Augusta chronicle & sentinel. (Augusta, Ga.) 1837-1837, November 13, 1837, Image 1

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. AlGl'STl, «EO., MOXDiY KVE.\l«f« .\»Vfi JIBE Jt 13, 1837. [.Bn«ni>wcckly.]—Vol. 1.--No. 87 WIUIAI E.-- - .......... —■ ■■ . , 33nUUi|)cU %/TAILY, SEMI-WEEKLY AM) WEEL.L i At .Vo. 861 Broad SI reel. TfittW—Daily papoi, Ten DoUarajwf annum maJvaaoe. Semi-wookly papsr, m l b >vo IK H, r» is Iwrelofure i i advance, or :U l ! ie . n ' rear. Weekly paper, Three Dollars in advance or ~CfiioNlCLli AND SI^NTINDL. AUGUSTA. Saturday Evcningi -Nov. It- TANKSGIVING. It wU bo scon by this evening’s paper, that the Mayor, at the request of Council, has set apart Thursday next, as a day of Thanksgiving and ft Prayer, ,*ml requests our citizens to suspend all ■ business p»at day. , ■ % theatre. I Mr, Cooper has been engaged for one night f, tynore, and will perform the part of Pierre in Ot ways tragedy of “Venice Preserved.” Mr. Forbes and Mrs. McClure also appear to-night. Ths American Life Isurance and Trust Com pany at Baltimore, has declared a dividend of three per cent, on its capital for the last six months, payable in specie or its equivalent. . f THE WEATHER. # 1 ast week we had frost —fnes and great coats fennels and merinos were all in requisition- N*w autumn plays the laggard, and seems do termined to dispense his parting rays with cof dial warmth of summer How long tbai present condition of the air will last, tis im possible to say. Almanac makers must be cute indeed, to prognosticate the ever changing - anti eccentric temperament of our atmosphere. Thf Convention of Merchants recently held iin (this city seems to have awakened the appre hensions of the North, and, as wo anticipated, thq press is in full blast against it. If any ar gument is wanting to satisfy the South of the expediency and sound policy of the measures proposed by the convention, the tone of the Northern press alone should satisfy her on the subject. .v EDITORIAL LABORS. The wife of one of the editors in AugUsta(Geo.) has lately presented her husband with four pret ty My*,— Portland (Me.) Transcript. (TKWe disclaim the honor, ourself—and am untfaty* to say at present which of our brethren has been so peculiarly blest. Messrs. Jones and i Glfett are absent —but perhaps our friend Thomp son may ho enable to inform us about the matter. E4. People’s Press. AVe are inclined to think that the editor of IheT Portland paper must have been pushed for a paragraph, when he penned the above. Our ■word for it, no such blessing has been visited uppn * n y of the corps in this city, Blessing inSeedl One or two editions of such blessings would soon suspend the publication of any paper In the state. Vor.frntkkus Fon Floriba, —The Philadel phia Gazette states that upwards of 500 persons have volunteered in that city, to join the service of (he Government in its efforts to subdue the Soeninolcs. One company, consisting exclusive ly of Germans, and intended as a troop of horse, paraded on Saturday last. The majority were young men, and most of them appeared hardy, and well calculated for the service. IMPORTANT FROM CANADA. « ’We learn from Burlington (Vt.) says the New "York Daily Express of the 7lh Inst, that over a h'dndrcd families had left Montreal for the Uni ted Stales, many of whom had come to Burling ton. The re moval is caused by the serious ap prehensions ofdlsturbances in Canada. [FROM OUR COU RESPOX RENT.] MILLEDGEVILLE. Nov. 10, 1837. This day at 11 o’clock, both branches of the General Assembly covcnod in the Representative Chamber, and proceeded to the election of Judg es, which resulted as follows : Pastern Circuit. Win. S. Henry, 138 votes, Jos. Jackson, 123 Middle Circuit. John Sidy, 141 W. W. Holt, 121 Northern Circuit. Garnott Andrews, 250 No opposition. Western Circuit. Ist ballot, 2d 3d 4th sih Gib ’C Dougherty, 119*120 119 122 119 78 Thus W Harris, 80 103 118 123 125 131 C D Davis, 17 9 3 1 8 2 JCHjllyer, 10 13 9 6 7 4 A L Hutchins, 11 8 9 ll 10 45 WHFleetman, 7 3 2 W J Walker, 6 3 1 J R Stanford, 2 Scattering, 2 After this election it became necessary to close . this letter to meet the mail. From the N. Y. Commercial A dv. Nov 7. ONE DAY LATER FROM ENGLAND. The packet ship Westminster, Captain Moore, .. v* last evening from London, via Ports l mouth. Capt- M left Portsmouth on tho even ing of the 10th of October. We arc indebted to .oar correspondent for tho London morning pa •pers of the lOln, one day later than previous advices. The London papers of October 9th contain the bill to authorize an issue of Tre sury notes, and the bill for extending the time on duty bonds, with other advices from the United States to the ‘ 20lh ofSeptemher. The London Courier of the 7lh contained an I extract from a letter written in New York, giving a very unfavorable account of the prospects as to the liquidation of outstanding claims held by the suspended American houses in London, and sta ling that it was very doubtful whether 10 per cl. would be realized on the whole amount. The sapie letter averred, on the other band, that Ihe Brains, Barings and others, who rode through the storm in England, would realize a large pro portion of the amounts due to them. The rea son assigned for this difference was, that the American debtors would lie quite willing to cheat those ot their creditors from whom nothing could expected hereafter, but that they would make great efforts to retrieve their credit, where credit might be valuable in future. We think that our merchants would be doing only jusiice to them iim' selves, in trying to Hud out tho author of this ca lumny. an I bestowing upon him some public tes timonial of their g atiiudc for his kind efforts to exalt their character. The Courier of the 9th contains the following satisfactory refutation of the slander. We have the best reason for believing that the discouraging account contained in an extract from a letter, published in our paper on Friday, of the attempt to realise the assets of the suspen- If <kd American houses, is far from being in accord at>ce with the fids. Wc understand from those who are best informed bn the subject, that the pipopoci of the assets being eventually realised is even more favorable al present that it was, though moio time may be required than at brsl 1 supposed. No instance has occurred of a pre- ' fercucc bavin i been shown to the claims of those London houses that have not suspended pay ment. Among other errors contained in the 1 extract from the lelior, it was slated that a part- ■ ncr in the house of Barings hail taken his depur turc from America, though no partner in that house, wc are informed, has been in America tor upward of eight years. The Queen was still at Brighton, with a very | numerous attendance of the nobillity. Her majes ty was in public almost every day, either riding or walking. Lord Yarborough, commodore of the yacht squadron, had gone to Portsmouth, with orders to bring round two frigates, in one ol j which the Queen intended making a nautical , excursion—the report of which had, of course, thrown the city and the surrounding country into a state of most exhilarating excitement. A letter his been addressed by the Secretary of the Admiralty to the secretary at Lloyd’s, warning the British ship commanders, on the authority of the American papers, beware of lj)e 1 Texan cruisers, by some of which British mer chantmen aro reported to have been caplued, and desiring the government packets to treat the Texan cruisas pirates. _ | The “dreadful murder and suicide” story .which ( wc copied the other day from the London Globe, ( is declared by tbe Bristol papers to be utterly un- ( true—the pure invention of some penny-a-liner l out of business. We thought as much when we , copied it. ( Sir George Gipps, recently one of the commis- ( sioners for Lower Canada, left London on the 9th of October, for the purpose of embarking for ( New South Wales, to assume ths government of , that colony. _ | The American minister transacted business at the Foreign Office on the 9th ot October. , His Majesty the King of Hanover retains bis | rank as a field-marshal in the British service, to , which ho was raised in 1813. < A new association has been formed in London, called the Electrical Society. Tho address, read at the first meeting, sets forth that whereas the j cultivation of electricity must inevitably confer j the most important benefits on mankind, &c. | therefore the society- is instituted to ensure the co-operation of experimentalists, and the collec , lion of more numerous and explicit data, &c. &c. i The number of professional beggars in London I is estimated at 8000; their receipts are supposed to average 30 shillings sterling per week. At least 7500 of them aro believed to bo impostors, i "Thomas Clarke, alias Robinson, described as I an illegitimate son of George 1V.,” (we quote i from the report in the London Courier,) was brought up at one of the London police offices on a charge of theft, and remanded for examina tion. The intelligence from Spain is a day or two later than wo have before. The Cories had pass ed a vote of censure on Pizarro, late minister of finance.—He resigned, of course, and was suc -1 cecded by Senor I’eroz. Senor BalauZat has dis placed General San Miguel, as minister of war. , The ministers ot jusiice and the interior have also been changed. The now ministers are not ■ members of the Cortes. General Quiroga, commandant of Madrid; re moved the restrictions on tho press, on the 20lh of September, but the city and province still re mained under martial law. Colonel Do Lacy and his companies, reported to have been slut by the Carlisls, had anived safely in Madrid —so it seems they were not ■ shot. Don Carlos, in his rapid flight from before Ma drid, left behind him his set of false teeth—almost ’ an escape “by the skin of his teeth,” * Advices from the army aro to the 17th of Sep , tember; The Don retreating in tie direction of the Ebro, and the Queen’s generals inclose ! pursuit.—The Don Irad ordered all his corps\(t ‘ tirnice to concentrate at Lodosa, on the banks , of the Abro. It is evident that he , tain his ground to the south of that river. Tho marriage-day ol tho ptinccss Mary, daugh ’ ter of King Louis Philippe, was appointed— the 14th of October. The contract, ratified by t ie King of Wirteuiburgh, uncle of the prince, was expected in Paris on the 13th. v Viscount Walsh, editor of T.e Mode, had been i convicted of publishing a portrait of the Duke do Bordeaux, and sentenced to a month of im prisOrimcnl and a .line of 500 francs. The trick ‘ by Which tho portrait was c rried through the '■ ordeal of the censorship, before publication, has boon heretofore described in oar columns. Lnsnosr, Oct. 9. —Evening.—Consols have been without variation all day, and very few of the dealers present in the house. Consols closed „ at 92 jto J, both for money and account; Exclie quer bills were 51s. to 535.; and India bonds 53s to 555. premium. The foreign market was cqual ' ly inactive. The share market was heavy. Tho New York letters of the IGth r It. brought by the Europe packet, aro of great importance, in asniuch as they afford the first indicati ms of an amelioration of the affairs of trade in the U. Slates and of the restoration, probably, of steady and re gular communications between the two countries for the purpose ofcoumierce, as they have hereto, fore existed. They assist, at the same lime, in clearing up the mystciy which had been tluown over the course pursued by the Bank of England in the restoration of this intercourse, and in which as it now turns out, they arc to take the princi pal part. It appears that Capt. Stockton, of tho United States, who has acquired some notoriety of late by the advice he has given to the directors, was enabled during his recent visit to England, to raise a loan to the amount of two hundred and twenty thousand pounds for tho Camden and Am boy Rail Road Co, of which lie deposited £BO,OOO in the Bank of England previous to his depar ture, Against this sum that institution have is sued bills on England in triplicate, of which the c firsts have been deposited in the Bank, and the seconds and thirds taken to New York, to be sold to those merchants who may requise a remit tance to this country, of unquestionable security, which according to tho prevalent belief there, in consequence of recent events, was not to be found. , This distrust was the great obstacle te renewed . commercial intercourse un a large scale, and has 0 led to Ihe clumsy expedient of transmitting specie . backwards and forward, to which the merchants s have been driven for some time past, but Uridgr which commerce can never go on upon a a large e scale. j Though the sum in itself seems small* it is sqp posed that it will yet do much in the restoration ; of confidence, and it is understood to be arranged that the whole of the subscription of .£220,000, [1 made here fur the Camden and Amboy Rail Road, » w.ll be paid as it becomes due, into the Bank of u England, and applied to the same purpose. e Another mode of supplying first rate bills on . England for the use of the New York merchants, [. has arisen out of the disturbed state of the Cana c das, the want of supplies for the public service, 3 through the refractory conduct of the Legislature, ! having compelled drafts on tho English Govern . merit fur the current expenditure us the colony, . which bills have been sent to N. York, as the e nearest and best money market, to be negotiated, t It is to these circumstances, as may bo collected j from the best private letters, and not to any of the e measures expected from Congress, that the im t provement of that money market is to be ascribed r It is rzmarked however, that “the liquidation of , suspended debts cannot proceed very rapidly for . some months to come; our debts at home and aboard must be paid out of the various products 0 of our own soil, and until they come freely to market, it is (dip to expect tliat much progress „ can be made toward lessening the la.go amount of engagements.” The anticipation of any sub c stantial relief from Congress is generally ridicul cd by men of sense and experience, and it is observed that “there is no way to sat things right but to leave them to regulate themselves, j which they will vary quickly do as soon as our 0 cotton lirgins to move toward a market." Tho calculation is, that if Liverpool and Manchester j can afford to give Cd a pound for American cut u ■ ■' i ium— Hi'iwirrMW'witw;* 11 * " lon, that alone will “auifico to bring matters round.” A well-in-formcd merchant, speaking of the trade in bullion between die two countries, says that not more than $2,00,000, on balance, have quitted the U. Stales us the result of the late commercial crisis, neatly as much going one way as the other- From the N. Y. Commercial Ado. Nov. - Specie. —American gold and half dollars G a 0$ premium ; quarter dollars 5 a 0 do ; Mexi can dollars 7ia 7$ do ; five franc pieces SI,OO a SI.OIJ- . Theasurt Drafts. —1 i a premium. Treasure Notf.s. —1J 2 premium. ■' Bickncll’s (Philadelphia) Rcporlct. „of this morning says, “Money for the last vytpk has been less abundant, and (tie demand more lively. The capitalists*,tired of inaction have invested large sums, and are still investing. The public mind is more calm and steady—more confidence is felt in the prolonged existence of tbe various bank charters and a belief is gradually gaining strength, that nothing can retard, the progress of business in the Spring. Sales>pf stogkp at Philadelphia, Nov. G.—B shares Northern Bank of Kentucky, 795. ; 4—, Fire.—A little after 7 o’clock last evening a fire broke out in the third story of the five story store, situated in tho south-west corner of Maid en lane and William streets Tho first floor was occupied by Mr. Isaac Lewis, Junr., as a cloth store and the upper stories by Mr. F. G. Bcrtcau, wholesale fancy warehouse. The only part of the building materially injured is tho ware room of the third story, in which was a large slock of goods, all of which arc greatly damaged both bjr fire and water. The. goods in the other apart ments arc more or less injured by removal and being Wet, ..... H w Mr. Berteau was insured f0r,550,000; but at one o’clock this day he could gi*e us no idea of his probable loss. Mr. Lewis’s loss Is not great; the damage was done by water. He was insured. The building is owned by William Wallace, Esq. The fire companies merit groat praise for their indefatigable exertions in subduing the flames. It is conjectured the fire was caused by the friction of loco-foco matches. —vV. F. Com, We see, by the St. Louis Bullatin of 30th ult that new deputations of Indians are on their way to the scat of the general government. That paper says:— Thirty five Indian Chiefs, under tho direction of.Major John Dougherty, arrived in this city on Saturday evening, and continued their journey to Washington city on last evening. Tho party consists of deputations from the Pawnee Piets, Pawnee Loups, and Pawnee Re publicans of the Pawnee nation, the Omahas, Ottoes, and Missouris. We have seldom seen a finer looking set ol men,with intelligent faces and lino athletic forms. Dressed in the native wild costumes of their different tribes, they (during their peregrimitiohs through the city no doubt wondering, though Indians generally hold it ef feminate to express surpris,) presented quite a picturesque appearance, Wc learn from Major Dougherty that the ob ject of taking these Indians to Washington city, is to afford them an opportunity of witnessing the strength, power, and population of the U. 8. and giving their Great Father, the President, an opportunity to impres upon their minds the necessity of their enforcing, if possible, a strict neutrality among the various tribes, and peace, with all nations. A BILL To be entitled un Act to authorize Limited Partnerships. Sec. 1. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the stale of Georgia, in General Assembly met, and it is hereby enacted by the authority of the same, That limited partnerships for the transaction of any mer cant le, comfnercial, mechanical, manufactur ing or mining business, within this stale, may be formed by two or more persons, upon the terms willi the rights and powers, and subject to the conditions and liabilities herein pre scribed ; but the provisions of this Act shall not be construed to authorize any such part nership for the purpose of Banking or making Insurance. Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, That such partnerships may consist of one or more persons, who shall he culled general partners, and who shall be jointly and severally respon sible as general partners now arc by law, and of one or more persons who shall contribute, in actual cash payments, a specific sum ns capital, to the common stock, who shall be called special partners, and who shall not bo liable for debts of the partnership beyond the fund so contributed by him or them to the cap ita). Kec. 3. And be it further enacted. That th general partners only shall be authorised to liansact business and to sign for the part nership, and to bind the same. Bec: 4. Ariel be it further enacted, That persons desirous of forming such partnership shall make and severally sign a certificate which shall contain— -Ist. The name of the firm under Which such partnership is to bo conducted. 2d. The general nature of the business in tended to be transacted. 3d. The names of all the general and spe cial partners inserted therein, distinguishing which are general and which are special partners, and their respective places ol resi dence. 4th. Tile amount ot capital which cayh special partner shall have contributed to tne common slock. sth. The period at which the partnership is to commence, and the period al which it shall terminate. Sec. 5. And be it further enacted That the certificate shall be acknowledged by the se veral persons signingthe same, before a Judge of the Superior or Inferior Court, ora Justice of the Peace; and sdeh acknowledgment shall be made and certified in the Cattle manner as the ackfidwledgment of conveyances of land. Sec 6. Ana be it further enacted, That the certificate so acknowledged and certificd*shall be filed in the Bftice of the Clerk of the Supe rior Court of the County in which tho princ - pal place of business ofthe partnership shall be situated, and shall also bo recorded by him, at large, in a book to be kept for that pur. pose, open to public inspection. If the part nership shall have places of business situated in different counties, a transcript ofthe certi ficate and of the acknowledgrnentthercof.duly certified by the Clerk in whose office it shall be filed, under his official seal, shall be filed and recorded in like manner in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court in every such County. Sec. 7. And be it further enacted, That at the time of filing the original certificate, with tbe evidence ofthe acknowledgment thereof, as before directed, an affidavit of one or more of the general partners shall also be filed in the same office, statng that the sums specifi ed in the certificate to have been contributed by ea:h ofthe special partners to the com mon stock, have been actually and in good faith paid in cash. Sec. 8. And be it further enacted That no such partnership shall be deemed to have been formed until such a certificate as is herein mentioned, shall have been made, ac knowledged. filed and recorded, nor nn'il an affidavit shall have been filed as above direct ed; and if any false statement be made in such cert ficale or affidavit, all tho persons interest ed in such parlmrdi p shall be liable tor all 1 the engagements thereof, as general partners. Sec. 9. And be it further enacted, That the patfiters shill publish the terms of the psrt i nership, when registered, for at least six weeks : immediately after auch registry, in one news. , paper in the County in which the pl ace of , business is situated, and in one newspaper in i the City of Milledgeville. If no newspaper should be published in the Country in which the business is to bo transacted, the notice shall be published in two. newspapers in the City of Milledgeville, as above required; and ifsucli publication be .not made, the partner ship shall be deemed general. Sec. 10. And be it further enacted, That the affidavits of the publication of such notice by llte pfififfefs,’ publishers or editors of the news papers in which the same shall be published, may be filed iu tho office of the Clerk of the Superior Court in which the ccrlifiua e has been filed, and shall be evidence of the facts therein contained. Sec. 11. And be it further enacted, That every renewal or continuance of such part nership beyond the time originally fixed for its duration shall be certified, acknowledged and recorded, and an affidavit of a genera) partner' b'c made and filed, and notice be given in the manner herein required fur its original formation j and every such partnership Which shall be otherwise renewed or cnnlinued shall be deemed a general partnership. Sec. 12. And be it further enacted. That every alteration which shall be made in the names of the partners, in the nature ot the ■ business, or in the capital or shares thereof, or in any other matter specified in the origi • nal certificate, shall be deemed a dissolution ofj the partnership; and every such partner ship, which shall in any manner be carried pn after any such alteration shall have been made, shall be deemed a general partnership , unless renewed as a special partnership, ao- F cording to the provision of the last section ; provided such alteration was made with the , privity of the special partner or partners. , Sec. 13. And be it further enacted, That the business of the partnership shall bo con ducted under a firm, in which tho names of • the general partners only shall be inserted, 1 without the addiction “word Company,” or any other general term ; and if the name of any special partner shall be nsec! in such firm, , with his privity, ho shall bo deemed a general partner. Sec. 14. Ail be it further envied, That suits in relation to the business of tile part nership may be brought and conducted by and against the general partners in the same manner as if there were no special partners, and it shall be optional with tho parties to include in such suits any special partner or partners who may have become general part ners by not having complied with the provis ions of this Act. Sec. 15. And be it farther enacted, That no sum which any special partner shall have contributed to the capital stock, shall be with drawn by him, or paid or transferal! to him, in the shape Os dividends, profi*, or otherwise, at any time during the continuance of tlie partnership, but any partner may annually receive lawful interest on the sunt so contrib uted by hint, if the payment of such interest shall not reduce the original amount or such \ caplial; and if, after the payment of snch in terest, any proli’s shall remain to bo divided, he mayjalso receive his portion of such profits. Sec. 10. And be it further enacted, That ifit shall appear, that by the payment of in terest or profits to any special partner, the ori ( ginal capitol has been reduced, the partner receiving the same shall bo bound to restore r tho amount necessary at make good his origi i nal share of the original stock. I Sec. 17. And be it further enacted, That a 1 special partner .may, at any time examine into - the slate and progress ofthe partnership con - coins, and may advise as to their management; I but he shall not transact any business on 3 account ol the partnership, nor be employed t for that purpose as agent or otherwise. If he - shall interfere, contrary to these provisions,lie 1 shall bo deemed a general partner; but he may - act as the Attorney or Counsellor at law or in % equity for the partnership, without being liable to become a general partner, t Sec 18. And be it further enacted, That the 0 general partners shall be liable to account to i, each oilier, and to tho special partners fortheir i- management of the business ofthe fi in, both d in law and equity, as other parlors now are, in law and equity, s Sec. 19. And he it further enecled, That e every partner who sha.l be guilty ol any fraud e in the a Hairs or business ot the partnership, c shall be liable civilly to the party injured to i. the extent of his damage; and shall also bo liable to an indictment fur a m stint anor, t punishable by fine or imprisonment, or both, 1 at the discretion of the .Superior Court, by ttliich he slnll be tried. Wec. 20, And be it f arther enacted, That, t every sale, assignment or transfer of any of p the properly or effects of such partnership, e made by such partnership when insolvent or in contemplation of insolvency or alter, or m h cointemplation of, the insolvency of any part ner, with the intent of giving a preference to - any creditor of such partnership or insolvent partner over other creditors of such partner - ship; and every judgment coalcssed, lien g created, or security given by such partnership, 1 under the like circumstances and with theliko . intent, shall be void against the crediton-Jof such partnership, i „ v Sbc. 21. And be it further enacted. That j every such sale, assignment, or transfer of any of the property or effects of a general oi > special partner, made by such general, or spe t cial partner, when insolvent, or in contem plation of insolvency, or after, or in conlem i plation of the instdvccncy ofthe partnership, - with the intent of giving to any creditor of } his own* or of the partnership, a preference l over creditors Os the partnership, every judge- I inent confessed, lien created, or security giv -3 en, by any such partner, finder the like cir . cumstances, and with like intent, shall be 3 void as against the creditors of the partner* I slop. Sec. 22. Atiil be it further enacted. That - every special partner who shall violate any I provision of the two last preceding sections, t or who shall concur in nr assent to any such . violation by the partnership, or by any indi ■ vidual partner* shall be liable as a genera’' I partner. Sec. 23. And be it further endcled, That in I case ofthe insolvci cy or bankruptcy ol the I partnership, no special partner shall, under 1 any circumstances, be allowed to claim, as f a creditor* until the claims of all the other i creditors ol the partnership shall he satisfied. Sec. 24. Ami be it further enacted That no t dissolution of such partnership, by the ads of t the parties, shall take place previous to the , time specified in the certificate of its forrna -3 tiun, or in the certificate of its renewal, until t a notice of such tn'ended dissolution shall - have been filed and recorded in the Clerk’s i Office in which the original certificate was - recorded, and published at least once a week ] for four weeks in a newspaper printed in each of the counties where the partnership has pla j ccs of business; but if no newspaper no prin j ted in such Counties, then the notice shall he • published for four weeks in two newspapers,!!! - the City of Milledgeville, which notice shall i bo signed by all the partners or their repre - sentutives. Eloquence and I’ietv. — The following ) gem is tne closing part of an address by the Rev. (Professor) Ware, Jr., to the students ol B Harvard College on the last Sunday of the . Academical year, "Wo look on your departure young friends, with aifectmnate and anxious interest. Ne ver again shall we meet you in nil these sa cred services. The ties which have bound ns together sfi long, in the daily offerings to God and the weekly sympathies of the thb bath, aro now to bo severed* to be united again, may wo hope,—or must wo fb.tr I —in the perfect enjoyment of that eternal Sabbath, in which the toils of earth are to be ended and the perfected spirit to he blest. “Meantime, for you, and for us, the work of life goes un, may it be our daily and unin terrupted growth in knowledge and virtue, till we reach the completeness of our moral and spiritual being! We commend you to your labors and trials. We pray fur your success and your happiness. Wc charge you to he faithful to your great trusts. Do not be satisfied with the education you have received, nor live in tho midst of infiinite knowledge as if you had already attained. Do not propose to yourselves any merely earthly object of pursuit, as if any thing mor tal was worthy to content the immortal. Live for usefullncss and society. Society is crying out for ihe aid of perfectly developed men, for the service of minds, well proportioned nnd well principled. Answer its call. Uphold it* institutions. Stand fast tor its rights. Plead for its laws. Arm yourselves stoutly against all tyranny of one or of many, against life, or liberty, of right. Do something, do all you can, to be true counsellois to that sov ereign power, public opinion, and to save the land from being ruined by the vice of the ignorant, or the knavery ot the knowing. Wherever you go, carry the upright front of the true scholar, tho frankness and fairness of tho true philosopher, the boldness and meek ness of the holy apos(,!u, tho self-sacrificing devotion ofthe sainted martyr. Then you shall ho the terror of the ill doing, and stay, for a time al least, the perils ofthe people. “Last of all, and above all, consecrate yourselves to God. You aro not your own; you have no strength of yourselves; conse crate yourselves to God. Work for him.— Ally yourselves, to his counsels and liis pur poses and secure,the co-operation of his will. 11l the ;l e op nib of the spirit commune with him and thus nourish yourself in all goodness. In the affectionate imitation of Jesus Christ, commend yourselves to his blessings, and so find strength and peace. In the hope and prospect of Eternity, toil on, rejoining and perservoing, through good and evil report, know.ng that your witness is in Heaven, your record on high. And then, when the day of 1 so shall he dune, its discipline ceased, its preparation ended, then may your ripened spirits pass to the final award of tho good and faithful; then may you find, one and all, that you have indeed attained, are at length per fect, and among tho glorified immortals of Heaven, arc partakers ofthe prize of the high culling Christ Jesus, We part from you at tho Altar here, let us meet you at Hie throne hereafter.” L.vfiS Cases op Ausenoe op Mind. A young i.ady in New York, inlending to go to a hull, left her slippers behind, and in a state of mental abstraction, drew on her grandfather’s white topped boots. Site did not perceive her mistake until she began to dance and crtlslied a corn on her partner’s toe ! A wagoner in Vermont, intending to go to market,lifted his horse into the wagon & tack led himself in tho traces. Ho did not discov er Ins mistake until lie undertook to neigh! A pysician In Boston on Tuesday lust gave one of his patient’s a piece of brown paper and threw the medicine into the fire. He did nut discover his mistake until tlie sick man began to recover from his illness! A man in Lowell, In attempting lo hang himself, forgot to pul the rope round his neck, and jumped off the barrel into a mud hole He did not discorer Ins mistake until he at tempted to kick I A man in New York, intended lo go to church, dodged into a restorato ur. Ho tlid not discover Ins mistake until hewas too drunk so mend ihe matter! A man in Providence, during n state of mental abstraction, called on an editor to col led a debt. He did not discover his mistake until the editorshowed him a black list as long as a deacon’s face. -.-»«*■«uwiwrv m ag.4t»niroi»-tarxw>tinyjif4uianwußmii BALTIMORE MARKR r, Nov, 7. AM kinds of UrcmUtuJfi have ris n in wrier. I'l'jiir.—Viu'cs are tending upward*. Hairs of lld wnnl struct from storm liuvn hruii mu dr t I fcH H7 1-- a 11, The market is uns tiled to-day, and an' aeeiiratr store price cun scarcely hr (jiveii. hut a quotation «.f'Jin v ry mar it. Thu wnjjoii price in also unsettled, rang ing from 8,50 to 8,7’. Hah s of City Mills Klour were made yesterday nt&8,75. To-day ho!dt rs all ask W. Crnin.— An advance of ahunt ten cm nls p- r bushel in the price of Wheal has taken place. Y* st* rday salt sos good to prim-* reds w< re made at l/U, ami to day several parcels of red were sold al »f white wheats at 2 u 2,01 for good to vt ry prime. tSiii'iiic Intelligence. S \ v,v.\ S ah, Nor. O.—Arr brig .Kentucky, Hatch, Havana; b(eainboats Morris, Augusta; Dim can M'llae, phiihrick; do, Cld, hrigi Uen Mclntosh, Chapman, nullimorej Clnr isa Ann, Mansoii t *Huvre; schr Avon, Widgeon, Provi dence. CHARLKHTOV, Nov, 10.—Arr brig Sun, I{r,wn New York; sc lira Vesper, We herell, New York; Ann Huphiu, K«mu tt, Norfolk; Delaware, Brookfield, Rich mond. Went to sea, brig Muses, Drown, N York; sehrs Alim as n, Randall, Key,West; Agnes; Houston, M Augustine, Herald,C ok, Jacksonville; steam packet iioslon, Ivy, Wiliui ngton, N (J. w ' To rciiclitix! fIIHE Trustees ol the Thomanlon Fctnolo Acndo- JL my, wiuli to employ a Lady of good education experience in leaching, lo take charge of *aid Academy: they would preler a gentleman and lun lady. None need apply hut »uch iih ctm he wel recommended tor literary nltainmonta and huccchm m leaching; for auch very liberal wages will bo guar ahftcod. Applications intest be made Boon. THUS FLCWKLUN.i THON TH WIS ATT, j CIIBALLKN, U v , WM LOW, f Tfuslood. OC GIBSON, <1 WM A COBB, J Thomauton, Go , Oc/17. utit Oglethorpe House. COI.CMBUM GEORGIA. f|MIK Biibacri ber would inform Ilia Irienda and J- tbe public generally, that ho haa purchaaod and ha« pcrwonally taken charg *of llii.s cstuhliHh merit, and intends to devote Ins entire attention lo the comfort and accommodation ol suck as may honor him with their patronage. Jlc ieels assured that lorig Experience has enabled him lo give us general satisfaction in every line of his business as cun bo given in this city,and ho pledges himsefl that no effort of Ins shall be npured in making tins one ofthe most deairuble houses of public nnd private entertainment in tbe Southern country. The build ings ure all new, large,airy,and convenient; tho lur rniure new, good, and well suited to the cslabli h inent. His table, (and tins, is an important item with a weary way taring man ) sboll bo at all tin.es supplied wiil» every variety that tbe city or country market can afford: bis bar is filled, and shall bo kepi filled, w ith the best of liquors, and bis stables garnished with clean mid wholesome provender; in short nothing shall be wanting, so fur us depends on *he proprietor, his assistants and servants, to make the I louse peace;til and worthy ol patronage. Tho Uglethrope House is situated m 11 business part ofthe City al the corner of Oglethorpe and Ran dolph streets, —where tne undersigned would gladly see Ins old friends and makemw acquaintances. WM. 1* McKKK.N. October 31—w6l ON the first Tuesday so December next. Will bo sold at the Court h mse iu Appling, Columbia i county, under an ord.r ofthe Honorable the Court of Ordinary of said comity, all the Lunds belong ing toOuuswuy Bo ill, deceased W. B litULL, fiuard’n. get ’-ifi Wtd 29U W r ILLlLL be s Id, at the Mark t hotiao in flic town ol Louisville, on the fir.si Tuesday in January next, u ilbm the usual hours of sale, lo . the highest bidder, and iigreeablo to an order'd the Honorable Inferior Court of Jrilerson county, when > silling fur ordinary purposes. Oho //limited and . LigSny Acres, more or less, of Oak mid Hickory I land, about two milesfr iu Louisville on lha An* gusta road, improved and adjo niug lands of Gamble, Halley, Hubert, and others; being land whereon j the laio William Mnhson ol said county lived and I died,and sold as belonging to his ostaio. To ms ol saloon the day. L. BLU.RV DON TICK, Adm’r. wi*h tho will annexed, ocl 25,1837 wtds 251 Law Notice. f 11 (IK iiedorsignrd having united in the practice 1 ol the LAW,offer their services to ihe public. They will attend the courts of /Muscogee, Marion, Stewart, Randolph, Early, Baker, Loo and Sumtor, of the Chuliahoocheo Circuit; Houston, of the Flint Circuit; and Twiggs, Pulaski, Lowndes, Thomas, Decatur and Dooly, of tho Southern Circuit. Pu siuess entrusted to their care will meet with prompt attention. Their office is in Americus, Sumter county, w hero one of them muv always be found when not absent on business. LOTT WAUUEN, WM H CRAWFOUD. oct 10 237 vvlf WILL bo sold, un the first Tuesday in Decern her next, al the Court i/ouse in Niewort count j, under an order of the Interior Court of Co lumbia county, silling for ordinary purpoi.es, Unp liOt of Land, number two hundred and tvvehiv eight (228), in tho eleventh (ll) district, of Lee, n»w Stewart county, containing 2024 acres, belonging lo Ihe estate of Nivinu T. Alagruder, deceased : sold or distribution. Terms cash. GEO. M. iVIAGRUDER, Adm’r. •ept 30, 1837. \m I 211 WILL he sold before the courthouse door in the county of Stewart, and town of Lop kin, on the first Tuesday in December next, in the usual hours ol sale, to tho highest bitltlor, and n greeable lo li» order ot tho Honorable the Inferior Court of Jefferson county, when sitting for ordinary purposes, Lot of Ltu.d eo Tilly Tour (i»4) in tile 21st district of formerly Leo now ISlcwart cou-.fy, containing 202 i acres more or less, ihe proper ty of ihe late Stephen Cotter, of Jefferson coun ty, deceased. Tcnntf mi (Iu day of sale. AB//LEY J'i/ILIPN, mhu’r. sept 26, 1837 wkl 22J WILL he sold, at the market house,in the Town of Louisville, Jefferson county, on the first Tuesday in December next, within the tu-ual hours of side and agreeable loan order of ihe i/oaoiuble Justices cf the Jiderior Court of said county ol Jefferson, when silting lor ordinary purposes, .Old acres, more or less oi ‘swamp nnd pine Land on Ogeechee River, about three miles below Luuisx illc, un the south side of the same, adjoining hands ol P B Connelly, John W Bothwell and others, Ihe properly of Nieiliug 1). Eason, deceased; also un ihe sumo day,ami al the same place, a negro woman, slave, nunmd Nan, about CU years of age, belonging to said estate also—Terms on the day ot sale. BE.NJA/i N. CARS WELL, adm’r. sept -.0, 1837 wid 220 WILL he sold at Iho market hmise in the low n of Louisville, Jefferson county with in Hie usual hours of suie, to Lite highest bidder, on the Hihl Tuesday iu December nex , agreeable to an or ler of the II morable interior Court oi said county, when sitting lor ordinary purposes acres ol oak and hickory Land, on the waters ol Chuvor’s clock, adjoining lands of J’.iiu A. Par son and others, the properly ol the late Janus Cook deceased. Terms on the day. JO//M R. COOk', adm’r. MAKV ANN COOK, admix. septß6, 1837 uiil W ILL lio gold on Hi" IK* Tiuwdny «" l ) ""'’in. lior nrxi.ni tliu c"in t lions" m tho town „f Waynesboro’, between lb" nsunl bours of sale, one tract of land belonging lo the estate of William Rollings, dec’d, containing eight, hundred acres, , mote or less, adjoining lands of William Bennett, Win Patterson, and Ralph Pen row, dec’d Sold for the benefit of tho heirs of said (Incensed. Terms of sale on the day, JOHN ROLLINS,) , L RUFF, < A “ m oi l 6j 1837 23f> wills WILL bo sold, on ihe first Tuesday in Jamirry next, in the usual hours of sale, ugroeablo to an order of the honorable Interior Court Ot Jeffer son county, when sitting for ordinary purpoN-.N, to the highest bidder, at (lie market bouse in the town of Louisville, two hundred and fifty nine acres of pine laud, adjoining 'ands of James Slone, E Brown and others,belonging to the estate ot the lute Joseph A lien, of Maid county, deer a rod. Terms on the day of sale. SAMUEL HADDEN, Adm’r. ocl 20,1837 210 wld VOREEABT.E to an order fr m the hon. ilia Inferior Court of IP rron romttv, \t hen Hitting iih a ourt of Ordinary, will be s Id on tho lira [ Tuesday in December, within the legal hours ol s ilo, before tbe Court House* do i in Warren comi , ly, part of the real estate ol Joseph Rob ’rts, late of Hancock county, deceased. 'Terms on the day. I BURCH M. ROBEUTN,) ... . JESSE M ROBERTS. ( '***• . HO pi 19, I. . wUI s*l AGREE A RLE to nn order of the 7/oro abb' (he Inferior Court of Jefferson county, when sitting for ordinary purposes, will ho sold, on the first ' Tuesday in January next, at the Market Hmise • in the Nwnof Lmnsvil'o, Jefferson county, between s * theusnal hours of sale, two hundred acres of Lund . in said county, on the waters of Big Creek, adjoin ing lands of George Stapleton am* ol liars, belong . ingtoiho minors of James Trimble, jun., doe’d.— 'Terms of sale on the flay. • JAMES A CARSWELL, ndm'r. nov l, 1837 wtd 3 I ON (he first Tuesday in Deotnnhor next, will oe sold, nt tho court house in’ Burke coim'y, un der on order of the Conn of Ordinary of said coun ty a tract of Land consisting of seventy-one acres, adjoining land ol John Lodge in s lid county. Sofu for the benefit of the minor heir. MILLEY COLEMAN, ndmx’r At Cuard’n. sept 20, 1827 wld 329 AGREEABLE to an order ofthe Honorable . Inferior Court of Columbia county, when ait - ting for ordinary purposes, will he sold, rn the first Tuesday in December next, nt Zcbulon, Pike coun ty, 202',. acres df Land, No hO, in the 7th District, • fqrmcHi'Monro • now Pike county. Also, on the ’ rfiuie day, nt McDonough, 20*ii acres of Land, No » 2fi(), 12th District,Henry county. All sold ns tho property of Mark P Davis, Into of Columbia county, deceased ; sold for the benefit of the heirs of said deceased. DAV/D iiOLLIMON, Ex’r. sept ?7,1837 wld 5 AGREEABLE tonn ordqr o/.ilm Inferior C«ur . of Burke county, when siting for ordinary pur poses, will he sold, on the first Tuesday in Decern her next, at Waynesboro’, Burke county, between the usual boms of sale. Seventy Acres of Land, more or loss, adjoining lands of John Lodge, Mitly Coleman, nnd ot hois, belonging to Julian Coleman, a minor. Terms of sale on (be day. MILLV COLEMAN, Gunrd’n. sepllfi, 1837 wid 219 ALL persons indebted to the estate of Ahrabarn Walker, deceased, are required to settle the same by or before tbe Ist day of January nex f , ns the Executor is determined to close the business of said estate, and can consequently allow no longer indulgence. T. M. BERRIN'/.’, Alt’v, for John Whitehead, Ex’r. oct 25. 1837 wfit 250 AGREEABLE (o an order of the Inferior Court of Lincoln county, when sitting for ordinary 1 purposes, will he sold on fhp. M Tuesday in Decem ber next, nt Lincoln'on, between (be usual hours of sale, Fifteen Negroes mid tho land belonging to Win Siiddutfi, dec’d. Sold for tho benefit of the hciis ami ciedilore. Terms at sale. W. W. STOKES, AdnTr. sept 11,1837 214 cmvSt AGREEABLE to an order ofthe Inferior Court ol Burke County, when silting for ordinary pur poses, will bn su'd on (lie first Tuesday i/i Decem ber nrxf. at Waynesboro*, Burke county, between the usual hours of sale, Four Hundred Arms nt Land, more or less, adjoining lands of E W Evans, W B Douglass, and others, belonging to Joseph Mu dray, a minor. Terms of sole on (h'* day. GEORGE M ADR AY, Gunrd’n. sept IC, 1837 wtd 219 AGREEABLE to on order of the Infeiior Cour of Burke county, while silling for ordinary purposes, will be sold, < n llm first Tuesday in I)J cember next, at the court house in the town of Waynesboro’, between the usual hours of s.il-- 2f‘o acres oIT-and,rn »re or lesi adjoining Innih of Toiivr r Dillar diind Laac Earner, belonging to John r t n J Mary Ami //udton, heirs of John and Behcccu f/iitmon, lato of Burke county, deceased. Term sale on ch« i iv. EPHRAIM FONDER, JrGitfrd’n. sept 27, wtd 228 SnhsinVr will leave liin present plnc« .EL «»f residence between tlie 10th and lAth of next December, to Heltloon hi* plantation on the Chats* lionclie Kivrr and will oiler at) uhtic sale, on the Hlh of J)< erinl <*r f n bet of KlarkHmiili’* Took, plan-, lation Imp)* niciiU, u quantity of (’om anti Fodder, and various nrlu les of House Furniture &c.—nil, <‘.\f *i't Iho Corn aid Fod Jer, will he sold on a cred it ot twelve monthN. lie ako offers for sale the fol lowing true h of Land at the reduced price which he now occupies in Columbia county, on tho waters of the Big-Kiokce Cre- k, viz. Fight Hundred Acres lest quality oak and luckory, lying on both Hides of iho Big-Kiokco C’retk, on which is a now, two-story Dwelling i/oUsc, fifty hy twenty feet, a good Kitchen and Frnoko //ous *, Negro Houses, a good Barn, smbk s and Giu-house, with a good sell of (iin-gcor, all now, ni.d a tnost beautiful si Cunt ion with a delightful spring of waicrund very healthy for five thousand dollars cash, or one ihiid cosh, the balance in two animal instalments >v;th interest from the date. On this tract there is a nwadow c,oiv-v taining twenty-five acres, cultivated this year in Corn, and would, any seasonable year, produce fifty, bushels of corn per acre, and a good deal of land now under c ultivation would make from eight hun dred to one thousnni pp.unda of {Soft! Cotton (any good crop your) per rt(>; Therp arc title:-st liiree* hundred acres in the woods well limbeied, first rate land. SoVcn hundred and fifty four acres, first quality oak and hick jry,.H>imug the above, three hundred acres wood land, hcavjly timbered; on this tract there is one field, sixty nores fresh land, now in Collorf. I made Inst yea* on that part of it cultiva ted in Cotton, one thousand pounds of fcfced Cotton per acre; a good Dwelling House and Kitchen, a, number of good Negro Houses, Barn and uhlcs, &e. and a first rule Cin-houao,so by 40 feel, with a good Ciin and miming-gccr; for the whole 1 will lako lour thousand dollars. The Kighkboro* road runs through tins tract 23 miles from Augusta. .. About four hundred acres good Fine UM(l,rohwl w ill: oak mid hickory, two miles from the above on the same road, My present pla< oof leddencc, 150 acres cleared, a good Dwelling 7/ousc, with other necessary build ings ; for lids place I will take five dollars per acre. 710 acres first rate Fine Land, mixed with oak and hickory, lies w ell ; u number of years ngo there was erected on this tract a Gust and Saw Mills at the conjunction of the two main prongs of the Hig- Kio keel reek, which is a good site, within three miles of the Georgia Kail Bond; 150 acres in (del field, the land first rale, the balance in woods, heavily limbered ; the price five thousand dollars.. About 2200 acres Fine Land,.lying on one of tho main forks of the Big-Kinked reck, on which is a Saw Mill that could ho pul in operation with a little expense, w ithin one nua u hall miles of the Bail Bond ; there is helwei n six and seven hundred acres ol first rate planting land, lying remarkably well* id' in a body, mixed with oak and hickory ; about 150 acres cleared, the balance in woo ls, well tiuir bcicl. For'this tract I will lake Ihioj dollars per ,U And also, ono other trad of good Fine land, lies wi 11, mixed with oak and hickory wood, nmd, containing 675 icros, joining the uhovo and iho tnc-t on which 1 reside; price two thousand dollars. Tln‘ payments of llio w hole Iho same ns Hie first. A linal.prdoseriplionisdiioiiu.il unnecessary, ns no gciiih-iaon wilt purchase witlioul viewing premises. 1 I..ive pot those lands lima low. wishing lo soillndore I lonvn. Any planter llmt tuny wish lo purchase a good tractol lan ,in n healthy situa r lion, mill mar one ol the best markets in the world 11,.- ,|,c event staple of our coimlry, uro invited tu cnji ami I w ill sell him a gri at bargain. IwilJdis |) ise of tbo above ill any way lo suit purchasers, bill) ill! 1 not sell 111-loro the Blit of I ocomlior ii,ivi I will either rout or sell to the highest bidder .h-.l'v /ACII. WILLIAMS. •"'oe; 3t. y ' * st U/iL/-bo sold, on » he first Tuesday in January next, between Iho usual hours ol.kulo before the Court House Omr, by order ofthtihon. the |u r lerifir Court off'ohtmhia county, when sitting for ordiury purposes, Iho whole of the and No grocH b. longing i» Iho heirs of William IVhil : ombe # dcceu«cd, ccnsisting of two small tracts of land m Columbia county, to wit: seventy one acres, mon or less,oak mid hickory land, adjoining Jam. hG Stallings and others,on .Savannah River; eighty two urns, more or less, prime land, adjoin ing .Mm Howard and James G. tsiullingk on Rocky ore* k. Also, throe negroes, lo wit—Amy an old woman; Change, a woman; and London a follow,lobe sold lor iho benefit of the heirs of said dcc’d. Terms made known at the sale. GABRIEL JONES. Tnihtc.o in virtue of his office of the htiis ol Wm. Wiiilcomb dec’d. nov 2’ 1m:17 wid 257 OF.OtihlA,) Court ofOrdinury, S crivm countu $ September Term 1837. . L| FUN applii alien of Alexander F. Dopson.ndmi ' nitirub’r du hom? non,of iho estate Green ft. I’oarcu dic'd..slating lint lit lias ftjlly administered said (-state and praying cifniion ibrleiers dismissory, it is on motion ordered, that tlieelerk do irsuen cita tion requiring all persons to shew cause why the rjnnto shall not be graiifod—nud that the sumo he publish :d once a month fornix mouths. A true extract from the minutes, this 12lh day of September, IHJ7. JOSHUA i'EUPY, cl’k. nov. 4 rnfirn 25!J Public Ssitc. raiill-; thnnswiek I,and Co offer (hr sale, from .11, one hundred lo two hundred well selected 'I ho sale commences at Brunswick, on ,1/CLND, Y ll.n Uight ihiy of .1 niimry, lH3d, midor. tin. superir., u iidencoof iho Directors,'or an Agi-nl appointed for I hul purpose. '1 ho lorms of sale will ho— (>nc Kith Cosh, l! “ ono year. ** two yoarn. ’* “ I hreo years. “ “ four yours. ■>. ■ Thokisl pnyniont will horcmitlfd on any Lot, on which ihoro shall hooreolcd and nunploiod wilhm ono yoarf r ' in ihudatc ofsak-, o substantial lions.; or Store, nol loss th-n t!u fiwlfront, by lit) in depth, and at least I wo slonogv Other terifls i.i ho maun known at iho lima and place of sale. liy order of tho Directors. JiDIV. liil.DKt;i)OK„Ron’l Agent, oel 25 wills 2/50 W f1.1.h0 .old,nl Ihe market hne.so in the town i,f l.uiiisville, .lefleisnn Coiinly, ngri caholo an order of the I lor,ura.h.'e Superior foiirl of said county w hen silling for ordinary purposes, in tho usual hours of sale, and to ihe highest bidder, on the; first Tuesday in January next,two negro men slaves, viz: Jerry,about fitly years ol age, and Isaac,about twenty five years old, the properly 'of tile latoSsth IPasoti. deceased. Terms on ihc day of sale, IIUYAMT KUI-I UKD, adni'r. oct 16,181)7 will 2(2 Notice. IT ih with much surprise lhat I lately l.'vn. llmt ihcro is demands against the late (inn Os Hailey A drover I hold iho obligation hf tho Inte l. H’ (/rover, doeM , for the prompt payment of nil Claims against the late tinned Hailey At Drover. I believed the lights were all paid long ngo, having been so inlormcd. I hereby notify all persons holding such claims, lhat unless they arc prosonhd according to law, to the Kxeeulors or Administrators ol tho estate of the late 1.. 11. Grover,dec’d. for payment I'shall not consider myself hound lo pay,them. 11. H. llAlLta. Elbcrton, Aug.2s, 1837. / Tho Washington News, will publish the nhovx once a month for throe mouths scp. 1 206 3ln » months after dale, I will make application 3 to the Honorable the Inferior Court of .Colum bia county, whensiltingtsa Comt ol ordinary for I filers dismi.-snry, from the limber Administration of the Estate of John Dozier late of said County Deceased, I hereby, require ail and singular tho kindred and creditors of said deceased, io file their objections if o.iy they have, in the afire of said . court( witliin the time p.escrihsd by Lai\ to ■ause why said I idlers should not he JAMES E. DO/1h It I'.xr. ime 5 1337 131 of John Dozier, dec'd. 4 (/KF.EAHLE to an order of the Ilonoraldo In- I\ (oriorCnurl of Columbia county when sitting for ordinaiy purposes, wilt he sold,on the first I in's 4 day in Decemla r next, at the Conn House door tn Murray county, Lot number ninety four (‘JD in the twenty fifth (85) District, .Second ;2) section of said courtly formerly Ch- rokee. Also on Ih ■ same day at tho Cmrt Wnise door in Wn'ker coimiy. Lot number one hundred and twen- IV five (1-5! 1,1 the ninth (U) District ofilie fourth (4) Adi | raid county formerly Cher.dme Mv„ on Hie same day at Taj Hon in Hu-rakce ■ '.-o'.l I, I n'l.nl- •' rl 'ft I.Tmlr, d and s-viy four /ol") in "the filiccnlli ; liLliisttict ol the steond (2) Section ofsairl copaty. . All sold as fill! properly oftha orphans of l.cmun lj.j„ u ,1-cM , f.r the benefit of said orphans. AHNEK I*. KOliE’i I’SO.N. f/u-r' n eng 30,1357 - 0i w 4 / i