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- --- .. ___ . ■ 1 ■ ■ 1 ■ 1 1 wa———
r 4,V,V^//.--PRiNTE"^™ BUSHED °* Mondays Thursdays by DOUGHERTY and CAIUIONT, ’ out id Bay, f^ffppff^Exclfn**.
y\OL. 111. No. 47.]
I TER VI S
B OF THE
■ PATRIOT
fl and
■ioumercial advertise*.
B crmsqf subscription are six
B.LARS it year—ore half to hr
mi the time of subscribing and
Wireminder at the expiration o<
■ —awl at! payer:* will be
until ordered to the con-
By-
of no more
Ht hthan breadth are instated at
for the first insertion, and
K r each continuation. A h-
Hy allowance wiU he made to
H. who wish to advertise by the
lwi. WILSON 1 ,
received per the s/ups Eliza
Volant, a large part of his
111 Supply of Goods,
Bl” Which with his iiock,
|ore on hand, makes his ai
lment very complete.
longit as great a variety of
Icles, as are commonly set
Ihin lengthy advertifeme r us
I large q uantity of
flhite & colored Negro
8 CLO T 11.
fcs this article was purchaf’
Bad Winter for cash, and
la moderate advance only,
Ibe now exacted, it is coo
led that it will be an object
■thy the attention of Plan.
Band others, who will) to
■base by the piece or pack 1 ’
■ Payment will be expe£t
■m Cash, Cottcn, or ap
Bed town notes.
wanna A, -Sept. IS, 90 ts
I MEW-YORK and Y
s
I SAVANNAH, x
mor X SHOE S TOR r. s
BA. Scribner & Cos.
mi’E JUST RECEIVED
Brow New- York, by the
■ brig Luna,
Belbgant assortment rr
Bc/j, Shoes £> Slijifiers,
BSuperior Quality, made af-
Bier tiie English lasinon,
B A/ SO,
Bw Slijifiers & Chil
-1 drens Shoes ,
Ho In addition to their fotmer
Bh tnakes their assortment
Hxtenive ; which ts it y oiler
H * at reduced prices, at
■ iln ' tlu. Mat', iivuriy op-
H ‘he Exchange.
I Just Received
fl at the
B V YORK & SAVANNAH
if) T &? SHOE SJ ORE,
Roy, opposite the lix
■ change,
■ ‘"iladelphia Boots,
Boren’s SHOES, La-
B SL INFERS, of every
.Bkfiption, and of a fu
fl pertor quality.
fl A ‘ SCRIBNER & Cos.
3 i ts
B n k Manifests &c.
fl Ya lc at this Office.
THE - PATRIOT
AND
COMMERCIAL ADVERTISE R.
Sheriff’s Sales,
ON the first Tuesday in May
next, U ILL BE SOLD, at the
Court House in this city be
tivet n the hours of 10 and 3
e'cloci.
ALL tliofe buildings and
improvements, on the N. W.
half part of Lot No. —, Deck
er VVa and, belonging to the
heirs of Philip Minis, decealed
formerly occupied and own
ed by Maurice Lchiff.
A fifty acre lot, known by
the number 8, the house at
present occupied by Joseph
Arnold, in Anson Ward
and three lots, being part of a
five acre iot, adjoining the
town, formerly belonging to
the efta.e of John Currie, dec.
taken under execution as the
property of Joseph Arnold, at
the funs of Benjamin BuflV,
surviving copartner and Benj.
Buffo, jun.
T. ROBERTSON, S. C. (L
March S. 42 1 m
FOR SALE^
A few Military Drums
By
M. WHITLEY.
Market Square.
March 23- 37. ts
’ NOTICE.”
-XJINE months after date, ap
-i- x plication will be made to
the honorable ins Inferior Court
of Camden county, for leave to
sell about seven hundred aers of
land, lying on the head of Crook
ed river, ahout two hundred a
crcs of White Oak, and a num
ber of Lots in the town of Jeffer
son, in the county aforesaid/ ap
pertaining t.y the estate of Wil
liam Jones, deceased, late of the
torn of St. Mary’s, for the be
nefit of the heirs and creditors.
D. G JONES,
Administrator ,
St. Mary’s, Jan, 15, 1807.
~ ~ 'notice.
r T' , IIE Subscriber forbids ail
JL persons, from this date, to
giro any credit on his account,
without a written order from him.
J: A. MOHR ICE.
April 13 4 3
WANTED,
A YOUTH of 12 or 14 years
of age, of decent connecti
ons, as an Apprentice to the Print ■
ins Business. Apply at this of
fice.
March 2.
20 Dollars Reward.
RAN AWAY from the Sub
scriber, in Hancock county,
near Sparta, two likely young
Negro Men, 20years of age, a
bout 5 feet 9 or 10 inches high,
names JOAI & CHAKLE>.—
Charles isstout&well made,when
fie goes to speak, lioids his mouth
open some time before he can in
ter a woitl, and then stutters: un
commonly bad while speakirg.
Tom is midiing spare m ide, and
has somewhat of a black skin
1 am apprehensive that the above
described Negroes wiil ni ke to
some sea port in order to take
shipping.
Any person that wiil appre
hend the said negroes, and deli
ver them to the subscriber, or se
cure them so he gets thorn again,
shall have the above Reward.
SAMUEL SHY.
April 16. AI
M O N D A Y, April 27, 1807.
NEW-YORK, March 18.
Messrs, Lang Turner.
Bv giving a few insertions to
the following, you will rentier an
essential service to shippers and
ship-owners who have their ves
sels in the Baltic trade: Those
who already experienced the con
sequences of not conforming with
the quarantine laws in Denmark,
need n >r a re-pernsal of this.—
Ihe publication is intended to
prevent future losses,
G. HAM ME KEN.
Danish Consul,
New Toik. J
“ As the same degree with
which vessels proceeding from
the U. States to Danish ports
are liable to threaten the public
state of health, in no less degree
exists with those bound to other
poits on the Baltic. fits majes
ty’s government has invite.d the
neighboring powers to adopt si
milar precautions with vessels
bound from tile United States to
any of their respective ports, as
by* the royal ordinance of the
lith May, 1805, has been pre
scribed for Danish vessels as
well as others proceeding from
the U. S. for any Danish pari.—
It has in consequence thereof
been agreed between his majes
ty’s government and the govern
ments of Sweden, Russia, and
Prussia, that consular certifi
cates shall henceforth be furnish
ed either by Danish consuls or
vice consuls, where those powers
themselves have no commercial
agents, or by theirs, vice veva,
where no Danish consul oi vice
conrul 1 esides.
Any vessel, therefore, to what
ever nation it may belong, which
alter public notice has been giv
en of tins ai range merit, shall pro
ceed from the United States to
any Danish port, or to any port
on the Baltic, without being pro
vided with a consular cerubcate
of health, will absolutely, on its
arrival at the sound, or it, port
of destination, if not bound, to
the Baltic, be subjected to qua
rantine lor a longer or shorter
time, according to circumstances
even ti it should be provided with
clean bdts at health from the re
spective authorities.”
‘i he Pi inters throughout
the slates are requested to give
the above a lew insertions.
prospectus
Os Lewis and Clark’s tour to
trie Bactlic Ocean, through the
interior of the continent of
NOIUI America, pci formed by
order of the Government cf
tiic Uuite.fi States, during the
years 1804, 1805 St 1806.
‘This work will be prepared
by captain Meriwether Lewis,
and will be divided into two
parts, the whole comprised in
‘.three Volumes, octavo, con
tainming from •four to five
hundred pages, each; printed
on good paper, and a lair Pica
t pc. The several vol
umes in succession wilt
be put to press at as early
periods as the avocations ot
tiic author wiil permit him to
prepare them fur publication.
Part the First—in Two Volumes,
Volume first —Will contain
a narrative ot the so. age,with a
description of some of the most
remarkable places in those iii
therto unknown wilds ol Ame
rica, accompanied by a Map ol
good size, ana embellished with
a view of the great Cataract of)
the Missouri, the plan, on a large
scale, of the connected falls of
tha. river, as also, of tho-e of
the fails, narrows and groat ra
pids of the Columbia, with their
several portages. For the in
formation of future voyagers,
there will he added in the sequel
of this.volume, some observati
ons and rematks on the naviga-
Uo of the Missouri and Colum
bia rivers, pointing out the pre
cautions which must necessarily
be taken, in order to insure suc
cess, together with an itinerancy
of the most direct and practica
ble route across the continent of
North America, from the con
fluence of !.te Missouri and Mis
sissipi rivers to the discharge
of the Columbia into the Pacific
ocean.
Volume second —Whatever
properly appertains to geography
—embracing a description of the
rivers, mountains, climate, soil
and face of the country; a view
of the Indian nations distributed
over that vast region, shewing
their traditions, habits, manners,
customs, national character, sta
ture, complexions, dress, dwel
lings, arms, and domestic uten
sils, with many oilier interesting
particulars in relation to them
Also, observations and reflecti
ons on the subjects of civilizing,
governing, and maintaining a
friendly intercourse with those
nations. A view of the fur trade
of North America, setting forth a
(dan for its extension, and shew
ing the immense advantages which
would accrue to the mercantile
interests of the United States, by
combining the some with a direct
track'to the East Indies, through
1 or- comment cf North America.
This volume will be embellished
with a number of plates, illustra
tive of the dress and general ap
pearance of such Indi .11 nations as
differ materially from each other;
of their habitations, their wea
pons and habiliments used in war;
their hunting and fishing appara
tus, domestic utensils, &c. in
an appendix there will also be gi
ven a diary of the weaihei, kept
with great attention throughout
the whole of the voyage, shew
ing also tiie daily rise and lad of
tiie principal water-courses which
were navigated in the course of
the same.
Part the second—in one Volume.
This part of the work will be
confined exclusively to scientific
research, and principally to Hie
natural history of those hitherto
unknown regions. It will con
tain a full dissertation on such
subjects as have fallen within the
notice of the author, and which
may properly be distributed un
der the heads of botany, mineral
ogy, and zoology, together with
some strictures on the origin of
the Prairies, the cause of the mud
dtness ut the Missouri, of volca
nic appearances, and natural phe
nomena, which were met with m
:he course of this interesting tour
l iiis volume will also contain a
comparative view of twenty.three
vocabularies of distinct Indian
languages, procured by captains
Lewis and Clark on die voyage,
and will be ornamented and em
bellished with a much greater
number of plates titan will he be
stowed on the first part of the
work, as it 1 s intended that every
subject oT natural history which
is entirely new, and of which
there ate a considerable number,
shall be accompanied by an ap
propriate engraving illustrative of
it.
This distribution of the work
has been made with a view 10 tire
itecommoiiai mu cf every descrip
tion of readers, and is here offer
ed to tide patronage of the public
in such shape, that all persons
wishing to become subscr.bers,
[AA hot.* Number 247.
m.'tv accommodate themselves
with cither of tiie pa>ts, or the
■ mire “ork, as it shall be most
convenient to themselves.
Dei ached from this work tie re
” ‘ll be published on a large scale,
as soon as a sufficient nun,her of
subscribers can be obtained 10 ue
Iruy tile expencc,
Lewis & Clark’s
MAP C f NORTH AMERICA.
From long. 9 deg. W to the Paci
fic Dean, and between 33 dew.
end 5 2 N. tat.
Embracing a M their ‘ate disco,
verms, and th.it part of the com -
nenr heretofore the Last known.
1 his map will tie compiled from
the best maps now extant as suit
published as in manuscript, from
• lie collective information of the
best informed travellers throua ,
the various portions of that regi
on, and corrected by a series of
several hundred celesiial ob-er
vations, made by capt. Lewis da
ring hn. late tour.
lor the convenience of subscri
hers, these wot ks will he deliver
ed at the most respectable com.
tTiercial towns, and at the scuts of
government of the respective
Matej and territories within the
union: No advance is required,
nor will payment be required un
til such deli vet y is made.
Knowing that a considerable
proportion of the expcnce of such
publications depends cm the en
gravings wbiG. c.iftietllsh or f, )nu
them. a.i.i that tlit: precise num
ber of such engravings, partiou
lui.', as it regal dg the second na , 't
of the work, have not yet been
settled; it is difficult lor the author
at this moment to fix a price ou
them—lie tlierclore declares to
tiie public, that his late
was not taken with a w j to pe
cuniary advantages, auu pledges
liniiroll that trie estimate winch
he wili in tins instance set cn Ins
literary labours,shall be of the mo,t
inout'iatc description; his princi
pal reason indeed lor proposing
a sub cription at all, is, that ho
may be enabled to form some es
timate of the number of copies
to be struck off.
*,f Editors of Public Prints in
the United States, disputed to aid
tiie publication of tins work, arc
requested 10 give the foregoing a
lew insertions.
i'oi i i.\ -\l; >u t ffcmg.t
rjh s I l.e last sailing ship
< - OVIM ER*'ii,
Nathaniel Fay, mas
ter— iei sail in 10 day s—u ijj take
50 bales of Cotton at 2d sti rin g
a pound, and freight it 10 London
A few passengers may bo ac
commodated on moderate terms.
App.v on board, or at Mr. Gunn’s
Cofiet -1 louse.
“notice! ’
Absented inm-cif n iii e
llth ult. SCIPIO, a Negro
iellow, by trade a Cooper but will
work at any other business ; yel
low complection, about 5 feet 8
inches.high, about 40 years ‘Ten
Dollars will be paul on delivering
him in .Lit! or on Telfairs wharf, to
THUS. DOLLAGUAN.
Feb 12. 26 if -
is. IR'llton,
lO ESPECTFUI I.Y informs’lns
JOx. friends and the public gene
rally, that he has nnn ved to ibs
house on tiie Buy, Icnneily oc
cupied by Mr. Geima hoc, deco
‘where he coni'mies 10 carry on
i he Tay loving Bu s ip.es s
in all Its var o s oranch s. Ue
r-i urns thank- (or favours ;t> fa
il}’ 1< c< ived, snd sc. i it, a coi.tiu
auece cf tl.t uj.