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Foreign. J*Yom London Pu/icrs received at the Ojf. the JV. Y. Commercial ^idvertiacr. The Princess of YYrales arrives at Marseilles on tbe 10th of Not. Large bets were offered at Pari*> the last of Nov. that the new minis try would not continue ui office mon than six Weeks. Twenty men per compapy are to be added to the regimen is in England: The Invalids are to do garrj$on duty: _^The Directors of the Bault of England have given orders to havt 4*ars of gold in readiness for balliou payments, on the Jlst of Feb. next On the l5H| pf November, the fever at G*d& tad so fa^ subsided, thai a Tk Deum and general thanks giving was to take place the ntxt The ground for erccting barracks, 500 men, jhas been laid out Beat Manchester. An articie frogi Vienna of Octo th* 38, ?ays, a cabinet courier hag from Warsaw. It is said pourier brings the iatelji-* t ^he Emperor of Russia resolutions adopted , r he postpones to ano-. ther opportqgkv several te^itorial ar . fang^pieqtfif Native tp Poland, aud various secudfcy States of Germany. ? _ A public meetiug was held at Hud-, dersfield, in f^kshu?;LM*t)i# 8th of November, to ^Mider tb? be?t Jneansof promoting n ?? Judical lie form."-? i orty-four lags were dis played, bearing a variety ?f figures fmblems and inscriptions) among winch were the following Black doth flag, with a figure of :;?% crown ? motto mi large characters,! Liberty or Death 1"? . tu' A figure of Jimlice : "No com' law* j death or liberty : arm yonr-' against tyrants," Wolf de y<?ortng a Lamb ^ Countrymen *? firm ? Grown and Laurel-.-i *?Lil?erty and Justice." Flag in four compartments, with pre* in each ; and in one? >Mky never a cock in England crow, w bevcr a pipe in Scotland blow, never a harp in Ireland pHyf" f Liberty regains the day*" " ',v- , ? 1 black flag with white border x - Vjjie time draws nljcfe ; it's just at band,! Britons shall with courage stand j ich heart united shall then be; > have our rights, we will be free; 1 Should the tyrants yet oppose* h hellish wit our noblecanse, Minever ffwerve, but stedfast be* *H die, or have our liberty.". Mr* Cpbhett has given a public Inception,. in Clapton square, Liver- 1 to wait on him with congratulation. ? A 3,000 persons collect witness the ceremony. After ? was read, Mr. Ooblwtt -? 1. ** ^n* speech of about an hour in length. The tone it wi,s mild and conciliating. .He -eetly recommended a peaceable patient deportment on the part1 tbe peopb j he spoke of tbe oe "i of * Kadical Koform in Par rot, and declared, that having led tbe. conduct of the Rulers kll States, and studied (be f, raw thefe governments, It was hu conviction, that of England, ng of ting, fords and com with a people fairly reptesent was the best which could post* ho devised, aud no other would Wvucate, or wish to see establish * * MANCHESTER, NOV. 29. I Expected arrival qf Mr. CobbeUA JHirFbongb the morning WM very ratay, the expectation of Mr. Cob bell's arrival in this town attracted creat uutnbers of persons from di fferent parts of Uie couutry* The local authorities were on the aiert, : - and military smngeaienta were made . I which were as fortuidahlt* as those otd the ifthof August. Several pie<r> of cawtoo were brought into the town last night, btit the Yeoiiutrir\ Cavalr> hail received no oner, nor did iu v r^ake their a|?^trntK?- u day. Huksju were BtainmeuXg Afferent parts of tie Livffltyool road, .1 order to jyjte immediate informa ion of Mr. CPs movements. As Mr. Ogbjbett did not make his ypttnrance at the expected time, the people gradually returned to their i?oraes. At about five o'clock a par v of his friends, to the amount of ime hundred and twenty, Bat down to an exeelleut dinner at th? Union Utooins, after which, Mr. Stott, the chairman, explaiued the cause of J-ir. Cobbett's absence, wbiclj may ?>e learned from the following letter from the Boroughreeves and Consta bles of Manchester and Salford, to Mr. Cobbett, at Irlam : Manchester , Nov. ?8, 1819. Sir-*~Having reason to believe that your introduction into the town of Manchester, "on Monday, the $9th ifist. is intended to be public, and to he accompanied by an unusu al procession and Multitude of peo ple, as wfltl strangers as inhabitants ; we, the undersigned, being Bo roughreeves and Constables of the t>eg to inform you, that we consider such an assemblage of the great mass of the population of this district, in the present situation of the country, as necessarily attended witb consid erable danger to the public peace : ? We do therefore caution jou against making any public entry into the town - of Manchester ; and if you adopt any other proceedings, where by the public peace may lie. broken or endangered, we shafll fe# it our indispensable duty imujfcH%tely to interfere. i " a We are, sir, yoar obedient ser vants, (Signed by the Boroughreeves and Constables of Manchester and Salford.) v Cobbett, immediately after writ* iug his reply, left lrlam, for London, in a post-chaise, accompanied by his two sons. MANCHESTER, NOV. 30. The Female Reformers of Man obiter were Yesterday mucb disap pointed in the non-arrival of Mr. Cobbett, for whom tbey had provi ded a moat elegant silver iuksUnd witfa appropriate inscriptions. H|| |epl| <T theTBoroughrefves and Constables was as follows :?*? " Irlam, November ?9, 1819. Gentlemen? I fit had come from any Other ptrsotis in ibis vv oriel, th< notification which 1 have just reoei-/ ved from yon would have surprised me. Coming froroyou it excites no surprise, nor any sort of feeling to wards yoiv which was not before en* " tertaitied by every jpd man, in every . part o t the world where your deeds and character 4ave been heard ot " ' f But, Gentlemen, is it ffcaft.v come - to this, that a man, upon returning to his country* or apon moving from one part of England to anothef, iej to be atopp^dWhis way by threats of irtferfcrene* {on the part of officers appointed to keep the peace, )lest the coaco^n^ of people, which his mars pre* may draw together, should produce danger of a breach of die puhHr peace ? A It is really come to this fc m this the state of England? la ttqa (he Uuc? Is tbia one or the ef fectqofthat apstem, which, we are tpkl, is bo excellent, Ibrt it feqoirei uu reform ? The laws of Eojluml aecuro to m theright of iocomotioe; i bat is to aajr the right of moving our bodies from one place to another. I Now, if your BotfficatSil be MflM thing more than ? mere empty pit ting forth of wards, it pwaumea that jua have a right to prevent me from enjoying this liberty of looo* motion. For you toll we yon shall interfere* if I persist in my intention of makinc it fwUk entry into your town ? and *lso ! we know too well what yon mean by i*kttfei*nce 1 And whit* ii(? yon mean by puUue fiitry ? what do you mean, I say, by public entry? How am I to make any othetr than a public entry, it I enter it all ? Like othfr persons, my intention must bave Ven to enter your town in a carriage, or on horseback, or on foot. Are not these the ways in which all other persons enter ? And have not i Uri^ntto enter as other persons do? Jtuijcr, tlicrelorc, you must meax* to forbid me to enter 'hi all, or you must mean that I shall move like (he women of < be Seraglio, of the Dey of Allien, abut up in a box, with large air hole* to it ? or rUle upcfti a horse, my ' body . ami head being covered over with a apecietf of tub. This is the $tate; is it, to which the; system has brought ooce free auti' happy England ? u To wliat a pitch mutt men have arrived, when they could set down and look one another in the face, while they wrote aud signed a pa per, such as that you sent me ! This paper was addressed to* man having no power and no inclination to disturb the public peace ; a man, who, with a knowledge of the receut events duly impressed upon bis mind, bad taken die precaution to beseech the people, not to mix np a reception of -him with even an allu sion to those events. It appears manifest that the public peace could net have been endangered from mv entrance into Manchester. 11 nf {Q see snrh multitude of people afi6em bled together . to shew their respect for me, appears to have been more , than you could endure. We read accounts of the Prince of Saxe Co bourg, the Marquis of Anglesea, the Duke of Wellington, and other great personages, moving ltere and there amidst public plaudits. In finite pains, at any rate, are taken to make us believe that this is the I case. What right, therefore, iinVe yoo to make any attempt, eitf,Pr (yu rectly or indirectly, to prevent the people from bestowing their applause upon me, in person? Is not my right to move from place to place, n* perfect as that of any of the tlire* men that I have just meutioned ! ! ! Aye, but then, the assemblages that they cause are so small f f " Suppose I were at this moment living at an inn in Manchester* It Is pretty clear, I believe, that an as semblage of persons would take place at any time that I chose to Nvalk out to the spot where the dread ful scenes *6th of August were exhibited W hat, then, would you expel me your town, or com pel me to keep lfc^self fihut Op in a room? And if the people presumed to come to she* sin? marks of their respect,' Would *you visit t)iem with ' your awful interference / Gentle men, we shall live to see the dav, and | that day is, I believe, not instant, when I shall be able to visit the ex-' - cellent people of ' Mancheeter and its ' neighborhood, without your daring 1 to step in between us with your ^ threats of interference* a Let me call on you tQ think a lit tle on the figw^eyoo new make fat the}, world. Here I ato, 40 miles froml Manchester ; there a*e the people < V bom you call an unusual multitude, ready to receive me, and to bestow on nte all possible marks of respect ; and there are yon, sending the threats of interference, and prepar- 1 ing all sort* of means for making that interference effectual, in order to intercept a verbal expression of pfcpMar approbation, intended, to be bestoweq upon a man, destitute of every species of means of ob taining that approbation, other than the means naturally arising from bis integrity and his talents, his well known love fhr hi# country, and his well known zeal in her cause, dur I ing the whole course of his life, un f<?ler allctrcomstances, whether afiroad or at home, whether is prosperity or adversity* u Thus the parties stand before the world, 1 di<dain to t^ll yon what my intentions are ; whether f intend to entqfManchester or not. 1 have nwdeTna comment open your communication, in order that the nature of yon? conduct may he the better understood, and even in doing this, I have condescended toj bestow on you too great an honour. ? With feelings such as a veal friend of the people; a real lover of his country, and faithful subject of the King, must ever entertain to wards men like yoo,^ I am, Wuuum Comrr,^ : ? bkc.4.1 The dewnd for cotton has been limited daring the last weeV, and (be sale* including 1000 bales of bengal by unction, vere only 5600, while the in?jnwt was 7800 Imles. ? The ?ricen are not actually lower ; hut the arrival of a \cssel from Charleston with a small parcel of new cotton* and the generally favor able accounts of new crops, have rendered the buyers unwilling to purchase -extensively. CAMDEN. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1820. i From the want of paper we are compel led to issue the GAisTf* this week on a half sheet. In consequence of which a number of advertisements, and seveful interesting articles are necessarily omitted. The Missouri Question, as it is fam ilia- I ry called, is at length determined in the I Senate* After a debate, as full, as dtli- I berate, and as able, perhaps, as ever took j place in that venerable body, the Senate J have decided, by a vote of nearly two to I one, that the Congress of the U nited j Slates does not possess the right to ioipoae | upon the people of" Missouri ppppcpgct | Uestriction, as a condition of their admis- ] sion into the Union. .. The majority is greater, we l>elieve, 1 than was anticipated, and the vote is the 1 largest which we remember to have been j taken in the benate ? every member being 1 in his seat, except one, who, it is under- 1 stood, would have voted with the majority, I had he been present I The fallowing are the yeas and nays * j Yeas ? Messrs. Burrill. Dana, Dicker- I son, King of New-York. Lowrie, Mellen, I Morrill, Noble, Otis, Roberts, Ruggles, I Sanford, Taylor, Tichenor, Trimble, Wil- I son? 16. m ' 'I Nays.? ?Messrs. Barbour, Brown, Ka- 1 ton, Edwards, Elliott, Oaiilard, Hunter, I Johnson of Ky. Johnson of Lou. King of | Ala. Lanman, Leake, Lloyd, Logan. 1 Macon, Pi?nier, Parrot, Pinkney, Plea- I sants, Smith, Stokes, Thomas, Van Dyke I Walker of Ala. Walker of Georgia, Wil- I lianas of Miss. Williams of Tenn.? 2f. I National Intelligencer , Feb. 8. Colonel William H. Capers is | elected Sheriff of Sumter district, I by a pluralty of 91 voted. The to- I tal number of votes take n was 1 .>18, I of which Colonel C. bad 41 6 ; Capt. j John China* 325 ; Wm. Taylor, I 232; Capt J. Jennings, 173; Thus. I Anderson, 89 ; and S. Hanks, 88* 1 ALBANY* Jan. fiO. I Tfcd Jfeite.? - Mr. Noah, editor of I the New-York National Advocate, I has addressed a memorial to the le- I gislature, praying that the state I would authorize the sale of Grand I Island hi the Niagara river, to him. I for the purpose of building a city I thereon, aim inviting a community ] of Jewish emigrants to that piece* J The memorial cannot fail to excite I interest, because it ethhraces an ob- I iect which appears to us very feasi- 1 hie ; and if Mr. Noah does not de- I ceive himself, as to the dis- osition I of the Jews io emigrate to this coun- I try, his- prtnect may be conaiderff} ft as a very splendid <A Indeed we I have often wondereuwby the Jews 1 do not emigrate more frequently to I the ?United! States ; why they should I suffer from the intolerant* of other I Sovernments, when an asylum to | csirable can be found In this coun- 1 try. It must aris$ from their total I un acquaintance with our laws and I institutions, and this memorial will 1 no doubt lead to some inquiry.-- I There is no small discernment evin- I ced in this location. Grand Island I is bounded on the north by Lake I Ontario ; on the south by Lake Brie ; I on the *jest by Upper Canada ; and I on the by the state of N. York, I and lies near the centra in Niagara I river ? the current, however, is I Rotfiewhat rapid. It mfcy contain I 80,000 acres. From the vicinity of those great bodies of water, (he ah n? winter derives a decree of warmth ; and the same cause also tempers ami refreshes the heat of summer.^ Melons, peaches, nectarines, and other delicate fVuits, grow in the neighborhood ? ami its position is ex cellent for a city. We know not whether the state would sell that tslanA It its of no use, and is the Asylum of gypsies and wanderers, who are destroying the timber. If, however, fhey should deem it expe dient to sell, it then will be no ot> jectioa to sell it to Mr* Noah for tby Aject which he contemplates; 1k> cause, iit the po>sesNiog of any oilier individual, and fur other Mirposes, the state cannot realize those benefits w hich a settlement of Jews will pro duce. The property of foreign Jens, principally consists of money and merchandize, which can be easily removed to any country ; aud if a few* of their great bankers would I tynigrate to this state, and circulate alt% millions, they would secure a good profit, aud give a spur to inter | nal commerce. Besides, after ail said or w rote on this subject, this is the most preferable country fu: the Jews 5 ? Here they cau have their Jerusalem, without fearing the le gions of Titus; here they cau erect their temple, without dreadii^g tho torches of enrage d fcoldieis; here they can lay their heads on their pil low, at night, without fear c.f mobs, of bigotrv and persecution ; her<> they can become citizens ? attached to tho soil ? defending the laws ? and interested in the protection of liberty : ? and who knows but divine Providence, . w ho i a tb litis day protected the childri# of Israel as a nation, may finally lead them to this jountry ; may repeat in the words of the prophets ? "1 will be as (lie dew unto Israel: he shall grow as the lily, and cast forth his roots as Le banon. His branches shall spread, aud his beauty shall he as the olive tree, and his smell as Lebanon." _ , rl ?' -.-*r Hon. John Gaillard, of this State, has been elected President pro t*m. of the Senate of the United State** POST-OFFICE NOTICE. ANY persons wishing to have at) accouut at the Post-Office, must pay in advance. No Letters, or Papers, will be de livered on the Sabbath, after 9 o'clock in the morning* P? Thornton, P. M. Camden, February 10, 1820. Commissioners of the Poor. r. A Meeting will be held at the Court. House in Camden, on Wednesday the twen ty-third instant, by the Commissioners of the Poor, for Kershaw District , mk in-# formation relative to the &ituatio?H^he * following Paupers, will he thankfully fe te ived by the C?pimWaioners JPaapentf ICershaw District. XBowaiwe Ptr Month. Suckey Bradley, Mary Barfield, T/ Mercer* v , Amy Parish, Ann Kent, 'Mary Phillips, John larvis, ? John Cravan," Kigglm Hamell, ? Mary Driver,; teasr*?; ' Francis MaloWj ? > * ft' ^ Brent) \ JohfH^tbart, Jndith Wrish, ?WilllUm Milter, James Cum tilings,. Hucthin Gibson, Amy Grant, ; , . - Jo?*(>h Patterson, Chaijtmun </ the Board. February lfc ' ' X, * ,K . lA" ? ->> Public Sale. t f BY Permisakxi of the Court of Ordina* j r f for Kershaw District, will be sold, on Saturday the 19th Inik. at 12 o'clock, be fore the store of Bftimiel Lopez, in Cam den ; a quantity of treating apparel, * watch With chefo, teal and key, two trunk# 1 and one tajble, belonging to tfe* estate ?df Michael Isaac*, deceased. Conditions Casb*^/ si Jmlah Barrett, Administer Michael lioac*t decoded* February 10. ' 26#-? 3 [? ' . i .i, ' /? ^ ? y*' M #> t y - ' ' ' V, ALL persons indebted to the firm of RtACKMAM k Dyp., are hereby informed thai U. Hlackman is the only person duly authoried to OoHect the juma due to sakl . firm* The Subsciber may be found at all times at the house of Messrs* Welsh 8c Smyth. The sums due to the firm, aa well as tho?e due me individually, must be , immediately settled* U. Rla< kman. February to. . 800?2 , Company Orders. THE Cpmden Light lr\funiry are as dered to parade In front of Messrs. Welsh 8t Smyth's Tavern, on Saturday** the 12th instant, at 10 o'clock,, A. M. hy Order of Cape. Boyriv, J. I. Hlair, Orderly Sergeant . . F^ruary 3.