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imiMiuiw mi..?WW 4 C"?RAW fi-iaETTa. W$tWB0NESJ>AY,' Fta*<JAOTt2,:i942M _ M l myokTAXT vnox. BSGL.XXD. By the steamer Britlanin, which errived in Boston on th'% 23fd January, ^a??* London accounts have been received, down to January 3d and Liverpool ac. counts to January 4th. The aspect of * financial and commercial affairs is more favorable than was expected. Tno Presi. dent's message at the opening of Congre? had reached England and w3?s well received. But the most important news | w the appoir.tmout of a special minister] ?th? country, wiih a view to the settle. , . ment of ail difficulties between the two I ?; governments. The appointment was; given to Lord Ashburton, lately if not 1 stilt one of the House of Barings & Co. J so welt, and so favorably known in this country. We copy below the coitunents of two of the English journals on the jsubject of this appointment. '*7 .- , From the iVorning Chronicle. Lord Asburton's appointment ha9 been favurtrbly received in commercial circles, -and given a tone of conti.iajiee to the iholders of stale stocks. His lordship's appointment will be acceptable to the Americans, as the Messrs. Barings have ^ mnui VftIV ; ',".v^3?Deeo lor matijr j .? .v engaged in American affairs, and, in fact, ibe agents of the American government in monetary operations. His lordship is . t?oside* a citizen of the great republic, and one of the largest landed proprietors, sloo, in the state of Pennsylvania. His talents as a man of busing* arc well ^ '- Jknowii. He is one of the largest house.holders in the U. Stales, and lady Ashbur tuu (late Miss Bingham) is an American birth. Well versed in the history aod j value of state bonds, and of the peculiar ! *frur'ture of the American Constitution, he will be able to press upon (be attention 'Hff the Americans the necessity of puncprovision for the public engage- j in cots. From the Times. " ; : tl gires us much pleasure to announce, .? tlrat the Right Hon. Lord Ashbjrfon, at the requAst of her Majesty s govern ocnt, is about to proceed to thr United States <00 a special mission, with th? object of '^settling all existing differences between | that country and our own. His Lordship. I who wili sail in a faw weeks, had been *>ked to undertake this service, and had consented to do so. before the President's message had been received, so that the mission in question, whatever be its char,defer or results, hns been had recourse to. wholly irrespective of any thing cou: dained or omitted in that document. The i <v_j - . >.1. .j o a;.jr. f,nn inas. i 1 ffop tn*eu, ?o M > "i-v . much n? the introduction of new elements ' ^irritation contingent u;>on further det'ay, 1 4?wght eventually rentier an amicable ad. jiwtmcnt uiuiitainable, and involve both %<_<'[ countr.e* in all the horrors of war. I <: Two things,*' all events, are clearly , tfcunon-truled by the appointment of this apodal mission?in the first place, that the conservative government, instead <?f VMfating the whigs4Mpro9ecutingase. ties of speculative political experiments, nre steadily addressing themselves to the 'repair of such practical evils as. by en.T gendering. a want of mercantile ennfi. J deuce, operate 'injuriously upon British commercei and secondly, that Sir It. *rPeel 'a ministry is intent, by all practical i means, upon maintaining the blessings Neither must it he supposed that Lord j p ini^ian n*>r???.4*rilv implies i j ? ^ ?? ?uuf i?w? v? .-^ ? 8 *py defifioey in tlie- instructions or '^ttttren? of the American minister at her majesty's court. Tnose instructions and ' powers, we have no reason to doubt, are Wa {denary order; while, from the known , discretion and alrilrty of Mr. Kveivtt, j As wt.'l as from the very short period du- j jring Which hie* excellency has been in J Sr' this country, the presumption is that, for various satisfactory reasons, it ha?>appeared tlnit the deputed points between America and ourselves had better be entirely committed to Lord Ashhurton and the Washington cabinet. The npnoint- i men, of a spechrl ambassador from this j /Country i?, of itself, n piece of marked re- f *pect to the United .States government, w hich can hardly fail of being duly ap, , preciated, and of paving .the way for an amicable negotiation. A friendly intercourse, too, between our special envoy arid the lending statesmen of America. A . .. * . ; i_._ ** r Vflicfated oy * coruiat anxiety 10 compivic an inf rangible bond of amity, cannot but be attended with beneficial results. AH that birth parties contend f??r may not be ; immediately secured ; but, by reasonable ' X concessions, likely to be yielded without 1 dishonor oa either side, the main points in dispute may be so reduced in impor. lance as to render future surrenders more advantageous to each other than a dog. j fc ged adherence to mere unsubstantial Al punctilios. The selection of Lord Ashburton for this delicate mission seems to ; us, upon the whole, to be deserving of W&"' .commendation. His lordshio is. bv uni. versa! acknowledgment, the prince of British merchants. .v .. . .. -? The Editor of the South Carolinian " Seems to rind it very hard to believe that oayiBembers of the Legislature, and still ruore so that any considerable number of them, when voting to refuse the Slate'* f' share of the proceeds .of the public lands, V.- w&e at the same time willing that it ^x^fhovjld ever afterwards l>e received under any contingency. His incredulity, however,'dees not alter the case.. Our in. formante had better opportunities of knowing than he could have had, and they are as well as highly respect hie- witnesses. Who- ha ther or not tl.ey drew general inferences in; from too few facts, we do not know. But jfo'i thUf we know : they are not more likely *n to he minted in this way thnn men yC> ha rikeltigence-; and good sense commonly ; ci? fire; e?nd wo reco!Ject that intimations of j4tt the same purport with the information sit derived by its from them, were thrown sit out by a correspondent of one of the or Charleston papers during the Session of j>r iho L gulaturn. The Kditoroi the Uar- sa oliniwi iH anxious to learn the names of S? our informants. With every disposi. he tiori to accomodate our cotemponry *p cannot do it in this particular It is alto- !y gather unnecessary. There is no need do for bandying gentlemen's names in such th a case. For the respectability of their sis character and the correctness of our re- in port of what wo burnt from them we are su responsible. te * h?i From an editorial paragraph of the hi Temperance Advocate introductory to* (}, an article in the preceding columns, taken er from the Kentucky Farmer, it appears pr that some of the Western hog drovors n(] have been selling pigs for Berkshires in th the upper districts of this State, which v? have little or no Berkshire blood in their (0 ? TKa nnwr districts are not the j m vuiim* ? >iv [? - __ only part of the State, nor this.the only / state, in which similar impositions have been practised. Persons who wish hUod- jy ed stock of any kfn'd can huve security g| of obtaining them genuine and pure, but rp by applying to breeder* of established (u reputation. The West is not the part of j)( tfie country front which they can he jy bought at low prices. There livestock j ^ is the stapje product, and the most vain J- [ pi hie varieties are yet so scarce, and the | demand for them so great, that (he prices j j,| at which they are sold are much higher i j;l (Han tlie prices in the Eastern and MiiMh- | ??f Stales. The only newspaper paragraph which wj we have seen in any degree approving the inte mob in Cincinnati, is the following ^ " - * -H. -.11 I from a paper printed m fayeueviiie caned the North Carolinian* . : Let this be a warning to other Banks',? The people are not goin? to stand thw non- re resumption game much longer-; at .Vast tlujy <?j are fools if they do. They want tlieir rights, jQ and will hare them, by fair means if (hey can, hy foul if (hey must, ft is high time that P" Bank swindling was brr>ken up, and if nothing en but mob law can effect it, be.tor so than not w. at a?l. ,rj The character of the "01! North Stale" th w?U very greatly change, before it can approve sentiment* so unpatriotic, unci of nf so un.arohical tendency. |)fl Since the a-wve was pnt it type we sa have received tiie fast week's South Caro- 0. Union tvhich contains an article of sortie a length on this subject, from which we an in?ke two extracts as follows: th< thi: sKorxxtxo or tbb kxd ! ro< The mid of the present corrupt and vicious (j0 Bunking system has begun, and began as we 1 avo for i lie Uhi ton years repeatedly declared " it would do, if a proper and thorough reform ho was rcHis'od?by Revolution ! The accounts in we public i to-day; of the recent Bank riots |)0 ? * _ >? and destruction hi Utncinnali ana l.ouisvuie, i n0 shew that the p^opl^, long oppressed, opt- j 1 raged, and phittiier-'d by thein, and, (from the l"( manner in which they almost everywhere buy th< up their Representatives,) losing all hope of co redress by law, are taking the law into their pa own hands?a result always inevitable. As long as a hope of red rebs by law remained, ro the peop'e peaceably and quietly submitted ca but he must be stupid indeed, who expects a tei continuance of such submission, from a free Wi people, when all such hope is at. an end. The ^ Bank minions and their presses throughout the c uritry, who have driven the people to these on excesses, may now raise their hands, turn up tin the whites of their eyes, and moralize most so fbently, on th( horrors of mobs, and the virtu- nr es of law and order But it wont do. Dont talk, then of the People's disregard for the law, till you make their vile plunderers, W( the Banks, obey b .* And where is ihe single bo Legislature thai has done this, to the extent Q< it ought ! '? nig Stale h?ts done much, but cfi nocso much as it should have dut.e ; anvi what has been the result of its attempt to control UWI the Banks* Haye they not combined against j do it, the law, and the majesty of the People? p( attempted to place themselves above all law, and subject the People to *iieir will?and so lar, been sustained even by the Judiciary it5 cn sell? Are not these startling thiugs to witness ne in a free State; and is it not evident, as sug- th< gested by our patriotic and honest hearted m, Governor, that if the Sovereign right to control these arrogant institutions were improvi- ct denlly lost in law, it would, in the absence .of any other resort, be reclaimed by Revolut on? |>e Can any one believe that the people of South hji Carolina would hesitate to fee themselves by the strong arm, il necessary, from :heupgrading and oppressive thraldou of a self constituted and unlimited Bank despotism ? We do not suppose it to be the design of l'? the Carolinian to excite any part of tho ^ people either of this or any adjoining ' a state to njob violence. The editor knows j?* the character of onr people too well to C believe such a thing could be done even i>Pl if he wished it. But if ho did wish it tlt such as the above would he the language ,n* VJ' forhitn touse. So far from its hemp the 4 case that any of the banks in this State have ? combined against it, the law and - tio the majesty ?l the people, attempted to set them salves tip against all law,- and subject the people to their will,'" the jM hanks have only taken a legal aland in support of their plain, legal and just rights. Ze They once, with the general approba- ^ tionof the community, announced to the public their inability to pay specie on de- * maud for their notes, without distressing ex their numerous debtors to an extent much beyond what they were willing to do ?, For this not a breath of censure was q( heard at the timo from aov quarter.? ja Thousands of wealthy individuals of as ^ good credit then and now, as any men ;eJ m the country, and connected with no bU v ^ SkU " nks" labored under precisely the sums j ibiiity. Why are they not maligned j "combining against the state, the law | (I the majesty of tlS?'people?" Their bility boitriri law otidjustice was preiely the same. Every irian ofcommon telHgence knows that the liability of igle individuals, an'ci of partners in buless, whether as merchants, meehnmcs hanks, is precisely the same, and the oce.s9 of collecting debts from them the me. There never has been a lime in >uth Carolina when a Imnk ccufd not u,? onv hnblur of its notes and the I OMI/U ?/T ??! i ecie recovered jti.st as soon and as nasias a private individual could. Nor ?esany man suspect that any hank in estate, if sued, would make illegal romance. All men of common sense and their senses, know that the hanks retried as soon as they could do so consisn?ly with the public interest. If they id refused to suspend when they did, or id resumed sooner, the public and not ey would have been the greater sufl*e?'s. For persuing a course which all np* oved at the time, and reasonable men w admit to have been proper, and which e Legislature itself sanctioned, this 'ry Legislature, afterwards undertook ' visit them with arbitrary illegal and constitutional punishment. The qiti* ins who constituted the hanks under* finding their rights, and determined hko eetnen to maintain them, resist this flurant attempt to tyrannise over them, hey appeal to the law and to the constiition established by "the majesty of the ?op!e," as the supreme Jaw of the land, ?r the security of their rights. And for lis their unquestioned right and their ain doty, they are now charged with iheMion against "the majesty of thcpeoe/' Because they have a;>pealed to the 1 w, they 8re charged with attempting to ! dace then;aclves above all law," and rentened with mob violence ! We have | sither time nor for the comments hich the article of the Carolinian eug'9tS. "Lncon" sh all appear next week. ** * A tAwn> I Tho INCW KOflC pnpMfN i;um?m rt I'M.ji I port of tho trial of John C? Colt of (hut (y churned with killing Samuel Adams *t September. The testimony on the ,rt of the prosecution only, has yet mo to hand. It proves timt Adams i is a most estimable man, and of indus. ions habits; that ho called on CoTt on e 17th Sept. to settle an account, and as not afterwards heard of till his body, ter several days, was found packed in a x on hoard a vessel on which it was ippod as Merchandise for New Orleans, a the day on which he called on Colt, little noiso ?fls heard in Colt's rooin, j (i then a noise as if some ono fell on j b floor. Tho occupant of an adjoining l i>m and others knocked nt the room j or repeatedly hut received no answer, me one was seen, through the keyle, bent towards the floor and tho arms active motion. That evening Colt crowed a saw, hammer <fcc. The is?: of sawing, uniting a box, scrubbing f; floor, fan. was heard in the room, nud a next day a hox, afterwards found to i)tain A'lains's bodv, was seen in the 383ge of the hotel where Colt had his nniand all this occured. The hox^vaa rried tea vessel by u carttnan who Rft rwnrds recognised it. Spots of blood ire fnumHo different fiartsofthe room,! oseon the walls covered with ink, those i the floor with oil. Different spots on r floor appeared to have been recently mired) for the purpose of removing stains b|ood, which at last was not effectuallyr.e. Toe head and face of the body no horribly mangled, apparently by ating with the hack of a hatchet. In ill's room a hatchet was found) con. a led under a-.pareul of papers covered th a trunk. Theso facts leave no lib? that Coil was the murderer. The jrJc through which it was necessary to rry Cult to tho court room for trial was awded at the time when it was known whs lobe brought out; arid such was a manifestation of indignant excite. ?nt against hiin that it was deemed nessary to take him into a house that md hy the way till the crowd had disraed, to prevent violence being done m. The President has communicated to ingress, in reply to a call, the corres- i ndence which hn.s taken pluce with ! 3 Secretary of State, in relation to the nta Fe prisoners; from which it npnrs that so far as was known nt the apartment of State, there were only two rsons among the prisoners who are en. led to the interference of the govern, mt, as citizens of the United States; s; a Mr. Combs, of Kentucky, and r. Kendall, one of the editors of the iw Orleans Picayune.' It was in rela >ii to these prisoners that Mr. MeKne is sent as special messenger with desthes to the Mexican Minister. Theclcstches, however, embraced instructions interfere in he ha IT also of other citiiis of t>.e U. States should there benny' long the prisoners who had not fi lled their claim to the protection of the .ivernment by engaging in an unlawful pedition. A resolution has been introduced into d New York Legislature, requesting ingress to pass a Jaw to refund to Gen. ckson the $1000 Hue imposed upon L c . i xT?... . n. iii Mii^f uiMHn'w in a l <1 \y in lit;** iiw tns during the fast war, and ,paid by bscription. A resolution was introduced in'o the I House of Representative* of Virginia, inwrticting the (J."S. SSwaiori vjTrom: thA: ?t?te to Vote for a ropeal of the bankrupt act, and lost, by a vote of 65 to 03. ,- ? * W' ' * *? ' Charles Dickens, the crdehrnttrtf Rv. glish writer, came over to this country in the Brit^nm, which lately arrived in Boston. - % * The Liberals in the city of Dublin have determined to run Lord Morpeth, now in this country, a* their candidate for Parliament, in place of Mr* West deceased. Col. Caspctt Smith, of Rowan county, N. C. was lately drowned while nttempting to cross the Yadkin at a ford in h'fc^ig. -J Both branches of the Legislature of Kentucky have unanimously pavsetl resolutions agaiuat the repudiation of S~iate dobts. The Maryland House of Delegates have passed a bill requiring the hanks to resume specie payments forthwith, ayes 66, nays 15. What the fate of the bill will be in tho Senate is uncertain. The following extract from tho annual report of the Treasurer of Pennsylvania rebukes in a very proper tone those who approve the repudiation of her debts by ' Mississippi on pretexts so flimsy as those set up by her, or ralhcr by her Governor. UI have thus, with as much brevity as possible, stated the actual condition of tho finances, and have made such practical suggestions its havu occurred to mv mind. Any other more specific information I ! shall be happy to communicate. The! | suggestions I have made have hnd immw. j I dinte reference to the maintenance of the | public credit?an object about which no i private citizen, or public officer can be I too solicitous. The public faith is the j aggregate of every man's promise. No individual can pun?ae even a safe course through life w ho violates his word of honor. No community can sustain itself which trifles with or denies its plighted faith. The promises of the Slate ought to be more" sacred than tho promises of individuals. They rest not on law, which ran he enforced hut on the public word of honor. An individual may be compelled by process of law, which the state secures to the citizens, to pay his debts and fulfil his obligations. The Sutto cannot be made a piuty to compulsory pro ceedntg-v and for tho State to disregard - 4"*- * ko nr% kaf. her honorary nunganuiia WUM1U Wr. mm m* j ter than fur her to closo her courts of justice, and withuld from the honest and injured creditor the means of redress against a dishonest debtor. If ine State violates one promise it may violate another.? If the stale horn!*! re repudiated to-day, the Sta aputerif tnay he repudiated ia-m?.^rovvAll rest on the same security? he pu be faith?the pledge of public honor. iNor! should there be any nice distinction lake*? j in determining the liability of the State, j Being a question of honorary not of legal responsibility, there is no room for distictions and technical objections which might be appropriate in controversies he. twecn man and man. ' .the safe rule is the honest one. When innocent third persons, trusting to the public faith, apparently or actually pledged in the forms of law and by public agents, have udvanced their money, the public is and ought to 1)0 responsible. If public agents, of whatever grade, betray their trust, let the penalty fall on those who employ them.not on those who frusting theni because they are public agents, can have no effeetual redress against their employers.? The instant that n different course is pur. suod, the magic of the public name is gone forever, and the. commonwealth is degraded, not merely to the low levoi of an individual litigant, but lo tho low level ot one who, wunoui venturing. 10 wnivu privilege, is content to justify a breach, of'faith by a poor technicality.. Fortunatelv Pensylvania has n^i her the wish nor the opportunity to pursue such a course. Her debt was contracted in good faith for the construction ol her puh. lie works, which have added more to the intrinsic vulueofthe State than their actual cost. That wns incurred ou accor. ding to the constitution and laws. No faithless agent has intercepted the confix dence of those who trusted u?. Every dollar-which our creditors have lent us has gone into our Treasury; and for every dollar, principal and interest, thus 'caned, do her cinzens and the constituted authorities consider thernselver answerable." MYSTERIOUS IXDEKO! The article below appeared in Satur. day's Whig. The Fredericksburg Arenu referring to it, asks: "Who is meant? *He mentioned your name' !" "Whose name?" The Arena then guesses that the strange young gentleman is "Sem mes," andv we ask?the "Semroc#" that killed Professor Davis] Tnis but in. creases the interest of the mystery. If it he Semmes, what a pathetic ns well as fearful morul does it convey! Rich. Compiler. Mr. Editor?-I received, to-day,. from the hand of a stranger, from Texas, the following letter : "A strange young gentleman ht?ly died here, friendless and almost alone. He seemed to be wealthy, or certainly to -want' nothing. He Stated thai he came from Virginia?hut he told his name to none. I enclose you the only paper foiind in his possession?(for just before death lie mentioned your name.) Tiio manuscript sefms to be a sort of death knell rung by himself." mfiiitiowd. I .lii?Tu tU,chi?sly h j: f tiluhv tcan forrrrnfc&teflfrMlw name vf the deceased. R^eotfully, \ .T-^ Fredericksburg, Dec. 26, 1841. ; Oh! when in -derrth I calmly lie, { P* no ^C"ia1dly\fthrfctho spot, j To tell'tiM e:irele?s passer by J WhdthVe in death's cold sUep doth j r<?t; - , To beg thetributecfa sigh!. No?lot me be by aJl forgot. ,S&\- J I Oh J hy me not tn n barfnl ground, Whero thousands daily came to tnoau, And Wfjp thoir bitter tears ar.,uad Tlieir lov'd iud dear one* loet end "$? -.1 ?0,ie! %*m No. no?in solitude profound i Thttro let me lie, unwept, oioadt For there arc none that will grieve for npe '/'hero's none to whom my lifeis deur. ' I A.ound my dying bod I see Ne cheek w,*t with soft pity's tear! * As lifo is, so my death will be? UnCWl^ttierc's none that love mt j hoivi ' ]' ' * " . V -> . ?? 1 Oh 11y no stuns alor? my graysJ ; Lei flowers abovn me wiJly spring; . ; L >t grucn gnaa gaily round mo wat? -* * Aud birds alons tny requiem *iug: Loi loars?of new the lone spul lire Where I iu du?t liu withering! 1 11 - > .> r AX UNGRACIOUS GREETING. Tho Albany Correspondent of- the Evening Post relates a singular incident which took place at the Capitol in that city on> Friday. * \Vhile Gen. Rpot (.nays ho) was in the midst of one of his stereotyped political harangues, Gov I Se- < ward was showing the new Governor Ge. ? neral of Canada, Sir Charles Bagot, 1 about tho capitol, and entered (he Senate Chamber just as Root was uttering this 'sentence: One of my earliest and i proudest recollections is the rejoicing with J which the people of this country received the news of the surren<jer*>f Burgoyne at Saratoga. It was a great and glorious triumph.' dec. dec. The British functionary drew back for a moment, ?* ; though he thought this rather a strange greeting upon his first arrival at Albany." "? " v ' * ^ r The St. Augustine News has advices ^ frotn Tampa to 18th inst., which suites that Col. Worth is still vigorously follow, ing up his operations aeainst the Indians, t and is very sanguine of capturing the various straggling parlies that are now roaming about. > : ],.? V, Office of tho Daily Georgian, .1 Savannah. Jan. 24?12 M: - ? [Corre*fpondenceof the Savannah Georgian.) Florida. Jan. 21, 1849. \ The.scout* under Col. Riloy and mtjor Ptympton, 2d futon try, have not yet returned. Lieut. Weasels with Company H, 2d infantry, issuouring the scrub in square Ne, 10. The Creeks have refused to surrender, contrary to the expectatum of the well informed among us. ^ What effect this will have upon the further prosecution of hostilities, (am unable to say. Port Clinch has been re.occupied, Lieut. Col- Loothi*. 6th Infantry, in command. "Doctor," said a snuff-taking old lady, "do you think snuff hurt* the brains?" "Oh no, madam," replied the doctor, " people with brains never take snuff." The Legislature of Alabama, at the late session, passed a resolution refusing j to receive their portion of the proceeds of the public land. J SENDING CO.VI.3 TO NEWCASTLE. It is stated to us as a fact, that alargq , number of hogsheads of 3t. Croix Rum (j havo recently been sent hack to St. Criitx from this port?the market here bfcing so ' flat for the article, that it will bYing a better price at the place whence imported. The move among the reformed inebriates is accomplishing wonders in various ways. Jour. Commerce* j ~ch uiu\v prTc!:"cdrrent:" ! February *2, 1842. ( Articcra pica | 8 C. j $ 1 B>elin market, ?b 0 S 0 4 Rjpnn iVrtin Mfli/unt IK K a 7 ' " '? ] IV/ V U f ?by retail, c. lb . - 8 i r , 9 Gutter lb * 1?^ a 28 , Bee*wax lb 22 a - 9Bagging yard 90* 25 Bale Rope lb- 10 a \2JL L'olFee lb 124 a ?5 Cotto!!, 15 7 a 5 ' Corn, bush 60 a , Flour, Country, brl 6 a t| Feather* fm wag. none !h $7| a 48 1 Fodder, .' lOOIhe 75 a 100 ' 1 GIa*a, window 8x1 ft, Soft 3 25 a 3 37i 1 ?10x12, 50ft 3 50 * 3 75 j (Jidea, green ,lb 5 a 1 dry lb 10 a t Iron 1001b* 5 50 a 6 50 1 Indigo ^ lb v I a 2 50 r Lime caxk 4 a 4 5b , Lard *caree lb 7 a 8 A Leather, *uie lb 22 a 28 Lead, bar ib 10 a ^ Logwood lb 10 a 15 [ Molasiee N. O. gal 40 a ,* "50 . gal- 35 a - 37 1 tfaila. cut, assorted lb 7| a,' $ ?.wrought ib lh a 18 i Oat* buxh 37 a 4u ' llH, "?irri(?r* era! 7.1 a * g?I?L ! I nil II Thb Rivkr is in good boating ordhr. j SZTWo arc authonxotl to an n on nee Ms^cam J K. McCaskilt &a a candidate for tho orficn 01 Tax Collector of ihi* Duliict at the ea$uiog deotion in Ocohnr n^xt. f January Sin. 1812. BZTThn &jv, Jamzb M, Thomas will At BrowruVitlo on Tue?Uy, Feb, 1 s. i r.ai mgntatKer. nfThon?i?w# tiooae, ) At Mr. E. Fab. 2, " *?? -J At Beuaetf?viT> on Feb; 34? K n>fht? -J J- At BenriefUvillrt nn Feb. 4. m AtChormw. on Fnhi 5th,j>t pt^bt, < At C!?cr*w, orti Feb 6th, 4 AvP.ny Gfovcn Feb, Fth, i v^AtCjcat-Crrok, Anton Co. on F?b. 9th. [%; at night, ,AtG. dac.Cre< k, on Feb, lOtb. v At Wa'l??boro' that fright, At peop CwIc, on FeK. Mth, ' -At Elizabeth, ot Feb. ,12th. 1 ^T^Tfli-'T ii i| -0\ m m mm 9 'y ' i c rJc, JrqkSSk j