Camden gazette. (Camden, S.C.) 1816-1818, June 20, 1816, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

CONDITIONS Or THIS GAZETTE. - T : . ' * THE price to Subacribera ia LAMS per annum, for , elusive of floatage y and in all case a where fiaflera ahall be delivered at the expence of the jiuhUahrt% Ij^c flriccwilLbc% including floatage, FOUR DOjL*AS* a yeart' payable half yearly in V |dnu off.adyertising in this Gazk^mI ?jfdvertiaementa not exceeding eight linen vjUI be printed /orriyTT ckhts, for the fifty publication, and half that price for evfry j suf%jbquent inaertipn* ? Largtr -advertise* mem # will be charged in pr A liberal discount bille of thoae who avjjftjfi cuatomera in this line?^$^^5% $ j 4 fit If ho directiona are given with an ad - vertiaement , it will be continued till forbid. ?oesjf'rklj in Cajmden, r Sale Before the _ ? ???v viuiiucim On the fir at Monday and Tueajay irk July next WILL B1 SOLD, ( A B5LVL7awtnty~Eigl" "22 ^V^EGROES, op 10 many df them as will satisfy the demand for which the J are sold? these Negroes are sold under A Mortgage made by William Mayranti trus tee of Mi's. Isabella Mayrant, to James Gardner, and that good and clear titles will 1 t " O i SumUrvllle Miy #? * " ? r- ? on hand a ?, aS8Q^b?J mertt of seasonable andw/Si -'Wfcj AIso^l good duce. JCERIES, flNr^MHj^pr%t'0 . iL ' ? I lj 8 1 ?n in Clermont Cavalry. . u,k|. ?>? - -i vDj yf*(l I Uy If II U" | wilt be held at STATEsauaoa,! Saturday ol August next, for a the Clermont Trojfe, to supiJ ccasioned by the promo?t yrant. . HMjjHMjKr^ let order of ^ KXigtt. 6th Cavalry , W*.T.-S?Airw, /VI/ ji8, ; ... T. , ? ? I , I . ? ^Thompson SHAKES, this mcthodlcJ inform Jft^ihg the public that he still continues the business of TURNING and WIND SOR CHAIR MAKING, in the ?pp*r end ol Camden. Order* in his lift? will be thankfully received and punctually ex ecuted. SETTEES and CMAtRS made to any pattern, and painted any quired. M*yl<>. #X ? - ??? +?>*<< "I ,V " "" 11 Charleston Tobacco Inspection. IkT OTlCE.?The '' ? ^ this institution ???? __r Jon of 0*e Tnapector <yf ( vuwco, " Ol Candidates from the upper .part of this on the 15th day of July next, who II be bound to attend at said Inspection, to perform all the duties of an Inspeo tor of Tobacco, agitable to t(ve laws and reguiftyons of the Commit^onen, from the fin* tyy of *tovejnber ne*t, until the first, day of Juno following, and for same L; * ? * * I ' ? ?' ? JS _ ' nng as whioh Five _ - L, ,tr Iiwaav tr IM 4 VI I* 3H1 period in each Jbcceeding year, so long he may be continued in office ; for whi service, he will reteWe the sum ol Fi Hundred and Fifty Dollars. Any perM dfoly qualified for said office, atf demons of becoming a Candidate, -ri" application by letter, (sealed and directed; to the Commissioners of ? the Chwiiston Tobacco Inspection,) and for wifrd the same to the Subscribed in Charles ton, on^or before the isth day of Julr next. Bond and security will be required, for the faithful performance of duly. Daniel Stevens, Chairman. Charleaton* Mau l.i. iaia printing, . OF FVKRY DESCRIPTION, XXtCUTKD WIT* NIL ATM BIS AND ACCURACT AT TH 1 OFFICII OF THR CAMDEN GAZETTE; Where may be had ?BLANKS FOR LAWYERS, MAGISTHATBS, SHERIFFS, &CC. M>TIQE SUBSCRIPTION papers me lnnteet ot the ^ ? A %0 n/X A m A ? K, y "j %??*- nuiivn wi iiic cj/|^ K J STEAM BOAT COMPANY, ?n?y seen at the Storr nf Mess'rs Quuaju Coj and jat MeuH L?K Ic DsLiok's. Persons desirous of becoming Subscribers ?re invited to come forward. June 6, 1816. , TB Notice is, Hereby Given > HAT agreeably ju/'Btcts x sed d urine the lut equina a! Lb* SUt of December, ISllfc **' s to those payable according to the _t August 3, 1813. Thei* licenses be granted for a year, except in ??e of m application for a license to retail be- | tween the 30th day of June and th* thrst of I January next, which will be granted for a 1 period that will expire on the 31st of ~ ceqjfljtr next, on paying.a sum which . bear the same proportion to the duty >vr ? year, according to the existing rates, as the i time for which the license may be granted* shall bear to ji year. ' t the duties spirits distilled United States, will cease after1 the 30th of June, 1816, to which period re turns tnust be made of the spirits that may be distilled on or before that day^ ? i* ? - .That after the 30th day of June* 1816, new rates of duties on licences, for stills and ? : ? leriah. i t 1 tiEj 1.18 I 30 mt* Hoots; M08 foreign materials. I 180 i 270 i The provisions applicable to the duties , on licenses to distiller*, are, it\ general, the Wif With those laid by the act U July24, 18 IS* The most important of the new provisions are? that the dut/ is invariably to be paid in money, when that payable upon the still or strlls, or boiler*, licensed an any one time, does not exceed twenty^ dollars ; that a deduction of eight per cen tum is, in all cases, to be made for prompt payment ; that }n cases where the.duti^i art bonded, they are to be given with two sureties at the least (instead of one as heretofore) and are to be paid at the end of twelve months, from the Expiration of the license ; that all stills are to be licensed, that are used, or kept in a situation for use ; that a penalty ties against any per son who shtigl keep in\ or about his distil lery, any Wer, or ottier liquor* prepared from grain, for the purpose of distillation, for more than eight days, without having ; a license j that a collector is authorised to enter a distillery at any time, whether be tween the rising and setting of tftasun, or at any other time. V In cases in which a license for distilling^ shull have been granted according to the prAent rates of duty, for a period extending beyond the 30th day of June, 18 16, it hfre quired, under a penalty tor neglect, that the person to Whom the same may hate been granted or transferred, shall, on or before the said day, apply to th? collector, and nay, or secure the payment of, the i additional duty, according to the new rates, (or the unexpired period of the license Jtoslthe 30th of Jane. New forms for bohd*% will be prepared by the Electors and furnished to distillers on application. JohnCante*. Collector of the Revenue Jar the 8 th Collection District* foaffoChH tMm. Csmden, June 6, 181 6* FOR SM.K JtT THIS Of PICK, ( Prict 1 2i Cents.) CHIT CHAT I between John Bull IS Brother Jonathan , f' v By Jack Marlinspikb. 1 I t * f ? . ??Also? INSTRUCTIONS roam* I Artillery Sword Exercise. \ FROM ^fARKi PAPER. tisiical and topographical descrip WVft ef tbf'DittrtiL vf Cnjmmbin, P. B. Warden. United, States of America fuve resorycd the most important and most difficult problem that has ever occupiecfthe mind of man, I mean the establishment of liberty without licentiousness, and of or der without, oppression t these ad rounded by jealous aadnsip* neighbors; the wars which they have to wage against foreign enemies cannot menace their independence ; they seam to live in a region always calm, from whence they contem plate without fear for themselves, | the political storms which agitate and overthrow other states jit-. e naQinedf lntotatN andestablisf&d them, . ?ority of discernment wfticb was Co be expected from his genius. How ever, as . th&great republic of the pjfjnited States had not yjet existed at the ejioch when he elevated the hit man understanding ?o high, it want ed a^ubject of observation which should have revealed^ to it a ?l principle of government, more di able perhaps, and more energeti than all other^ , 1 |m|wf ot no phrase which Win better express nay neaning than the words u- effects which Rfoni wjiiwu oiaics, tne nature :e of the spirit of property. __jng no- other people do we find, 'in the same degree as with the American^ ajtespect so inviolable latitude } it is not Only $ut of man that property U discoverable, but in man. An American ruled By this sentiment, which he has per- ; haps never defined, sets as mi value onjthjs imprbvement of hi cultiet, the cultivation of his ret on freely manifesting his thought*? preserving the opipiona acquired* by the exercise of judgment, as to enjoy in peace the .actual products of his industre, or to fructify-che yet virgin soil 'whffch to recom-? pence his tabors.. When an Ante rican citizen is asked for the ground of his aj^hment to the political cohstitutidfc tof his country, he sim ply answers*// is mj 'property ?, this reply exonerates him from all other argumentation, and in fact k appears to me, more conclusive than ^ ab stractions of publicists. Thus whatever appertains to the citizens, whatever touches his rights, is tiered in the United States. ^ He stalks freely and pipudljR on his na tive soil, fearless of the jealousy of malevolence or the stab of an infor mer. He accounts not for his ac tions but to that common law which is the property of all ? he gives to Jkts abniries, -^ptellectual and physi cal, all the devMopement of which they are susceptible } he uf happy enmigh to desire neither change in his laws nor in the condition of his family. This idea of property, this gen eral sentiment is represented more particularly by the ifbtions annexed to territorial or landed property. The class of American cultivators is the most influential in the United States* ~ It is supposed with reason ^hatthey reckon as mui'c important than any other* the right of pro perty, the principal supporter of institutions foijndcd on the same right. Nearly all the cultivators, improperly called farmers*, possess expcnenCe and information. They , hold seats ifi^ihe lcgi slarivS jsacm blies and the councils of govern meat ; this class his produced eio- ~ quent orators^ trates, Skilful and courageous cap tains. General Jackson, who dis 1? w ! ? ? in Louisiana by is victories, 1 had 'with * ? -w" ? *Mtv4 1 1 ir> V IV.IVII IC II3U. forsaken his fartikto fly to the de-i fence of his country. Washington was originally a %<ner. . ?This consideration, attached to agricultural" labors, is' not, one of the smallest causes ^f the ever growing prosperity of the United States. The extensive banks of the Ohio, the vast plains of Genes see,' the immense^ regions '"'" " Southern states, afe pei HHtttigvho seekadpppm who thiflk in earnest o? . ity of tffRr families, such _.y obtain by the culture ot lands yet in need of clearing. -still free, and without misery,gg|^^? Prosperity displays itsel gression so rapid, 'that H - some measure, never lose' sight of the United States for a .single mo ment, we inces&ntly tun /the ri>k of estimating their situatipn ? 1? imperfect documents. AU descuptiobs of this country, *"u"4 eight or sag^jrean ago, ing^more than an interest Jp?y they express net- . therher riches nor actual power, nor prcstnt us any adequate idea of her high and approaching destinies. ? During the night of the 17 th Jan. 1814, Gen .Jackson, ever 011 the watch againttthe enemies with in as well as withdut, took measures to ascertain if all that should be un der his command were then at their ttfsts. One man, a Spaniard, was found to be missing. As tho eral felt certain that die Spaniard J could not have got off towaras New Orleans, he concluded he had gone to contact, to tion of his ing some wv?f?,?iviwvsv mKi mhuiu m his plan. The British came on, and were dealt with as every one knows Three da- " ~ 1 m * ' the wretc s have nbth ons to receive accordingly? yrtidt lerable alteration* in a J. -A - ~ days #er they had retired, ctchecr Spaniard was found hanging on a tree !?r-The enemy supposed he had deceived them, and thty* executed him for telling .them the truth and serving them faithfWly ! Verily, he got his re ward. , IRISHMEN AND POTATOES. Some years since scarce a ship arrived at the aoathwar^ from Ire land, bnt was loaded with the men of that country ? the pctatott are now kindly sent after to feeel them. The Globe has arrived at Baltimore, wish /freight of them* which cosc in be^end eight fence per bushel, and are now retailing at two dolletrs f Salem Gazette. ? ? I A grave diggers bill^ A grave digger, who had buried a Mr. Bui ton, sent the lolloWiftg curious bi' to his widow : 41 To making a Mf'jJ Hole ? 2 s?\ ' - ??