rn m 'XWK LIBERTY, TH? CONSTITUTION CMOS. if NEWBEBN: FRIDAY iv o or nloail to learn bevW N-wbern and Bea.fort, will eo into open. on to-n.orrmv. -The Sup nU ! the Post Or lice at 7 o'clock, A. M. t i -t wp called the public attention to the ex In oqr hst necaur . ertions which were making in Duplin and Sampson Counties to establish a Stage Line from Fayette ville to Jones's, in Jones County, to intersect at the latter place the regular line from Newbern to Wilmington. Sensible that the route via Newbern from Norfolk, hv din proposed- line, would be improved, our citizens, tin Icrstnnd, are .about to unite, with those of Pu l n ') it I Sampson in gettingup a, memorial on the . i" subject. (jnpt. J. L. Smith, of the Engineer Corps, under vrhos-1 superintendence Fort Macon has been nearly compered, is transferred to the public service at Bos t,n. " He is succeeded at Fort Macon by Lieut. Oo.gr Dutton, of the same corps- Our readers are referred toour advertising columns lor a notice of the Lottery proposed to be drawn in Knistuii for the building of a Free R:ver. Although we are not advocates lor lotteries, .-,.! wenrn for Free Rn.Jn-ps. and rjarticuhulv when 'L.r,: . i:,,(l.n..,.,0,ifnh,K,i;!f ivfll hrinc Tff LH milt, im I'm: iniinm-u -f- " ' t u i (T u u; seven miles nean-r to Kaieigh, and cut oil tne v.orst portion of the road, viz. the heavy sand above ; Kmton. Our commercial and travelling friends are LrMedin the Bridge in question, and will, we ; 11 , . , , . ,., , , Ve, gemote the enterprise by their liberal purchase : -of tickets. j " rnu ; We ilid not witness the performance of the Thes-; vi:mj on Wednesday evening last, hut are informed . rrntleman who was present that the high ex-: pprtntions winch had been raised, were fully realized. ; vtny of the characters were sustained with uncom r1in abilitv, and elicited great applause. Dostriictive Fire ! United States' Treasury Department burnt ! The Public Building East of the President's Square, occupied as the Treasury Department, -was consu ,:ic! kv fire on the nioming of the 30th ult. .The fbl--"lovviiii? particulars of the occurrence are copied from the National Intelligencer :--c The fire was first disco vers! in the room adjoiivng that of the Chief Clerk of tin Department, usually known among the Clerks and. other officers by the name of Mr. T. Laub's Room. h is not known whether the fire originated in the rliwor the ceiling of the room, the whole being in a W;ize before any one approached it ; but no doulu appears to he entertained that the fire was accidental. The whole room was on fire before the alarm was j.veti; and until the alarm was given, even the watch walking the pavement in front of the Branch Bank ! near the spot) perceived nothing of the fire, (the building of the State Department interposing ) Eve ry exertion was made, as the people gathered to the t, finding that it would be;in vain to attempt ving the. hmlding, to rescue the books and papers of the several offices A great deal was saved, by the Clerks and other .citizens, considering the circum stance:?. It is hoped, indeed, that few books or pa pTs-of much consequence are destroyed. i - .1' the hooks and papers on the ground floor are be- h-eve I to have been save'd (in great disorder of course) ntvl all those in the third story were destroyed." Of the books and papers in the apartments of the second story, much the rreater nart were saved. Hie offices on the first floor, the books of which arc :avet were those of the Register of the Treasury, ,the Treasurer, and the First Auditor. On the second tkwr, nearly all the books of the-First Comptroller, whose office occupied the greater number of the rooms, u:p saved, and a part of those belonging to the office the Secretary of the Treasury, in whose immediate apartments the fire was first discovered. Of tle offices connected with the Treasury Depart Jient, several of the most extensive, are kept in other oiuLiings than that destroyed, and are o course en viz: lhof;e ol'th(J Second Comptroller, Se cond, Third, Fourth and -Ffih Auditors, and the So lictor of the Treasury. The papers destroyed were many of them obsolete, and almost all oi a date prior to "1820. The most iuu papers .lestrove.l WfM... nurh-i rc? f bn 1 Wchwiii fi t1le 'reasury Department, I " "as kept m the roomivherein thtf fireoiiginated. ! 77ie Chol lu ' - oera at Havana. An arrival at Balti-, ?re from Havana, brings advices to the 24th of ' ilarch. They represent the nroore nftho ! -u'y appalling From o7,k i r" , thp r. , . i r-euruary mi , A H 711 l" - U.' .1 i ..uuiLii, jicc in ovsand (1,000 whites, and ' Slacks,) had die( of the disease and on the i Z 8a,l,n5 of ,;,e F M hundred ? are8T ' "aVe bee" taken "A- "early u,,m" been buried each rlav Cnr !'-.. : ' 1 ne Captain General has is- .'1 V'lS nrol!rt..-.t.. rr. , ' 1111 ie arm ery shall he f nre. I he Board of Health nf ,0. : , ... riealtn oi Havana hr uuruer,uiat all the nrt,IW c.kh u sunrise each ,v .u. , . n,JOU uc 11,LU ai at m os- Jed an order prohibit! n have is- mj3r the by the Apotheca- ,es) f any medicine :&r the cure of the uuaer the name of specifics Cholera. Several of the Apo- caries have offered to rUrn' v. pp- nnir tk q ' medicines gratisioi the same complaints which w u..rius ot the Hospitals i 5 pita ':a,,try, as to the ere urget patients being brought ,T '" in this m the last stage of the disorder TZ i V Arable. absolutely W4s !i,Winf ie"eT n the subi' h -Pied from Daitimore .American. "ThfPi UHatana' March 23d, 1833. n"nercial h0. brokers, cart & . .;. ' ' aeu's. puWcklv knovn. " 0! but it i, euppoj ' : - ' ! " ', ' f c that tne new mir uj oiages v uui pcnuiuuu go outside the walls, lest they should discover the j mortality. One individual has lost 50 out of 200 j biavct?, ami ucaiiy me wnoie oiacK popujauou uaa been attacked. There are few persons, perhaps, who are aware of the enormou3 weight of the Mails dn some parts of the country. We have seen a statement of the Mails, and their weight which left IW York on the 3rd inst. and it consisted of three portmanteaus and twelve canvass bacrs weighing the enormous weight ot 3318 pounds. It is said the Christian Advocate alone weighed 1500 pounds. A letter from the New York office, accompanying the above statement says : " This is not only a light day with us ; but there "is forwarded every day, papers and packages by " two or three other mail J conveyances which are "not included; nor are the quarterly accounts inclu ded, which will weigh enormously." If, in addi tion to this load, Admiral Reeside has to drag with it several acres of the New Jersey soil, as the United States Gazette facetiously observed, we think he has an arduous task to perfom, and has some claims to the clemency of the editorial corps. t Movement of Troops.Eisht companies of the U. S. Troops at Charleston, are to return immediately to Fortress Monroe. Mr. Livingston. The following highly compli mentary article in relation to Mr. Livingston ''s trans lated from the Peruvian Mercury, of the 10th of November last. Bait. Repub. copy from the papers of the United Provinces, a decree of'the supreme government of Central Ame rica, highly honorable to its enlightened condition. The adoption of a penal code esteemed by the most enlightened men of both hemispheres as one which approaches nearer to perfection than any known in , . i I ,l I the present day, is a step which may cause the people to a(ivmice vory f.ir in civilization and morality. T! e respectable author of that work, Edward Livingston, although born in New York, has been for twenty-five ar.s. a "ifzen of New Orleans, in the State of Louisiana. He has sp -:it forty vears of his life in the (lii3rh;trre of lort y homr ftlIlctiongj in which he ha distinguished himself bv his superior talents. At present he is the principal Secretary under the trove rn men t of the United States. In virtu of a resolution of the Legislature of V"li,S,lim' vmgsiori composen a iew years Hs anWpd Kv thp nPW .,tL nr fVntml Amo rica ; a work which has produced a profound sensa tion among all civilized nations, and which will doubtless place the name of its author in the cata logue of the most eminent jurists and legislators. FOR THE SENTINEL. GOETHE. Germany was the ancient seed-ground of Europe. The bold and athletic, savages who roamed over her vast plains, and lurked among her frowning forest, in the days of Caesar and Tacitus, were invincible even by the regular and solid attacks, of the legions which bore the standards of the world's mistress; theypreserved their civil and religions institutions, in soite ot the arms and enticing corruptions ot Koman ambition and luxury, and filially assisted in theover- ui row oi uie imperial cay . i ne leeoie uouus which knitted together the German tribes the relation, be tween the chief and his followers the partition of tfralerritorial as well as conquered lands the ties of feaTtythe penalties of unfaithfulness, and in fact, all that rude system ot laws by whose -prescription they were governed, were the inchoate elements of the civilized and extensive systems, which at this day regulate the domestic intercourse of the Euro pean nations. Another period has arrived, when Germany after a long night of darkness, bigotry, superstition, dis traction and suffering, has by the unrivalled genius of one man, hecome. the day-star of a new literature, the founder of a new empire over the heart. More glorious is this pre-eminence in the dominion over the heart than that over the actions of men, for the heart is the fountain, action the brawling stream. And this man did indeed look with clear eye into the depths of the souK his works show it, and they lie not for take but a small portion of the stream which issued from his mind and you will behold your own heart and your heart's deep feelings, reflected from the eternal mirror. "Our age has produced three wonderful men Goethe, Napoleon and myself and ot these three, Uoethe is the greatest"- -So said Byron, and so will all say one day. Napoleon's memory like his existence, resembles a "gun-powder explosion" an immense destruction, -a great noise, smoke infinite, and lo ail is clear ! Byron wrote his own epitaph unconsciously, when he wrote When Fame's shrill trump hath blown its loudest blast, Though long the sound, the echo dies at last, And glory, like the Phoenix in her fires; Exhales its odours, blazes, and expires. The voice of his complaint rose in air; loud, long uniform, until the feve; ceased with life. His me mory too is like his poetry, wonderfully personal--he was admired idolized as Byron- -but he is no more, 1 r A ro n'- luc fill onJ 1"wa rtij . r- i r( -v-v-.f Mi fir xr ! 1 1 sit in judgment over him as a poet. Goethe was first in time, as well as precedence. Eighty-three years aS,)) ue was Dorn m Frankfort on the Maine. During his early years, he lived in' a society ex- temely different from that which exist? at present in Europe. All the avenues to fair and honorable dis tinction were blocked up by stiff, antjquated, musty, tormahty an unmeaning inppery, an inane repeti- .--.. ' . tion of useless folly, was all the mind could feed on, tne German language (according to the best ac counts) was a clashing ana mixen iargon, coniusea and discordant, the manners ot society made it like an old sickly pruile, the heart oi the world was hollow and sick, and all nobler natures looked forth through the deep-night, and sighed lor day-break. This was a moral night, anil the only light which could relume the world, must proceed from mind. And then, just as the cry of the priest is heard from the temple, calling upon the waking world to wor ship the one God, so the voice of Goethe was raised from the grand edifice lie himself had raised. And it was the voice of a deep love, coming from the un- r.-xi : i i- . ... j : iatnomanie sout, oi atiection insatiate ana msatia- ble, which lamenteu its hard fate,which sought not 10 .ompassion' and whose only solace was tnat last relief of man, communication of its erief. The most celebrated of his early productions, the Sor rows of Werter is the most renowned of alibis works in our country tl rough the medium of a miserable watery translation. This was written in four weeks, and published in his twenty-third year. The Pil grimage of Childe Harold excited not a greater sen sation that this short work did among the literary of Germany. Imitations were attempted in a thousand quarters, with both pens and pistols, scribblers scribbled ontrageously, young men shot themselves, young ladies slept (some of them the long sleep) with it under their pillows, and people were "about to run stark crazy with sentiment, until the author by some well timed ridicule and succeeding productions, stopped the iingle or set it another tune. This work which has been said to, consist of u groans from theJ v :om -uropej" ontaine? its ceienrny oy neuig ' journal of the feelings of the time. The real j 7aZZJ u , wer a?utely cJ?oaked b' j fRS frirm'i lit r nt stv.iptv ' mPIl could not express their nlafriAc Tooling fnikfpar thev might transgress the bounds which had been dravn around their humble being. The Sorrows of Wcr ter expressed their thoughts and gave them vent, but the unfortunate propensities of the world carried Jjs s.Pir 100 far, even to extragavance. Here then decidedly was struck out a new path in literature nay, we may say here was first discovered the pri mary source of all poetry, which is the expression of leehng. We will not go so far as to say that this performance has been " theorigiii whence were de rived most of the works which have followed it," but it is certain that here first was opened that field of imagination, in which the great works of Schiller and Byron afterwards flourished so admirably. At the present moment, perhaps we cannot enter into the taste of the true merits of this little romance, the very qualities which made it the rage when first published, now tend to obscure it, for it is a domestic narration closely connected with the manners of the time, and its strongest passion is engrafted on private incidents: thus differing from exnansive poetry which deals in universal ideas and mingles with important circumstances. Shortly after this, Goethe was invi ted hy the Duke of Saxe Weimar to reside at his court, where he was subsequently dignified with the highest offices and titles, a petty prince could bestow. ! The mind of our author, now began to undergo a great change the storm had subsided the wrecks cast around by the conflicting elements of passion, were drifted away in the receding flood, and what remained firm, had been well tried and was sure. Gleams of ruddy light began to tinge the fly ing tempest-clouds with cheerful presage, and ere noon, the unextinguishable luminary was ri ding high and brilliant through the clear realms of heaven. And now slowly and with exquisite art, was bui't up an unrivalled mind; vast, wonderful, beautifully proportioned. A mind which had a tone and an echo correspondent to every strong passion, every slightest emotion a mirror which reflected alike the rolling fury of the far thunderstorm, and the gentle wavings of the violet upon the shore of the breezy lake. It was a whole mind, which looked upon life with a just eye, whose equilibrium was never unbalanced by an undue preponderance, a mind which had unsolved much of the great mys tery, and wished to comfort others who groped in doubt. This is the great excellence which distinguishes him from and above all poets that ever existed. The deep, calm, sympathy, which pervades every line he has written, the universality of his powers, for he has excelled in every species of imaginative writing, the wonderful originality, and yet so true to na ture that we know we have felt before what is said, but never until now saw it stamped in living impe rishable characters, the loving reflection which gilds it also with more than golden tints, these are the features of this great man's genius. His style is various, and shadowed forth with an imperceptible coloring which changes, hut still somehow leaves it visibly the. same It resembles a gently flowing ri ver, on whose bosom softly gliding, we pass through numberless alternations of light and shade harmoni ously blending. It is well known how lamentably Germany has been disunited, and her strength dissipated. So small are her principalities that there is nothing like State pride among them. There are no great events no mighty institutions, to concentrate affec tion and stimulate patriotism. Until comparatively a late period, their very language was continually ec.ommg more provincial, and intercourse more dif ficult. It may be said that they were united on no subject. The glorious effects of aristocracy were fully de monstrated. The manner of carrying a snuff box, and managing a handkerchief- -the struggle for the highest seat at a public dinner the portrait, of a great-uncle who once pulled of Prince H's shoethe night-cap ol a great-grand-mother who once actually wig j. iiuucs ii s tremens, were 111c ssunifcia ui ' " ' most orave an rpvprpn. r.on tfrsnt on- -tho nnrcP - ... ui ;nuc aim imuuuticba iu tne biuifbi biuiucis in they were unanimouns. viz: to ransack the pockets,! and despise the persons of their miserable subjects, j The Theatre alone was a favorite among all the j States. Their political constitution gives no scope for discussion at the bar, or in legislative halls it is anicuc them a maxim hp.ld sacred, that the neooh at the people mcerns of o- breed to wield havP nn rirrht to anv chnrP in thp nnnrarns nf n-n. vernment. nnrl consp nnpntlv nrpnins is forced to wield th twn alniiP. nnrl n ltno-Pt;Pr nmn imnmnativp nr didactic subjects. TheGermans are confessedly a people of deep reflection, acute sensibilities, and ex- traordinary industry. Their disposition, -not quite so phlegmatic as that of the Dutch or the English, is! much more conversible, and their energies when once aroused, are capable of effecting vast results. Such j is the dearth of rational amusement and public era-; ployment, that theatrical exibitions were among j them passionately loved. Anil indeed among all ; communities, this noble, this divine art, has al- j ways been a subject of interest and enjoyment. j The imitation of this our life in a scene of fanciful j and ingenious arrangement- the condensation of all j that is terrible in passion into a moment of absorb- j ing captivation the language of the soul in circum- f stances of elevation and grandeur the cunning ; touches of satire leading through smiles to reform, combine to render the theatre one of the most useful j and attractive of amusemeets. j At the time when Goethe was reaching manhood, all Germany wassighing fora national theatre. 1 ransla - tions and some imperfect German performanees were all they could afford: puppets and rope dancers sup-, plied the void. The majority of his works were con sequently of a dramatic character. H:s first WasGotz of the Iron hand, the principalcharacter of which is an old knight of the feudal ages, a picture of firmness, restlessness and daring. Egmont succeeded his Wer ter and was eminently successful. But it was that second stage of his mind of which we have spoken, in which he produced his most celebrated and jjerfect works. During this period was written his W ilhelm Meister, a novel complete ly German and unlike any thing produced either before or since. Touches of the most sublimated poesy run "like, a thread of gold" through the work; whilst reflections of the most search ing acuteness on life, character, and mind, make it a long discourse calculated to foster and perfect our mental cultivation. His three unrivalled dramas are Iphigenia, Tasso, aud Faust The Iphigenia of Go ethe is represented as a perfect composition, chaste, classic, grand, and meditative. It is u a new song from Greece" surpassing (to modern taste) all that Greece or Rome ever produced. No violent burst of passion, no feverish excitement ; all its abounding imagery is conceived in the .very essence of purity, and when the mind turns from its perusal the all-1 beautiful rises in calmness from its depths, and the sensation produced is like that which follows the view of some finished statue, simple in its marble grandeur. His Tasso is a tale of love, told in numbers of full .and glowing harmony. Faust, is the most wonderful production of modern times. A man of Titanian mind who has .attained by magic art more know ledge than others sigh for, feels with the Grecian sage "All that we know is, nothing can be known," and longs for unattainable attainments. His vain struggles drive him to the brink of despair, but just as he is about to quaff the fatal potion, Mephistopheles the Prince of Darkness, steps in and persuades him to betake himself to sensual enjoyment, and promises for a certain consideration, to obtain for him every thing he may wish. He accepts the bargain without jpakin deed of. trust. ucouia i once Uedown with heart untroubled Even for one moment feel mv heart at rest ' 1 care not lf the next behold my ruin". . - Be this our har(Tf!rf If ever I at any moment say . " Fair visions linger," ."Oh how beautifuP.' Or words like these ; then throw me into fetters Then will'ngly do I consent to perish, 1 . Then may the death-bell peal its heavy notes Then is tny service at an end, and then ' The clock may cease to strike, the hand to move, For me, be time then past away forever. And then succeeds a tale of varied and magic im agery, and told in unrivalled verse. Mephistopheles although he is the devil, sticks to his bargain like an honest devil (thereby setting a praiseworthy exam ple) but by his whisperings and inuehdos constantly racks the conscience of Faust) and poisons every de light Terror and delight, laughter and grief, alter nate with astonishing vividness throughout, until the drama suddenly breaks, leaving us to draw the quite sure conclusion, that the Evil Sprit shortly receives his profits from the bargain. From this Drama there seems to be but little doubt that Byron drew the plan of his Manfred. Not that we accuse him of plagiarism, but we mean that the terrific grandeur of this poem seem to have impressed his mind with indelible ideas in his youth, and that afterwards he embodied them after his own manner in Manfred. If these two dramatic poems be compared, we shall have a pretty accurate idea of the two minds. The whole drift of Byron's poem is to throw a single char acter into the blackest perspective possible, he con centrates around him a cloud of pitchy darkness, illu minated by flashes of genius which show at once the sublimity of the incantation, and the stern despair of magician of the Alps, who in another dress means himself. But how different the German patriarch ! The springs of poetry and of nature seem completely at his will, the most unearthly tints of feeling bound living from his touch, we feel by his varied powers that he is truly a magician, though Faust is no selfish personification but is a breathing compound of all men's feeling. He throws a doubb light upon our existence Faust and Mephistopheles though contra- ! ry in disposition are evidently the two elements which "ompose that mystery, man.. Byron almost sickens us with melancholy. Goethe is constantly changing, and after charming us with an unexpected image, seems to delight in throwing it down ami calling up another still more unexpected. It seems strange that these German masterpieces have never been translated into English. Schiller has been translated and translations are constantly making of trashbut Goethe the. idol of Germany, remains unknown. Some attempts have been made on Faust and Wilhelm Meister but it is said that they o-ive no i'ea of the original It will require no ------ j? ordinary p'jvver of conception to translate him just ly, but we may be allowed to hope that in an age ; when every species of literature is sought and encour aged, some one may be found, worthy of enriching our language with the products of this mastermind. Some passages from the Iphigenia translated by Mrs. Hemans will be found be'ow. B. Passages translated by Mrs. Hemans from the Iphijrerua of Croethe. Tlie joy of Fylades on hearing his native language 0 sweetest voice ! O blest familiar sound Of mother words, heard in the strangers land! 1 see the blue hills of my native shore The far blue hills again. Those cordial tones Befor the captive, bid them freshly rise, Forever welcome ! Oh by this deep joy Know the true son of Greece ! Exclamation of Iphigenia, on seeing her brother. O hear me ! look upon me ! How my heart After long desolation, now unfolds Unto this new delight. To kiss thy head Thou dearest, dearest one of al! on earth, To clasp thee with my arms, which were but thrown On the void winds before ! Oh give me way Give my soul's rapture way! The eternal fount Leaps not more brightly forth from rock to rock, Ut high farnassus, down the golden vale, rn, .1, . . - , . r , I mn trip Rfmnif mir h'irota nno linn Irnm mir haaW t , 7. J -u ""J "V "rait: . j ,, ,. vnnnH vw n Hn.l kl Orpst O mV hmthorl Thefateofmanandioomancomparedbylphigejua. JJan l).V the battles hour immortalized Mar ,all yet loaves hls name to living song. But of forsaken woman's countless tears, ! vv lla1 recks the after-world i l he x)ets voice ' Tells nought, of all the slow, sad, weary days, S n' ln JPS nights, through which the lonely ' Pured itself forth, consumed itself away S Alld long, Utlg PlghtS, through which the loiiely SOul passionate adjuringS, vain desires, ni useless weepings, for the early rhe lovefl and vanished lnend. lost Longing of Orestes for repose. One draught from Lethe'sflood! reach me one draught! One last cool goblet, filled with dewy peace! Soon will the spasm of life departing, leave My bosom free! soon will my spirit flow Along the deep waves of forgetfulness, Calmly and silently. Away to you Ye dead, ye dwellers of the eternaljcloud, Take home the son of earth, and let him steep His o'ei worn senses ia your dim repose Forevermore ! Hark ! from the trembling leaves Mysterious whispers! Hark a rushing sound Sweeps through yon twilight depth. Ev'n now they come They throng to greet their guest. AndtcAo are they? Rejoicing each with each in stately joy As a king's children, gathered for the hour j Of some high festival ; Exultingly, And kindred-like, and god-like, on they pass, The filorious wandering shapes. Aired and young, Proud men, and regal women Lo ! my race, Mv sire's ancestral race! MARRIED, On Thursday 4th inst. at Swift Creek, in this County, by Nathamel Street, Esq. Mr. JOHIM BRYAN to Miss MARY L. ELLISON, daughter of1 Alderson Ellison, Esq. On 1 uesdav 2nd inst., mJ Green County, Mr. JOSEPH M. McKINNEY to Miss WINIFRED EDWARDS, daughter of Mr. Theoph. Edwards. PORT OF NEVVBERN. ARRIVED, Schr. Susan Mary, Snow, New York. " James Monroe, Ferguson, N Yori. " William Allen, Wadsworth, Bermuda. Sloop Portsmouth, Staples, N. Port R Island. CLEARED, Schr, Fanny, Mason, 1 Guadeloupe. April 10, Packet schr. Convoy, Ludlam, for N. Y. Cargo, 93 bales Cotton, 1325 bushels Corn, 225 brs. Turpentine, and 125 bacon Hams: by J.M.Granade, & Co. J SPRING AND SUMMER GOODS,, TTTTAS just opened a rich and beautiful Ll' variety of y SPUING AND SUMMER Of the most fashionable descriptions, which he will.sell at reduced priceg. April 5 1833, mt ce Has been removed to ihe building'? in front of the Sentinel Office, on Pollock Street. MERCHANT TAILOR, MAS the pleasure to Inform his customers arid the pniMick, that lie has just recei ved from' New York, by schooner Convoy. A HANDSOME AMORT O SPRI1VG AuY O S UMMER Among which are the jWovkrig : ( Super Green, Brown, and .Black CUAVE CAMBLET, -' Black BOMBAZISTE. 1 handsome assortment of Marseilles and Silk VESTINGS, With a variety ol Other articles suitable to the Season. April 12, 1833. ATTENTION! YOU will appear on Parade, on Saturday next, at half Dast 2 P. M. in front of St John's Lodge, equipped agreeably to the Regulations of the Com pany. By order ot the L-aptam, Z. -SLADE, 'ft April 12, 1833. , . : ; . SPANISH TOBACCO fnHE subscriber has on hand Spanish. To- 'bacco, Spanish and half Spanish Segars which he offers by retail upon moderate terqiK at his Store on Craven Street a few doors South of the Bank of Newbern. B. CERTAIN. April 5, 1833. SALT; bushels coarse Turk's Island SALT, received per British Schr. Two Sisters, now discharging, and for sale by J. M. GRANADE, & Co. Newbern, April 5th, 1833. FOR S A T P! Bannockburn, in Chatham County, A very healthy Summer Residence. !IIF1 There is a comfortable Dwelling '"Hi. House, good Out Buildings, and ex cellent water; 450 acres of Land capable vi producing Wheat, Corn or Tobacco, under a good fence. Choice Fruit Trees; a good Mill within half a mile which can grind at all times; about 20 acres of wheat now.gTowing. Stock of all kinds, which would be sold with the Plantation. It is 17 miles from Hilisboro 12 from Chapel Hill, and 10 from Tittsboro Also, a Tract of 225 acres of excellent Laml in Orange County, about 3 miles frofn the former, with very superior water. Apply to Col. MAURICE MOORE. Brunswick Co. or to Dr. WM. P. HORT, Wilmington. March 1833. LETTERS Remaining in the Newbern, Post Office?, April 1st, 1833. A Capt. A.Allen, Miss Maty AllenStcphcn A. Allen. ' B. Mrs. Mary Brown (2) James C. Bryan, Christopher Brooks, Capt. Timerlane Burt, (2) Silvester. Brown, (2) Stephen Butler, N. fit Brown, B. Backhouse, John N. Borang, Beni. Burdin, B. Bengwyn, Mrs. Eleanor Bell, V. L. Bell, James Beasley, M. Boriohmine JNathl. Babcock, (2.) - C. Richard Casey, George Carter, Philip M. Cuny, Dr. R. Cochrane, Stephen Chad wick', (2) George Cooper, L. Conard, Capt. Davjid W. Chadwick,Wm. M. Chiney, James Coal,(2) Duncan Cameron, Alfred Castle, Elijha' Cala- wav, jonn mourns. D. Daughety &, Webb, T. Drcgus, Craven Dickerson, J. Dormck. E. Silvanus Everson. F. Wm. C. Fox, R. R. Falford, Henry W. Fowler, Frilick &. Helme, Fred'k. Foscue, Mrs. Caroline b rater, John Freher, Mrs; Com fort Frasier. G. Mrs. Eliz dill, Mrs. Nancy tfrover, Wesley Gray, John Green, John S. Green,, Mrs". Maria Gaskill, Anson Gaskill, James Al fred Gan jan, Andrew Qildersieeve. , ' .Rev. Erasmus Hill, 2, Mrs. H. .Harvev, Wm. Holliday, James Howard, Wm. J. Hutch ins, Charles Holland, Charles Hickman, Wm. Hindes. . J. John Ives, Mrs. Elizabeth Jackson, Miss Julia Ann Jones, Miss Hancy Jones, Wrn. Jones .2, Wm. H. Jones 2, Henry Jones, Jona than Jones, jun. K.C. C. King, W. W. King. L. Lemuel I. Lane, Miss Carolines. Lane, Capt. Lee, Catharine Li wes, (2.) M. Benjamin Mason, Thomas Mason, Jas Merret, jun. Alexander Miller, Joseph Sfyers, B. Mackethan, Lucilla Moore, John McDaniel, Wm. D. Mangum, Capt. E. 3Ioore(2J Susan G. Morse, Junius A. Moore, Mrs Delitha .. Kenney, Andrew Mon'ton, Wm. Moore, Alfred Martin. . w . JV. Nehemiah NewaJi, jun, Jesse Noble, Mrs. Joseph Nelson, Samuel Nelson, Col. 'SV. Nelson. - . O.Dr. William Ormsbee. p'p. O. Picot, Wm. B. Pearce, Parmer fc Smith, Asa Powell, sen. Wra. B. Perkins. Capt. John Pike. H.Capl. Wm. Read, Mrs. Mary Rhem, Wm, Russe1, Jeremiah Roe, Luke Russell, D. Roberts, James P. Ryall, Walter J. Ramsey , James Robinson. 5. John Smith, Gilbert W. Strange, (2) Capt. James Seymour, (6) Oliver Sage, Tilman Salter, Sheriff of Craven County, Wm. Stewart. Jacob Stokely Augustus Scott, Stephen Scott, Joshua Scott, W. Stansley, Urban Sampson, Gideon M. Spragne, James Simpson, Mrs. Ann Swan. T. Mrs. Jane Turner, Josiah Tavlor. Ro bert Thompson, Cornelius Tarbpz. lY.George Washington, Matthew Woo, ten, Peter Waller, James Wade, Hardy Wtof ford, L. Worrick, John Wilson, Major Wilhj, Mr Fli7QKotkWl,;,n nT Williamson, J. Wilkins, Beckton Walki, Stephen THOMAS WATSON, P. M. ie om