Newspaper Page Text
?I I S € I] r. I- A N Y .
From the Cincinnati Journal.
Beauty.
'There’s beauty in the lofty pins
That scorns the passing gale,
When winter, in his reckless wrath,
Sweeps o’er the shrinking vale.
There’s beauty in the dashing shower
That welcomes in the spring,
And in the thousand graceful forms
Which summer hours bring.
There’s beauty in the bonding sky,
Clad in its azure blue,
When fleecy clouds are gliding by,
Hiding its face from vie-w;
And on the s ea, when silence deep
Sleeps o’er the mirror’d wave,
Where the coral many a fathom down
' .Adorn’s the.soaman'B grave.
The face of smiling infancy.
Is it not sweetly fair?
For Heav’n, with an unerring hand,
Hath stamped its image there.
And passing beautiful to all
The cheek of youth appears,
Ere its first freshness hath been drown’d,
Or blanch’d with bitter tears.
Yet lofty pine and graceful flower,
In summer beauty gay—
i The passing pageants of an hour—
In time shall pass away.
Tho budding earth and placid sea
In lurid flame will roll;
Yon smiling sky of blessed light
Be like a mighty scroll.
The terrors of that dreaded hour
With wrathful arm be hurl’d,
While the archangel’, trumpet speaks
The ruin ofa world.
Ye gentlo ones, in youth’s first bloom,
Seek ye, while yet ye may,
That living beauty of the soul
'Which never knows decay.
O, give to him who gave your Ufa
Your childhood’s earliest love.
And seek, through trial, toil aud .strife,
A lasting home above.
So when eternity shall burst
Upon your dazzled sight,
Your dwell forevermore
In blessedness and light. M. D.
EDITORIAL COURTESIES.
*1 mint speak in a passion, and I will do it in King
Cy mbyte!’ vein.”—Shakspear.
If Socrates, or any other sensible ancient,
could be resuscitated, and have a half-a-dozen
flaming rhapsodies on the benefits and bles
sings of the ‘'press,” put into his hands, what
a glorious and mighty change would he sup
pose had taken place in ibe ordering of public
affairs, since the time when the Athenian rab
ble were led by the nose by every noisy dema
gogue who chose to spout nonsense to them in
their market places. How the good man’s
heart would be filled with rejoicing as he read
glowing descriptions of the tremonduous capa
bilities of this mighty engine, wielded solely
for the benefit of mankind, and of its unweari
ed exertions to disseminate useful information
and correct knowledge of political events to
the meanest citizen of the state! He would i
suppose, that with this almost omnipotent pow- ’
er arrayed on the side of virtue, and watching ,
with untiring vigilance over the true interests '
of all, that this wicked world must have been
transformed into a sort of Utopia since bis
time —a place from which all prejudice, venal
ity, corruption and sycophancy were swept a
xvay, and where the governors and the govern
ned would emulate each other in their exer
tions for the common weal. But, if after pe- j
rusing the aforesaid rhapsodies, the said Soc- i
rates could have a quantity of newspapers ta
ken indiscriminately from different parts of the
country placed before him, there is strong rea
son to believe that an attentive perusal of their i
wlegant contents would materially change his
opinion. He would find the gentleman presi
<ii»g over one half of the press stating that the
other portion of their editorial brethren were,
without exception, the greatest set of rascals,
scoundrels, rogues, thieves, and vagabonds that
over existed on the face of the earth; and that
they were the most vile, the most degraded, the
jnost contemptible miscreants that could, by
u»y possibility, disgrace humanity. On the
other hand, he would find the party accused in
these gentle terms, asserting that their assail
ants were well known to bo such infamous li
ars, so totally destitute of every spark of hon
esiy, so stamed with infamy, so branded with
convicted falsehoods, as to render any thing
they might say unworthy of the slightest no
ttce. Poor Socrates would be sadly puzzled,
and think there was more in this than he ever
“dreampt of in7i?s’phdosophy,”A that truth still
I- rpt her ancient station at the bottom o! a well.
1 Ic would find these virtuous vehicles of knowl
edge and information made up of quack adver
t semt nt*, dreadful munlers, dreadful poetry,
J . Miller ,s’s, and editorial personalities; in
t lie latter oi w hieh he would see all the coarse
ness ot les oM mt my Aristophanes ten times
trebled, without a single redeeming sprinkling
of his wit and humort and ho would be lost in
Utter amusement to find that the very worst
*iad most tgnorent portion of the people fr, c .
cording to. thei i own showing) had been,, by,
i some strange fatality, elevated to instruct and
amuse the rest.
There are some subjects which it is necessa
ry to aid by a slight stretch of the fancy, or a
little exaggeration of language, in order to
give them point and effect; but to de
scribe just as it is, the manner in which
1 editorial warfare is carried on in the country
papers of the United States, other words than
are to be found in Walker or Webster must
be sought-for; they are too tame, too weak to
eonvey any idea of these Billingsgate personal
ities.
“A beggar in his drink.
Would not bestow such terms upon his callet,”
as the worthy conductors of the press think
proper to bestow upon each-other. Wherein
the utility—the advantage of all this to the
public, or what is more, to themselves, con
sists, it is not easy to discover. If they are,
what they say they are, would it not be their
policy to agree and keep it concealed, and not
blazon forth each other’s infamy to the world?
And what has that world to do with disreputa
blequarrelsand low abuse, farther than to
laugh at and despise them for it? the public of
this day, as of yore,
“care not a toss up
Whether Mossop kick Barry or Barry kick Mossop;’’
and after looking on for some time, and amus
ing itself with the noise andsputter of the en
raged belligerents, come to the conclusion that
they are both contemptible creatures, and pay
no further attention to the matter- In fact,
nine-tenths of the papers have, by this degra
ding conduct, in a great measure lost the pow
er of affecting character either by praise or
censure: there are many who pay no sort of
attention either to what they say of public
men or ofeach other; and if there are still
those who, making a deduction of ninety.nine
per cent., think “there must be same truth in
i what the fellow says,” their number is fast, di
minishing. A paper is at present lyipg before
us, from which better things might have been
expected, as it is published in a decent neigh
borhood, and contains some good reading mat
ter, in which, amid two-thirds of a column of
abuse, one of the most moderate sentences is,
that his opponent is “a liar by nature and a
thief by profession.” After going on for some
time with unabated spirit in this strain of un
mitigated abuse, he winds up with the following
magnificent piece of composition. “If the-riv
er Amazon were made to run-through his (his
opponent’s) soul, more time would be taken up
in cleansing it of its depravity and filthiness,
than was required by tho ancient river to
cleanse the celebrated stables, wherein a thou
sand oxen had been stalled for almost as many
years!” This appears to be only one of a se
ries of articles on the subject! and the offence,
as far as we can make it out, for which all
these hard words arc let loose, seems to have
been the copying an article without duo cred
it, or something of the kind of equally vital im
portance to the community. We have not
seen the replication to this choice morcciu, but
presume it will be in the same style of impas-.
sioned and elegant invective. ,
Now is not this and such as this abominable!
and hundreds of instances could be pointed out
of still greater magnitude, in which the perso
nal appearance and family connexions of a man
are ridiculed—charges of not having paid his
tailor’s bill, or any thing else, no matter what,
that depravity can invent or blackguardism
utter, aro put forth. Opprobrious epithets
from such sources, when applied to those who
have been long before the public, and whose
characters are well and favorably known, can
do but comparatively little harm; they may
exclaim with Brutus,
“I am arnie d so strong in honesty
That they pass by me as the idle wino,
Which I regard not;”
hut suppose an honorable and sensitive man,
just commenced his carreer, attacked by one
of those literary scavengers, what exquisite
pain must it give him to find himself dragged
forward and slandered in this mftnner. And
he has no redress; he cannot reply, or at all’
events if he does, it will be a most unequal
match, for he will be temperate in his lan-,
guage, and anxious not to assert anything but
what is strictly true. It would be like a gen
tleman neatly dressed in light-colored unmen
tionables and white kid gloves, engaged in a
combat of throwing mud from a kennel with a
ragged and tattered miscreant; his adversary,
being well practised at tho game, throws ten
j handsfull of dirt for his one, and quickly be
, spatters him ajl over, while the few additional
piece* that ho could send, would never be dis
cerned on his opponent’s already soiled and fil
thy garments. The best way certainly for
those who are well enough known to afford it,
is to pass all such attacks over in absolute si
lence. Blackwood’s Magazine, whose person
ality has at least always prostituted humor and
ability to make it go off, has never been so
enraged by any of the retorts of its adversa
ries as by the real or affected contempt of the
Edinburgh Review. Notwithstanding the yi
rulenl abuse that has from time to time been
bestowed upon it, the Edinburgh has never,
since the commencement of Blackwood, hit it
■ appear that it was conscious there was such a
I journal in existence.
i We arc not very sanguine in anticipations of
anv speedy and effectual change for the better
in this world of ours; but we do think the time
is fast coming when, with a few exceptions,
this custom of the present race of public journ
als in the United States will be regarded with
unqualified contempt. There aro already
symptoms of better things. Most of the city
papers in New York, and indeed in all large
towns, have lately amended their ways consi
derably in this respect, though they were nev
er one quai ter so bad as their rural brethren;
’•nd thereinto several journals xbnt are rcspcc
’ab.’c ar. J entertaining, repositories of news,
jknowledge, literature, and fashion; while their
trifling disputes are conducted in a pleasant
and gentlemanly spirit. Clashing interests
and parly views will always preserve some
portion of personality in the world; but it
would be more agreeable to all concerned to
settle their little affairs of the pen by good-na
tured raillery, light repartees, and polished sar
casms, such as pass in decent society, in pref
erence to vulgar slang and porter-house fig
ures of rhetoric. Let such contests be carried
on like two gentlemen engaged in a bout at
foils, in which both exert their utmost skill and
ingenuity, in a friendly temper; and when a
“palbable hit” is given on either side, let it be
courteously acknowledged, and then try it a
gaie; and not like a couple of -ragamuffins in
the street, who fight and tear themselves to
pieces for the amusement of the spectators.
From the Illinois Backwoodsman.
A BRAVE GIRL.
In this State, no minor can obtain from the
county commissioners’ courts a dicense to
marry, without first obtaining the consent of
his or her parent or guardian, and, without
such license, -cannot marry in this State.
Young couples frequently fly to the opposite
side of the Mississippi, where no license is
required.
These “runaway matches,” as they are
called, are very frequent. A laughable oc
currenee of that kind happened a few days
ago, which has made much sport in this re
gion.
A Miss , about 17 years of age, who
is the heiress to an estale valued at sl#,ooo,
lately runaway in company with a bridesmaid
and her lover, who was nearly thirty.—Her
guardian believed the man totally unworthy of
her, had refused his consent. —When they
reached >the bank of the Mississippi, the ice
was running furiously in the river; but the
young lady, expecting every moment her
guardian would arrive there in pursuit, urged
her lover to lose not an instant in pushing the
boat from the shore. His courage seemed to
have a good deal abated; but ho, with the
owner ol a large skiff, and the bridesmaid,
embarked with his intended. They had near
ly reached the head of an island, about a
third ol the distance from the opposite shore,
when the current became more rapid, the
cakes ol ice very large, and their situation
extremely dangerous. The lover, excessively
frightened, and forgetful of every body but his
own dear bawled out in the most piteous ac
cents, “Oh! 1 shall be drowned!—l shall be’
drowned!” and bitterly reproached his lady
love as the cause of his probable death. Sh<
uttered not a word, but her courage and pres
ence of mind seemed to increase with her per
il. A tremenduous cake of ice fairly capsized
the boat, but.it was so large that all got on it,
the lover rendering her no assistance at all.
It bore them to the head of the island, and, as
good fortune would have it, the chute between
it and the Missouri shore was frozen over, and
they crossed it without difficulty. They rea
ched a tavern near the river, and, after chan
ging thefr wet garments and becoming warm
ata good fire, the lover hinted to the young
lady that it was time now for them to have the
knot tied, as the -magistrate had arrived for
that purpose, and was in the next room. She
gave him a most withering look of contempt,
and declared she would never tmrte her desti
n-y with one who was so selfish and cowuidly.
It was in vain that he attempted by entreaty
and argument to change her resolution. She
was immoveable, and replied to him with
scorn.
A few days afterwards, she returned to tho
house of her guardian, thankful that she had
escaped marrying a man whose only object
was her fortune.
Her lover returned to this side of the river
also; but such showers of ridicule and coo.
tempt wore bestowed upon him that he found it
best to decatnp, which ho did a few nights ago
leaving behind him a host of unsettled demands.
A new Territory. —The Territory of
Wisconsin has been devided by law of Con
gress; and all that part lying west of the
Mississippi, after the third day of July next,
is to constitute a separate territorial govern
ment similar to that of other territories.
Mexico has proposed to submit the difficul
ties between her nnd the’United States, to the
Umpirage of a third power—which has been
acceded to by the President of the United
States.
Mexico. |
The N. O. Bee of ths 7th inst., says: “A ;
passenger who came by the U. S. Siiip Con
cord reports, that having remained three days
at Vera Cruz, he felt convinced from the ru
mors in circulation, that the Mexican Govern
ment wns in no wise disposed to pay the indem
nity claimed by France.
We aLo learn from the same passenger that
the American schooner Eliza Ann was at Ma
tamoras previous to this blockade. She has'
been stopped from coming out of this port —
she made three attempts but failed. However,
they have come to the conclusion to let her
pass. She will be here in a few days.— Au.
gusia CpHStilulionalist.
FRENCH BLOCKADE.
The N. O. Commercial Bulletin of the 7th
inst. says: “Tho American schrs. Dolphin and
Byron returned yesterday from the coast of
I Mexico. They were bound hence to Mata,
i morns with valuable cargoes ol provisions &c.,
but were not permitted to enter that port, ha
ving been boarded on their arrival by the
I French men of war Rationed off' that place,
j their papers endorsed, and ordered off. The
two vessels were permitted to land their pas
sengers and letters, but uo otht r communica
tion with the s ore‘was allowed. The rcspcc-
I five commanders of the above vessels inform
us that they were treated with the utmost po-
! liteness by the officers of the squadron.— lb.
j ......... . ■ ■ -7".. .. .. - . _ .
C O IT It T c. 4 L E « » A II .
I ■
SUPERIOR COURTS-
January.
Ist Monday, Richmond,
2d -‘ Chatham,
February.
Ist Monday, Stewart,
“ Floyd,
Paulding,Thursday before
2d iMonday, Clark,
“ B.bb,
“ Macon,
“ Randolph,
“ Cast,,
i 3d “ Walton,
I “ Crawford,
“ Early,
“ Cherokee,
i 4th “ Baker,
“ Jackson,
“ Meriwether, ,
“ Forsyth,
Upson,
Lee, Thursday after, i
March.
Ist Monday, Cowetna,
“ Lumpkin,
“ Pike, ! -
■“ Sumpter,
“ Taliaferro,
2d Columbia,
“ Fayette,
“ Greene,
“ Laurens,
“ Madison,
“ Marion,
“ Monrod,
“ Morgan,
“ Gwinnett,
“ -Union,
Gilmer, Wednesday after,
3d Monday. Butts,
*• Elbert.
“ DeKalb,
“ Hall,
“ Putnam,
•* Talbot,
“ Murray,
4th “ Bullock,
“ Cobb,
“ Dooly,
Newton,
“ Walker,
“ Washington,
•• Wilkes,
Effingham,Thursday after
April,
Ist Monday, Warren,
“ Wilkinson.
“ Campbell,
2d “ Carroll,
" Dade,
“ Camden,
“ Hancock,
“ Harris, ,
“ Henry,
“ Franklin,
“ Montgomery
“ Twiggs,
Tatnall, Thursday after,
Wayrto, “ “
3d Monday, Emanuel,
“ Habersham,
“ Heard,
Glynn,
“ Jones,
“ Muscogee,
“ Oglethorpe,
J “ Pulaskit
Mclntosh,Thursday -after,
4th Monday, Scrivon,
“ Lincoln,
“ Rabun,
•• Jasper,
“ Telfair,
“ Houston,
“ Troup,
“ Liberty.
Irwin, Thursday after,
Bryan, Wednesday after,
May,
Ist Monday, Burke,
.. Appling,
Ware, Thursday after, •
2d Monday, Chatham, ;
“ Lowndes, ;
3d “ Jefferson,
“ Thomas, I
4th “ Decatur, I
UNITED STATES COURT,
Sixth Circuit for the district ol Georgia— James M
Wayne, Circuit Judge—At Savannah, Thursday after
the Ist Monday 3d May — Mii.led«evd.i:e, Thursday
after the lat Monday Bth November— Rules-day, the
Ist Mon lays in each month, upon which days all”writs
are returnable to the Clerk’s office in Savannah.
District Court— Jeremiah Cuyleh, Judge—ln Sa
vannah, 2d Tuesday 13th February—2d Tuesday Bth
May—2d Tuesday 14th August—2d Tuesday 13th No
vember.
GEORGIA, Gilmer County.
A MU-EL JONES of
the Bfittth District,
vrtw G' Tolls before me
if' i [ one Sorrel Horse four
fl vYi yeare old; 14 arid a half
i V. hands high roached mane
land switch tail. Appraised by John Patterson C.
Aaron Smith to fifty Dollars- This 2d April, 1 and
A true Copy of Record.
LAR KEN SMITH, Cl’k. I. 839.
D. QUILLIAN, J. P.
April 28, 15—4 t.
NOTICE?
PWIHE Sheriff’s'Salts nf Dade County, wi.l
I in future be published in the Western
i Georgian.
ISAAC RANEY, Sh’ff.
May 5.
! El IV.
FK4HE undereiened will attend (he Courts in all the
JB. f’ounttee of the Cherokee Circuit, Habersham
and Raburn of the Western, and Cobb of the Coweta
j Circust, and also the Counties of Benton and Chero
kee Ala. All business directed to their address Ca»s
rille, Ga. will receive prompt and punctual attention.
WTLLIAM H. STEELMAN,
JOHN W. 11. UNDERWOOD.
Feb. 10. 4. w, 6mo.
MOVEY FOU.W!
HICH the owner can have by describing the
▼ V same and paying for this Advertisement, Ap
ply to the subscriber iivjog one and a half miles from
Rome. ALLEN MARTIN.
May 22,
June.
Ist Monday, Baldwin,
•* Richmond,
Auqust.
Ist Monday, Stewart,
Floyd,
2d “ Clark,
“ Bibb,
“ Randolph,
“ Cass,
Macon,
3d “ Walton,
“ Crawford,
“ Early,
“ Cherokee,
4th “ Baker,
*• Jackson,
“ Emanuel,
“ Upson,
“ Meriwether,
•“ Forsyth,
i Lee, Thursday after,
September.
Ist Monday, Pike,
“ Gilmer,
“ Taliaferro,
“ Coweta,
“ Lu napkin,
2d “ Columbia
“ Madiscm
“ Morgan
** Laurens
“ Monroe
“ Fayette
” Greene
“ Marion
Gwinnett
„ Union
3d Elbert
i. Buns
DeKalb
Hall
Talbot
‘‘ Murray
/ Putnam
, Newton
, t Cobb
Walker
Bulloch
u Dooly
•• Washington
“ Wilkes
October.
Ist Monday, Warren
“ Wilkinson
“ Campbell
* Montgomery
2d ’ Hancock
Franklin.
Camden
Twiggs
Dade
Henry
Carrol
Harris
3J Emanuel
Oglethorpe
*» Habersham
/ Jones
Pulaski
,* H ■ ard
~ Muscogee
4th . Seri ven
‘ Lincoln
Rabun
Jasper
Telfair
*4 Houston
Troup
November.
Bulloch, Wednesday be
fore the Ist Monday
Effingham, Friday after,
the Ist Monday, ,
2d Munday, Jefferson
3d “ Burke
“ Applying
Ware, Thursday after
Lowndes, Monday after,
Thomas, Men. thereafter,
Decatur, •* “
4th Monday, Camden
Wayne, Thursday after
Glynn, Monday thereafter
Mclntosh, Thursday “
Liberty, Monday, ’ “
Bryan, Wednewdtry
Or. A. PATTERSON
BEING permanently located in Rome, Floyd
county, tenders his services to the Citizen*
generally, in the practice ol Medicine and its collate
ral branches.
RdrTie, Jan. 13—1—if.
» IL ANO
for sale.
Subscriber will sell on the first Tuesday lit
S May next, a few L.i»ssof Wood Lands,
adjoining to the town of Lafayette, Ga., suitable for
building or other purposes,—in such size as will suit
purchasers.
On which, liberal time will be given, (for most of
the mon-*y,) with good sacurity for the buiunce dtie.
March 29th, 1838.
R. M. AYCOCK.
April 7—12—31.
NOTICE.
JEHU G. CARSON is hereby informed, that his
mother is in great need of assistance Irom him.
His father died on the 6th November last, and I have
no perkon in this country to assist me except my s-m.
who has never been apprised of the death of h.s
father
The Editors of the Southern Recorder will confer
a lasting favor on an unforiunatc mother, by inserting
this a few times, and requesting all the editors in the
State to do so, who are friendly to a poor disKresrsed
widow, entirely separated from her relations—and
God grant you great success. LUCY CARSON.
Brownsville, Jasper county, Merch 9, 1838.
TTEditors throughout the State will obhga by com
yling with'the above request.
NOTICE.
rBIIIE the Sheriffs Sales of Lumpkin county,
will in future, be advertised in the Wes
tern Georgian.
SAMUEL KING, Sh’ff.
April 7.—12.
GEORGIA, Walker County.
VNDREW L. BARRY of Cnptaih Smith’s Dis
trict, tolled before me a dark Bay Horse, five
or six yours old; fourteen hands high; curled tail,
md both hind fee; white; no other murk perceivable.
Appraised to Thirty-five Dollars October Ist, 1837.
LEMUEL HOGE, J. P.
The above is a true Cnpy from the Estray Book.
JNO. CALDWELL, D. C. I. C.
April 7—l2—3t.
AdiJiissS*ti-afors
A GREEABLY to an order ufttbe l:<xp<-»rrj»b' the,
.'ml Inferior Court or Butts county, when sitting for
ordinary purposes, will be sold, helure tlmyourt-iioitsc*
door, on the first Tti- sd-ty in Jur's be, a e<.n the
lawful hours of sale,in the town 61 R >me, Floyd coun
ty. Lot No. 33, 23d district, 3d Section, o. ortginuliy
Chorcfeee, now Floyd county.
And at Pattlding Court House, Puhldaig connty,
on the same day, Lot No. 22, 17th district, 4,h Sec
tion, of originally Chtrokee, now Paulding county-
Both said tracts sold subject tv the widow’s dower, us
the property of Dennis McCarthy, decoased.
DAVID MARTIN, adnir.
March lO.<—B—tds.
NOTI C E .
month after da’c application will be tm/h
to the Honorable • thc inferior Court o-f Gil.
mcr County, when oilttng for.orlinary pnrpoKee, lor
leave to sell Lot No. 26, inthe llth Distnei. 2 J
Section, formerly Cherokee, now Gilmer (?otmty;
being a part of the Real Estate of William Ellington,
late of said county deceased.
L. D. ELLINGTON, Ad’m’r.
March 24, 10. w4m.
NOTICE.
months alter date application will ho wta'Aft
to the Honorable the Inferior (fo-nt of Gffiib i
County, when sitting for ordinary purposes, fur leu .e
to sell two Negroes, being tho Estate of Priscilla
Ellington late of sujd Couiny deceased, s<,!J for the
purpose of division.
L. D. ELLINGTON, Ad’m’r.
March 24, ID, w4in.
months after date application will be made
to,the honorable the inferior Court of Walker
county, when sitting for ordinary purposes, lor leave to
sell Two Lots of Land, Np. 132<intlje 13th District of
the 4th Section: and No. 116, in the 16th District of
the 3d Section, it being n part of the Reul Estate of
John Gilber, late of Jackson county deceased.
ROBERT ALLEN, Admr.
March 17, 9 w4m
Arrival and Departure of Hlails.
JjpilL Milledgeville Mail, carried by Stage,
from Decatur to this office nrrrives eve
ry Monday, Wednesday and Friday, at 5 o’,
clock, P. M., and leaves on every Tuesday,
Thursday and Sunday mornings, at 5 o’clock.
The Stages from Carrollton & Spring Place
meets at this office on every Monciay, Wed
nesday and Friday, at 6 o’clock P. M., and
leaves on every Tuesday, Thursday and Sat
urday mornings at'4 o’clock. The mail for
the above routes is invariably closed at B
o’clock, on the night previous to their depar
ture.
The mail from this office to La Fayette,
Walker county, leaves on every Tuesday
morning, and returns on every Saturday eve
ning at 5 o’clock.
The mail from Jacksonville, Alabama, car
ried by Stage, arrives at this office on every
Tuesday and Saturday, at 12 o’clock, and
leaves in an hour after its arrival on each day.
7he mail conveyed on horse-back from
Fayetteville to this'office, arrives on every
Wednesday at 6 o’clock, P- and departs on
every Thursday, at ® o’clock, A. M,
Rome, Geo., Feb. «5, 1838.
OF EVEKI' DETCRIPTION, EXECUTED WITH
5 ATSESS ANI> DESPATCH AT THIS OFFtCF,.