Newspaper Page Text
Augwata UYaonicla j
AND
Georgia ttaifttte.
bditkdot
JOSEPH VALLENCB BE\AN.
PUBLISHED IVtW
Monday £5 Thursday.
« FIVE DOLLABS FEU ***"?»
AOVANCE.-COUNTBT F*PEU,OStS A WEEK,
TnUKE DOLLABS FEB ANNUM, pAFABLE
ALSO IN ADVANCE.
-
T lvVUd States’
BY AUTHORITY.
[PUBLIC ACTS.]
AN ACT to relieve the people of Florida
from the operation of certain ordman
ces.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House
•of Representatives of the United States
of America in Congress assembled. That
an ordinance number three, made and pass
sed on the eighteenth of July eighteen
hundred and twenty one, by M jor Gene
ral Andrew Jackson, Governor of the
provinces of the Florida*, entitled “ An
' ordinance providing for the naturaliza
tion of the inhabitants of the ceded tern
torvj” and an ordinance passed by the
■J, penvii v -' :A-~...«10e. on the se-
VtVtdVy-oiie, imposing and faying ceViioi
taxes on the inhabitants, and all other
laws, ordinances, or resolves, so far as
they enforce or confirm the same, be,
and the same are hereby, repealed,-and
declared nidi and-void- ,
Sec. 2, And be itfurther enacted, That
if any person shall attempt to enforce any
of said taws, ordinances, or resolves, by
•demandingand receiving any tax, impo
sition, or assessment, authorized or pre
scribed thereby, such person shall, on
conviction thereof, be punished by fine,
not exceeding two hundred dollars, or by
imprisonment not exceeding six months,
cither or botli of said punishments.
Sec. 3. And be it further enacted, That
the President of the United States shall,
in such manner and under such regula
tions as he may direct and prescribe,
cause to be refunded to any person any
sum of money which he may have paid
under or by virtue of either of said laws,
ordinances, or resolves.
Sec 4- And be it further enacted, That
this act shall be in force from and after
the first day of June next.
PHILIP P. BARBOUR- .
Speaker of the House of Representatives.
JOHN GAILLARD,
President of the Senate, pro tempore.
Washington, May 7,1822 h ppvoved,
JAMBS MONROE.
“Vm^ T c^l I Pa r^ire, ge^ n o^ f l C n^:
ana.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House
■of Representatives of the United States of
America in Congress assembled, That
the Register of the land office at Brook
ville be, and he is hereby, authorized to
select school lands within said district
'’equivalent to the one thirty-sixth part of
the reservation commonly called Clark’s
Grant, for the use of schools within the
game; and the Register of the land office
at Terre Haute is hereby, in like man
Her, authorized to select, within his dis
trict, school lands, which together with
the eleven sections already se’ected, shall
be equivalent to the one thirty-sixth part
.of the Vincennes donation tract, for the
use of schools within said tract* It shall
be the duty of (he Registers aforesaid in
making such selections, to be confined to
section numbered twenty, in each town
ship, and the selection so made shall be
feservedfrom sale.
Washington, May 7, 1822—Approved.
AN ACT to repeal the fourteenth section
of “An act to reduce and fix the mili
taty peace establishment,” passed the
second day of March one thousand eight
hundred and twenty-one.
Be it enaced by the Senate and Hjtise I
us Representatives of the United Stat.-s
«f America in Congress assembled, That
the fourteenth section of the act, enti
tled “An art to reduce and fix the mili
tary peace establishment,” passed the se •
ftond day of March, one thousand eight
hundred and twenty one, be, and the
same is hereby, repealed,
Washington, May 7, 1822—Approved.
AN ACT making further appropriations
for the military service of the United
States for the year eighteen hundred
and twenty-two, and for other pur
poses.
Beilenactedby the Senate and House
of Representatives of the United States
of America in Congress assembled, That
the following sums be, and the same are
he bi appropriated to wit:
For fortifications, to each specifically, as
follows, viz:
Fur Fort Delaware, twenty thousand
dollars.
For Port Washington, twenty-five thou
sand J.illars*
For Fort Monroe, seventy-five thou
sand dollars.
Fur Fort Calhoun, fifty thousand dol
lars.
For collecting materials for a fortifica
tion at Mobile Point, in the state of Ala
bama, fifty thousand dollars*
For the Rivulets and Chef Menteur,
one hundred thousand dollars.
F«r collecting materials for a fort on
the right bank of the Mississippi, oppo
Site fort St* Philip, thirty thousand dol
lais.
For contingencies and repays of fortifi-
Cations, twenty thousand dollars.
For the national armories, three hun
dred and sixty tnousand dollars.
For current expenses of the ordnanc
service, viz:
For the preservation of the arms and
Other public property in store, including
the hired workmen, & purchase of paint,-
oil, and other materials necessary for the
purpose, eight thousand eight hundred
and thirty-eight dollars.
To meet ordinary requisitions for army
supplies, vi*:
For parnt and oil for the preservation
of the guns and carriages in the fortifica
tions, and for artificers’ and entrench,
ing tools, six thousand three hundred and
forty dollars
For the miscellaneous expenses at ar
senals, forage for public horses, statione
ry, &c. two thousand eights hundred and
sixtv-two dollars. ,
For the reparation of defective arms,
including the wages of armorers, th
purchase of iron, sti el, coals, tools, &c.
eleven thousand nine hundred and sixty
dollars.
For repairs of arsenals, one thousand
d 'Harsi . .
For the preservation of ammunition,
five thousand dollars.
For (he payment of outstanding claims
which acrued in one thousand eight hun
dred and nineteen and one thousand eighi
hundred and twenty, at Pittsburg, and
not presented until eighteen hundred and
twenty-one, and unpaid for want of an ap
propriation applicable to the object, one
thousand seven hundred dollars
For arrearages in the War Department
prior to the first of July, one thousand
eight hundred and seventeen, ninety thou
sand dollars.
For pay allowed by law to Indian a
gents, twenty-two thousand three hon
ored dollars
For sub-agents, eleven thousand three
hundred and thirty-eight dollars.
For presents to Indians, allowed by the
law of eighteen hundred and two, fifteen
thousand dollars.
For contingent expencesof the Indian
Department, seventy-five thousand cTol
lars.
For making good a deficit of the ap
propriation of the last year, in the same,
seventy thousand dollars.
For payment of a deficit in the appro*
fVcpann\fflri,, l^{Ljiu hunched and
twenty-one, seventy thousand dollars.
For completing the barracks at Baton
Rouge, twelve thousand dollars
For constructing new roofs for ihe bar
racks at Carlisle, three thousand five hun
dred dollars.
For the payment of the expenses of the
militia court martial in Pennsylvania, of
which Lieutenant Colonel Thomas Moore
and David Fore were successively presi
dents, eight hundred and forty dollais
and eighty-four cents.
For the payment of the expenses of
the mili ia-court martial in Pennsylvania,
of which Thomas C* Miller was presi
dent, one thousand five hundred and nine
ty-eight d.Jlars and seventy eight cents
For the payment of the expenses of the
militia court martial in Pennsylvania, of
which Colonel James Wood was presi
dent, seven hundred and ninety-eight dol
lars and eighty-four cents.
For the payment of the balance es the
expenses of the militia.
£ e tSefard Sieddiford, vr>B pre
aiilent, nineteen thousand two hundred
and sixteen dollars and twenty-nine cents.
For the balance of an appropriation
made nineteenth of February, eighteen
hundred and eighteen, to defray the ex
penses of employing a brigade of mili
tia, being the amount thereof carried to
tile surpms fuhd, twelve thousand three
hundred and seventy-four dollars and sis-y
seven cents-
For replacing th£ like amount of appro
priations made for. the survey of certain
ports and harbors, which has been carri
ed to the surplus fund, the sum of one
thousand three hundred and thirty-four
dollars and sevemy-eightcents.
For replacing the like amount appro
priated to procure medals, for officers of
the army, carried to the surplus fund, the
sum of eight thousand two hundred dol
lars.
For replacing the like amount appro
priated for the relief of Colonel William
Lawrence, and others, carried to the
surplus fund, the sum of one thousand
four hundred and forty dollars and tw-elve
cents.
For carrying into effect the treaty con
cluded at Chicago, on the twenty-ninth
day of August, eighti en hundred and
twenty-one, the sum of eighteen thou
sand one hundred nnd seven dollars and
ten cents.
For carry ing into effect so much of the
fourth article of the treaty of the eighth
of Janui.ry, one thousand eight hundred
a d twenty-one, between the United
States and the Creek nation, in relation
to the compensation due to the citizens of
Georgia by ihe Craek nation, fifty thou
sand dollars.
For ihe purpose of holding treaties
with the Cherokee and Creek tribes of
Indians, for the extinguishment of the
Indian title to all the lands within the
slate of Georgia, pursuant to the fourth
section of the first article of the agree
mem and cess.on, concluded betwe n
the United States and the state of Geor
gia, on the twenty fourth of April, one
thousand eight hundred and the two, sum
of thirty thousand dollars.
Sec. 2 And be it further enacted, That
tlie several appropriations herein before
made shall be paid out of any money in
the Treasury, not otherwise approptia
ted
Sec 2. And be it further enacted, That
no money appropriated by this act, or by
the act, entitled “ An act making appro
priations for the military service of the
United Stales for the year one thousand
eight hundred and twenty two,” shall be
advanced or paid to any person on any
contract, or to any officer who is in ar
rears to the United States, until be shall
have accounted for, and paid into the
Treasury, alt sums for which he may be
liable.
Washington, May 7, 1822—Approved.
For Sale,
3 TxceWent G\g Horses,
AND A
Secondhand Gig £sHarness
Will be sold low for cash —Enquire at the
Globe Tavern. May 27 ts
&T I have appointed Mr.
lAYLOR FLI.WELLIN my Attorney
during my absence from ‘his City.
Jno. Farrington.
May 6 ts May 30—2
StiJbtiC lEl) I OE'l lix' \
from Lord Bacon’s Jicsnsciiatio ~
the translation of tub 90tu ssalil
-0 Lord, lliou art our Home, to whom we
fly, i
And so hast alwaysbeen from age to*ge-
Before the hills did. intercept me ey«.
Or tliar the frame was up ot tjinhly siagc,
One God thou wert, and art, and Mill
shall be j 1
The line of lime,it doth notimasure thee.
Roth death and life obey thy holy lor#
And visit in their turns, as they are sent.
A thousand years with thee, they are no
more,
1 Than yesterday, which, e’re it is, is spent:
Or as a watch by n.ght, that course
, doth keep, *
Ami goes, and comes, unwares to them
s that sleep.
• Thou earnest man away as with a tide ;
1 Then down swim all his thoughts, that
1 mounted high ;
1 Much like a mocking dream, that will not
bide,
: But flies before the sight of waking eye;
Or as the grass, that cannot term obtain,
t To see the summer come about again
1 u t
. At morning, lam it musters, on the ground,
At even, it is cut don n, and laid a ong :
- And though it spared were and lavour
found,
The weather would perform the Mowers
? wrong :
Thus hast thou bang’d our life on brit
» lie Pins,
i To let us know, it will not bear our sins.
■, Thou buriest not within oblivious Tomb
Our trespasses, but entrest them aright j
Even those that are conceiv’d in darkness
Womb,
To thee appear, as done at broad day
light.
As a tale told, which sometimes nicn
j And sometimes not, our life steals to
an end. •
1 The life of man is threescore yeats and
ten,
Or if that lie be strong, perhaps fotukcore,
Yet all things are but labour to him then,
. New sorrows still come on, pleasures no
I more i
3 Why should there be such turmoil and
such strife
To spin in length this feeble lino of
life ?
f But who considers duely of thine Ire ?
, Or dotn the thoughts thereof wisely em
brace f
. For thou, O God, art a consuming fire.
Frail Man, how can he stand before thy
; face I
f If thy displeasure thou dost not refrain,
A moment brings all back to dust again.
Teach us, O Lord, to number well our
Days,
Thereby our hearts to wisdom to apply ;
irf nil. Wlifal •
Is meditation of mortality.
This bubble ligln, this vapour of our
breath.
1 Teach us to consecrate to hour of Death.
i
Return unto ns Lord, and ballance now
With days of joy, our days of misery ;
I Help us right soon, cur knees to thee we
how,
i- Depending wholly on thy clemency ;
Then shall thy servants both with heart
and voice,
i All the days of their life, in thee re
joyce
Begin thy work, O Lord, in this our age,
Shew it unto thy servants that now live ;
But to our Children raise it many a stage
That all the World to thee may glory
give.
Our handy work likewise, as fruitful
Tree,
Let ii, O Lord, blessed, not blasted be.
from the London Literary Gazelle:
Poetic Sketch,
“ She had no thought from him apart,
The idol of her scared heart,
The hope of life’s lone pilgrimage,
The light, the blessing of her age!
But hope is like (he rainbow’s form,
Dying in tears and born in storm;
And all must feel what passing flowers
Are joys we deemed most truly ours.”
" Alas, life is a weary voyage, made.
Mid storms and rocks, with just a sun
ray sent
To lure us on and leave us.”
Down swept the gathered water over
i rocks
■ Which broke at times the column’s foam
t ing line;
■ Darkening amid the snow-white froth, it
i swept
t Like an all conquering army, and an arch
Os sparkling hues that in the sunbeams
t played
3 Seemed to unite it with the sky which
i hung
- Above all calmness and repose. The blue
Ethereal, soft and stainless, well beseem
t ed
A heaven we deem the dwelling-place of
pence
t Downwards it rushed; the tall green pines,
1 that hung
s Upon the dill's beside, were covered o’er
/ Will; silver spray: there stood those state
ly trees,
1 JBravingThe furious storm, as the proud
3 -sons
- Os Greece, when Greece was glorious,
stood and braved
The tyrant’s menace and defied the yoke.
It reached the plain below; a crystal lake
• Became its dwelling, where the dimpling
wave /■
Had lost all memory of its former strife :
The willows grew around, and that pale
> flower .
The water-lily floated on its face.
The halcyon plumed his azure wings, nor
• feared
s A coming storm and in the midst an isle
Rose like ablest shrine to the guardian
power
, Os that sweet scene. It was a little spot
Shaded by gloomy firs and lighter birch:
' Here the wild strawberry shod its first
white blossoms.
And the dove built her nest, while the
soft gate.
Sighing amid the graceful larches, gave
The only answer to her minmuiißgs-
Two once dwelt here, a Mother and her
Child: . .
She was a widow, and had deeply dean
The cup of bitterness But woman bears
Thestormman shrinks from unrepming
ly. .
At length the one to whom her love ha
I}£Cl)
A light mid darkness died, and she was
left
In coldness and unkindness; but one link
Still bound her to this earth; there was a
smile ~ . . „
Bore gladness to her wounded heart, a
voice . I
Os i»y and consolation, one who mane I
Life veiy precious to her —the young
bird.
Her own sweet nestling, yet too young to
know
What clouds hung o’er him Quiet came
at last;
The mournei found a little lone retreat
Where she might rest her weary feet
this isle
Became her home. Her child grew up
A hope and blessing to hei: —she was
proud
To hear that when he joined his young
compeers,
No foot was fleet as his, no hand could
send
The arrow so unerringly, and none
So lightly and so fearlessly could scale
The height whereon the eagle dwelt;
and, more
Than all, to feel how she was loved! He
seemed . , , . ,
To live but for her. Whe« *>lh boyish
He dared'the venous path the others
fcured
If chance b' saw his mother’s cheek grow
px.'e,
Thi» meed was left unwon. One morn
he went
n, his light skiff, and promised to return
As evening fell; but when the sun sank
down
The air was thick with clouds, and the
fu-ice wind
Poured in its anger o’er the water-'; loud
The thunder rolled, and Hie red lightnings
hurled
Their fiery warnings. High upon a rock
She raised afire:—the lightning struck tl ie
pile,
She marked it not —the rain beat on her
head,
It was unfold—but with the agony
Os hope expirii g, s ill she fed the flame
Day rolled the clouds away, and, sick at
heart,
She looked towards the shore —be floated
there,
Her own beloved child! —With one wild
shriek
She threw herself towards him, and the
waves
Closed on them undivided!
THE liAREJZy UlilQV^
quence:” by Edta d Philips—a
Milton.
A good specimen of the style of this
curious volume may be taken, from the
“ Set Forms of Expression, Inserted for
Imitation,” about the middle of the hook,
Godwin’s laves.
** You are the miracle of friendship.
“ You are the usurer of fame.
“ My genius and yours are friends.
“ I will unrip my very bosom to yen.
“ My tongue speaks the freedom of my
heart.
“ With your Ambroslack kisses bathe
my lips.
“ Sure winter dwells upon your lip, the
snow is not more cold.
“ 01), I shall rob you .of too much
sweetness
*' The sup never met the summer with
more joy
* Ii i no pilgrimage to travel loyour lips.
“You are a white enchantress, iaily,
you can enchain me with a smile
“ Her name, like some celestial fire,
quickens my spirit.
“ Midnight would blush at this.
« There is musick in her guides.
“ I will celebrate my mistress health to
you
“ I will, like ihe perfumed winde, sport
with your hair.
“ Report could never have a sweeter
air to fly in, than your breath
• Would I were secretary to your
thoughts.
“ You walk in artificial clouds, and bathe
your silken limbs in wanton dalliance.”
from Godwin s Lives of the Phillipses.
When the bachelor Samson Carrasco
comes, in the disguise of a knight-errant,
to challenge Don Quixote, with a deter
mination to carry his vaunts beyond all
former examples of chivalry, the transla
tor is sufficiectly happy.”
“ lit short, sir,” says the batchelor,
“ by destiny or choice, 1 became enamour
ed of the peerless Rosamond of Turn
builstretia. I call her peerless, because
there was never any female in this world
that ever equalled her in beauty and me
rit; but on the other side, if I may pre
sume to sa) it, never any woman upon
the face ot the earth surpased her in in.
gratitude. Whatever I could do, all the
offers and protestations I could make her,
could never bring her to fake the least
notice of my affection Bhe saw me witl
ing to do any thing to gain her good will,
and put me upon more desperate designs
then Hercules himseif was renowned for,
still feeding me with hopes and promises,
and still baffling my expectations.
“ Once she sent me to challenge that
same giantess of an hostess at Lincoln, so
tall, thatAscapart himself could not kiss
her, unless he stood upon a f oynt-stool;
and so strong, that she would drive twen
ty bailiffs before her at a time. I went, I
saw, and overcame; and I made her down
of her knees, and drink the popes health,
though she happened to be a heretick.—
Another time she commanded me to go
and remove Stonehenge (which is a pro
digious numoerof vast stones, every one
as big as an ordinary castle) from Shaftes
bury to Amesbury Plain. 1 did |so, and
there they stand to this hour. Then she
ordered mo to go and throw myself head
long into a hole in Derbyshire, called the
Devil’s Den, and upon my return to tell
( her how far the bottom re #fred, which
| some vertuoso’s in England would give
J ten thousand pound to knew. I did so,
and was above a montn a falling; at lengU
1 piicned within three tnHongs «f ihe
Antarlik Pole, and was ten months befoi e _
I could tret into Ethiopia, and thence
home wen. Yet after all this, the
grateful Rosamond of Turnbullstretia• ■ (
time coxcomb for my pains, and bid me
go about my business, fur she had nothing
more to say to me.” t
V_ 7
From the Philadelphia flemacw/ic
The following Anecdote ot Dr !• lanit
lin, was recently told by the •
dent, John Adams. The enmity of Mr.
Adams to Dr. Franklin, is so well known,
that we may be certain the anecdote is a
least as creditable, as it is reported, tor
the intellect and patriotism of the Doctor.
It is a well conceived, well expressed and
most appropriate Fable.
The Doctor was in company with some
of liis literary friends in London, when
the subject of fables, was the top c o
conversation. 1' reemed to be the gene,
ral sentiment that the subject vuis ex
hausted The Doctor was appealed to
for his opinion, wiio said that he tin,light
quite otherwise, and that theie was still a
i rich fund, on' which future iEsops might
delight and instruct niaukind. Lord Spen
cer asked him to give them a specimen ot
his powers in that science* Ihe dispute
I between Great Britain and her colonies
had been under discussion; when, in al
lusion to (hat subject, he fabricated tiic
following fable, which may be considered
i prophet’C as to he result of that tor.lru
veisy.
“An eagle sculling round a farmer's
barn, spied in the yard a Haiik, and dart
-1 ing down upon him, seized him in his
daws, and mounted with him in the air.
’ But he soon found that the animal had
clasped his body with her fore paws, to
the great inlemiption of his wings; and
had grasped his legs, with her paws, so
’ that he could with difficulty preserve his
balance in the air : and what was worse,
’ she had seized Ills throat with her jaws ;
‘ and above all, lie found to his sorrow
that h< had mistaken a Cat for a Hare !
: Che eagle says to the cut, let go your
hold and I will release you. Oh no ! said
the cat, you brought me up here against
5 my will, and I have no notion of falling
fiom this height, to dash myself to pieces.
| You must stoop, and set me down ”
North- Car cliff n —Mr Macon, a Senator
in Congress, from North-Caroling, has sent
to the Transylvania University, a pamph
let containing undoubted evidence that
Col. Thomas Polk and others convened
1 the people of county in
. May, 1776, and entered into resolutions
which went to dfccla e all independence
. .This pamphlet contains matter so honora
ble to those engaged in the revolution
that injustice to them, the slate and the 1
county, it ought to be made known- From
•he above mentioned pamphlet it appears
that the first declaration of independence
was drawn up in North Carolina, and pre
sented to Congress by Captain .Lick, who
now resides i n Georgia.— Ken. Gas,
, THE PHILADELPHIA.
m'Tfce ofißkf'7AWqn the corn
business of Philadelphia, lia(imcrn,„„.
the last year, we were desirous to ascer
-5 tain the fact and requested informal ion
from the Harbor Master He "has politely
i* furnished it, and we find that our arrivals
from forcifn ports, from 22d Marcli to
the 18 li May, 3822, compaied with our
arrivals during the same period of the
present-year gives an increase, as near as
may be, of one third* Oureoasting trade,
domestic manufactures, &c. have increas
ed in a still greater proportion. The in
' crease in the vain eof Heal Estate and the
rise of rents arc other unrreing signs of
: public prosperity.— [hem. Press.
A return of the number of Convicts sent
cut. of the Uniter: Kingdom from the slli
1 o( January 1816, to the slli of January
1822.
' to 1816.1,3 '9 males, 102 males—l.44l
1817 2039 dt 189’ do —2,228
18.8.2.757 do 229 do —2986
. 1819, 3,036 do 127 do —3.163
1820. 3,405 do 225 do -3 650
. 1821,2,455 do 183 do —2,639
1822, 186 do 100 do 206
General total 16,373
Cum hlv
> __
1 r.i n raiiy.
p~— ■ " ■
Washiktoon Diving's new work, Jlrace.
p bridge Hull, was on sale at N York 21st
instant. Char Cour,
A pamphlet of 24 pages has lately been
published in New. York, entitled "Jin
Excursion of the Don Cart, a Poem hy tin
imprisoned debtor.” $ The-Siatesman thinks
, it to be from the. pen of Croaker, and
) pronounces it an admirable satire, in which
, men of all professions fall alternately un
der the lash. Snv, Hep
A new farce called the “ Expki.lku
Colleotan,” by the author of the drama
, of tiie Spy was to have been performed
- on the 24ih ult. ir. the New-York Thea
- tre. ibid.
I- AMFRTCAjV COLLEGES.
Names and I’uesidkrts.
■ Yale College, Rev. Jeremiah Day, LLD
i Cambridge Un. Rev J. Kirkland, DD LLD
• Brown University. Rev Asa Messer, DD.
; Williams College, Rev Ed. D. Griffin, DU.
, Dartmouth College, Rev Rennet Tyler,
t Princeton Col. Rev. Ashbel Greene, D l>
■ Union College, Rev. Eliphalet Nott, D1)
, Hamilton College, Rev. Henry Davis, DD
s Middlebury College, Rev. Jos Bates, DD
, Bowdoin Col. Maine Rev. Wm. Allen DIJ.
, Dickinson College, Penn, Rev. J.M Ma
son, DD.
t Columbia College, S- C. Thomas Coo
i per, M D
j Columbian College, Rev. W. Stoughton,
; DD
- Norlh-Oarolina University, Rev. J. Cald
l well, DD.
1 Tl DD ylvani,L Universit y* Rev - H H °ny>
- University of Georgia, Rev. Dr. Waddel.
> University of Yermout, Rev. Danl. Haskell,
- Wateivilie College, Maine, Rev, D Barnes
s Washington College, Penn. Rev A. Wylie
- Jefferson College, Penn Rev. Mr. M‘Mil
d lan
s Allegany College, Penn. Rev. T. Alden,
D D.
e William & Mary C« dlege, Va. Dr. Smith.
1 Columbia College, lS. Y. Wm Harris, D 1).
i Greenville College, Tenn. Rev. Dr. Coffin,
e Worthington CplU ge, Ohio, P. Chase, D B
'» Y. Daily Advertiser;
“ And he gave it for ~
whoever could make .... ><l
t-wo blades of gras,, , 0 r > >f
ground where only 011 , 6 ‘ "fn n
serve belter of mankind
tiul service to hi, countn, ‘, m
raceof poltuciun* put:,
Communication to n, e .j
<f Albemn r ie nllW
OM FALLOWS J, '
Sir:—From mv 11,„
farmer, I have been stn lci ,^' enc
increase of the vc c
prowmew of ihe|,„ (lf ,JJ'j|«l
in July and August, „ , 1,(13
Sepiembcr «ml October. l Hlse 1
facts as 1 ohsei ved them.
may elicit something ol
t om others. 1 irn ?
In fallowing fir ww, .
upon a farm u.en under 1» "',
sired by the tenant t 0 | eiW ,l
laud near his Darn to staclc’l,! 11
in ploughing
allowed me to h.-ilow ii 1(? '
apparent y as well pr J
ploughed From iu vici S! L ",
it was perhaps more fertile Vl
jommg funds. The cron
ter on the early fallow-,|, an “
and the growth of weeds
much more luxuriant
Ou repealed observation, .u
ver, as well as on C a
have observed that land
and the early pan of A Htrus ,
ny shades darker ahe-fp-*
land adjoining fallowed in S Z
October winch if it chi "
the change was im percept,b '
observed the crop t 0 be ,L rl
earlier. less liable tn accidents a
Sec. The growth of weeds aft,,
more luxuriant, and the land has
appearance of an increased fenji
feeding early fallows in comtm,
late, the preparation man m„
the same What cottul have chi
color of the clay turned by the
lows, previous io being mixed
soil by a second ploughing| |ti
contract with the vegetable mitt
ed by the, plough. The oh,
were made where it had hem
many indies. The sun alone cm
produced no such effect, I S |m«
change to be produced from the
ty of gas generated in the decora
of vegetable master turned unde
rising thro’ the day, had impregt
whole mass of it, and had fei-tiii
the surface. That in July and Am
days being long and hot, the night
vegetation tender and succulent,
composition was rapid, and the i
ol this fertilizing gas very "-real,
contrary, in September andVioh
days being shorter, the nights ion;
cool, vegetation hard and woody,i
circtiHis'ances unfavorable for a n
composition, the air was
smaller quantities, wml
without producing■ * ntt'rarart o
ja —AiAi aoopt the following opinio
Ist. That the fertilizing pwpti
manure exist more in the gas thin
crated iu its dectßfcposition than lot
<ly, or quanturn of the manure itseK
2d 'That half rotted manures m
active in t heir effects than those too
ly rotted.
And 3d That manure rises, byb
tliis air generated from it, and di
sink as has been supposed.
Respectfully yours,
TH. J..RANDOI
To Pr.Tr.n Mrxon, Esq.
Sec’y Agricultural Society
of Abemarle Rich Enq
bmm—m»»pja«n«
FOKttiGV.
Commercial Treaty wilt Em
A letter dated New-York 21st in
a Commercial House ot the Inti
1 (ability, to their Correspimdrw
city, received, by yt»st<-ri)iy , i
1 says:—
“ A Provisional Treaty l> M «
eluded with France, at Washing
. President’s Proclamation to it*
wilt appear in a few days, h*
American vessels are recipirol
th same fooling, with the condiw
exporting the value of dleir impfl
in the produce, kc. of the com
nmy come to. —From this, y l * 1
ceive that foreign vessels [j. «
or American! will find
freights between the twoC/ 1 1 1 "
b CharleimC
i Russia —lt is slated in theff-
Adv of the 22.1 inst, lliaf'W
according to the latest inteiigro
iliat country, were in a st.Yc
ft ruigs IVcmi the low plice (;R
i scaroiiy of circulating tn*'' ll1 *
had almost vanished, add thew
lation grea’ly depreciated- I*
paper, was reduced to the vans
or ten pence British. Plrc9‘.
viiuf. R Were gorged Vi'.h ST»jf
nommerc? of the 11l 'ck Se»
stand.”— Sav Republican
From the Savannah MiMi*^
By the ship Dromn, 27d«p£j
gow , we jreceived files of the
perv.up to the 26thof April
Tim Glasgow Herald of*
serves, The dispatches frof
11th instant, hold out strong *r
ot peace in the East . .
Ireland is stated to be <T I,e
Snerly ; but in some P* rta ° ~!j
. ly in the county of Clare, t 1
is threatened with aH the
, mine. ‘ &
The King’s birth day (
. with great pomp and cere
gow. In keeping | he P ea hJie ,a
, observes, our magist.ates
occasions, had a difficult J
on this as,an former.°f c T"jj fC c(
1, every precaution which F
s dictate ;so that if it h» .
e they would have acted
[. promptitude ; but the sp
is much altered, and e»eij
, t with the greatest harmony
A petition was got
House, Glasgow, to bothH
►. ment, praying ■*•«*?pert.
sions to the H' ,nr, » n 9 ( »* J 1
D A young «n#n of»b«
dresses to young * <um "