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Frederick Town Herald
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Frederick Town Herald

   Frederick Town Herald (Newspaper) - December 25, 1830, Frederick, Maryland                                I WISH OTHER NO OK MY MINK No. 33 SATURDAY DECEMBER 183O. PRINTED AND PUBLISH BY WILLIAM OFFICE AT THE OLD On A few doors North of Price Two Dollars per FOR SALE OR A comfortable BRICK a quarter a mile from on Ferry road There are two acres of land will out ing to rent or will please apply IP JACOB and December ll. C court as a court of OCTOBER 1830. William Schley Joseph TUB object 01 the petition in case is to compel lUe defendant to certain chase by him alleged to be upon n sale made by the petitioner as under the authority of a decree and in default of such that an older may be directing u resale of said propel ty at tlie risk of the said de- The petition states the sale of 51J acres of part the real estate ol the late Thomas Wiles gll per making an aggregate amount oJ 65 to the and the due re- and Stion of said the non- on part of said with tlie terms his departure from the slate to sume place and his absence up to time and prajs for an order of publication against him warning him of the nature and object of this and requiring him by a day to be limited for that to appear in this and so And this court being by an affidavit accompanying said of the nonresidence of said Joseph It is thereupon this eighth day of December 1830. by Frederick county and by the of the ordered and that the said by causing a copy of this order to be inserted in some printed in for three successive weeks be- fore the first Monday of January give notice Joseph Tritt of the nature and object of this and warn him to be and appear in court here in person or by solicitor on or before the twelfth day of March and show if any he why an order should not be passed as pray ed. Otherwise a decree pro confesso will be entered against True copy JOHN SCHLEY December 11. In Frederick county sitting as a court of 1830. Elizabeth Howard and Philemon M. Smith vs. Mary Jamet and jinn his James Torrance and his and THE object of the proceedings in this case is to obtain a decree for the sale of tain premises mortgaged by the late Baruch in his life to the com- The states the execution and ry of said and the occurrence of the event upon which the by its terms was made liable to and prays that a decree may be made for a sale ofthe mortgaged premises and so The further states the death of said and the devise of his ter certain devises and to his and enumerates of whom the said Ann Mullikan wife of James and said Ann Torrance wife of said James Torrance are and both residing out the state in the state of Kentucky or within the United beyond the jurisdiction of this and prays an order of publication against them in the usual form and so It it thereupon this 9lh day of December 1830, by Frederick county court sitting as a court of chancery and by the of the ordered and decreed the said complainants by causing a copy of this order to be inserted in some newspaper printed in Frederick for three before the tenth day January give notice to said absent defendants of the nature and object of said and warn them to appear in this court in person or by on or before the fifteenth day of April then and there upon their corporal oaths to the said the several matters and things therein con- and and to show if any they why a decree should not pass as True copy JOHN December 11. THE BLUE been is is The clouds from the sky Like banners at a Or dusty And I've got tlie (I wonder who has 1'Jl rid me of life's 'Tis but a single .It is And wood is Poor folks are And topers I've got a goodly Brim full of I've a suit on But I've not got I've a a 'Tis not the I'm just as well as Tho' 1 am My tailor has been Each hour for his The stocks arc n And I'll hang It is is 1 cant raise the Some folks look very And other's looks are I what we'll come If clouds weep as they And men drink Yankee When they're already It is is how to pass the to And out of The Holiday and cannot take us I'll and drown I Think it is no By Frederick county court sitting as a court of OCTOBER 1830. ORDERED that the sale of a part of the real estate ofthe late Samuel Lilly made and reported by Frederick A. Schley and William the trustees in No. 611 be ratified and unless cause be shewn to the contrary of on or before first Monday of January provided n copy of order be in- in some printed in for three successive before limited The report slatos the sale ofthe quantity of 170 at dollars per True copy JOHN Our limits not permitting the ion of the documents accompanying the president's at we are compelled to avail ourselves of tlie abstracts made by our editorial They contain all that is ry public TUB Abstract ofthe National The annual report of the Secretary of the treasury was yesterday received by both houses of From this report it that the receipts into the in the year from twenty-two millions six hundred and eighty-one thousand nine hundred and sixty-five dollars and ninety-one from sales of public one million five hundred and seventeen thousand one hundred and seventy-five dollars and thirteen from dividends on bank four hundred and ninety thousand incidental one hundred and thirty-eight thousand four hundred and eighty-six dollars and thirty-four cents twenty-four lions eight hundred and twenty-seven thousand six hundred and ven dollars and thirty-eight The receipts into the treasury for the three first quarters of the present 1830, from enteen millions two hundred and sixty eight thousand one hundred and dollars and seventy-four sales of one million two hundred and ninety-three seven dred and nineteen dollars and seven bank four dred and ninety thousand thousand one hundred and seventy-six dollars and estimated receipts for the fourth from all five millions and twenty-five sand millions one hundred snd one thousand and eighteen dollars and seventy-nine If the estimate of the fourth quarter of the present year be there will be a deficiency in the nue of 1830, compared with that of 1829, of hundred and sixty-six sand six hundred and eight fifty-nine The expenditures 820, amounted to millions forty-four sand three hundred and fifty-eight lars and forty The tures ofthe three first quarters of 1830, amount to twenty millions seven dred and eighty thousand nine hundred and thirty-six dollars and eighty-four the estimated expenditures for the fourth quarter of 1830, amount to four millions three and teen thousand and four dollars and ninety-eight making the whole expenditures of 1830, twenty-five lions ninety-six thousand nine hundred and forty-one dollars and eighty-two The expenditures for 1850 forty-seven thousand four hundred and sixteen dollars and eight cents more than those for 1829. The amount of public debt paid in 1829, was twelve millions three dred and eighty three thousand eight hundred and sixty-seven and seventy-eight the amount and to be in 1830, is eleven lions three hundred and fifty-four sand six hundred and thirty dollars ami nine ce The total amount of the public debt on the first of 1830, was forty eight millions live hundred and five thousand four hundred and six lars and fifty consisting of six millions four hundred ami forty sand live hundred and fifty-six dollars and seventeen cents of six per twelve millions seven hundred and ninety-two thousand dollars and twenty cents of five in- the seven millions held by in the stock of the bank United fifteen millions nine hundred ami ninety-four thousand and sixty-four and eleven cents of four and a per thirteen millions two hundred and two hundred and and forty-five cents per the balance consists of of thirty-two and dollars of small The total amount of public debt on the first of 1831, will be nine millions one hundred and three thousand one hundred and one dollars and sixty-eight The whole remaining amount of this debt is nearly one half at the pleasure of the and the balance at different periods down to the first of 1835. The amount of into the United States for the year ending tember 30th, 1830, was sixty-eight millions five hundred thousand and the amount of exports for the same was Of the fifty-nine millions four hundred thousand dollars were and fourteen millions four hundred i thousand The amount of duty on imports and tonnage which accrued in the three first quarters of the year 1830, is estimated at twenty millions five hundred and seventy thousand and in the 4th quarter at five millions six hundred and ten thousand The report states that ed that the accruing duty on and imported in 1830, and ing in store on fie 1st 1831, will be reduced about five hundred thousand dollars by the operation of the acts of the last reducing the duties on these and that the duties on and accruing in 1831, and ble within that upon a like consumption to that of he ther diminished by those acts about six hundred thousand Tho re- peal the duties on which will take effect on the 1st of April will further reduce the revenue of the next year about thousand The subsequent reduction ol the duties on and on the 1st of 1.832, will probably lessen the usual importation of those articles for the demand of 1831. 13ul the influence of these circumstances upon the revenue will be in some de- gree counteracted by the increased ofthe country for as evinced by the enlarged amount of domestic the general ty of mercantile and the rable state of exchange with foreign which may be added the opening of the trade with the British in the West and on the North American The revenue arising from the sales of public lands will be improved by the same seneral which tend to im- prove that from the From a view of these and the secretary estimates the receipts for the year 1831, at three millions three hundred and forty thousand from twenty-one millions of one million seven hundred thousand bank four hundred and ninety one and The estimated expenditures for 1831, are twenty-three millions two hundred and twenty-eight thousand and sixty-five that the superiority heretofore claimed for American skill and in this is yielding to more nate and suggests the diecy of considering far that rest without injury to be relieved from its He recommends a number of tant modifications in the impost in contemplation of ing crisis in the fiscal policy of the U. J With regard to the the most material allusion to it in the report U the remark made by the that it be contemplated by congress to make any further reduction of tlie re- preparatory to the period of the final extinguishment of the public it is respect fully in der to avoid impairing the necessary means for the ordinary expenditures the or encroaching upon the it will be proper that such reduction should take effect at the period sufficiently remote for the ment of. the entire as the tion made at the last session bare- ly leave sufficient revenue for those objects do ring the ensuing four Report of the post master The amount of postages received from the 1st of 1829, the t of July 1830, was The expenditures during the same for compensation to postmasters for transportation ofthe mail 98, and for incidental 04, amounting in the aggregate to ing an excess of beyond the revenue ofthe of 85. the deficit in the preceding year was 15, and in the first half of the current year it was only 71. The amount of postages received in the last exceeds that received in tlie year preceding by 68. The of available funds at the disposal of the department on the 1st of 1830, was 07; from which if the excess of expenditure for the year be the sum of 22 will remain as tlie actual surplus of the Between the 1st of July 1829 and the 1st of July 1830, the transportation of the mail was In equid to miles a The aggregate amount of the army in dollars and eighty-six including ten millions of the public The balance in the treasury on the first of 1829, was five lions nine hundred and seventy-two thousand four hundred and thirty-five dollars and eighty-one on the first of 1830, it was five lions seven hundred and fifty-five thousand seven hundred and four lars and seventy-nine the mated balance on the first of 1331, will be four millions eight dred and nineteen thousand seven hundred and eighty-one dollars and The secretary states that gating interest employed in foreign and particularly in the has suffered a material de- and he adds that tion of the carrying trade which is un- fettered by navigation will fall into the hands of those who can navigate and this falling off gives reason to On in sulkies annual increase of beyond the previous The annual transportation on the 1st of July was about miles in arid the whole yearly trans- in and on amounted at that period to about Agreeably to the new which take effect on the 1st of January there will be an increase of stage trans- from that of miles in a There will also be an increase of trips on horse to miles iu a and an in- crease of trips on routes changed from horse to utage equal to miles The average expense of transporting the mail by horses or in is five cents per and in stages thirteen cents per The aggregate amount to be paid an- by the department for the trans- portation of the under the new contracts for four years from the 1st of January including the 87 less than the tal cost per year And out of this saving and the increase in the receipt of the general anticipates the ability ofthe department to fulfil all its engagements in the succeeding There are at present ces in the United Ex. The General's The report of major general Macomb tions the disturbances already noticed in our abstract of other among the Indians on the and southern frontiers ofthe United and their sion by the presence of military It appears from the same report that ICey Fort at the and the tower constructed for the de- fence ofthe Bayou du Pro. have been occupied by Some United States troops have beed ordered to operate with the authorities of the state of Louisiana in suppressing any insurrectionary movements a measure which has been attended with The major general urges the subject the usual annual appropriation will for the armament of the pal fortifications on the The required being some time will elapse can be ed. It would be an awkward ment if these strong thus should in the event of a into the hands of any commissioned ami is report of the Chief Engineer states that Fort in York will soon be ready to receive a Of the civil construction we notice several in the Lake and at the mouths of rivers en- tering intended to protect the vessels employed in the lake Among these are Cleveland outlet of the Ohio Presque Buffalo and Black improvements have been made in the harbors of Lake On- AS Big Sodus and the mouth of Works de- signed to secure to facilitate the entrance into and to connect the navigation of various sounds and rivers alone the sea coast have also been carried on in various parts of the from Maine to We have already mentioned the partial re- moval ofthe Raft of Red and the successful operations in improving the navigations of the Ohio and The arrangements made for the gress of that part of the Cumberland road which is in west of are stated to be Its whole distance through Indiana has been opened and and con- tracts have been made for the same process on the road on the whole dis- tance between the eastern boundary of Illinois and 66 of which 59 are to be finished by the close of this and the remainder by the 1st of 1831. Roads are nearly or in rapid from Detroit to to to all in Various surveys have been in gress during the past with a view to some principal points of internal Among these h a f ey with a view to connect Lake plain with the another with the same object as to Lake Erie and Michigan and the a third to connect these lakes with the a fourth as to the best mode of crossing the Allegheny summit of the vania The survey near the mouth of Lake with a view to a of defence for that part of the has not been commenced in consequence ofthe unsettled state of the question of boundary at that Estimates arc given of the probable cost of various defensive They are divided into three The cost of the first those which should be commenced as noon as is computed at of the those to be commenced at a later of the to be at a still re- moter the sum tal of cost GREAT MEETING IN NEW The New York American the 14th Dec. the following ing account ofthe great Clay held in the city of New York the pre- That we shall hold vet ID readiness to confer and act in concert with our friends opposed to the general administration in other and of the name of Henry Of Kentucky already before the public candidate for the office of president of the United meets hearty and decided we recognize in this distinguished a man of elevated ardent and experience in he one whose fixed and and distinguished he in war and in and whose zealous endeavors to extend the blessings of free government to other give him high claims upon the gratitude of his and entitle him to a distinguished place in the great republican party of the That we recommend to our friends in the city to convene in their respective without to select five persons from each to form a general to super- intend the concerns of the National Re- publican party in this to select ward and that such general committee be requested to meet at Mr. Acker's on the evening of the 27th of cember inst. ceding The friends of Mr. Clay showed themselves most worthily at the last It was one of the most and at the same time enthusiastic we have ever The large hall in which it was held can according to over person there nearly present last and the and mity of the proved how strongly Henry Clay is rivetted in the affections of this It was not merely the cold assent of the judgment in his that too was freely the ing of srong personal on the part of thousands who have never seen the but who yet enter fully into his and generous and who have viewed with the base and bitter and unfounded with which he has been hunted It is in the nature of the American people to revolt against injustice and from whatever and never did that nature prompt to more honest or honorable resolutions than those which were last night adopted and by acclamations loud and long. John N. Lawrence was called to the Isaac Minard and Peter Sharpe CHEROKEE I he National Intelligencer the following communication from the Cherokee delegation at contradicting the report that the were willing to dispose of their lands under certain We have seen since our arrival in two erroneous as it regards the copied into your paper from Southern which we beg permission to cor- It is first stated that Cherokees are willing to enter into a vided reservations in fee arc given to certain it is said that Jackson informed governor Gilmer that a treaty could be made with the suitable reservations being made to certain who wished to re- Not long since a special agent was dispatched by the president to the to make certain among which was the offer of large and to ascertain whether or not they would He attended the late general council of the made known his business in a written and the and people of the liberality of the propositions by a speech before the and in the presence of a large concourse of in which the selfish interests and cupidity of all were and the terror of force on thr part of Georgia to survey and dispose of their lands by lottery to her was set forth in bold The reply of the council affords abundant evidence of the determination of the Cherokees not to even upon the proviso and a resolution to hazard all their right to danger threatened rather than to suffer personal interest to predominate over their better and at the same time relying on the justice of the constituted the United States for They have repeatedly declared to the government and its agent their solemn determination never again to cede another foot of may be said to the they are firmly and unalterably resolved never again to expose their happiness and in tfu I ly you r obed i en t ser va ii t JOHN W. 8. Cherokee Washington 11, 1830. oir The extract from the 1 Ifh number of the written by will shew that the idea of an American system not of recent In the modern champion of wtch a Mr. Clay is only up the ly doctrines of the and in the footsteps of and other and of the world may as an geo be divided into four each having a distinct set of interests for the other by her arms and by her by force and by hu in different degrees extended her dominion over them and The Ellis Potter and Joseph ed her to u the of the The meeting was opened by an j and to the of mankind a s from David B. esq. for her address who was followed bv H. esq. j thew when the a to ut to This in opposition to that ofthe Secretary of hopes for beneficial results from the abolishment of when the address and resolutions being severally were unanimously The following are the That we approve the ad- dress now and that the time has when a in opposition to the general should be organized and that we will without to effect such tion in this the honor of the human and to teach that assuming brother Union will enable ut to do Disunion will add an- other victim to hia Let disdain to be the of European Let the thirteen a strict and eur in erecting one great ji m- to the control of all ftm or and able to dictate Hie of connexion between the old  

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