Newspapers / The Journal (Salisbury, N.C.) / March 15, 1825, edition 1 / Page 3
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( »1 VKLOTTE : (I'KSDAY, MAUCH 15, 1H25. I.\l KST FROM KXi.LAMlJ. |/V ,iu>’' 'rc:’rrcyponch fii at I'nt/ctleiUk, March 8.] Hv Jic regiihir packet sliip .liimos rro])i)cr, -Mil Ni’^'-Vork on t}iu 2d, we Imve rc- vd! l.(;iuioii ihitcs tothc COlli, :uid Livtrijooi the taken placo in |lu Mvi rpool, fVoin ^ to ^il. I* j. jj, Tliii transaclloi’.s for the wci k ))revious I tlif -3‘1 ' ‘'"■'''S' to li -nv spi-'Culations of the six weeks prLvious, T 1 f,.onfthc w ish of tlic dciders to see more of ■lie ncw crop, wliicli still continues very infe- The consui'.)ption is so extcn^iive, tliat we •iiriot 1‘U.l look forward to a maintenance of tjtil' [iviccs for some niontlisto ronie. 'I he last iiiiutatioiisurc, for rp.lands, 8^ a 1 Id. ,,111 i(i. lor very prime. 'I’his arrival has had - j j-jVct iij)on our market; and sales were made I 4cnl:*.') bales, fi om Iredell, parcel from Chat- ^ 'l'J'’t^tioii may he ■ulo at 11 \ a 11)^. '1'1'G cotton comini^ in is •iiraih of an iiift rior ip.iality, as is usually t!ie ,0 with late g-atheriiig';. "5 336 hhds. of 'I'ohacco wevr i:nported into tpg-liuid from the United States, dunnp: the t.u' ending- 30lh Septemlx r; beinp J3,4~J i.'j^ less than the inipoi tution of ISv’.j. C.cn. Lufji/rtlc arrived at Ualeijrh, on the 2d iii-tint. lie was met a few miles Irom Ualei^h, ,v the volanteiTS under the command of fol. '(.Ik. aurl about half a mile from the city, by i ■ lhkij;'b lilucs. The (lener.d then procced- ! to the liovcrnment House, where he was Mr(.ssi;il bv Ciovernc.r lluvton, v. ho welcomed 111 to this state, in the name of the people of orlli-Carohi'.a. 'I «i this the tieneral returned ;i appropriate r . ; and after partaking of f-eshnu-,1 j, 1\c rt paireil to tlic Capitol, nvli;\s t!ic St •T- v)f V/asliinj^'ton, Accompanied iv the iscort. iind :i lar,^o toner,ursc of eiti/ens. Ip v.ms air:iin addressed by (’ol. AVm. I’olk, in _^cl.:ilf of the citii-.ens of Tialcigh, and after kit'Wiiig'the statue, w.-is introduced to the stu'- :’.t iits of tlie Tniversity, who had repaired thitli- tr to pay tluir respccts to the nation’s (^uest iirl iieiiefactor. 'I’he day closed, with a dinner [a j o'clock, and a ball in the evening'. The (icneral started for Fayetteville on Thurs- lp,;v; escorted by the Mecklenburjj and Cabar- Jtis volunteers, and arrived there the next mor- Wc h.ave not received an account of his Sti-ciption at that placc; but learn froni tlie vol- :Aii.tcers, V.ho have returned, that it was such as (lo honor to the town and to the state. The t.ciicral v.as met about 9 miles from town, by i]’t. Towiics’ company of I.\rtillery, and ja imiViIxT of citl/cn.i; and at '1*. iJrid.i^e, by the Flkuv!. and the other uniiV 'lO companies of the jtf/wn. On his arrival • .lie l.iij'dyittf Hotel, a ilar|,'P and elej^ant buil imp;', crected durin;;’ the last season by Mr. Uonaldson, he was addressed Ly Judg'C Toomkh, to whom the (.ieneral repli- cJ, in a very appropriate manner. The volunteers speak in very flatterin,^ terms f their treatment iu I'ayetlevllle—their reccj)- !tif'!i. in every rcspect, was such as we anticii>a- tcii, from our knowledg'e of the citizens ot that tC'V.n. Kxcellent accommodations were ]>ro- vidfd ; and the members of the escort were not rdy invited to the dinner, but tickets of ad- ’ir.ssidn to the splendid Ilall in the evenin};:, ■ t-Tc ^'cnerously presented tt.) each. The inan- • i.rin \^hich they were received in Vayctteville, I'.''ill alwa\'S be remenibc ri'd with tlie liveliest i"-iti«r;utlon. They were also pai-ticularly i^ra- with tluir reception at Sali^-'bury, and ;ik ill verv grati ful terms it‘ the attentions ?io\vn till m by the citizens of that place. V, ith accomm>datious iiruvidc il for them at itirii-nshorough, they were also much gratified: —thry xle]it on beds for the la^t time at lhat k? ••iutfji.', \intd they arrived at Fa_\ ette\ llle. 1 l.c corrt s])Oii(l(MU‘e Ix’lwctMi Com. and (Icii. \’ivrs, citi the eve ol tlic ■'‘''liurtiire of ilir i'ornu'r lor the United is ])fettv ('f)iuinsiv(’ rvidencf that '' C’oiniiifri’Kjrc’s coniliict at I'axarilo. I ''^is not uf liuit \i!ijuslt!ial)K' and oulra.^a'- liaracici’, w !iich inaity of the.papers ' i'" C^jminoilorc.' li:is Ijceii i\'cal!c(l, 'qiieiu e oi' th(‘ clanu-!’ ral'od a^":'ii:is!. lis ])foni|)'. jiuni-ihiiirnt ol a i'.ii'.i. I ‘'Jvs insult, not merely lo an Aiiu'ricati ■‘•' I'!', but to the Amc: !)\ llie ■ ''liorities (d I’orio Hieo: !)ut we lx'lie\e ''' pi'ople live well satis'ied w 1th his con- '^ ;i!h1 ;.^!-alerul joi- hi:; \'j1un!ary ser- " ill u cuusc atlemlrd i'Ji iiuh Ii ha/- •'‘'•liltle {»!ory, and saeriliees. Coin. li;is IVequently hei ti the suNjert f)f ecusufr IVoin a certain fiti.irter : the alVair ofCapt. Httil and of Mr. ■'inney, he was nidely assailed : tlic inosi ''’’p'’'b:;o!is epithets w ere lieaped iijion unu iiKistIv l)v '!-e isaiiif prints w liieli '“'e recently ali'isL'd i\iin : hut the [leo- sr.staiiud and tl’.ey v, ill not hint tiow. H(' lir.s dot''; noUiin;:^ • ‘'-»Tc!t piiblic tuniulenoc : v.iUIimil" 'o lessen his claims on the gi-atiiudc of his country--on the contriiry, he has done much to increase them : his country will not condt'inn him then, fcr punishiii;:, in a summary manner, a set of wretches who had set all laws at defiance, and who, if they were not actually pirates, were their aiders and abettors, and shared in the spoils of these inhuman depredator.s. Several circumstances lead us to be lieve, that (^reat exertions are makins; bv a few restless spirits at Washington and elsewhere, to orjjanize an op])osiiion to Mr. Adams. The injustice of this at tempt, we think, cannot hut strike everv candid mind, and meet with instant re probation. To determine heforeliand on ail opposition to the measures of ijovern- ment, bolore it can he known wliat will be the character of its measures, atu! when it is at least probable they mav be such as to deserve the generous support ol the country, is surely not an evidence of ])atriotism or of honorabh; ambition, but is revolting to all our ideas of justice, to all our notions of right and wrong, and the obligations which they imjjose. Tiuit an opposition so formed, on motives so suspicious, and for j)urposes so utdioly,— for unlioly they must be, from the very circumstance of their being conceived and determined on, before the new adminis tration had commenced, and when no one could say whether Its acts v.ould entitle it lo praise or censure,—that such an oppo sition can gain the conlklcnce and aj)pro- batioj> of a generous and etdightened peo ple, it would be an insult'to them to sup pose. They would not be scduced into an opposition so unwarrantable, even by men who possess their confidence, and whose experience atul talonts give them a claim to it; much less then will they be drawn into it by an ambitious young man, with little exjH’rience, iidlated by vanity and flattery to a size vastly dispro- portioned lo his real capacity, atul asj>l- ring to honors wliich mi;u;ht sit well on a youthful Prrx, bnt not on him. The peoj)le, we believe, in spite of all the arts of the desigtiing and the ambi tious, will support the government wlien it is right—will give h their cr.niidence, so long as its measures shall l)e conducive lo the prosperity and w elfare of the coun try ; and oppose it only when it is wron^ —when ils acts shall be such as to render it unworthy of confidence. Support or opposition on any other grounds, -would be alike reprehensible. Aew Cabinet.—Speculation is still busy as to the individuals who will comi)ose Mr. Adams’s cabinet: but most of tlie statements whirl) are going the rounds of the papers, it is very evident have no I)etter foundation than rumor, set aiioat, in many instances, by editors themselves. Last week we staled, what seemed to l)c generally admitted, that Mr. ('nr.vr.s would be called into the Treasury I)e- Ijratment ; but that place is now assigned to another, w helher on better authority, or whether on any authority at all, is more than we can say. It is asserted, howev er, in several j)apers leceived by last marl, and as usual, on the “ authority ol letti'i's from \\'ashinglon,” thal it is now reduced to a certainly, that the lollouing gentlemen have been selected by Mr. Ad ams lo compose his ealiint'l : lli'.NRV Clay, of K.entueky. SicnIdrij af^^la/c. Kien\uo I’l sh. of Pennsylvania, and now Minister at Loiuion. Senriaijj cj I hi 'I'ri tisi/ri/'- JxMi.s ilxur.oi K, of \’irginia, .S'(r;rMrv '/ll'.ir. S\\-.i i'.t. L. Sot I n.M'.i), of N'ew-Jersey. N(V/'(/(//•// oj IliC ''fti'j- to somc of our mad politicians, wc should have some faith in his miraculous pow ers ; but as it i^, wc can otily say, credat Jadacxis, !xc. Trom the National .lournal, March 1. “ Mr. Kroner n Jlddrejtsor the ron^pirn- c/i viH't'ih'd.—'If the person whose name u])pears at the bottom of an address ‘‘ to the I'.lectors o( the ninth Congressional District of the State of Pennsylvania,” which was stretched to the lent^th of six columns i*i the \N'ashington (lazette oi‘ last evening, were as well known abroail as he is at home, and at ^^■ashing.lon, it would be w'holly unneressary to ofler either argument or proof to show that that address is no more the production of the “honorable” ‘‘(i. Kremer,” than it is the production of the “honorable” man in the moon. But as this is not the case, it becomes our duty to state, as and plated his name on lhat immortal scroll, in three short years afterwards, f)n a voyage for the recovery of his health, he and his lady perislied at sea. He does “not sleep upon his w.\t’r^bit.r, Nor welter to the parching wind, ’Without the meed of one melodious t« ,ir.” Dot'lor T'.okntov’s biography is lhat of a man of great drollery and wit—.i talking novelist, whose stories he made as he went along, and made them last for hours—a physician, who, wh^n acting as surgeon at the siege of Louisburg, never allowed any of his ow n men to die of dis ease, although ill battle he would have looked on “blood and carnage with composure,”—a man, who, while he made every body el.se laugh, sutlered no one to make him smile. He attained the age >f 90, ar.d was much honored through lif(‘. Mr. Wnirri.r. commeiict'd life as . . sailor, but having abandoned the sea, be- v. ell in vindication of the said honorable I came subsocjucTilly a member of con Mr.'Kremer, as to place ihe matter in gress, a (Jeneral, and a .ludge. 7'he firs’ 'I'he U. S. scbootier F,rrti, has been lo- tallv wrecked otV Matanzas, and five jf ',!i!’ cre'.v dionne;!. ’I’he sur\iv(.rs, in number, remained on ll*e w.'cck 21 hours, before icHe\i‘d, and v\ere near!) e:vhaustcd. V^'e perceive, from the Washlngtoti pajXM" , that aiu»tber /nirarh' lias been per- I’firnx'd at the inmtiei'y in Ci;'oi'g'‘>o"'n* 1). C. throtigb the intcrpositicji) ol I’l ince !lc!i, iiii'ir. This is the secotid pi'>''*‘nded . mira:.l( tl'.at has been wrought in ilie Dis- tricl of Ct»iuml)ia ; and the subjects (d both air f.-males. Hysterica! ladies arc par'll,ida!'l'> favored by tlie woiuh’r-work- l?i;'- fie;';!!.;'’ I’**- -ould f(."-:to:'c s:',nit\ its ])roj)er light before our readers at a distance, that his name has only been borroxml by others, for the purjjose of I'flectitig, in greater sec.urity, the most dial)olicaI purpijses. We know the whole band of midnight plotters against the peace of the country, of whom this poor unlettered John Doe is the witless insiiMiment, and shall prob.tbly ere long lake occasion to exjxjse I heir ncnJU'S, as Well as their schemes, to the execration of all honest men; but for the present we shall merely ofler the authority of Mr. Kremer himself for saying, that neither the letter to the'committee of the House of licprc- sentatives, which bears his signature,nor this Address lo his Constituents, expr(*s- ses///s sentiments. W’hat Mr, Kremer’s oi)inions of Mr. C'lay and of his conduct in ndalion to the Presidency, really are, may be seen from the following statement of a conversation with that gentleman, by two members of the House of Hepre- seiUatives. O'ne of these, meinber;, Mr. Ijri-nt, of Louisiana, alll’ough he j)refer- red .Mr. Clay to either of the other can didates fur ihe Presidency, is known, even before the commencement of the session, and during the whole of it, to have repeatedly declared his preference for Mr. Adams in the second instance. Oil. Little, an old 'and highly respecta- I)le member of the House, from Mary land, voletl for (General Jackson. Our I'cason for menlloninii; these facts will be readily seen. We are authorized to state that Mr. Bretit, immediatcdy afler preparitig, yes- day, his statement of the conversation 'VIih Mr. Kremer, sent a co])y of it to tiiat gentleman. We state furthc'-, on pro])er autiiority, that Mr. Dudley Dig- ges, a genlleniiin well known in this city, was present, and heard the conversu- lion here stated lo have taken place. I slate, without hesitation, lhat on the ilay on which the del)ale look place in the House of I’vepresentatives on the pro- |)Osition lo refer Mr. Clay’s communica- tif)n respecting “ Mr. Kremer’s Card" lo a committer, I heard Mr. Kremer de clare, at the iire-j)lace, in the lobl)y of the House of Representatives, in a manner and language w hich I believed sincere, tiiat he never intended to charge Mr. Clay with corruption or dishonour, in his intended vole for Mr. Adams as President, or that he had transferred, or coulil trans fer, the voles or interest of his IViends ; that he (Mr. Kremer) was amongst the last men in the nation to make such a cluirge against Mr. Clay; and that his (Mr. Kremei-’s) letter never was intend ed to convey the ideas given to it. 'i’he su!)slanc‘ (d’ the above conversation I immedi'.ite’fy communicated tf> Mr. IJuch- anan and .^lr. Hemi)hil! of Pennsylvania, and Mr. Dwi.^dil, of Massachusetts, of the House of Repres( ntativi-s. U.M. IJUIAT, of I.ou. Feb. 25. I was ])resent, and heaj'd tlie observa tions as abo'.e staled, in a conversation beluecn .Mr. Urenl .'iud Mr. Kremer. 1M: i F.W I.n' FLF,, of Md. Thr i'dI. of \ of Ihr Sii;n- rr.s of Ihv dr 'Inrulii'H of l/rli']n'>idciirr, is ])er- liaps llie nK)sl in'erestinwhich lias yi ;)e;'u |)ii!disliec!. It presents sketches of live gentlemen, the hai'inony of w lujse j;alriotic desijvns and hdioi s is not gi-eat- er lliaii liie eontrasl (jf tin Ir ori;>;inal studies aii'l a\ocatioii', in Hie. The fii'si (d’ these. Mr. J .y\eii,' v, as a_ young ;,nd ojiiiK'nt |)lanU‘i' d’Si(Uth Carolina. I'lie seeotul, .Ml’. TiiouvroN. a p'lysic ian, a nalive (d’Ircland. 'i he third, !^ir. W'lii!’- ri.F. a sa’dor, (cabin l.oy ikjI many veai s !)efore he sa*. in Congress,'i nathe of .Maine. 'I'be fonrtli. Mr. i riii usiMos, first part of his career was unha|)pily stained by participation in the slave trade, (ihe metilion of which circumstance, in his biography, goes to j>rove the author’s re gard lo truth)—but his subsetiuenl e.\- ploits in battle, while commanding the Xew-Hampshire troops, and his ardent devolioti lo the cause of his countrv, having, long ere this, it is hoped, expia ted his ollence. The remainder of liie volume, nearly one half of it, is devoted to full length ])orlraits of the Rev. Dr. WrrnmisrooN, and the celebrated, but unfortunate Ron- i.ur Mouius, which we shall not attempt lo conden,se, but commend to the eager periisul of the reader. 'J'o the former of these gentlemen, it is slated lhat (Jen. \\'ii,Ki v;u).\ was indebted for the pro posal to present him with/:»;///' spurs, on l)ringing express the new’s of Hl'hgoym.’s capture, when Congress had received it a day or two before. “The General will never outlive the anecdote. 1 he story of Mr. Mf)Kiiis should be studied by every American. He may, without great extrava|,^tnce, b(‘ called the Atlas of the Re\(dulion. We had sol diers, it is true, and generals to command them ; but v.c had not arms with which they were lo lighi, and we had not mojiey lo buy them. Tlie great financial tab tits of Ibis gentleman—his ardent devijiion lo his country, atul the high character which he per.sonally bore, enabled him lo be the voluntai’y cashicr of his country— whose resources he sup))orted with great embarrassment and difficulties, under ac cumulated slanders and susjiicions to the close of a triumjjhant war. ’I'hc coun try should know' its obligatioifS'-to‘this enlighiened merchant, and by raising a monument to his memory, remove the disgi-ace of having allowed him to die in ])r.’son on account of his own debts— where, poor and humbled as he was, Wasih\oto\ always paid his first visit on entering Philadi.dphia. It is lo be regretted that Judge Joiix- son’s Life of (iKF.Kv shf)uld be the sub ject of su( h endless animadversion. A half a dozen pagfs of the sketch of Mr. Moiiais are ap|)lied to a vindication of his character from the Judge’s charges. Chas. Courier, ihe few* wlio are anxious to keep alivo an uimatural excitement on the ^ul)ieei. No f)ue could be prevailed on to take the chair. /•'reein. Jour/iui. A very exlraordin.irv dcM lopcment of a' nefarious and continued s}s?em c.f thievery has Uuely taken place in ibis city. It a|)j)eaTs lh.it a person hitherto of a respectable and unini[)eaclied characier, w as ih tected in ihe aei of stealing an ar ticle of trilling Value from a co:ichuiaker’:i shop. The dis(;overy of this induced the owner to procure a !.e;i;-eli w.trr uit, in the execution of which the oflicer dis covered a great number oi articles pur loined from difTerent pcisoiis. In the course of his exajninalioti before the .Mayor, it apiieared thal he had set fire to a room iu the University—and also had takt'ii several (oats, books and minerals from th(' buihliiig.—The alT^if'r has excit ed a considerable deg'^ree of inU'rest. We suppri'ss the name of the person charged v\ith thi* commission of the otVences,as the cours‘of jusfn e will bring him before the coiii|)elent legal tribunal ; when lhat takes place we will give our readers an account of the j)roceediius. / JS'at. (Jazcllc. The Tnjliicnzn.—The comi)laint, which \ is staled to prevail in Boston and its neighbourhood, and is noticed iti dill'er- ent parts of V’ermont, as an'eclin;;- tlie population to so great a degree that the schools are discontinued in many j)lae( has raged for some weeks in this city, and kept in constant and active rc(|uis- ilioii tin- physicians, from w hose rej)orts it is calculated from -lo lo 50,o0() of our citi/.ens are ;ulVering wit it. We do not recollect the lime when it has been so generally j)revah‘nt.— A'c/e ior/: jyiprr. M VKKIF.l), in this county, on I'hursilay last, by tlie l!ev. S.'imuel (Caldwell, Mr. i'.(lu'indlxii>ukr, to .Mis.s Susnn Clarh. On th(“ l,>th of .fannary, by Guy Maxwell, F.sq. Mr. tl'Hliam .1, 'i'l/f', to .Miss ('onuliti II. Shuvf.r. AIso, oil Ihe l.hh of .faimsr}-, .Mr. Juliit Mi- Kibhcn, to Miss Ikn'KiM', all of.this couufy. .hist PiihlisluMl, A N!) for sale at this OlHee, in a pampldct l'V form, “Strictures (ui a piece writtiii by Mr. id Henkel, entitled llt avenly Flood ot’ Uegi iu ri.tion, or. Treatise on Holy llaplism.” Hy ,losi;ni Muotir, I' I). M. I’rlce, 2r) eciit«. passes. PniT.AnKi.riiiA, I’i,i!. 11.—The (jues- tion of late has been debated in Con gress, whether a representative shouhl vote according lo his judgment or the wishes of those who depute him. Mr. Burke, on his election to Parliament, be ing (luesiioned on this matter, sj>oke thus : “Certainly, gentlemen, it ought to be the h:ib|^)iness anrl glory of a rejiresenla- live, to live in the strictest union, tin closest correspondence, and tiie most unreserved con\nuinicalion wiili his con stituents. Their wishes ouglit lo have [;i'(‘at weight with him ; their ojdnion liigh respecl; their business unremilled aUenlion. ll is his duty lo san-iiiee hi re])ose, his pleasure, his satisfaction to theirs ; and ajiuvc all ever, in all c^ to j)refer ilu'ir interest to his own. Rut his jin!)iassetl opinion, his malure judg ment, his enlightened cons( ience he ought nol to saeriiice to \ou, to a.tiy iiian, or lo anv set of men living. Tiie.-e hi' does nil derive iV(jiu \our pleasure ; m), nor Irom the law and tl'.e cons''iti'tiou. They are a trust IVom Prov ideiK e, lor. the abuse (d' whi; h he is deeply answera ble . Vour representa,ti\e owe, you iiol hi-..in lustry oiilv, but his judgni'Mi! : ,uul lie betrays instead of s-'rviie.^; you, If he sa( rifi. es il to your opinion.” ‘•It’ gov('rnment wt-re a matter td’will upon any side, yours wiiheuit f|uestir)u oui^;ht to be superior. Il'it gou'inmeni a native of Scotland, a cfdeljraled divine, land h-t'-isl ition arc ma*tei-s ol rt ason and i^nd I're'dileui »f Pritu'i ton (.’oilet'e, (N. ; no* d' in( linalioii ; and what soi't (.•!'rca- J. ; .And tlu; filth, lhat illusti-ious mer-j'-ijii is th:-.t in whuli ilie, tleterminalioii chant. ll(ii;i'.ui' .Motuu'-;. til" A\ ashini^toii I jirceedes the discii>sif)ti : in \vhi(.h one /f our IliKini t s.—I lere is a patrlolif' ba.u- | s t ot’ men (bdi'iei ale and ano'ht r de( ide: ijue! iiuleed I No Iwo li;\v er.s aliki', biitja.iv’ w liere th"se whi loriu t lie c .ji'.e.lu- all of them kindi ed sw cels, and fVagrani !'.ion pi ; !i:'ps thi i'c hu’jdi ed iiiile-. and immorta!. hlis'i'nl I’l'fjui tliose who liear the ?.rgu-- 'I'licre is H'tle of Ineub tit hi th> narra-■ tive fd’Mr. Lvsfii. lie is pokeii of us; - a man id'i;e!ii'is atid ol'h'tters. rtiid b- ing ] Phk.M/KM'MI\. I’l,!!. 17.—The a’ti nvd u!ieni';ag'-d in ])rrd'essionaI life, h'- had ] (o eonver.e a tow n i.iei tii;g y,-‘sU ; (!ay af- not mativ (jppoi lunilies of pulilic displav i lenuion. in order to obtain an e\preN,ioi, —!)ul llie eonlidenee of the piCople inir.t i id'di-.-.a'id'aetiiin al tie* l esult ol'liie Pres- have b ''II \\ ell placed, when at the ci’is.s idei.'ial (juestion. [wovei!, as v. e anti ipat- oi'lh*' i>evolulion, t h' \’ sent him to sue>-eed ed. a | erfect a':o; 'ion. \ .i ->1 ntiMile-! s of his {'.iM.er in Congress, when i..-';. i [people a-iseniM' i! in the s‘a‘.e-hoi,se yard., veai's (dll.'’ av ing as-.oeiated in iholand, a,-. :t appi aj'ed to us, ue;'e merelv iinnv 'ta! l:vb‘'s of tba’ (-.m'I'iI ; v, m \n ■, i -d"- put df^nu 20 ])()Mnrs li«‘warl. rJ.\NAW,\Y from tlie subscriber, t on the 5tii instant, a negro m;'i>, named S.\M, near 30 years of ape, , yellow comj)lcxion, common size, slim ) and straight made, large eyi s, ae|ui- liiir nos'e, bv trade a black-smitli ; hart foi’ged papers, whic h lie will us.- as He was born and raised in \ irpnia, i)rou^ht from tlu re and sold to me live or six \ ears a}^o, and it is Ix Ih-ved he vxlll aim to re turn to his native [)lai-e, somewhi-re ik ar Uieh- iiiond, in Vlrg'lnia. '1 he above reward will lie i^ivon lor the apijreheushui and did'Vi-ry h;in to me in this jjlaci', or for his beii-ic conHiied lii any Jail, and information forwarded, so lhal f can obtain him. SAMliF-L W. YOUGUE. IJ'hinnhto-nugh, S. C. y J'lb. 2y, 1H25. 5 Pliintiitioii and iMills lor sale, ^ valuable I)lanf.'iti(in, eonlain- inf;- acres, lyin;^ on the waters of Dntchni'.in’s (.'reek, l.incoln count v, about two miles f-om it>s mouth. 'I'hc improvenn nts consist of a good dwelling-house, l>:irn, and the nt-ces'^ary pul- liousi's, all under j]f()odr epair. Then are, al.^o, a Saw Mill and a (irist NFill, on the [ireinis- •i, iu i^-ood order, I’ersonsdisposed to pureha' ■ tbesi": valuable jxisscssions, will of cfinrse ';ill and judt^e (or tbemsidv es. ‘ 'I’errns of s-de, :md any other Inl'ormalion rt ijuired, :ui be oi i.-uu d, oa ;i|)]dieation to the Hubseriln r. HOI’.FIM’ HF.F.D. Mar-h fi, )82.r—,^t2.»f 'I'lic Su!)scril)rr n iW l\('i recelvod the :ippoiiitmont of .\uc- tionei r for the town of ( liarlone, n,si)ect* fully oders bis services, in ili;it e:ipaeity. ('onsi>;hUH-nts of j.'-oods will br receivetl aiij sold oil the usual '.oiiiiiessioii. ^ .MilIN h'. NOKMK.VF. Mar-h 0\ Tuesday, .?'..’d Mafcli, f will sdl at the dwi lliii. liouse (d tin i.tle \V liliuin I’arks, iiiii \ej;'ro M(iv, aj^f'd toiirtei 'i, and one .\r|^-rc» (i.rl, a;>'eil lit't\-fi\e; n ('otloii (lin, Screw, and ruMiiiii> w (ii'ks, i'»e. I lie jirujii rt \ ot \\ m. I’.U'ks. 'I'l rill'., notes, witli appi'oved security, payablu lOlli 1 U cenil)ei\ .1 .'iJ.’), 1.. II AId'.\'AN'l)Fd{, JJi.i'r. Dr. Samurl (liirr’s liStali;. \T,I. persons hull t)“e(i, by book account, to the late Dr. Sauiui I (iiecr, will pit ase \i> ( nil aiid s( ttle tile sane , eifber !>y nnte or o'li- i rw ise, (ill or bel.ire tlie 2()ih nf March, or their acc(niiil.T will !)'■ itidlsenriilnaO Iv pul in m;,t. THOMAS .). (.WFF!!, Jilmr. S\ iiul^or ('liaii* >!!ikinu: lUisl- T\: f..-ll;. u ol I IH'SS. n!isrriberh i\ill}'"'c>mui( nc( d tlu‘ alxive >ie,.ti( »s in t!ie ti>v. ii of ( leo respi et- SdIu it-, a >.bare t-l' p>'l!)l:e |eitroii.i;.;e. Hi'-t udi 1)0 ii'-adv Mid finralil'.' () , .tri et. il. Will be i!i-i(joed (if on u'-i ouuiiuUa'i’ig -'1-1 FV.l'.s nn.I fH.MRS, made 1) e''d' r, can 1m' liid n Ii-.;1 notice W I! I.l A vl ( U,\ i.HIKil SF.. (dKivI'itte, | .'l). ■>, 1 S j.--.’.n.t,'..; 'I'wo CiiFjst'nhM’^ ( v\ h..\ work, Ijv appivine;:i‘ Dr. H-'iulcr ' onV ' .’l-VrMli
The Journal (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 15, 1825, edition 1
3
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