NEWBERNJ YtEDXESDV, MARCH 14, 1832. The Globe of the 6th inst contains an interesting correspondence between a Committee of the Repub lican Members oi the New-York Legislature, and the President of the United States, relating to the repent rejection of Mr. Van Burcn, which we -will publish in riur next. At present, we have only room for the tbl lowing passages from the reply of the Presidents "1 cannot withhold my entire concurrence with the publican members of the Legislature in their high carnation of their eminent fellow-citizen, whom they fcave so generously come forward to sustain. To thi3 J will add the assurance of my undiminished respect fur his great public and private wortbyaiid rny full confidence in the integrity of his character. j ; In calling him to the Department of State from tho ; r xaltcd station he then occupied by the suffrages of the people of his native State, I was not influenced more by his acknowledged talents and public services, than by the general Wish and expectation of th Re publican party throughout the Union. The ejgnal ability and success which distinguished hia adminis tration of the duties of that department, have ; fully justified the selection. -V . j . " I owe it to the late Secretary of State, to myself and to the American people, on this occasion to state, that as far as! is known to ipe, he had no participation whatever in 'the occurrences relative to myself and the second officer of the government, or in the disso j ition of the late cabinet; and that there is ho ground i or imputing to him the having advi;d those remo :J from ofilce, which, in the discharge of my con stitutional function?, it was deemed proper to -make. During his continuance in the cabinet, his exertions were directed to produce harmony among its members ; ;.nd he uniformly endeavored to sustain his'colleagues. His final resignation was a sacrifice of official station to what he deemed the beat interests'of the country. "Mr. McLane,our then minister at London, having previously asked permission to return, it was mj own :::ixious desire to commit the-lmportaht points remain ing open in our relations, with Great Britain, to a suc cessor in whose peculiar fitness and capacity I had crjual coiifidence ; and to my selection Mr. Yan Buren Yielded a reluctant assent. In urging upon him that .acrifice, I did npt doubt that I was doing the best for the country, and acting in coincidence with the: pub lic ivibh ; and it certainly could not have been sntiei- a3 Paris dates might be six days later than the 15th, this wants confirmation. j IRELAND. S Dreadful outrages had been committed in the coon ty of Limerick. Several officers and supposed in formers had been nearly murdered. ; FRANCE. In the French Chamber of Deputies, the Budget continued the prominent topic of discussion. During a recent debate, one of the speakers, M. Jules de la Rochefoucald, compared the Budget ot America wi in that of France ; and maintained that if alJ the vari ous charges to which the population of the United States was subjected in ditterent shapes were unnigut into it, the amount would give an average of 35fr. lor each individual, while that of France was only 311r. for each inhabitant. General Lafayette had addressed a circular to the members of the Chamber of Deputies, in which he states that, having read an article in the Revue Bn tannique. referred to in tho Moniteur, upon the com parative departmental expenses of France arid Ame rica, and being struck with the manifest errors it con tained he had consulted the celebrated American writer, Mr. Fennemore Cooper, and also General Bertrand, who had resided fifteen years in America, from whose i concurring evidence it resulted that the whole budo-et of the United States amounted only to 147,402,051 fr. 80 c. which divided by 12,856,497, the number of inhabitants, gives an average of 11 lr.47c. for each individual, instead of from 31 fr. to 35 fr. as asserted in the Revue Britannique, while the ordinary French BuJget of 1830, which amounted to 900,074, 432 fr. gives, if divided by 32,000,000, the number of inhabitants, an average of 28 fr. 12 c. per head. Seizures of the French newspapers continued to take place. Gailignani's Messenger of the 19th, states that the Revolution of the 17th had been stopped at the Post Office, and seized at the office of the paper. The editor, i in announcing the fact, states that the warrant did not indicate the cause, but he imagines it to have been a description given of tiie prints an nxed to the last number of the Caricature. The journal called Le FrancaI, had also been seized"; and the 24th number of the pamphlet, called Mayeux ; several print sellers had also been prosecu ted. Louis Phillippe must be restless upon his throne. Mr. Sarrut, who has acted as editor of the Tribune since the imprisonment of Mr. Marrast has been Summoned ! before the Judge d'Instruction, in conse quence of an article published in that paper, when, after the examination, the Magistrate extended the summons into a warrant of arrest, by virtue of which he was conveyed to the prison of St. Pelagic M. Allier, the young Advocate who defended one of the Society of the Amis du Peuple on the 15th Jan. and for his indiscreet conduct in court, was sus suspeuded ' from pleading for a twelvemonth, has been tried before the Court cf Assizes for a political letter published by him in April, 1831, tending to ex cite hatred and contempt against the government. He was found guilty by the jury, and condemned to two years imprisonment. M. Allier in his defence raado use ofexpressionsso violent that the Procnreur General called upon the Court to take his words down and refer them to the examinig magistrate, to decide whether they did not form grounds, for afresh prosecution, which was accordingly done. There are now twenty six newspapers i?i France, the names of which are before us, openly advocating the return of the fallen dynasty. Paris, Jan. 20. Half past four o'clock. The market has continued dull, and as the reports in circu- pre vious to his sailing. The emperor looked yellow, jaded and haggard; and was apparent ly worn out with tyranny. It was the decided opinion of the Lisbonians, that in case the troops of Don Pedro were un successful, they would all "be put to instant death by the sword without mercv. Orders had been given by Don Miguel, tha't, whenev er any of the citizens of Lisbon were collected in groups together, not being in the regular line of defenders, after the arrival of Don Pedro's hosts, these groups should be fired upon by his regular soldiers, for fear of treacherv. Thus the tyrant, who sheds blood and oppres ses his kind without scruple, is ever insecure. His days are consumed by watchful paroxysms of fear: his repose is a repose on the, rock and the thorn. Capt. W. describes Lisbon as miserable and loathsome beyond endurance. Insolent police, squalid beggary, and rank villany were every where rife. troduced an amelioration, which will bjnost beneficially felt throughout tneVBold system, of American being? In otixtt Rsvle tho sa'i IprJ is an animal, who is recruited by a press gang, and intoxicated s for -a battle. In tW American Navy he may become a manV?olshv tarily enlisting and spontaneously sobejvVWe sincerely pray that such may be the result of an experiment so auspiciously begun. Globe-; i &t . hvtinn ttndid rather to throw doubts on the adherence patedthat, in the manner U saccessluily conducting cf tne Northern Powers to the Treaty, which doubts and terminating an important and complex nejgotia- were strengthened by the Courier London paper, ...u:-i. ua n.jinn n received this moraine, the prices have again do- T . f II I IlLf l I I llll.V IVJlini V II.LL.I .111 LI AV HUillfclli W - ' " VJ 1 1 Itiuit mmmm F - .- II . . ,.- .1 . I J V 1 P J both nouses oi v;ongrcss, mere wouia nave ueeu loiiua motives for embarrassing t!ie executive action and for interrupting an important foreign negotiation. 'I can never be led to doubt, that, in the instructions i;'.;dcr which tite nerrotiaticn relative to the trade with the British West Indies was conducted and successful ly concluded, the people of the United States wjll find any thing either derogatory to the national dignity anJ honor, or improper for such an occasion. I " Those parts of the instructions which have been used to justify the rejection of Mr. Van Buren'&nomi niition by the Senate of the United States, proceeded Mr. Walsh, the editor of the National Gazette a warm supporter of Mr. Clay, thus rebukes thatien tleman for his ungentlemanly attack on Mr. Galla tin. ' " We have received pamphlet copies of Mr. Clay's great speech in defence of the American system. We read it last evening with lively interest, and a strong disposition to proclaim emphatically all the merit which it might appear to us to possess. But we ex perienced pain and damp, when we reached that pa ragraph of the eleventh page, wherein Mr. Gallatin is so harshly treated. The verbum ardens in the heat of public declamation may be excused, but this is a deliberate repetition of what could be so, only in that point of view. The paragraph strikes us as re pugnant to justice, dignity, decorum. It betrays a spirit of intolerance in the matter of opinion on the tariff question, to which we should make opposition, even if we were advocates of the Chinese policy. If "fifty years ago" Pennsylvania began to "cherish and honor" Mr. Gallatin, he gave her in return the utmost exertion of his great abilities and attainments, and the credit of the reputation which he acquired; if he now believes the tariff system to be injurious even to her, he assuredly displays no "ingratitude" in laboring to procure a modification of it, and though he might deem it profitable to her apart, yet if he sup posed it to be injurious on the whole to the union, he would be bound, as an American politician, to act as he has done. Mr. Gallatin cannot "have filled, at home and abroad some of the highest offices under our government," and be "still at heart an alien." The case may be pronounced impossible, and the fact be .well disputed by all impartial persons, who know the statesman and his performances. It is only a few years since, Mr. Gallatin was sent by the ad ministration of whieh M. Clay was so distinguished a member, to represent this country at the court of Great Britain, and to manage very important nation al interests. "We feel reluctance in consigning the above re marks to the press. We can make allowance for the impetuosity of Mr. Clay's feelings on a subject in which his soul is wrapped ; he strikes at a formidable antagonist without reflecting upon the mode and de gree. But we hold ourselves obliged to deem Mr. Gallatin's political reputation to an American and National one at present, after he has filled " during thirty years, some of the highest offices under the gen eral government," and when he is attacked for hav ing merely taken a prominent part on one side of a question of public economy, about which the country is divided." r,K XanD ejected by the casting vote of the Vice President; but it should be recollected that qf those who voted against him are the two Senators from Maine, and Mr.-Bell of New Hampshire, who voted m direct opposition to the known wUlof their S tates. As for Poindexter of Mississippi and Moore of Alabama, their case is still worse : they were elected on a pledge of supporting the Administration, and in this vote they have as grossly betrayed thir tuents as did Mr. Clay, Cook of Illinois, and Bates of Missouri, when tney votea ior Mr. Adams as Presi dent, in 1825, against previous pledges and the known will of their constituents, and political death as cer tainly awaits them. Bost Statesman. A Nation without a Debt. Nothing in General Jackson's late Message to Congress appears to have more astonished the politicians of Europe, than the statement that the national debt of the United States may be liquidated in full next year. A civilized na tion, without a heavy debt, and oppressive civil list, is, to the monarchists of Europe a riddle a nuzzle an enigma i paradox-a seeming impossibility. This mtfie leaiurep m the present condition of the United btates. has oroduced tellect pfVfiurope than any event since the Revolu tion. Hence the astonishment, surprise and gratifi cation with which the President's Message has been republished and read in Europe. That document operating upon the free minds of European states men, will produce", in a short time, an entire revolu tion in their opinions in relation to government and ruiers. i . iour. c &nq. A Subject for Refection. Agreeably to a memo-! randum kept by the Rev. Dr. Cathcart, of York Penn sylvania, appears that one hundred and nine mur ders were committed in the United States, within the year 1831. Some of these were of the most apalung kind, such a3 parents by their children, children by their parents, husbands by their wives, and wives by their husbands, &c. A large proportion of them are regarded as the consequence of an intemperate use of ardent spirits. Letters have been received in town mentioning "the marriage, at Paris, of the notorious Mis3 Wright to a foreigner, neither young nor handsome, but rather having something of an ogre in his appearance in other words what ladies would call " a fright." It is ad ded that the aid of Lucina was successfully invoked by the happy couple before they had recourse to Hy men. The least said about such matters the better in general cases; but there is something in the par ticular instance before us "to point a moral," if not " to adorn a tale." The subject of the scandal, plough long since thrown off and disowned by the kind friends whose feelings her manifold improprie ties outrasred. was at one time a woman whose ta- Iai i to ntfl I !iTPni(. rnr! mnilpafr rf 'pnrvrtmnt rirhlir entitled her to all the courtesies which were extended thatthejeeeperofthe Stage house in Vayneshorougb, her. She lost her respectability not by being car- is in the habit offorwarding passengers in Mr. Guioiv ried away by the " vanities of the world," the intox- line to the stage house on Saltmarsh's line, so that no ications ol hie acting upon a weak nnnd but by an time need be lost; and Mr. Cox or Mr. Kennedy, will attempt, uot less remarkable for its impudence than . Jf its absurdity, to break through the usages oi society r4UUttUv ayeueviue roinis piace. wiuiimpuuiiy, anu sei lis esiaoiisnea ruiesaiaeuauce. m uuio iur uie mcwoera sxage. rier naturally strong butperverted mmd had taken up rt is somewhat surnrisintr that ihe Avtro s suuic ruiicuiuus iucu.3 cuiiueriuujr iiiu yuaiuuu which i ,v. , t l . i women ouo-ht to maintain in the wor d, and the v....v .wucuujf uic jjcoic propriety of her sex asserting their right to participate ot ewbern. Even m the unconnected state of the in the dignities and share what she considered the im- route as it now exists, travellers pass from one Place; .a t i -i '.i 1 ' muuiues 01 me oaier. in aavaucinfr mis posuion wun tn th ofhr in A nA . 1 f i ! I - mi .i . j I v"w iuuuuj uuu invruiUU! COMMUNICATION, , Waynesborocgh, March Sth, 1932; To the Editor of the Sentinel, Sir In your paper of yesterday, I observed a notice? of the facilities yielded by the Post Office Department to the people of Newbern, of travelling and malls; regretting only that youhave no direct commuiTrca tion with Fayetteville. It has probably -not occurred to you, that this disideratum can be effected withW any additional trouble or expense to the Department, hy a slight alteration in the FayettevLUe and Norfolk line now running four miles from this place, ir that line ran through this piace, travellers from Newbern to Fayetteville would leave Newbern in Mr. Guion's excellerft line and take Saltmarsh's Stage "here the, same night, making the trip in 38 or 38 hours. U is not 10 miles farther to come through Waynesborough in passing between these two commercial1 capitals,, than to take the nearest road, viz. that through Tren ton and Duplin. Now if Saltmarsh's line passed through this place, it would intersect with Guions and no time be lost by travellers. I have been infor med that the proprietors agree to the alteration if Oley could have a little more time. They would pass tfie river on an excellent free bridge, where there wouU seldom or never be any interruption from high water ; whereas they now pass a ferry always difficult, ami frequently dangerous. A year never passes without, their being incommoded by high water, while on thfe other road, the offer has been made them of a bond, to indemnify against loss of time from that cause. These remarks refer only to the slighest alteration necessary ; but if they were directed te take what is called the lower route, through Sampson, they would accommodate a very wealthy and respectable seciioti of country, pass a fine hard road and not increase the distance theii now travel n mil' f While on this subject, I take the liberty to remark Portugal;- The Journal of Commerce contains several particulars relative to the state of affairs id Portujral, communicated in letters from Lisbon, dated on the 10th and 12th of January last, and received in Washington by way of Philadelphia. It appears that Dr. Randolph had arrived at Lis bon, and after remaining there only four days, pro ceeded to Madrid. V With respect to the state of Portugal, the letter of the 12th of January ultimo states that a force consist ing of four divisions, composed of regulars and militia, amounting to sixty or seventy thousand men, is distri buted on the coast from the mouth of the Douro to that of the Guadianna. The first division is com- l'rum my own suggestion; were the result of my own j manded by Lieut. General Barron of PerodaRegoa; dahberate investigation and reflection ; and now, as ! the division, by Major General Fovoas; the da di when they were dictated, appear to me to be entirely proper and consonant to my public duty." Congress In the House of .Representatives, on the 3d instant, the Hon. Jesse Speight introduced a Resolution providing for the erection of' a Marine Hospi tdk on Beacon Island ; and, we further j learn, vision, by Major Augusta Pinto de Moreas Sarmen to; and the 4th division by Major General Viscount of Santa Martha, the whole commanded by the King in person. If he be not victorious, in the event of an assault by his brother Don Pedro, surely you will eay it will not be for the want of terrible names in the General staff of his army. , The letter further state?, that the levy en masse is well organized, and ready for service on the appear- 'hat upon hirsuggestion, a Resolution for building a a'nee of an enemy at any point; and that the King of Fort on that Island, was offered by tho Hon. Mr. nas lined the irontiers ot Portugal witn an arm- p ; I lUOUpAJlllUO O.UJT 111 "'J' OJIil JtJIVJT . XJ.UllJf Iiiilliuaij jiuiiiui.iuiiB nave uuii uiauc in uic ai iijv ut ta i. i : r .j i TJit Georgia Question. The Judgment of the L. lct fc'v tnMPr;n r WinpH .al,inct h Supreme Court of the United States, in the ease of insurgents atsomcoth-r place. The ship of the line, the Missionaries confined in the State Prison of Geor- Maria 1st! has been converted into a floating battery. instant, pronounced against mounting 50 pieces of artillery of the largest calibre. h i i-. ,. xL . . ,,,, j i lie casus are maiiiieu. x ue miiu xjwu juiiii v i. is the legality of the imprisonment. The decision, mnnpj hptwppn Rpl-m nnH thp Torrp Villa. T?. tiys a letter from Washington, addressed to the Edi- tjn js animated, confident, and spirited, and noth- tors ot the Raleigh Register, naturally excites great hng is apprehended on account ol the pretensions of Don redro or his troops, which are regarded unequal to any serious invasion, l he preparations have an eye to more important objects. The unfeelingnd cold-blooded speculations which are indulged in among daily journals in distantnunr- lers, respecnnguie neaitn ana probable time oi oeeer:se. of the President of this Republic, strike us as being most undignified and malignant. We see repeated and authentic, assurances from the best sources, that the physicial constitution of our national chief magis trate, is firm and vigorous; that hia spirits are elevated and serene, and his temperate habits altogether prophetic of calm and useful longevity. Why then ia the truth in reference to this subject set aside, and heartless prognostications, based on fables, promulged in its stead i To wrhat depraved uses can the pre- pondency of party urge their mind, i he natural and just feelings of humanity are disregarded and suppressed generous sentiment extinguished, and the wishing partizan plays the seer, and talks about an event ol Death, as it the day and hour when it should occur were a cousummation devoutly to be de sired. Phil. Gaz. brought into play, and probably unknown tojherselfj hrst influenced her in entering upon the course she adopted. Their gratification has now brought her so low, that her present condition contrasted with the former estimation in which she was held, reads a striking lesson to her sex to confine their ambition within their own peculiar sphere of power ; and to the followers ol her tenets generally does this termination of her course teach the absurdity ol embracing doc trines whose tendency their original promulgator has so forcibly illustrated. We should not be surprized if tins deluded woman, who so modestly set up her own perceptions of "truth" (this was her favorite phrase) against what the accumiated mass of mankind have in gathered centuries regarded as such, should di in one of the most ancient faiths she can adopt, and close her eyes perhaps m a nunnery. N. '. Amer. Very respectfully yours An accommodated Traveller. PORT OP XrcWBSRZT. Schr: John, Sloop Marquis, Charleston. New York ARRIVED, Ingalli Tuthill, CLEARED, Schr. Timothy Pickering, Morris, New YorL Schr. Susan Mary, Harding, New Yoii. Schr. Lima, Jones, ' Baltimore. Sloop Translation, Norcut, - New York. Beaufort, March 5. ARRIVED. Schr. Julius Pringle, Duncan. 6 days fnuCharies ton ; ballast. Passenger Mr. G. Belli i, :,u j: i i : A.. I wvai. vaiitivu jkuuiuao, viioucsiwj; iuuj. lumas- is wmi curuiai picture uiui we aunouace u PaMp.r-MlT. n.hAih. r,A . i ... i" i . . i . -i t 7" vuMva uuu vu M t n n norti-i I ninmnliiihmont o r noct f t a rrroat I . - t i w. vi.x uw.uiu.u.uv.,!, ' v tain xnies. moral revolution, for which this countrv and all manKind will acknowledge gratitude to Uen. gi ' TTZn 33 Jackson's administration, and particularly to i w ill JLHUvo .i. ,i l j u .i r . v, nt r r I in k. r it: t . . uie uisuuuuisutu iiuau ui iidvj wepau- fwf rF u fill vrrapu Vine IVOOIS. IrOm ilr. ment, by whom this most desirable improve-1 J lMi Loubat s Nursery, on Long Isl- ment, has Deen enectea. ay accounts trom ana, areexpectea in a lew days, i 'hey are careful! V- Melancholy Shipwreck. A passenger in the severa 0f our vessels of war, on foreign fita- labelled, packed with wet moss, and will be forwarded Packet Schr. Empire, informs, that he saw it stated . . fc than fc lf their creWS n good order for planting, to any part of the State, voluntarily relinquished ardent spirits, ensuing mree week For , , A . . r , 50 roots or more, Id cents per root ; and 25 cents ccepted the cost of their customary al- fx h ' ttUU M CCIU THOIAS WATSON. in a TtnllAtin at Nw Vnrt nn TnPi?d;i v mornino- ""B lfc FFcai ;r. that thp(Kr.hr fnr.rf.nset. Pif.rsoll. hence 27th navc - ' . . I I Al . U " i . Feb. for New York, was cast away on Absecom accepieu ine cubi oi ulC4r . CUbluIUttf ai each for less than 50. Beach, (near where the George Canning was lost,) lowance in the small sum substituted Dy oraer and that nine passengers were drowned: A ling of Mr. Woodbury. Ve have seen late letters Newbern, March 14. also went ashore near the same nlace. I the this - .wv I I & A J i.At VilV U Villi - lllVIt AWWkJVWW w- w ffj Norfolk lscacon. harjnv chanoe as havin? taken Dlace on board U & 1, that vessel, to a ffreat and most exenndarv ex A : iarge Urcenfeilk Umbrella, marked with icrencer oi the bth. that uapt. j iomas ywaurice. itai . iuu auvitcs uum mu i uwuiot uoc uctu - ..... ofthe United Statea Kno-ineer corns, fell down vester- received, to the same effect. These shiDs mav suitaDiy rewarded by returning the same to day whilst transacting business at the Engineer De- be taken as specimens of the whole Navy of inis umcc. -r-iuarcn itn, 18. pmiuiwu, uuu nioiauiautuuw; -T" U1C J III leU O LttlCS . allU LIIUS a IXJ(JSI IHlCf CH llllii I (jm.rnn t-j rpxT ninnTTVl exDenment is succcedinsr under the present ; ss. 1 a VliiAJW LfUUMI. interest because, should Georgia rashly arid unwise ly refuse obedience to the mandate of the court, it de volves cn the President to enforce it. Extract of a letter to the Editors of the Baltimore American, dated j St. Johns, Porto Rico, Feb. 15, 1832. Gentlemen This market has been exceedingly well supplied with American produce and is now rrhitfprl with most articles. Flonr. rice, siierm and tallow candles with Codfish, are the only articles called for. Our Coffee business has been brisk in all parts of the Island. The crop is nearly over. Still there re main lots for exportation. . The whole amount of the crop according to the most carelul estimates will ex ceed two millions of pounds. There is a great falling off in the sugar crops which . will brobably be one third less than that of last year, which was 45000 hhds. The reason is that the price being so very low Iaicrfrom Europc.-Thc ship Hull, CaptJCrow rilf has arrived at Philadelphia, in 36 days from Bor deaux, which port she left on the 25th of January. By this arrivalthe Philadelphia Editors have re ceived Pans dates to the 21st of January, containing advices from London to the, 18th. Thefbllowingarc the principal items ofintelligenec brought by this arrival. , ; GREAT BRITAIN. 1 t a i a a use ot Emmons met on the 17th Jan. The .k d r V0Ci Save notice that, he should introduce rru t ril tor Scotland, on the 19th. I pcror of Russia WhZMvnSS to rfv t h the owners of thc smalIer plantations have abandoned treaty of conference, on the 24 articled- ffbl virtue the culture of the cane' alld many thers haVe made J' "" "'bi oi noiiand would beull trea- J ted. The Times intimatesthat the question of Casimir Pener's retirement from office woulH h a4;aa the answer the English Government might? give to ta-o gentlemen, whom he had sent to communicate ttith them, on the subject of the Behrian fnrt The Courier confirms the statement" katingthat the lhe Spanish Consul. niuisiur nau at way 6 onjecieu 10 uie proposal of the Consulate of the U. S. At St. Johns, P. R. Feb. 15th, 1832. All masters of vessels comins to this Island will, tor the luturejarovidc themselves with clean bills ot TT i.i . ' - ... . .... neaitn, otherwise they will be subjected to a rigorous quarantine. The bills ot Health should oe certmeu S. MASON, Consul. 'onterence to destroy fortresses which had ohce been FROM LISBON. The ship Plato, at Phi- L-M3 Dronertv of Fmnc without dfstrnvinn. I ladnlnhin. cUorl T :i IRtVi ! , . i j f . J unlet; I I -7 w.i4iitvi 11 will JjlSUUH vl 11 ikix iwhi Ttchhad been raiBed against her ; and had said that The Editors of the Philadelphia Gazette learn guel has collec Del the invasion A. Sosavs ihii Cnnripr 1 r'""uicuru' Aoout litty padres, ormonKs London rwir nf-tho 1-rtVi etc, thntk mnrior m convent nearlv fiftv. miles from Lisbon 'rived in Paris on tkr. 15th. annonncino- that both were under arms and exercisinff dailv. with a m O . J ITJ -T I ' .1 . . O .' ' i ii..n 4 L - 1 1 l V : j 1 VIF.W II 1 1 1 (Yin I O lr in r,i A J ; .11 .-.uw aim vusinau vaDinets naa ueiermmea j - --v ttiu.mvir earmiv niasier. 1 J latity the Treatv of Conference: ankl as the I Uon 31iguel was httinn- nut twn Uno f V.nttl. ,M! ,V . : 'V; in; led to do so, but with aeon- snips; erecting torts about Lisbon, and ma , . k - .liuugiii impossible that the ratjhcations King ev 1 if 1 possible that the ratjhcations King evcrv preparation to rpsit tVi. nmv tr.e dist, trie time lcl. but Capt. V. -aye he saw Don Miguc! a day or two ! Removal of Indians. The Secretary qf War ina administration, the ultimate advantages of which! Clnunfii Cmirt nf Plana nnrl Otiinfon .Ci.,'n Parmrt lofclir rtmmnni(otvl hv th PrPSldpnt tfl l Oil- TV' . a. 11 1. : J I Tl 1 i-ri . X. gress, states that according to the best estimate that incalculable. The John Adams is the sloop Dexter Burns i can be made, the number ot Indians who nave emi- , . .fif1 rjommoHnrfl PortPr to vs. S Orimnal Attachment. grated to the t territory appropriated to them, west on nforti,nMrfv. wM Jacob J. Doty S the State ot Missouri and Arkansas i erritory r- - ; - , - - - , - TTT appearing to the satisfaction ofthe Court, dyu, ot wnom ouuuare onocraws, oow. vu 7. ' " ;V U lhat thft TTnAi J -Wtant of ' - 111. , . . .1 t IhIC f 1 T n " Mt t ti nr ft nnhflQtlflTl TM. K ckaDooa. and the rest beionmncr to various smaller bv this disease, on changing: the climate, and y uc,cu V101 y"rr A trJKoo ThA nnmhAr nf TnHinn smith of Michigan Mannrr thn chJr. htr ViolfK wre made lor six weeks m the North Carolina en whn harp iirtt nmiorntpfl he. estimates to be 30,450, 1 1 . nnA i mn.r Vx kki,f ,kl tinel, that said defendant appear oelore inc Vxx-XoVa sober and cleanly habits of her officers and ourt of P13 a Qter Sessions of Onslow ans 4000, Miamis 1000 and Wyandots 450. The 4. . f, . 4 .4 Countv. at the Court Ilouse in Onslow, on the ' - .If rf XA. . 1 I I l 1 . Mlll'.r LI II I I I .? I.I I I ill. I I I II III I If H I 1 II. I K I J ' temtory wh5 tl to .' bcen uncommon. strikin' at first, Monday of May next, and replevy or plea uiese iriDus is cbumaicu iiLcv... xvv- ,uu..u.. . . : ... Itrt i',0 ry Tnnimipnf final will DC renuureu' . . . i v f "II. I 1 I t.I.vtf n lfl14 Tl n oc IT lima OVtoinorilA n In ovn .uuui v V tiv. - - acres ot which about ou minions nave oeeu aireanj imcmjfcioin-v o unomauiu m a. migc allotted to eight tribes of Indians. Boston D. Adv. body omen, among whom it has been hereto- lore encouraged it may be said, bv law. the to issue, or Judgment against him. Attest, DAVID W. SANDERS, Clerk. Important to Sihv Owners. In the Supreme ExftCtitive has undertaken, a rp iti i -! c t i . I ' Judicial oourt, now noiaen uy vxuei yu utc practical and pervading, for the suecess of mLms cuy, aiimipur we are sure, all rational men will be cided yesterday, so far as the verdict of the jury goes, grateful. The temperance societies can sel- Thflcn , woo KrrxnfTht -arrfiinKt n I iPniltV rraiicn rilOl. uui. iuuimuuuis. XilC musk cii- to recover the damages resulting from the loss of the lightened zeal, and constant endeavors of self- Spanish Retch Isabella, aiiegea to nave uceu ucu- creaieu associations, tnougn oy no means inei- crentlv mn ashore on the Minot rocks, off Cohasset, some months since, said Deputy Branch Pilot being then on board. There was a thorough and patient investigation into all the facts in the case. The case was f ully argued by the counsel, and the jury were very lucidly and ably charged by mei jusuce ouaw fectual, can accomplish but little, compared with the radical action of government, when it may be lawfully applied to masses of men under its control. In the instance m question there was no force used. The sailor is Th! vwAr wc for ft!72 92 in favorof the Plaintiff sented with an option : instead of the seduc -A. ft -J A V AW W I M . and against the Pilot. tion ol strong drink placed beiore uuu Some questions oi law have oeen saveu ior me ae- aay, he is told that he may nave me cub y , to await in monev if he will and he accepts iu uauV dpliorhtft 1 m rnntPmnlate the measures ana me r.ision of the whole Court in March next Trhi.h th mw Ktnds continued. Boston Advertiser. .i end of this great improvement in tne morai, a ui.u Sr ioand valuable class of men, John Holmes, of Maine. The National Intelligen- f , . , n blf authorities cannot be too vf o must be incurable m the perver sions of -faction, who will not confess, that by w milrl and salutary regimen, those to whom the administration is now entrusted, have iu-j cer of Saturdav contains a , long address trom this notorious Senator, declining a re-election!! A well bred dog walks out when he sees preparations makinsr to kick him out. lhe state of Maine is a strensr Jackson state. Bait , Rev MAtfSIOW HOUSE, WASHINGTON, N. C. The subscriber has taken possession ,i ii i. j j c i ol mat wen nuuwu auu cuumiuuious lf L stand, the Mansion Hotel, for a loner time hitherto occupied Dy, Mr. .Lerov. He in tends to keep a HOUSE OF ENTERTAIN MENT, where strangers, transient or resident persons, can be accommodated in a stylet and manner equal to his best abilities, and thestate- pre- o( the market in ttis town. A desire to pro-: . j..-I'mote the comfort of his quests, and tr thm every reasonable satisfaction, while thev remain under his roof, he trusts will alwava distinguish his conduct towards them. His stanies are well furnished with provender, and persons travelling oy private conveyance, can rely on him, that their horses shall be carefully (cd land properly attended to. private families, travelling, this Way, will b& accommodated with board and retired rboms or separate apartments. SAMUEL VINE9." Washington, Feb. 10, 1832.