Newspaper Page Text
WILLIAM E. JOAKS. AUGUSTA, GEO., MOADAY EVENING, AUGUST 14, 1837. * [Semi-weekly.J-y o|. 0 |. I>-No 64
43nbIts|)Ct)
OAW.It SEMI-WEEKLY A\P WEEKLY,
At A'o. 261 Brian? Street.
TERMS—DaiIy papet, Ton Dollar* per annum
n advance. Semi-weekly paper, ai Five Uullani
lAhereluture i.i ailvnnce, or Six si the end of the
*r. Weekly paper, Throe Dollar* in advance or
our at the eiid of the year.
CHRONICLE AND SENTINEL.
’ AUGUSTA.
Saturday Evening. August 12. 1637.
FOR GUVEK.NOR.
GBOKGE R, GILMER.
• ala|^ma~ electiox-fojt gov.
Uaghy, Oliver.
Mobile counjy, 753 674
Montgomery, 718 735
Baldwin. 333 58
i
1693 1517
MISSISSIPPI ELECTION,
y In 26 counties, llio following is the result for
vo members of Congress. There is no.jjouht of
le Elcetion of Claiborn and Gholson, the Van
luren candidates. Mississippi inglonously licks
he hands that has smitten her.
Cfftiborn, 0051
Gholson, 5304
Pibnliss, 6130
Acce, 5043
[fen. THE CHRONICLE AND SENTINEL.]
CELEBRATION AT fSUORTVILLE.
At 11 o’clock A. M. on the Fourth of July
last, the citizens of Shortsville assemble at the
Meeting House of the village, where alter the
isual introductory exercises the of
independence was read by Mr. Long and the fol
owing oration was delivered by Mr. Short.
Pjsends and Fellow Citizens:
never hear that declaration of Independence read
vithout the most thrilling emolions—Never, with
>ut mutually exclaiming. “How wonderful the
ace of men who framed and sustained it! Was
t passible that thirteen separate independent 1 it
•le coloni-s s altered over an immense territory,
surrounded by savage foes, without money, with-
JUt arms, without ships—was it possible they
would peril so much, rather than pay a few taxes.
Would they burst all the cords that bound them
to their parent land, war against their mother
country, take up arms against their brethren, and
through a seven years’ conflict of the se
verest hardships, to establish a single political
principle! Sutclysuch men never lived before.
Nor was their wisdom, surpassed by their chi
valry. Absolved from the shackles of despotism,
they formed that beautiful system of Government
\under which we live. A higher compliment,
rould not be passed upon their political sagacity.
And got fellow citizens, how they dwindle into
insignificance when compared with the , heroes
and stalemen of modern times.—Placed by the
side of the divine Jackson, the immortal Van Bu
ren, the immaculate Benton, the profound Ken
dall, and the sagacious Blair, they arc but as
stars, in at system of suns. With all their wis
dom, integrity and forecast, many were their er
rors, which would probably have been entailed
upon the nation to the latest posterity, had they
not been exposed, by the great and good men
‘whom] I have just enumerated. You cannot read
the Declaration of Independence, without per
ceiving, that those who fronted it,understood it to
be the voice of thirteen free, sovereign and inde-
V’ndent states; hence they ventured the rush
avowal (hut “these United Colonics are,id of right
ought to be free, sovereign, & Independent
1 States.” Thanks to our Solon of the Hermi
tage, this dangerous heresy has been repudiated;
and we now know, that they are not “now,” and
never were, & never “ought” they have been free>
sovereign, or independent Stales. Read the con
stitution of the United Stales, and you will per
ceive, that its framers ignorantly believed, that it
committed the purse of the nation, to the exclu
■ivekeeping of the people’s immediate reptesenta.
lives. | Marvellous delusion! Did they suppose
that the people of the subject colonies, would
bleed at every pore, rather than be taxed by any
but their own representatives, and then suffer
their tribute to be kept by their own representa
tives! Our Jackson saw the error, and kindly
cook the nation’s tieasuie into bis own keeping.
Blessed old mao! unborn millions, will read the
rewards of yout aceute discernment, and daring
independence.
To the same immortal patriotdo we owe the
discovery, that to the first officer of the nation
belongs the prerogative, of nominating his suc
cessor; and of winning by persuasive epistles, the
Slate Legislatures to the support of his nomina
tions.’", ’|jpme have dared to call these patarichal
notes of affection, vile tampering with the organs
ofStalasovereignty. Infamous insinuation! What,
have tge some to this!—that the hero of Orleans
cannot Write a few love-notes, without being
charged with tampering with legislatures!—
What are Legislatures! What are conven
tions! other than Baltimore Conventions.—
Read the Proclamation! I remember that one
Womack, indignantly hurled hack one of the
good old Presidents amatory epistles in his
teeth. Unparalleled insolence! If this is to be
tolerated, in a little time we shall see the Gover
nors ofStates, the Congress of the United Stales,
and all subordinate officers, rebelling against the
President’s authority. Let them remember Or
leans, and beware—let them remember Duane
and tremble.
Our forefathers blindly supposed, that the peo
ple at large were competent to choose, and elect
their Presidentthrough the old and vulgar me
dium of the ballot box. But the renowned and
glorious Van Buren, has taught us a far more
simple, easy and expeditious mode. Turn your
eyes fellow citizens to Baltimore—sea that beau
tiful harmonious piece of machinery yclep’d the
Convention —see the divine Rucker breathe into
it, the resistless efflatus of steam —see it move in
all its grand proportions—and ere you can say “it
moves,” —see a President and Vice President
shelled out, precisely suited to the most fastidious
taste—and tell me, can you ever he willing to re
turn to the ignoble ballot box—Ah no! I read
in yonr kindled eye, and animated countenances,
the magnanimous sentiment “away with the an
tiquated notions of Washington, Jelferson, Ad
am* and Madison! Give us Van Buren, Ruck
er, end Steam forever!!! Exalted people! Lib
(ertycan never suffer in your keeping !
InoMen time it was thought advisable to make
eaetHWoso of Congress keep a record of its pio
cecdinf*; but thanks to the spotless Be nlnn, ilia
useless ceremony is now exploded ; and should
either House he dissatisfied with it* plDceedihgs,
jl may- expunge (hem from the - recon/, and thus
save the people the trouble of prying into-the
conduct of their servants. What responsibilities
will not this remove—what labor will it not Save
to posterity I Noble Benton ! Let the invidi
ous and the vindictive revile thee—let them point
to thy cravat, and say “ behold the graduate of
Chapel Hill,” but when the miserable infatuation
which has now seized upon the people shall have
passed away—posterity will do you justice.—
May you live to receive your appropriate reward;
Under the old notions of things, the people of
these United States, had got in the habit of trad
ing in their own way. They ignorantly received
bank notes, bills of exchange, and other paper
securities for money, and while this state of things
continued, they madly lelieved themselves rich,
prosperous, and happy. The generous Benton
pitied their delusion, and kindly undertook to
give them a better currency. Like all magnani
mous reformers he had to encounter opposition.
The silly, captious, shorl-sighte-Calhoun, Clay,
and Webster, had the temerity to predict, that
this expciiment would ruin the country ; but here
•he god like Blair, stepped into the aid of the
meek and pious reformer, and through the instru
mentality of a free and veracious press, taught us
better things. He told us that in a little lime
gold and silver would deluge the country—that
the honest yeomanry of the land would be seen
with silken purses, teaming with glittering treas
ure—that commercial credit would be placed up
on a solid basis—that banks would be prostrated,
and general prosperity reign through the whole
length and breadth of our glorious republic. And
is it not so —^Here the orator was interrupted
by an honest backwoodsman with — “A'o, 1 han't
*ecn a thbip for two months—and when I
want a little change they offer me little thumb
papers for shaves, punch, drinks, aud rail road
rides. And I hear em say every body is broke,
and the banks wont pay no then, and the Legisla
ture won't let 'em pay nothen nither. How they
gwine to be fostated then ?" This inter
ruption. gave occasion to Mr. Short to introduce
the following extemporaneous episode, which
was received with unbounded applause.)
Ah my honest friend, your error springs from
seeing 100 much, and reading to little—from mis
understanding the melapltoiio language ol the
prophesies—anil from misapprehending the true
evidences of national prosperity. Read Colonel
Benton’s dinner speeches, and you will find that
the country is actually deluged with gold aqd sil
ver; and, sir, if you will not pick it up. and put
it in your purse, that is your own fault. And
suppose there was not a dollar of specie in the
land, can there be a more ‘solid basis’ for tbe cur
rency, than ‘shaves, punch, dinners, and rail road
rides!’ Gold and silver may be sent outof the coun
try, but who can octal your heard out of the coun
try—and your riding places, and your punch,and
your dinners! “You hear every body’s broke.”
Not so; there is not a city in the United States
in which there is not two or three sound houses
still. True, neatly all our merchants, mechan
ics and manufacturers me broke; but ask those
very merchants, mechanics and manufacturers,
whether they would give up the present healthful
state of the currency, to bo restored to all heir
lost possessions; and if they do nut answer you
promptly in the negative, I will forfe t forevc; all
my respect for the noble Benton. But “the
banks are not prostrated.” No, not actually, but
virtually, prostrated. Who wants (heir bills
now! We can get bills enough without their
help; and that, too, without asking for them, or
offering security. With nothing too to support
their cicdit—no razors, no ; unch, no victuals, no
cars—they must inevitably expire from indolence
and starvation.
Yes fellow citizens, (as I was proceeding to
show when I was interrupted,)by the grand dis
coveries and improvements of the deathless Jack
son, Van Buren, Benton, Kendall, Blair and their
colleagues, the country has been raised to its pre
sent unexampled prosperity and happiness. Thro,
all our cities aud villages, Jthe peace, the quiet,
the rest, the ease, the gravity of a Sabbath reigns.
No longer does the noisy stage-horn announce
the coming of thronged coaches. Men stay ol
home and take care of their own affairs. That
restless spirit of enterprise which drove trade all
over the world, and drew down upon us the envy
of all nations, is now restrained to the confines of
the counties, and is disciplined to a monthly tta
fic.al your court house steps. All can attend thh
maiket, and none arc troubled to expose their
own wares to sale. Would you buy land! .You
can get that for a dollar, which six months ago
would have commanded ten. Would you btly
cotton! You can get for six cents, what a little
while ago would have cost you egblcon. And,
if it were not lor the infamous Nltk Biddle, you
could get it cheaper still. Pul this vilo wretch,
who b'as been straining every nerve to put down
the belter currency, has now rushed to the south
ern market, and is buying cotton to pay our for
eign debts, instead of sending off the useless spe
cie to do it. But for this competition you could
get cotton for three cents. Have you debts to
pay? You have only to mak; bills and pay them.
Hitherto we have had but one session of Con
gress, and one session of the Legislature, in a
year: now we have two, and disregard the ex
pense. It is needless, fellow citizens, to recount
the blessings which we enjoy. Turn your eyes
to any quarter of the Uni on,and you see the signs
of them. Venerable father, whose boa y locks
proclaim you a contemporary of Washington,
did you eve; see such times, during the adminis
tration of that great and good man! Ah no!
Washington was a good man, but he was no
Roman. He was too much afraid o ( “responsi
bilities." Had ho taken the public money into
his keeping, had ho assumed the guardianship of
legislatures, had he reduced his cabinet to a
"unit," had he regulated the currency, had he
called conventions, had he ruled Congress, hoard
ed the Senate,rewarded his favorites,dislodged his
opponents, put down banks, and build up theo
ries, he would have had all the glory of the pie
sent state of things: but as it is, it alt belongs to
Jackson and his auxiliaries. Long may you,
fellow citizens, who have contributed to produce
the present unexampled prosperity, long may you
enjoy it. Let tbe vile whigs and nullifiers, who
have been foreboding ruin, see in the conflagra
tion of glory which surrounds you, the refutation
of their gloomy predictions. If they like the an
cient order of things belter than the present, let
them go shed tears and strew flowers over the
graves of Washington, Jefferson, Adams, Madi-
J- diVthd Mumoe.' But you, ye Champions of our
i, glorio'us reformation, will fill heaven’s concave
s with your declarations, “-Long live Jackson, \an
t Buren, Uentoft, Blair, Kendall & Company!”
* --After the exercise* of the day were ended, the
! company adjourned to a grove near the Poplar
Spring, w here they regaled themselves upon a
t sptendud dinner prepared for thorn by Mr. Dunn;
f after which the following toasts were drunk in
i cold water.
The day we celebrate —So bright and glorious
it hurts our eyes to look upon it. Music—The
Dead March.
r
1 The Baltimore Convention —A Rucker’s nest
for hatching Presidents and Vice Presidents by
steam. A great improvement on the ballot box.
Music—“ Double, double, toil and trouble.”
The President of the United Stales. Dr.
Rucker’s No 6. A powerful sweat. Music—
•• Tell me my soul, can this bo Death.”
The Vice President of the United Slates.
Doctor Rucker’s i/oef'-drop—-excellent for
qualms, „
Music—“ Johnson’s wife of Obi Kentucky*”
The Honorable Thomas H. Benton.*
| The dirt in - ® UIS *’ firau "
of Chap pel Hill.
Music.—"l saw hint softly stealing."
The Cabinet —To these the President may
point and say, “behold my jewels.” All bright
but Georgia’s son the brightest of them all. Spir
it of Rochester, what an encouragement to vir
tue!—Music—Love’s Ritorncllo.
- Agriculture, Commerce and. Manufactures,
—II well supported by specie circulars, they must
r flourish. Ecce Signum !—Music—Jackson's
March.
■ The Governor of Georgia —What ts he did
rejoice at our cm'iariassmenis, and refuse to illu
minate for our victories, during the last war!—
Has ho not made amends for all this by patroni
zing Bisln p.-j- and swearing allegiance to Van
Buren! "Music—‘Wha would he a traitor knave!’
George li. Gilmer.— Let him not suppose,
that because he was a companion in arms with
Appling and Tattnall, he can dissolve the firm of
Schley & Bishop as easily as he thinks to.—
Music—Gilmer’s March,
The Standard of Union. —The palladium of
Schley’s liberty. If you want a free press, give
it to a public officer; his honor will he sure to
control his interest, Hence the purity of the
Standard’s columns. Music—“ Buy a broom.”
The American Fair —Be not dispirited, yo
loveliest of creation. If the Vice President has
deserted you, the whigs will befr end you. Mu
sic—“ Come haste to the wedding.”
"TlorcMr. Short has a form ol a short corpulent
man, with a bell-crowned hit, and a prodigious
cravat. On tho hat is a cockade, through which
slicks a pen of godly length like a plume. Wo
Lave no cut to represent the form, and the above is
tho best our office affords —[Ed. Cur, <St Sent.]
f For the benefit of our distant renders wo would
remark, that this man Bishop is remarkable lor no
thing but his utter contempt of .the laws of tho
Slate, and the peace of tbe community; and yet,
through all his outrages, Gov. Scliloy has sustained
hint.—[lbid.],
From the Charleston Mercury, of yesterday.
FROM HAVANA.
By the arrival of the IJrig John C. Calhoun,
from Havana, we are indebted to a commercial
friend fb'r the following extracts of a letter:—
“Havana, Ang. 4.
“The shipment of Rice you made to our ad
dress per present vessel, was sold, part at 14J,
and part of 14 j rs. per airoba. Had we kept it on
hand, it would have fetched now 15 rs. per arro
ba; but in so fluctuating a market as ours, we
only have the alternative of selling on the wharf,
on such terms, since storing provisions is attended
only with loss,
“In our sugar market the demand is net so
brisk; with all prices are firm our quotations, say
assorted 711 a 8 12, prime 913a9£ 13 J; whites
12 a browns and yellows, (I a 8.
‘in Coffee nothing doing nominal rates arc
5J a 8. as to quality.
“Exchange on London, 8 a 10 per cent prem;
on the U. States 5 per cent discount, —no la
kers.”
Anecdote.—The Inflowing anecdote having
never seen in print, we give to our readers.
While mu goodly city was in possession of the
British during tao war of the revolution, an En
glish officer of rank gave an entertainment, to
to which'several American officers who were
prisoners were invited. Among them was a
1 L’spt. —, distinguished as a brave officer, but
uncouth iu his manners, little conversant with
tbe refinements of society, and not much given to
any “set phrase of speech.” The English officer
cer who was the Host on the festive occasion t«
which wc aflude, hud two daughters—one cflhem
distinguished liir beauty and a great belle ; the
other was remarkably plain .by reason of a defect
in one of hcreyfep. After the removal of llie
cloth, many sentiments were drunk, and among
them several highly complinlentary to llie beauti
ful daughter of “mine host.” Cap’. .with
that devotion far the sex which n brave man ever
entertains, feeling that the other daughter had
been neglected, when called on by the host, gave
as his sentiment—“Vourdaugtcr Sir !” Which
one sir, asked the hospitable entertainer ! The
cork eyed one, sir responded the well meaning
but plain spoken Captain,
From the Charleston Mcr, of yesterday
Shipwrecks.—Capl.Henry of the sclir. Med
iterranean, arrived yekerday morning, from Jack
sonville, slates that a severe gale ol wind com
menced on Tuesday the Ist inst., which contin
ued until Sunday last, whcnilblewa hurricane
from N. B. to B,’VV. and did considerable injury
to the shipping. The sehr George & -Mary, was
off St. John’s Bar, Ist insl. and drifted ashore 10
miles N. of St. Augustine, vessel and cargo total
ly lost. The brig Favorite was also off St. John’s
Bar, was compelled to slip her cables and run in,
she sunk immediately on her arrival at Jackson
ville.
The steamer Charleston was driven into the
marsh, but was got off without material injury.
Two of the government ware-houses at Jack
sonville were blown down,and all the crops of
cotton and provisions are totally destroyed.
From the Charleston Mercury.
The Globe and Mu. Bibdi.es Cotton.— The
Administration Organ is much horified at the a
trocious conduct of Mr. Biddle in buying up
Southern Cotton (to the amount of $3,000,000,
the Globe says) to ship to Europe in discharge of
the debt to our foreign customers. Tho Globe
calls it a monstrous monopoly. The Planters of
the South will not thank the Globe for the denun
ciation while in the improved price of our staple
they are realizing the benefit of the operation.—
Mr. Biddle is ooly acting upon the truth which
we declared when the pressure came, that the
agriculture of the South was the very sap and
lifeblood of American credit and prosperity, and
that the Cotton then in these Stales, stood us
1 in the stead of so much specie. Wo rejoice
that the credit and resources of Mr Biddle’s
. Bank’bas enabled him thus to come into our
' market and relievo our Planters from the pres
-1 sure, by taking their produce off their hands. Wc
• wish that the Party’s Pets could come and do
r I likewise, l»ut al.isl they arc on their beam ends,
0 am) ran do nothing for us. If Mr. Middle in.
stead of sending Gotlon to meet the liuliililies and
lake up (ho paper of hi* bank in England, were
sending gold and silver, (he Globe would yelp
1 and howl at him for (training the country of
r specie. What must Mr. Biddle do to please
the Globed Nothing but break rnd die.
* Who are in any wise injured by this Colton
; operation! Certainly not the Planters—certainly
i not the Merchants who had aerumlated a heavy
j stock; a temporary check is indeed given to those
lew merchants who are in funds and without a
t stock of Cotton, and who wish to speculate on
, the low price of Cotten. Even they must bene
fit by Mr Biddle's reducing tho rate of Ex
change now against this country. But is it on
• their account the Globe Clamors? No! This AJ
ministraiion7m(i*r .Merchants and to malign and
persecute them has boon tho leading feature of
"my Administration.”
We would object to baying another Tariff tax
upon the Plan ers for the beneilt of Merchants,
by prohibiting Mr Biddle from giving good
prices for Cotton as much as we objected to a
Tariff tax on the Planters for the protection of
the Manufacturers. But above all, do we object
to a lax on the Planters for no other earthly pur
pose hut to help tho Administration to kill Mr.
Biddle.
From the AT. Y. Daily Express, Aug. 3.
The Canadas,—We copy freely into our col
umns what is done in the Canadas, because these
British Provinces border upon us, and because
the movements there aro to effect us materially
before they end. Wo do not covet tho Canadas,
assume suppose. Wo sock tostirup no involu
tion there, as the Canadian (Loyal) papers charge
us with attempting. If Texas, however, knocks
earnestly at the door of Congress, it is hut natural
that some of the northern statesmen should ngek
to checkmate it with a proposed purchase of (he
Canadas, but more to keep Texas out of the Union
than to bring the Canadas in.
It is idle, though, and it is blindness to suppose
that the Canadas will many years longer rest (jui
cily under British sway. It is unnatural to sup
pose that a great people will consent to bo gov
erned by rulers 4000 miles off—their officers ex
ported upon them—a large standing army to back
them—their laws, their social regulations, every
thing“rcgulat d by an Imperial Parliament, or
court customs, with which they have nothing to
do. Os the grievances of which the Canadas
have to complain it is not for us to enlarge upon
if grievances they really arc, nor do we undertake
to say a change will give them better men, or a
better government ; but such a change, we do
say, of a colony to a government of itself is natu
ral, —a law of nature as it were, a thing to bo ex
pected as of course, which lime will assuredly
bring about. The soil will create, if we may use
the expression, too many men of nerve on.l ambi
tion to rest quiet under a colonial government,
all, or almost all officers coming fiom oversea, —
the scat of honors and rewards being in a foreign,
and not in the home land.
Again, our example is in fecting the Canadas,
for infection it is called. That the Canadians
would suffer something from the effervescence of
freedom, and pay more tuxes than under that
best of monorchia! devices, the monarchy of Eng
land, is highly probable,—but the Provinces
would doubly, (reply, aye, in a ccntreple ratio,
make up for all that in the new vigor andcnlhiisi
asm which every thing would feel under the elec
tric touch of a well organized, constitutional de
mocracy. pervading and infusing all classes of so
ciety, and working like magic to bring the hum
b!e up. Two kinds of a government there are,
that make devils, or demons, or lions of men,—
one like that of Napolean’s, a fierce, fiery, abso
lute despotism,— or the other, like that of Greece
or Rome, or Venice, Florence, or Pisa, in their
healthy days,—a valiant soundly constituted de
mocracy, acting in concert and in a mass, where
the energies of the whole mass, as in despotisms,
are the energies of One. If the Canadas had a
little of the elements of either, how they would
leap to life!
Thus much we have thought proper to say, to
put our press reclno in curia on these matters.
All we seek to do is to record events as they hap
pen, audio express opinions upon them. If we
wished, as We are charged, to make out a rase for
(he sympathy ofthe 11. S., we could appeal to all
the cupidity of the northern, eastern, and western
Stales, —for what a magnificent port Now York
would he for the vast trade of the Canadas—how
important is the absolute possession of the lakes!
the settlement of our disputed territory!—the
fisheries!—the important strip of land between
Lakes Huron, Eric, and Ontario!—the mines of
Nova Scotia!—and what a field for enterprise,rail
roads steamboats; and the like!—hut we make no
such appeals. We neither preach tieuson fir
Canada not cupidity /or the United States. We
exercise the same right in discussing Canada of
airs, as dors the press of London when it speaks
of the politics in Paris.
From the N. T. Com. Ado. bug 9.
Wall-street .—One o'clock.—The transac
tions at the hoard were rather more heavy this
morning than they were yesterday, hut without
any very material alteration in the prices. Uni
ted Slates and Delaware & Hudson, however,
declined } per cent.
Specie —The sales at the hoard this morning
were 100 sovereigns at $5,35. We notice Amer
ican gold and hall dollars at 8] a 9 prom; Mexi
can dollars 10 a 10$ do; Spanish do. 10} a 12;
live franc pieces —a $1,(135; Napoleons $1,12};
Spanish doubloons $17,20 a 17,40.
A treasury draft for SIOO sold at 3} premium.
From the N. Y. Daily Hxyre.at, Xug. 8.
MONEY MARKET—CITY NEWS.
Tuesday, P. M.—There was but little done
in Bills of Exchange £>r the packets leaiing to
day. Some sales were made on England at 18}
a 19} per cent premium; on France at 4f 85 a 4f
90; on Hamburg, at 38$ a !19c. The amount
ot specie going out in this day’s Liverpool and
Havre packets is unimportant, probably not ex
ceeding SIOO,OOO. The prices were chivfiy for
sovereigns, $5,24 a 26; American gold and’ half
dollars, 8} a 9 per cent; Mexican dollars, 9} a 10
percent, Spanish doutdoons, sl4 30; Patriots,
sl6 75; Five franc pieces $1,02} a 1,03; Napo-
Icons $4,10 a 4,12,
Os Specie there is very little in the street, the
late packet having nearly drained us. The de
mand for the packets to-day has fortunately been
light, compared with that of last week.
The Editor of Bicknell’s Philadelphia Repor
ter, who has lately visited New York and Mas
sachuselts, under the head of “Moneys Market,”
says:—“ln Boston the embarrassment and pres
sure arc experienced to about the same extent as
in Philadelphia; while in New York, the calami -
ty is, in its effects, Rightful indeed. The greatest
sufferets in Boston, are the manufacturers, and
those connected with the various establish menu
at Lynn, Weymouth, Hingharn,Lowell and other
manufacturing towns. Many of the mills, as
they are called, arc entirely lifeless, while others
are kept going by the proprietors, merely in mer
cy to the workmen. All have saved a little dur
ing prosperous times, and it is upon this little
they are now depending. In the commercial
walks, the aspect of affairs is somewhat better;
hut still it is had enough, and most continue to
grow worse, unless a speedy remedy is provided
by Congress,”
Ddeadeul Accident on the Danube.—A
dreadful disaster lock place on the Danube on the
221 of June, attended by the loss ot nearly thirty
lives. A large barque of about one hundred lons
left Rugcnsherg for Vienna on that day with a
number of passengers, upwanls of one hundred.
On the vessel teaching Shauf, a small place about
six miles from Rugensbcrg, she ran foul of a
bridge, which struck her nearly amidships with
a most tremendous shock, which sjdit her in two
parts. A large portion of the bridge fell upon the
passengers. An English gentleman, an officer in
the Austrian army, named Westbrook Michael to
whom we are indebted for our information, wgs
Standing aheftd,. aq_J the shock (throw him sev'e-.
s, a! yards into (he river, with ti portion of.thcwrcc I
i- upon flint. Being an ax pin swimmer, he sue-
J needed in reaching the shore,
c The scene was of lb* most frightful description,
p and the cues for assistance were heart rending.—
f Men Women and children were home down the
e rapid torrent. The scene at this moment it would
be impossible to describe. Between twenty and
i thirty people perished in the river, and the loss of
r property waft very considerable. The officer
I above mentioned ws* die only Englishman on
s hoard. Too much praise cannot he given to the
i rinhle Prince lax is, whose lnuise*und purse weic
t open to alf those who escaped with their lives,
• but in many instances lost all that I hey possessed,
■ The exertions he made in person to save the lives
i of the passengers, reflect the highest honor up
on this nobleman. One poor woman, who had
I clung to the barque, had her head compete! v se
r vered from her ly, and a man had one of his
legs cut asunder. A neighboring hospital is al
most filled with the wounded. The loss of prop
, ery is estimated at fifteen millions of florins bar.
1 London paper.
Touch of the sublime. —A Western wiiter
who has just begun to acquire celebrity, thus de
scribes his entrance into a room where there was
a great cry, little blood, any no murder. “I burst
through the door, I throw off my coat and solem
nly, exclaimed— lVhat is the matter?'’
From the Correspondence of the N Y Star
Baltimore, July 28lh, 1837.
“Well, we have got through with our election.
It was a regular “knock down and drag out” bu
siness—your favourite son Van Buren, gave us a
neat sample of New York tactics. Talk of your
fight in 1834—0 f the battle ol the Five Points—
(ho assault on the arsenal, and the leader in the
dared colored coat, it was no touch in corruption
and bold effrontciy to ours. Howard and Me-
Kim, the Tory candidates, shelled out liberally—
there was no concealment—it was an open Eng
lish hustings affair, where every fellow who could
lake an oath could tell you huw much his vote
was worth. Imagine to yoursolf about seven
hundred votes more than there are legal electors,
being [lolled. Cars came down from Washing
ton loaded with voters —every man in tho pay of
the Government was on the spot —hundreds of
Irishmen from the surrounding rail roads were
bought up and brought to the polls, and in roiiio
instances they could not tell the names by which
they were to vote, contained in the borrowed and
simulated papers, which were pr. settled and pro
nounced good by the Van Boren inspectors—
many whigs were absent from tho city; ns high as
thirteen dollars were paid for a vole, not.
withstandingjwhielijlho administration only obtain
ed a small majority. 'They talk of contesting tbe
election, and can shew a decided whig majority
in the District, but it will be of no use. A mighty
uilbrt, infamous and degrading to tbe eliarctor of
Americans, was made by Van Buren to curry
this election, in order to make an impression on
elections in other stales. li the Whigs resolve
lo light the administration with its own weapons,
anil pay as high us they do for a vote, Van Buren
will tell you that ho holds the purse strings of
the nation —that he lias the management of llie
surplus revenue and defies competiiiun of that
kind. Our only plan is an amendment to our
Naturalization Laws—a Registry act or Revolu.
(ion, and lo be frank with you I prefer Revolu
tion at once to allowing the pauper population
of Ireland, brought here by tbe administration in
countless thousands,to hold the balance of power
and govern the country immediately on selling
font into it. , We have desperadoes lo deal with
at Washington, and they must be dealt with us
such; they will not give up power while they can
steal a dollar of the public money to buy a vote
with, or Instigate a foreign pauper tokuock down
free born Americans at the Po Is.
I am satisfied by wball saw ntlhis election,that
the Van Ilmen parly must be pnl down by vio
lence—they will not allow a fair and honest ap
peal to the Ballot Box —they have made the
Government bankrupt and impoverished the peo
ple, and now Intend lu_figli( it out. For one I
tin ready for them. I Was born in tills City—
lave worked hard to accumulates little property
and bring up honestly a family of children. I
am fairly entitled to a vote, and yet a ragged
f ireigner, who probably came here by the late at
rivals, actually pushed me from the polls just be,
fore they closed, and 1 lost my vole.
So we go, and the barefaced fellows set up a i
shout of triumph and have barbecues and proces
sions for a victory achieved by the grea'est cor
ruption and by foreign emissaries. We must
rally under the American Banner, and go for the
American party against the Tory administration
and this foreign influence, or the Republic is
gone."
ANOTHER LETTER FROM J. Q.
ADAMS.
Letters ore the orders of thn day, and Mr
Adams appears with another inure curious
than the first; econtric ns usual, nnd indica
ting that he will make “the fur fly” when ho
reaches the Capitol in SeplC mber! This let
ter was (trough nut by a call from the 1 lon.
William Foster of Boston (a Van Buren man)
under dale of June 21, and llie answer was
dated July Ist. We quote all of the letter
which wou.il interest our readers. The cor
respondence first, appeared in the Beston Ad
vocate, a Van Buren iintimusonic, abolition,
high tariff paper. Mr. Adams, it is cent,
intends “to go lor humbug.” with Benton,
rfiherllmnlotclioiiihiiuo.nl vvitli ILves the
Albany Regency & Co.
j “We are now in the midst of a natonal
bftkruptcy, occasioned by the insolvency ol
multitudes of individuals. We are now told
Dial all the banks in Hie United Elates have
suspended specie payments —and what is Die
suspension of specie payments but selling
the laws of properly at defiance! IfihePres- t
ideiit and Directors of a bank have issued
a million of fills promising to pay live dollars
la the holder ol each and every one of them ,
the suspension ol specie payments is, by one
act the breach of one million of promises.—
What is it but fraud upon evoy bolder of
tlie.r bills! And what difference is there
between Die President and Directors of such
a bank, and the skillu! artist who engraves
a bank bill a sac-smile of Die bill signed by
Die President and Directors and saves
them tee trouble of signing it by doing it for
them! The only difference that 1 can see in
the two operutiions is that tho artist gives
evidence of superior skill and modesty. It
requires more talent to sign another man's ;
mine than one’s own; and the counterfeiter
does at least his work in llio dark while the
sjspenden of specie payments brazen it in Die
fxce of day and laugh at the victims and
tupea who have put faith in their promises.
"Yon ask, what is to he the remedy of this
stale of things! There are two remedies, bolli
ts which may be practicable. (Joe is, that
the Congress of Die United Elates should ex
ercise its powers to re ulate Die currency;
lint they must do this (which they will not,)
without consulting banks, the presidents and
directors. The Legislatures of New York
and Virginia have already shown wnat Die
presidents and directors of hanks will advise
And the proposal of Die President nfa broken
bank in Charleston, S. Carolina, to begin qyisDi
an amendment to the Const lotion granting
powers to Congress, which hate already.hieo ,
granted to them, and which they have twice
exercised to the great benefit ol the nation, is
an insult at once to our understanding and
upon our misfortunes.
As little do I relish his other porposal of a
general convention of broken bank presidents
and Directors lo enlighten Congress with
their advice —a convention of bankrupts to
teach Congress reverence lor llie obligation
of otfntMclH, and huw to make nothing but!
gold and silver a tender tor tbe payment of
deWts ! —of all remedies for existing evils, tint!
k l«-t I would »y«orl to would be a «per.uu*ci
c * !" front ilin mnt of nulUlicution.
Tlie other remedy which I believu pracli
•> cable is flint of Hulun —a sponge upon lhe nc
~ count of debior and creditor—wipe out all.il
" scored ami npnu. Tins ix the imnl-tnu
ney system, and so fur ns 1 can Judge, it i
.. the fisxijriiinl-system of the present aclrn.nix
1 tratioi)—il is to detach llio goVerninem Iron
t all banking and .leal in nullnpg but the pie
B cions metals. I! Mr. Van B i.cn is tunic o
e stuff to go thrpiigii vblfli tins operation,! win!
him well out oI it, but lie vVill want other co
operators t huu the Legislatures of New Yorl
. and Virwinia ; nnd other advisers tiian pres;
dents or directors of broken hanks, or land-job
bers upon loans (rom deposit banks.
I think of this as 1 thought of the dry dock
ffim-bout, restrictive, anti-navy system of Mr,
Jefferson. It. cost tlie nation a terrible wai
to be delivered of that, but the nation was ef
fectually cured of its hydrophobia. Tho wa>
was a drastic purge, but it effectually worked
its cure. I (ear that our present bankruptcy
will need a still more violent course of alter
natives, hut the cure will come when the peo
ple are prepared to receive it. They are cer
tainly not so now—they will in ist probablv
not be so during the remnant m my term ol
life. I hope you will live to witness ami en
joy t! o cmiVH.escencc.
Fo-give the freedom with which I have
answered your letter, and believe me to be
with great respect,
Your friend and servant,
J. Q.. ADAMS.
A Mistake.—One Sunday when that eminent
Christian the Rev. Sir H. Maseru;lf was mimsiei
of Uakford, the precentor came to church with the
buck part of a large curled wig turned to the fore
part of his head. The Minister gave the 71st
psalm to he snug, beginning at the 7th verse.—
When the precentor stood op to sing the first
line, which iuns“To many 1 a wonder am,” the
people could not hi-Ip looking and laughing at
him. Sir Henry, observing the point to which the
people’s eyes were directed, looked over the pul
pit, and seeing the mistake, giavely said, “Ami
so, Sir,you are a wonder to many; turn the right
side of your wig foremost.”—f>'/o»,»ove Courier.
~v XmJt k iuji aV,T
NEW YORK COTTON MARKET, AUU. 7.
O'.r advices from 'i'curies,sen are up to the 28th
ol July. They represent 'he coming . r°pns inferi
or lu the lasi. 1 eorresnondent estimates Ihe fall
ing off as eipiallu 8 percent
A large quantity of tho old cr,t| is mill on hand.
The exportation h (entirely ceased, in consequence
ol iho lowness of ilie livers
In New Orleans, the (ins [’amt Ims been buying
largely 1 1 remit to Knglaml to men' protested bills.
The ( anal ami Louisiana Hanks will have 10 do the
same or send specie, il wo may judge from ilioolli
eialnotice of Ibe Wilsons. liiey i.uvo u large u
mount ol protested bills.
I'p lo June 2d, h, it was estimated that upwards of
12,0 0 bales had arrived nt Liverpool on nceauatof
the Bank of llio United Mates; It had the dibi tlo
increase confidence in Mr liiddlo's imluutioii.
dales in tho city this day were small, and nt pre
vious rales. Imparls since the Ist lust. IStiJ bales.
J uropean It) (n Arts—SfecL on hand.
Havre,Jeno22,lß37, 72,7 1 0 Ameneliii
“ “ “ 115,410 olh cotton
88,102
* IG3P, 45,881 American
“ •* “ 7,802 oth coiioa
«U,7M
Liverpool, June 24,1327, 848,000 A meiicnn
“ “ 180,000 otli cotton
3-»B,<UO
“ “ « 183 G, 104,001) American
“ “ “ 76,000 otlur cotton
880,000 _
Imports into Great itrilam.
Juno 24, 1837. June 24, 1030.
A merienn cottons, 600,8M1 460,000
Other cottons, 166,200 180,000
7(52,000 080,000
Liverpool classification— -June 24, 1887.
Ord lo mil Ir ir lo good fr Good tn fine
Uplntii] UaOid 6ii.(i,'d oln7ld
Orleans, 41u6*d h.'uOid T.adid
Mobile, 4;u6id 6.uO|d 7 u7ld
Tennessee, 1 slid O.'aOM 0 e—d
The cjiiotnlionn in ibis market remain without
chnnpo —Herald.
«SMss,i>'s i i ■■—tn nm—l
?v3arizi«* Intdligcncr.
< Hahi.eston, Aug. IJ.—Arrived yesterday, brig
Opulence, burden, Now York 20 days; brig John (J.
Calhoun, Boss, Havana 3 days; sclir Medtlerra
iieun, Henry, Jacksonville 21 hours.
Cleared, -chr Sarah Aim, Patch, Mobile.
Went to sea yostor.lay. ship Jflssoro, Jauvrin, Li
verpool; selir Vuloeiiy, K.-l'y, Huston; steam pack
et Columbia, Wright, JV4 ork.
i(iMiw»win——b——
A 'BVachcr Warn led.
AGICiVTIeICM AN of ateftily habits, nho Mould
bo disposed to (uko clinrgo of a mnall school,
can find employment by applying lo llio JVustiMH
n I Oak fJi il Arndomy, Columbia cuuty, Go no - r
Kiil)ank’« Pont Ollico. Tho number ofst i.u 1 . 'v l
hofuwntihc fommenromenl, uni! an Mien I . :■■ vs
lets v\ill make ilia rompmiHHlion worn. or
SIOO per annum. Fho Acadomy in tilnae im a
healthy neighborhood. The |ronp ctol ihe st h oi's
increasing nre flarering, and induces the Trustees to
hope »h;u ihey will again, ere long, have a perma
nent and flourishing school, liy order of the True*
tecs. A PICAUWK, tSoc’y.
nug 9 J 8. r > 2uni3m
Fifty Wollar* ISctvnnl.
j** KANAWA > f from the sub-
Jf , seriber, on ibe 21st Septembei,
I'iykJ 1835, a Negro man, by tlie
“VfJTI name of OEOllUfii 83 or 4
/ years old. abont 6 lect high,
qiYiß!j/(_ / dark complex, large prominent
ryes, had lust two nt Ins uppei
front teeth,one of his knees a little crooked, Slender
bulk, quite slim round the waist, speaks coarse ami
positive, bad when he ran away 818(1 in money, nnd
wore a watch. He in by trade a Carpenter, a loi
entitle Cabinet maker, and a Hoot nnd Shoe maker;
and 1 can read pretty well. 326 will be given lo any
one who will apprehend said negro and plant hint
in any jail nod give such information ns will enable
me lo get him ; $25 far the discovery of any villinn
who may harbor him; or ssll for tits discovery of
any person wits may have given hint a free pass.—
(lie formerly belonged to Lssail Harbour, Franklin
county Ga, and once ran away horn him, bating
such a pass, and wont to Savannah where he
worked 0 months undiscovered,)
JOB HAMMOND,
Franklin Co. Ga.
The editors of the Savannah Georgian and the
Charleston Observer will give the above 3 insertions
nnd forward their accounts to tins ulfiea for pay
ment. attg 7 184 w3t
Kaces.
rr IT K Annual Fal' Meeting over the Newberry
•L Jockey Club Course, near tVewbcrry Court
House, will commence on the first Tuesday (7th) of
Noveroberiiexi, and continue (our days. On Mon
day preoe ing, a Sweepstakes will ho run, two
mile heats, lor colts and fillies three years old spring
1887. And on Wednesday, immediately after the
regular race, a sweepstakes will be run, mile heals,
Ky-eolls and .fillies, then 2 years eld To both (lie
abovesdikes there are some fine colls t utored, and
therefore gooA sport may he exported. There is al
so two ether sweepstakes ti ho run at the full meet
ing 1838, already made up, but not closed.
July 31 173 Im It bTKWAIt'I, Sec'v.
Oh.OliG/A, Burke county:
gSAOLLKU before me, in the 58th DptG lit, by
.B. William C Bates, a large Black //rune, suppos
ed fo'he leu years old, five feet fivetipe.hes high.no
ntarks nr brands, appraised nt ftffv .xjollara. July
122. 1-37. IHA-iG J mATtLJ V.
A true extract from the crime book.
y.VTII'L L STURGH.S m i c.
‘ s f tg 5 183' m’3w
«• I GEORGIA, Scnirri 4 County
HERE AS, Andrews «i>t>liN to#
▼J "I “>liuiiil.-trotiun.>ith the will in.
• oir the-estate of Efim,or Swuinc, lip, .."a
|(J C .unty, deceased . . " ,u
ii. . I l'e<f lire, tjcref-ire.iu che nridndmotlivK ,fi tn4 i
■ singular Clici kindred -and credit!in of mid deeenurd
in no iind.app. nr.ru my office within the time tin,.
"• m'lbahy law to shew cattse (Jf any they hive)
in why httiii lettaft tfhonld not bo jjiuriif-d.
e ■ 'mtfer my liarid it office in Jarksonfioro.'
„ J«». >bi7. - JUSHDA PcRRY, Clerk.
,1, ,• wWd IMS
... J"»l receiveJyml/»*• iule 6y
k B*. Fleming & co f>
ground Flour, (extra brand)
)- ftt/htigs prime Grenn Coffee
—■* LSD—
j. A fresh supply of Siijjur, Molartos, Iroh, .Neils:
Bagging, See. dsc., all of which is offered low tor
r ' caal >. ■ , fJuly 13 JOS 4tdAw
r
* A }er,,c,nA doniumlH n#uin«i the laitf
\r Flulmn.s It. Wrll's, tfi J effort on county dor'dj
a * r(% w*qn«it«l lo preterit ihrtn nru? lbo*e indebted
to vaid d-.i d will make pnvmont to
>' J"'lN R. WELLS, or ) P _ .
r lIOIiI.VSOjY, Jr! I Execulor*,
'• July 25 • 173
!■;xcoitor’si Sale. ‘
' A GREEABLV l« nn order of the Honorable In :
it - “ Ihrinr Cotrl ot l.iihuln county will be wild nt
. Lincolnion, on the first Tuesday in September next;
tho oegroee belonging to tho estate of L. H. (trover,
, deceased, tends oisale will be mad* known-on the
■ day.
‘ JOSHUA DANIEL, 1
Si KI.BMI.Vm, [ freemen:
ELIJAH ALEXANDER; )
Jdl> 155
„ Waynesboro’ Academy.
‘r S 11 K Rectorship of this Academy being voca
-0 by lli« resignation of the liev Theodor*
.. Dwight, implications to fill the same will here
cci veil until the first of October next, at which lime
the schooldstic year will commence. All appli
cants must conic well recommended for iiiumi at
t well ns mental attainments, mid must also possess
e n thorough knowledge of (he Greek and Latin Inn
-1 gu.ig-s. Ify order of the hoard
e „ J. W. JONES, Secy
. au 8 2 __ ]Bo w2m
i Columbia Sheriff Sales; "
t ILL be sold at Columbia Court House on lha
v v first Tuesday in Sepiember negi, between
, the usual hours ot sale, two impr.ived lots in the,
village of Wnghlshorougli, on the mrth aide of
liron l street, jomiag Henry IV. Md.rental, and oth
ers, being the hits Whereon /’dlierl Wade now lives,
levied on as the property of said Robert Wade, tr
sa'isfy sundry fi las irom the Jnsrice's Court, James
.Voire and others, ngnislsaid Wade, Joseph Walker
and John L inhere levied on and relumed lo me
by a constable RICHARD H JONES, I) Sh'ff.
ang i • ISO Wid
£lO lie irani.
RANAWAY from the subscriber, on the ?9tH
jd/ny last, my negro man land; He is about
five feet five or six inches high, yellow complected;
when spoken lo looks wild, Ins felt hand has been
harm, and his thumb ami loro finger grows togeth
er lo tho last joint of the tfiurtib. ,apd I think the end
ol his (lire finger is otf The above) reward will
be paid, il delivered to the Hiihserilti'r, or lodged ill
any Jail so 1 gel him, and nil leatimiihln expenreS
paid. I'HEM’OiN HALEY.
Barnwell, S C., Juneli 130 w3m
GEORGIA, Cntiimbiarcrunty:
POLLED before James Eurnside.n Justice of
JB. Ihe Peace (hr said county, a bnv horse, snip
nose, left eya out: appraised, by E T Williams and
Walter.! Jones at leu dollars. Sn .posed to ha iO
yoarsold. JAMES ROR/VSiDE, J P.
Aim extract from theestiny hook,
nug 2-IBow3l D.V Vll> HARKINS, Cferk.
LaiayvJU* Hall.
Till'. inirioVsioned respectfully inform* hid
friends nml the public generally, that he Ka»
taken jl.ofayeite I tall,in Mtll.dgevillc, tormeHy kept
by lien 1) H. Mitchell. This huilssi' ns well cal
culated to render comfort as any other hatnh'iih
mont in the city; and every exertion on in} paid will
he made lo accommodate those who fnay favor me
. wiih a call.
The subscriber w ill give his personal attention Id.
his patrons,and will hate the entire management of
the house. WM. ROtJKKL.
VrT ho Stage Office of the People's l.lne It kept
at this house. The stages dally leaving for Mont
mgoery mid Augusta.
A/illedgeville. Aug. I J«0 fl*
S®«s IS i* wni’d.
IOKT, on Tuesday evening Initt, either iff sib|iis
-A In, or on the Wriglltthoro' road, within 4 iajlaa
of Angnafa.a Red Morocco POCKET BhOK,con
mining 310 or 5315, in bills, the barks not recollect
ed. Tim name ol'llie subscriber hi Written ineidethd
Pocket Book. The above reward Will be given for
lliedelively of the Pocket Book and Money lo Mr;
At. Lillie, in the (Jloho Hotel, or to the subscriber
(Towfordville, TIIOS. J. WEBORNL.
uue 3U 153 if
JrlfVrwon i ’* Snle.
Wild, he sold nt the Market House, in the tawd
of iamisiville, within the hours of wail, art
the first Tuesday in Pcpt next two hundred Acred
more or less of Pine I .ami, lying on the warlers o
Roekev Creek, adjoining land of E. Wllla, John
Pokes, and others levied on as the property of Hah
ry I). Spivey, to satisfy a fi fa issued from a justi
e •’* conn in favor of Joseph Marshall. Pro|s>riy
pointed out by plnimiff, levy ma le and returned
me by a cunstahlb, this 2(lth of July 1537
IVY W. GREGORY.
July 32 - 17A
BROUGHT tollib Jnllof Rhmmuild county on
the 2 llh msl ,n negro man wdm calls his name
JACK or JAfiKSON, and say* that he belongs to
John Sparks of Jasper county. He is about 5 loci 51
im has high, thick set, mid muscular; has quite a
fierce look w han spoken to; his left hand has been
considerably burnt, the thumb still' amlveiy inucty
crooked. lld is admit 35 or 40 years of age.
jmgd-TO ELI MORGAN, Jailor.
Administrator’* Sale.
Wild, he rold, by oni. r o r the Inferior Court
of Buike county, sitting for ordinary purpo
ses, within the usual hours ol saloon the first Tims'
day in October next, at til* court house in Cte*
comity, lot Nd Six hundred mid seventy eight, (67(1)'
in the twenty-second (2‘2nd) District second (Slid)
sectillh, now Cass enemy, he'onging 10 the estate
of Thonta* Mallor", dec. Terms on dnv of Sale.
JOHN B. KOHENSOiV; Adtn'r.
Angii.-i 3 lm
tail;irdinn’s Sale.
WILL bn sold, before the Court llditsc door
iii Wayneslmro', Burke cotiniy, bn ilie first
Tuesday in October next, all the land* lying in
said county belonging lo the orphans us Thomas
Bell, deei used; lu be sold fur the Ihuh fit of said
orphans Terms made known on the day.
jnly 4,1837 HUGH ALLEN, Guard'n.
july 7 wid 154
CJoliiiiihin Klwriff Sales.
Wild, he sold at Columbia Court Hamr,aul
the first Tuesday in September next, between'
the usual hours of sale,
A lot of ladies and goritlomen’s shoes and boo I*/
a lot of boy's and men s wool ned tur hate, lu satisfy
threo fi. Ins.; one from Columbia Inferior Court, at
tho suit ol J D Price & Co against James Burnside;
two from Columbia Superior Court, James Cert
ledge ami Joseph Poilorick, (urollieors of th* e jurt;
against the same.
- *t.»o>=
Ti n patent axes, aiutrass and 1 l>riMi'«td,fci) Wan-'
kets, kitcln n and Itonseliold furniture, and threb
trunks, lo satisly a fi fa from Colombia Superior
Court, Edward M Crawfoid aguinsi Richard Haws.'
Property pointed out by p.'nintiH.
—xx.so—
One hundred acres of pme kind, oh tb# Hebe*
Crcok, joining land* of Morries' heirs,(Richard W.
Jones and others, lo satisfy three fi lok f*oM a jus- .
iiees C mu ol Columbiaeounly,.at the saitb oLioMf'
Olivo, Join. Parish,and Pace <St V*
Sinn Elkina, defendtusV. kavvied on sni returned to l
me by a constable.
RICHARD H JONES, O Sh'tt.
july 26, 1837 172 *■**
Executor's .Votice.
SIX mouths after date, I will make appheatiKm'
to till) Honorable the Inferior Court .if CultMl.'
hiu county, whenslltmgasa Court ol onlinory or
Letters disnufsory. fioiu tlielutihor Admlmsiratioa'
ol the Estate of John Dozier late of Hid County
Den used, I hereby, r. quiro all and singular thf»
kimlred ami creditors of said deceased, to fife their
objections if any they have, in the office of»*id'
court, within the lime preseribsd by Law, to show
•ausc why said Letter* rhould not He granted.
JAMES F DoJIKU Kxr.
j»mc 5* 1837 131 J«|s^P!fttv* > 'Jde’d.