Tly g)pertator
OCTOBER 20, 1832
A CONSERVATIVE gentleman of Bristol lately sent to a tradesman a message, stating that he was in want of certain articles of the other's manufacture; but that, 'before giving the order, he wished to know for whom he intended to vote? The reply of the tradesman was, that he intended to vote for, the honestest man, hut that he had not yet made up his mind who he was.
Accounts frcim Sydney state the discovery of some valuable districts in the interior, by George Clark, a bushranger, who had been committed to the gaol of Sydney. He had succeeded in attaching himself to the aborigines, beyond Bathurst; and was adppted a member of the tribes with whom he travelled. He speaks confidently of the discovery of a`great river far to the North, and of a rich tract of country on the northern side of the river, extending to the sea coast.