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I . ’ • * ■* *■ • .' • A LE X A ft b R 1 A ._ MONDAY MORNING, JANUARY 6, 1834. With reference to the unanimity which pre- j vails in Richmond on the subject of the depo-1 sites, the Whig of that city says, “ if there are j twenty persons in this city, or even half that - number, who justify the removal of the depo sited we are sure that no man can tell who they are.” The Norfolk Herald says:—“We speak ad-, visedly when we affirm, tnat there is not to be found an individual in our community, whether ; friendly, or constitutionally opposed, to the United States Bank—whether a Jackson or An- j ti-Jackson man, who does not decidedly con- j demn the act of the President in removing the j deposites—not only for the mischiefs it has • brought and is bringing on the country, but as ! a high-handed and dangerous usurpation of power.” The National Intelligencer says:—“ We state, with entire confidence in our prediction, that we do not believe that the measure will, six months from now, find respectable friends or ; apologists in any part of the country. It is one which cannot stand the test of examination. | As a financial error, it is producing, and must continue to produce, most disastrous^ effects, but, in a political and legal light, it is, as it strikes us, still less defensible.” “ Agreeably to notice given,” we commence i the publication of Mr. Benton’s Speech. The last part of Mr. Clay’s Speech has not yet been reported. - ■ .— — Patent Rights.—We learn from the Boston Journal, that his Honor Justice Story, in the Circuit Court on Saturday, refused to grant a new trial in the ca*e of Ames vs. Howard and Lathrop, decided for the plaintiff in November, and involving, it will be recollected, the im portant question of the paper-making patent. The patent right is now finally established. In the Maryland House of Delegates, on Wed- j nesday, Mr. Sifford, of Frederick, asked and obtained leave to introduce a bill to alter the mode of electing Electors of President and Vice President of the United States. Mr. Per- j ry, of Allegany, obtained leave to introduce a < bill to abolish the Council to the Governor. Mr. i Palmer, of Frederick, obtained leave to intro duce a bill to alter the mode of electing the Go vernor. Mr. Fossit, of Worcester, obtained leave to introduce a bill to alter the mode of; electing the Senate. On motion of Col. Ely, it was ordered that a standing committee on the constitution be appointed. One of the removed clerks is Mr. Randolph from Virginia; and although he was removed but on Saturday before last, yet on Monday the Kitchen Cabinet, finding the delegation excited by the removal, appointed him as a clerk in one : of the Departments. Gen. Scott— It seems that the nomination of this gentleman as President, has been seriously made, and will be seriously urged. Mr. J. G. Bermet has come out with his pro- J mised No. 2 Exposition. It contains a letter j from Kendall to him, giving him advice, &c. I as to his editorial course, and a letter from R. j M. Whitney, giving information to be worked ! up into editorial articles and used against the Bank. Kendall says in his letter that he “is! oppressed with a load of debt,”—and Whitney, ! in his, sends a paper “ picked up among Mr.; Webster’s loose papers dropped on the floor of the Senate”!! We shall keep our readers advised of Mr. Bennet’s exposition, though we cannot consent 1 at this time to occupy our columns with Ken- j dall’s and Whitney’s letters. Judge Porter, elected Senator from Louisia na, is by birth an Irishman, a very distinguish ed jurist and a very able man. General Patterson, who presided at the Phi ladelphia meeting, is an early, steady and warm ] friend of General Jackson—such a friend as the President could confide in. - - i Appointment by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate.—Robert C. [ Nicholas, to be Attorney for the Eastern Dis-! trict of Virginia, in the place of Thomas E. , Burfoot, deceased. . ----— - The friends of the Chesapeake and Ohio Ca- j nal will read with pleasure the communication j on that subject which we have, to-day, the grati- j fieation of publishing. I —— -- . ■ ——-— ■ From Ohio we learn that the two Houses of the [ Legislature (both being of the right sort of po- • litics,) have voted instructions to the Senators of that State, and requests to its Representatives in Congress, to act against the Military Academy j at West Point, and to oppose the restoration of the Public Deposites to the Bank of the United , States. I! ——-^ . ( An act has passed the Legislature of Louisi- t ana, repealing all the existing laws against the < introduction of slaves into that State. There f1 are left, accordingly, no restrictions upon the in-; ^ troductionof slaves, except a provision that, if ^ during two months the purchaser discovers that the slave is addicted to running away, or, within •1 eight months, discovers any “rehibitory defect” fj —so in the paper from which we quote—he may i t have recourse against the vender/ j a Neither House of Congress was in session on b Saturday. __ ti v b ' **•’ . 4P? ' % ’ * *S* V .• . % The January Number of Mr. Homan’s Navdl and Military Magazine supports the credit of the work. .We have looked over it with much satisfaction, and again recommend the Maga zine to those especially interested and the pub lic generally. The New Orleans Courier of the 20th ult. congratulates its readers upon the increased population of the city,—wijoh indeed, under the topor of the Spanish sway, doubled every fifteen years,—and adds, with much satisfac tion, that a “ a peep into their houses, at the present day, will convince any one that our wives are fully as unwiling as their mothers were to neglect the first commandment.” Q,uite a compliment to the New Orleans la dies, we take it! Mr. French, one of the newly appointed Clerks in the Clerk’s Office of the House of Re-j presentatives, is stated in the New Hampshire Statesman to be, or rather to have been, the in cumbent of offices 4 too numerous to mention,’ such as Clerk of the Common Pleas Court for Sullivan County, Clerk of the Superior Court for Sullivan County, Representative in the State Legislature, Under Clerk in the Clerks’ Office at Washington, Captain of the Engine; and common report says that he is also President of a Temperance Society. As far as offices are concerned, pretty much of a Caleb Q,uotem, we should say. Ship Canal round Niagara Falls.—We have received, and read with attention, a memorial adopted at a meeting held at Oswego, for the purpose of inducing Congress to make a ship canal round the falls on the American side.— The length wTould not be more than 8 miles. Theatre.—We understand that those in our community fond of Theatrical amusements, will have an opportunity shortly of enjoying a rich treat. Mr. and Miss Fanny Kemble will shortly be in this District, and intend playing here, with the Washington Company, for two nights. They will probably appear about the 21st inst.—of which, we are requested to say, due notice will be given, and that the Box Sheet will be opened at Mr. West’s Tavern. The Pennsylvanian says, there is a pressure: —to be sure there is a pressure—every body knows that—nobody denies that; but then “ the pressure is partly real and partly imaginary.” The “imaginary part” must be the cream of tlie joke; but, the deuce of it is, the people can’t get at it—it’s all real to them. Dr. McWilliams, of Washington, has made an invention for warming, and rendering com fortable, carriages, either close or open. It is simple in its construction and application, and attended with but trifling expense, being made of tin, sheet iron, copper, or brass; and a few handsful of charcoal is all that is required to heat it. By this apparatus, travelling during our in- ^ clement season will be much encouraged. Be- j ing well adapted to our public stages, it would j be greatly to the advantage of the proprietors j of those vehicles to encourage its use, by which ; the drivers will be safe from freezing, and the j inside passengers comfortable. STATEMENT OF TONNAGE employed in 1 the Trade with the British West Indies and J British North American Colonies, before and : since the West India Arrangement. Before the Arrangement. Average of American and Foreign Tonnage jor ten years, from 1S21 to 1830, inclusive; with j the proportion which the foreign bears to the American. Proportion foreign Am. Foreign, bears to Am. j Brit. W. Indies 50,073 4,043 8 pr. ct. Brit.Am Colonies77,492 7,467 9 6-10 “ Since the Arrangement. 1831. Brit. W. Indies 36,440 16,937 46 7-10 “ BritAm.Qolonies77,737 85,916 110 5-10 “ 1332. Tonnage departed from the United States: Brit. W. Indies 66,769 18,357 28 9-10 “ Brit.Am Co!Qnies66,056 1-16,292 221 4 10 “ We learn from IT. Erben, Esq. oi New York ; a passenger in the mail stage from Richmond ; to this city, that the stage upset twice between Richmond and Bowling Green on the night of the 2d inst. and most of the passengers were hurt more or less, and some of them seriously. The Hon. J. Y. Mason and lady were so much , injured, they were compelled to stop at Mr. ; Thornton’s, near Bowling Green; and it is sup posed will not be able to reach here for several , davs. : Mr. Erben attributes the accident entirely to , the want of lamps.— Globe. Heat Produced by Friction.—We stated a few • weeks since (says the Northampton Courier) ; that a machine had been invented in this State j ;o warm factories and all large public edi- 1 ( tices by Friction. We had but little definite j ( knowledge then of its merits or structure, but,, within a few days we have seen it in operation i n this town. We now speak from personal ob- i t ;ervation. The machinery which generates , { ;he heat consists of a pair of horizontal circular • ^ elates of cast iron, enclosed in a brick oven, t ibout four feet in diameter, and weighing 1600 ; j >ounds. They operate upon each other pre- ( •isely like a pair of mill stones, with this excep ion-the upper one is stationary and the lower j t mes revolves. The ordinary speed is eiglity j, evolutions a minute, and the velocity is suffi-; t ■ient in two hours to raise the thermometer in- j he oven in which they are enclosed to 500 de- j ’rThe size of the plates, their thickness and the ! elocity with which they revolve, are conside ations" which the size of the building to be , eated must regulate. From the top of the ( rick enclosure or oven, a funnel is projected, < nd from this the heat can be thrown off, as l iroueh ordinary furnaces, to any part of the uilding, We saw the machinery put m opera on when cold, and in fifteen minutes, the heat •om the mouth of the funnel in an upper story { r,as almost too much for the naked hand to ( ear, EVENTS OF 1833. We purposed to take a cursory retrospect yesterday, of the year just finished, but found that other subjects entitled to precedence would occupy our columns. Let us now employ our memory in noting the principal events of the last twelvemonths, by which the recollection o 1 our readers may be agreeably or usefully fresh ened. We cannot pursue an exact chronologi cal order; nor is this material for our object. A at. Gaz. The Proclamation of Governor Hayne, of South Carolina, in answer to that of President Jackson, dates, we believe, about the beginning of the year. It has left scarcely any trace; the Governor has the merit of more consistency than the President. We have not heard of a palinode from him. The Washington Globe chanted a requiem to Mr.' Livingston’s work.— War of France againt Holland by the Siege of Antwerp;—no other result than the reduction of the fortress; Belgic question still unsettled. The manifestoes and speeches of the King of Hol land evince a bold firmness, or what is called Dutch obstinacy, that is, a resolution to incur all hazards, rather than sacrifice honor and right. Triumph of the Doctrinaire party in the French Chamber of Deputies. That party re main predominant, happily as we believe for the weal of France and Europe. We regard the present King of the French, as the most pa triotic and accomplished sovereign in the world. Mr. Clay’s Tariff Bill in Congress, last win ter. Debate on the bill “ further to provide for the collection of duties on imports.” Very able speech of Mr. Webster. Compromise achiev ed by Mr. Clay, by which the march of South Carolina Nullification was arrested to the inef fable joy of the Nullifiers themselves. Their heresy has been overshadowed, superseded as it were, by the pretensions and acts of the Ex ecutive power at Washington. Mr. Adams’s Report on Manufactures—admirable, like all his productions as a statesman. Nullifying or dinance passed by the Legislature of South Car onna in rererence 10 me jimiorcmg nci. con gress will, it is thought, repeal the act as now unnecessary. President’s Message with regard to the ordinance of the South Carolina Con vention respecting the Tariff: the next best of the public documents bearing the signature An drew Jackson;—most of the others equivocal, contradictory, or absolutely bad. Mr. Clay’s Land Bill vetoed by the President—now revived by its able author. British Reformed Parliament. Irish coercion bill; violently denounced by O'Connell, who continues his war upon it. It seems to have answered its purpose in Ireland. Occupation of the Falkland Islands by the British—matter still in dispute between the Government of Bue nos Ayres and that of Great Britain. The bills drawn by the Government of the United States, in pursuance of the treaty of indemnity for the claims of American merchants, dishonored by the French government. Lieut. Randolph’s personal assault upon President Jackson. Re cent illegal and vindictive arrest of said Ran dolph, and his discharge by an independent and able court after Full argument. Death of John Randolph, of Roanoke, one of the chief orators of his time; the most eccentric of pub lic men—always an object of attention through out the Union. Treaty of navigation and com merce concluded between Russia and the Unit ed States. Northern tour of President Jack son. .Concomitant exhibition of Black Hawk and other Indian hostages. Letters of Major Jack Downing, securing immortality to the tour. President Jackson made an L. L. D. by the University of Cambridge. Accouchement and release of the Duchess of Berri. Female heroism passing from the sub lime to the ridiculous. Death of William Wil berforce and mourning of Philantropy. Vic tory. of Don Pedro’s fleet, commanded by Ad miral Napier, over that of Don Miguel. Con sequent occupation of Lisbon by Don Pedro’s troops. Arrival of the young Queen at Lisbon. Withdrawal of Don Miguel’s army from the neighborhood of Oporto, and its approach to Lisbon. Unsuccessful attacks on Don Pedro’s i• /-m r \ i* . . r n ... i_ o_ llllt’S. ucufbSlUl sui ues ui uun icuiu. ocpd- , ration of Marshal Bourmont and other French 1 officers from Don Miguel. Death of Ferdi nand, King of Spain. Dispute for the succes sion between Don Curios, the king’s brother, and the widow of Ferdinand in right of her daughter to whom her husband assigned the crown. Civil war in Spain. Uncertainty of the real condition of affairs and popular opi nion in Spain and Portugal. Successes of Ibrahim Pacha over the forces of the Turkish Sultan. March of Ibrahim on Constantinople. The Ottoman Porte saved by the intervention of Russia, military and diplomatic. Alliance, of fensive and defensive, between Russia and the Porte. Dissatisfaction of the European powers. Mexico,—civil war; double triumph of Santa Anna; overthrow and expulsion of his enemies. Conspiracy in the Republic of New Granada.— Able and just administration of President San tander. Venezuela comparatively tranquil.— Disorders and bloodshed in the new state of Equador. Revolutions in Peru and Chili. In dian wars in the provinces of La Plata. No stability in the affairs of any part of South Ame rica. Dismissal of Mr. Duane from the office of Se- • -retary of the Treasury, and substitution of Mr. j faney. “ I take the responsibility.” Removal : ff the Deposites from the Bank of the United i States—opening of Pandora’s box. Mr. Du me’s Exposition—more due and expected.— President’s Annual Message, and Mr. Taney’s Report concerning the removal of the deposites. Report of the Committe of the Directors of the Bank fully vindicating the management of that institution. Memorial from the government lirectors—to be abundantly refuted. Important lebate in Congress on the treatment of the 3 ci nk Meteoric phenomenon—yet unexplained. Re urn of Captain Ross from the Arctic expedi ion. Contest between the Executive of Alaba na and the Executive of our Union in relation o the settlers on the Indian lands in Alabama— ikely to be adjusted amicably. Dreadful Steam explosions. This subject introduced into Con gress by Mr. Webster. Important measures of he British Parliament—Abolition of Negro Sla very in the West Indies; opening of the China , rade; renewal of the charter of the Bank of, England. Vast enterprises, either suggested or j )gcriin in Great Britain and the United States, )frail roads. Spirit of Internal Improvement jarticularly rife in some of our Southern and Western States. Extension of Bible, Tempe •ance and Missionary Societies. Attempts to ; >roanize societies, in the Northern and Middle j Slates for the immediate abolition of negro Sla ’erv—very little accomplished. Severe laws | lassed in the South in reference to the religious : ( md literary instruction of the slaves. Pro-j rress recently made by the State-Rights party | n the South. Healthfulness of the Atlantic Coast | luring the last summer-devastations of the Cholera in the interior. Cholera pervading Spain. Abolition of Lotteries in some of th< States. Multiplication of suicides in our coun try. Wonderful growth of our great cities and towns,now checked by the dangers which threat en the currency and public credit. In allusion to the present low rate of Exchange on Europe, which has fallen to 3 1-2 per centj and which will probably go still lower, the Nor folk Herald very properly observes that the high* er the premium on foreign exchange, the better for the farmer—as it operates, in fact as a pre mium on export; but where exchange is at a discount, it operates as an export duty. The Herald adds that, our agriculturists “ may ex pect ere long, to realize their full proportion of the suffering which is now exclusively confined to the trading and manufacturing classes.” Mr. Peter Edes, son of the ancient Peter, a patriarch of the typographical fraternity in Boston, is now at work at the printing business in Bangor, (Me.) at the advanced age of 80.— He is said to be in destitute circumstances, and an appeal has been made to the generosity of the Boston printers in his behalf. Mr. Edes suffered much from imprisonment, &c. by the British, during the Revolution. [One hundred dollars have been subscribed by the printers of Boston, and forwarded to this veteran of the type-J _ Mail Robber taken.—Some weeks since infor mation was received at the Post Office Depart ment of the loss of a packet of letters contain ing money sent from MaysviJle, Ky., to Pitts burg, Pa. The case excited much surprise, be ing the first, that had occurred between the two offices. A few days afterwards intelligence was received of the loss of a heavy money letter from St. Louis to Philadelphia about the same time. The St. Louis mail to Philadelphia pass es over the greater part of the road between DiftcKnvrf 1VA 1 * Ail w C4. 4 1 V* A I V CW Wl The losses being heavy, and demanding ge neral attention, the Tost Master General des patched a Commission of Special Agency to N. D. Coleman, Esq. Post Master at Maysville, with instructions to proceed forthwith along the route through Ohio, and make every effort to find the depredator. Letters just received from Mr. Coleman, at Columbus, Ohio, give the gratifying intelligence that he has just committed a late driver of the mail stage on the route, who has confessed his participation in the depredation, and his accom plices. Mr. Coleman has also succeeded in re covering $1300, which has been deposited in the Franklin Bank at Columbus, to await the trial, and the claims of its owners. Some of this mo ney has been identified as the same that was sent from St. Louis. Puvsuit is now making for the drivers’ confe derates, and it is expected they will also be brought to trial.— Globe. Muck Excitement was felt in Amherst last Wednesday (says he Northampton Courier) at the burial of Mrs. Carter, in consequence of a change in the appearance of the corpse. The funeral exercises were performed and the body about to be committed to the grave when her ap pearance became so fresh and unlike the dead, that the friends were led to believe and cherish the hope, that vitality still remained. In conse quence of this, the interment was deferred until the succeeding day, and in the mean time the arteries were opened and the galvanic battery was tried, but without the least evidence of re turning animation. She had been ill but a few' days, and the freshness of health and vigour of the system did not relax its usual energies so soon as in ordinary cases. Some times the sus pension of life continues a number of days, and the individual by some miraculous effort of the vital energies, is again restored to society.— But when the seal of death is once set, no hu man agency can remove it; nor can the inani mate body be brought to life again. A friend of ours who was in Paris a lew years since, in passing a chapel one day, perceived much commotion around it. He was informed that a young man, over whom the funeral exercises had just been made, discovered signs of life, had been resuscitated, and from among the dead was restored back to the arms of the liv ing! __ It is said that some of the most zealous advo cates of Temperance, “ peaceably if they can, forcibly ifthey must,” have resolved not to make any further use of the Spirit Gas Lamp, as these consume alcohol without the least disguise. Marriage Ceremony Extraordinary.—On Monday last a woman without arms was marri ed at Bury—the ring being placed by the bride groom upon one of the bride’s toes. [This, in deed, is taking a wife in toe-toe, “ for better, for worse.”] PUBLIC SALE. ON Wednesday next, the 8th instant, at 10 o’clock, will be sold on Cazenove & Co.’s Wharf, for the benefit of those concerned, one JIB and FORESAIL, an old STOVE, and a JIB BOOM; damaged on board the schooner Armada, on her late voyage from Eastport to , Alexandria. Terms cash. jan 6—3t_WM, D. NUTT, Auctioneer. DRAWS TO-MORROW Grand Consolidated Lottery, Class 1 for 1834, Will be drawn in Wilmington, Del. on Tuesday, 1 January 7. HIGHEST PRIZE 20,000 DOLLARS. Tickets $4 50; halves 2 25; quarters 112 1-2. Literature Lottery of the State of Delaware, Class No. 2 for 1834, I Will be drawn in Wilmington on Thursday, January 9. HIGHEST PRIZE $10,000. Tickets $3 00; halves 150; quarters 0 75. To be had in a variety of numbers of J. CORSE, Lottery Exchange Broker, Alexandria. « DRAWS TO-MORROW !< Grand Consolidated Lottery, Class 1 for 1834, * To be drawn at Wilmington, Del. January 7 i prize of $20,000 1 prize of $2,000 l do of 5,000 75 prizes of 500 , Tickets $4 50; halves 2 25; quarters 1 12 1-2 On sale in great variety by JAS. RIORDA1V. ; £3= Uncurrent Note? and Foreign Gold pur-. chased. / -- 1 Drawing Literature Lottery, Class1 for 1834: 21_y_9Q—16—4—•41—22 11—31 r CHESAPEAKE AND OHIO CANAL ‘ B To the Editors of the National Intelligencer. p| Gentlemen—It may gratify many of your reft- m ■ ders, as it certainly will those who are Stockhol- B ders in the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Corapa- B ny, to learn that the late severe storm and heavy Ip fall ofrain, which produced so much damage in Bl other respects, did not injure, in the slightest do- Ip gree, that part of the Canal between the Basin, I at Georgetown, and Harper’s Ferry—nor is it Eg ! known that any injury was sustained by the Ca- jM jnal and Dams now constructing above that B A very small breach was made in the Berm B bank of that part of the Canal just finished in |§! this City, by the unprecedented flood of water B from thejand. This has been repaired at a ve ry trifling cost. H It is now eight weeks since the new portion of H Canal between Seneca and Harper’s Ferry, (a Si distance of forty miles,) was first opened for use; since which time the trade upon it, and upon the || remaining twenty miles below it, has not been || interrupted by accident for a single hour. fjS It was the intention of the Canal Company to p have completed the forty miles of Canal above m Harper’s Ferry, and now under contract, by the gi opening of the trade of the next Spring; but the M return of Cholera to the line last Summer, has defeated this purpose. It will, however, be com || pleted as high as the fourth Dam, twelve, miles || above Shepherdstovvn; and in order to obviate B the difficulty which the Dam above Williamsport would present to the river trade from Cumber- m land, it is understood that the Company have || contracted for a temporary Lock, to be complet- |i ed by the 10th of March next, to pass boats || around the Dam. This being done, we may an- 'M ticipate the arrival, in our District, of a consi- || derable quantity of Cumberland Coal during the fe next Summer. A. g* Sailed, Januarry 4, Brig Uncas, Moore, New Orleans Brig Howard, GoolF, New York. Schr. Mount Moriah, Rogers, Norfolk. Passed down, from Georgetown, Schr. Robert Gordon. -. N»*w York. ■' THOMAS LEE Ifc ESPECTFULLY informs his friends and the public that be has commenced the \ FLACKSMITH & HORSE-SHOEING BU SINESS, at his Sho pon Royal street, next to Mr. Mc Laughlin’s Grocery Store, a lew doors north of the Market House, where Blacksmith’s Work generally will be done with despatch. Horses will be neatly shod, in a scientific manner, cor responding to the anatomy of the toot; and, I should the hoof be any way disordered, attention will be given to that part of the business, in or* der to correct the complaint. Having been regularly bred to the above bu siness, with an experienced workman in this ci ty, and having, since that period, availed hiu • self of a further knowledge of his profession, as practised in Boston and other large cities, con siders himself competent to the performance of his duty; aiid hopes, by assiduity and attention, to merit and receive a portion of encourage-men t from the public in general, jan C—d3t&\vtf V ut l\o»Vou. The schooner JANE, Allen, master, will ilcMiatch. and take 300 barrels faugh*; tor winch apply to \V. FOWLE h Co. jan 3 ____ For Freight. The three masted schooner MARY, Cahorn. naster, cames about 850 barrels, a supeiior vew>c:, and will be ready for the reception of u c*rgo in two days, Apply to dec31 _VV. FOWLE h Co. F isr .Vfw \orls.. The schooner GLOBE, Snow, master, car ies about 800 barrels, will be read) for cargo in a lew .lays. Apply to dec 31 W. FOWLE Of* Co. but brtighu ' sc^la0Mer ARMADA, Capt. Phi lb rook, y^iau'iurthen 700 barrels, about fifteen months old. i>nt aouth or for the West Indies wou‘d be preferred, jan l Apply to A. C. CAZENOVE & Co. bugat, YSfctf* &c. S BOXES prime V* hite and Brown Sugar 10 barrels prime Beef 3 tierces Oil 5 kegs Ground Ginger Jud received, per schooner Virginia, for sale by LINCOLN CHAMBERLAIN, jan 4 Vo Well’s wharf. B«\ fcvxgavti, &u. [V BOXES Havana White and Blown Sugars if 10* ba^a Palnr* Nuts 1 cask fresh Zante Currants Just received per schooner Virginia, from New fork, and, together with the remainder of his Gosher [Jutter and Cheese, Gentssee Flour, Groceries, W i.ies, Sec. wiil be sold low by ANDREW J. FLEUING, jan 4—3t Prince Street Dock. Doclivr V\ tight HAS removed to the House on St. A&aph street. between King and Prince streets, formerly occt* >iedby T. F. Mason, F.sq. whore he can be found, nov 8—d4t&wtf Orphans’ Court, Alexandria Count) November '/'erm, 1833. I OUIS BEELER exhibited to the Court his first wJ account as Administrator of Charles Henry Amos, leceased, with the voucheis in support thereof; which ccount is received, wilt be allowed and duly recorded inless cause be shew n to the contrary on or before the irst Monday in January next; of which all persons in* crested or concerned will take notice, A copy—Test; A. MOORE, nov 19 - w 6 w__Iteg1 W ills^ Marine Vnawtauce t3omyan> OF ALEXANDRIA. \N Election will be held on Wednesday, the 15th proximo, between the hours of 10 o’clock A M nd 2 P. M , at the Office of the Company, to elect fteen Directors for the ensuing year. The transfer Books will be closed on Saturday, the lib, until after the Election. N ATH’L. WATTLFiS, President, dec 16—eot 15th Jan # /