"- l III m i i" n Pi. -m'mij yV : t I i ;'f 1? I A" ! -:, -i .l-.'.'-r THE 50 CfONGRElSS. ,T WE f T Y-FUtST CONGRESS.. ..iFIRST SESSIOV. WEDNESDAY, AprilSl. Senate. 1 The bill to authorize the pay ment of the claim of the State of Massa chusetts for certain services of her militia in thelate war, vva9 passed, and sent to the'other House' for concurrence. The f bill to provide for the removal of the In dians west of the Mississippi was further debated by Sir. Bobbins and Mr. Forsyth. House. i After Mr. Drayton had bccu- pied the hour in some remarks on the re solution relative to a new military organi sation, the discussion on which was arres- 7 ted before their conclusion, passed the bill - to-.reduce the duties on Cofiec and" Tea, by a vote of 163 to 5. . After postponing the bills before the House, the House went into Committee of the Whole on. the state of the Union- The Committee refused to take pthe consideration of the Tariff Bill bv a vote of 75 to 61; and took up the report of the Judiciary Committee on . the case of Judge Peck. That report re commended the impeachment of Judge .-. Peck for. high misdemeanors. A discus sion took' place in which Messrs. Buchan (. an, Clay, and-A. Spencer took part.N , V THURSDAY April 22. ! . Senate J " The amendments of the . House of Representatives to the' bill au thorizing the Commissioners of the Sink ing Fund to redeem the public debt; and the' bill providing for the appropriation of : certain unexpended balances ot Imimer ap propriations: were concurred jn. Hie ioiut resolution, submitted by Mr. Rowan, authorising the transmission ot papersby mail j relative to the fifth census, was read d third time -and passed. When the bill y for the removal of .the Indians beyond the Mississippi was taken, up, Mr. Freling huysen replied to the arguments of Mr. 4 Forsythoc the Indian Bill. lie yielded the point that thq other States had exten ded - their laws over i the' Indians within .their limits as Well as Georgia; but ex 'claimed how magnanimous it would be for the State of Georgia to have disclaim Jed to tolloW the pernicious example of her isister States.. Mr. McKinley rejoined to Mr. Frelinghuysen, in support of, and ful ly maintaining the. 'constitutionality t)f the u iioctnnes iie naa advanced in nis tomer r arffuments. and which he contended Mr F. had not as yet been able to answer . When Mr. McKinley concluded, IMr. For syth took the floor, and, in an ume and in , 'terestihg speech, supported the rights, and Georgia in relation to the Indians within per limits.-;-. ;.r $J: : .,, JIouse. Mr. Spencer, lof New York from the Committee on-agrieulture, repof ted a resolution directing the printing of six thousand copies; of the Message of the President of the United States, of the oth of January, 1825, transmitting a report from the Secretary of the Navy, in rela tion to American canvass, cables, and eor dage, for the use of the House. Mr Craig, of Virginia, made a favorable report from1 the tOinmitree on internal improvement, on the letter of Mr. Skinner, in relation to the cohstructionin tMs city of central basin, for commercial purposes ; and, al so, for furnishing a sUppbof . water for the public buildings ilnd the metropolis. The report cdncluded with a resolution authorizing the " President of jthe United States to causltiie' necessary survey s to be madc. in order that a report thereon should be presented to Congress at the en Eiiih'sr session. The report and resolutions were laid upon the table and "ordered to be printed.' The Hous ;then-Jtoolcupthe rpsnlntinn nf the ("JoTtimilt.ee on the Jndi- ciary for the impeachineirt of Judge Pecki' of Missouri.. . r; .. . - . m ;-;;. i v . fi priday, jA.Prii 23. I SEN'ATf.. On motion of Mr. Grundy, , the Senate resumed, as the .unfinished bu siness, the consideration of the bill provi ding for. an exchange of lands with such Indians 411 the U. States -as are willing to emigrate, and making an Appropriation to defray the expenses of their removal be- - yond the Mississippi! Mr.. White who . was entitled to the flooryielded it to Mr; Sprague, who replied to the arguments of Messrs. M R iiiley and torsyUitOf yester day and wien .Mr, S. had concluded, 3Ir. , AVhife took the floor in reply 'to the 1 vari ous arguments which had been urged a gainst the bill in the course of the debate, . and continued until a late hour, when the Senate adjourned witliout his having con- : eluded." .. "; : i 'r; "f.y House. 1 Mr. A rchcr reported , from the Committee on .Foreign AiTairs. a bill authorizing the appointment of an assis tant Secretary of State. It was real! twice, and referred to a Committee of the Whole on the State of the Union, and ordered to be printed; ( The House then resumed the consideration ot the resolutionOl Mr. De sha for the reduction of the number of offi cers of the Army ; and Mr. Drayton con eluded his speech against it. j ; The case Of thef mpeachment of Judge Peck wa9"ta ken up in a Committee of. the Whole on the state of. the Union. A prolonged dis cussion took place upon the subject. J Mr. Everett, of Massachusetts, offered an a ihendment which, with a subsequent mod ification, provided that, in lieu of the re solution of the Committee on the Judicia ry, a resolutiou shbuld be reported to the House to the following effect : - - : . . . , -. . ... : 7" ; . i '! , ', -r :! ' ! NORTH CAROLINA Kesbleed. That altnouffn, on tne evi- r nee; as it nostands, this Hbuse does the IlOt approve Ul HIP tuuuuvi ui Dttiu 11 fU rl.t r Tn'...'1J ectv, rfuuac Ji v vi mi, i w U n.ted States or tne n, ?llssoun, . .1 T- .. r- . I n in nroceedinsr DV suiacnmeni affainsx lUKe I Lawless for alleged contempt of Court; tor insubordination, and another lor neing; but that there is not sufficient evidence to a constitutionalist. The robbers andjeor authorize this House to impeach the said poral were graciobsly pardoned, belt the 3udre for his misdemeanors in office. 1 The debate was continued upon the a- tnendment until a late hour.: ! V f SATURDAY, April 24. : The House of Representatives were on- gaged the whole-day on the case of Judge Feck. ; The resolution moved by Mr. puchanan,4to impeach Judge Peck, was reported to the House without amendment, and was concurred in by a vote of 123 to a:. a ijommuiee was i nen oniRrpfi m in- i form the Senate, arul also a Commie of impeachment. - - t T ,: inr j M MONDAY, April iN House. The Indian Bill was brought rov the Sejnate, read twice, and commit ed to the Committee of the whole House oh the! st&te of the Union. tThe various business on the table was then postponed, and the House Tesolved itselt xinto Com- mittee of the. whole on the state ofl tlie jUnioh, and took up the bill to amend an ict in alteration of the acts imposing! du- ,io amenu me Din oy striKing out all alter the first section of the bill, and introduced various sections repealing gradually all the Tantt duties ot and. -1324. In de- ;fence of his proposition, and in opposition ;to the whole l anu svstem. he SDoke at i 1 - 'V ' x -r 1 much lengthy but -did not conclude his re-1 marks. A Bill was reoorted bv the Chair- man pf the District Committee, for. the election and administration ot a Delegate from jthe District of Columbia; audanoth-' tional sprit, of democratic liberty isacqui er BiJL was reported by Mr. Semmes in rin? fresh vigor daily.' ' ; relation to the Orphan's Court in thejDis- trict. I TUESDAY, April 27. The resolution introduced by Mr. Coul ter from the Comafittese on Retrenchment, on the subject of the public printing! oc cupied the House ot Kepresentativesr du ing the morning hour of yesterday'. Mr. Chilton introduced a preamble and"reso- lution , stating that "suspicions bave'gone auroau inai.uuuer me present iiamims- l a. i. .1 . . i. . -.: a l Jtratioh many removals of public officers have been made from political consiidera' trom Dolitical considpra- tions alone, and not trom any. particular devotion to the public interest ; and where as there exists considerable excitement re lative? to 'the causes of said removals ;now, to quiet the pubhe. apprehensiorfupon this subject-T-ii it llesolvell, That the Presi- dent of the United Stat s4 e respec fully irequqsted to cause to'be reported to tins illouso, &c. the precise number of remo vals oi oihcersylroin the highest to , the lowest &c. ,audthat he be also respectful- ly rcquiva .io,uave expressea ine causes , for each removal." riie mtrcduction of rtliefr esolut:on caused, gr,eat excitement. plr. Ramsay moved to lav the resolution t on the table. Mr. M Duttie then denland j ed the question of consideration, on which the Ayes and Noes were ordered. The House then refused to consider, by a vote of!2Gtol8. '-'A" : 1 I . F O llEIG N A N D D O M E S 1 C. Prance. , The two Chambers were pro- Deputies the opposition carried their draft ol the address, m reply tos the TTT ivins s speech, by the large Majority of 40j votes against Ministers,- and that the address was "4grecjd to in the same form in which it was originally reported. The language is strong, iand evinces a tietermined oppo- sitiouito Ministers, but it has met with pfinnl;firmnpss bv the Tf inrr. ''Tt. is'-nt rn cir tA'iW'otn' Knt ffnt AAkn ' ercise of the Royal prerogative may have Upon jthe French people;- particularly as it has been exercised to sustain. "a Ministry evidently unpopular, and opposed; by af large majority 1 of the Deputies, if not- the CTeai mass oi me rrencn mauon. A reduction of taxes lo the . amount of nearly three 'millions per annum, litis been made rby the British Government.) j Charleston, Courier. Most Horrible Murder. The folowinir article of iutellijrcnce has been cominuni- catcd to us from a source which we can- not dpubt although it appears tod horri- ble for. belief. " A whole company of Itai- ..j t... tr:- : Ai.-in.i-. ;.i?n r-t -, ui.:--,u:i:.. -. i . J . 9 :'Jr. --ii.. .1 ...If o' , T. 'Li. -A - ; 1 r,,f , Before the next It ivill lw' sppn tht in thn. - f.Umi'n H finvs in hnse nf attack ' be will sKj tl,-Pvamor lay stl ian 1 players, twenty-two jn number, who Continue, then, Sir, tq preserve jjTblom- edict resigning a large fortune to the dis took their j passage on board a Portuguese' bia from the horrors of anarchy jl leave posal of the church. We doubt this ac vessel, bound to Oporto, from Lisln, were her for a legacy, the consolidation f her count; especially as we have seen it con most barbarously murdered by the crew, laws,' and then your name, -already im- tradicted, if we mistake not; but if it be together with two Portuguese Jttdges, who were also passengers. 1 he diabolical wretches are in custody, and have.corfes sed the fact. Falmouth Packet. ' TbojMarquis'de Chaves, one of Don 1 Miguel's companions in cruelty, is dead. ( ' Diplomacy in Rhymes. . The London r '. - .1 f n y juiierary uazene gives uie ioiiowing as a literal r despatch from the lateGeorffe Canning to Sir Charles Bagot, Ambassa- dor at the Hague: ' . -1 w , f . "Auw r v u.u is giving too ntue, ana asRiDg 100 mucn;i With eaualized duties the French are content, So we'U dag on Duch bottoms fall fifteen percent. ?.'.-! ''.'!-': -V ;' :' ' " '. ! " ' SPECTATOR AKI) WESTERN ADVERTISER. in one 01 ms excursions, Jjim -v'M"; i""" In one of his excursions, Don Jr, Portuguesetyrant, received a tuition rrn.n GPTor'i nr cnnoM nn t ir'tvnvOl Ll!i- uumvi v.. jiu-uuuo uii iuvu "-j r- i release J ' 11 .nnnn 10 , j j, I'"' . , . TJ'" I one u iiui-uuiuunssioneu ouicct mitu poor constitutionalist was ordered ;o re-j main in prison piva el rey. i M "I Portrait of Don Miguel draicn Iffy 3Ir Huskisson. He looked with astouishinent at the character of Don Miguel, x It! was amazing that so young a man could.havc accompusnea so mucii wicKeanessm o oaui i. i tiiii , lui, ui, iuu eaiiy tt- i' oiat ano-twenty, uns man thj Don . Migne had perpetrated 'evcrMriroe, arw dis4 . 17 7. YW0"01 i i - . in .1-1 insrnrip.m lift mn hoH nttnhntifi in Tfif i """'u uiuiuuv- w n mosi sanguinary monsters , that ever wa i ded through the blood of innbeent people in pursuit of their ambitious! objects. It ' was to be hoped that he would finish a life of mlamy by a death of violence. r Accounts from Turkey state tBd the Porte is making great exertions torgan- ize an army disciplined after the Europe- an manner, n is .suDDOsed tnatwauoui the last of April he will have 150 -vu. w, "V 6,- i A H ranMi ninAV ot-nYAf tl,nf lun ti Trio I u tolu, iW Wu TOUi,u at the Lyons hospital. . t -j ; ' In a late address to the Deopleijf Ire- land. Mr. O'Connel makes the folldwim?! . . .. . ; remarks : . ; ' - "The arm of monarchial tvrann v:is bro- ken. . The emaciating despotism oJ;a vile oligarchy is wearing away, the cdistitu Arctic Expedition. A Paris pape states that CaptaiuJRoss's expedition to tie Arc tic Pole has" safely reached th Ctli de gree of north latitude. Thjtcafca. boat has traversed the most dangerous as of the glole. But wishing to touch At the coast of Spitzbergepshe was overtaken by a violent galeofwind, which Icarried - ) :Jt ! nJ ii u . tortunate accident, especially in a reriOn wW nnrSnmnp;t(i rpn,;rsiIkloss ca Q L up n,re,l. S t!nr. f V i i , . . . & lish vessel happened to get among ilie ice, and was therefore abandoned by. itrew, when her main mast was taken ouEby the steamer, as well as the provisions a?d fuel that were requisite for continuing the voy age to the iole. 5 , Parliament was engaged pn thp 29tli and 30th, in debates on the Corn fcjLaws, and the reciprocity treaty lately concluded with Austria. The Paris papers the 29th had been received. The expedition against Algiers, under ien. Boujmoht was expected to be -'.ready .by j the 15th. j The Dauphin would proceed to Toiilon tp superintend the embarkation of the foopsl The French' will, probably meet ith a warm reception, as the Dey's fojresses have been rendered impregnable bjEuro pean engineers. His armyof obsvation consists of 85,000 men, 30,000 driled in European tactics.' The: Algerint', it is said, were full of spirits, and speal;bf the conduct of the Turks at Acre as proof of , women into the interior, take in twpyears provisions into the city, and defy the whole power ox x ranee. . . . p Eiirdct from the Congress rephjgn dc- j "The devounngmonster of aArchy, Sir, will rage among us in Coloijr-iia, if I vnn ..nhnfiflnniis at this mnmpnf'Ii: Vnn havA cMnlir nrnmUwl tr. '.nnrinih";- 'uA exercise of the supreme . authority until bongress shall promulge a constitution. ana name us magistrates i ana, n 41 . one hand what you owe to Colombia, $ir, and to yourself, offer weighty obstacles trJcarrv ing into effect the abdication voWl have made of the Presidency of the Re&dblic : the Congress on the" other .is ab&ejutely incapable of accepting it becaUse that promise is enrolled m the very law. -by which the Con fTeS was authorizes, and it should therefore be the first .reliaouslv I to respect it. ' As to vour reputalion. it to respect it.. As to your rcputottbn, it can in no wise suffer iiy the caluiiiues of ..!... - r yomrdetractors. The existence if this assemly is a victorious answer to au such. j mortal, will appear still more resplendent in the pfiges of history, when theyj shall record that you postponed. every;hmg ; sacrificed every thing, to. the happmess of your ccuJltry., . . . ' - ". j J Montgomery, (Ala.) April 16. lj)n the .TJ5 night of the 12 ult. Tuskiha, was taken iit his residence, by Major Wager fend his, small band of troops. x In a short ime af ter he had been brought to his stan late- ty known as Triplett's, it is saicf thfe there 1 were r.olleeteil nmvWa nf one tti'ninr,J ind,ansi srenerallv armed. A reseiVe. nro- 1, ' . . j v , r. bably, would have been attempted, .but 1 for the advice of an old king of a!?heigh - ; ' ' . : " ' y boring town, ana xusk ma 1 i m w - m ; - i & wr tin - s - ., .t. understood lo nave torn u em . i IDUSl HOI UUl UlfH wauua uwvu u . -ir ! W tAner man. Major Wager, witn ms prisons. . .t i n.j.:nn nnr nn his nrntf in I IK n 1 UMUUU iui " ''" Mft. n "made to believe, by n "" . : r " I uieir uuiSci3, u. u,u w - -.- totheretanishmcntoftheirlandi. This however, may make tbcm more pacing 1 1 - ,kA I A. A. . . .1 . ' nV.wlinn I 111 uut iney are mi3iaKu-uu uuu u.uS . Indians we have nothing to do, but "lose who offend against the laws of the Gen- erai, or state uovemraeni, must auu ... -t . . . m .1 ...ill bc madc tQ guffer feuch pcnaitics as WOuld, for smilar oflences, be inflicted on a white MillcdgevUle Journal. Tim town of Montjromcrv was fired in laccs Qn the n- ht of the o7th ult. The new house ottlr. P. D. Sayrc, and w r ,i iv oi-o nncn i nir .innn r m ll rl T it . -. r - t i . t tcaite. . It was discovered in time to pre vent much damage. . Geo. Courier. Georgetown D. C. April 20. One of our active and vinilant police officers, Ir. John B. Gray, succeeded on Friday last, in taking in this town, a fugitive, from the Baltimore Penitentiary, named John Kid- uw, hhu nau omy itentiary niaii extraordinary manner; ... ' having no other instrument thai! o piece 0f.ir?I belonging to a bucket,' with which he made an. opening through a fourteen inch walU throuch which he crept, and decended Dv.tne liffntinne roa: unainir n plank m the yard he scaled the walls by its aid, ancl thus effected his escape. Gazette. . The Rochester Craftsman relates a cir- cumsance attending the death of one bur revolutionary worthies, which is not cal culated to mitigate the charge so frequent ly niade, and often verified, of the . rank in gratitude of the Republics. Colonel Piatt, whose death we have already men tioned, was like most of the. gentlemen of the old school, reduced in his declined life. He was one of the pensioners under the actof!82e. - The pensions are drawn every six months, and it is of the just and generous constructions of the law, that if a pensioner dies any time between the semi-annual days of payment, his widow and children arc debarred from drawing what is actually due from the last-payment' day up to the day of the petitioner's death.. Col.. Piatt had been, deoUning for a long time--he was aware that death was rapidly approaching him -and his sole prayer for this life, was that he might be spared until the ad day ol March, the pension-day, that he might leave his wife the six month's pay. Every morning, for a month preceding the day ot his death, the feeble old man, when he awoke, in quired the day of the month, "has the.3d of March comeV.' When it did come, he had liimself raised in the bed,a friend was called in, and the papers instantly nature to them, it was foOnd he was too urepareu. i kju aueinping 10. pui ins Sl""- feeble to write, his riaine he was obliged to make his mark, which was duly at tested, and the pension-was secured.- e sunkdown exausted X)h his pillow. morning dawned, the old in death ! That high he roic soul which sustained the frame of the young sodiler through seven years toil and privation, upheld the wasted body of .1 11 . . me oiu man, until his generous object was accomplished, and then it fled to a purer and a better world. '. i r Bait. Gazette. Custom House Duties. It is mentioned in the Boston papers, that dutieto the amount of filUoAHH) were paid last week at the Custom House of that port, on the cargo oi an rasi inaian. v c can assure them, that New York js not behind Boston in making sucli splendid hauls for the rev- emie In the week before last, the sum of $110,000 was paid at our Custom House, being the amount of duties on the cargo of a vessel from China, belonging to one of our -merchants. . N. Y. Com. Adv , Very Silly.- A Boston paper says that a oeau iiui and accomplished young lady, . nn rtmhnn trmn tli Snttth lioa tu Lr an an P01111 how. the South v.eil aild gone into voluntary seclusion for at the Ursuline Convent, Jlount Ben- .. r true efo-arig lady has taken a "false I st,eP ' Mount Benedict ! Heaven pre- serveus! !Any other lienedict would have been preferable. W e are sorrv to American girls getting such notioi their heads;1 It is a violation of State Constitution. A blending oY Church and State, which we as opposers of Sunday nuiuii vi viiujwu iiiiu mail restriction, look upon upon as desenine ot all possible abhorrence. v The Editor of the "Kew Berlin Penn. T mes." svc TuAc .OOOmen ced to n ten years appreuuccMup, ucmg . f . , . f - - frf,. v . I inc Grtnrl trm m n ftimilnr rstabhshment. I .... ' .. .. . .- . . - ."5 . , . " . . " . I 'I lip m:ifiTinU nr thf wnrk nrc fihutn'-.n: I IK JJl.. r ,1 rm lt.iltiinnro I'oti- 1 . : : I j " wuc of the 'universal yankeb nation,' with a l.wagon load of tomb-stones, at Selinsgrove r r ' J b J cL,a nr1 ornamented, and 7"t " rr , -t w furmh.an epi- nnv u - r t iiiiiaiicu - - r dlar iiucriuj upon U,e t ' . . i- - .U .o t,lv enrnntm profitable business. ." No doubt. : rA Hertford Incendiaries.. j icuenu the editor ofthis paper, from a friend' in c." cflVJlhe wretch. Allen, is A A A. 1 A LI 11 U - . . . - ... f t d nc- . . . nrcrailed on to execute OUT !Ull H " " , , .. . 'ti..um rt n mrm .cu - . - - - --- mat iuixil; tv v u . . - ... drivin- about in his thousand dollar carriage, and had considerable visible property ; but it was ascertained, lie wtls acting on a false capital. He is n degraded bankrupt, manacled in a dungeon, and chargc a m n.i the perpetration of a crime of the deepest dye!" ; Norfolk Jlcrald. . Admiral Paul Jones. Miss Taylor, u niece of the celebrated Paul Jones, hai V a " j-v L 2-1 TiJ C .11 'vli to her mother. We learn that a life of the distinguished commander .who first hoisted the American flag' with his own has heretotore been written, which wa. entitled to the name. Compilations liavc been made from dif jointed and imperii cl dociiments, which only showed how niucJi was left for explanation and elucidation in his history. Wc can hate no doubt that the fourth coining work will bc sought for with' avidity. - Jones was oi.e of iho most, singular, as well as renowned men of his own or any age; his brief career of intense activity is full of various and a' most romantic incidents; and is intimate ly connected with the history of his time, the policy of different courts, and the es tablishment of our independence. N. Y. Com. Advcrtifcer. The Miners (Penn.) Journal states that a company has been incorporated, 'styled the fTuscarora and Coal Run Tunnel and Rail-road Company," for the purpotc of tunnelling the Sharp. Mountain at the town of Tuscarora. This tunnel will in tersect the Little Schuylkill Rail-road, distance of I t miles from. Port Clinton , at the forks of the Schuylkill. The dis tance through1 the mountain to be tunnel led, is about 80 perches,-cutting through a large number of coal veiues, will mak; the excavation easy aud place them hi complete mining order, i Moulding jt Bust. We understand an f tall?n,wjl of this city has secretly dis- mterred tlie body of E. Hicks, the cele brated Quaker Preacher, and moulded his bust. It seems that he had applied to tht: friends of the deceased to take a mould ing previous to his interment, but was re fused. Suspicion being excited that -the grave had been disturbed, it was examin- some bits ?f Poster we're found .iaiiciui'j iu iuc iimr uiiuc oeceasca. ine ontbeRiastic Italian was visited and own ed that, as he had been denkd the privi lege of taking'a bust before interment, he had adopted tins only method of obtain ing one. We. have heard nothing mere on the subject, except that the bust i h most exccUen likeness. N. Y. pa. The Count of Pombeiro, arrived at Lis bon on the 10th March from London," with despatches for Don Miguel, and it was said that these, despatches contain the ultimatum, on a "Compliance with which, his acknowledgement by England as King of Portugal will depend. The Vll : .1 l - 1".1 1 , rrt conditions of this ultimatum, it is added. uul uiuicuu, oui almost im- P4ble. Chas. Courier. lustrations of Rhetoric. Thi" Harding at Oxford, was half, crazy, and "sometimes walked aboutwith acythein his hand, as Time ; sometimes with an an chor. One? day I met biro with a huge broken brick, and some bits of thatch, up on the crown of his bat ; on my asking him for a solution . of ' this prosopopoeia Sir, lTiI.S?rJ.n J?' of lhc' i.rirui iiirii 1 riH'iiir 1 tun 1 Km tii j ziAniu . v . nm n - . , rhn'-f T r; "J - uia JSCicntrz I Ullage , V JcvisrUle Va. March 27. VTnM c:i. ver, Copper, Tin, and Iron, Xbound in Western Virginia. ; Lewis Eisenminger, a German gentleman , of intelligence and experience in the ores of these minerals, has discovered on his lands extensive de posits of all the above metals. Si!rr hands, is in rapid: preparation, and will I . O V - seethe T Icularir, found in large bo .s into d'"lhGOre of which ,, superior to that w into of Germany. We are informer ... . 7 v..WwUJCUU '"fc. ii ia nis intention fr : . . 1 . v - Cr sr"MT,Dft L PP9. ' " alladium.J . IIis Excellency Got. MUer, has issued bis . proclamation, offering a reward, of three hundred dollars for the apprehen tioq and delivery in Greenville gaol, of I JohrK CampbeU, charged with with the "iucrui ir unam Browning. t i ' : V i 1 I f t 'I y II- -if

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