Newspaper Page Text
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From a beautiful poem, occupying fifteen
pages of the Democratic Review, we make the
following extract. It bears a striking resem
blance to “Drake’s American Flag,” and we
are almost led to believe, that it is from the pen
of a Junior “Croaker.” Nothing surely can
fill the breast of the patriot , with more lofty
feeling than to gaze upon the flag of his coun
try, as it floats tranquilly in the breeze, an
emblem of national glory — drappeau sans ta
che.
"Flag of my country! in thy folds
Are wrapped the treasures of the heart;
Where’er that waving sheet is fanned,
i By breezes of the sea or land,
It bids the life-blood start.
It is not that among those stars
The fiery crest of Mars shines out:
•It is not that on battle-plain,
’Midst heaps of harnessed warrior’s slain,
It flaps triumphant o'er the rout.
Short-lived the joy that conquest yields;
Flushed victory is bathed in tears;
The burden of that bloody fame,
Which shouting thousands loud proclaim,
Sounds sad to widow’d ears.
Thou hast a deeper, stronger hold.
Flag of my country! on the heart,
Than when o’er mustered hosts unfurled.
Thou art a signal to the world,
At which the nations start.
Thou art a symbol of the power.
Whose sheltering wings our homes surround;
Guarded by thee was childhood’s morn,
And where thy cheering folds arc borne,
Order and peace are found.
Flag of my favored country, hail!
Blessings abound where thou dost float:
Best robe for living freedom’s form,
Fit pall to spread upon the tomb,
Should heaven to death devote.
Wave over us in glory still,
And be our guardian as now.
Each wind of heaven shall kiss thy cheeks:
And withered be the arm that seeks
To bring that banner low!”
WHO IS THE fiRNTI.RMAN
’» llv ikJ lllu L A.J I a LVI IN •
The answer of this question, among the A-'
tnericans depends generally upon the condi-'
tion, feelings, and particular modes of thinking,
of those who undertake to answer it, and con
sequently he who is very much of a gentleman
-in tko oalinaaliaia of ouo poriwn, ia «.<-> I
man at all in tho opinion of another.
A gentleman, in the estimation of mine host,
is one who calls freely for all the good things
appertaining to the bar, the wine cellar, and
the tabic, pays his bills punctually, without
disputing the items of the prices; and speaks
in flattering terms of every thing about his
landlord’s premises, from the beds in the attic
to Betty in the kitchen.
With waiters and ostlers, a gentleman is
one who is flush of his cash; who, after having
paid their master as much as their services
are worth, pays them four times their value
into the bargain, “Massa Dash,” says Cuflee,
4 ‘he bo one real gemman; he gid me half a dol
lar for brush his boots, three quarter dollar for
hold his hoss, and whole dollar for callin’ him
a gemman. And lie be first rate gemman: and
no mistake.”
A gentleman, with Dolly, the chambermaid,
is one who says a soft thing to her, praises her
good looks, compares her cheeks to the dam
ask rose, her lips to red cherries, her eyes 40
the planet Venus, and her waist to an hour
glass; and who, to prove the sincerity of his
soft nothings, gives her occasionally a sly kiss,
a gentle squeeze of the hand, and a bright sil
ver dollar.
A dandy’s estimate of a gentleman is based
on a foundation peculiarly his own. lie is!
not a creature who has any thing to do with '
money, sense, feeling, flesh or blood. lie is
wholly a factious animal, made up by the tai- :
lor, the seamstress, the cordwainer, the hatter,
and the corset manufacturer. He is, to be
sure, a creature that walks, talks, and eats;
but he does all these from no ordinary motive.
He walks merely to show his gentlemanly fig
ure; ho talks only because he never thinks;
and he eats for the same reason that his tailor
uses padding, viz: to fill out his proportions.
With a duelist, he is no gentleman who re
fuses to fight a duel. Ho may enact as many
villainous tricks as he pleases; ho may seduce
the weak, betray the confiding, cheat the hon
est, and murder the unresisting; all those do
not detract one whit from his gentlemanly
pretensions. But if he refuses to stand up and
be shot at, he is no gentleman. Having com
plied with this requisite he is a gentleman eve
ry inch of him, adultery, treachery, and mur
der, to the contrary notwithstanding.
With the gay miss, who never breathes free
ly’except in the atmosphere of folly and show,
a gentleman is one who exerts himself to pro
mote her wishes; who gallants her to theatres,
balls, and sleigh rides; who neglects his busi
ness to attend to her amusement; who spends
his money to advance her pleasure; who, in a
word, is pretty much, if not altogether a lady’s
man.
But with the young lady’s maiden aunt, a
staid gentlewoman ot worth, the gentleman is
stdl a different personage. He is the essence
i t respectful attention; and does not indicate
I by word look or that he suspects her of
being older than she was once, or that he pre- i
fersthe company of younger misses.
With old ladies of revolutionary times, a
. gentleman who wears a three cornered beaver;
has his shirts ruffled at the wrist. Who wears
short small clothes, and a long waistcoat, with
s pocket flaps; who wears silver buckles that
reach from side to side of his well saved shoes;
who walks with a gold headed cane; and who,
1 in his manners neglects no item of the cere
r mony of olden times.
The pit-a-pat heart of a susceptible girl of
16, tells her that a gentleman is a tall fellow,
i with a fine military cap on his head; a blue coat
. turned up with red facings; a sword by his
side; a neat pair of whiskers; a measured step,
and a “How d’ye do, my charming miss? You
I are the loveliest creature I ever beheld —upon
my soul you are!”
Miss Philis, too—she hab her gemman.—
And be a brack man, trait as a lamp post, wid
white teeth, roily eye, shiny skin, flatty foot,
plumpy skin lip, broady nose —a niggar who
wear a red coat, be de color what it will, who
fiddle like Polio, dance like Frenchman, make
two or three bows in a minute, and say, “0
loddy! Missy Phillis, your unpallatable beauty
hab set my heart on fire. O glue pot?”
Among fox hunters, a gentleman is a fellow
who can leap a five barred gate, jump a twen
ty foot ditch, thread the windings of the forest
at full gallop, smell the track when the hounds
are at fault, be the first at the death of Rey
nard, dip the brush in a bowl of punch, and
drink the washings of a fox’s tail.
With a country housewife he is every bit of
a gentleman who praises her domestic accom
plishments; extols her cookery, admires the
neatness of her house, and pats the heads of
her children; who prefers molasses to sugar in
sweetening his coffee; eats sour bread without
a wry face; despatches the worst articles on
her table with the best relish: rises at the crow,
ingofthe cock; and wishes his face at the
pump, instead of disarranging the ewer and ba
sin, which are kept for show.
A sailors gentleman is a bit of a tar. He is
a man who can box the compass; knot, splice
hand, reef, and steer; who can run aloft with
the nimbleness of a cat; and keep his footing
on a rope, as fearless as a spider on his web.
Who recks little whether he sleeps in his ham
mock; on the round top, or at the bottom of the
I ocean; who fears neither storms, nor a hostile
i sail; who cares not a great deal for money;
: whose hand is ever open at the cry of distress;
j w’ho loves his wife next to his ship; cannot a-
I bide a fellow that comes in at a cabin window;
hates meanness and despises a land lubber.
From Sam Slick, the Yankee Clock maker.
THE ROAD TO WOMAN’S HEART.
As we approached the Inn at Amherst, the 1
Clockmaker grew uneasy. It’s pretty well on i
in the evening, I guess, said he, and Maria'
Pugwash is as onsartain in her temper as a
rnornin in April; it’s all sunshine or all clouds
i Wstl* 9 cAMsI ii’ **» WMW vl? ,
! she’ll stretch out her neck and hiss like a goose
; with a flock of goslins. I wonder what on
airth Pugwash was a thinkin on, when he sign
ed articles of partnership with that are woman;
she’s not a bad looking piece of furniture nei
ther, and its a proper pity such a clever wo
man should carry such a stiff upper lip—she
reminds me of our old minister Joshua Hope
well’s apple trees.
1 The old minister had an orchard of most:
particular good fruit, for he was a great hand
1 at buddin, graftin, and what not, and the orch
-1 ard (it was on the South side of the house)
, stretched right up to the road. Well, there
was some treoe hung over the fence; I never
seed such bearers, the apples hung in ropes,
1 for all the world like strings of onions, and the
I fruit was beautiful. Nobody touched the mi
nistcr’s apples, and when other folks lost theirn
from the boys, hisn always hung there like
’ bait to a hook, but there never was so much as
a nibble at ’em.—So I said to him one day,
Minister, said I, how on airth do you manage
to keep your fruit that’s so exposed, when no
1 one else can’t do it no how. Why, says he,
they are dreadful pretty fruit, aint they? 1
guess, said I, there aint the like on’em in all
Connectiout. Well, savs he, I’ll tell you a se-
I- 7—J - , - ~
cret, but you necd’nt let on to no one about it.
That aro row next the fence, 1 grafted it my
" self, I took great pains to get the right kind, I
sent clean up to Roxberry and away down to
I Quasneck Creek (I was afraid he was going
to give day and date for every graft, being a
terrible long-winded man in his stories,) so,
says I, I know that, Minister, but how co you
preserve them? Why, I was agoin to tell you,
said he, when you stopped me. That are out
ward row, I grafted myself with the choicest
kind I could find, and succeeded. They are
beautiful, but so etearnal sour no human soul
! can eat them. Well, the boys think the old
Minister's graftin has all succeeded as well as
that row, and they search no further. They ;
i snicker at my graftin, and I laugh in my
sleeve at their penetration.
• Now, Warm Pugwash is like the Minister’s
apples, very temptin fruit to look at but despe-
5 rate sour. If Pugwash had a watery mouth
when he married, I guess its pretty puckery
by this time. However, if she goes to act ug
ly, PH give her a dose of “soft sawder,” that
will take the frown out of her frontispiece, and
make her dial plate as smooth as a lick of copal'
varnish. It’s a pity she’s such a kickin devil. ;
J too, for she has good points—good eye—good
foot—neat pastern —fine chest—a clean set of
i limbs, nnd carries a good . But here we
are, now you’ll see what “soft sawder” will do.
i: When we entered the house, the traveller’s
room was al! in darkuess, and on opening the
opposite door into the sitting room, we found.
i the female part of the family extinguishing the ■
; fire for the night. Mrs. Pugwcsh had a broom i
. ia her hand, and was in the act (the last act of|
female housewifery,) of sweeping the hearth.
The strong flickering light of the fire, as it fell
upon her tall figure and beautiful face, revea
led a creature worthy of the Clockmaker’s
comments.
Good evening, marm, said Mr. Slick, how
do you do, and how’s Mr. Pugwash? He, said
she, why he’s been abed this hour, you don t
expect to disturb him this time of night, I
hope. Oh, no, said Mr. Slick;- certainly not,
and I am sorry to have disturbed you, but we
got detained longer than we expected, I am
sorry that So am I, said she, hut if Mr.
Pugwash will keep an inn, when he ha s no oc
casion to, his family can’t expect to rest.
Here the Clockmaker, seeing the storm g a "
thering, stooped down suddenly, and stariPg
intently, held out his hand, and exclaimed,
well, if that aint a beautiful child—come here,
my little man, and shake hands along with me
—well, I declare, if that are little feller aint
the finest child I ever seed—what not abed yet?
ah, you rogue, where did you get them are
pretty rosy cheeks? stole them from mamma, i
eh? Well, I wish my old mother could see
that child—it is such a treat. In our country,
said he turning to me, the children are all as
pale as chalk, or asyaller as an orange. Lord
that are little feller would be a show in our
country—come to me, my little man. Mrs.
Pugwash said, in a milder tone than we had
yet heard, “Go, my dear, to the gentleman—
go dear.” Mr. Slick kissed him, and asked
him if he would go to the States along with
him—told him that the little girls would fall in
love with him, for they did’nt see such a beau
tiful face mice in a month of Sundays. Black
eyes—let me see—ah, mamma’s eyes, too, and
black hair, also; as I am alive, why you are a
mamma’s own boy, the very image of mamma.
Do be seated, gentlemen, said Mrs. Pugwash 1
—Sally, make a fire in the next room. She
ought to be proud of you, he continued. Well,
if I live to return here, I must paint your face,
and have it put on my clocks for the sake of
the face. Did you ever see, said he, again
addressing me, such a likeness between one
human and another, as between this beautiful
little boy and his mother. lam sure you have
had no supper, said Mrs. Pugwash to me—
you must be hungry and weary, too—l will
get you a cup of tea. lam sorry to give you
so much trouble, said I. Not the leajt trou
ble in the world, she replied; on the contrary,
a pleasure.
We were then shown into the next room,
where the fire was now blazing up, but Mr.
Slick protested he could not proceed without
the little boy, and lingered behind me to ascer
tain his age, and concluded by asking the child
if he had any aunts that looked like mamma.
As the door closed, Mr. Slick said, it’s a pity
she don’t go well in gear. The difficulty with
l those critters is to get them to start; after that
there is no trouble with them, if you don’t
■ check ’em too short. If you do, they’ll stop
| again, run back, and kick like mad, and then
Old Nick himself would’nt start ’em. Pug
wash, I guess, don’t the natur of
the critter; she'tt never go Kina tn harness tor
him- When I see a child, said the Clockma
ker, I always feel safe with these women folk,
for I have always found that the road to a wo
man’s heart lies through her child.
From the Frazers Magazine.
ADVICE TO REJECTED LOVERS’
i Though it is impossible to soy any thing vc-
I ry much to the parpose about refusals general
ly, a little fact and observation will always
tell you whether the girl who refuses you
would have been worth having, had she accep
ted. lam speaking of verbal communications
only, as nobody ever writes who can speak.
It is usual, in all cases of refusal, for the lady
to say that she is deeply grateful for the honor
you have done her; but feeling only friendship
for you, she regrets that she cannot accept
your proposal, &c. &c. I have heard the
words so often, that I know them by heart.
The words, however varied, signify little; it is
the tone and manner in which they are pro
nounced that must guide you in forming your
estimateof the cruel one. If they are pro.
nounecd with evident marks of sorrow, instead
of triumph, showing unfeigned regret for haV
ing caused pain which she could not alleviate
—if her voice is soft, broken and tremulous—
her eyes dimmed with a half formed tear,
which it requires even an effort to subdue—
then I say you may share in her sorrow, for
you have probably lost a prize worth gaining:
but though you grieve, you may also hope, if
you are a man of any pretension, for there is
evidently good feeling to build upon. Do not
therefore fly out and make an idiot of yourself,
on receiving your refusal; submit with a good
grace; solicit a continuance of friendship, to
support you under the heart crushing affliction
you have sustained. Take her hand at part
ing, kiss it fervently, but quietly: no outer con
duct of any kind—jest a little at the expense
? of your own failure, without, however, attemp
-1 ting to deprive her of the honor of the victory.
Rise in her estimation by the manner in which
you receive your sentence; let her sorrow bo
mingled with admiration, and there is no know
ing how soon things will change. These in
structions you will perceive, are not intended
for every one. as they require skill, tact,
quickness, and feeling, in order to be appreci
ated and acted upon. If you want these qual
ities, just make love purse in hand: it is a safe
mode of proceeding, and will answer admira
bly with all ranks, from Almacks, to the Bor
ough. Thereis only one class with whom it
will not answer, and that is the very class
worth having.
“If, on the other hand, the lady refuses you
I in a ready made and well delivered speech,
I which had evidently been prepared and kept
; waiting for you, then make your bow, and
i thank your stars for your lucky escape. If
she admonishes yo*>r inconsiderate conduct,
bids you calm your excited feelings, and sup- ,
port your affliction—if she triumphs, in fact,
and is condescendingly polite—then cut a ca
per for joy, and come down in the attitude of
John of Bologna’s dying Mercury, for you
have ample cause to rejoice. Il the lady snaps
at you as much as to say, “you are an impu
dent fellow”—which may be some times true
though it should not exactly be told—then re
ply with a few stanzas of Miss Landon’s s®ng.
"There is in southern climes a breeze,
That sweeps with changeless course the seas;
Fixed to one point—eh, faithful gale!
Tho art not for my wandering sail.”
If she bursts out in a loud fit of laughter, as
I once knew a lady to do, then join her by all
means; for you may be sure that she is neither
an ill bred hoyden or a downright idiot. But
unable to speak, grief at having caused your
nah’ l makes her burst into tears —as a little
Sw et / : sh girl once did when such a proposal
was made to her —then join her if you like,
for the cb.nnces are that you have lost one re
ally worth \Ypeping or -
Franklin's Ti™t- , Lwg 5“ shi "S
--ton’s victories over the French and Enghsn
had made his name ftmthar all over Europe,
Dr. Franklin chanced to dme with the English
and French An>bussado.-S, when tbo following
toasts were drun&: , ~
By the British Ambassador- England,the
Sun whose beams eni'jg’hten a „ n IUC 1 Y
remotest corners ofthe
The French Ambassador,- with na
tional pride, drank “Franc*?, oc,n \ w ° se
mild, steady,-and cheering rk vs; are tie e
light of all nations, consoling ti?eni in oar -
ness, and making their dreariness beauty.
Dr. Franklin then arose, and with his usual,
dignified simplicity, said, “George W ashing
ton, the Joshua who commanded the and
Moon to standstill and they obeyed him'-’
A Pilgrim. Among the passengers in Jhe
ship Susquehanna, recently arrived at this porJ
from Liverpool was Miss Harriet Livermore,
who will be recollected by most of our readers
as a Zealous preacher. This lady, about two
years since, left Philadelphia to go to Jerusa
lem.—She went, tarrying a short time at Lon
don, touching at Gibraltar, Malta and the in
termediate places, and abode for some time in
the Holy City, sitting in the sepulchre “where
the lord was laid,” wandering in the valley of
Jehosophat, climbing the Mount of Olives, for
ding Kedron, lingering in Gethsemane, and
journeying round places more consecrated to
Christian sympathies and biblical reminiscen
ces,
Where David sung and Jeremiah wept.
This lone woman of delicate health, made
all this journey without a male protector.—
She sojourned in a Catholic convent while in
l Jerusalem, and was kindly entertained. She
• was, when near the Levant, amidst those dy
-1 ing with the plague, and once in a place agita
■ ted by a tremenduous earthquake. We have,
' for our good wishes to the pilgrim received not
• arty consecrated relic, bert a pomegranate ta
ken from the garden of Gethsemane.
NOTICE-
WILL behold on ihe 2nd day of August next,
in the town of Van Wert, Paulding County,
three FRONT, & all the BACK LOT S belonging to
said Town, to the highest bidder.—Persons wishing
to lay out money for town property, would do well to
attend the sale, for we have a valley of splendid land,
and clear limestone water, in a beautiful country
that is rapidly settling with rich farmers; the bone
and sinew of any inland village. Sale to continue
I from day to day until all are sold. Terms made
. known on the day of sale. By order of Court.
1 BARNABAS PACE, Cl’k.
May 29-19-tds.
Murray Superior Court, May Adjourned
Term, 1838.
> TN open court, personally came Baylos Donaldson,
t ■- and being duly sworn, deposoth and says, that he
, has lost or mislaid a promissory Note, a copy of which
is hereto appended , and that the same cannot be found.
BAYLOS DONALSON.
’ Sworn to in open court.
JOHNS. BEALL, Clerk.
* COPY NOTE.
. Six months after date, we or either of 11.3 promise
j to pay Benjamin Sams or bearer, Forty Dollars. Val
ue received. May Ist, 1836.
Wilson Holden.
' Joshua Holden.
- Riley Wilson, Security.
Tn Murray Superior Court, May Adjourned
r Term, 1838.
: RULE NISI.
* <T appearing to the satisfaction of the court, that
; I Baylos Donaldson lost or mislaid a promissory
‘ Note, drawn by Wilson Holden, Joshua Holden and
Riley Wilson, payable to Benjamin Sams, for the sum
I ' of forty dollars, dated the first day of May, 1836, and
, duo on the first day of November of said year thereaf-
• ter. It is, therefore, on motion of counsel, ordered
i ' that the makers of said note do shew cause at the next
. 1 term of this court, why the annexed copy should not
be established in lieu of said lost original note, and
that a copy of this rule be served upon the defendants,
! if to be found, or be published three months before the
- sitting of that court, in one of the public gazettes of
, this State.
. A true transcript from the minutes of court.
JOHN S. BEALL, Clerk.
’ May 15,1838-—-17-3 m. _____
NOTICE.
• TOOUR month after da'e application will ba made
, I. to the Honorable the Inferior Court of Gil.
, j when sitting for ordinary purposes, for
leave to sell Lot No. 26, in the 11th District, 2nd
Section, formerly Cherokee, now Gilmer County;
* I being a part of the Real Estate of William Ellington,
> i late of said county deceased.
. I L. D. ELLINGTON, Ad’m’r.
March 24, 10. w4m.
h NOTICE?
W7IOUR months after date application will be made
M. to the Honorable the Inferior Court of Gilmer
, County, when sitting for ordinary purposes, for leave
to sell two Negroes, being the Estate of Priscilla
I Ellington late of said County deceased, sold for the
- purpose of division.
L. D. ELLINGTON, Ad’m’r.
, March 24, 10, wfm. *
""COURT C A <-« E N I> A R.
SUPERIOR COURTS- %
January.
Ist Monday, Richmond,
2d “ Chatham,
February.
Ist Monday, Stewart,
" Floyd,
Paulding.Thursday before
2d Monday, Clark,
" Bibb,
" Macon,
" Randolph,
" Cass,
3d “ Walton,
•’ Crawford,
" Early,
*• Cherokee,
4tlr “ Baker,
»♦ Jackson,
" Meriwether,
" Forsyth,
" Upson,
r Leo, Thursday after,
March.
Ist Monday, Cowetaa,
“ Lumpkin,
• M Fike,
1 " Sumpter,
Taliaferro,
’ 2d *• Columbia,
1 " Fayette,
’ " Greene,
Laurens,
3 •* Madison,
3 " Marton,
“ Monroe.
" Morgan,
- " Gwinnett,
3 n Union,
, Gilmer, Wednesday after,
3d Monday. Butt®,
" Elbert,
" DeKalb,
I « Half.
" Putnam,
Talbot,
1 •< Murray,
4th “ Jfulloflk,
" Cobb,
r " Dooly,
| Newton,
“ Walker,
“ Washington,
" Wilkes,
Thursday after
Aram.
Ist Monday, Warren,
>< Vv’ilktnson,
«• Can.'Db*h.
2d " Carroi’4
“ Dade,
" Camden?
" Hancock, ,
“ Harris,
“ Henry,
“ Franklin,
“ Montgomery
" Twiggs,
Tatnall, Thursday after,
Wayne, ** **
3d Monday, Emanuel,
" Habersham,
t « lino
“ iieara,
«• Glynn,
•• Jones,
•• Muscogee,
“ Oglethorpe,
“ Pulaski,
Mclntosh,Thursday after,
4th Monday, Striven,
“ Lincoln,
“ Rabun,
•• Jasper,
“ Telfair,
“ Houston,
•• Troup,
“ Liberty,
Irwin, Thursday ufter,
Bryan, Wednesday after,
May,
Ist Monday, Burke,
«, Appling,
Ware, Thursday after,
2d Monday, Chatham,
“ Lowndes,
3d “ Jefferson,
•• Thomas,
4th “ Decatur,
UNITED STATES COURT.
Sixth Circuit for the district of Georgia—James M
Wavnf., Circuit Judge—At Savannah, Thursday alier
I the Ist Monday 3d May—Milledgeville, Thursday
I after the Ist Monday Bth November—Rules day, tho
■lst Mondays in each month, upon which days all writs
I arc returnable to the Clerk’s office in Savannah.
District Court—Jeremiah Cutler, Jndgs—ln Sa
vannah, 2d Tuesday 13th February—2d Tuesday Bth
; May—2d Tuesday 14th August—2d Tuesday 13th No
! j vernber.
EDUCATION,
fWIHE Subscriber’s School, located in the centra
' B of Vann’s Valley, contiguous to General
James Hemphill’s, is now open for the reception of
I students at the following rates of tuition, per session
I of five months.
; Beginners, .... - $6 00
Rudiments of Arithmetic and Geography, 8 00
English Grammar and Geography. - 12 00
Classics and Sciences, - - - 15 00
Boarding can be obtained at from six to eight dol.
lars per month, washing included. As the number
of students will be limited, those who design sen
ding their children or Wards will please make early
application.
JOHN WARNOCK.
May 5-16-3 t.
NOTICE.
FOUR months afterdate application will bo made
to the honorable the Inferior Court of Walker
county, when sitting as a court of Ordinary, for leave
to sell all the Real Estate of Harris Sprayberry, late
of sa.d county, deceased-
HARVEY J. SPRAYBERRY, Adm’r.
March 17, 9 w4m
: NOTICE? ~
AGREEABLE to an order of the Honorable the
Inferior Court of Floyd county, when sitting as
> a Court of Ordinary, will be sold on the first Tuesday
in July next, in the town of Rome, the following prop
erty, to wit: One negro woman by the name of lbby,
about sixty years old; Harriett, about thirty;
two negro girls—one by the name of Eastbcr, about
sixteen years old, the oiher by the name of Lllcy 5
? ten yeers old. Also, one Improved Lot in the
r town of Rome, No. 21, in the Coosa Division. Sold
» for tho benefit of the heirs and creditors of the Estate
i of Wm. 11. Meredith, la'e of said county deceased.—
• Terms made known on the day of sale.
JESSE LAMBERTH, Administrator
with the Will annexed.
April 14, 1838. 13-lda,
June.
Ist Monday, Baldwin,
" Richmond,
August.
Ist Monday, Stewart,
•• Flovd,
2d “ Clark,
•• Bibb,
" Randolph, .
•• Cass,
•• Macon.
3d “ Walton,
" Crawford,
" Early,
•• Cherokee,
4lh " Baker,
Jackson,
" Emanuel,
•» Upson,
•• Meriwether,.
" Forsyth,
Lee, Thursday alter, <
September,
Ist Monday, Pike,
“■ Gilmer,'
" Taliaferro, •
" Coweta,
" Lumpkin,
2d “ Columbia
" Madison-
’• Morgan
“ Ixitfrcns ’
“ Monroe-
‘‘ Fayette’
** Greene
„ Marion
~ Gwinnett.
*» Union
3d “ Elbert
“ Butts
DeKalb
Hall
,** Talbot
„ Murray
u Putnam
«> Newton:
«, Cobb
» Walker
’■ “ Bulloch
« Dooly
*"* Washington.
“ Wilkea
October.
Ist Monday, Warren
“ Wilkinson
“ Campbell
Montgomery
2d " Hancock
” Franklin
„ Camden
h. Twiggs-
Dade
w Henry
w Carrol
Harris
31 „ Emanuel
u Oglethorpe
„ Babershutica
Jones
<i Pulaski
Heard
■“ Muscogee
4 th “ Seri ven
Lincoln
’’ Rabun*
„ Jasper
,1 Telfair
v Houston
“ '1 roup -r*
November.
Bulloch, Wednesday be
fore the Ist Monday
Effingham, Friday niter,
the Ist Monday,
2d Munday, Jefferson ,
3d “ Burke
” Applying
Wore, Thuruduy after
Lowndes, Munday after,
Thomas, Mon. thereafter,
Dccaiur, “ “
4th Monday, Camden
• Wayne, Thursday after
• Glynn, Monday thereafter
• Mclntosh, Thursday “
; Liberty, Monday, “
‘. Bryan, Wednesday “