Newspaper Page Text
RHNEBS REC®2<I>ES
VOL SI.
& aj'lXs) I
-
An Independent Republican Newspaper, Published I
<ftt Auraria, Lumpkin County, Georgia, devoted to the
preservation of the Union, and Sovekeiontt of the i
States. The sycophant of no Party—the slanderer
‘d no Individual the friend of Ja<i.sON.
' pchlished evj:bt Saturday morning,
By 11. SI. <4ATHRICiIIT.
Terms Three Dollars per annum w hen paid in ad
vance oral fonrdollars, it not paid until the end of
the year.
No paper will l;c discontinued, but at lire option of
li’ie Editor, to any subscriber in arrears.
Advertisements and Job Work will be executed at
the customary prices.
Communications to the Editors must be postpaid to
entitle them to attention.
No subscription received for less titan a year.
’ EXECUTORS AND ADMINISTR VFORS DUTY
Notice to Debtors and Creditor? to Lie publishep
six weeks. Prince's Digest, [rage 157.
All intended Sales oi goods and chatties, lielonging
to testators or intestates goods and chatties, shall be
published in two or more public places in the parish
| county! where such effects are to be sold, and in the
gazette, at least fortv days before the day of such in
tended “ale.—t'/zir/ 151.
All sales to be between the hours of ten and font
o’clock, and if continued from day to day. notice to
be given thereof on the first day of sale. — ibid 1(17.
.Sales of real property Io be outlie first Tuesday in
the month, at the place of public sales,after sixty days
publication.— ibid 171.
Application for Letters of Dismission published six
months.— ibid It‘>B.
ESTRAYS.
To be advertised by the Clerk of the Inferior Court
SHERIFFS
That advertise with us are notified that to make
their sales legal, those for April must appear on the
first day of March.
For May, by the fifth of Aptil.
' For June, by the third day of May.
For July, by the thirty-first day of May.
For Ang’ist, by flic filth day of July.
For September, by tin- second day of August.
For t tetober by the sixth day of September.
For November, by tin- fourth day of October.
For December, by the first day of November.
*■ Persons indebted to the Intelligencer are notified
that we will receive in payment, Bills of any denomi
nation on any oi the solvent Banks of this State.
PROPOSE. S
For publishing <i new wrckly Newspaper, at Auraria,
(ieorgia, Io be entitled
Tin: miner* recorder
SVY LN Till. WEST.
In the publication of this Paper, the Editor will from
f lime Io time, lurni-h the public with all the informa
tion he may be enabled to procure, in relation to the
pn.g.ess ol'the Mim s. In addition to whu h. he w ill
shortly he fttrnished w ith a -cries ot Essays, written
t>v I .iterarv < i cutie men who have taken it ( o illogical
view ofthv country, in which will be shew n the com
plete arrangement <>t the dillerent Strata ot earths and
rock* forming Hi's ittlercsiiiig section of country, and
in wh’it kind tbdd i- mo-t i-ually found. The l.di
f ... al all time* l«> I"’"! T‘ S MlD£:
information as will keep up a cotislant investigation
ot the x arion- minerals lon nd in (his count ry.
11l the way I I Miscellaneous matter, h<- will make
the best selections in his power both of a domestic
lift foreign nature
As regards the ( mlil : riil course of this paper, the
Editor will riidimwr to pursue a liberal couise keep
ing Rl nh times hi'colit.uU- open to the discussion o
political subjects, wliieli ail- or mil} be ot interest to
the country.
In rd ili'm to hi' own politic.il opinions, he con
sider. tin in to be sin h a< have, been maintained in the
Southern .■states, from the adoption ot the Federal
I'oii'titiHion »loWu to tin' pre'Ciil time. Hr l.elicxe
that Federal eucront low tils, -!• mid be guardcu
agiinst with xigileiwe and rep. lied with proin|Hm—
Yt-.f, however, in contrndme t-w rhe Riglits ot the
States, he cannot go totlie i-xtraoi im.ny ami danger
ous extent of some of the polili< nies m a ■'ister Mate ;
because he believes ll Would nltimnl.lv end in the de
htnirtion ofthe gov. rnrn.-nt and di its right’
Hi* opinions however tie considers as nothing mote
I than the opinion' ot any other individual, lie will
therefore endeavor to a« i the part <d a faithful Jour
nslist without hritu *'»bsri vieiit to the view* ot mix
parts . leaving his paper open to the investigation ot
truth, and all iutrrcsiingsubjects ba I.
The first number ot this | ..per will appear in a lew
weeks.
Terms—Three dollars per annum paynblein ad
vance or Four DOLLARS at the cxpiartmn ot
the year.
.Advertising nt the usual rates.
Editors of other paper'are requested to give the
above n few insertion®.
MILTON IL GATIIRIGIIT
reb 22—51
ProMpertns
OF HIE
WESTERN 11 EK AED
Publish'd at Aura it. l.uinpiciu County
BY HOLT A JONES
Tuts Gazette having been trtasferred by pur
di i'C to tiie undesigned, w ill in future be conducted
bv them . 'i.joint! v ns Editor. and Proprietors. The
rea.uns w hick have impelled them to an undertak
ing nt once mi lal.v.ioii' and responsible, aslhe con
duct o' a public Jotuii -I.in cniinectiou w i’.!i t'u ir pro
frssiona. avocations, may be read in the present low
ering mq»ei't of the politic..! horizon, produced bv
the tenrtul pievnlenctt ol the d wtriucs »>t tin ITc-i
Jents ill-starred Proclamation —doctrines at war w ith
the genius mid spirit ot »iii Government —in their
nature. lore g-Oo its theory—in their tendency, de
structive to its character t*' a • onre.h*.'-.red republic,
bv overturning the rights mid sovereignty ot the
States w hieb compose it. and in their final end and
effect, baleful to the hbetiu » of tiie people.
To contribute our ted.lv aid in the great work.-,
producing a coufoiiuity in the pnc'iiccs of tiie I ecer
al Government, to its true and ordinal theory -in
restraining its action w ithiu its original, end v .-1! de
fined Constitutional limits; »•> o, *e •'<> d. to ditla-ont
the misrule of revived Federalism, and to the
«qpremany of the rejected R-pd-licani-mi “ f ( * ' .
build true puw up thegenuinc 5'.. e »ig'ts u c’line
AIVO
SPY IN THE WEST.
“LET THERE RE HARMO Nl. T N THINGS ESSENTIA L —L IBERALITY IN TH INGS NOT ESSENTIA L--C II ARI T Y IN At. I. ”
AURARIA, EUiWPKIN COUNTY, GEORGIA, APRIL 12, 1834.
n its primitive purity, Strength rtiid beauty, untrarn-l
I'melled with the conditions, restrictions, limitations!
i and refinements ofthe. political weather-cocks of the
i present day—these may be numbered among the ob
! jects, to the accomplishment of which, our humble
j exertions shall be devoted, with a zeal and we trust,
i a sincerity not unbecoming their importance.
Nurtured and brought tip as we have been, in the
I admonition of the Republican State Rights doctrine
• —in a contest in which ibeir preservation is sought i
I on the otte hand by the lovers of Cdnstitutional Lib
j erty, and threatened on the other by the renewed as
j saults of re-animated Federalism, it may be easily
I conjectured on which side we are to be found. We
j aspire to belong to the Republican State Rights Party.
I professing such principles as sustained the Fathers of
that faith in ’9B and ’99-as bore that party in Geor
gia triumphant, through the political conflicts of'2s
and 26. and to which it has not proved recreant in
’32 and’33 We claim to be. disciples of the School
of Jefferson, as taught in the Kentucky and Virginia
Resirltitiorts. But professions of rfcptibliSrnism have
become mere cant, when every party lays claims to
that title, from the Union Democratic Republican par
!ly of Georgia, up to the great National Republican
party of the Union, and back totlie remnant ot the
j party which repneedin the subsequent election of a
' Sedition law Judge, as the triumph of (be Democru/tc
i llepublican party of New England! Equally vague is
; the pretence to belong to the State Rights Parly, since
many of those who profess to be State. Rights adher
ents, deny to the States all other rights, but those of
remonstrance and submission. Stillmore uncertain
i i» the profession of belonging to the Jeffersonian
; School, since many who pretend to be followers of
that Patriot, publish to the world, the preposterous,
the humiliating notion, that the labours ot his whole
life w ere intended to prove that the States have ordj’
the right of petitioning for a redress of grievances--of
remonstrating against unconstitutional Federal Legis
lation, and liuaHy -whenall other remedies fail” of
- ——-protesting ! ! ! To prove that our profes
sions are not of this character, let the columtisof the
Herald oe our witness.
The ears ofthe people have of late been drummed
almost to deafness with the continued and popular
c.ryot Union! L’nioi ! 1 Union !!! We too profess,
not emptily, to love and venerate the Unioa.and to
be as highly sensible of its incnicillable value and itn
portance, ns those w bo are most loud Olid boistersoiis
in their clamours. But w e seek to have a I nion In
truth and indeed ; a Utt'on of States in its pristine
beauty and simplicity; in its original healihtul vigour
1 and purity. We would be spare <1 to paur of view ing
our own native Georgia, in whose bosom w e have
been c.heri»hed; upon thelruits ot whose soil we have
been reared; in whose bonntiiul institutions, we have
libcii educated ; a mere speck upon the map ot a great
consolidated empire, stripped of her ancient tights,
and disrobed ot her premeval sovereignty, by the fl
gent she had helped to cr--ate; proud as we are, and
as we have reason to be ot her name and of her peo
ple—ardent as ate om* after lions for her, soonet let jl
be written that ‘‘she was, but is no more.” We
would have her as of right she should tie. asoveieign
member—an integral part of a great contededated Re
public. which shall continue the pride of the World—
the hope of Freedom—whose living principle, shall
manifest itself, not in the pomp and splendour ot an
immense and all-controlling central power; but in the
happiness and prosperity ot every one, e?en the
least of its members.
It shall be our purpose to make the Ilera'd wor
thy the perusal of all classes of readers— ot (hose who
delight in the pleasure ot' romance mid the Music of
Poewv"—of ‘ho-e who prefer to pursue the delightful
paths of historic or of scientific research, —of those
whose business it is to delve in "mother earth, in
pursuit of her glitteiingtrensurcs, ns well as of those
w ho are connected, either through choice of ncce ssi
tv. wi'h the agitating political eontrovercies ot Hie.
lUw irtv-’fft’W/tt YvViWA'
so soon ns the materals for that purpose, can be pro-
CU'ed.
’l’hc term®of its publication reinnin unchanged, be
ing :j3t*o per annum in advance, ur 1’»0, at the end
I ot!he vear
I < hir press mid materalsarc of that description, that
I w ill enable us to execute w ith neatness and despatch
! all Job and Advertising business with which we may
be favored. HINES HOL’F..Jith'r.
WILLIAM E JONES,
1* 11 O S 1» E C T U S
or THE
COMPLETE PERIODICAL L.BRARY.
Forty eight pages weekly —nearly twothousm 1 five
| hundred in lavo pages in a year, lor five dollars, tur
I iii-liiug aiinuallj select reading equal lu fifty volumes
ol common size-
’Flu Library will contain nearly all the new works
»i iu« ;it as they appear, viz : Voyages and Travels ;
‘ History , Biography ; Select Memoirs; the approved
European Annals ; Adventures; Tales of uue.xcep
: lloiiaLJa ehu>'«n:lw. A u.
! The Complete Periodical Library, will be found
indispensible to all lovers ot good reading in town or
I country. Every number will contain torty-eighl pa-
■ ges, in a size expressly adapted for binding when the
book is completed; printed w ith type so large as not
Ito fatigue the weakest eye. Its imtue use size willen
I utdc the Editor to crowd any common sized book in
I two number*, frequently into one. New works will
i thus be despatched as they arrive from Europe, and
pent otf to its patrons 'File subscriber in Missouri
i will lie hroiigbt as it were totlie very loiintaiii ot lite
j ralure Works printed in this l.ibiary will be furnish
; ed to him. when without it , be would be wholly una
ble to procure them. A book that will cost us six
j dollars to import, can be re-printed and distributedlu
subscribers, owing to our pecaliar facilities. f<»t about
. twentv or thirty cents, with the important addition of
i its being fresh and new.
We will givt i early two thousand five hundred pa
; ges annually, equal to fifty coiutnon sized booi>s !
■ Every work published in the Library willhe complete
in itself A Title Page will be given in each voluu e
so that the subscriber, it he pleases.may sell or give it
1 away vvithout injury to any ot the others; vr it may
‘ b<- bound up al the pleasure ot the subscriber.
This w«».k presents an extraordinary feature, un
. know nto anv other periodical iu the country Ibe
' subscription price may be considered a mere loan I";
! the y ear,as the work at the year’s emi, wdl sell for
< ist. and in m»>ix parts of the United States it wit!
bring doulvle its -»riginal c«>st to the siibsci i n*r.
The vx >rks published in the I omplvte I eriodical
j I.ibrarv. will beot the highest cba»acter. both as re
t -id' the MUtboi and his M»bjecL New work* oi ■] -
' proved merit, vx ill Be sent out to the Editor by every
arrival from Etinqa.-, giving ‘.ini h'i unlimited t:r!J •<>
-<l»-»t from, while care will be taken to make his
publication rq'lai to any thing ol the kind publi-hed
, m America
The first number will be issued on ti e Rjh «>t May
next and regularly every Wednesday thercMter. se
cnrvd in hamhome printed covers, and <>n fine xv iiite
■verier at S 5 iar amiurr., pavablc in advance. Ulubs
i remitting S2O, will be supplied With five copies for
! that sum ; agents at the same rate. Address
T. K- GREENBANK.
No. 9. Franklin Place, Phil a.
N. B. The usual exchange to Editors who advertise
University of Georgia.
ti; Hi. next Coliege Session wili commence on tiie]
g Hith January, JB3l. For admission into the j
Freshman Class, a candidate iunsl have a correct!
knowledge of Cicero’s Oration, Virgil, John and'
Acts in the Greek Testament,Graeca Minora or Ja-;
cob's Greek Reader. English .irammeE and Geog
raphy, and be well acquainted wth Arithmatic.
STUDIES OF THE FRESHMAN CLASS.
Ist. Term, Aua. to Nov. — l.ivr. Gtwca Majora, Ist
vol commenced, mid the Frenci Language.
28 Term, from Jan. to A/iril—Wsy, Graeca, Majo
ra, Ist vol. and French Continual.
3rf Term. April to Aug.—Livyand Graeca Majora,
Ist vol. concluded, French conthued. and Day’s, Al-.
gebra, through Ratio rind Proportion.
STUDIES OF THE SOPHOMORE CLASS. |
Term, Aup. to Not'.— llirnco and Graeca Mr
jora. 2d vol. commenced. Algebra concluded, and
three hooks of Geometry, (Plaffair's Euclid.) .
2d Term. Jdn to April.— Gtaeca Majora, 2d vo>.
continued; Horace and Geomitry concluded, and
Jamieson’s Rhetoric. . I
3rf Term. April to Aug.— Gmeca Majora, 2d vol. I
concluded; .Modern Languages. Plain Trigonometry. |
Mensuration, Surveying, Bottny, and Tyler’s His-1
tory. . . (
The present Junior Class have studied iii addition
to the above, the first book of Cicero de Oratore, the
first book ot Hoiner s Iliad, Blairs Lectures, and
Olmsteads Mechanic’s in part.
Though the classes regulh-ty attchil to French ut
ring the Freshman and Sophomore years, yet it is no
made an indispensable requisite for admission into any
of the classes Provision is made for those who en
ter without a knowledge of French, to study that
language, for which there is no additional charge of
tuition.
Those who desire it will have opportunity of study
mg Hebrew. Spanish, German, and Italian withou
any adoitional charges.
The rates of tuitipu are S3B per annum, payable
half yearly in advance.
Board can he obtained in respectable famdies at
from $8 to $lO per month.
Bycrder ofthe faculty.
\VM. L. MITCHELL. Sec’ry.
November )6, 1833 —42.
NOTICE.
A LL person® who are indebted to the Magistrates
and Constables of this list i ict for costs, on Notes
and Accounts, placed in tbeilhands for collection, are
requested to come forward aid settle the same, other
wise executions will be issue!, indiscriminately against
all who disregard this notice within one month.
.14MbS CANTRELL, j. r.
JAMES PRATER, J. r.
HEDGF.MAN GREEN,!.. C.
ABEL WINNINGHAM,!., c.
April 5.—7 It.
NOTICE.
INCUR months after datetipplica!ion will be made
to the Honorable the Iderior Court ol Lumpkin
counts, Georgia, when siting for oidinary purposes,
fir leave to sell al! the Real Istate of Morgan It. Snow,
bite of said county, riecaased 'or the benefit ofthe heirs
and creditor®, ol said decea.® <1
HARYY SM \LL, Adm’r.
SUS W NAH E. SNOW, Admfx.
NOT/uK.
wwt jj j, j (C «,.],! ’o •>><• highest hider at Leather’?
▼ ▼ Ford, Li'*'!'ki' ' tinty, Georgia, on Saturday
the third 'ax of 1 x T . ' l|! ’’’ e personal property of
Moreanll. Sa'«, iate <.f said county, deceased; t on
sisting of H<>«se hold and kitchen fi-rnHurc, a saddle
Horse", a Gi/ and harness with other articles too tedi
ons to’inchtmu. T< iw- <>f sale made known on the
,j ttV H * RVF.Y SMALL, Adm’r.
SUSAN NAH 1.. SNOW, Adrnr’x.
April sth, —’ds
FOR SALE.
i .•'■yHF. subscriber ..flcrsfor sale a Lot in the
j liiiEL " I „wn of l-.lahwah, wiih a House fifty hv
twi ntx-four f« et, nearly finished. This Lot is in an <1
imble part ol the town, ou the principal steel; the
House is admirably calculated fir a Store.
ALSO,
A Lot separated from the able square only bv n k>t
of.-i.xtv feet. The Lot fro'.ts «n both the principal
streets running paialel through tie toxvn, and is con
▼wwen* tmh-public Sprint;. On this lot there is nl
House, twenty by t wentv-four, ritended for n Ki’ hen,
a good smoke-house and other improvements.
'l’ehms —Anver ail nf this property will be exchang- ,
ed for Negro proper’V. or sold on a credit of six months. ■
I Possession w ill be given of the Lot first mentioned,
immediately, ofthe other in tbir v davs after its sale.
HOWELL COBB.
April 5. —” lf.
TOWN LOIS FOR SALE,
rWNHE SUBSCRIBER will offer for sale at public
S. ootc.iv ,on Monday the 7ii July next, a number
1 ol Town Lo’s. lying at t\ nr<'r-St-'t”, Coweta, county.
! Persons wishing to jmrehase, will do we'l to examine
i for themselves. Terms made known on the day u!!
I sale.
I ALEXANDER WARE. ,
I April s.—«—if.
NOTICE.
?|VIF. Snh>rr>bxr« g vr t.rjHT that all powers nf nt-
I M torney. letter>of ctadit, and all delegated author- i
iity of every kirnt, t<» b.»d tlitv firm to pay moneys, or :
to do ot her services, are hereby g 4 xuii from a.id !
alter the date of Hus nott4.e,ire nnll and void.
iLLENS k PADDOCK.
| Augusta, March 29,- t>—h
LIST OF j: ITERS
F.MAILING in tin- Pei Off:. • ai Auraria, Lump
H Q km County, lieorgiaor. the Ist day of April,;
ami if not taken out by tn» st of July next, w ill be j
«ent to the <-• neral Post Utcc as dead letivrz,
* • i-
Davtd Atiaon, R-
William Anderson, diss Lucinda Kenedy,
i Nathar. Austin, !»« k itn, 2.
! John Addington, Hartin Keith and j
' .lenry Adam*, 4- ' hnso>pher. and
Jo.in Arrii-lo'it, 5. ikriiia.M Stephen-
| James M. Adams. lieorgc W Jx t ! ’t’gh; [
• B. John Kinney.
Thos. C- Bowen; L.
Alexander Brown, 4. Mason I.ixton,
William Blake, Htirvy Lions,
S. & E. Beall, Samuel Lester,
Horatio Brace, James Leonard,
\\ illiani Beall, Benjamin Langford,
Roland Bcardin, Horace Lawrence,
1 James Bryon, J Q Livingston;
William Ballew', William Linsey,
Armstead Brown, 2. Benjamin Laney.
William G. Blake, M-
L. & 11. Blake Co. Joseph Morriss,
Mrs. Nancv Bond/ Archibald M’ColumD,
Joseph L. Brannen; A. C; Marshall,
Thomas Barnet, 2. Hugh Murphree
George Bell, I'holnrid Morgan,
Wm. Brown, John Madden,
Wm. Barnett. Isaac Mincy,
C. Aaron Mir.sey, 2.
Clerk Superior Court. N.
Jacob Ctlnriday, N. Nuckles,
John Ciavibn,
William Campbell, Ashley Oliver,
Lewis Charidler, R, Osburn,
David Caldwell. Elizabeth Odem.
John Carmichael, P-
Stephen Collins, Nancy Peranson,
M; F. Cannon, Josiah H. Presswood,
John or Tully Choice, William Pontur,
Philip Crane' Dr. Wm. A. Parsons,
Gabriel Capers, Thomas Pilgrim,
E. W. Cullens, 13. Samuel Pate,
D. Lorenzo D. Patton,
.James J. Dobbs. William Parson,
Gen. R. G. Dunlap, Adam Peck,
Col. R. Dennis, R- Pattbh;
Patrick Doyl, .John Powell,
James Deiniek, Janies Prater,
T. Durter, Richard Pary
James Donohoo, 2. R.
James Donaldson, James R. Russel,
Capt. Richard Dennis, William Ravy,
Mathew Duncan, W. P. Rin,
John Doniildson. J. W. Riley.
E. S-
John Evans, William Senters,
George Elgin, 3« Richard Sharj>,
F» David Steward,
Noah Felton, Vinson Sims,
Lindsay I’arnum, Robert 11. Seal,
A. G. Fambrough, 13. Henry B Slmw,
Timothy Gibson and William Sente’l,
James Mahan, John Smith,
Mrs. Jamima Gibbens, Asel Smith, 3,
George W. Grier, Breton Smith,
Josiah Green, Jonathan Smrih,
George Gaddes, Win. Saunders,
James Gaston. John Stow ees,
JI. Jeremiah Stover,
Samuel B. Head. Ze’.iedee -laton,
James B. Henson, W. Stinson,
Thomas J. Hester, Aaron Slatten,
Nathaniel B. llarben, Mr. Sams,
James Hudson, Ellet k Scott.
Isaac Heath, ’R
John W. Hall, Samuel Tate,
Mariin C, Howell, W itham Tuildcr,
Abner Hopkins, William Thomas.
John Hollingshead, W •
Elijah Heralson, William E. Walker, 5.
W m. T. Heard, Isaac R. W alker.
Rev. John Hubbard, John II Ware,
Martin Howell, Joshua W clsh,
Alford Harris, Micajah Winningham,
Isham Hall. Peter W eaver,
J. W m. W’eh-he),
Mrs. Mary Jack. George G. Wilson.
Gilford W. Jones.
CHARLES A. ELY,?. AL
April 57—3i.
All the TOWN LOTS, in| the town of Marietta
Cobb county. Georgia, will be sold, nt public outcry,
on the 14th day of April; to continue from day to day
until allsre sold. Term* made, known on the day of
sale Given under our hands this 18th February
1834.
JAMES T. M’AFEF.. j i c.
JOHN W LOWRY, j i. c
EDWARD MAYS, j. i.c
LEMMA KERTLEY.J i c.
JOHN COLEINS, .t i c.
march I—t—ss
’notice? - ~
I expect to Preach at Mr. Henderson®, in Forsyth
counts’, on Monday, J7th instant.
Mr Perkin’s, Cherokee, Tuesday. JBtli
Mr. Maddox's W edm sday, 19th.
Mr Pntmnn’s Thursday. 20th.
Sixes Gold Mines Friday, 2!st
Cherokee C. IL Sat. &. Sunday,22d 23rd
Mr. Well’s Monday, 24th.
JEREMIAH REEVES
Athens female Academj.
rjfi JHLS Institution wdl be opened on the FIRST
§ MONDAY IN JANUARY NEAT, under the
joint direction oi the subscribers A sufficient num
ber <<f competent a-'istanis will at all limes be pro
v idi d.
Rales of Tuition, payable in advance.
F<>j Scholar’ inslnictt d in Spelling, Reading. Writ
ing and Arithmatic, as tar as 5 ulgar Fraclior- [
Smith s system. 00 per <jr
Same—-with English Grammer and
Geography, S7 00 “
Rhetoric. History. Use of Globe®, Nat-
ural Philosophj . Chemistry. A-tro
nornv. Latin and Greek Languages,
and the Mathematics, SS l>o “
Instructions will lie give in the French l.ari/uage. i
The 3/uor Room, as heretofore, w ill be occupied ;
by MRS WALTHALL, whose ktiowledgeuf the;
science, and experience in teaching, need no coni-j
mendation.
Drawing and Painting will be taught in the Acade .
Fire school will be provided with Ap|»atafns for
ilhisli'ation in the different tcience-
There will be monthly examinations without any •
previous preparation.
Shobistic Year—l'cn Months.
"l J' Boarders will be received in the family of the ‘
Senior Principal ri-idmg on 1 lie premises.
\V M 8.-FAS LOR, ) .
W.M If HI NT, ; Avenue 1 rt'. cipals.
N< v 11.
BLJXK DEBS
Ncaflv printed and for >;»k- at this
< Ittico !
-
j From the Nbtv Monthly Magazine, for December.
WORDS FOR MELODIES.
, Ry Mrs. Hernans.
; nines; at sea;
Sleeps—we give thee to the wave,
Red with lite-blood ofthe brave; ’
i Thou shalt find a noble grave, —
• Fare thee well '
Sleep!—thy billowy field is won!
Proudly may the funeral gun,
i Midst the hush at set of sun,
Boom tby knell,
Lonely, lonely is tby bed!
Never there may tear be shed,
Marble reared, -.r brother’s head
Bo’vvd to weep
Yet thy record on the sea,
Borne through battle high and free,
Long the red-cross flag shall be, —
Sleep, oh! slespf
FARAWAY;
Faraway !—My soul is far away,
Where the blue sen laves a mountain shore;
In the vvo >ds I see my brother play;
Midst the flowers, my sister sings ouce mote,—
Far aw ay!
Far atvay ! —My dreams arc far away,
When, at midnight, stars and shadows icign !
“Gentle child,’’ my mother seems to say,
“Follow me where home shall smile again,”—
Far away !
Faraway ! My hope is far aw ay
W here Lovele voice, young Gladness may restorer
0 thou Dove! now soaring through the day,
Lend me wings to reach that brighter .shore, —
Far away!
THE ANONYMOUS EETTER.
To write an anonymusletter is uogentleinnn
ly :of that there can be no doubt nay more,
it is mean—dastardly—skulking—depraved!
Hut w hat could 1 d<» ? Colonel Plinth was
about to marry htscouk
To write an anonymous letter is degrading,
to say the least : it would require the -kill of
a Sophist to render H justifiable—perhaps ; and
yet when Colonel Plinth was going to marry
his <-nok
A vixen—a pet feet Saracen of a woman be
hind Ins backj and he a man of nice honour—
who had gained golden laurels at S< rmgapatam
—an aide-camp to Sir David Baird —my
fnend ! The intelligence had come like a
t Hinder bolt.
J’o write an anonymous letter, except under
the most imperative circumstances, is unques
tionably atrocious. 1 felt that, even positve
us I W’as, —with the most benevolent intentions,
—eons ietice— mi/ conscience. asjijieulhu»a«-
-nmr;rn i>mf(’r, wnnnrnv.s'n.HTr to approve ol it.
I paused—l determined to weigh tho matter
• well ; —but the conviction fell upon me like nn
[■ avalanche that not a moment was to be lost!
Colonel Plinth was on the eve of marrying his
Conk
Rebecca Moggs! And he my brother-in
law—the widow'ed husband of my sainted sis
ter —a K C. B.—a wearer of lout medals, two
crosses, and the order of llie golden lleeci—a
mini who had received the thanks of P.iiia
meut —the written approbation of my Lord
Clive—two freedoms in gold boxes!—a man
J who, bad he nobly fell on (be ramparts of Tip
i poo’s capital, would have been taken home in
Him. and buried in St. Paul’s.
| His friignient his living remains—(for her
■ possessed only one organ of a cor;—h iving
lost a leg. an arm, nn • ye and a nostril) —had
! resolved on what 1 considered a sort ol denu-
I post-mortem match, with—what ?
A blowsy, underhung medial, whose only
merit consisted in cooking mulligatawny, and
rubbing with a soft fat palm the wounded uncle
ol his portially efficient leg; the oflspn. gos
a Sepoy pioneer, whom my lovely and accom
plished sister had taken from tiie breast of her
I dead mother (the woman—a ratnp-fidlower—
received an iron ball m her brain from one of
Tippoo’s guetilla troops in the jungle)—m e
whom Ev idne had brought up, wrii m i ernal
care, m her kitchen; —a .scullion!—And such
a otre to be Colom I Plinth’s wife—to take the
place of Evadne! Coml God !
To write tin anonymous letter is rather re
volting; much ma v be suid against it ; it is one’s
dernier resort : snll it nas its advantages—and
| why neglect them ?—-Had Colonel Plinth not
! been what he wa-—xverc he but a casual ac
quuintauce or a mere f c id—then indeed
But he was my brotuer-in-law—my brother
in arms—m a word Colonel Plinth-
Had lie been a man who would listen to
reason who was open to conviction—to
! whom one might venture to speak—why re
! ally
Bm fie xvns hot ns curry ; —yet not deficient
in sens.-; hut dreadfully opinionated—tetchy
e i -i. '. s »sc»-puble of feeling himself insulted—
•caret I to keeping his pistol-care rn such ft
• state f- io be readv at a moment’s notice—a
I tug t finned »n body, eoul. nnd complexion,
by the .-ruefiH and syn of the burning East.
j T<» r-monstrate with him would have been
NO. S>.