13 29-OOOOOOOf ©wmiM&aji® FOR THE YEAR OF OUR LORE 1829, Being the first after Bissextile, or Leap Year, and THE 53d and 54TH of AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE. Containing' The motions of the Sun and Moon—the true pha- ' ses and aspects of the planets the rising and setting of the SuN the rising and setting of the Moon—Solar and Lunar Eclipses, &c. Calculated jFor the hoetjon of iiashbUlc, 2Tcn. Latitude about 36° N. and Longitude 87° 30'W. of London, and 10°, 03'-of- W ishiiigton; and ttifh aught variation", will answer for itentucfeii & BY W. L. WILLEFORI), A. M Of Franklin, Williamson County. NASHVILLE, TEJSTN. PRINTED AND SOLD BY JOHN S. SIMPSON, At the Whig and Banner Office. 18.99 OOOOOOOi Table aj the bolar Sustain. Names. Mean d i- amet'rin Eng'hm Mean distance from the Sun, Time of Rotation round their axis. Time of Revolu¬ tions round the Sun. , l'he Sun 833,24 > 250 14h 8m 0s d. h. m. s. Mercuty Venus 3,224 37.000,000 14 24 5 28 87 23 15 43 7,687 68,000,000 O 23 20 54 224 16 49 10 The Earth 7,912 95 000,000 1 0 0 0 365 6 9 12 The Moon 2,131) 95,000,000 29 17 44 3 Mars *4,189 144,000,000 O 24 39 22 686 23 30 3'5 Vesta 238 225,000.000 Juno 1,425 252,000,000 C eres 160 263,000,000 1703 16 48 0 Pallas 110 265,000,000 Jupiter 89,170 490,000,000 0 9 55 37 4332 14 27 1C Saturn 79,042 900,000,000 0 10 16 2 10759 1 51 10 Ilerschel 35,112 1,800,000,000 30tG7 10 0 AN AT031Y OF THE BODY, As Governed by the Twelve Constellations. THE HEAD AND FACE. Explanation of the Calendar Pages. The first column shows the day of the month; the second, the day of the v. eea the third, remarkable dajs, chronological events, ^-c; the fourth, the rising of the Sun; the fifth, the setting of the Sunj the sixth, the rising and setting of the Moon; the seventh, the Moon^s place in the ecliptic, &r longitude.—At the toprf each calendar page is the equationni time; which shows the difference between the time of an equal going i lock, and solar time; and the Moon's phases are ixr mediately bfeiov it ECLIPSES FOR TH'SWAl* 1829. i Moon eclipsed, 20th March, invisible, ecliptic opposition at 1 minute after 8 o'clock in the morniDg. II Sun eclipsed, 3d April, conjunction at 31^ minutes after 4 o'clock in the afternoon; invisible to us on account of the Moon's great south latitude, which will be 35^' south. This eclipse will be central on the meridian in longitude 149° 6ir west of London, and latitude 32° 15' south. This poiat will fall in the South Pacific Ocean, south of the Society Isles. III Modn eclipsed, 12th and 13th September, visible, to wit Beginning - - * - - 12d llh 35m afternoon Ecliptic opposition - - - 13 0 39£ morning Middle of the eclipse - - 13 0 47 morning End of the eclipse - - - 13 1 59 morning juration 2h 24m—Digits eclipsed 6° 5' on the Moon's south limb. IV Sun eclipsed, 27th September, conjunction at 13|minutes after 8 o'clock in the afternoon, and of course invisible to us, as the Sun will be below our horizon—the Moon's latitude will be 33$' north. This eclipse will be central on the meridian in longitude 157° 5£' east of London, and latitude 39° 22;}' north This point will fall in the North Pacific Ocean, east of the Straits of Sangaar. —-— " CHRONOLOGICAL CYCLES. Dominical Letter D j Epact 25- SolarCycle 18 Roman Indictiou ........ .2 Lunar Cycle, or Golden Number . . . 6 | Julian Period ........ . 651P MOVEABLE FEASTS. Septuagesima Sunday . . . February 15 Quhiquagesima, orShroveSund. March 1 Ash Wednesday, orlstbfLent, Marefi4 Palm Sunday . .April. 12 Bastbr Sunday , April 19 Low Sunday April 26- Whit Sunday June 7 Trinity Sunday ...... . June 14 Advent Sunday . . . ."November 2f Venus will be Morning Star till the 20th May; then Evening Star fa the«nd of the year. "—;—; The Vernal Equinox, or beginning of Spring, March 20 The Summer Solstice, or beginning of Summer, June 21 The Autumnal Equinox, or beginning of Autumn, September 23 The Winter-Solstice, or-beginning of Winter, • December 22 Names cphd Characters of the Signs of the Zodiac. qp Aries, head 8 Taurus, neck II Gemini, arms $ Cancer,-breast fl Leo, heart | t Sagittarius,thigh? irji Virgo, belly j V5 Capricorn, knees Libra, reins 0C0 Aquarius, legs Ti'j. Scorpio, secrets j X Pisces, feet THE "PLANETS, AND THGIP. -RELATIONS. if), Sun ? Venus 21 Jupiter • #) O ® Moon © Earth J? Saturn $ -Mercury t Mars " I-Ierschel $1 A -Planet's Ascending Node—~}j The Descending Node. ^ Conjunction, or Planets situated in the same longitude. & Quadrature, or Planets situat'd in longit's differing 3 signs, # ..Opposition or Planets situated in opposite longitudes. The Geocentric Longitude of the Planets or their places, as seenl from the Earth. 1 o" s C3 D 1 9 ^ a q> 1 ta f xi I ^ fl! u j! 'u O- < I f 1 ^ 1 U f c 1 3 2 "a 3' hr a •< £ a. o. 0) I C2 1 t- ■ ® 1 - I f o_ £ a > o £ a £ a noo S W US r* i/S Gl ' (TJL'5COJ>C>0'-oeo«ocj5G^»flco—< d h m % New Moon, 5 10 2 m £) First Quarter, 12 1 28 m D H M Q Full Moon, 19 6 27 a (& Last Quarter, 27 11 31 a D of W Miscellaneous. 1 © Irises © | « I €)'s sets |r # s\place. 9 10 ■it l 13 14 1 16 17 18 19 20 Thursday Friday Saturday SUND. Monday Tuesday Wednesd Thursday Friday Saturday SUND. .^Monday ~ Tuesday Wednesd Thursday Friday Saturday SUND. Monday Tuesday Circumcision- Bat. [Princeton, 1777 O South, lOh 4m M Sir I. Newton, b. 1642 Epiphany. Jos. Bonaparte b. 1768 O id Per-Battle 6f Or leans, 1815 Stamp Act passed 1765 IstSunaf. Ep.-Linnaeus, bota.d. 1-778. O South, 8h 2m After 7 7 4 53 Bat Cowpens, 1*81. 2dSunatEpi. Franklin born 1706 © enters ~ Wednesd If) in Ap-Louis XVI be- Thursday Friday Saturday SUND. Monday Tuesday Wednesd Thursday Friday Saturday headed 170 Indians defeated Clai¬ borne, 1814 3rd Sun af Epi. Conver sion of St. Paul Peter great died 1725 George 3d died 1820. Chas. I. beheaded, 1643 12 12 11 11 11 10 10 9 7 9 8 8 8 4 53 4 54 4 54 4 55 4 56 4 57 4 4 59 4 59 5 0 5 1 5 2' 5 2 5 3 5 4 5 5 l5 6 6 53 5 7 3 27 4 27 5 27 6 27 Sets 5 38 6 38 7 38 8 38 9 38 10 38 11 38 Morn 1 38 2 38 3 38 4 38 5 38 Rises 6 11 7 8 3 8 59 9 55 10 51 11 47 Morn 1 39 2 35 3 31 4 27 cp n "I 19 17 1 16 1 16 X * 16 0 14 25 11 24 7 2C 2 15 27 9 21 3 14, 26 8 20 2 15 28 11 25 It is the part of virtue not only to joy and grieve from fit motives, but to assign proper limits to those emotions. W' 1829 FEBRUARY, 28 tag*. 2wtt wo; ASTRONOMICAL CALCULATIONS. W a g m ®-2 4 co g i «o •& u> o « e* © ' SO W St rn -K* Ot «i / j fN H H |W( r*( F« IH 1 <=SJS i^t-ono® erm eb u h m 0 New Moon, 3 a 41 a #) First Quarter, 10 t 33 a x> H M 0> i'ull Moon, 18 1 25 a (§> Last Quarter, 26 2 30 a Df D of W Bll. "SUNIT Monday Tuesday Wednesd Thursday Friday Saturday SUND. Monday Tuesday Wednesd Thursday Friday 14 Saturday 151 SUND. 16Monday 17 Tuesday 18* Wednesd 13i Thursday 20 Friday 21,Saturday ~ ' SUND. 23Monday 24 Tuesday 25, Wednesd 26 Thursday 27 Friday 28 Saturday Miscellaneous © © rises sets f> r Hfs 4th Sun after Epiphany Purificationtof Vn, Mary 4) in Perigee £) South, 2b 24m Aft. Days lOh 28m long 5th Sun after Epiphany f)'s place, {hee 1779 Capt Cook kill at 0 why Valentine Day Septuagesima Sunday. $ ^ 6h morn. Shrove Tuesday C> In Ap~© entX Trea. $ Stat. Ghent rat. 1815 % Am'st Col. lU J825 6th Sup af.Epi.,, Wash- ipgtoii oorn 1732 f T f) South 4h 40m M 52|5 515 9 50 5 10 49'5 11 48t5 12 4715 13 46] 5 14 45 5 15 44 5 16 4 43.5 17 42,5 18 4l'5 19 405 20 395 21 3815 22; 375 23 3615 24 345 26 335 27 te 28 31S 29 305~30 29]5 31 28 5 32 27,5 26|5 34 25 5 35 2415 36 5 23 v? 9; 6 19 24 Sets. av q © 3 241 6 54 X «! t 45 25] 8 36

. ,i ' ■„ i" 1 ,!■. i _ ■ ^ . i r If ■ . n. _ ,,, i . . p* ir 3rfc m. '5 J W , 3 m co £ »ooocosf©^oi'^,«5ent>, v" GO i-t n Tf U) i» r%y-i. f ff ««Siv*00>03i>t-ffll6^ DATS. ,-<->rftI>©C3c£3«>&*u5CO'—» nrtwrtMMNn » h jffi New Moon, 5 6 46 m O First Quarter, 12 3 69 m d h m 0 Full Moon, 20 81 m ($ Last Quarter, 28 1 29 m D of W Miscellaneous. © \ © rises] sets - V i r& splace SUND. Monday Tuesday Wednesd Thursday Friday Saturday SUND. Monday Tuesday Wednesd Thursday Friday Saturday SUND. Monday Tuesday W ednesd Thursday Friday Saturday SpNP. Monday Tuesday Wednesd Thursday Friday Saturday SUND. Monday, Saturday Quinquagesiraa, or Shro Sunday Ash "Wednesday. £) in , [Perigee f) ? 1st Sunday in Lent Bon.deft at Laon 1814 $) South 5h 34m Aft Gregory, martyr | Stationary 2d Sunday in Lent. Jul, Csesar assassinated Boston evacuated 1776 in Ap-St. Pal; Day (g> Unt in Peri-2/ Stationary 5 5 58 5 57 5 55 5 64 5 53 5 52 5 51 5 50 5- 49 5 48 ■oa 9 10 11 12 13 14 L5 16 17 18 19 20 i?i 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Before you make a promise, consider well its importance, and ascer-j tain whether yon can perform it. | 65KW !£r 38 ,5 39 ii5 41 ■•5 42 '5 43 15 44 15 <45 .5 46 47 5 49 1,5 50 >5 51 52 53 6 9 6 10 6 U 6 121 20 11 2 53 3 4 5 5 Sets. 7 7 59 8 48 9 37 10 26 11 15 Morn 0 53 1 42 2 3 18 4 4 54 5 4£ Rises 7 16 8 9 9 9 55 10 48 U 41 Morfa 1 26 2 18 3 10 4 2 V? 13 2 17 X «' 17 qp 3 17 * All I6]j n 0 13 26i "25 8 !ss ?l 3 15 26 W 8 i4 26 H 8; 2ll 3',1 161 29 Y5> '13' 27 'V 26 wBBe9BE555®6 wpSS^S^Bu llllUI IMIII I lllll,m>!,< " !" I.;i> 1,!. I IN 0 IM I ' f ' 1829 APRIL, 30 ttawj. 4th mo ASTRONOMICAL CALCULATIONS. a> o* & m *i (n co oa m m i->G*cnjgmcn co to cncnc^'-'oliiO'-iiNniG^ x> h m d h m New Moon, 3 4 31 a | O Full Moon, 19 0 32 a (O First Quarter, 10 8 17 a ® Dast Quarter, 26 9 5m D of W Miscellaneous. © © O I •>'" rises sets r&s [place, 1 Wednesd Thursday 3 Friday Saturday SUND. Monday Tuesday Wednesd Thursday Friday Saturday SUND. Monday Tuesday Wednesd Thursday Friday Saturday SUND. Monday Tuesday 22] Wednesd 23|Thursday 24'Friday 25jSaturday j2G| SUND. 27 [Monday 28,Tuesday 29l Wednesd 30IThursday Jefferson born 1743 ©eel invis-Nelson's vie [1801 5th Sunday in Lent Lewistown cannona '13 « south 4h 24m aften. Lord Bacon died 1626 $ a b-Bank US inc '16 Bon abd'14-Ds!2h48m I PalmSund—6th in Lent Handel died 1759 ®in ap-Emb law rep '14 Shakspeareborn 1564 GoodFrid-Franklind'90 ['75-Byrondi '24 EasterSunday-batt Lex EasterMonday—© en y [1616 ®so 3h23m m—Shaks di Brazil discovered 1500 LowSunday-lst aft East York,UCtakbyAml8l3 @) in per-Bon. emba for [Elba 1814 Louisiana ceded to U S 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 37 36 35 34 33 32 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 18 17, 16 6 13 6 14 6 15 6 16 6 17 6 18 6 19 6 20 6 21 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 6 39 6 40 6 42 6 43 6 44, 4 54 5 46 Sets 7 11 7 56 8 41 9 26 18 11 10 56 11 41 Morn 1 11 Rises 8 19 9 4 9 49 10 34 11 19 Morn 0 49 1 34 2 18 3 2 3 46 X 11 26 T> 11 25 « 10 24 n 8 21 25 4 17 29 SI 11 23 W 5 17 28 11 23 HI 5 18 t 0 13 26 V? 1Q 24] 7 22 X o 20 T 5 The opinion of the vulgar separated from the consent and appro¬ bation of the wise, signifies no more than a great many cyphers would do without figures. —TT-rr • ■■ — , .1 M ,nTO, >tit mo. MAY, 31 trass. 1829 ASTRONOMICAL CALCULATIONS. o a . o v '■Si §.*• w S s MM®o)^u5oo«ot»n siMTfiflmo'q'w nwMMMMcininsi.M days. d h m d h m 9 New Moon, 3 2 7m I ©FullMoon, 18 1 58 a O First Quarter, 10 1 46 a I <• Last Quarter, 25 2 29 a d DofW Misceixaneo us. > © © sets O f)'s m rises r # s place Friday St Philip & St. J ames 5 15 6 45 4 30 19 2 Saturday Bon left Par to meet the 5 15 6 45 5 14 * 4 3 SUND. 2d aft East [Allies 1815 5 14 6 46 Sets 18 4 Monday s ? 5 13 6 47 8 2 n 2 5 Tuesday Bonaparte died 1821 5 12 6 48 8 44 16 6 Wednesd O so 3h 10m aft—Battle 5 11 6 49 9 26 29 7 Thursday [Prague 1757 5 10 6 50 10 8 25 12 8 Friday Days 13h 42m long 5 9 6 51 10 50 25 9 Saturday 3d aftEast [dies dis.1497 5 8 6 52 11 32 a ^ 10 SUND. Ticond. tak.l775-W In- 5 7 6 53 Morn 19 11 Monday stationary 5 6 6 54 0 55 TTJ7 1 12 Tuesday C) in apogee 5 5 6 55 1 36 13 13 Wednesd 5 5 6 55 2 17 25 14 Thursday 9 a b 5 4 6 56 2 58 t£r 7 15 Friday [agtFrance 1804 5 4 6 56 3 39 19 18 Saturday $ 132 b —Eng dec war 5 2 6 58 4 20 HI 1 17 SUND. 4th Sunday after Easter 5 2 6 58 5 1 14 18 Monday 5 1 6 59 Rises 26 19 Tuesday Dark day in NEng 1780 5 0 7 0 7 50 t 9 20 Wednesd O sodth lh 19m morn 4 59 7 1 8 34 23 Thursday ©«nt n-StHel.disl502 4 59 7 1 9 18 V? 7 22 Friday [Fed con met inPhill787 4 58 7 2 10 2 20 23 Saturday A Burr arraigned 1807- 4 57 7 3 10 46 at 4 24 SUND. 5th Sunday after Easter 4 57 7 3 11 30 18 25 Monday 4 56 7 4 Morn X 2 26 Tuesday O in perigee— $ 132 b 4 55 7 5 0 58 17 27 Wednesd 4 55 7 5 1 42 T 1 28 Thursday Aspension,orHolyThurs 4 54 7 6 2 26 15 29 Friday AttonSacket'sHar 1813 4 53 7 7 3 10 29 30 Saturday 4 53 7 7 3 54 b 13 31 SUND. Sun after Ascension day 4 52 7 8 4 38 27 Repentance without amendment, is like continually pumping with¬ out mending the leak. B 1829 JUNE, 3D trags. 6th mo. ASTRONOMICAL CALCULATIONS. B ^ (O ^ O ^ ^wOWCO 40 M m ruMJJ V« Ml 40 s-» «x j lo co \fi |Q «0«4(41f5 I!© New Moon, 1 11 59m i'$) First Quarter, 9 7 33 m ,# Full Moon, 17 0 25 m » H M (® Last Quarter, 23 7 7 a O New Moon, 30 10 55 a ~©T sets I f>*5~ place. D of W Miscellaneous. I © irises t r #s Monday Tuesday Wednesd Thursday Friday Saturday SUND Monday Tuesday W ednesd Thursday Friday Saturday SUND. Monday Tuesday Wednesd Thursday Friday Saturday SUND. Monday Tuesday W ednesd Thursday Friday Saturday SUND. Monday T uesdav Pea with Fran&En 1314 Days 14h 20m long S $ Sodus on lake Oot burnt 4 Whit Sunday Whit Monday—jf) in ap|4 [Copenhagen St Barnabas—Gr fire at south 8h 37m aftern [of Friedland 1807 Trinity Sunday—Battle 4 52 51 51 50 50 50 49 49 Battle BunkerHill 1775 Battle of Waterloo 1815 Carthagena takby Adm [V ernon 1741 1st aft Trio-© enters 2c f) in perigee-$ station Nati of St John Baptist O so 7h 13m m—Battle [Charleston 1776 Days 14h 26m long 2d Sund aft Trio-Battle [Monmouth 1778 © in aphelion 49 487 48 48 48 47 47 47 4 47 4 47 4 47 4 477 4 46 46 46 46 47 47 47 47 47 47 7 8 7 9 7 9 10 10 10 11 11 11 12 12 12 12 13 13 13 13 13 13 13 14 14 Sets 8 1 8 40 9 19 9 58 10 36 11 14 11 52 Hg Morn 1 8 1 46 2 24 3 2 3 40 4 18 4 56 Rises 8 35 9 19 10 3 10 47 11 31 n 11 24 25 7 20 a s 15 27 9 21 3 15 27 Morn 0 59 1 43 2 26 3 3 52 4 35 Sets 2 16 1 IS 29 X 13 12 26 S 16 m n * He whose jests make others afraid of his wit, bad need be afraid of their memory. • ' • 7th mo. JULY, 31 ia t-gs. li 32S ASTRONOMICAL CALCULATIONS. OH © fl . 1 o o fS.S ^ cfi SI H 81 rt 53 O fry k\ ! 1 w UAXS. r«-OC05005(?tLncc^' J ® First Quarter, 9 ,0 41m # Full Moon, Ip J 2 m \ D H M |j (3> Last Quarter, 23 0 24 ni;j O New Moon, 30 11 49 m i D of W Wednesd Thursday Friday Saturday SUND Monday Tuesday Wednesd Thursday Friday Saturday SUND. Monday Tuesday Wednesd Thursday Friday Saturday SUND. Monday Tuesday Wednesd Thursday Friday Saturday SUND Monday Tuesday Wednesd Thursday 1 (Friday Miscellaneous. © rises rtys i) s place. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 fcl 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 a,? 9 fio & Visitation B V Mary Fort Erie surrendered Prsts Jefferson & Adams 3d Sun af Trin. £di 1826 £) in Apogee If) So.5h 42m aft ? $ Days 14h 18m long Brig (Rattlesnake cap by 4tb Sun af Trin. [B 1814 ?' V Fr Revolution com 1789 Days 14h 14m long £ Stationary Michili tak by Bri 18] Pope John 18 died 1009 5th af. Tr. $ ^ Geo IV P^in Perigee [cro. 1821 p) South 5h 6m M <© [Enters Cl Dog days begin OtluafTr-P Office estab by Cong 1775 Ticonderoga taken 1759 ~H Stationary Wm Penn died 1718 Brit atta Plats burg 1813| 4 481? 4 48 4 48 4 48 4 49 4 49 49 50 50 51 51 52 52 52 53 53 54 55 55 56 4 57 4 57 58 59 59 0 12 12 12 12 11 11 11 10; 10 9 9 8 8 8 7 7 6 5 5 4 3 3 2 1 1 0 59 6 59 6 58 6 5 6 56 1TI V? 7 45 ' 8 25 9 5 9 45 10 25 11 5 11 45 Morn 1 3 1 42 ""21 3 0U 3 39 4 18 4 57 Rises 8 22 9 5 9 48 10 31 11 14 11 56 Morn 1 20 2 2 '2 44 3 26 4 8 4 50 Sets - 7 -51 2516,; 29 ait 23 m 5 17 29 11 23 5 17' 0' 13 27 11 25 10 25 9 24 n a [ 'The shortest way to get rich, is not by enlarging our estates, but, fey^O^yyciitipg our desires. ; 1829 AUGUST, 31 Sajjs. 8th tno ASTRONOMICAL CALCULATIONS. *3 CO CO lO b- CO ^ O —1 o CO CO to Ci S *-0 to to 5 4 4 3 2 1 1 o DAYS. rf c- O M « Ol M if) 03 .1 fi r-i St ©I in per-N Lond burnt] [by Arnold N.Yorktaken 1776. Fr. [ent. Madrid 1812 Quebec taken by Wolfe Days I2h 12m long 14th Sun after Trinity St Matt-® so 7h 16m m © enters ^ Columb sail fr Cadiz on St Cyp. [2*d voyage 1493 Earthquake atMex!717 [O in apogee St Michasl St Jer-Harmer's def '90 6 25 6 24 6 23 6 22 6 21 20 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 20 10 7 10 54 11 41 Morn 1 15 2 2 2 49 3 36 4 23 5 10 5 57 Rises 7 37 8 27 9 17 10 7 10 57 11 47 Morn 1 2' 2 17 Itl Sets 6 45 7 39 8 32 16 27 9 22 t 4 17 V5> 0 13 27 7X 12 26 X 12 27 V 12 27 a 12 26 n io 23 25 6 19 a i 13 25 m 7 19 ^ 1 13 24 111 6 If you have performed an act of great and disinterested viitue, conceal it; if you publish it, you will neither be'believed here, nor rewarded hereafter, C 1829 OCTOBER, 31 taps. lOtfi tuo. ASTRONOMICAL CALCULATIONS. O 0) rSJ §> w SO uj oi to t- ei Last Quarter 19 8 4m O Full Moon, 12 9 39m | 9 New Moon, 27 1 54 a D of W Miscellaneous. © rises r&fs i)'s place. Thursday Friday Saturday SUND. Monday Tuesday Wednesd Thursday Friday ilOjSaturday :11 SUND. 12 Monday 13 Tuesday 14;Wednesd 15|Thursday 16 Friday Saturday SUND Monday Tuesday Wednesd Thursday Friday Major Andre ex'd 1780 [Germantown 16th afterTr—Rattle of [® so 7h lm af; Peace Aix la Chap 1748 Saturday SUND. Monday Tuesday Wednesd Thursday Friday Saturday St Denys ® in perigee Bat Camperdown 1797 Canova di 1822—stat Bon land atStHel 1815 Moscow burnt 1812 Days llh 12ra long Battle Leipsic 1814 £ station—Bur tak '77 18aftT-Cornwal ta 1781 ® south 6h56m morn Bat Bosworth Fieldl485 © enters Tt[ Bat Moll '81—C in ap° Crispin-Geo 2d di 1760 [19th after Trio Bat White Plains J777 Nights 13h 18m long 915 51 10 5 50 11 12 13 14 15 16 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 49 48 47 46 45 44 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 32 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 9 25)711 16 10 18)£ 1 11 It' V5> Morn 0 57 1 50 2 43 3 36 4 29|X 5 22] 6 15|T Rises 6 50 7 44 8 38 9 32 10 25 11 18 Morn 1 4 1 57 2 50 3 43 4 36 5 29 6 22 Sets 6 30 7 30 8 30 9 30 13 26 9 22 6 20 5 20 5 20 5 20 4 18 2 15 28 a 10 22 m % A fine woman ought to add»nnually to her accomplishment*, as much as her beauty loses in the time. Utii mo. NOVEMBER, 30 tags. 1829 ASTRONOMICAL CALCULATIONS. co cd co lo to co -h d h m First Quarter 4 4 1m d h m Last Quarter, 18 3 1m O Full Moon, 10 7 16a | ® New Moon, 26 6 4 m d D of W Miscellaneous. © © 4) r &c s 4)'s m rises sets place 1 SUND. 20th Sund after Trinity 6 42 5 18 10 30 V? 6 2 Monday 6 43 5 17 11 30 19 3 Tuesday 6 44 5 16 Morn cx 2 4 Wednesd r s f)'a place. 1 Tuesday EmpAlexander di'd 1825 7 7 4 53 10 39 ox 13 2 Wednesd Geo Davoust with Fren 7 8 4 52 11 43 27 3 Thursday [Gorpsent Posen 1806 7 8 4 52 Morn X 11 4 Friday $) in per [Praiga 1806 7 9 4 51 1 51 25 5 Saturday Fr cr theVistula&occup 7 9 4 51 % 55 cp 9 6 SUND. 2 in Adv-9 so ^h 58m aft 7 10 4 50 3 59 23 7 Monday Newport ta'79 [Nicho 7 10 4 50 5 3 H 8 8 Tuesday Conception V Mary 7 11 4 49 6 7 22 9 Wednesd Milton born 1608-Days 7 11 4 49 7 11 n 6 10 Thursday [9h 38m long 7 11 4 49 Rises 20 11 Friday 7 12 4 48 6 9 25 4 12 Saturday ® south 34m morning 7 12 4 48 7 7 18 13 SUND. 3inAd~drSJohnson d '84 7 12 4 48 8 5 a 1 14 Monday Washington tjlied 1799 7 13 4 47 9 3 14 15 Tuesday 7 13 4 47 10 1 26 16 Wednesd Tea destr at Bost 1773 7 13 4 47 10 59 8 17 Thursday 7 13 4 47 11 57 20 18 Friday ®in apogee 7 13 4 47 Morn 2 19 Saturday 7 13 4 47 1 52 14 20 SUND. 4inAdv-Ni 14h26m long 7 1-3 4 47 2 49 26 21 Monday 7 13 4 47 3 46 til 8 22 Tuesday © enters YJ 7 14 4 46 4 43 20 23 Wednesd Era Alex b 1777 [1805 7 14 4 46 5 40 * 3! 24 Thursday Peace con. withHolkar 7 13 4 47 6 37 15i 25 Friday CHRisTMAs-Newton bn 7 13 4 47 Sets 29! 26 Saturday St Stephen [1642 7 13:4 47 5 32 V? 12! 27 SUND. 1st aftChristm's-StJohn 7 13 4 47 6 29 26 28 Monday O so 2h 21m afternoon 7 13 4 47 7 26 AV 101 29 Tuesday 7 13 4 47 8 23 24 30 Wednesd 7 13 4 47 9 20 X 8 31 Thursday Sylvest-© in perihelion 7 12 4 48 10 17 22 1 ' ' ™ ■ ^ Children increase the cares of life, but they mitigate the remem¬ brance of death. Table of simple interest at six per cent. Prin¬ 1 week 1 mo. 1 year Prin¬ 1 week 1 mo. 1 year. cipal. d c m d c in d c in cipal. d c in d c m d c m Cts. 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 Dols. 6 0 0 6 0 3 0 0 36 0 20 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 7 0 0 7 0 3 5 0 42 O 30 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 18 8 0 0 8 ' 0 4 0 0 48 0 40 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 4 9 0 1 0 0 4 5 0 54 0 50 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 3 0 10 0 1 1 0 5 0 0 60 0 60 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 3 6 20 0 2 5 0 10 0 1 20 0 70 0 0 0 0 0 3 .0 4 2 30 0 3 7 0 15 0 1 80 0 80 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 4 8 40 0 5 0 0 20 0 2 40 0 90 0 0 1 0 0 4 0 5 4 50 0 6 2 0 25 0 3 00 0 Dols. 1 0 0 1 0 0 5 0 6.0 60 0 7 5 0 30 0 3 60 0 2 0 0 1 0 10 0 12 0 70 0 8 7 0 35 0 4 20 0 3 0 0 2 0 15 0 18 0 80 0 10 0 0 40 0 4 80 0 4 0 0 4 0 2 0 0 24 0 90 0 11 2 0 45 0 5 40 0 5 0 0 5 0 2 5 0 30 0 100 0 12 5 0 50 0 6 00 0 N. B.—To understand the use of this table—against 2 dols. for one week, you will find the interest to be 1 mill—one month, 1 cent—one year, 12 cents. *** Money at compound interest will double itself in 11 years 10 months and 22 days. CONVENIENT RULE. In any sum the interest of the same for six days, at 6 per cent, j will be found to be {he figures on the left hand side of the decimal point, calling the first mills—Thus, the interest of 196 dollars for 6 days, is 19 cents 6 mills; for three days half the sum, &c. RATE OF POSTAGE. For every letter of a single sheet, conveyed not over 30 miles, six cents; over30 miles ana not exceeding 80, ten cents; over 80 and not exceeding 150, twelve and a half cents; over 150 and not exceeding 400, eighteen and three fourths cents; over 400 twenty- five cents. Every letter consisting of two pieces of paper double those rates; every letter consisting of three or moijl pieces of paper, and weigh- i ing less than one ounce, triple those flptes; every letter consisting] of more than three pieces of paper, and weighing one ounce, quad¬ ruple those rates; and at the rate of four single letters, for each ounce which a letter or packet consisting of more than three pie¬ ces of paper may weigh. Every ship letter, originally received at any office for delivery, six cents. JVewspapers, not over 100 miles, one cent; over 100 miles, one cent and a half; to any distance in the state where prin- 1 ted, one cent. Magazines and pamphlets, not j eriodical—for any distance not over 100 miles, four cents per sheet, that isfour cents for every 4 pages folio, 8 quarto, 16 octavo, 24 duodecimo, 36 18 mo. 64 32mo.—over 100 miles, six cents. But if published period¬ ically the postage is, not over 100 miles, one and a half cents, over 100 miles, two and a half cents. Pamph. of g sheet g those rates. AMERICAN STANDARD OF MONEY approved by act of Congress, April 10,1806.—Gold Eagle, valued at ten dollars, must weigh 11 dwts. 6 grs. Half Eagle, at five dollars, 5 do. 15 do. Quarter Eagle, at two dollars and fifty cents, 2 do. 19g do. Sil¬ ver—Dollar must weigh 17 dwts. 7 grs. Half Dollar 8 do. 16 do. .Quarter Dollar, 4do.4do. French Crown, at one dollar and ten cents, 18 do. 17 do. , D A TABLE biiovwug the number of square miles of each state in the Union; tlie popula Hon of 1820; the average population on a square mile; the estimated value ot manufactures in 1810; the value of houses and lands in 1815; and the time when each state was admitted into the Union. Maine N. H. Mass. R. 1. Conn. Vt. N. Y.t N. J. Pa. Dela. Md. Va. • N. C. S. C. Geo. Ala. Miss, Lap. Ten. , Ken. ' Ohio Indiana I Illinois^ Missou. 1 Mich.T. I Ark- T. I Col. D. Total. 31,750 9,491 7,250 1,580 4,764 10,212 46,000 8,320 46,000 2,120 13,959 64,000 48,000 24,000 60,000 44,000 45,000 48,000 40,000 42,000 39,000 36,000 52,000 60,000 40,000 100 929 786 6,740 3,602 7,967 918 39,367 20,017 30,413 17,467 147,128 462,042 219,629 258,497 151,439 42,450 33,272 79,540 82,826 129,491 4.,723 1,420 1,374 10,569 174 1,676 10,425 298,335 10 244,161 26 523,287 72 83,059 275,248 235,764 1,372,812 277,575 1,049,398 72,749 407,350 1,065,366 638,829 490,309 340,989 127,901 75,448 153,407 422,813 564,317 581,434 1417,178 55,211 66,586 8,896 14,273 33,039 330 1,764,836 9,625,734 i So .«99 DOLLARS. 3,741,116 5,225,045 21,895,528 4,106,074 7,771,928 5,407,280 25,370,286 7.054.594 33,691,111 1,733,744 11,468,794 15,263,473 6,653,152 3.623.595 3,658,481 | 419,073 1,222,357 3,611,029 6,181,024 2,894,290 300,000 120,000 200,000 50,000 1,100,000 II a > 38,745,974 tl43,765,560 20,907,766 88,534,971 32,461,120 209,370,900 95,899,333 346,633,889 13,449,370 106,496,638 165,608,199 51,517,031 74,325,262 31,487,656 24,243,750 66,878,587 61,347,215 172,762,676 1,631,657,224 ^Including Maine. ^Original States. JThe population of the state of New-York, in 1825, was 1,616,457; of whom 643 were deaf and dumb, 1,421 idiots, and 819 lunatics. $1 he population of Illinois, in 1825, 72,817. Whole population in 1790, 3,929,326; in 1800,5,305 666; in 1810.7,263,926; in 1820, 9,637,734. The rate of increase between 1810 and 1820, has been 32,9 per cent. At this rate the population will double in about 25 years. In 1790 tbe states west of the Alleghany mountains contained scarcely .100,000 inhabitants; in 1820 they contained about 2,000,000. Taking the whole United States togeth¬ er, the whites increase faster than the blacks. In the southern states the blacks increase much faster than the whites. In the whole U. States there are 97 females to 100 males. The average of all our cities gives 109 females to 100 males. In five of the newly settled states, taken collectively, there are, among the children under 10 years of age, 92 girls to 100 boys. In 5 of the old states, 97 girls to 100 boys. In our 6 large cities 100 girls to 100 boys. In these cities the proportion ot •hildren under 10 years of age, is to that of the whole U. S. as 28 to 33 —Aforsc GOVERNMENT OF TENNESSEE. Samuel Houston, Governor; Daniel Graham, Secretary of State; Tho; Crutch er, Treasurer "Middle Tennessee; Miller Francis, Treasurer East Tennessee; James T. Caruthers, Treasurer West Tennessee. COURT OF ERRORS AND APPEALS. Judges—Robert Whyte, Jacob Peck, John Catron. Clerks—Hugh Brown, Knoxville; Alexander B. Lane, Sparta; Randal M'Gav- ock, Nashville; John D. Martin, Reynoldsburgh. Chancellors—William E. Anderson, Western Division; Nathan Gieen,Eastern Division. Chancery Court Clerks—George T. Gillespie, Greenville; Disc Alexander, Ro. gersville; Thomas N. Clark,Kingston; Robert L. Caruthers,Carthage; JosialiF. Morford, M'Minnville; Eli Talbot, Franklin; Madison Caruthers, Columbia; John Montgomery,Charlotte; Robert Hughes, Jackson; I. S. W.Cook, Paris; Circuit Court Judges-^Edward Scott, Samuel Powell, Chtfrles F. Keith, Na¬ thaniel Williams, Parry W. Humphreys, Thomas Stuart, William E; Kennedy, Joshua Haskell, John S. Hamilton. GOVERNMENT OF ALABAMA. John Murphy, Governor; James I. Thornton, Secretary of State; Samuel Pick- etas, Comptroller; John C. Perry, Treasurer. Supreme Court of Alabama—At Tuscaloosa, 1st Mondays in January and July. Federal District Court—For the Northern District, at Huntsville, 1st Mondays in March and October. CIRCUIT COURTS. circuits. judges. . First Circuit, Abner S. Lipscomb, Second do Reuben Saffold, Third do John Gayle, Fourth do John White, solicitors* John Elliot. Henry Goldthwalle. Const. Perkins, AttGen. David Hubbard. James G; Birney. Benj. Fitzpatrick. Fifth - do John M. Taylor, Sixth do Anderson Crenshaw, The circuit courts are held on Mondays in the several counties as follows first cikcurr. | Counties. Mondays. Counties. Mondays. | St. Clair, 4th aft 4tli in Feb fy Sept Monroe, 1st in March, 2d in Octo. ■ Shelby 7th do do do Clarke, 3d do and 4th do ' fourth Circuit. Marengo, 4th do and 1st aft 4th ! Limestone, 1st in March and Sepc in October. j LaVrence, 4th do do Washington, 1st after 4th in March and , Lauderdale, 3d aft 4th in Mar # Sept 2d after 4th in Octo 2d after 4th in March and 3d after 4th in Octo. 4th after 4th m Mar. and 5th aft 4th in Octo. second circuit. 1st ill April and 3d in Oct. 3d do and 1st aft 4th - in October. 4th in April and 2d aft 4th in October. 1st aft 4th in April and 3d after 4th in October. 2d after 4th in April and 4th after 4th in Octo. third circuir. - 3d in February and Sept. Tuscaloosa, 1st aft 4th in Feb Sept. Jefferson, 6th aft 4th in Feb # Sept. Mobile, Baldwin, Dallas, Wilcox, Perry, Bibb, Autauga, fifth circuit, 1st in March and Sept. 3d do do 5th aft 3d in Mar. & Sept* sixth circuit. Montgomery, 1st in March and Sept. Butler, 3d do - do Conecuh, 4th do do Covington, 1st after the 4th in March and September. 2d aft 4th in Mar 4" Sept. 3d do do do seventh circuit. Franklin, is in Afarchand Septem, 4th do do do 1st aft 4th in Afar. 4- Sept- 2d aft do do do 3d aft do do do 4th ^ft do do do Jackson, Madison, Morgan, Henry, Pike, Marion Pickens Fayette, Walker, Blount, jSTii Pepper Plant is a species of vine which twines round the trees in the Vicinity, especially the mango: the leaf is pungent and aromatic—the berries gfow hi clusters, like currents close to the stalks. When ripe, the berries are gathered, and before being dried, are steeped in warm water, in order to preserve t»em from insects. Newspapers Periodicals in Tennessee, Kentucky Alabama, in ISaitE? TENNESSEE. mere Pub. By Whom Pub. Price. Columbia A C Hays $2 50 Murfreesboro' Tho A Patterson 2 50 Clarksville Richardson & Philips 2 50 Rogersville S D Mitchell 2 00 Knoxville Hiram Barry 3 00 Jonesborough J Howard 3 00 Gallatin H Strange &co. 3 00 Athens "S M & J C S Hood 2 50 Knoxville T Stringfield 1 00 Jackson Charles D M'Lean 3 00 Knoxville Heiskell & Brown 3 00 Memphis T Phoebus 3 00 Nashville Title Columbian Courier Clarksville Gazette Oalvanistic Magazine* Enquirer Farmers' Journal Gallatin Journal Hiwassean Holston Messenger* Jackson Gazette Knoxville Register Memphis Advocate National Banner and Nashville Whigf Nashville Republican and State Gazettef Sparta Review village Messenger Western Balance Western Intelligencer Western Statesman West Tenjaessean Nashville Sparta Fayetteville Franklin Shelbyville Bolivar Paris KENTUCKY. Georgetown American Sentinel Argus of Western America Frankfort Agreeable C ompanion| Harrodsburg Augusta Herald Baptist Recorder^. Commentator Central Watchtower Christian Messenger* Columbian Compiler Focus Farmers' Chronicle Kentucky Gazette Kenturky Reporter Kentucky Republican Kentucky Journal Kentuckian Kentucky Advocate Augusta Bloomheld Frankfort Harrodsburg Georgetown Henderson Shelbyville Louisville Richmond Lexington Lexington Hopkinsville Flemingsburg Frankfort Shelbyville Louisville Public Adv'r.f Louisville Maysville Eagle Mavsville Olive Branch Danville Parks W eekly Advertiser Paris Public Advertiser Bowlinggreen People's Press Richmond Transylvania Jour of Med ) Lexi ton ana the Asso. $ciences|| J ° The Rural Visiter Glasgow Village Museum ' Princeton Weekly Messenger Russellville Western Compiler Hardinsburg Western Luminary Lexington Western Beocon Mt Sterling Western Citizen Paris John S Simpson 5 00 Hall & Fitzgerald 5 00 John W Ford 3 00 E^-JBHill 2 00 Henry Van Pelt 2 50 White, Newton & Laird 2 00 Phillips & Wilson 3 00 J ohnston & Dyer 3 00 N L Finnell 2 00 Amos Kendall & co. 3 00 U P Randall 1 00 — Wood 2 50 William H Holmes 1 50 Dana & Hodges 3 00 W Tanner 2 00 Barton & Stone 1 09 W R Abbott 2 00 J D Grant 2 09 John P Morton & co. 3 60 Joseph Turner 2 00 A G Meriwether 2 50 Smith & Palmer 2 50 Peeples & Kelly 3 00 J B Carter 2 CO Jacob H Holeman 3 00 G P Miller 2 50 S Penn jr 5 00 Richard Henry Lee 2 50 J J Polk 2 00 T R Benning 2 00 Robert Willis 2 50 Henry B Hawkins 2 00 Drs Cook & Short 3 00 Wm B Kilgore 2 50 A Brock 2 00 Rhea fy Atchison 3 00 J W Kincheloe 2 50 Tho T Skillman 2 00 Western F Birch 2 00 Lyle & Keenon 2 50 KENTUCKY—"CONTINUED* Title. Westerrt Intelligencer Western Herald Whig Alabama Sentinel Alabama Herald Alabama Journal Athenian Courtland Herald Democrat Florence Gazette Mobile Com. Register Southern Advocate Selma Courier Telegraph and Patriot Tuscaloosa Chronicle Alabama Herald Where pub. Elizabethtown Bardstown Mountsterliiig ALABAMA. Tuscaloosa Greens borough Montgomery Athens Courtland Huntsville Florence Mobile Huntsville Selma Tuscumbia Tuscaloosa Claiborne By whom pub. Price, C W Hutcheu 3 00 D D Jones 2 00 A D Foster 2 00 Grantland & Mitchel Rev J Hillhouse Mosley Baker Estis & Mathis Willie Conner Philip Woodson jr David Fulton D Farriss & co. Thomas J Frow N Reid Dousral M'Farland 4 00 3 00 3 50 3 00 3 00 4 00 3 00 3 00 4 00 3 00 Published *Monthly. j-Semiweekly. ^Semimonthly. ||Quarterly. All those not thus marked, are weekly publications Where there is a difference between the advance and credit price (as is almost invariably the case) the advance price is stated in the foregoing list. Cormac O'Kelly's Anathema upon the town of Doneraile, where he lost his watch, Alas! how dismal is my tale! I lost my watch at Doneraile! My Dublin watch, my chain and seal, ■Pilfered at once in Doneraile. May fire and brimstone never fail To fall in showers on Doneraile. May all the leading fiends assail The thieving town of Doneraile. As lightnings flash across the vale, So down to h—with Doneraile. The fate of Pompey at Pharsale, Be that the fate of Doneraile. May beef and mutton, lamb and veal, Be never found in Doneraile; But garlic soup and scurvy kale, Be still the food of Doneraile. And forward as the creeping snail, The industry be of Doneraile. May Heaven a chosen curse entail On ragged, rotten, Doneraile. May sun and moon forever fail, To beam their lights on Doneraile. May every pestilential gale Blast that spot called Doneraile. May no sweet cuckoo, thrush or quail Be ever heard in Doneraile. May patriots, king and common weal, Despise and harruss Doneraile. May every post, gazette and mail, Sad tidings bring to Doneraile. May vengeance fall at head and tail, Prom north to south, on Doneraile. May profits light, and tardy sale, Still damp the trade of Doneraile. May fame resound a dismal tale, Whene'er she lights on Doneraile. May Egypt's plagues at once prevail, 1 To thin the knaves of Doneraile. May frost and snow, and sleet # hail, | Benumb each joint in Doneraile. May wolves $ bloodhounds train # trail The wretched crew of Doneraile. May Oscar, with fiery flail, To atoms thrash all Doneraile. May all, from Belfast to Klnsale, Curse, scoff and plague you, Doneraile May neither flour nor oaten mea$ Be ever found in Doneraile. May want and wo each joy curtail, That e'er was known-in Doneraile. May no one coffin want a nail, That wraps a rogue in Doneraile May all the thieves that,rob and steal, The gallows meet in Doneraile. May all the sons of Graned weal, Blush at the thieves of Doneraile. May every mischief, fresh and stale, O'erwhelm the knaves of Doneraile. May plagues, by wholesale and retail, Pour with full force on Doneraile. May every transport wont to sail, A convict bring from Doneraile. May every churn and milking pail Pall dry to staves in Doneraile. May cold and hunger still congeal The stagnant blood of Doneraile. May every hour new woes reveal, That h— reserves for Doneraile. May th' inquisition straight impale The reparees of Doneraile. May curse of Sodom now prevail, And sink to ashes Doneraile. May-Charon's boat triumphant sail, Completely manned from Doneraile; And may grim Piut.o's inner gaol Forever groan with Doneraile. O! may my couplets never fail To find new plagues for Doneraile LIST OF RbADS AND DISTANCES. From Aashville, T . to Fayettevilie Allen's 8 Nash's 6 Abingdon, Va. 12 Bedford's 7 Keeble's 14 Hazel green 3 Elyton (Tarrant's) 5 Jefferson 9 Meridian ville 7 ■106 Murfreesborough Ia Huntsville 8 Jones' Cahawba riv . in Readyville 19 ■105 Lindsay's Tritson's Hill 7 Bates's 16 Huntsville to New Or¬ 8 M'Minnville 13 leans via Columbus. Moore's 8 Canyfork 13 Brown's Ferry 39 Davenport's Cox's 6 Sparta 13 Courtland 13 6 Eastland's 19 Russelville 30 Bogle's 12 Dawson's 19 Thomas' Big Bear cr 17 Phillips' 9 Craborchard 16 Halloway's 18 Seltna 6 Willet's 12 Fitzgerald's 23 Cahawba 10 Kingston 12 Moore's 5 •206 Easkridge's Campbell's Station 6 Wilson's 1-2 Huntsv. to Tuscaloosa 18 Basse'8 5 Elyton (as above) 106 Knoxville 16 Columbus (Tom R.) 21 Jonesborough 11 Plat Creek 16 -176 M'Math's 12 Rutledge 17 Marshoola Tabba's 18 Wilson's Store 9 Mooresburgh 18 Steam's (white) 12 M. Collins' 7 Rogersville 15 Lucas5 (Indian) 22 Hurricane Fork 10 Surgoinsville 14 Jones' do 8 Tuscaloosa 8 Boatyard or Kingsp'tflS Doty's 11 ■163 Blountsville 16 Harvey's 78 Another way to Tusca¬ Abingdon 24 Wiggin's 11 loosa and Cahawba. 341 Lee's 28 Triana 15 Nashville to Louisville. Howell's 15 Crabb's Ferry 4 Hurt's 7 Jacksonville 15 Sommerville 6 Hagan's (Springs) 13 Covington 24 Gandy's 12 Franklin, Ky. 91 Madisonville 7 Weedon's 18 Bawlinggreen £0 Across Lake Pon- Stout's 4 Bell's (J forks)* 23 ckartrain to N. O. 30 Blount Springs Brown's 12 Mumfordsville 16 —455 13 Elizabethtown 37 Huntsville to Natchez. Butler's 13 Salt River 20 To Columbus 176 Elvton (Stout's road) 8 Louisville 20 Missionary 18 Tuscaloosa 58 177 Mrs Black's 17 ■103 ^Distance from Bell's to Pigeonroost (Fulsom)18 Weathered's 12 Lexington, K. 116 m. Upper French Camp 25 Havanna 14 Nashville to Tuscaloo- Lower do 15 Patten's 13 sa, Alabama. Shoats' 12 Marion IS Little Harpeth 10 Harris' 5 Chesnut's 17 Franklin S Doake's 26 Pope's 7 West Haipeth 6 Ward's 15 Cahawba 3 Columbia 17 Choctaw Agency 13 -247 Mount Pleasant 11 Ash horn's 8 To Savannah by Augus¬ Lawrenceburph 22 Dean's Creek 20 ta Geo. Blue water, Ala. 92 Baldwin's lower line 14 Bayless 15 Florence 18 Gibson Port 26 Salem 20 Tuscumbia 5 Greenville 23 Winchester 10 Russelville 18 Uniontown 6 Jasper courthouse 37 Pikeville 32 Sulcertown 6 Ross 12 Tuscaloosa 65 Washington 6 Taylor's 15 ■234 Natchez 6 Vaan's 12 Nashville to Huntsville —455 Mrs White'sturnp. 16 Topp's 6 Huntsville to Cakawba. Saunders' 17 Mabury*s 8 Ditto's Landing 10 Daniel's 14 Nolensville 2 Bush's 3 Blackburn's 14 Porter's 6 Henderson's 9 Young's 25 Webb's 4 Race's 15 Cochran's 19 Allison's 4 Mead's 11 Athens 25 Forrest's 9 Blountsville 7 Lexington 16 Fishing Ford 3 Lickworth's 7 Washington 25 Farmington 7 Mrs Hanby'e 7 Augusta 52 Living's 4 Harrison's 14 Savannah 123 Blake's 14 Hockhtsrt's . 5 -1& COURTS I.N TENNESSEE. TIMES OP HOLDING COUNTY AND CIRCUIT COURTS'. COUNTIES. CO'JNTT COURTS. CIRCUIT COURTS. Moiidays. Mondays. Anderson, 2d in Jan. April, July, October. 4th in February, August Bledsoe, 4th— Feb. May, Aug. November. 4th — March, Sept. Blount, 4th — March, June, Sept. December. 1st — February, August, Bedford, 1st — Feb. May, August, November. 1st — June, December. Cocke, 1st—Feb. May, August, November. 2d —January, July. Carter, ' 2d — Feb. May, August, November. 3d — March, Sept. Claiborne, 4th—Feb. May, August, November. 3d — April, October. Campbell, 1st — March, June, Sept. December. 4th — April, October. Carroll, 2d — March, June, Sept. December. 3d — May, November. Davidson, 3d—Jan. April, July, October. 2d — May, November. Dickson, 1st — Jan. April, July October. '1st — March, September. Dyer, 2d — March, June, Sept. December. 3d — April, October. Fentress, 4th — Jan. 1 in May, 4 in July, 1 in No. 3d March, Sept. Fayette, 2d—Jan. April, July, October. 2d — June, December. Franklin, 4th — Feb. May, August, November. 2d — January, July. Greene, 4th — Jan. April, July, October. 1st — March, Sept. Giles, 3d — Feb. May, August, November. 1st — February, Aug. Gibson, 1st—March, June, Sept. December. 4th — April, October. Grainger, 3d — Feb. May, August, November. 2d — April, October. Hamilton, 2d—March, June, Sept. December. 2d —April, October. Hawkins, 4th— Feb. May, August, November. 1st — April, October. Hickman, 2d — Jan. April, July, Octobor. 2d — March, Sept. Humphreys, 4th—Jan. April, July, October. - 3d — March, Sept. Hardeman, 1st — Jan. April, July, October. 4th — May, November. Hardin, 3d—March, June, Sept. December. 2d—May, November. Haywood, ^ 3d — Jan. April, July, October. 1st — January, July. Henry, 5 ISt — March, June, Sept. December. 4th — May, November. Henderson, 2d — Feb. May, August, November. 2d — May, November. Jefferson, 2d — March, June, Sept. December. 3d—January, July. Jackson, 2d — Feb. May, Aug. Nov. 4th— March, Sept. Knox, 1st — Jah. April, July, October. 2d—February, August' Lincoln, 3d — Jan. April, July, October. 3d — March, Sept. Lawrence, 1st — Jan. April, July, Oetober. 4th — February, August. Marion, 1st — March, June, Sept. December. 3d — April, October. M'Minn, 3d—March, June, Sept. December. 1st — April, October. Monroe, 4th—March, June, Sept. December. 1st — May, November. Morgan, 3d — Jan. April, July,October. 1st—March, Sept. Maury, 3d — Jan. April, July, October. 3d — June, December. Montgomery, 3d — Jan. April, July October. 3d — February, August, Madison, 1st — Feb. May, August, November. 3d—January, July. M'Nairy, 4th — March, June, Sept. December. 3d—May, November. Obion, 1st — Jan. April, July, October. 2d—April, October. Overton, 3d — Jan. 4 in Apr. 3 in July, 4 in Oct. 2d — March, Sept. Perry, 3d — Jan. April, July, October. 1st 4— May, November, Roane, 2d—Feb. May, August, Novr. 2d—March,Sept. Rhea, 3d — Feb. May, August, November. 3d — March, Sept. Rutherford, 3d —Feb. May, August Octo. 1st —April, October. Robertson, 2d — Feb. May, August, November. 2d — April, October. Sullivan, 3d — Feb. May, August, November. 4th—March, Sept. Sevier, 1st— March, June, Sept. December. 4th — January, July. Shelby, 3d—Jan. April, July, October. 3d—June, Decembej, Smith, 4th — Feb. May, Aug. November. 2d—April, October. Sumner, 2d — Feb. May, Aug. November. 2d — March, Sept. Stuart, -1st — March, June, Sept. December. 4th—March, Sept. Tipton, 1st — March, June, Sept. December. 4th — June, December. Washington, 2d — Jan. April, July, October. 2d — March, Sept Warren, 1st — Jan. April,.July, October. 4th—Jaanuary, July. White, 2d — Jan. April, July, October. 3d — Feb. August. Wilson, 4th — March, June, Sept. December. 4th—April, October. Williamson, 1st — Jan. April, July, October. 1st — Feb. August. Wayne, 4th—March, June, Sept.December. 1st—May,November- Weakley, 2d — Jan., April, July, October. 1st — April October COUNTY AND CIRCUIT COURT CLERKS. COUNTIES. COUNTY COURT. Anderson Hugh Barton . . . Bledsoe ...... Scott Terry . . . . Blount Jacob F. Foute . . Bedford . James M'Kisick . . Qocke William Garrett . . Carter George Williams . Claiborne Benjamin Cloud . . Campbell Joseph Hart. . . . Carroll E. Guinn Davidson Nathan Ewing Dickson . '" " Dyer . . Fayette . Franklin Fentress Greene . Giles . . Gibson Field Farrar . William L. Mitchell, Doctor Johnson . . , Edmund Russell . , J. H. Richardson . Andrew Patterson . German Lester . . Thomas Fite . • . Grainger John Cocke Hamilton Ashael Bawlings Hawkins Hickman . Humphreys Hardin . . Hardeman Haywood . Henry . . Henderson Jefferson . Jackson . . Knox . . . Lincoln Lawrence . Marion . . M'Minn . . Monroe Btockley D. Mitchell. Samuel Sabastion . . Dorsey P. Hudson • . David Robertson . . Thomas J. Hardeman Brittain Saunders . . John Hicks John Wilson .... Joseph Hamilton jr . William Gilbreath . . Charles M'Clung . . Brice M. Garner . . M. H. Buchanan . . John Kelly ..... John R. Turk .... William S. Blair . . Morgan W. Wall Maury Joseph B. Porter Montgomery Madison M'Nairy Overton . Obion . Andrew Vance Roderick M'lver . Joseh W. Barnett. William Gote . . . Samuel D. Wilson Perry William Jarmon . . Roane Henry Brazeal . . Rbea James Berry •> . . Rutherford .... John R. Laughlin . Robertson William Seal . . . Sullivan Richard Netherland Sevier George M. Cown . Smith Jonathan Pickett . Sumner Alfred H. Douglas. Stuart Wm Williams . . . Shelby William Lawrence Tipton Andrew Greer . Washington . Warren . . White . . . Wilson . . . Williamson . Wayne . . . Weakley . . James Sevier Joseph Colville . . . Jacob A. Lane . . , John Stone Thomas Hardeman , William Barnett. . , William H. Johnson , crRCUIT COURT. Arthur Crozier Elijah C. Rice Daniel D. Foute Daniel M'Kisick D. C. Chamberlain Alfred M. Carter J. Cloud David Richardson James H. Gee • Jacob M'Gavock John C. Collier Joel Dyer jr. John Brown Jonathan Spyker John M. Clanmons Valentine Sevier Sterling H. Lester John L. Totten William E. Cocke- John W. Brazeal Willie B. Mitchell Millington Easley Joseph Cry Lewis H. Broyles John H. Bills Blackman Colemhn James Jones William L. Petty Napo. B. Bradfoid George T. Quarles William Swan James Bright Josephus Irwin Stephen Hicks Samuel Gantt John B. Tipton Levi Truet George M. Martin Peter N. Marr William Harris Benjamin Wright Henry H. Atkinson Jonas Bedford Jared S. Allen William Brown John Locke William Ledbetter Samuel King William Anderson ' John Porter William Hart James W. Bald ridge-. John H Clements Robert Lawrence Joseph Greer James V. Anderson Pleasant Henderson Anthony Dibrell. Saronel Yerger William Smith John M. Bamett Mears Warner ^hete is nothing farther, or nearer, more hidden or revealed than God, That which fragrance is to the rose, modesty is to beauty. Patty spirit and love of country, are simples difficult to amalgamate. MILITIA OFFICERS OF TENNESSEE. Pirst Division—John Cocke, Major-General; Peter Parsons, Briga¬ dier-General 1st brigade; Alexander Anderson,2d; Wm C Duncan, 3d; John Brown, 7th; William Stone, lith. Second Division—John W. Simpson, Major-General; Robert Desha, Brigadier-General 4th brigade; Allen Brown, 5th; William Cooke, 6th; William C. Smartt, 8th; William Martin, 9th; John Greer, 10th. Third Division—William Arnold, Major-General; Brigadier-General 11th brigade, J. W. Cooke, 13th, Jacob Tipton, 14th- Washington county, 1st reg't. John Nelson, col, Jacob Hartsell, It co?„ John Ryland 1st maj—2, Sullivan, Joseph Scott col, John R Delany, It col—3, Greene, John Snapp, jr col, Hugh Carter, It col, David Bright, 2d maj—4, Hawkins, Peter Parsons col, James Francisco, It col, Campbell Smith, 1st maj JamesBradly, 2d maj—5, Carter, James V Taylor, col. Samuel W Williams, 1st maj, Hambleton B. Hampton, 2d maj—6, Jeffer-, son, Robert M'Farlandjr col, William P M'Dermot, It col, John Talbott, 1st maj, Benj M'Farland, 2d maj—7, Grainger,Robert Massengill, col, Martin Cleveland, It col, John Jarnagin, lstmaj—8, Cocke, James Jen- pings, col, Tilghman A Howard, It col, Tho Jerihings, 1st maj, Joseph Pun,2d maj—9, Claiborne, WmHogan,col, Henry Rice, ltcol—10 Knox, Henry Graves, col, Nicholas Gibbs, ltcol, John Craighead 1st maj, An-- drew Kelly, 2d maj—11, Sevier, Micajah Rogers, col, John Ellis, It col,R. Shields, 1st maj, Saml West,2d maj—12, Blount, Wm Wallace, col, Wm Thomas It col, Andrew Kirkpatrick, 1st maj, Matthew Boyle, 2d maj—13, Anderson,Ch Y Oliver, col, Wm Parks, ltcol, John Cross, 1st maj, Wm Griffith, 2d maj—14, Roane, Joel Hembree, col, Willis S. Carter, ltcol, Geo Arnold, 1st maj, Lewis Burris, 2d maj—15, Sumner, Humphrey Bate, col, Joseph C Guild It col, Robt Weathered 1st maj, John Burnes, 2d maj—16, Smith, John Cliburn, col, Richard P Hall, It col, Tho J Mont» gomery,lst maj, David Turner, 2d maj—17, Wilson, O G Finley, col, Ga¬ briel Barton, It col, Edward A White lstmaj, JosL Wilson, 2d maj—18, Jackson, WmW Woodfolk,col, Anthony Hogan, ltcol, John Brown, 1st maj, Michael Price, 2d maj—19, Davidson, John Exum, col, Willoughby Williams, ltcol,Whitmell H Boyd, 1st maj, Benj Pritchard, 2d maj—20, Davidson, Jesse I Everett,col. Enos Walker,ltcol, WmH Hamblin,lst maj, Wm M Hinton,2d maj—21, Willamson, JamesG Jones,col, Mahlon Stacy, It col, Wm Johnson, 1st maj, Archelaus P. Hughes-, 2d maj—22, Rutherford, Moses Ridley col. James M Smith, It col, Peter Warren, 1st maj, Geo Ralston, 2d maj—23, Robertson, Benj Elliott, col, Hiram W Ryburn, It col, Washington Ryburn, 2d maj—24, Montgomery, Henry M Fall, col. John Ogburn, 2d maj—25, Dickson, Richard D Sanson), col, John B Brown, It col, Herod Parrish, 1st maj, S W Handly, 2d maj—26, Stewart, Willie Bayless, col, Wm H West, It col, George D Outlaw, 1st maj, John Brown, 2d maj—27, Maury, Richd A L Wilkes, col. Esom B Dooley, ltcol, Wm B Pillow, 1st maj, CalebThomas,2d maj--28,Bedford, Wm Burnett, col, Robert Gannon, It col, John A Moore, 1st maj, Ken¬ neth D Anderson, 2d maj—29, Warren, Wm Douglas, col, Wm M Ro¬ binson', It col—30, Rhea, James C. Mitchell, col. Thos M'Callie, It col, John Lewis, lstmaj, Saml Johnson, 2d maj—31, Bledsoe, Saml C Lowe, col, Wm Brown It col, Isaac Robinson 1st maj, Thos M Skillern 2d maj, 32, Franklin, Garland B Miller col, Wm Taylor It col, James Donaldson 1st maj, Berry Faris 2d maj—33, Campbell, Joseph Peterson col, James Glenn It col, Farrell B Brucher 1st maj, Jos Carlock 2d maj—34, White, WmlJ sry col, Joseph Hurd It col, James Anderson 2dmaj—35, Over- #0t»,ThoisI Williams col, RobtNevins It col, John T. Cooefand, 1st maj, Henry Maxwell 2d maj—36, Hickman, W S Reeves col. S DM'Laughlm It col, Boyd B Satterfield 1st maj, David B Warren 2d maj—37, Giles, Gfell am Howell col, WmH Moore It col, EdwdA Dillon 1st mai, Cl9i» barue Kyle Id maj—3d, Hum^hre^, .luim jaiaum rtu, fumes Lnul ford It col, William Loremier 1st maj, Isaac Luc us 2d maj—39, Lincoln, Davis Smith col, SilasM'CIellan It col, G W M'Bnde 1st unj, John Robinson ■2d maj—40, Knox, Wm S Howell col, Jos A Mabry It col, Ro 1 ieming 1st maj, John Havern2d maj—41, Smith, A' n. Overall col, LiaviJ Fete It col, 42, Wilton,Geo Smith jr col, Jas Adams It col, Jas S Lester 1st maj, S H Porterfield 2d maj—43, Sumner, .Lewis Green col, D Monfgomc ty It col, S Kirkpatrick 1st maj, S Wallace 2d maj—44, Williamson, John b Rusa- wurm col, John Webb It col, Eoward W Matthews 1st maj, Saml Scales 2d maj—45, Rutherford,IS m Locke col, Hemy Norman It col, Leonard H Sims 1st maj, John D Fletcher 2d maj—46, Maury, Samuel Crawford col, Hugh B Potter It col, Jeremiah H Morgan 1st maj, Edmund Wil¬ liams 2d maj—47, Bedford Abm Martin col, Saml Clage It col, Samuel Mitchell 1st maj, Frederic Sholtner 2d maj—48, Jackson, William Locke col, Wm Plumlee 1st maj, John Purris jr 2d maj—49, Lincoln, William Moore col, Reuben H Boon It col, Wm Morehead 1st maj, James Smith 2d maj—-50, Montgomery, Wm J. Lynes col, Merideth W illiams 2d maj, 61 Maury, Wm Hunter col, J M Mitchell It col, Alexander Johnson 1st maj, Arthur T Isom 2d maj—52, Giles, David A M Ewen col, Richard Bently It col, Wm M Shields 1st maj, Joseph Nance 2d maj—53, Ruth- 'crford, Alfred P Gowencol, William Miller It col,"Wm Lowe 1st maj, James Ferreil2d maj—54, Bedford, John Orr col, Ephraim Hunter It col, Thos H Hardin 1st maj, Wm J Whitaker 2d maj—55, Warren, Woodson Northernttcol, WmH Allen It col—56, Franklin;Geo W Richardson It 'col, Alexr Patton 1st maj, Thos Finch 2d maj—57, Lawrence, Josephus Xrvine col, John A Haile It col, Bradley Halford 1st maj, Wm Hammond '2d maj—58, Morgan, James M'Clintock col, Eloridge Myattlt col, Wm T L Davidson 1st maj, N. Dougherty 2d maj—59, Smith, A W Overton eol, John Lyon It col, Isaac Overall 2d maj—60, Marion, Davis Oatts col, Ignatius Hall k col, Daniel O Baker 1st maj, Philip Kroft? 2d maj—61, Wayne, Jacob Biffle col, Isaac G. Grimes It col, Daniel A Flournoy 1st maj, Wm M Nanelly 2d maj—62, Robertson, James Shannon col, Philip Mason It col, Meredith Williams 1st maj, Moses M'Carley 2d maj—63, Lincoln, J V M'Kinney col, Andrew A Itincannon It col, Eliot H Fletch¬ er 1st maj, Stephen C Chetwood 2d maj—64, Hamilton, Ch Gamble col, John Lovelady It col, Robert M'Kee 1st maj, John Cummings2d maj, 65, Hardin, James Barnes col, Richd Stevens Lt col, Lewis Johnson 1st maj, Jonathan R Pickens 2d maj—66, M'Minn, James M'Cartney col, James F Bradford ltcol, Moses Cunningham 1st niaj.Wm B Wilson 2d maj—67, Monroe, Jones Griffin col, Joseph Rowan ltcol, Joseph M'Spad- din 1st maj, Willie B Tipton 2d maj—68, Perry, James G Kellough col, Charles Graham ltcol, Jer'h Wood 1st maj, Jesse Bennet2d maj—69, Shelby, Robert Fearn col, Samnel Shepherd lt col, James L Vaughn, 1st maj—70, Jefferson, John Roper col, Wm Brazeltonlt col, John Chase 1st mai, Adam K Meek 2d maj—71, White, Jose Dew col, John Price lt col, Alfred G Beadles 1st maj—72, Wilson, Joseph Kirkpatrick col, Geo Williamson ltcol, Jonas Swingley 1st maj, John Shepard 2d maj—73 Henry, Wm Stewart col,Thomas K Porter lt col, Tucker W Williamson 1st maj, Wm R Harris 2d maj—74, Carroll, D A Moore col, H Wright It col, J Dickson 1st maj, W H A Bagby 2d maj—75, Madison, D Shropshire col, Alexander B Bradford.lt col, Josiah Strange 1st Maj, Austin A King 2d maj—76, Henderson, John Purdy col, Stephen Snell lt col, Isaac Wood 1st maj, John ANenl 2d maj—77, Sumner, Joseph G Meador col, Reuben S Brown lt col, Jos M'Laughlin 1st maj, Joseph Meadows 2d maj—78, Hawkins, Michael M'Cann col, Willie B Kjle lt col, James M Henry 1st maj, Geo Berry 2d maj—79, Davidson, Wm H M'Laughlin col, Benj F Foster ltcol, IsaacHHovvlett 1st maj, Robert B Turner 2d maj, 51(1, M'Nairy, Thomas Reeves cpl, Geo W Barnett It col, John I. Rowan isi mai, Samuel C. Murray 2d maj—81, Hardeman, Julius C N Ro'ucjtsnn col, Edward Burleson It col, Ezekiel P. M'Neal 1st maj, Jesse Thomas 2d ™aJ—82, JTeaftZey, Mears Warner col, Pulaski P. Bell It col, E D Dickson 1st maJ( Th Adams 2d maj—83, Obion, Samuel L Teater col, Win M Wi1- son It col, John Hutcheson 1st maj, Joel S Enloe 2d maj—84, Gibson, John Parker col, Jas B Blakemorelst maj, Elisha Harbour 2d maj—8P. ®yer'/08 C'ay col, Griffith Rutherford It col, Woodward Roan 1st maj Wm Nash 2d maj—86, Haywood, J oshua Abstan col, 3oseph T Harralsoh it col, Robert T Smith 1st maj, Alfred Kennedy 2d maj—87, Tipton, Mar quis Calmes col, Samuel V Gilleland It col, Wm P Miller 1st maj, Th B Hill 2d maj—88, Fayette, Robert Cotton col, John Brown It col, John II Logwood 1st maj,'Clement Belote 2d maj—89,Fentress, John Reagan col, Abner Davidson 1st ma), Alexander Davidson 2d maj,—90, Greene, Wm D Neilson col, Wm M Crawford It col, Christopher Cook 1st maj, Moses G Wilson 2d maj—91, Madison, Stephen Lacy col, David Jarrett It col, Andrew Turner 1st maj, Jas D Williamson 2d maj—92, Giles, Richard H Allen col, Simpson H White It col, John H Rivers 1st maj, Edmund W Tipton 2d msy—93, Maury, Williamson Smith'col, Tho D Kenedy It col, Robert M'Nutt 1st maj, John R Hill 2d maj—94, M'Minn, A Edens col, Joseph M'Millan It col, Jonathan Evans 2d maj—95, Roane, James Gam- bell col, Robert Love It col, John Blair, 2d maj—96, Rhea, Miles Vernon col, And'w Kincannon It col, W M Rogers 1st maj, Ab'm Cox 2d maj'—97, Williamson, Rich'd Swanson col, Wm Craig It col, James M Wilson 1st maj, Thomas A Pope 2d maj—98, Monroe, Nicholas S Peck col, Matthew W M'Geheelt col, Hiram K Turk Istmaj-99, Carroll, 3 SNeelycol, S 3 Nisbitltcol, J R Smith 1st maj, V Sevier 2d maj-100,Grainger, T White¬ side col, Warham Easley It col, Hugh Houston 1st maj, Martin Henderson 2d maj—101, Henry, Stephen Nance col, Wm Porter It col, Eli Kendall 1st maj, John H Warren 2d maj—102, Bedford, Henry B Coffee col, Wm R Burdett It col, Elijah Parker 1st maj—103, Bedford, Abram Whinerg col, Elisha Bobo It col, Henry C Hasting 1st maj, James Gambell 2d maj—104, Rutherford, Jacob L. Fleming col, Janies Gilliam It col, Da¬ vid M Stewart 1st maj, Noah Dell2d maj—105, Blount, Marville Duncan col, James M'Mahon It col, William Maxwell 1st maj, John Howard, 2d maj—106, Hickman, James Baleycol, Jacob Riley It col, Jesse Low 1st maj, Lewis Denning 2d maj—107, Hawkins, James Willis col, David S Rogers It col, Willie Kenner 1st maj, Claiborne Roberts 2d maj.—108, Maury, Hugh B Porter col, John W Hancock It col, John Porter 1st maj, Edward J. Allmond 2d maj. —— A Table showing the distances to tlifferent places on the main post rqad from Portland in Maine, toSt. Mary's in Georgia, according to the survey in 1812-13. Portland Portsmouth | 54 Boston*-] 66 | 120 N~Haven | 154 1 220 | 274 New York | 76 | 230 | 296 [ 350 Philadelphia f 91 f 167 | 321J 387 | 441 Baltimore | 100 | 191 | 267 | 421 j 487 \ 541 Washington | 39 j 139 | 230 | 306 ( 460 \ 526 | 580 Richmond |123|162 | 262 | 352 [ 428 | 582 j 648 | 702 Raleigh |164|287|336 j 426 | 517 | 593 | 747 | 813 | 867 Ch^fo^ |257|421|544|583 | 683 ( 774 | 850 | 1004 | 1070 | 1124 Savannah|U7|374j538|661|700 j 800 j 891 | 967 | 1121 \ 1187 1 1241 %, M. |147|264|52l|685l808j847 | 94f"p038 j 1114 ) 1268 | 1334 [ 1388 GOVERNMENT OP THE UNITED STATES. John Quincy Adams, President; John C. Calhoun, Vice-President;* Henry Clay, Sec'y of State; Richard Rush, Sec'y of the Treasury; Peter B. Porter, Sec'y of War; Samuel L. Southard, Sec'y of the Navy; John M'Lean, Postmaster-General; John Marshall, of Va. Chief Justice of U- 3; Bushrod Washington, Va; William Johnson jr, S. C; Smith Thomp¬ son, N. Y; ^ Gabriel Duval, Md; Joseph Story, Ms. associate Judges. William Wirt, Md. attornev-general. Foreign Ministers-—-J ames Barbour, to England; J as. Brown. France; H Middleton,Russia; William H. Harrison, Colombia; J. R. Poinsett, Mexico; Heman Allen, Chili; A. H. Everett,Spain. Charges d'Affaires.-C hristopher Hughes, to tne Netherlands; J. J. Ap- pleton, Sweden; T- L.L. Brent, Portugal; J. M. Forbes, Buenos Ayres; Wm b. Rochester, Guatimala; H.Wheaton, Denmark; W.Tudor, Brazil. JVavy Commissioners.—John Rodgers, Lewis Warrington and United States' Courts. -Supreme Court, yearly at Washington city; firstMonday in February. Circuit courts, annually, Me. at Portl.Mayl; Wiscasset, Oct. 1; JV. Hamp. Portsm. and Exeter, alternately, May SI and Oct. 8; Ft. Rutland and Windsor, altern. May 21 and Oct. 3; Mass- Boston, June 1 and Oct. 20; R. Isl. Newp. and Prov. altern. June 15 and Nov. 15; Conn. Hartf. and N. Haven.altern. April 13 and Sept. 17; JV. York, N. Y. last Mod. in April and Oct.; Pa. Phil. April 11 and Oct. 11; Del. Newc. and Dover, altern. June 3 and Oct. 27; Md. Bait. May land Nov. 7; Virg Richmond, May 22 and Nov. 22; M. Car. Raleigh, May 12andNov. 12; S. Car. Charleston, Nov. 20, Columb. April20; Geo. Sav.Dec.l4,Milledgev.May6; Ten. Nashv. 2 Mon. in June, Knoxv. 2 Mon. in Oct.; Ky. Frankf. 1 Mon in May and Nov.; Ohio, Colum. 1 Mon. jn Jan. and Sept.; Dist. Col. Washington, 1 Mon. in Oct. 2 Monday in April, Alexandria, 1 Mon. in Nov. andMay. Statistics of the United States.—Value of Exports in 1827, $82,324,827; Imports 79,485,068. The estimated revenue for 1827, was $28,496,976 25, including a balance in the treasury 31st Dec. 1826, of $6,358,686 18. The public debt contracted in the war ofindependence was,in 1791, $75,463- 467. In 1812, it had been reduced to $36,656,932. By the war of 1812—1815, it was increased to $123,016 375. In January 1827, it had again been reduced to $73,920,844 In January 1828, to $67,413,377 92, and $6,000,000 were paid off in July 1828. The expenditure of govern¬ ment in 1827, was $22,695,390 96. Whole naval force authorized by¬ law: 12 ships of the line, exclusive of two on Lake Ontario;_17 fri¬ gates of the first class, and 3 of the second; 16 sloops of war; 4scnooners, and 3 other vessels—total 57. The senate of the United States is compo¬ sed of 2 members from each state, chosen by their legislatures for 6 years. The representatives are chosen by the people biennally; in the slave hold¬ ing states 5 slaves being allowed to count tne same as three freemen. Av¬ erage number of graduates from colleges, about 750 annually. Whole number of newspapers, about 900. Post-Offices, about 6,000; extent of post roads, about 100,000 miles. The growth of the United States for Die last 40 years has been without a parallel. In 1790 the value of ex¬ ports was only $16,000,000; the revenue only $2,410,320; the number of postofficesonly 75; the extentof postroads only 1,875miles. The Mint.—Value of gold, silver and copper coinage, from January 1st to Dec. 31st, 1827, $3,022,675 32. From the commencement of the institution to the close of the year 1827, $30,525,138 28. *The President and Vice-President elect foi the next term, will be installed in¬ to office on the 4th of March of this year. Nevercondemn a man on ex-parte evidence, where tkere are two .•ides to the qtrestfon; TWENTIETH CONGRESS—SENATE. Presidtnt of the Senate, John C. Calhoun of South Carolina. Sena* iors, with the years in which, their terms will expire.—From Maine John Chandler 1829; 1833. New Hampshire, Samuel Fell 1829; Levi Woodbury 1831. Massachusetts, Nathaniel Sillsbee 1829; Daniel Webster 1833. Connecticut, Samuel A Foot 1833; Calvin Wil- ley 1831. Rhode-Island, Nehemiab R Knight 1829; Asher Robbins 1833. Vermont, Dudley Chase 1831; Horatio Seymour 1833. New York, Mar¬ tin Van Buren 1833; Nathan Sant'ord 1831 New Jersey, Mahlon Dicker- son 1829: Ephraim Bateman 1833. Pennsylvania, William Marks, 1831; Isaac D Barnard 1833. Delaware, Louis IVI'Lane 1833; Henry M Ridge- ley 1829. Maryland, Ezekiel F. Chambers 1831; Samuel Smith 1833. Virginia, Littleton W Tazewell 1829; John Tyler 1833. North Carolina, John Branch 1829; Nathaniel Macon 1831; South Carolina, Win Smith 1831, Robert Y Hayne 1829. Georgia, John M'Pherson Berrien 1831; Thomas W Cobb 1829. Kentucky, Richard M Johnson 1829; John Row¬ an 1831; Tennessee, John H Eaton 1833; Hugh L White 1835. Ohio, 1831; Benjamin Ruggles 1833. Louisiana, Dominique Bouligny 1829; Josiah S. Johnston 1831. Indiana, William Hendricks 1831; James Noble 1833. Mississippi, Powhatan Ellis 1833; Thomas H Williams 1829. Illinois, Elias K Kane 1831; Jesse B Thomas 1829. Al¬ abama, John M'Kinley 1831; William R King 1829. Missouri, Davit] Barton 1831; Thomas H Benton 1833. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Speaker, Andrew Stevenson of Virginia. Representatives.—From Maine, John Anderson, Samuel Butman, RufusM'lntire, Jer'h O'Bryan, James W Ripley, Peleg Sprague, Joseph F Wingate. New Hampshire, Ichabod Bartlett, David Baker jr, Titus Brown, Joseph Healy, Jonathan Harvey,Thomas Whipple jr. Massachusetts, Samuel C. Allen, John Bailey, Isaac C Bates, B W Crownin shield, Jno Davis, Henry W Dwight, Edward Everett, Benjamin Gorham, James L Hodges, John Locke, John Reed, Joseph Richardson, John Varnum. Rhode Island, Tristam Bur- fes, Dutee J Pearce. Connecticut, John Baldwin, Noyes Barber, Ralpt Ingersoll, Orange Merwin, Elisha Phelps, David Plant. Vermont,Dan¬ iel A A Buck, Jonathan Hunt, Rollin C Mallary, Benjamin Swift, Geo JS Wales. N, York, Daniel D Barnard, Geo O Belden, Rudolph Bunner, CC Cambreleng,Samuel Chase, John C Clark, John DDickinson, Jonas Earlljr, Daniel G Garnsey, Nathaniel Garrow, John I De Graff, John Hallock jr, Selah R Hobbie, Michael Hoffman, Jeromus Johnson, Rich'd Keese, Henry Markell, H C Martindale, Dudley Marvin, John Magee, JohnMaynard, S Van Rensselaer, Henry R Storrs, James Strong, John G Stower, Phineas LTracey, John W Taylor, G C Verplanck, Aaron Ward, John I Wood, Silas Wood, David Wood¬ cock, Silas Wright jr. New Jersey, Lewis Condict, Geo Holcombe, Isaac Pierson, Saml Swan, Hedge Thompson, Ebenezer Tucker. Penn¬ sylvania, William Addams, Samuel Anderson, Stephen Barlow, James Buchanan, Richard Coulter, Chauiicey Forward, Joseph Fryjr, Innes Green, Samuel D Ingham, George Kremer, Adam King, Joseph Law¬ rence, Daniel H Miller, Charles Miner. John Mitchell, Samuel M'Kean, Robert Orr jr, William Ramsay. John Sergeant, James S. Stevenson, John B Sterigere, Andrew Stewart, Joel B Sutherland, Espy Van Horn, James Wilson, George Wolf. Delaware, Kensey Johns jr. Maryland, John Barney, Clement Dorsey, Levin Gale, John Leeds Kerr, Peter Lit¬ tle, Michael C Sprigg, G C Washington, John C Weems, Ephraim K Wilson. Virginia, Mark Alexander, Robert Allen, William S Archer, Wm Armstrong jr, John S Barbour, Philip P Barbour, Burwell Bassetf, NH Claiborne, Thomas Davenport, John Floyd, Isaac LefHe'r, Lewis Maxwell, Charles F Mercer, William M'Coy, Thomas Newton, John Randolph, William C Rives, John Roane, Alexander Smyth, Andrew Stevenson (Speaker,) John Taliaferro, James Trezvant. North Carolina, Willis Alston, Daniel L Barringer, John L Bryan, Saml P Carson, Henry W Conner, John Culpeper, Thomas H Hall, Gabriel Holmes, John LoDg, Lemuel Sawyer, A H Shepherd, Daniel Turner, Lewis Williams.' South Carolina, John Carter, Warren R Davis, William Drayton, James Ham¬ ilton, jr, George M'Duffie, William D Martin, Thomas R. Mitchell, ffm T Nuckolls, Starling Tucker. Georgia, John Floyd, Tomlinson Fort^ Charles JE Haynes, George R Gilmer, Wilson LumpkinrWilley Thomp¬ son, Richard H Wilde. Kentucky, Richard A Buckner, James Clark, Thomas Chilton, Henry Daniel, Joseph Lecompte, Robert P Letcher, Chittenden Lyon, Thomas Metcalfe, Robert M'Hatton, Thomas P Moore, Charles A Wicklifte, Joel Yancey. Tennessee, John Bell, John Blair, David Crocket, Rqbt Desha, Jacob C Isacks, Pryor Lea, John H Mara- ble, James C Mitchell, James K Polk. Ohio, Mordecai Bartley, Philer man Beecher, William Creighton jr, John Davenport, James Findlay, William M'Lean, William Russell, John Sloane,. William Stanberry, Joseph Vance, Samuel F Vinton, Elisha Whittlesey, John Woods, John (2 Wright Louisiana, William L Brent, Henry H Gurley, Edward Liv¬ ingston. Indiana, Thomas H Blake,Jonathan Jennings, Oliver H Smith Mississippi, William Haile. Illinois, Jos Duncan. Alabama, Gabriel Moore, John M'Kee, George W Owen. Missouri, Edward Bates. Ar¬ kansas, vacant. Michigan, Austin E. Wing. Florida, Joseph M White. OFFICERS OF CONGRESS. Secretary of the Senate—Walter Lowne. Clerks—J G M'Donald, frincipal, Lewis H Machen, William Hickey. Sergeant-at-arms and toor-keeper—Moumjoy Bailey; Heurv Tims, assistant door keeper. Messenger to Secretary's Office—Tobias Simpson. Chaplain—Rev Mr Rylaud. 4 Clerk of the House of Representatives—M St Clair Clark, S. Burch, chief clerk. Clerks of the office—J ohn T Frost, Benjamin Spiigg, Brook M Berry, Thomas Patterson, Noah Fletcher, Robert N. Johnson. Ser- geant-at-arms—J O Dunn. Door-keeper—B Burch; Overton Carr, as¬ sistant door-keeper. Chaplain—Rev Mr Post. Postmaster—William J M'Corknick- Messenger to Clerk's Office—J. Barton. Congress juibrarian—George W tterson. Mining.—The greatest depth to wnich a vein has been followed, and probably the greatest extent to which the earth has been penetrated, is in ■a silver mine in Bohemia, where the workmen have dug down SOOO feet. The most profitable, and the only sure mining ever yet undertaken, is that which is confined to the surface, the depth of the plough-share. Diamonds.—The ancients attributed extraordinary virtues to the Die- mond. They helieved it could not be broken even by the greatest blow but Pliny says if it be soaked in the blood of a goat, it may then be bro¬ ken. The ancients believed that a diamond kept in the house would pre¬ vent domestic strife between man and wife. This was mere idle imagin ation, but there is a diamond that may be kept in every family, which has this virtue—.and that, is good temper The dominion of fashion is established upon a basis that it will be for ever out of our power, or attempts to shake it; it is settled upon the strongest and most stable foundation, upon the weakness and folly of mankind; a bulwark, that will, to the end of time, rise superior to all its adversaries ' Why should we despise those whose faith leads them to think differ¬ ently from ourselves; every good Christain has the same point in view f harefore the path by which they pursue it must be very immaterial. COSSITT LIBRARY BOOKS ARE YOURS TO USE BUT NOT TO ABUSE* Pages of this book missing here were torn out by some vandal* Cossitt Library loses hundreds of dollars worth of books each year by acts of this character. HELP US HAKE BOOKS LAST LONGER INFLUENCE OF THE MOON. The following abstract of a paper of Dr Olbers, the distinguished Astronomer at Bremen, in Germany, who discovered the planet Pallas in lfc'G*., and the planed Vesta in 1807, translated-from the " Annates de Chimie et de Physique," is worthy of the attention of all, and especially of those who do not wish to be deluded by predictions of the weather in Almanac*. The Moon enlightehsour nights, draws the earth alittlefrom its elliptic orbit, occasions a small oscillation in theeaith's axis, produces the tides of the sea, and a similar but less motion in the atmosphere. Besides these demonstrable effects, many have believed, from time immemorial, that the moon exercises aconsidera» We influence upon the health of mankind, upon animals, upon vegetation, and upon chemical products. Experience only can throw light upon thissubject; and long and well conducted experiments have been- made. As to the influence of the moon upon the weather, the result deduced from one reries of meteorological observations, is always contradicted by another series. We cite, for example, Howard, who, after careful observation, believed he had discovered that the barometer was usually lowest, (that is, the air was more dense) at the time of new meon. Cotte, on the contrary, to whom meteorology is so much indebted, and who commenced in order to confirm the remarks of Howard, found, by twenty years' observation, that the barometer was lowest at the time of full moon. Lalande and Lamarke also, have drawn the most opposite results from their ob¬ servations respecting the influence of the moon in her passage by the plane of the equator. But what is decisive on thissubject is, that in thfe equatorial regions where the influence of the moon ought to be greatest, not a trace of it is to be found: but the heat, rain, winds, 4*c. all depend on the distance of the sun from the zenith of the place. Foul weather and fair often prevail in different places at the same time, and consequently under the same phase [appearance] of the moon. M. Bode, for example, collected the remarks made during the time of an eclipse of the sun, Nov. 18,1816, from which it appears that a great diversity Ot weather, without any regard to order, prevailed on Jhat day,through a great pant -. of Europe. Professor Brandes compared, with gre'at,labour, the variation ot the weather over a great part of the earth's surface in the year 1783, and found no relation between it and the phases of the moon. Some suppose that the full moon, when rising,.dissipates the clouds* but clouds usually disappear in a tran¬ quil evening. Some who live near the sea coast, believe that the changes of the weather, and the force and direction of the wind and clouds, depend on the tides. We may here observe, that the tides of the oeean and those of the atmosphere do not happenatthe same time. The air being easily moved, arid hindered by nrr obstacle, instantly obeys the attractive force of the moon; but high water, in the open sea, does not take place till three hours afterward; and on coasts and in bays it happens still later. The astronomer Horseley, at Oxford, Eng. could perceive no relation between the weather and the tides, or moon; and Toaldo, from the obser¬ vations made during 50 years at Poleni, in Italy, where the climate is veiy mild, while he thought that he could distinguish the influence of the moon on the wea¬ ther, was convinced that it was extremely small. A series of experiments for many years has convinced me, that in our climate, where the weather is subject to more considerable and numerous variations, the rules of Toaldo are entirely Wrong. For example, on the 7thof Dec. 1813, the full moon coincided with-the perigee, and 2 days after the moon had its greatest northern declination; so that from the principles of Toaldo,the influence of the moon ought to have been the greatest pos» sible; but notwithstanding all this, there was not any sensible change in the wea. ther. I-believe then, that I have demonstratcdthnlthe influence of the moon uppjj the weather is so small, that it is totally lost amid the great variety of other forces and causes which change the state of our atmosphere. And if the influence of the moon is so insensible on the weather, We are entitled very much to suspect its pre¬ tended influence, either upon men, animals or plants. In fact, it is all of it due to illusion and prejudice. Observation shows, that the notion that men weigh one or two pounds more at the beginning of the month; and that lobsters, oysters, 4rc are fatter when the moo%js on the increase, is entirely without foundation-. WJp may place great confidence in the very careful experiments made by the celebra¬ ted agriculturists, Eadquinteri, Nardmann, Beicliard and Hartenfels; and by the great naturalists Buffon and Reaumur; who proved distinctly, that the increase, or decrease of the moon had no influence either upon the germination of seeds, jfr upon the rapidity of their growth, or1 upon their quality. I can positively assert, that I have carefully iniquired into the influence of -tha. moon -upon the sick, during the long time that I.have practised medicine, and that 1 never perceived any relation between the moon and my patients;,and all mod¬ ern physicians have come to a similar result.' It is in respect to the influence o r the motin, as in many cases of remit*, we see it only when we Ir/tPve A. PERPETUAL WEATHER TABLE. The following table, constructed by the celebrated Dr. Her9chel, upon a philosophical consideration of the attr. ctionof the sun and moon, in their several posi¬ tions as'to the earth, and confirmed by the experience of many years' actual observation, may, without doubt, suggest to the observer what kind of weather will pro¬ bably follow the moon's entrance into any one of her quarters, and so near the truth, that it will be very sel¬ dom found to tail. SUMMER. If it be a new or full moon, or the moon enters into thelst or last quar¬ ter, at the hour of 12 at noon, or be¬ tween the hours of 2 and "4 4 to 6 6 to 8 ! 8 to 10 - - - - 10 to midnight Midnight to 2 Very rainy. WINTER. Snow or rain Ditto Fair Ditto Changeable Fair and mild Fair Fair Fair if wind NW. Fair and frosty aioyifSorSW. If N or Pi E Rain or snow lfS.br S W Ditto Fair ard frosty Hard frost unless wind S or W 2 to 4 - - Cold,withfrequent Snow and stormy 4 to 6 - - Rain Ditto 6 to 8 - - Wind and rain Stormy 8 to 10 - Changeable Cold rain ifW snow if E [ 10 to 12 - Frequent showers Cold high wind. From the above table, it will be seen that the nearer to midnight either the moon's periodical changes, (i. e within two hours either jeforeor after it,) the more fair the weather is in summer; while he nearer to noon that the changes take place, the reverse may be xpected. Fair weather may also follow, when either of the peri¬ odical changes occur during the afternoon six hours, viz. from four 11 to ten, but this is mostly dependant on the wind.—The moon's en- j trance during all the hours after midnight, except the two first, is \ unfavorable to fair weather. The like may nearly be observed in winter. Every farmer ought to preserve a copy of this table, and carefully to regulate his pursuits by its indications. Such a line of conduct might materially promote his coipforts and his interest, while in no case would it disturb his prospects, or destroy his hopes