-X 'i , LIBERTY, THE CONSTITUTION UNION. THE SERrTDTBIi.'- NEWBERN: WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1832. Our County Court, on Monday List, by a unani mous vote, appointed Thomas Jefferson Pasteur, Esq. Sheriff of this county, in ' the place of James C. Cole, Esq. resigned. , By the arrival of the packet Nortb America, at New-York, from Liverpool, we have European newa to the 1st of January, being eleven days later than our previous dates. The engrossing subject is the Cholera. Out of 246 cases which occurred at New castle, 03 had died ; and the disease was still more ma iirmant at North Shields, nine having died out of ele ven. W e earnestly hope that the quarantine regu lationd will be strictly attended to in all the ports of the United States which hold immediate intercourse with Europe and the West Indies. The erroneous opinion, that, the ravages of this pestilence were limit ed by the sea, can now no longer impart confidence; and those whose business it is to prevent its importa tion, will incur . an awful responsibility should their negligence permit its introduction. A very destructive fire took place in Liverpool, on the night of the 22d December. The property con sumed is estimated $80,000. The Presidents Message had been received in London, arid is spoken of in many of the British pa pers in terms w hich cannot fail to gratify every Ame rican. It was published, at length in some of the pa pers. The Latest French news brought by the INorth Ame rica, is of the 28th December. The most important item is the abolition :of, the hereditary Peerage. This eannot-fail to have ii considerable influence in favour of the British Reform bill. T he aristocrats of that country wjllrecogniize in the fate of their French breth ren an evidence f of the" extremely frail tenure by which they hold their own privilege?, and a conse quent relaxation of their opposition will undoubtedly ensue. -j '.,'-. The French papers contain a report of serious dis turbances at itomei A Revolution had commenced ia. that city, and it is said. that the Pope had fallen a victim to the unrestrained violence of the people. This intelligence had been received at Toulon on the 28th of December by a Steam Boat direct from Italy, and tt-aa conveyed by express to Paris. Since the above was put in type wc iiave learned lhat the Mayor of New-York has issued his Procla mation, strictly enforcing the Quarantine regulations i of that port. We would respectfully request the at tention of our Commissioners to this example. 5 Centennial Celebration W e are gratified instate that arrangements hav:been made to celebrate the !EM in a manner becoming the occasion. Mr. Back- i house has been appointed to deliver an Oration and Mr. Wads worth to read Washington's Farewell Address. Wc refer to the announcement by the Committee of the Grays' published in to-day's paper. The lovers ot Circus sports have now an opportu nity of being well ; entertained- Mi Smith's Com pany are giving high satisfaction to crowded houses. They certainly offer attractions to those who love suclL-amuserncntF, far beyond any of the kind that have been among na for many years. Tho Senate of New-York have adopted by a vote ol 20 to 10, a Resolution declaring as the sense of the Legislature, that the charter of the Bank of the Uni .tod States ought not to be renewed. The Rejection. The rejection of Martin Van Buren by the Senate of the United States, appears to have called forth expressions of public Sentiment throughout the whole State of New-York The mem. bcrsbf the Legislature have passed some strong re solutions on tho subject. Although we seldom notice the effusions of the anonymous correspondents of our neighbour, the Spectator, .when they are comments on the contents oCour columns, we will deviate eo far, in the present case, as to say to Angelo that we are extremely desi rous that the Lyceum shall succeed. Our remarks were 6iiperinduced by this anxiety. We will listen with with pleasure to his leetures, or to those of any other person, provided they are calculated topromote its prosperity. - ?v On Saturday morning last, a youth of about fifteen years of age, son of Mr. Lawson W. Davis, of Bache lor's Creek!, in this county, was killed by the acciden-r tal discharge of a gun. The contents were lodged in his face, and in a few minutes he was a corpse ! THE PRESIDENT. Ourlcttrs ifrom Washington report favorably of the health and spirits of the President. " He is in gopd health again (says a letter of the 1st.) The recent storrn, or rather deep-laid scheme to destroy? him,; seems tohaye given him new life and spirit, j I have never seen him more cheerful than at present; his wound has healed, and his whole health seems much improved." "The" rejection of Mr. Van Buren (says another letter,) is only the first act in the JJrama. ; An attenlpt to send the Bank of the United State's Bill to the President will be the nexti I have no doubt he will reject it if it ever reaches him. I The H. of Representatives will, however, give the Bank advocates a hard bght; and I think it very doubtful whether it w tll pass the House it will faie. better in the "House of Lords." I care little whether the Pill goes to the President or not. Whether it ls rejected by him or by the House, it will be equally serviceable to the country. It will strengthen our Constitutional cause very much. i ne act of the opposition will be an at cmpt to crowd upon the President as many i"iQS and canals as possible but the harder press mm (like the compactarch of a well nlt bridge,) the firmer he stands." i 'Richmond Enq. Extract of a letter from Gen. Blair, a S. C. member oj uongress, to a uorresponaeiu in ut7wc. "Nullification can never be our remedy. When we lose all hope of a redress of our grievances from Congress, and-are compelled to take the remedy into our own hands, we must pursue the plan I suggested to the people of Charleston in my letter last summer. A gene ral convention of the Southern States must be held, and present to Congress the alternative of giving up the protective system (as it is called) or permitting- us to seperate from the Union. This session is the limit of Our hopes it is the utmost period of time to which a redress of our grievances could be postponed ; and if the Tariff is not modified to suit us, I wish our hot-headed nullies may be disposed to go as far as some of the submission men" EX-SECRETARY CLAY. Extract from Mr. Clay's Speech on Mr. Van Bu rets nomination. "Although I shall not controvert the right of the President, in an extraordinary case, to send abroad a public minister, without the ad vice and consent of the Senate, I do not admit that it ever ought to be done without the exis tence of some special cause to be communicated to the Senate. We have received no communi cation of the existence of any such special cause." Extract from the Executive Journal of the Senate, Dec. 13fi, 1825. , "Commissions having) been granted during the recess of the Senate to the following persons : I now nominate them to the same offices as are respectively annexed to their names. "Rufus King, of New York, to be envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of the United States at the Court of the United Kingdoms of Great Britain and Ireland." Now look on that picture and on this No special reason assigned in Mr. King's case, and the selection and nomination made under advice of Mr. Clay, himself, as Secretary of State, in the recess of the Senate and to the same Court What is the difference? Mr. King was a Federalist of the Old School, and Mr. Van Buren was a Democrat, and Mr. K. was not obnoxious like Mr. V. to some of Mr. C.'s allies for having supported the late war. What admirable consistency in Mr. Clay! and what a beautiful illustration of the princi ples of the second Coalition! Globe. MR. CLAY, WEBSTER & CO. Forsooth, Mr. Webster is now for his country, and his whole country and Mr. V. i3 to be re jected by him; because he has no "elevated re gard for country.' Yes, Mr. W. opposing the embargo as unconstitutional, and denouncing Mr. Jefferson as under French influence. Mr. W. opposing' the late war, and acting with those who declared Mr. Madison deserved a halter and yet, Mr. Van Buren, doing the reverse in those days, denounced as having no " elevated regard for country." Mr. Webster himself, is actuated only by duty, in all this but Mr. Van Buren, the public are told, could not be actuated bv duty, and must be, we fear, to wreak an old war grudge, offered up a sacrifice with crocodile tears, shed by the new coalition. The instructions to our Minister are held up as the1 cause, when these very instructions were more than'a year ago. made public and printed,4 and known by Mr. Webster, and no opposition then attempted to completing the arrangement. " How profoundly destitute of even the shadow of correctness," to use the language of the eloquent and mathematical Mr. Chambers from Maryland- must be such charges. No. Regard less of increased,expense by the rejection ; re gardless of Mr. Van Buren's great public servi ces and private worth; regardless of the Presi dent's anxiety to close our important negotia tions abroad some of the new coalition, like the corrupt ones of oldMn Rome in her de generacy, have, it is feared, made out their list of victims, and the residue are compelled to strike the blow. lb. The question has been asked, what is the popula tion of the places of England m which the Cholera is raging ? We answer, from the best data in our possession, as follows : ft at.. i bo rvm at au y vzlci Sunderland, 13,000 , Gateshead, 9,000 Haddington, (Scotland) 5000. New- York Mer. Adv. COMMUNICATION. Remarks on Mr. Clay's Tariff Speech. Well, here we have once more, farmer Clay mounted cap-a pee on his well known Rosiuante, the American i t r : l-. . a : . . i . i hiihs uie nuintn, viiiiki, siuiriu, or miy oiner man a RepubjfHi System. But look out. Knight of the rueful counteimrce, there are windmills ahead. Let us gee of what stuff the armour is made with which he defends his bantlinff. Mr. CIhv says tie conideredagriculture to be the greatest of all interests, and distinct from it, would jiot have commanded bis attention for a moment. f So, in order to foster agriculture, he taxes the farmer and Jis family, from 40 to 150 per cent on every article they use, and which is not the produce of their own farm. But the cream of it is, that while he thus pretends to foster agticulture by high taxation, he indirectly deprives the farmer of the means to pay those lazes ; tor we defy Mr. Clay or any other political sophist, to deny that the ex portation ofour surplus agricultural produce is so closely linked wi.h the importation of foreign commodities Cfor the production ofwhich, neither our climate nor the con- dilion of the inhabitants oi me country is sutteo; tuat the latter cannot be diminished without affecting the former. The geutleman from Missouri had founded his argument on the belief Uat a reduction of the price of salt woold follow a reduction of the dutv: but it was a question wbetuer tbe retention of the duty would not produce that result- The gentteman and himself Imth had the same obiect IU view, iwe tuey uan uiuereni wars of arriving at it. In May last, one-fifth of the duly was taken off ihe article of salt, and let us, saia ne, see wn nas oeeu tne coDse buences. Now we request this great statesman and some of his admirers, to lend us their attention to a dialogue which lately tools place between Mr. L., a respectable merchant of this place, who has at present a Tessri at sea, and our- selves, and then tell us " what have been the consequen ces." I understand you have heard from your son, friend L." Ye, he was at Barbadoes, to sad in a few days." ,; Then we shall soon hate the pleasure of seeing himf " Not so soon tie'tl her, for he will go to Turks Island for a load of salt," " Are you not apprehensive that the late large quantity brought in from every quarter, will reduce the prite, ar.d tnat you will be obliged to keen yours on hand ?" " ?ot in the least ; for 1 can afferd to sell mine (or forty cents the oushel Say tt cost 12 1-2, loss in measurement f t e- a , s-m. - . . ..a stou ugmerage o, auty ia i-'z, and it win leave me a freight of 10 cents per bushel." Now let us " see what would hare been the conse quence" if our friend L. had had 26 cents to pay in duty. Could he have afforded bis salt for less than 4p 1-2 cents without loss? Surely noi. You reneaied. ! i. : . ee.. r .i j...- 4 .ul price MMit, in aw correctly informed, it higher now thsd it has ueea tor cone year past. Thai, it will be seen that a diminution ZlwZiZt "oroe!,ne occasioned by an augmentation of duty, by tumii Into actioa the great principle of competition. J! r"lher' U h ,lie deduction f our tonnage that left farmer OUy aad otuir farmers, without a sufficient quantity of sail to cure their meat, and ibi-reuy Wising he price, has produced tlm competition. That this has been the ca.e in North Carolioa at least, we all kuow. A high price of a!t miffbt also be traced to another source- It was a powerful evidence of the prosperity or our tonnage " Prosperity ofour tonnage,!" and ca there, after this yet be found men in North Carolina who can be guHci by this wily office-hunter? Let us instruct this would be President of the U. S. a little as to the state of bur pros per us commerce and tonnage ; it may asiithim to gov ern the nation (when he is ebrctrd.) From the 1st Aoril 1626, to 1st April, 1828, we could count 22 s htp pi ug mer chants in Newbern, of undoubted credit, who owned and employed 36 vessels in the West .India trade. We had three Ropewaiks in full employ and at Beaufort and the Straits, there were building on an average from seven to nine vessels annually. The Stock of our Banks was Kt par '; and real estate, if offered, could be sold without loss. Now look at the other side of the picture, and mark the " prospeiity" brought on us by the blighting Administration and System of this very, Henry Clay . We suffer now under a general stagnation of business f six ship owners of good credit ; 12 vessels, such as thfy are ; not a ropewalk, and until within three months, not a vessel building or built, either here, at Beaufort or the Straits, since Clay's golden era of 1328 ; our Bnk stock 30 to 40 per cent, below par, and then only to be sold to the Institutions themselves ; real estate sunk and sinking daily to a ruinous 4egi ee. This is the " prosperity" left us by this ambitious demagogue. 'And are other sections of the Slate better off ? We answer unhesitatingly, no. But this is only the devoted Slate of North Carolina. How stand matters farther South ? We have informa tion upon which we can rely ; and so fur as it regards tonnage and commerce, they are ntat bttter of, however they may be better nble to bear it. But perhaps jVir. C. hen he speaks of the prospei ity of the commerce and tonnage of the country, has no allusion to the South. The table following these strictures, will show that our ton nage fell off in the year 1829, (when the measures of Mr. C's Administration and System were fell) 48l;6X)4 ton3. - A high price of sa't implied low price its inactivity ; the activity of navigation, and a During the last war, we were personally engaged in an enterpri.e which eventuated in the bringing a cargo of salt into North Carolina, which sold fur Irom $4 to 5 per bushel. The same kind of salt can now be had in tins market for 40 a 50 cents; and the high price of the article at a time when we had no navigation at ail, im plied, agreeably to Mr. Clny'a logic, " the activity of na vigation." For vessels would not engage in be more jrufitably empluyed- tbe salt trade when they could And pray, Mr. Clay, in what trade will vessels engage, if (hey cdn be more profitably employed ? We will en gage that no man would be fool enough in these times to enter into the trade if carry ing warming pans to Jamaica; but should Mr. C. or any olher poliliciau, wish to Iry the experiment, they chij, if they will py for it, get' arty ves sel, even one of (lie Loudon packets, to engage ia this unprofitable trade. The suit from Liverpool was introduced altogether as ballast, and -that from the Bahamas wns not introduced at all, unless when, Irom want ef other freights, our vessels were forced to go there. And how much w uild our vessels care for other freight if you would kirk your System to the dogs, and let us alone, to receive Irom our customers such articles as it would suit them best to pay and us to receive for our c .roes without poking your systematized noses into the hold of every vessel, and ograbme one half, a' least, of every cargo not for the use of Uncle Sam, for it can easily be demonstrated, that were the duties reduced to 20 per cent, advalorem, you would have a greater revenue than you collect . now, (see the annexed table.) Three fold the quantity of foreign produce and manufactures woold be introduced, which would take threefold of A- merican agricultural produce to pay for, which would take three fold the tonnage to bring it to market. When this shall take t lace, then, and not till then, may we expect to see the country prosper in all its paTts. But sotre excellent cittzen will no doubt wonder if this enor mous tax is not levied for revenue,' what is it levied for. We will tell them. It is laid to protect home manufac tures ; that is to say, to lotce every mau m the commu nity to work a certain number of hours or dfays of the week, for nothing ; yes, stare as much as you please ; we repeat it, for nothing, r or whether you are forced to give away without compensation, what you get for your day's labour, or you work for nothing, is precisely the same ; and this for the unhallowed purpose that a few rich capitalists may receive from 15 to 25 per cent, divi dends on capital, which they would otherwise be obliged to vest in agriculture, commerce, or lend out on moderate interest. Now you who justly boast of being the, exam ple of liberty and self-government, under a written Con stifution, for the rest of the world, can hardly believe this: we will, therefore, illustrate it by stains a case. Suppose a farmer, mechanirk, or working-man, earns on an average one dollar per day. and he should want cloth enough for a new coat for himself, or woollen or worsted articles for a garment for his wife or children, the cost of which would be at present $10 ; he would have to work ten days to earn this sum. But suppose you take' off 40 or 50 per cent- of the duty levied on these articles, how many days would he then have to work ? Not quite seven days. But should he now want a peajacket to keep the weather out, or a coarse jacket to work in, or common flannel to keep his wife and children warm ; or should he be a planter that wishes to clothe his negroes well, and for that purpose would want some common plains the case is altered : he has then to work one hour for himself and family, and one for the protecting system, until the amount vanted is made up ! God protect us from such protection ! And this is not (as the woollen manufacturers fain would have had it, when they intro duced their famous woollens bill in Congress,) on wool lens alone ; bh, no, it is on erery article ; and the first 'necessaries of life, in every instance, are taxed higher han luxuries! This is truly a bill of abomination ! ! During the last year, the busy employment of our tonnage pro duced an increased price of salt, and a higher price might still ob tain, even if tu4 favorite measure of the gentleman from Missouri should prevail. The fallacy of these " might bees" and " may bees" is too glaring to deserve serious refutation. Mr. C. contended that the duty was a moderate one, in compariV son with tbat winch be believed was still collected in n.ngianu. One hundred per cent, on an article, which next to bread, fire and water, is the mos.t unavoidable to the sus tenance of human existence, was a moderate oue(always) " which he believed was still collected in England." But why look to England, France, orto any other of the rot ten systems of Europe, for example to follow in legisla ting for the people of this country. Is there any simil arity between our instiutions and theirs Oil r fathers, when they set up shop for themselves, 67 years ago, took example from them, but it was only to avoid all that was of European stamp, as they would have avoided the India-cholera itself. If you take example of her revenue laws, which have had the grand effect of producing 40,000,000 poor rates, take her King, Parliameni, Church and State tyitern, Tithes, Peer Bishops or Bishop Peers, her Borough-mongers, and her8W millions ster ling Publick Debt take it all, and you will soon make the people of this country as wretched as they are in England. Then, and not until then, will you be able to compete with England in manufacturing, goods without laying the rest of the community under a heavy contri bution. Re did not know the extent of the gabtlU in Ft? e, Well would it have been for us all had he known as little of the Tariff cabal of his own country. We can, hoivever, produce abundant proof of the effect which the high duties upon foreign Iron has had in France. (The object was precisely the same as in this country, namely, te enable a few rich owners of poor mines, without skill and industry, to work those mines to an undue advan tage.) Her wine and brandy trade, the natural staple of t rance, has fallen off lOO per cent, since tnat part or the American system was introduced. But one thine be well knew, that the unexampled pros peri tv which this country enjoyed above any emiutry under Heaven; da ted its origin from toe tax laid on sau as wen as omecartides which it bad been found necessary to protect Surely, by this country." Mr. C.can only mean some part of the West, which has to appearance been enriched We have just read. Mr, Hayne's last speech in the Senate, from which it will be seen that Charleston 1? not muciJ better ofr tha.i ewiyrp, bJAhV?'le.?Pred Prosperity !ot emigration, ru4n?q farmers, merchants and mecicks of m a-"n ;"e r lf reined, Tor Iherr are many who hare ot got enough left to take them thence ; nd the Eastern or nionopolixing States, enriched by an equally " unexampled" bonus of from $ 100to 135 per annum, paid to every operative, taken out of the pockets or" the people, under the specious' name or protecting duties. Sir, it is to the tariff, not of 1816 but of 1824, that we owe not only oar unrivalled prosperity, but the extinction of the pobiicdebt which is rapidly approach ing Say you so, Mr. Clay ? Well, let us try his say so hy facts We present the reader with a, table, for the truth of which we depend upon no man's say so, or may, bees, but rely entirely upon Public' Documents. If we are thought wrongs let any of Mr. Clay's friends (for howev er desperate maybe his cause, or hwever desperate the means may may be by which he rntends 4o attain the ob ject of his unhallowed ambition, Still, he hs partisans even nere) correct us if they can. Tonnage, 1827, 1, 620,61 7 1828, 1 741,391 1829, 1,260 797 Balance against the system, Exports, 1816, '17, o 18, $262,873,104 1824, '25, h '26, 253,1 17,67 fin ance from 1816 to 1826, 1828, '29, & '30, $218,522,508, D , . Balance from 1316 to 1830, Populat n. 1816, '17 & '18, 9,000.000 48li604 9,755.'77 44,350,289 '2o & '26, 11,000,000 1828 '29 b '30. 12 iwmr Revenue. 1804, with apopulat of 6,(KK) 000 ? and a duty ofl 6 per cent. ( H,99fl,96a 1829,with a popiatn of 12,000,000 oi a duty of from 35 to 200 per cent $ 22,92,897 i. Now we invite the attention of the reader to the result hete exhibited, and he will at once seethe l prosperity '' the " unexampled prosperity" to which Clay and his system ould have brought us if he had not been checked by public opinion. We have hete, with an increase of population, a falling off in our tonnage1 nf 481,604 tons, and with an increased population of 30 per cent, in 14 years, a falling off in our exports of 44,350,289. Should any one doubt the correctness of this conclusion, on the ground that articles exported in 1816 were higher than they were in 1830 howeverthis may have been the case with some articles, by taking into consideration the dif ference of population and the difference of tonnage in the two years, which was employed in carrying the articles then exported, the reader will no doubt he reconciled. Registered tonnage in 1816, 800,759 1829, 650,142 In favor of the result 150,617 With a populasiou of 15 millions and 15 per cent, du ties, our revenue was $14,996,965 ; had the same duties been levied in 1829, it is not unfair to calculate that with a population of twelve millions, we should have had a revenue of about $30 000,000 But how is it ? With dtuiesftf frpai 35 to 200 per cent our revenue 19 1829 was only $22,192,897. Let every man of commonsense and honesty make his own comments He had been a farmer all his life, Claj a farmer all his life .' Now that is a good one He dont know or s ashamed of his own profession. No, Clay, you have not been a farmer; you have been a manufacturer all your life a manufacturer of guli Iraps ; but thanks to the wicked nulliGers and free trade- advocates, and ftLove all, thanks to the misery of the South ; the people are getiing their eyes opened, and your manufactures will be as innocent as your brother .Tonathan'g horn gun flints. There might be a prejudice in favor of alum salt, for the purpose unfounded, as one of the most experienced men in the business bad assureu uiiu mai me sail irom tba salines answered equally as well ioraii tue purposes when tue provisions were properly put up. We are not acquainted with ' the salt from the salines,' our we are wen acquainted witn " tne preiuoice ol our North Carolina farmers in favor of Turks Island salt to cure their meat with. Mr. C. said it was not well to look at the subject at this time wueo it could not be properly seen in all its hearings. in tnis you are right, farmer Ulay ; tor it the dutv on salt goes, down tumbles that on sugar, and iron would not Ion? outlive the death of its two compeers, but with a crash would go down, dragging with it the whole system of abomination Clay, Webster and all. F.N. WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY. ihe Committee appointed at a meeting of the yX n-u u. luung vx "' Newbern Grays, on Saturday evening last, respect- 'JL:.,J will be delivered in the Presbyterian Church at 10 o'clock on the approaching anniversary of the Birth- day of WASHINGTON, by John A. Backhouse, Esq. and the Farewell Address will be read by Wn liam B. Wadsworth, Esq. Newbern, February 15. MARRIED, In Beaufort, on Thursday evening last,-by J. W. Hunt, Esq. JOHN JONES, Esq. to Miss SUSAN BELL, daughter of the late W. C. Bell, Esq. In Greene county, on the 2d inst. by Wyatt Moye, Esq. Mr. HENRY BEST, jun. to Miss MARIA EDMONDSON. In Greene county,on the31st January, Mr. JESSE GRIMSLEY to Miss NICE Y STANCEL. port or uswBzmxj. ARRIVED, Schr. Henrietta, Jerkins, St. Thomas. ' CLEARED, Schr. Francis Withers, Rumley St. Thomas. To the Public. fflHE subscriber will leave Waynesboro' on JLL Tuesday evening, the 15th inst. but not without returning his thanks to its citizens for their kind and polite treatment. He informs his friends, and the public in general, that his Reading School will commence on Monday, the 20th instant, in the Building formerly oc cupied by the late Ephriam Daniel, on Black Creek, eighteen miles from Waynesborough. As the subscriber's family will reside in the same building, which is large and" commodious, he will accommodate a few Boarders, on ac commodating terms. He pledges himself to parents and others that the moral and religious duties of those entrusted to his care 6hall be strictly attended to. Students who are not boarders, and who reside at a distance, shall be accommodated during inclemencies of weather f hich might injure jtheir health, j The branches taught in this Institution, are, Orthography, Reading, Penmanship, Arithme tic, Grammar and Geography; prices, from $6 to $8 per Session of 120 days. A Bible School will be regularly attended to everv Sabbath-day, unless interrupted by other devotional obligations to which students ot both sexes and all ages are invited, without mo ney and without price. - . , The situation is well knovn to bea healthy one, the water is very superior, and board can be had in' respectable families on moderate terms. JAMES BROOME. Black Creek, Wayne County 10th February, 1832. notice: TTN, obedience; to two Deeds of Trust or As LL signmente to roe -made, the one datei the 3d day of February, ,",1330,. and the other dated the 26th day of March, follo wing, 1 shll pro ceed to sell J ' At the Court-House in Trenton , Jones county, on the 29th day of Marchiiixt. all the LANDS of Richard B. Hatch ;irf;said county, viz: . I The Plantation formerly owned by J oseph Hatch,ideceased, and devised to Richard B. Hatch during his life, by the said -Joseph Hatch, adjoining the lands of the late Josiah Howard. . 1 Also, all the right, title and interest of the said Richard B. Hatch (it being for and during the life of the said Richard B. Hatch,) in the Grimes Land, lying on the south side of Trent River, containing, by estimation, three hundred and forty-six acres, more or less. ' Also, all the Lands conveyed to the said Richard B. Hatch, by Lemuel Hatch and Mary his wife, lying on the south side of Trent River, called the James Simmons place. Also, the Lands of the said Richard B. Hatch, purchased of John Simmons, decea sed, adjoining the land last above rrtentioned. Also, the Lands-formerly belonging to Solomon E. Grant, lying on both sides of the Road leading from Newbern to Trenton and Kinston, ten miles from Trenton ; containing four hundred and fifty acres, more or less. And on the 30th day of March next , at the Plantation near Buckner Hatch's' Mills, where Joseph Whitty lived last year, will be sold, 15 or 20 likely Negroes, consisting of both sexes and all classes, belong ing to the said Richard B. Hatch. I Also, the Household and Kitchen Furniture, the STOCK of all kinds, with the. Plantation Tools and Farmihg.Utensils on said Plantation. There will also be sold, on Wed nesday the 2d day of April next, In Wayncsborwigh, Wayne County, the life estate f -Richard B. Hatch in a Saw and Gsist Mill, with a Mill Site containing two acres of Landr And on Wednesday, the 4th day of ril, at the Plantation of the said Richard B. April, at the JrlantatlOn OI the SaiQ KlCharQ JO. Hatch, in the county of Wayne, will be sold, - Fifteen or twenty JY egroes? and all the Household and Kitchen Furniture, Stock of all kinds, and the Farming Utensils on said Plahtaton. Also, will be sold, on the 7th day of April next, at the Court-House In Smithjield, in the county of Johnston. the life estate of the said Richard B. Hatch in all the Lands descended to him from his wife, i t ftimtir f 'f Tnlincffm Knntoininr. Aim v. j i . i ' 0 hunnrftd arrrs. more or less. t ... . , , , , And on the 7th dav of May next. WI" De bom ' M UilSlOW CQUrt-JJoiLSC, all the Lands of the said Richard B. Hatch in the county of Onslow ; consisting of about three-fourths of Eden's Island, and a large quantity of Piney Lands, with about twenty thousand boxes, two years old. The conditions of the sales 'will be made known on the days of sale. WILLIAM MONTFORT, l . Trustee.. February 13, 1832. POST-OFFICE, Newbern, 15th Feb. 1832. S f nHE Horse Mail between Trenton and Li Newbern having been discontinued, the Mails for Duplin and Sampson counties will in future be forwarded by the Wilmington Stage on Friday. T. WATSON, P. M. POST-OFFICE, ) Newbern, 15th Feb. 1832. y THE Postmaster General having establish ed a semi-weekly mail between Newbern and Onslow Court-House, via Trent Bridgo andjCross Roads, in Jones county, Mails for those Offices will be closed on Wednesday and Friday at 5 P M. THOMAS WATSON, P- M. NOTICE. AT the February Term, A. B. of the Courr of Pleas and Quarter Sessions of Craven County, the subscriber obtained letters of Ad ministration on the estate of Waitman Emery deceased. All persons indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment, and those having claims against it, to bring them forward, properly authenticated, within the? time prescribed by law, or they will be barred of re covery by the operation of the acts of Assem bly in such cafe made and provided. ' 3 WILLIAM LEWIS, February 15, 1832. , . V NOTICE. MAV1NG located myself as a Teacher, on Brown's Soiind, Onslow couatv.iiear the residence of David Ward, Esq.; I take fbis method of soliciting the patronage of ; those who may wish to place their children or wards under my tuition. Strict attention shall be paid to stndents in their respective studies- Terms, 83 per quarter fox Spe llihg, Reading, Writing and Aritlimetick ; 64 do. for Book keeping and Surveying. Board, convenient io the Scobl, may be hadon low terms, in resjgecia btefanulies. C,C TOER February 12th, 1832. -i .1 i i i 1

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