BfIE IP JHL I5 A El 0IL ISTA S IE N T Hi .MIL. 1 -J to prescribe the miahsSf Tending Wc peopl iothU t CotiVclflion? ; n'wKaVpnnciplels this, except that they may, as the people's re presentatives, make recommendations for the sanction of the people t If they are limited aadaarictionedrtnen by what process can it be demonstrated, - that recommendations bestow . untintited powerwhen in their terms they are specific only ? Say that the Legislature has recommended t to the people,, a j Convention imthout limit,1 and they refused to sanction it, -bat immediately after it, they recommend a Convention wWi power-only, to abolish the 32nL Article of the Constitution, and this Te commendation is confirmed toy the people, and a convention accordingly assembled 1 Can hcrc be a doubt, that the. Convention is strict ly limited, and that they will not cannot ex fcced.thcirJboinds?, Say that those who pen ned iln& recommendation, timid and tealous of $owcr, superadded that upon the questions submitted to the Convention, their vote shall fce final; but if ;tlioy shall attempt to do more, then no act of thcrrs shall be valid and binding without the sunseoucnt ratification of a major ity of three fourths of the people, 44 or even the! unanimous assent of the polls. . duly taken by a vote at the poles within 30 days after the ad journment of the Convention.' Where, and what is the danger of such a Convention. But Aye are not left without the light of experience o guide .us on this interesting subject. Since hese governments, were formed and the means of conveniently i providing a limit wcro r thus furnished, it ha3 not been unusual vith-thc States to impose it. in some form. When the Federal Constitution was proposed to the people of the States for their acceptance, each State called a limited Convention ; these Con ventions had-no power to do more than to accept or reject the whole plan, as it was pro- "posed'i unless it was in cases where the Legis latures recommended that they might exercise certain other limited powers, and the people ratified it. New Yorlc, whose constitution was like ours Bileht as to the mode of reforming it, and expe rienced the same inconveniences from her rep resentation that arc now feft in North Carolina as well as other inconveniences, frori doubts entertained on another article of her Constitu tion. The Legislature recommended and the people approved (he calling of a convention in 1601 to remedy these evils, but the convention was limited to these powers and duties only. When the people of Virginia called a conven 4;on to revise their constitution, it was limited to the duly of framing the amendments they Icemed expedient or preparing a new consti tution, and submitting their work to be ap proved er rejected by these People at the polls ; o the convention regarded it and so they acted. The constitution of New Hampshire provides maia convention may oe canea every seven years to amend it ; but the powers of this con vcnlion are expressly limited by a proviso that jio alterations shall be valid until they are laid heforc the people and ratified by them. The People of Georgia hare elected delegates to a convention, winch is limited to specific duties imd is ordered to be organizedty administering an oath to the. members, that they will not at t empt to violate the boundaries jjrescribed for them. In our own State we have had two limited conventions since 1776, the one to con sider of the Federal Constitution and perma nency to locate the Seat of Government the other to reconsider the Federal Constitution end to give Faycttcrille the right of electing a member to the Assembly. But we 'will not pursue it further. No fair mind will demand iurther proof that it is consistent with both the theory and paactice of our covernmcnt that the People may limit a convention to specific .subjects of consideration, and whether they will do so or not is a question not of risrhlbut ofcx pedicucy.- The mode of altering the Constitution that is recommended by the report of a Committee fn our last Legislature may be properly adop ted. Why may not the General Assembly sub mil tn tJie People certain specific amendments for their adoption? If the Legislature may recommend a convention to make amendments ate mem to nigner ana more promising cxer--or to accept or reject specific amendments, tions, for reviving the hopes and advancing and the people by ratifving such a recommen- tne prosperity and honor of the State. flation can cause the convention to be assem bled for the purposes that are designated, it is iliflicttlt to conceire why the people may not vote directly upon amendments proposed to theraby the Legislature. It is impossible to maintain a contrary position until it can be .shown that the People derive power and do ziot confer it on Conventionsuntil it can be proved " that the creature is greater than its creator" or that the servant is above his mas- fer." The path of truth is here also pointed out by experience and practice. It is a mis- taie if we suppose that the principle of this recommendation is ivilhout precedent. The constitution of Connecticut prescribes this vcjv moac ox tnaxinff alterations in mode of tonkin alterations in that instrument. The Stale of Alabama in effect, though riot in words, confirms it by her own cJiartcr, whilst the States of South Carolina, Maryland, and Delaware recognize the same right in substance by allowing changes to be jr - - w. . successive lemslatiirr";. ihir amendments bein?l ... r , o 7 : , : , , . published and anclcctxouby the people having v Thus it is demonstrated that this Dlan for amending the Constitution is not liable loany ses of all models and all colors, as erected by objection on principle. Since our Constitu- the taste of a Spaniard, a Frenchmen, or an tion is silent as to the mode of; proposing a- American, but, nevertheless, such houses and jnendments to it, the people are free to adopt plantations are on the levee of the Mississippi .any course which is consistent with the for miles, above New Orleans, adorning the tiSrk a PP-lar government and the river, and variegating the prospectsoine p Trm ; h! Araer.l(n States. If this mode times seeming like whole villages as they ncat ot reiorm is proper m itself, there are some Iv nainted negro huts cluster around the pai. ywws-vius-ezpcaiencu which r v. Claims on our consiaeration. Mllr, ... , . , " . b-iv uecuiiar.i v- l'iammt what -.11 , . J "w UlUlCUllV 7 utmtuny nm v bub uj "Vne r?Ple should 'vr- r-V -"" or the . TCtorm-oj an:x!sang;onsinuon,anl u . uwprihj- ofournotUe that Whi.st ylTTs ' "f11? AStHS, which like the Nile, fer.ilues.its cnarge upon mu ivmjv a Auuse oaniis '.who. entertain any.rojl fenw of -a Convention -But there is soon an end to this display of a uugUtlriQ tou y eeX 40 Apl an, P0 J the nchcountry and fine houses. Houses soon ap .ground tf, Peirturfter-and further ofi; and lpqk, poorer d gwRt di dwgw except ".ffco mil of a and porerr"AtTaVtt majority" and even that will be restricted to an aye or no: upon wnatever the ruling mino rity shall consent to put forth for public sanc tion. The rights of the minority, will be pro tected against encroachment by the over-balancing power they have in the Legislature, that prepares the amendments to be suommea ana the rights of a majority are safe in their own &Tuf-1w..iiS4hir Will not approve of amend- 1UCUU UY WlUtll -- - than theV are now. What then are the objec tions urged against it? It is said to he norel in practice and principle and far too easy in its execution. We have shown already that it is not novel in principle nor is it without prece dent in practice; the experience of 60 years might convince us that it 4s not so easy of exe cution; for onrConstitutioM was ratified in 1776 and has noteen amended since 1789. Be sides, it is proposed to quiet all such fears by the article which prescribes a mode for future amendments. It is said however that the right of the People contended for by this recommen u ti.a.- will t rnaue wunc w dation is founded on the assumption that all were torn with equal political powers" and that it "leads to the monstrous conclusion that a majority may impose upon the minority what government they please; that they may abolish the representative republican institutions of this country and rear upon its rums the most intole rable despotism." But these objections pass a sentence of condemnation upon the Declaration of Independence and the principles of the Ame rican Revolution: and when we deny this right of the majority of the people to remodel their government, it leads to the much more "mon strous conclusion" that a minority, that one man may perpetuate the "most intolerable system of tyranny" over the rights of the ma jority, may usurp all the powers of the govern ment and leave the majority with no rights but to practice the virtue of tame and quiet sub jects. The people cannot fail to reprobate a principle of opposition that leads us to such conclusions. Sovereignty, a power which binds all others, yet is restricted by no other, anTbound bv no forms, must reside somewhere. Tn this country it is lodged with a majority of cr r . the People. No objections can be fairly urged against the time at which it was proposed to take the vote of the people, for it is in the pow er of the Assembly to prescribe the most quiet and convenient season of the year. Fellow Citizens of North Carolina! In the fair exercise of a right that is common to all free-men in a free State, and in the execution of a trust, which was confided to us bv a res pectable body of the people and their repre sentatives; wc have laid before you, the com plaints which are made against the Constitution of the State, with the grounds of them, and as far as the limits of an address like this would permit, we have also, considered of those plain and practicable remedies, which are sanctioned by the principles of our government, and have been confirmed by the practice of the people in other State?. We have endeavored to do this, not only with manly plainess of speech, but with a strict regard for the feelings and pride of others. We have drawn no sectional lines, none such ought to exist, and we do not mean to be responsible forthe consequences of any attempt to create or preserve them. The People of North Carolina, ought to be one in feeling, as they are in interest. We put it to the consideration of the people, whether this subject does not authorize an appeal tothejws tice of the minority, the right of a majority, and the. interest of both? Whether those who desire reform will not now demand it, and whether those who think their demands fair, will not now concede it ! We sincerely be- neve mat me spceay settlement oi these qucs tions, involves the destinies of the State ; that it will restore harmony where there is discord; mat u win oe me means oi aevcioping me in ternal resources of the State, without any re course to additional taxation ; that it will econ omize the government, so as to bring its ex penses below the regular ordinary revenues, that it will destroy the division of East and West, and disengage our Representatives from the strifes of sectional party ; that it will stimu- WILLIAM H. HAYWOOD, Jr. RICHMOND M. PEARSON, ROMULUS M SAUNDERS, THOMAS DEWS, Jr. June, 1st. 1833. 2 5 From the correspondent of the Portland Daily Advertiser. THINGS ON THE MISSISIPPI AND OHIO. r ? rr r o tooo . , omslll Ky. May 8, ia33.Go back ZnL? ? T fulJ f mlfJmtos " yT by day and assaulting you !I ?enV P!sonous stnS by night so that i::tlf,i scaPe al car.7 evcmn? lo Juui unuer your mosquno net, wnere you can read and think in peace, -to New Or leans now in full summer, teeming with the rich Iruits of earth, and follow me yet longer, it you have patience, on this Inner vnvnrrf it another region, another people, anotherclimate where I again meet snrinfr. n,l wnere i again meet spring, and the strong bra r tvt. ,r . -"u"b uwa 4" U1 x,vw ngana. have said nomine of the rirh r,i.,; both banks of the Mississinni abovr TVor O. leans, nothing of the fine rich looking hn... ' '.l J nA cnmpiimpc lil-o Ai'. .. . . it.u ntnUotnce. hav Uft in. ace oi ute uiasiwr m vw.M.w uviaui- i Viucu tuwus, w 4 ..v-.. I . . . a u . 1 . : in. These are chiefly rich sugar plantations on tbe fittest lands in the world, extendi- in la tho interior hut a short distance, wnerc, is I , . , ., .t., 'mnuirirh uAi or nearly cea3es, and thep is seen a swamp with its cypresses, spotted only here and there by the hut of a daring . wood-cutter who sup plies the steam boats with fuel; or bluffs ap pear, blufis or hills of all shapes, from the curved to the ragged or rent parallelogram. w e passed uonaldsonviHe in the night. Ba ton Rogue was seen at advantage by day light, with the neatly built Arsenal just "above the town. We stopt at Natchez awhile, which time 1 improved in ascending a high bluff through deep mud, expecting to see nothing 8ufficienHo compensate for my trouble, when at once a beautiful little city broke in upon the view, Natchez itself with elegant houses, hand some streets, and well bordered with the China tree. I looked into the squares and gardens, which were then flourishing in all their glory. As elegantly clad ladies were in the princi pal street as one will see in Broadway. I regretted that I could not; tarry longer to see this city of Mississippi, a state which I skirt in my travels, but of which one can see but little in a steam boat. That part of Natchez under the hill, a small part, the port as it were, is filthy and uninvi ting. There was loud conversation on the subject of the Cholera. It seems that Natchez is a port where slaves are brought and sold so as to avoid the law of Louisiana, and irom thence are introduced into Louisiana. A slave trader brought a hundred slaves -there for sale, many of whom had alter their arrival died of the cholera, and these the driver had care lessly thrown into a ditch, half covering their bodies with dirt, so that the first rain brought them forth to the horror :of the inhabitants. The excitement was great, and 1 hope sufficient to drive these venders of souls and bodies further off to pursue elsewhere their accursed traffic. v Of Arkansaw on the left bank of the Missis sippi, we saw nothing but its forests, Us cane brakes so thick as to be almost impervious to light, and the cabins of its wood cutters, who were "squatting" on the lands of the government, and selling wood at2,50cts. per cord, disdain ing to cultivate the soil, when by levelling the huge trees on the banks, they could thus easily put money into their pockets. Somewhere in Arkansaw while our steamboat was " wood in," I strayed off a little and found near a log cabin two Indians hideously painted as in their days of war and glory, now heastly drunk with whiskey, and revelling in all the extra vagances of Intoxication. Our voyage from Vicksburg where wc stop ped in the night, to Memphis, in Tennessee, was uninviting and unvaried but by the pas sing of the flat boats and steam boats for New Orleans arid Red River, or the occasional soundings which we made ih crossing a sand bar. "A quarter less twain," "no bottom"' " mark above water twain,' or the like, were the chief sounds that saluted our ears, while forest, forest, forest, with the huts of the wood cutters, were all we could sec on the shores. i t Memphis is on a bluff or hill. It is a small neat looking place, with a few brick buildings. We drifted on the current as our small boat, or yawl put off-to take in boat stores. Mem phis seems to the voyager on the Mississippi, like a refreshing port, when he has once more come in sight of land after being long upon the waters. We left there at levening. After a copious shower of rain with the thunder of the South, not of New England,! the bright moon looked forth in its foil radiance, and we jour neyed up the strongly opposing current in high spirits and good fellowship, passing in our steamer the Senator, the Farmer and the Red Rover, all full of Cholera as I was in formed. It was on Saturday evening that we left New Orleans. The next Saturday morning early, we werejnear the mouth of the Ohio, in the light silver waters of the river on the right bank of the Mississippi long before we ap proached its mouth; for as j the two streams meet, it is long before they unite, the Ohio keeping its peculiar tinge and the Mississippi its turbid yellow color for ten or twelve miles. About this time our mosquitos had nearly left us. The climate was different, the season less advanced : the scenery on the banks of the riv er more udulating, andjmor varying. On en tering the mouth of the beautiful river "Ztz belle riviere11 well called by like the sailor who on a the French, I lonff voyace felt has caught a glimpse of shore, yet we were 450 miles from Louisville. The country was how ever, becoming more inviting. We were out of the low country. We were free from mos- qoetos, from swamps and and morasses but yet we had indeed a voyage to make, before we reached Pittsburg or Cincinnati. An indefinable sensation of satisfaction, de light and beauty, comes over one, as he sails up this river, and notices its graceful curves, and sloping banks now alive with vegetation, and covered with the ash, the oak, cotton wood and cypress. There is a calmness, quietude, and unobtrusive simple grandeur, that lulls the senses into contentment, and even draws the eye and opens the applauding mouth of him who has no soul for nature. The current is calm and unruffled. All is as quiet as when the first adventurous party first sailed from the upper waters on tneir auveniurous voyage they hardly knew whither. Uccasionally the banks are broken by rocks. At times, but sel dom, a precipice is to be seen, but generally speaking, there is a sloping woodland of migh ty trees, beautiful but yet awing, auunng but impressive. We nassed by many villages on tne banks ot the Ohio villages or towns in Kentucky, in Illinois and Indiana. We landed at a few and passed others in the night. Paducah in Ky, is a rapidly growing viJlage, Shawnese town in Illinois, on the spot of an old Shawnese settlement is a place of some importance. But I am not writing a geography, nor a book ot travels. Amid clouds of dust which a high wind was blowing: in all WHinns. our steamer, the Chancellor, left. New Orleans on Saturday, 6 j P." M. April 271 fnr xnhnt almost eauals a sea voyage Louisville, Ky. distant by the ri ver-1448 miles. . But what , is distance here ! little or notmng, as steam is realizing the drjeam of the lor, er in; annihilating, time jand First, I will give you an idea of our steamer. and thus show you the comforts "of travelling on the Western waters. The Chancellor is a boat of about 450 tons, a splendid boat, far better than any I have seen on the Atlantic waters, though not the best as I am informed on the river. Our cabin is above the deck, in the second story, open, airy and spacious. ' This cabin is elegantly furnished, a elegantly as a saloon, with a rich carpet, in short with all the comforts, and conveniences of a par lor in the best of hotels. This cabin when all open, "extends almost the whole length of the steam boat. But there are doors dividing it in the after part, so as to give the ladies a separate apartment. On the right and left of mis cauin, are siait i uuuia, wim rr - uuhw in each, a writing table covering a bowl and pitcher, and thus giviug one an opportunity to wash, as well as to write; or there aie open births, as in all cabins, protected by Venetian blinds, alternating one with the other. Thus the passenger can be alone all day, if he wish es, or he can enjoy a semi-society and an open birth, with a freer circulation of air. Our table is well provided with all the luxu ries as well as the solids of the season. We took in a quantity of ice at New Orleans, which stood by us till we reached Mem phis, (Tenn.) when we recruited. Thus we have the muddy water of the Mississip pi, not filtered as at New Orleans, for here that would be difficult, but well-iced and therefore very cool and very good. Our meals are at the usual hours, -but in addition we have a good luncheon at 12 o'clock. There is a bar on board with fruits and liquors in abundance. Now even the Epicure need not hesitate to travel here, nor the lover of ease, for the life if there is error, is too luxurious and easy. Our captain is a polite, and apparently an accomplished man, one of the best on the riv er, I suspect. He is provided with a clerk, pi lots and engineers, who are paid well, and has comparatively little else to do than to oversee the manner in which things are managed. Neatness and order prevail in all his arringe ments. His waiters are attentive and obliging. Our company is not very large. There are but few ladies in this boat, though the boats, this spring are generally crowded. We passed the Farmer the fourth day out, which started two days, before, full of ladies, and with about 200 deck passengers, boatmen principally, among whom the Cholera had broken out. When we passed her she had buried four persons, and three more were on the point of death. The Farmer is a rapid hut not a neat boat, and this is perhvps the ca son, that the passengers there were so un fortunate, while not a case had occurred in our boat. The dead on board of the Farmer were ! buried on the banks of the river, probably j without a coffin, or the common ceremonies of; sepulture. It is horrid thus to be left in the i wilderness, far from home and friends, the victim of such a disease ! The cabin passengers, of whom there arc forty or fifty, amuse themselves in reading, or in writing a little, which you will sec from my hand-writing, is not so easy an employment from the jostling of the machinery, or in con versation, promenading, playing backgam-1 mon, or in conversation, promenading, playing backgammon, chess, or cards. I have seen in the Chancellor but a very little that gambling, and that lested only a few hours. By the regulations of the Boat, all card playing ceases at 10 P. M. Our deck passengers have various amuse ments. Some see saw a little over the cat-sut of a fiddle. Some play a Jews harp. Some sing. Some sleep. Some tell stories,- and a few read a little. They are the boatmen who go hundreds of miles down to New Orleans in their flat boats, or " broad horus" as they call them, and after discharging their cargoes, break them up, sell the materials, and then take passage back in a Steam Boat, at a very cheap rate, working in part for the wood, which is consumed by the Steam boat, and which by the way costs about 60 or 70 dollars, a day, the wood being on an average about two dollars a cord. The company I have met with on board of the Steam Boats here, is better than report would lead one to expect. It is varied enough to be sure. There are men of all occupations, from the professed gambler to the venturous pioneer and- hunter of the far-off wilderness. These men in general have great spirit, great volubility, a great love of telling great stories. -of electioneering, of brisk fighting, and tomahawking and Indian hunting, but they arc such men as one can sit hours with, ami then enjoy their company. There is an origi nality, spice and vivacity in their conversation that interest one. They swear without much ceremony, and intersperse in their eloquence an oath, not between every sentence but every two or three words. Indeed common as pro fanity is at th;e north, and the south, the Steam boat men of the west far out do even the most gifted of our sailors. At home we exaggerate the roughness of western manners, and of western boatmen of whom as yet I am only prepared to speak. Some few wear knives, but such are nearly all from the low country. An equal fight is enjoyed; but an une qual contest is not tolerated. This propen sity, however, is not one tenth part as strong as the Irish exhibit, this pugnacious propen sity I mean. Gouging in Kentucky, I suspect, in quite all moonshine. Western boat men are a brave, hardy, and rugged body of men, the bone and sinew of a working population. They sail off in their flat boats, on a journey often, of nearly 2000 miles with a bold heart and a jovial front. You see them every mile and a half of a mile, spotting the yellow waters oi me Mississippi, ana tne calm silver current of the Ohio. They are paraded often at mor ning and evening on shore, or are rowing care lessly along on the whirling, eddying stream of the great river. Every little tributary river that we pass throws them out orT their distant adventurous voyage ; from the bayou or out let, to the far reaching Tennessee or niore dis tant Illinois. Such a population must be bold; vrgorous, and the more so as they are founders or the sons of the founders of cmres in this magnificent-West - NEWBERK PRICES JCUR, BEESWAX, Ih. 16 xu i jcrv, oo. &j a Ico CANDLES, do. 12 a 15 COFFEE, do. 12a13Y CORDAGE, cwt S 15 a g 1ft COTTON, do. 10 50 T,TTrT5Trr J vrw COTTON BAGGING Hemp, jpcryd 15 FLAX, per lb. 10 a 15 cts. w a 15 FLOUR, bbl. $6 60 a 7 Corn Meal, bushel, 80 cent GRAIN Corn, bbl! $ 275 a 300 81 -Wheat, bushel, $1 IRON Bar, American, lb. 5 a 5 cent t .Russia and Sweedes. do. s J a LARD, lb. 8f cents a 6 i EATHER Sole, lb. Ura 25 cents r yt t rimes ao. iu a 12 juu armpit Flooring, Inch boards, Scantling, Square Timber cems $12 do. 8ag Sag 203o I50a2 16 a 20 8 8 18 a 8 a in to. tlo. Shincles, Cypress, rfn Staves, W. 0.hhd.do. Do. R. O. do. Do. W. O. barrel do. Heading, hhd. do. Do. barrel, do MOLASSES, millnn. 30 32 L NAILS Cut, all sizes above 4d. lhJ6a6i,. . and 3d. dcQVeit Wroucht, do. NAVAL STORES Tar. ML gl ,1 Turpentine 0o. 8200 Piteh do. Yio Rosin do 1 Spirits Surpemine, frallon, 25 cents Varnish, jjal. 25 cents OIL7Ts.peJr,nA rl. Sl.a l 20 Whale & Porpoise do. 35 a 40 cents Linseed. do.$l 20 a 1 20 PAINTS-Red Lead, lb. 15 a 18 oeL White Lead, ground in oil, cwt. S ina i o PEASE Black eyed, bushel, 75 cente U2 Grey eyed, do. 45 a 60 FROVlSIONS-Bacon,lb. 7 a SemT Beef, lb. 3 a 4 cents Pork, mess, bbl. $ 13 a 15 Do. prime, do. U 12 Do. cargo, do. 9 SALT Turks Island, bushel, 45 a 50 cent Liverpool, fine do. 60 a 70 cent SHOT-cwt.$8al0 SPIRITS Brandy, French, gallon, $ ! 50 a Apple do. 50 a 60 Peach do. ja J00 cent, Rum, Jamaica, 120 a 150cent Do. Windward Island, 80 a 90 cents Do.N ew England, 35 a 40 cents GIN Holland, gallon, 150 a 160cent3 Do. Country, 40 a 50 cents Whiskey, 35 cents STEEL German, lb. 16 a 20 cents Do. English, 10 a 12 cents SUGARS Loaf, lb. 16a 18, Lump, 14 a 15cen:3 Do. Brown, do. 7 a 9 cents TEAS Imperial, do. 1 40 a 1 60 cents. Gunpowder, do. 1 40 a 1 60 do. 3m rvZ. GRASJADE ACOt MAVE just received per schr. Trent, km New York, the following articles, riz: 7 4 ps. it splendid Painted Muslins, embossed colored Furniture Diroit a new and elegant article, 4 1 50 3 it plain white do. do. pink Florence, Moscheto Netting, tt hhd6. light brown Muscovado Sup:, 10 obis. do. do. 10 bags St. Domingo Coffee. 5 prime Cuba do. 5 Laguira do. 10 boxes Patent Mould Candles, 30 bbls. New York Canal Flour, (Beach's red brand,) doz. bottles London Brown StoutPorter. Lemon Syrup, cask superior Claret Wine, now fining and will be ready for use in 20 dw bags Allspice, Pepper, bales Cassia, 7 5 1 5 5 10 30 20 25 10 ,4 Nutmegs, Cloves, best quality Indigo, tt tt boxes Poland Starch, 20 44 Soap, 5 doz. Nos. 0 and 1 Weeding How, 10 casks Lime, 10 kegs fresh Goshen Butter. Thev have also on hind, 65 83 bbls. Mess Pork, 44 Prime do. bushels Turks Island Salt, 2,000 5,000 lbs. assorted Bacon, 50 kegs Lard, 10 tierces prime Charleston Bice; All nf which, in niMitinn to their extcmive assortment of Dry Goods, Groceries &.C. &C. they offer at a moderate aavsow the cost. Newbern, 30th May, 1833. JOSEPH M. GRAXADE & Have just received by the sehr. Geo. PolM os. ie v rt riinr. f Reach's brinw.j UUIOl . WtM. M. ' 30 half do. do. do. do. do. do. 1 2 2 1 2 6 ba soft shelled Almonds, bbls. double refined Loaf Sugar, hhds. ft. E. Rum, ton square Iron, assorted sizes, 44 bolt and spike Rod, do. do. Willow Cradles, 7th June, II Richard B. Berry f MAS on .hand, Shirt Bosorns, bwes. Shirt Collars, and a variety. mings, which he will sell at the.Iowcst He continues to execute with dispatch, w trusts, to the satisfaction of his customers, orders in his line of business- 0f He has received the latest "SinlfS. the New York and WUWVHID and has made arrangements for recw others as they shall be published. rVS Wanted, one or two. APPRENTIC rroheconnt of from44 to 16yearsof Newbern, May dl, ICSW- Oshorne9 Syrup thei -gjREPARED an: tor - D V.D5f 7; ft:!! new - TJromriet.and Apotnecaiypxi uuu, B. mbtd.lNewbcrn 14 1&;I833