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AND I aWBUB COMMERCIAL, AGMCIJMUKAIi AMD MTEBAKY TOTEIiMOEMCEM, LIBERTY... .THE CONSTITUTION... .UNION. PUBLISHED BY? TII03IAS WATSOX. At three dollars per annum payable in advance. From the Richmond Enquirer. - As Mr. Calhoun's opinions are now before the public, on the exercise of power by the States, and the assumed power of, the General Government, the offspring of the formerj it is certainly full time for, our prominent public men to come out fearlessly and with candor, over their own signatures, on this all-impor tant Tariff bounty question.. The example- j ven bv Mr,. Adams and Mr. Calhoun, who arai ceiinly.antipode9 to one another, shews more of candor than some'politicians may consider prudent?- It has been said, trrat in time of war. there pucrht to be no neutrafs; but when a war has been wagecl not only against the constitu tion, but against common sense and common honesty, there ought not to be found a sentinel off his post. The aiders arid abettors of this open violation of the constitution," would bet ter follow the examplerof Mr. Adams and not leave so responsible a duty to be performed by the irresponsible demoralizing scavenger?! of fhepress. The humble, constitutional method adopted, of sending delegates .' to meet in Ph ladelphia, for th.e purpose of remonstrating against this dishonest Tariff bounty act, will no doubt have the desired effect, in compelling the demagogues to pause in the midst of their delusive career, against the sacred institutions of our common country. There has certainly been too great a degree of apathy prevailing through the Union, and it is considered by many an unpardonable forbearance. But the cri Vis has now arrived, when the 'delusive infatua tion of fostering manufactures,, will be blown skv-high, like Mr. Adams' light-houses of the sky. The idea of fostering any one: denomi nation of manufactures ; is equally ridiculous with the experiment of a certain Prdfessor of uiifAcademy, who had been engagetl for many vearsPiri extracting sun-beams from cucumbers,! for the purpose of their being made use jf in seasons unfavorable for. the" growth of such veo-etables, or other horticultural purposes. ! The trreat interest of the American people is certainly agricultural, and must continue so for; ii'iany centuries yet to come. Where are the advocates for Planters' rights? ' It 'may be an swered that they are coming out with snail's! pace ; but they will ultimately-increase their; tpced to equal the locomotive rail road rapidity. - . Free Trade & Planters' Rights. ; INTERESTING EXTRACT. , Frurti the Federalist, No. 35, by Alex'r. Hamilton J 1 "Suppose tho federal power of taxation werej to be confined to d:uties on imports; it is evi dent that the Government, for want of being! iiBle to command other resourses, would fre-! quently be tempted to extend these duties to an injurious excess. There are persons who imawine'nhat this can never be the case; since the hitrher they are, the more, it is alleged, 'they -will tend to discourage, an extravagant;! consumption, to produce a favorable, balance of. trade, and to promote domestic manufac tures.' But all extremes are pernicious in vari ous ways. ' Exorbitant duties on imported ar ticles .sorve to beget a general spirit of smug-; ghmr, which is .always prejudicial to the fair tra.der.-and to the revenue itself: .they tend:to j vender other classes of the community tribu-! " The following is a list of a few, who were tan , n aniimproper degree, to the manufac-;j removed from office for no other reason than turinof classes, to whom they give a premature!; their being obnoxious on account of their poli monopoly of themarkets: they sometimes;; tical opinions: force industry out! of its most natural channels 1 "John Wilkes Kittera, Attorney for the jnto others in which it flows with less advan-H tage : and," in the last. place, they oppress the I merchant, who is often' obliged to pay them j himself without any retribution from the consu ! , mer. - When the demand is equal to the quan- Vuv of goods aY market, the consumer gene-; rallv pays the duty; but when the markets! happen to be overstocked, a gre(at proportion j falls upon' the merchant. When -the V are paid by the merchant, they;! operate as an additional tax upon the import-!' ing State; whose citizens pay their proportion! . of them in the character of consumers. In ' this view 'they are productive of inequality!; among the States; -which inequality would be ; increased with the increased extont of the du-p ties. .The "confinement of the national reve- nues to this species of imposts, would be at-i William Smith, Minister Plenipotentiary to tended with inequality, from a different cause, i the Court of Portugal ; William Vans Murray, between the nfanufactiirino; and non-manufacJ! Minister Resident to the Batavian Republic; turing States.. The States which can go far- David Humphreys, Minister Plenipotentiary to thest toward the supply of their own wants,'! the Court of Madrid ; Elizur Goodrich, Col by their own manufactures, will not, according ! lector of New Haven ; John Chester, Supervi- Ja their numbers or wealth, consume so great ! sor of the District of Connecticut ; Ray Greene, a proportion of imported articles, as those!; Judge of Rhode Island District ; Wintfirop StatesVwhich are not in the same favorable si-1 Sergeant, Governor of the Massissippi Terri tuation. They would, not, therefore, contri-H tory ; David Hopkins, Marshal of the District Me to the public treasury in a ratio to their! of Maryland; Andrew Bell, Collector of the l abilities. i port of Amboy ; Aaron Dunham, Supervisor member term, mSBespiiblica vs. Cobbett- of the District of New Jersey; James.Dole, Supreme Court cf Pennsylvania 3 Dallas, 467-! Marshal of the District of Albany; Robert 476. ,M. Keax, Chief Justice, delireiHng Ihe ! Hamilton. Marshal of the District of Delaware; unanijnom opinion of the Court. N ;Our system of government seems to me tn . liner, in form and spirit, from all other go vernments; that have heretofore existed in the Xorld. If is, as to some particulars, national, ...in others federal, In all the residue territorial or in districts called States." " Tlie ' divisions of power between the na :. tional, federal, and.State governments (all de rived from the g"ame source, the authority of the people,) must be collected from the Consti tution of the United States. Before it was aftopted, the several States had absolute and nnlUnited sovereignty within their respective boundaries, all the power; legislative, execu tive, and judicial, excepting those granted to Congress under the old Constitution. They now . enjoy them all'; excepting such as are panted to the government of the, United State$ hY ,ihe iesentVinstrumeht, arid the adoptej rmendments, which are for particular purposes only- The government of i the United States forms a part of the government of each State; . s jurisdiction extends to the providing for the common defence against exterior injuries and violence, the regulation of commerce, and other matters specially enumerated in the Con- stitution; ! all powers remain in the individual States, comprehending the interier and other concerns;1 these combined form one complete government, Should mere ne any aejeci in this form of ffovernment, or any collision oc-. cur it cannot be remedied by the sole act of the Congress or of a State, the people must be j " opinions." . resorted to for enlargement or modification.. j The cry of proscription has always been If a State should differ with the United States raised by those ejected from office. We are about the construction of them, there is no therefore by no mean ssurprised that those dis umpire but tbte people, who should, adjust the placed in obedience to the fiat of the people, affair by making amendments in the Constitu- as pronounced at the polls in 1828, should tional way or suffer from the defect. In such j have followed the example of the federal op a case the Constitution of the United States is ) portents of Mr. Jefferson. Then, as now, the federal; it is a league or treaty made by the individual States as one party, and by all the the people, wereUurned off to starve, to die and States, as another party. "When two nations rotioT,wantof offi.ce. Such subterfuges could differ about the meaning of any clause; sen- not mislead the Republicans of the Union when tence or word in a treaty, neither has an ex- i Mr. Jefferson was President, nor will they mis elusive right to decide it; they endeavor to ad- lead them now. If the reformed gentlemen just it by negotiation, but if it cannot be thus were competent to labor for the people, they accomplished, each has a, right to retain its must be equally competent to labor for them owii interpretation until a reference be had to selves, and can be in no danger of starvation.'; the mediation of other nations, arbitration, or I r, rr, ; rr , r c tu ' . . . .1 tomthe Frenton Emporium. the fate of war. There is no provision in the w Constitution, that in such a case the' Judges of' - Where Is HE? The enquiry has often been the Supreme Conrt of the United shall control : made, where is Mr. Clay ? What is his system ? nr1 h pvrliVsivp: nftithor ran thft Cnntrrruk Iw Hls friends hurra for Clay and the " American uuu - " ' . j a law confer that power," fcc. 6lc. Ft is a compact by Hnd between all the several Slates in their primary sovereign capacity, in which each ,-lipu-. lates with each and with the whole, arid the whole in their eles of the cmi; ct ordained bv the people or natural j persons constituting the State, for the Sia es, or the sam-pet-pie in their particular political formation, uni-1 ted as one collection of states. PROSCRIPTION. Under Mri Jefferson, the cry of nroscrivtion for opinion's sake, ns as bitter and loud as it is at present. From a federal publication of , iX .1 r n that day we copy the lollowingextracts : "I do not mearfno assert that Mr. Jefferson ' huno-, burnt, or guillotined his opponents. Hut . perhaps the means bv .which the federalists ' have been " oppugnated," have been but little less destructive to the sufferers, and but little more honorable on the part of those who have adopted such means. Starving a man and his family, is doubtless, an effectual method of despatching him. "Most of the federalists who held offices under the Washington and Adams administra tions, had devoted much time and expense to qualify themselves for such offices, and in many instances had relinquished lucrative professions and branches of business, that they might the better perform the duties of those offices. These have bef n displaced for young and igno rant persons, arid in many instances foreigners. f whose sole recommendation has been their Jeffersonian politics, while the war-worn vete ran who had fought the battles of our Indepen dence, and grown not only old, but poor, in ac tive services for his country, is prohibited from tasting the fruit of his labors, by the faction which is now dominant, and seems willing "to owe their greatness to their country's ruin." "To give a catalogue of all the worthies who have adorned Mr. Jefferson's Proscrip tion list, would be to name almost every honest man who held any office under government, at the time Mr. Jefferson was elected. Eastern District of Pennsylvania ; John Hall, Marshal of the same District ; Samuel Hogdon,. Superintendant of Public Stores at Philadelphia; John Harris Store Keeper at the same place ; Henry Miller, Supervisor of the Revenue of the District of Pennsylvania ; J. M. Lingan, Attorney of the District of Columbia ; Thos. Iwan, Attorney; John Pierce, Commissioner of Loans for the State of New Hampshire ; Ths. Martin, Collector of the District of Portsmouth, in the same State : Jacob Sheaffe, Navy Agent at Portsmouth; Richard Harrison, Attorney for the District of New York; Aquila Giles, Marshal of the same District ; James Watson, Navy Agent for New York; Joshua Sands, Collector of the Port of New York; Nicholas Fish, Supervisor of the District of New York ; Harmon G. Otis. Attorney for the District of Massachusetts ; Chauncey Whittlesey Collec tor of Mitjdleton, Connecticut; Amos Marsh, Attorney for the District of Vermont, Jabez Fitch, Marshal for the same District; Samuel Bradford, Marshal of the District of Massa chusetts ; Thomas Perkins, Commissioner of Loans for the State of Massachusetts ; cum multis aliis, all good men and true ; and we believe that their successors in office have been men, whose talents, reputation, or pretensions to public, patronage, could in no way entitle them to take the precedence of the gentlemen who were displaced, had not the spirit of party turned the 4 world upside down.' " We request the public to compare the fore going extracts with the clamor of the existing opposition to the administration, on the sub ject of proscription. It was said that Mr. Jef ferson had turned all the honesty,' virtue and intelligence in the land out of office and that he could; with! equal propriety, have hung, burnt, or guillotined the federalists. Starving a man and His family, was said to be an effec-1 tuai nietnoa ot aispatcmng mm ! The list of about thirty persons, removed by ; Mr. Jefferson, 'or opinion's sake, cmbiaces a goodly number of Attorneys and Collectors, and no less than three Foreign Ministers. This j list, we are ; told, ' embraces only " a few" of ; iue who were removeu irom omce ty ivir. Jefferson, for no "other reason than their be- ing obnoxious on account of their political poor fellows who had contemned the voice of j ,,1 " A .... 1 -l i-i v uysiciu, ctnu &ay uiey cannot unuersiaiiu jreii. Jackson. We confess we never have been able to understand Mr. Clay until recently. The other day we met with the most luminous, ex plicit and concise exposition of the System," 111 tne United States Uazette ; couched in those clear and emphatic terms which might be ex- pected at a moment when like the present, ,un ti.v : i i. njt oic uajitiu upun, in liiu suit in in the west in the.centre, and in the east to ive in thcir adesion- IIfirc il is : IC'' A System, not perhaps' expressed exactjy by an; e"S code, but applicable to all wait ts, and suited.when rightly applied ,to all general mterests" ' J tl 5 Admirable! ! ! Who does not now under- sianu -U1' la" s American oystem. it-is to be " applicable ; to all wants." The south want nullification there it is in. the " System" The south mqreover want the tariff repealed that is also in the " Sy stem." Mr. Clay's " private views?' say hia, leading papers are in accordance with those of the south' exactly. Georgia wants to be protected in her sovereign ty, and the Cherokees want to bean indepen dent nation. The " American System" is "ap plicable to the wants of all." Virginia insists on States Rights Mr. Clay's " System" is to concede them. . One party is opposed to the Hank of the United States, and another favors, it the "sys tem" is suited, to both parties. The middle states want a moderate tariff the eastern states a high tariff the "system" is to suit all g-entle-men. Mr Webster " wants" a grand govern ment, a little more dash and arristocracy about it the' "system" is to accomodate him. Mr. Wirt wants the money of the "poor Cherokees" for giving them advice which Chief Justice Marshall says was all fudge he has only to draw his draft on the American System. To by WcKkins, Robert Arnold and his friend of the Ferdonian, " want restoration to office." the "system" is applicable again, to all wants. The United States Gazette has said it and the Nationals all repeat it. It is to put down the masons and to put down the anti-masons and to put down democracy the American system '-'is applicable to all wants, and suited, when rightly applied, to all general interests. -Well, we never knew before what the Ameri can System was. Who now can refuse to vote for Mr. Clay ? The folio win o- remarks by the Richmond Whig, in relation to the Clay bulletins of vic tory received from Kentucky, 'must carry a keen rebuke to the authors of the deception, that is, if any thing can add to the mortification of re-perusing their own " extras" as they re turn from " down East," after performing their brief carreer of delusion. - " The people have a right to do as they please, and no man should be fool enough to com plain ; but of one thing we do complain, and justly complain ; namely, the folly of those in Kentucky, who have been instrumental in mis leading their friends at a distance. Handbill after handbill, has reached us from Frankfort and Lexington, announcing victories never won; "Daniel defeated! Gaither defeated! Brent's election certain ! Wickliffe done upt Lyon probably vanquished !' How cheap the publishers of these handbills must now feel ? How foolish and mortified have they made their friends who depend upon them, feel ! What serious injury have they not inflicted on the cause, by subjecting it to the revulsion of disappointment and mortification. True, they intended no imposition ; they thought, or strongly, hoped, what they said, but they ought to have waited, until they were certain of not misleading others. In this city money has been lost upon bets, in consequence of these hand bills; and we really think it as little as their authors can do, to refund it." ADVANCE OF CLAYISM. "Where? Is it on Mr. Clay's "own dung hill?" What splendid victories does he show in Kentucky? The vote in the Legislature will be a tie or nearly a tie No gain, or only a gain of one member of Congress, after their boasted ratio of 8 to 4 ! -No majority of the popular votes, as gaged by those Congressional elections. i Where is the gain elsewhere? The Jackson party has all three members of Congress in In diana.! They have succeeded in Illinois. They sweep1 the platter in Missouri. If they have lost a J member elsewhere, they have gained an equivalent. If the Opposition have gained an Arnold, they have lost a Crockett. If they have gained a Newton, they have lost a Talia ferro. j . . ' " Ayhilst, (saysE the Winchester Virginian) with but few exceptions, the Administration members of the late Congress, who arc candi dates for re-election, are walking over tne course without opposition or are only opposed by gentlemen of their own party, almost eve ry anti-Administration member is strongly op posed." r Depend upon it- let Mr. Clay be nominated by Convention, Caucus, or what not let him take the field how and when he pleases he wilL experience a tremendous Waterloo defeat. Andrew Jackson will beat the field. Even the Dbylestown Democrat, a paper un der Mr. Ingham's beard and devoted to his in terests, says on the 16th: "Mr. Clay can ne ver be the President of these States, and much nSSi L LCe of Pennsvlvania. ' To swallow all he (Stephen Simpson) has said in relation to this gentleman, will be a bitter pill and to establish the belief that he is now sincere in his professions, after all he has done and written, will be an arduous performance." THE ANTI-TARIFF CONVENTION Is advancing apace. A meeting is called at New York and at Portland in Maine, for Wednesday last. The Maine Argus, in calling this meeting, says truly and forcibly: "We hope this measure will be viewed in its true light. It is not one of the ordinary poli tical meetings of the day to call together Jackson, Calhoun or Clay men. It is a call upon the friends of constitutional liberty upon the real friends of equal rights. Personal pre dilections and local jealousies should be left entirely out of the consideration. Do you be lieve that the Constitution of the United States is a charter of defined powers that Congress have no right to act under its. constructive in terpretations ? Do you believe that all sections j of the Union should be guarded in their local and peculiar interests and that mutual conces sions should contribute to sustain the bonds of our Union? Are you unwilling that "ninety nine hundredths" of the people should be taxed upon the prime necessaries of their existence, merely to assist certain capitalists to grow rich faster than they can by the ordinary operations of society? Are you of opinion that Agricul ture and Commerce should not be rendered by force of government enactments, tributary to Manufactures ? rAre you fully persuaded that the true principle upon which free government should exist, is equal protection to its three great branches of industry Agriculture, Com merce and Manufactures ; and that each should be as unshackled as the genial air? If so you are in duty bound to demonstrate the love you entertain of these great principles, by at tending the contemplated meeting. The La borers, Mechanics and Merchants, are equally interested in the objects of this meeting; and we hope they will show the interest they feel, by being present." TENNESSEE ELECTIONS. . In the Congressional District recently repre sented by Gen. Desha,. Wm. Hall has been elected by a majority of 114 votes over Robert M. Barton. Messrs. James K. Polk and Cave Johnson have been re-elected, without opposi tion. David Crockett has been beaten, by from GOO to 1000 votes, by Mr. Fitzgerald. This is good distributive justice ! A new Qandidatc! Mr. J. Q. Adams seems to. realize the saying of the old School Like Nature, he abhors a vacuum. He is nominated as a candidate for every great office. Now, his friends say that the Anti-masons will nomi nate him for the Presidency and then, the N. Y. Commercial nominates him for Speaker A of the House of Representatives. This is ridi culous. He will be elected neither the one nor the other. We run .our friend Stevenson against him and lay any wager upon his beat ing him. We offer another wager; that there is not an impartial man in the country, who will not say that Mr. Stevenson is ten times better qualified for the Chair than Mr. Adams. Richmond Eoqoirer. From the Southern Clarion, DAVID CROCKETT. I According to the Memphis Advocate, has recently made a most flaming speech in that goodly town, in which he most genteely abu ses General Jackson; the whole Tennessee de legation, and nearly all the " little" papers in his district, some of which he actually believes were bought to write agairst him ! Davy has declared his independence, as a Clay man would say, and most solemnly avows, that he will no longer wear any Collar with the words "Gen. Jackson's f Dog upon it." We had always thought, from his fame among the panthers and wild cats, that there was some kind of affinity beetween him and the canine species and from the admission before us, who can doubt it? Yet he has been a lucky dog, and has had his day. But the poor printers ! Davy declares that if elected, he will propose a law to lay a tax on' dogs, the proceeds of which he intends having applied to the support of "them'reeZ Zers," who live by scriblinsf lies aerainst him. arid who can get their bread no other way. How compassionate ! The Tennesse printers certainly ought to support him after this. It will take better than raccoon skins. AMERICAN SILK. We. had the pleasure a few days since of exami ning a fine specimen of American sewing silk From Mansfield, Conn. The gentleman who exhibited it has upwards of 10,000 skeins, for which he finds a ready sale at about $ 8.50 per lb. He informs as that about five tons have been raised4 in Mansfield alone this season, and the culture is rapidly ex tending in Coventry and other neighboring JJJJ: One gentleman in Connecticut last year paid $ 15UU for white mulberry trees, with which he basset out an orchard of one hundred acres. About 10UU busn els of cocoons were sent td Philadelphia last season, and were sold" for $3 per bushel. Competent fo reigners are now setting up machinery in Mansfield for spinning and wearing the raw article, which has made a great demand for cocoons, and given aspnr to the business. By means of machinery introduced a year or two since, the value of the raw silk has been enhanced $ 1 per lb. The business is managed almost exclusively by females, requiring very parti cular attention for only about two weeks each year. The sales oi sewing sine are climated at upwards silk in Mansfield. alone, this year, j personal application, if dvrvSTER. NetvYohk. , Eirds ofS 85.000. iV.i;. Farmer.h " hr JOSEPH M. GRANADE; & Co. At tlte Store former I r oeoUDied tor Wn. Dunm CORNER OF POLLOK&BIIDDLE-STHEETS OFFER FOR SALE A. GE31KRA.I ASSORTMENT OP uxis, iiics, Hardware, Glass & ione Ware. They bave just received from New York and Baltimore the folloiin "--, vtuiv-u uejr win sen low for cash viz ; 1 hhd. very superior New Orleans SUGAIx, 4 bbls. English Island . Do. 5 do. Loaf Sugar, 4 qr. chests. Gunpowder & Hyson TEAS 5 bags Rio COFFEE, . 1 qr. cask exy superior old Sherry ) 1 do. L. P. TeneViffe WINE. 1 do. sweet Malaga - S Cogniac Brandy, HollaridGin, Jamaica Rum. I lU.bbls. Apple Brandy, 10 do. Baltimore Rye Whiskey,. 5 do. old Mouongahela Do. 5 boxes Sicily ORANGES, 6 do. do T.WAirVYS ( 4 do. LEMON SIROP, f 2 jbLs lery superior New York Canal 10 do Baltimore Howard Street FLOUR 20 half bbls. do. do. do. . S Jaje Scotch Oznaburgs, in half pieces, ; 1 bbl. Lorillard's Scotch SNUFF, ' j 4 doz. N. Bears" cast-steel bitted AXES. " I 50 pair Trace Chains, j 10 doz. Carolina Weeding Hoes, ' 20 bbls. prest HERRINGS, N.' Y. Gitytnspectien. ALSO IN STORE, 40 bbls. Mess ) Trw ' 40 do. Prime ,5iRKj 20 Kegs LARD, of 26 lbs. each. 800 bushels Indian CORN. Newbern, July 1st, 1831. 1 All Hail. for Victorious, Triumphant- Golden Palace, No. 210. Broadway, corner v Fulton-street, New York, Where have been actually sold and promptly paid, ! the splendid Prizes of $50,000. i"40,00fi, 30,000, $23,000 aul a host o"5IO OOO, 5.000, &c. &c. amount- ; ing to nearly two millions of-dollars. : : GREAT ATTRACTION! ! ! Another Mammoth Sciiem- to be drawn in this City on the 21st o! September. , J; 36 Number Lottery, 6 Drawn Ballots This Scheme we r command to our friends and adven turers as being a bPLEN DID SCHEME. . p Capital Prizes, 850,000, 8 40,000, 830,000, 820,000, 810,000, 85,000,, &c. &c. m Whole tickets $IG, Halves $ 8, Quarters S i. i Package of Whole Tickets cost $ 192, warranted to draw f (less discount,) S VQ Do. II Ives, $96 - ? - 4S Do. Quarters, 43 - - i 24 Do. Eights," - 24 .. . j Ijo . DO" To those who purchase a Package of Whole, or Shares of Tickets, a liberal deduction will be allowed. The following Splendid Lotteries are soon tohc drawn in the City of New York: I Extra No. 24, Aug 24, Capital $ 40,000, 20,000, $ 10,000; tickets 10. Extra 25, Aug. 31, Capitals $ 15,000, $ 6000, $ 50OD, tickets $ 4. Extra 2G, Sept. 7, Capitals '$ 2C,0CO, 0,000, 5000jS:c. tickets five dollars. .; , For the Capitals, address CLAHK, $ Co . 210 1-2, Broadway, corner of FulUn-st. N. York Orders per mail promptly attnded' tq. Olubs dealt wilh ou fa vorable terras. Purchasers oi' tickets at Clark and Co's Office will receive "Clark rim! Co Weekly Messenger," without charge We refer those with whom we have not the pleasure of an acquaintance, to Messrs. Yates and M'Intyre, New York, and if necessary, we cai" refer to several of the first Commercial Houses In the principal Cities in the Uuited States, also in Canada and the West Indie.' TO OUR CORRESPONDENTS, y We have an Office at Jersey City (State of New Jersey 1 to supply our friends and all authorised Lotteries through out the United Slates, of which Yates k. M'lntyreJ are m ti, -n. i i - 1. ivjauagci e. a uc luiiunnig ancuuiti scut; m es we -particularly refer to. All orders per mail or private conveyance, will be thankfully received and promptly attended to. (BCD (DID Address CLARK &, Co. Jersey City opposite to New York City. School Fund of R. I JSTo.5; 22d Aug. at Providence, $10,000, 6,000. Tickets four dollars, i ' ;. ' j Dismal Swamp, Extra No. 1 ; -Jtid A lg. at Norfolk, u, 20,000, 10,000, 5 00, -c. Tickets five dpllars: i, i Union Canal, No. 18 10th Sept. at Philadelphia, -r 1 30.000. 20.000. 10,000.' 5.000, &c "TickclVten dollars. Lj Virginia Dismal Swamp, crass No. 17 ; 80th of Sept. at Richmond; 20,000, 10,000, 100 of 1,000 each. Tickets ten dollars. i N. B. The prizeg in the above Schemes will be cashed at our Prize Office 210 1-2 Broadway corner of Fulton sU (N. Y ); also at our Office Jersey City. A liberal deduction will be allowed to those who pur chase a package of tickets. A SPECULATION tCT Something curious, and vvorthy atteiition.i From the great success attending the last Club, Jji. Jt SYLVESTER, Licensed Lotted Broker, 130 Droadsy. New York, respectfully submits the following plaa . tb his friends in. this section of the country : ' ! j ' -. . The NEW YORK LOTTERY, Exira Class, o. 18, will be drawn 21st Sbptbmber 36 lumbers 6 drawn Ballots. The chief Prizes are S 50,000, $40,000, $30,000, $20,000, $10,000, $5,680, &C.&C. It U the intention of S. 5. Sylvester lo cluh 25 Pack's. Whole Tickets, 800 S0O 35 vdo. Halves 420 20 40 do. Quarters 4S0 l-v Tickets b30 at 1G. 10,080 ! ' 100 Shares, at $ 100 SO 10.080 630 Tickets must dr.w 4280, 100 Shares, each 4 bu, qau. Deducting $42S0 from 10,030, leaves 58G0, dm- , ded into 100 shares, thereatest ' powibie loss will be 58 each share. ' .' M l It is certain the Tickets will draw more, than the above named sum, but this amount is mentioned as they cannot brinff less. To those who remit $634n Notes or Prises, a regular certificate of each Package and Coru bination Numbers will be forwarded. The Tickets w ill be lodged in the Bank 'till after the drawing, anil the Prize money immediately divided among the SbareholdefSv1 Such a chance seldom occurs to obtain the splendid Capi tals. The plan has met with so much approbation in New York and Philadelphia, that already 43 shares have ; been taken. 1 0 Messrs. Yates & M'Intyre, the Managers, vyi!', with each Certificate, give a guarantee for the payment ,i of all Ihe prizes. I ! r S. J. SYLVESTER begs leave to remark to those wno do not know him, that he hatf permission to rejer toyin Managers, Messrs: Yates M'Intyre ; and . quired,-can give the names of the first.bSStKl Viofwish the United States and the Canadas. J for gaIe in to risk so much; S. J. Sylvester has Qu. 1 11 V aaiii r - .k. ..,, cihme. Whole Lie" v--' t same attention as on ON All T ollnrt hv liail " f 'J
Newbern Sentinel (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 7, 1831, edition 1
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