ng the ear tilting on the 30th day of September, 1827. FOREIGN. Entered. Departing. Entered. Departing. Tona 10,071 20,392 2,801 2,617 612 210 Frenchman's Bay 2,365 2,732 Annapolis 1,926 Waldoborough 2,469 1,066 Saint Mary's 297 Wiscasset 1,826 914 Snow Hill 715 261 Bath 8,964 16,965 279 279 Vienna 207 295 Treasury Department, Register's Office, 16th April, 1828. (11.)-Abstract of the Tonnage of the Shipping of the several Districts of The United States, on the last day of December, 1826. Passamaquoddy, Maine Registered Tonnage. Enrolled and licensed Tonnage. 5,287 33 17,369 84 22,657 22 Vienna 320 56 23,625 75 22,946 36 8,696 70 8,855 63 12,552 38 Snow Hill 386 08 7,351 06 7,737 14 1,756 73 32,608 48 34,365 26 2,326 40 8,849 68 11,176 13 St. Mary's 18,000 80 12,516 36 30,517 21 33,133 41 15,425 90 48,559 36 3,220 63 2,500 72 5,721 40 6,909 29 1,151 67 8,061 01 167 68 1,083 30 1,251 03 20,103 93 6,109 30 26,213 28 Annapolis Georgetown, Columbia Alexandria Norfolk, Virginia Petersburg Richmond Yorktown 9,894 58 12,986 36 22,880 94 East River 744 26 3,130 00 3,874 26 69 60 1,276 04 1,354 64 Tappahannock 1,591 90 10,840 44 12,432 39 3,545 65 10,379 82 13,925 52 Folly Landing 191 00 3,229 88 3,420 88 31,641 03 11,739 12 43,380 15 Cherrystone 2,198 68 2,198 68 2,928 22 8,391 43 11,319 65 Wilmington, North Carolina 8,328 80 1,286 03 9,614 83 109,383 47 62,592 60 171,976 12 Newbern 4,845 75 3,018 21 7,864 01 11,258 81 13,608 07 24,608 07 Washington 1,438 75 2,809 91 4,248 71 842 89 3,257 68 4,100 62 Edenton 1,291 39 6,573 12 7,864 51 27,404 22 12,494 34 39,898 56 Camden 3,600 55 4,958 50 8,559 10 989 27 22,076 92 23,066 24 Beaufort 48 77 1,163 84 1,212 66 1,600 69 1,016 47 2,617 21 Plymouth 165 38 483 07 648 45 21,246 40 5,161 71 26,408 16 Ocracoke 1,298 72 1,297 52 2,596 29 14,198 14 5,083 15 19,281 29 Charleston, South Carolina 12,066 50 16,643 89 28,710 44 6,598 77 2,612 03 9,210 80 Georgetown 1 1,268 05 1,268 05 6,120 41 3,281 19 9,401 60 Beaufort 6,741 39 10,779 68 17,521 12 Savannah, Georgia 4,457 45 4,205 31 8,662, 76 3,589 29 9,027 62 12,616 91 Sunbury 4,823 38 7,456 20 12,279 58 Hardwick 205 21 10,086 68 10,291 89 Brunswick 811 49 1,119 29 1,930 78 617 85 46 85 958 92 1,576 82 Cuyahoga 991 31 991 31 381 72 428 62 Sandusky 74 63 317 07 391 70 Detroit, Michigan 506 20 506 20 742 70 1,309 63 2,052 38 Michilimackinac Mobile, Alabama 1,494 18 7,156 86 8,651 09 Blakely 7,016 69 Pearl River 664 32 664 32 158,451 38 1,161 83 266 50 157,837 58 44 65 10,873 12 316,289 01 15,947 59 16,214 14 2,162 09 Little Egg Harbour 2,162 09 3,763 18 3,763 18 Great Egg Harbour Key West 7,876 72 7,876 72 63,288 30 10,116 82 160 04 295 87 73,400 17 455 91 Total 787,978 15 796,212 68 1,534,190 83 Treasury Department, Register's Office, April 15, 1828. JOSEPH NOURSE, Register. (12)-COMPARATIVE VIEW of the Registered and Enrolled and Licensed Tonnage of The United States, from 1815 to 1826, inclusive. Treasury Department, Register's Office, 15th April, 1828. JOSEPH NOURSE, Register. BRITISH ORDER IN COUNCIL, extending the privileges of a Free Port to Pictou, and Sydney, in Nova Scotia.-13th February, 1828. At the Court at Windsor, the 13th day of February, 1828, PRESENT, THE KING'S MOST EXCELLENT MAJESTY IN COUNCIL. WHEREAS by an Act, passed in the 6th Year of His Majesty's Reign, intituled "An Act to regulate the Trade of the British Possessions abroad," it is, amongst other things, enacted, that no goods shall be imported into, nor shall any goods, except the produce of the fisheries in British Ships, be exported from, any of the British Possessions in America by sea, or from or to any Place other than The United Kingdom, or some other of such Possessions, except into or from the several Ports in such Possessions called Free Ports, enumerated or described in the Table in the said Act of Parliament contained: And it is thereby provided, that if His Majesty shall deem it expedient to extend the provisions of the said Act to any Port or Ports not enumerated in the said Table, it shall be lawful for His Majesty, by Order in Council, to extend the provisions of the said Act to such Port or Ports, and it is enacted, that from and after the day mentioned in such Order in Council, all the privileges and advantages of the said Act, and all the provisions, penalties, and forfeitures therein contained, shall extend, and be deemed and construed to extend, to any such Port or Ports respectively, as fully as if the same had been inserted and enumerated in the said Table at the time of passing the said Act: And whereas His Majesty doth deem it expedient to extend the provisions of the said Act to the Ports of Pictou and Sydney, in the Province of Nova Scotia; His Majesty doth therefore, in pursuance and exercise of the Powers vested in him by the said Act of Parlia ment, and with the advice of His Privy Council, order, and it is hereby ordered, that, from and after the date of this Order, the provisions of the said Act of Parliament respecting free Ports shall be, and the same are hereby, extended to the said Ports of Pictou and Sydney, in the Province of Nova Scotia: And the Right Honourable the Lords Commissioners of His Majesty's Treasury, and the Right Honourable William Huskisson, one of His Majesty's Principal Secretaries of State, are to give the necessary directions herein as to them may respectively appertain. JAS. BULLER. BRITISH ORDER IN COUNCIL, prohibiting the exportation of Arms, Gunpowder, &c. to certain parts of Africa. 24th November, 1828. At the Court at Windsor, the 24th day of November, 1828. PRESENT, THE KING'S MOST EXCELLENT MAJESTY IN COUNCIL. WHEREAS the time limited by His Majesty's Order in Council, of the 7th of May last, for prohibiting the exportation of gun-powder, salt-petre, or any sort of arms or ammunition, to any Port or Place on the Coast of Africa (except to any Ports or Places within the Streights of Gibraltar), has expired; and whereas it is deemed expedient that the said prohibition should be continued for some time longer; His Majesty, by and with the advice of His Privy Council, doth therefore hereby order, require, and command, that no Person or Persons whatever (except the Master-General of the Ordnance for His Majesty's Service), do, at any time during the space of 6 months (to commence from the date of this Order), presume to transport any gun-powder or salt-petre, or any sort of arms or ammunition, to any Port or Place on the Coast of Africa (except to any Ports or Places within the Streights of Gibraltar) or ship or lade any gun-powder or salt-petre, or any sort of arms or ammunition, on board any Ship or Vessel, for the transporting of the same into any such Ports or Places on the Coast of Africa (except as above excepted), without leave or permission in that behalf first obtained from His Majesty or His Privy Council, upon pain of incurring and suffering the respective forfeitures and penalties imposed in that behalf by an Act, passed in the 6th Year of His present Majesty's Reign, intituled "An Act for the general regulation of the Customs:" And the Right Honourable the Lords Commissioners of His Majesty's Treasury, the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty, the Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports, the Master-General and the rest of the Principal Officers of the Ordnance, and His Majesty's Secretary at War, are to give the necessary directions herein as to them may respectively appertain. C. C. GREVILLE. BRITISH ORDER IN COUNCIL, granting to Spanish Vessels certain privileges of trading with the British Possessions Abroad.-28th April, 1828. At the Court at St. James's, the 28th day of April, 1828, PRESENT, THE KING'S MOST EXCELLENT MAJESTY IN COUNCIL. WHEREAS by a certain Act of Parliament, passed in the 6th Year of the Reign of His present Majesty, intituled "An Act to regulate the trade of the British Possessions abroad," after reciting, that “ by the Law of Navigation Foreign Ships are permitted to import into any of the British Possessions abroad, from the Countries to which they belong, goods, the produce of those Countries, and to export goods from such Possessions to be carried to any Foreign Country whatever, and that it is expedient that such permission should be subject to certain conditions," it is enacted, "that the privileges thereby granted to Foreign Ships shall be limited to the Ships of those Countries which, having Colonial Possessions, shall grant the like privileges of trading with those Possessions to British Ships, or which, not having Colonial Possessions, shall place the Commerce and Navigation of this Country, and of its Possessions abroad, upon the footing of the most favoured Nation, unless His Majesty, by His Order in Council, shall in any case deem it expedient to grant the whole or any of such privileges to the Ships of any Foreign Country, although the conditions aforesaid shall not in all respects be fulfilled by such Foreign Country:" |