—onj fAfng is fashion
able—-but tiie latest & most beautiful dress
triimning-I have seen is a.fold, midway of
skirt, headed with a deep fringe of a differ
ent colo'. For Foulard dresses white iih-
nen fringe is pied; for white, colored woiat-
,cd—and for silks silk fringe: AS for caps
and Irair ornaments, the ugliest thing you
enh get is foonjiht tlio prettiest' anffmost
stylish.—Titus things griin this great em
poritim of rasltion where'he primitive sim
plicity of other times is entirely lost sight
of."—Balt. Patriot. b
' Faodl.—lt is understood .that at'this
place and N. York, n draft of 1000 men
has recently been made, from wltich • nrmn,-
herthe crew of tho U. S. ship Ohio, now
fitting fob the Mediterranean station,- is (n
be selected. ■ It is probably well known that
on acttount.ofthe demnnd in the mercantile
service, 1 otir government has hitherto labor
ed'under’considerable embarrassm'ent ir.
procuring suitable seamen fira our- vesSela
of war; blit in the present iustance; so low
aret|ie wages for.commercial employment
vbry littlo diffielilty was experienced in
raislng'the qtinto required; and thq^wholc
rite seulown as first rate, seamen.—Boston
Traveller,' ■ ■
Lidgc in buh|i„,to M, take'i , ufoi C 0 ° ni |J*W j
tion lira altmhlng state of the cnuii!,, "'
At that meeting a pioeloination a>?,4L
suedfor the suppression faFafl nss'oniilr.
lend ng to endanger tlio p.ubltc peace t ' 1
proclamation, whiain 1s general with i' 5
pect to counties, prohibits all meoiing ‘
for tlio putpgsu of coinritunicatiaf
giotis or political opinions or ientjmS
and cnnimutida all ntaglauatestobeS:
ftnd asstsilnr mi to dispersion tliercnf nil
Dublin Evening Post thought MS
Jitro would lieol no use.atid insist, th« a’
clicuuntinces of menace, outr« eo , ,
deatlt, ami the general danger reselL . ■
the peace ol'the country Tr^n the .;
meetings, would justify a resort to Vi !
Inw. •' l| n
law.
The Lrtttcrlck
Chro.nlcle gives ..,i
cairronoy to a ,report “that Lord \. c !! “
liam will contest the .county Clare and u i
frutn the declared,opigiou or M r , y ,
Solicitor General, it is bbllsVad Mr ni ,
Cuhhell. Ifoleele.1, will bo iu, , , 1|IU '
sit Jn the prevent patliamcnfV fi W jL ‘
refused llteoatlis." Wc don't Ueii.fo AIr
Sucdcn-cver gave any such ouniion.* f '
News, from the East —Advices
Constantinople .are to .ilia 4oth „f J , “®
but they cotnuin no lator intelligence r l 1
the theatre ofivar, nor In
gence f.om thati quarter whlchiustwi
•anticipated v s Geituauy. DespjicW.f, 0 ,!'
Mr. .Gordon, the Urilf.lt MiSis.ei &'
tiie fiotlt of June, liave been received-i ih,
•Fore,gn Office. Mr. Gordot,
alGiilllmiiiiiut arrived o'ntlio 19th, but did
.not land till tho Seth, when they ; C , •
eelved by thupeorilo anf. huthoritioi oi,F
every demonstration of regard and
The two anibassadors has Seal in the!,'
notea fo stale that they were in rtatlinea
lo negoCiate upon Ilia gmtlrstiff.’reeer.aui
•they were tVaiting for a reply. The pub-
lioiudiencei of Mri Gordon, of the Cantu,
eatf. und the Sultan were shortly to taka
place, «nd- Ills arrival, with that of the
Branch Ambassador, wks generally snd
joyfully looked upon j-ajl clasios of the
inh.iliitniit* as thb sure fororutmer of a tee. •
erarpaoiffiatlou. The immediate mem
-al of the former friendly relations will, En.V
gland and France a're anticipated and tha
Hlelf. Effendi' hittiself iriald to havses;
pressed sentiments uf a most pacific us,
lute. ’
J’roylsiops abounded In theTmkish csp.
Ital, lining cltieny-iopplled from the Tur.
khli Asiatie..ports of the Black Has, by'
means ql small coasting* vessels, against
tiie navigation of which no means have'
heotfinken by the Russiari Mafltime force* 1
in ihe.Eitxino. "... . •
- ’The Sultan had purcHasetl the Hvltoj'
Jotiffee. iteamcr.- Tho French and Ear.'
Ii>h Adiriltaffwith their respective squad.':
rbrix, sailed from Siny'rna, and iv'er.e crui-
ZitVi off Tenedos. Tiie lattor had beta
joined there hy the Irish frhiate. Three
loaded ships had received the Sultan’s spe
cial: permission to proceed tn .the Illicit'
Seadrill the passage continued close, uip
fossra special ndcr. ...
TfiiFrvncIi pitperc contaitia letter trm
Constantinople, dated the (9u ult. »ti«i
states'Jhal. instead-of having returned to
Shuntis with only.600.none., after the list,)
tic of tha I lilt, the Grand Vizier lisd tin't
Itack with liitq 8000 cavalry and IW»
infuutry in good order; . . .
Tiie Brussels Gazette of'Juiy 1st; speak!!
with some positivhneis pf the departure of
Gen. Muffling from Berliri, ori a secret rail-
sion—supposed to "lie c'onnected 'wltli the •
Sending ofan Envoy-by the Emperor of
Russia, with his ultimatum to the Sultaa.
This rumor >*a* pitlvllsliad'in(he Coalmen
eial Advertiser,' oh tiie tflth ult'. from Ber-
tin unifor the date or July. ISiJi- So that'
fiftci-n days a'ig,.wo. had tho news from
Berlin a fortnight'inter than' tile Brussel)
accotint. - 1 < ■ ’ j.
. Aecourtts from Bueh'aiest, to the Cfllh
/line, state', that the reversje,'under Getter-,
al Tulstoy, has received or'fiets, to join tits
arm/ on the Danube'. It - consist: of 80,-
000 men Of all arm.-.r,:
The. French gaffers arid the ABgaawiM
Zojtang of the 20th July, assert tliaj great
moveirtents wefe abbot taking place ill till
Russian army. Tlteir .accounts hpwetw,
■are somewhat contradictor;. 'Ac.oitW
to tiie prenoh '.stiitembnts,;<be seige «
Sliutnla whs to be undorm ken by a fotcem
itlirty Iralt.lllnnb'nr infunlMi snil Atf* ffill'
j Cooke, p.fter reheorsliig Tiie Gom<latiRr
with Mr. Cooper. In America, said to Mr.
’Dunlap f tm manager, and afterwards Bio*
grapiier, “I’ll tel) you what : Tom add I
wbre not very clear at-rehffHraal** this mor-
mng. I liopo we shall riot do to night as
Kemble aucTI dfd in this ianid piny. We
played^ seene of the third act in tiie se-
t was frightened oiit of my wltn.-^.
‘We’re wrong,* says-f ; /»Go on,* says he ;
and we went through it. When ^veiianie
off, I exclaimed *
have done
tho third „ f
ry coldly.—‘And whnt shall we do in the
•tlurd act ‘Play the second and so we
did. *, But the beSi*of the joke was, that the
papers never found it out.”
wont through it. When jv®B»»me
claimed, ‘D^you know whjtt/ we
ne 7 We lutve played h scqjio of
i .*ot;^ T<know it,’says John, v$
! „ NORFOLK, Scpf. 5.
Naval.—'The U. 8. slnnp Florida, I.t.
Cbm. Tatnnll, arrived at tho Navy Yard,
Gbsport, on Thursday avetiing last, froth
Washington., Slte-will sail in a few days
on a survey.
y bqtthliuns of infantvy, and fiv, ted-
tnents ofcavalry; 'notwithstanding wnldh
Ilia Capture of the place wji not expeetd ,
before the clitso of.tite pfosent year. Ac
cording fo the German accounts, troop)
had already been pushed as far as Etkn .
Htamboul (which the RussiahsocciipledfJ .
a short gnpipaigri j and Count Diebltscb'.
iuterided
Hi,
tael . _ ,
,llourgns, and from tlionoe, after defeat
ing Hint', to descend on the right, through
the plains tn Adriannple. .These more-
ments are remarltably.oosv on paper, but
noiequally-so in execution. If Htii'i en
Pacha lias wjth him; as-is stated, an arm;
of 60,000 men, liis defeat iS by no nteama'
miittor of ccrthioty p ai]t( -.even zliould. lie
be put fo flight, vast mountains still > e ‘t
mnin tn hn r.r/iMifirl linfnrArtlio RllSSiaHS
i short pppipaignj and Count uiemwou,
uien'ded-tj) advance his hentf quarters 1o .
faunibat, and. taking the'sea line, to st
ack IfusseVn" Pacha in Iris camp befits ,
main to lie crossed before'the Rassiacs
can reaclt the plains—mountains irnpassa—
blii.tohumiin feet; and gorges,' wjiers a
lew'Bold snldfcts may arrest a whole at-
‘iriy. 4 I
. From- Prance—Direct—Since tha rate--
going was in type, tho Boslot;,-papers W'C
yesterday have been foceiygfl. The brig;
Clematis arrived at foat.roit oil TuckIs);
from Havre, and bringsPnns papers to* 1 *
4j)tli nf July, inclusive... The Paris nrtri-,
cos from Constantiriople.,aie of the sania
■late as those aMtotinced id the proceeding
column ; hut they contain some oddllionst
items, witicli are of suffleient interest tor
I'hpublicnlion,were there time tliis evening..
It appears that the Porte lias so for mode
rated its iono, that It will now listen m m
overtures of intervention, agreeably to "w
protocol of March 22; but.
Sion of the . Grecian limits ’beyond •"
Isthmus of Corinth, tho Porto will t> e *
tonsent.