-1"V -Y S ORT ' A lO li IN A S BNTI X'HS'L ... - . . 1 WW "(V TV LIBERTY. TB?. CONSTITUTION w.-mw.i. THE SEXTIEL XEWBEUN : FRIDAY. JUNE l", 132. The Convention of the" Protestant Episcopal Church of this Diocese, assembled at Edenton, on Thursday riic I7th of Ma-, md continued for four days. Fears were entertained that the ill health of Bisiiop Ives would incapacitate him for performing his official duties ; btft the visitors were agreeably disappointed in perceiving the increased vigour with which he sus taiiwl them. Twelve ministers were present, whose parochial reports gave evidence of the progress-ng prosperity of the tUhurch. The kindness and hospi tality of the, citizens of Edenton were of the most cardial nature, and left a deep impression open the niimUof all who had the happiness of witnessing THE VICE PRESIDENCY. It will Lc seen that the Delegates- representing Uic several States : of the Union, have unanimously concurred in the nomination of Mr. VAN BE REN fir the Vice Presidency, and that, contrary to the wishes of some, and the fears of others, this result owes its accom plishment tolhc disinterccted patriotism and eingle ness of purpose, of the gentlemen com posing the Con vention. The candidates for the two highest offices tinder our government, are now fully before the Peo ple. The opposition to their election, will be fierce and inveterate-;" and some who have hitherto acted with the Republican party, will co-operate with the friends of the Federal candidates. Yet, notwith standing this defection, a vast majority of our party, yielding to the impulses of 'principle, will sustain the common cause, and again ensure the triumph of the People's candidates. The following excellent re narks on this subject, are copied from the New York Mercantile Advertiser ot Saturday : Yes terday wc place ! at the head cf our paper, the names efthe regularly nominated Candidates of the i 'erao rratic Republican Paty for the two highest otfuet in the gift of the peopl and there they shall remain till the election ia over. Gen Jackson and Martin Van Buren, are the choice ot a large majority of the people their disinterested patriotism, their unbend ing integrity, and their unceasing exertions to ad vance the general good of uur republic, an 1 maintain the great-name which she holds in the scale of na tions, have endeared them to their countrymen. True, there is an opposition for to what measure or man has taere not ocen opposition but the opposition against our administration, U not so much of the peo pie as of designing and ambitious politicians, who, re-1 iraf dlcss of ali taws that should actuate honest men, etnve more for power than for the general good of the country. - ' General Jackson was elected not by politicians, but in despite of them :the loud voice of our virtuous ynoinaary, applauding his Roman-like virtues, exalted him to 'the highest office in their gift; he has morel than, exceeded all expectations and the people wil re-elect him to that high station, the duties of whichj he has performed with eo muc h honor to himself, an advantage to the country. We have said that the opposition is of politicians who would lead the people all slaves to the. olls not of the people themselves. That this is true, may be- shown in a very few words. We have seen dis ; appointed men of the most opposite qualities, forgetr tibg all previous animosities; with principles as ditferf out tis fire and water, linking themselves together like brothers in the desperate hop i of success in their r.n-republican crusade of defeating the wishes of the people, and seating themselves in a place for which the people have pronounced them disqualified we have seen tdiis at " Barbacucs" at the polls-; yea, even ik i he very Senate Chamber. These politicians, whose tin happiness and content; but let not the democracy be inactive, for the opposition will still leave no means bntried to seek power. Too secure in an overwhel- teiftg majority, we should not exhibit apathy, but by all honorable means, persevere in the good cause. The Tariff, The Report of Mr. Adams, chair man of the Committee of Manufactures, was made to the House of Representatives, on Wednesday last. The Report is accompanied by a Bill, the details ol which vary esspRti ally from those contained m that submitted by the Secretary of the Treasury. Alter the presentation of the Rport and Bill, Mr. J. b. Lah- bour, a member of the Committee on Manufactures, rose and said " It was incumbent on him to make an explanatory remark in consequence of his peculiar position in the Committee, which had been charged with the settle ment of this the most distracting of all the questions before the House- Upon some material points of this question, the Committee was divided in the propor tion of six to one. Under such circumstances, he had resoJ v-d to carry into the deliberations of the Commit tee, the most perftct spirit of compromise which was consistent with those constitutional principles which througlrout his political life he had regarded ns his sheet anchor. In the Committee a correspondent feeling hid been expressed and by no individual more distinctly than by the distinguished gentleman fmm Massachusetts (Mr. Adams.) But when the committee came loathe consideration of practical points they "Tiad found their opinions widely apart from each other. With rnar?y ol the sentiments con tained in the report he not only agreed, but felt grate ful to the chairman of the committee for the force with which they were expressed. But with the general principles of that report he felt compelled to express his decided disapprobation. Those principles were not drawn from the limited powers given to this go vernment by the constitution but from the general grounds of the social compact. With reference to the able hill reported to the house by the Secretary of. the Treasury. He had not been satisfied with that bill he thought it concealed much exceptionable matter that did not appear on its surface but under all cir cumstances lie had thought if would be better to take it with ail its evils than Hazard the occurrence of far greater evils. With these remarks upon the princi ples of the report and hill, he would not detain the House further, until the subject should come up regu larly for discussion. The FROM OUR CORRESPONDENT. "Washington Cmr, May 18 Dear Sir, Congress is now immersed in the very (Kjpth of public business. With the exception of the affair, at once trifling and tedious, of tie Wiscasset Inspector, all the impediments to the progress of the bills before the House, appear to be removed. The apportionment bill, (the passage of which, the Con stitution itself renders imperative this Session) was disposed of yesterday ; and to-day, thei Internal Im provement appropriation bill has been jordercd to. a third reading, which is considered equivalent to its passage. The question was carried by; a very la rge majority. Your Ocracock appropriation of $22,500, is included in it. j An attempt was made yesterday, for; the appoint ment of a select committee to enquire into the cir cumstances attending an attack made by a frantic desperado upon a member of Congress, but it was promptly negatived, the sense of the Hduse being de cidedly against any thing which can now interpose an obstacle to the discussion of the weighty and i m portant matters awaiting their consideration. The resolution. will be assuredly offered again, but it will again be as assuredly rejected. On Wednesday, the day 1 presume that you will receive this, the great question of, the Tariff, comes on ; a warm and vehement debate will take place Tlieoppositionpapersof thiscity, call the Baltimore I li&eiy cctftial for the 'safety of the 'Bill that euch Convention (and it seems as if by a preconcerted un-1 should he the case. Fotir of the Peers; who voted una reading, nave.aeciareo yiai u an end, and there may be many others thr nrinrintea ol the Bill have been adopted, will require only modifications in the details. Still, in order to tranquillize the country, and make derstandwg) andicuW iUrcer very iitfrciy, tl- i against tuc second reading, have declared that their ucuii.ii , uuv u ayu. t, it is sucix a one, that the catas-1 opposition i? at an end, and there may dc many oxners trophe m the closing scene will make ybu all weep, whef, now thti the principles of the Bill have; beei notwithstanding your bullying andWusterinu. -Mer i -i We learn an important fad, and it is just as irue as opposition facts generally arc. that the Baltimore Convention was "packed" for the very purpose of carrying Mr. Van Buren to the Vice Presidency on the shoulders of Gen. Jackson. This is ?n admirable specimen of opposition coniplimcnt and respect to a people, than whom none wiser, braver, o? freer exist Whit'. 283 persons (many of them among the very first men in the land) chosen bv the people of twenty-four states, "packed" to do the raiding cf another. The thought is preposterous. a T the heasufc.safe,h may bethouglit prudent to Creale a tew Feers. Courier. .. . ' ..i. Of the Peers who, in October, oted eerauistthe oiji. the following voted on SaMrdav in its favor : Lord Coventry, Bradford, Taiikt rvillc, Ilarrowby, Gage: De Hoos, Northwick. RavcKsworth, lelros, (Had d'n?ton) WhamclrTe, Calthiop. Bishops Bath ai:d "pail-incoIiijUanQo. he following Pcci, who did v t vote on the las occasion, voted on the present with M.:nistere: : Arcli bittoAork Bishop l.rxi,lnn fir Davids Worcrf.- FROM FRANCE. By .the arrival at New York of the packet h-p -Havre, from Havre, whence; she sailed n the 1 1th April, the Editors of the Mercantile Advertiser have received files of Paris papers to the 10th, and Havre to the 11th April, inclusive. ter--Lords Middieton, Gambier, Stamho? OTCed, fome. Stradbrooke, Moray, Crewe. The following Peers, who votedimiint'lhDforCfer i billjj were absent on Friday ; Bishop Peterborougb 1 Loads Bath, 'St. GermRin's, Slrelmersdalc, GlaffiOv, w un. iut u.tt juiitc vikcs iiius unuer (late of the 10th; "Tlnr t nll f , - wv,iv,u, UltUUlCS upon it. I '.villadv-i.-eyou)iflcan,f.omiiiiietot;meotianiost exclusively tlie attention of all r'laws- any thing important that may o cur.! Attention is jit continues its ravages to an extent, exceedinr SETTLEMENT OF BELGIAN UUESTIOK i &ondov, April 19. Wc have at length the grafj fieairion of announcing that the Austrian and Pruslan Pleninotentvirics have exchanged ratifications wUb ; thejBritUh and French Plenipotentiaries. They mt late hour vesterdav even nrfnj;n r , ! ingl and at ten o'clock this important net took, place. alarming extent 1 he private correspondence veret the exchann t.ilc'ino. nlace until it coitld be done The Cholera was excited in no ordinary degree to forthcoming events. Saturday Evening, Mav 19. 7 ml The Senate sat to-day, for almost the first time du ring the present Session of Congress. I They have passed the great Pension's bill, and receded from bill just reported, he deemed it far more exception-jtiie amendment to the Apportionment bill of the j to southern views and southern leelings, thy n the j Hnncl , lurocanta;l. m;Ur ur. tation, therefore, is now fixed at 47,700, which will leave North Carolina her present number of Repre- sentativce. all anticipations. Each day the oflicil bulletin gives new cause of alarm. Almostg very one -.vhose business or whose relations! will permit, ire leaving the citv. Since yesterd Aity presents a very sorrowful appearance for some days past by 9 o'clock in the evening scarcely one person is to be seen in the streets. simultaneously with "Russia; but Lord Falmereton and Prince Talleyrand were firm, and the instruc tioiis to Baron Wesseaberg and Baron Bulow let 1 ihem no discretionary power. The' London Courier attributes the success of this question, to the passage of the second reading of the Reform Bill.' 4v tetter irom the Hague, dated Marcn ic, sayt-.-. mal decla ration of his Majesty has been tranj s resiguj11 nowledgtd ijao arr- leaving the city. Since yesterday at noon j miited to the London Conference; "he has nil this morning at 10 o'clock, the number of r. be sovereignty of Belgium, and has ackn new cases is 1075, and the deaths are 455. The s -vih Leopold.-' VV e are dchchted to see the spirit with whicn the iiajuse ol Commons takes up the political condition ot Pojand. The unanimity that prevails on the subject. . cyi,nu, ..a wicui. mdnt. ifcommunicated, will make the heartless tyrajx tci-iii-u, unu ,imu di nit; jiutiiMiai (ji rus-.,-aii-1 reribleon his throne Bell The other branch of Congress aloO hU been occu-1 Ion V The cholera, it appears, has not. been j ?lfast Chronicle, April 3 confined to the lowest class of citizens, but has attacked and carried off several persons of the jied in business of interest and importance. It was t i tirst rank. Sfvern nohleirspit. sntnp nt (nrvn United States Bank. The extreme length of the Re-orta which hve been made ut on the sub ject of the V. S. Ban'-, by no loss than three different members of the Committee, precludes the possibility of our publ'jins: them. Judge Clayton, of Geo-gia, submitted the Report of the m:jorify of the Committee and counter Reports have been :ha by Messrs. Adam? and MuDufHe. The most pT-ominent case of orru;)tion nppears to be that of the Courier & En quirer. At a time when there was a great pressure for money, and the notes of respectable merchants of Philadelphia, could not be discounted, we find the Bank loaning, upon the security of Webb & Noah, more than 50,000. We see, up to the time when these loans -were made, the Courier & Enquirer the loudest in its denunciations of that Institution ; but no sooner is the money of the Bank in the pockets of the consistent gentlemen who conduct that paper, than their hostility ceases, and they advocate its re newal under a modified charter. The statement at tempting to show the very flourishing condition of the affairs of the Courier & Enquirer, is paraded, to prove, that they were receiving a nett revenue per annum of $25,000 and yet, as a " bushier transac tion," they want a loan of 50,000 and that without responsible endorsements. Had it been a real bus:- a nees transaction, as is alleged, and the names of Webb &- Noah perfectly good for the amount lo-ncd by the Bank at Philadelphia,, why could not their nGfx-G have been discounted at some one of the nu merous Banks in New York, op at the U. S. Bank there ? It appears, too, that intimations were given to the President of the Bank, before the application for the loan, that Webb& Noah would advocate a mo dified charter. The Bank well knew the extensive circulation of the Courier & Enquirer, and the great influence' which its opposition would exercise against its interests, and it knew also that to silence its bat teries was an object of no incons;derale consequence T OBITUARY. I v A rcther Revolutionary Soldier gout. Died, in Johnston county, on the 20th of May, rtrtv 't 1 -irt T"T- A Cl TKT T71 T T I Un CUtk ..An.! triet of Column; but ,ho Internal Jmprovonum. araly are ,mong' ,he liSt of deaths. Among ?, f.JinB" "UM'toS; Appropriation hill was cahed up tor its tlurd reading,, the names we find Le Baron de! Monteville, ! ibrlt'.p independence of his country, which beincsc peer of France; Le Comte de Goethosqucl, al- j cured, he continued to venerate and maintain. -; A so a neer: M. Masset-Pnthev. rbief nf tho-di- i heilived. so he died perfectly reskmed tothewill.r! vision of war; the lady of Col. Chateau: Drs. Leroux and Petit, besides rnnyiother physi- : . ..fl . . nil 1 ! uan U17!"nu- xneaiarmseeins i -1 m meet in a blieaful eternity, where neral in Paris, as well in the hnst and most ; be no matf.-Communicated. airy quarters oi t'.e city, ns in those that aro more narrow, crowded and filthy." A committee of the Academy of Sciences at! 9 Paris, wras engaged in analyzing the air in pla- and a debate arose upon it, which took iup the atten tion of the House for almost the whole f the day. Mr. Speight commenced it by moving for a recon sideration of the vote by which on the jay before the bill had been ordered to a third reading. He very forcibly anrl pointedly said that there1 were many objects of national improvements enumerated in the bill for which appropriations ought to be made from the Public Treasury, but there were! others of an entirely different character. He proiessed himself hidMaker. His relict, now in "the 82d year of her age. is idmonished by her bodily infirmities that theisepa ratlion will be short, and that soon, through, divine PORT OP EfEWBEB.M'. to be a friend to Internal Imorovcment, las far as thev could be carried on for objects warranted by the of tb';se places. One physician thought ise bad Constitution, but beyond that sacred Sboundary hctlc tasle of copper in his mouth and many would not advance a single step. Mr. Hall of North w?re ?llt the malady was o wing to a ! ARRIVED, ? 5 ces where the cholera existed, it is said that! jUay SO, echr. Rebecca, Jones, G days from New a ferruginous taste has been noticed. in the airlVjprk, with merchandise to Jos. M. Granade & Co. r 1. (. Lot l mer cc Co., B. L. lloskms Co. and tlie Carolina opposed the bill altogether, on Constitutional grounds. It was, however, passed byj a vote consi derably smaller than that by which i was ordered to be engrossed . Wtasiiington Irving, Esq. after an absence of 17 years, arrived at New Yorkjon the 21st ult. in the ship Havre, from Havre. He is thrice welcome to his native land. 1 mineral poison issuing from the rcrth. Connecticut Senator. The Legislature of Connecticut, on Friday last, elected Nathan Smith, United States Senator, in jthe place of S. A. Foot, whose term of service! expires on the 4th of March next. . The ship Splendid, at New York, from Bre men, brings Bremen papers to April 19th, con taining London-and Paris dates each to the 13th, inclusive. . Paris, April 2. The Cholera still continues its ravages, but its intensity is a little abated. From Mpnday noon to yesterday, the nnmber of Fresh cases is 9S5, deaths 356. The Presi dent of the Council continues to grow better and better. The number of persons of note attacked con- ! tinues to augfment. Among: them is the Prince Casleleicala, the Neapolitan Ambassador, but his attacK 16 represented as not very serious. The sixteenth annual Convention of the Pro testant Episcopal Church for this idiocese, as sembled in St. Paul's Church, at Edenton, on)Perier, wife of Scipion Perier, brother inst. and continued to the1 Prime Minister, died yesterday; of chol Thursday the 17th following Monday. There were present the Bishop, nine Priests and three Deacons, and twenty seven Lay Delegates. Diyine service was performed two and three titles a day to large and attentive congregations,! who had as sembled there from different parts bf the State, and were kindly received and hospitably en tertained by the citizens of Edenton and its neighborhood. We hope the instructive and impressive sermons delivered on this occasion have had their desired' effect; andj like "bread cast upon the waters, may be gathjercd up after many davs." The Convention sermon was In the Spanish Ambassador's suit, some per sons have been attacked, and are dead. Madam brother to the era, as aR!'.r. Passengers Mr. Cash, and Mr. Lyon. Schr. Perseverence, Scott, New York-. CLEARED, May 28, ?chr. Pedee, Tolson, for New Yorkrtvfih fO bids. Turpentine, Do bales Cotton, and 5 M. H - Hhd. States. So' R'chr. Pirhdeblii: Balrirrnir. hichr Ludlum, Cawy, lowland, Philadelphia New York. Baltimore. Beaufort, May 2T. Arrived, brig Integrity, Watson, from New York, ballast, for a cargo of Lumber at the Steam Mil! lenoxvilic, . - ' Schr. Juliu9 Piinglc, Duncan. Horn Baltimore,, ji: blllast. -therefore, the merchants of Philadelphia, must patriotism is sell-aggrandizement, prophesied that if i iorego their claims for accommodation, and the ap- Gcnl. Jackson were elected President, "war, pesti- plicants from New York be attended to. Gloss this lencc andamine" would follow in his march. Ilk ' transaction over as they may, i can only be regarded was elected, and they are branded fake prophets. ; Dv all dispassionate and unprejudiced men, as a : We were told he was a murderer and a robber -! shameful direhction of duty and of principle on the (harsh terras these,) yet the people believed not the j part of the applicants, and no less discreditable to preached on Friday by the Bishop, with more foul slander, and elected Genl. Jackson. Finding j the Directors of the Bank. On this subject, the than bis accustomed force and eloquence. now, that such stories can not decievcthe people, nor i New York Jounrnal of Commerce holds the following . The Bishop's J ournal and the parochial and alienate their dep rooted affection from our venerable i language "If the flagrant features of this case (the Chief, we are now told that he is the adviser, the pro- j 1 an to the Courier & Enquirer) can be argued away, raoter and instigator of murdeie this is a falling off'hen may we be talked out of all our senses." And concludes, after exposing the story about $ 25,000 a year income, as follows: to be sure. When he was accused aa the principal, the people elected him; now, he is only the instirator, end the people will surelv re-elect him : The hue. . . , . wy luC unnoaiiiori nanpni in j elation to some recent an 1 unfortunate events at the j Capitol-thc slanders of the six-dollar-a-week-corres- pondents, and the agency ascribed by them to the President in these brawls, will not decievc any one .they are all weak inventions of the enemy, which .showing a pitiful lack of invention, recoil upon their own heads. T r ' When wc reflect a! moment that for upwards if i -i'rl fno !iL .1 -J n i I v ib, V.UUU uirce or iour short exceptions) the Democratic party has been triumphant, and under 5-s yy the wltole country has prospered in an unex ampled degree, in agriculture, commerce, manufac tory and the arts that wealth and prosperity have blessed our citizens that our population has rapidly .increased that the nation has the means of paying Jill its debts that where interminable forests grew, iaxurioas fields now yield: their fruits to the industri ous husbandman that our name is respected by all foreign nations, and the enterprizeof our merchants Appreciated " Far as beneath the Heaven, by sea-winds fanned, Floats the free banner of our native land." I When wc reflect a moment on all these blessincrs. hy should we think of a change ? - Why should the Patriotic democracy of the country yield the sway, to Q -iseontentented party, who under various names aad by various stratagems seek the ascendency? For "at t t or the desperate chance of something bet- "re cn they promise cs T9 Let missionary reports showed an unusual increase of the members ; the members baptized and con firmed, and those received to the communion, exceeding considerably that of any preceding J . Standing Committee for the ensuing year "It is in vain and worse than in vain to attempt Clcrgy. Rev. Wm. M. Green,! George AV. to nersuade ourselves into the plain fact, that the Freeman. Jos. H. Saunders. Laity. Walker President and Directors have not abused their trust Anderson, Esq., Gavin Hogg, Lsq. ina matter immediately hazardous to the best interests Delegates to the General Convention .Clcr- of the country. And we no not see how, as high- minded men and patriots, this community can listen to any proposition to recharter the Bank, while the present Direction is at the head of its affairs." Robert R. Reid, of Georgia, and John A. Cameron? of North Carolina, (at present, Consul at Vera Cruz) gy. nev. lieo. v . rreeman, y m. iu. urecu, Jno. K. Goodman, John Avery, j iaity. Ga vin Hogg, Duncan Cameron, Edward E. Win- slow, Geo. E. Spruill. Besides the ordinary business, the most im portant measure was the appointment of a com mittee of enquiry, respecting the establishment of a Theological and Classical School in the also M. Bisson, an ancient Prefect. M. Seguien, First President of the Court Royare, and seve ral members of the bar are ill, but it is hoped not seriously. The North West district of Pa ris continues less infected. The weather is till variable, and the heat of the atmosphere very changeable. A letter received this morn ing from Switzerland positively-contradicts the statement of the Cholera having appeared in Berne and Geneva. Paris, April 13. The number of new cases of Cholera during the 24 hours ending yester day noon, ,was 804; deaths 817. "Total cases from the beginning, o60; deaths 91. 1. Ihe convalescence of M. Piere continued, the news of which was spread to the Departments by telegraphic communication. Among tne vie- tims of the Cholera are mentioned M. Melville, Peer of France; the Marquis de Croix, also Peer; Gen. Goettosquet; M. Benoist, former Secretary of State; the celebrated Hatien Phy sician, M. Barrilla and M. Debruit, President of the Health Commission fori the District of Monterguil. The Vice President of the Cham ber, M. Segnier, is aiso dead, the Deputies M. Pages, General Lamarque, ihe Duke of Mo rency, son-in-law of Marshall Soult. The Cho lera was also raging in Troyee, Nemours, Be- gous, Reuil, Puteaux, and many Villages in the neighborhood ol Pans. T. he lower classes still attributed it to poisoning, and that the Cho lera had no existence. I i NOTICE. Tlic Pevrs in the Baptist CimrCli Will be rented this afternoon, at 4 o'clock. Pjersons wanting Pews, will please to attend, j Friday, June 1st, 1832. T ! FOR NEW YORK. Packet schooner Rebecca, Jone?. master. laying ct Upper Long Wharf, will sail on Sunday next For passage only, having good accommodations apply to the Captain on dard, or to JOS. M. GliAiAADK & Co, June 1st, 1R32. FLOUR, OZNABURGS, fcc. 44 bbls. West'n Canal Flour, 'Beach's red braftr do. do. 1C kDUl . 10 half bbls. do. 1 bale Scotch Onaburgs, 4 boxes Sperm Candles., fj bbls. Sperm Oil, CO loaves " Premium" Tabh 2 dozen CayenneJepper, Lee & Thompson'TBleaching. Landing from bchooner Rebecca, and llr sale l JOS. M. GRANADE t Co. June 1, IS32. OT7 NOTICE. , ILL be sold at the Plantation of tbelale ? V V llenrv Black, on Thursday the 7tli ot June, at 3 o'clock, about 20 or 3D head of CAT TLE, and 30 or 40 head of SHEEP at hh months credit. j The subscriber has for sale, a female-Calf it! the improved breed. ! ASA JOES S Newbern lay SStli 1S82. lmvp Krn nnnnintprl. with the. C.nnKent. of tht Spnafp I rr ' niocese. w Judges in the Territory of Florida. TKp MiinnariAs. 4 in nnmber. rave very In the Senate, on Wednesday, the bill to recharter favorable reports of their succesf ; and between ' J ' I-. r t .tr li I .... u ....... K A the Bank of the United States, was discussed byMr.J an? wcrecoHecieuoj umuiucu, u DaHas, and the subject was then posted until the P' L" " 7 Z.-.',, X r. I noi rC Princl rnn 1i norconc wprfi mntiriBPfl t I Utl J 1 x 14t.t3HlWU M. V y - Compliment to Mr. Livinsvton. The Guata- during the session of the convention, and malian Government, as a testimony of respect to the about the same number came forward, for the Hon. Edward Livinnn Krod- r stnto nrst time, to the communion. jCivery inuig was cunuunru "pm, ui unanimity. The next Convention will meet at Warren ton, on the last Wednesday in May, 1833. Elizabeth City Star. Washington, whose Penal Code it is proposed to adopt m that Republic, have directed a district in the North part of Guatemala, and also the chief town ol the district, to be called " Livingston." The Governor of Pennsylvania has signed a I "rucFiug me execution of the Spaniard uiixa, uu mursuay me iRt inst, Installed at Wilmington, on; Sabbath even ing the 13th inst. Rev. Thomas P. Hunt, as Bishop of the Presbyterian Church in that The U. S. shins Warren ami t a place. Sermon by the Kev. Henry A. Row- schooner Enterprize, under command ni" land 1 of Fayetteville. Charge to the Pastor I I itnr(TO l nri rrrc sai orl f-. Tl I and KfiOnie DV me XVev. ALEXANnFIR "irivitn nmt or. AM I ..wv.rw, wmwu 11UIU XVIII JdnPirft flFI I . i J - wuHtJ!tho30fh March for Bneno? Ayre. lofCKntw jV. C. Jovrrar. Late and important from Europe, From the New York Mercantile Advertiser of May fid. Passage of the Refor m Bill to n second reading in the House of Lords Adjustment of the Belgian Question, $ c The ship Josephine. Capt. Britten, arrived last evening from Belfast, bringing papers from that city to April 24th, and London to the 21st, for which we are indebted to our friend Capt. Thomas Bntton. PASSAGE OF THE. REFORM BILL. The question on the second reading of this bill was taken in the House of Lords at 7 o'clock in the morn ing of the 14th of April, and, was carried by a majori ty of 9 as follows : Contents Present, 128 Proxies, ST1&t Non-Contents Presenf, Proxies, Wn? Majority for the Second Reading, - - - ISUMJ. The bill was then read a second time, and on the motion of Earl Grey, it was ordered to be Committed on the first day after the recess. ; f The Irish Tithes Bill passed thc liotree of Lords on the 16th. bv a majority of 45. Avril 16. We may venture to sav mat mere will rraHE small Steam-Boat recently used as o I J. OWing JUlgl'lC Hi uv vjuupftiii .. 'Tht V.ntnno. is nf inhnrV Vvau on tne cjwobh. - jr,r er, on the high pressure principle, and in gQcuf order, with the exception of the boiler aficl furnaces, which require repajrs. The boat is of 30 tons burthen, timbered with lire oak anil1 cedar, and sheathed and fastened with! copper. ti. DUTTON, Lieut, of Engineer?. Newbern, X. C. May 29th, 1632. y, NOTTC1R -r Ehave the pleasure, of stating, for the infoi mation of the public, that the Bridge over Nuesc, 10 miles from Newbern, is rebuilt - and i!M good order; and that in a few days, thePrMge 4vcrwhVCreek, en the road leading to Vm Ham's Creek and Bay Rircrv - will M be in re; diness for crossing. SAMTTKL STREE1 ihr. ? srmall creation of Peers; but we crnsidcr i abpo-4 j June 1st, : I ; 4 I 1 1 i l ; ' St ,5 -j. 'j v 'f- I"! .1

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