Newspaper Page Text
DOMESTIC.
From the St. Louis Slew Era, 18//* inst.
OREGON.
We have convened with an intilligeut, practical
mau, who hn* just returned from Oregon, in which
place he lived neatly a year. He went from Indiana
last year, and in now leturning to that place, with the
intention of removing permanently to Oregon.
He has travelled over a large portion of that rountry,
ond has been a close observer. He §ys that the peo
ple of Oregon will he very much rejoiced to learn that
the Oregon question has been settled ; that they will
object to the relinquishment ot Vancouvier’a Island,
but will consider jt a vreat object to have the boundary
settled; that they do not consider it a matter of great
importance where the line shall run, hut a matter of
vast importance to their peace, prosperty and safety,
that it should he finally adjusted.
The emigrants will be rejoiced when they hear of
the Oregon treaty. He represented that there are now
about COUO isittlers in Oregon, one fourth of whom are
foreigners or half bleeds, and three-fourths American
emigrants. The provisional government is well sus
tained, justice well administered, and the law s proper
ly ciiforcuJ. The local legislature provides bv law
that each pettier shall h ive one section or ind square
of land, Hindi must he surveyed with til'* cardinal
points and marked either b) n Uural or artificial laud*
marks.
A description must bo recorded, and the settler must
either coniaiucon it, or it he Iraies it he must pay ;i
tax on huMlain of five doll in per year for iwuyrum ;
and if he cia iauo absent more than two years he for
feits all claim Vhatevi r.
v The people tro anxious for the United States to es
tnolish a icrriUiijl government in order tan they may
|i4ve greater*permanency and security, and also that
. thf may have base and range lines and a regular sys
tem of surveys of the public lands. The peop'e arc
industriously making furma aid impr v'in. nts; they ,
n * make a considerable surplus of wheat beyond
tin v.;ml ot the territory ; they s . % .nd export much
lumber, and soil a considerable ou tv of fish.
i i.e farmers arc gutting fine s’.- k* of bogs, horses
•herp ond cattle; they trade join- 1 rt‘i t • s U i.
.Wich Inlands, and get their supplies of merchand
principally from the Hudson B.i\ Company, who sup
ply them with groceries and nn rch amiize on reasona
ble terms. The Cushings of Newbutyport, and G. v
Aberneathy, have Mores in Oregon City, but their
Mocks are not heavy. The people need very much
firming implements, tools ot every kind, castings, hoi
few wire and household kitchen furniture, and such
things shipped round Irom the Hast would be good in
vestments.
The water power of the country is very fine, and (lie
people very much need additional mills ai.d machinery;
they also rn ed carding machines to work up their wool,
the climate is mild in the Wellamette valley— they
hid no snow all last Wmtei, an 1 thev seldom have
Mfiow of any depth ; and stiil irnme hatelv E st of them
are several high mountain peaks that are covered w ith
perpetual Know. Ttiey can plough at any ti ne during
the YY inivr. and wheat may be advantageously sown
at any time from September to April. They raise from
25 to 60 bushels of wheat to the sere. He showed us
some specimens ol Oregon wbeul which were unusual
ly fine.
The farmers are faying some attention to orchards
and iiuraeries, l/nder ail act of Congress, some per
sons have undertaken to m ike a road across the Cas
cade mountains, so as to surmount the g'eatest difficul
ty in reaching Oregon. One hundred and sixty miles
across the Cascade range presents mote difficulties and
perils to the emigrant than the whole distance from the
Missouii to the ocean.
The persons alluded to have undertaken to cut u
wagon road across this range of mountains on condition
that they receive five dollars for each wagon that cros
ses ovei for two years to come. They engage to have
it ready for the emigrants of the present year. Many
of the emigrants last year suffered prodigiously in at
tempting to oroes these mountains.
Oiir m'elligerrt informant thinks that Cong r ess ought
tq .make an appropriation without delay to make a good
road ‘tferoHs the Cascade lange into the Wellamette
Va!|y, and then a wagon can travel conveniently from
Missouri to the Pacific, and the construction of a rjad
at this time is he.vond the ability ol the emigrants*
Ship* ascend the Co'umhi* six no lea above the
mouth of the Wrlfenit tie to Fort Vancouver; and
twenty mil s farther np the river is interrupted by high
perpendicular falls; aln>ve that point are several other
high falls, nml the liver is only navigated by birch ca
noes or light boats, that art carried across many porta
ges. Ship* ascend the Wellamette to within ten miles
’ I Oregon City, slid steamboat* nriy come to that city
and at the city there is a perpendicular fall of 25 feet,
which affords the finest water power in the world.
Above the full* at Oregon City the WellannMte could
l*e navigated bv steamboats for 150 miles. The Wei
bnnette valley i very rich and desirable, and contain*
the principal settlements. There is a settleinement on ‘
the coast just below the moo nth of the Oregon, and 1
one between the VVellemette and the Pacific. A few
American settlers have located near Puget’s Sound, and
ore erecting a saw-m il at that point.
The country between the. Oregon and Puget's Sound
is generally mountainous, but it has m*nv fertile val
leys, fine timber and good water, Puget’s Sound is
said to he the he*t on the coast, and there is also a good
bartiur at the mouth ot the Colum la.
There is a great quantity of iron ore at Mount Hood I
in Oregon, and stone coal has been discovered and ■
worked in the Wei Is me tie N alley about 100 miles a
bove Oregon City. Some of the cm grants .ire trying
to explore a route from Fort Hogy on Lewi* river, di
rect to the upper end of the Wellamette Villev, and if
they succeed it will shorten the loule to Oregon very
much.
Front Ihe Kichiooml Whig.
MR. WEBSTBK ON THE TARIFF.
The Washington Union is my iged in a work ot
supcreirtgalieti in republishing Mr. Webster's uid opin
ions in opposition |o a Protective ‘J'anll. No one de
nies that til INKS .111.1 1824. lie opposed it with nil the
power ol his great mind —and so ilui nearly the entire
New England delrg itmn in Congiesa. noiwithsiand
nut the people are now made to la-lo ve thaMlie sva
tein laone ot Yankee origin, aid fi.it tin- ohjscl of ns
prep-etuis waa fioin the slait to “plunder” (lie 8 <>utli!
Mr. Cainoi'H end dm Hoi in I'mutiM Ih leeafon
were ihll (marvellous as it may s. em) the hea I and
Iron ‘ ‘arid’ party, inclu Im •il ■ njHil.il ape-
I'ljta, ihs ‘ ‘9iis min ir.ima and a 1 \ir did ibev
ntainl ! nmfir, il the Union will ‘ . ivhat mi
partml in it’ resesnrlics among o.d n II find
ihat Jamra (luchan-ni. Martin \ , . . Am . -<
Jackson. Thomas 11. llenion, unj man) u her l< adi ts
of the nova (so pulled) “Free Tudo” parly v.ded not
•ml) lor the Taril! ol I HM4. hut lor that “first lull nl
dominations,” the Tanlf ot I*2B, also * Mr. V\ i li
ster hae changed Ills position it is true —and an have
the leaders of the Democracy. Ilut why are Mr.
Web-trr and New England nuw in favor of a system
which they formerly oppoerd! Simply because, hev- |
mg lieen forced upon Ihrtn, with thru promptness to
adapt themselves to rircumetanres which marks the
Noithrrn illiractrr. gnat interests huve grown up
under it—capitsl and laluir.lo in enormous atiinunl, 1
diverted from other pursuits, are now embarked In line
IIVW department of industry—tailJ they are naturally !
and propeily h lahle to a change which w ill now atnke
down by the leg.station ol Congress an immense husi- ,
ness which ha giown up under its previons enact- 1
ments. Can Mr. Calhoun and other leaders of the
Democratic party ollei as satistirtwy an explanation
n( their change? Can they tall us why it is, afier
holding out inducements to individuals to invest their
rapital in manufacturing patahhahiueuta, they now
seek to aneat their progress, and to ruin thoae whom
they have tempted te engage in this pursuit ? The
•JVifT it the offspring, to a great eitenl. of Sotilh
Carolina Slateuncn— and waa forced upon New Eng.
lend agaiuat hei wishes and in dfianra of the votes ol
her representatives. Decause they have exhibited au-
Jiannr sagacity in profiting by its advantages, ought
they to Ire therefore the victims of the versatile ojnn
ions us the authors of the system ? If Mr. Calhoun
chooses to devour, Htlrm-like, Ills own offspring, sure
ly those who have, against their will, cherished and
fosterrd it in its infancy, arr justified in exhibiting for
It some regard, and in eodravoring In prevent its de
struction. now that it has acquired stability and
strength
bingueTr CASE.
We mentioned a saw days ago the election of Mr.
Bradbury, by the Legislature of Maine, as the U. H.
Benatot. It tames out that he was not elected after all
—and that the most intamou* fraud was perpetrated
by the committee which counted the ballots. The
Boston Atlas gives the following particulars : “ It ap
pears that only forty-junk ballots were returned for
; Mr. Evans, when fifti-thrkb Whig* have signed a
solemn declaration that they voted lor Mi. Evans; and
four other Whiga have testified that they voted for
Mr. Allen, of Bangor, and W’. P. Fessenden, of Port
land ; thia, together with the votes of the Independent
Democrats, makes aeventy-four against Bradbury,
which, with the Abolition vote, would have defeated
I turn by sevetal votes. Mr. Magoun, of Bath, a gen
jtlemanof the highest.respectability and charucler, tea
I lilies that he went into the committee room and there
I found his ballot, which was not returned, as also the
ballot of Mr. Kingsbury.
An investigation was demanded in I lie House of
Representatives on the 22d, and it was declared if
Gov. Anderson gave Mr. B. u certificate of election ‘
(which it is said lie liaa refused) the seat would he
contested. The Committee to receive, sort and count
the vote* for a U. S. Senator, did not revise euch oth
er’s count; nml the scattering voles were counted for
Mr. Btadhury, and this was the way the fraud was
consummated.”
INTERNAL IMPROVEMENT BIEL
In defiance of the resolutions of the Baltimore Con
vention, and in the teeth of lie professions of the
dominant party, the bill appropriating a large sum to
the improvement of river* and harbor*, which some
i rue si:*o paused the House of Representative*, on Fri
day list received the sanction of the Serrate also, by a
decisive majority. VVe sul>j>n the yea* and nays:
Vlis Messrs. Alien, A*hley, Bairow, Benton,
Berrien, Brecse, Cameron. Cans, John Vi. ('layton,
Thomas (layton, Corwin, Davis, Dayton, Dickinson,
Mix. Greene. Hannegm, Huntington, Jjrnag n, John
>n of Lou fiana, Johnson of Maryland, Miller, More
head, Pearce, Phelps. Rusk, Semple, Sevier, Simmons,
;T.t. Sturgeon, l pliam, Webster, unJ Wood
hi, fee—34.
Nits—Messrs. Archer, Atherton. Bigbv,Calhoun,
I 1 aimers, Cilley, F;i.field, Haywood. Houston, Low
(i-. Mvingum, Niles, Penny backer, Tun y V'.s a'\,
•! ii • Yuloe—lC.
The lull is now in the hands of ti i -
di he veto it ? The Enquirer in > 1
■I no doubt *do his duty”—in other *. ~ \ Cu
ill. In a day or two, we presumo, we thail know
i whether a “Democratic” President, ly vetoing h iiiohs
me of a‘ Democratic” Corig'ess, will furnish another
illustration of the uncertainty of “Democialic” prin
ciples ? —Richmond Whig.
WAR EXPENSES.
A letter from Washington to the Philadelphia
North American, descant* us follows upon the proba
ble ex (tenses of the Mexican War. We shall behold
* frightful aggregate when the account current shall
be tendered:
“ There is one point, which touches the nerves of a
large interest in the dominant party—the enormous
| expense at which this war is being conducted. We
I are now progressing at the rate of three or four mil
! lions a month, which will make a respectable sum to
• tal by the end of the year. They dread public opin
ion upon the score of expenditure, since the shameless
and profligate extravagance of the Florida war, of
which this is to be a second edition ir. point of prodi
gality. as we have already seen, but on u more extend
ed scale. The only material difference between the
Mexican and the Florida wars, when the accounts
come to be adjusted, will he, that the first will be seen
to have cost twice or three times ns much aa the latter,
and that thousands instead of hundreds of contractors
and sutlers will have grown rich at the expeuse of
1 Government.”
Ai.akmino the Hrins.—A lady of Washington,;
who introduces herself to the public by tbe name and I
style of M try Ann Van Ness,advertises in tho Nation- j
ol Intelligencer, claiming to be the widow of the late j
General Vail Ness, of that city, and offering 5500 for
the discovery of a will which she avers, was made bv I
him ; at the same time cautioning all person* indebted
to the e.-rtxte of said Van Ness, or having business re- !
lutions therewith, a *amsl making payment* and con- I
Rumating contracts, or doing any other act or thing to
the validity of which her sanction is necessary. She
add*, that she will ratify and carry into effect, at the !
proper time, all contracts and business negotiations ac
cording to the intentions ol her late husband.
Tiip estate in question is worth looking after cer- ■
tainly ; being valued at half a million, we believe, and
if there be u widow, it is not to be wondered at that
she should be careful of her rights. But why was this
pietence deferred to so late a day. We have always 1
thought Gen. Van Ness was a widower, lie certain- ;
ly passed for one, for years.
The Commercial's correspondent says;
“ The name of the claimant to the substantial bene
fits of widowhood ha* been heretofore Mary A. Con
ner. a widow of a citizen of this place.”
The Washington correspondent of the Philadelphia
Inquirer, commenting on this singular advertisement,
remarks th^t
“ As the General was never seen to visit the lady
in question, our good ci’izen* were astonished at the
annunciation. The • widow” stated that the marriage
took pDca privately, in Philadelphia, in 1632. This
morning she ha* come out in an advertismenl in the
National IntePigencer, and effering a reward of SSOO
for the recovery of a will the deceased is said to have
made. The rase will shortly come before court, when
the proofs of the alledged widow will he tested. One
of her counsel, a* I learn, is tbe Vu e President t the
United States. Her “proofs” of th* marriage are said
to be very curion*. The ceremony i* slledgt'd to have
taken place last rummer in Philadelphia. This a flair,
having become the subject of public legal proceeding*,
excites iiitich curiosity.”
OI.D FURNITURE SOLD HV PUNCH.
Lot I. The teal of war (in India.) —This seal
has been very much knocked about, and has scarcely
a leg to stand u|ion. With a little money, however
judiciously laid out, it could he put into immediate re
pair. It ha* been carried about for half a century all
over India, and is now to be disposed of, as tlm own
ers have no further use for it. It is offered to the
French Government ass seat the best adapted for the
standing amiy in Algrirs. With little French pol
ish, and turning the scat i::lo Morocco, It is an silicic
which will h.a’ |..r yeu.
Lot m. Ilie jut of fanhinn. —This glass ha. lost
its lifillsitcy, Item hating l*ccn so f.equsnllv looked
into. I is * -i calculated for those jiersons vvhos, v-
I nil , a,l 111 Ills will bear the mmiiinj’ if? ,
as I I .1 Viewed through ills seen in . ~ ,t
It ii sod young ladles, residing on t, , . ,
i id llieil silver well laid om o ..
oflaebmii,
1 Wil he the iJentietl tuple u,e n ,', ,
conic all tbo manages in high li'e tor ti e is*’ J.liy ,
yesi*.
l,ot 4. There is some hope of Ihe Pipe of Peace,
which Frsuee and England have lately been smoking,
bring |iut up lor sale, hut this tl.q ends entirely upon
Err'd Palmerston being made the minister for foreign
affairs.
Eol 6. Several autographs of K. M, the Duke of
Wellington, written during the march ot intellect, will
Ire also submitted to the amateurs us tare th net.
| Eol ti. A few Flowers of Kuslorif, and Figures of
’ Speech, will lie handed round the rouin for lire inepei
lion of p irlmmt nisiy slid pot-bouto orators. The
bowers are beautiful cul and dried, and have been pre
served in Ihe leaves ol Hauaanl, Tile figures ate well
slutted, and clothed in Ihe elningeat language.
I.oi T. The toureltnl Field Marshall Prince Albert,
as rested by him in ihe gardens of Uuekmghsm Pel
ace, will he shown for Die inspection of ell military
persona who produce then Waterloo medals, and small
rpiiga will be suld to country renth'insn who bold
commissions in her majesty's militia.
Eot 8. The silver sj.ooo which Mr. Hudson hid
in Ins mouth when he was horn, will be pul op for
competition among railway chairmen.
‘I he clothes which the lories ran away with when
the whiga were bathing, will he bung round the iworn,
list will not he sold, la they form part of a collection us
unredeemed pledges.
In addition to the above attractions, Ihe celebrated
Rod of Iron, which was formerly used in England, has
been sent over from Ireland expressly for tins sale,and
the Rule which Millennia uses in rating the waves, will
be kindly lent by Euid Bllanboroggh for ihia exhibi
tion only.
FAT CONTRACT*.
The favored nnea are no* making immense fortunes
out nf army contracts. W c hear of one case in which
30,000 suits of clothing were ordered. The contractor
got two dollars piofit on each sun, and the officer mak
ing the contract for the government teceived a bonus
of one dollar on each suit. The one made 530.000
and the other SOO,OOO at a slap. For all these luxu
ries the North pays The Mexicao war, il peace should
he declared to-morrow, will cost the people of this State
more than enough t# have finished the euuals. Yet
the party who wont permit the jeople to make an in
vestment which i* sure to return them 10 or 20 per
cent, have not a word in reprobation of the lavish and
worse than useless expenditure* made to pumper the
slave aristocracy of the Muuth. ‘Phi* is what we should
call straining at a gnat and swallowing a camel. —A.
L Western Slate Journal.
From Townsend't Lives of Twelve Eminent Judges.
LORD ELLENBOROUGH'S WITTICISMS.
When Mr. Park (the laic Justice Allen Park) had j
bien moved, in some case that appealed to the feeling*.’
to repeated exclamation*, and had called Heaven to
witness, and ho forth, while addressing the jury. “Pray,
sir, said my lord, “pray, don’t swear hi that wav heie
in couil! ’ ‘J he effect of this interruption, in a grave
tone, was irresistible, and Mr. Park heartily joined in
Iju hing at this unexpected practical pleasantry.
W lien another council, 100 much hddicted to self
praise, had declared, in the couraeofhis address, that
such things were enough to drive one from the proles
sion of the law, “Don’t threaten the court,” said his
lordship, with such a terrible calamity.”
The austere lectures which he sometimes read flip
pant pedaatry, or hopeless imbecility, are often rerncm
beied mid quoted witn niabno'j* glee, for they possess
a character for quaint an ; i\e arcosm peculiar to the ,
man.
An eminent cmiv wi .-r. ulio prided himself on
having an were 1 thirty l uih.i.i) cases, came express
lrm the Court >i Chancery to the King'* Bench to
aruue a ca*>e of real property. Taking for granted,
rather 100 rashly, that common lawyer* are little more
acquainted with ihe Digest of Cruise than with the
1 iws of China, he commenced hi* erudite harningue
by obsci ving, “ that an estate in fee simple wasihe
1 ‘’ “1 estate known to the law of England.” ■•Stav,
’ .t< rrupird the Chief Justice, with < m
let in write thill down.” IE wrote, mui
| .-low y and deliHerat, ly, tho note which he lad
| *’ ll> l! *ia A. B. C. axoiii *An estate tr f e simple
| ifr the highest estate known to ibe law of England.—
I be Cuun,sir, is indebted to you for the information.”
I tiere was only one person present who did not per
ceive the irony, and that was the learned council who
incurred it. But, though impervioot to irony, it was im
possible even fjr his self-love to avoid uudeistandiog
the home thrust lounged by the judge at tbe conclusion
ol his harangue. He had exhausted the year books,
and all the mysteries of real property law, in u sleepy
oration which cffectnally cleared the court. Insensible
alike to the grim repose of the bench and the yawning
impatience of the ushers, when, at tbe close of gome
parenthetical and apparently interminable sentences,
the clock struck four, and the judges started to their
I wt, he appealed to know when it would be their pleas
ure to hear the remainder of his argument. “ Mr. IV
rejoined the chief, •* we are bounJ to hear you, and
shall do so on Friday, but pleasure has long been out
of the question.”
i be hesitation of duJness and vagaries of fancy re
ceived from him no quarter. A young council com
menced his stammering speech with the remark, “The
unfortunate client who appears by roe,” and then came
to a full stop, beginning again, after a brief piuse, with
• repetition of (be remark. “My unfortunate client,” be
did not find his fluency of speech quickened by the
calm raillery of the judge, who interposed, in his softest
i ( ( J nea . 4 Pray go on : *o fer the court is with you.”—
; J he late Sir James Mclntosh, who used to chuckle over
the narration of this incident, would, however, sigh at
remembrance of its cruelly ; and cruel it undoubt
-1 edly wag.
Another barrister was advancing rapidly into the re
gions of poetry in a grave argument at bane, and ob
serving. “ It is w/itten in the large volume of nature,”
when tbe judge instantly recalled his wandering imag
ination* by tbe caustic query, •* In what page, pray ?”
When a favorite special pleader, Mr. Gazelle, was
making an excursion, somewhat unexpected to his
hearers as unwonted in him, into# p.lhrur topic, “Are
we not, sir. rather getting now into Che high sentimen
tal latitudes ?” The barn-dour flight of the English
special pleder was far inferior in sublimity to that of
aa Irish coußcellor, who thought proper to auppose
“An eagle soaring high above the mints of earth, win
ning its daring flight against the mid-day sun, till the
coutempUuon becomes too dazzling for humanity, and
mortal eyes gaze after it in vain ; heie the orator falter
ed, and after an abortive effort or two, sat down in con
fusion. “ The next time,’sir. said the judge, “ you
bring an eagle into court, I should recommend you to
clip his wings.”
I.ettkr rasa Hantx Asa.-The New York Her
eld publishes ihe following important extract of a let
ter recently written by B,nils Ana :
“Should the fortress of San Juan d’Ulloa second
the many calls upon tne from other portions of Mexi
co. it will be deemed decided evidence that my country
is convinced that, in banishing, great injustice has
been done lo me. Ho direct a mode of announcing
my innocence of having shaped my public course in
no instance, except in the way behevej moat conducive
to the good of the republic, must occasion me to feel
it obligatory ‘upon me to obey, with earnest affection,
the wishes of the nothin; and 1 will immediately pro
ceed from this to the pest in qncslioir As, however,
it has not been my desire to interfere with lire meas
urcs of the present administration of mv country’s
destinies, it will not be expected of me to enter Mexi
co unless I have the countenance and support of Ihe
sallant soldiery and citizens us ihe fortress and city of
Vers (!ruz.
•• Gen. Paredes was instrumental in supplanting my
own government with that of Herrera: his ha-ing
himself, subsequently, supplanted the government
which overthrew mine, is proof, on hia pari, that he
also did me injustice ; und, inasmuch a- 1 am aware us
the existing necessity for whomsoever is m power, lo
consider it, liv virtue of tin i.arli if office, obligatory
upon him to ii[holil his p.s i I shall deem the
measure which Genera! i ■ , , re . on :<!cr icquistts
to avert my return, us u. o - >.>al towards my
self. but as acts won It by ra, ... is callerl upon 10
|terftiruv, in order lo sustain r . 1 snail nol, therefore,
sites it) Gen. Paiedcs my enemy. My wishes arc for
the prosperity of my country.”
American Squaaron in the Gulf and the Pacific.
Te i .win,', list comprises the names of lh“ vessel?
t •i. t-.e Golf, anil about lo protect) iii r, :
‘ it Gulf of Mcx'cn and fat tne A.inch
o , S . t Juan tfr Vltoa.
U. h. Hinp lit the i, tie ennsv .vsnia, 120 guns,
“ ‘• NortU-Camlina. 74 ••
” •• Dwlawtie, 74 •<
*• i. Ohio, 74 a
‘• Fugate Miami; wine, 44 ••
•• •• Constellation, 44 .
•• •• Potomac, 44
o •• Raritan, 44 ••
•• Uumberland, 44 •*
“ Sloop Falmouth, 22 ••
** ** John Adams, 22 ••
•* •< St. Mary'a, SO
•• •• Austin. 20 u
Steamer Mississippi, 10 ••
n•• Princeton, 9 s
•• Hpitfire, 3 t,
•• •• Eegare, 6 u
s Hpencer, 6
“ Bug Porpoise, 10 •<
*• Trugton, 10
o •• Horn te ra, 10 ••
*• “ Eawience, 14
•• Heboonsr Flirt, 4
“ Boniii, 2
*• Cutler, M’Eane, C •<
<• •* Woodbury, 8 ••
•t Van Buren, 6
Total guna, 752
DAVID CONNOR, Commodore.
The Weafern coaat of Mexico, and ill the ports in
the Pacific, will be seized end kept under strict block
ade. and the revenue derived fium commerce complete
ly slopped.
The following list embrace# the American Hquidron
1 now in the Pacific, and ordered te that ocean :
S.juuitron on the West Conti of Mexico, in the
I'aCftc,
L S. R a 7 e Independence, 54 juris.
“ Fiijale .Savannah, * 54 “
“ •* (Joaijrwa, 44 “
“ •• Constitution, 44
“ Sloop Portsmouth, 30
“ Levant, * 30 ••
“ “ Warren, 30 ••
“ “ Gayane, 20 •*
•• Schooner Shark, 10 ••
•• Store >hip Erie, 8 ••
‘• *• Relief, 8 *
” •• Lexington, 8
‘l‘otal guna, 008
’May noon return home.
VN M II SMIUBIHCK, Commodore,
‘l hcae two squadrons will comprise a larger naval
force than wav over put forth hy the United Slates;
nd manned anil officered as they will lie hy the heat
men in the world, they cannot tail of accomplishing
all that will he required of them. — ft. V. Herald.
Our neighbors in Camden county will he pleased to
leain that through the untiring ifl'irts of their immedi
ate Representative, Mr. Kir, they have finally suc
ceeded in gelling ituuugh the House of Representa
tives, an appropriation of $20,0(10 for the commence
incut ol a Fort at the entrance of Cumberland Sound.
I ho good people id St. Marys, ton, who have strong
reasons for remembering the want id such a fortifica
tion duiiug the 1 at war will, no doubt, he able to ap
preciate thoae efforts of their immediate Representative,
which may hereafter save them the pairi and mortifica
tion of a second visit from the red coots. They will
s'- 1 hdy thankful tu Mt. llahxlson, tho only
member frum the IStale who thought the
diluent importance n> give Mr. Kino a
f- -nd in the matter. We must nut utnii to
state i t Mr, fSTseuuas also gave Mr King a vigei
oti. support, while Messrs. Jones, Towns, Cnbb and
Lumpkin recorded then votes against the Rill in which
it w a contained. Mr. Too.miis was not in Ins scut.
—*'>'ii lan null licp üblicu n.
.1-res/ of Mr. Graham. —A telegraphic despatch
in the Halttmote American of the 28lh, dated Pbila
-Ith. savs: •• Mr. Crahani, proprietor of the
“th American, was this afternoon nr
.nt-at-Arina of the Senate, mid start
ed -n in the evening train. The cause
| ofl- a iu ierstood to he the pubiicitiou of the
| Oregon J ny ~id accompanying document*, which
. arc supposed to have been purloined by someone from
! the Senate chamber, or else furnished to him for pub-
I lication by some member of the Senate.'’
The Washington correspondent of the New York
Commercial says, tbe opinion that we ought lu resort
ton system of Direct Taxation is very generally
| prevailing among the friends of free trade here.” The
Enquirer will percieve'tbat there are increasing symp
| turns of “insanity” among its friends.— lb.
“ Death of the old Drown Dog. —Under this head
all tbe Cincinnati papers ol Saturday have editorial no
, ticcs of the death of a remarkable dog of that city, well
1 known to the -‘oldest inhabitants.” Tbe Ileiald says
that lor the twenty years pant he has resided here, and
! has generally signalized himself by attending, with
grrat sobriety, all grand processions. He was buried
with due honors in the yard belonging to the Gazette
buildings, arid it is in contemplation, we learn to rear
a monument tu Ills memory. Mr. Cist, iu bis Adver
| l Ist, has the following notice of hint.
| “ One of the greatest curiosities of Cincinnati is Le
| ar, the old brown dog, who may he seen at almost any
. hour of the day iu the perilous of our city post office,
| and as he has not and probably never had any owner,
| may be numbered as one of the familiars of that es-
I tshlishinent.
Among the various succession of postmasters, during
the whole incumbences of Rurke, Taylor and Craw
ford—amidst all the presidential changes of Munroe,
AJams, Jackson, Van Ruren, Harrison, Tyler and
Folk, he still holds his post. How far hack he made
hts appearance the oldest inhabitant cannot tell, hut t
can find several who have known and recollect him for
twenty year* and mote. During this period he was
never known to follow any individuals, even when
tempted by carressee or the offer of food ; in fact, he
has nevei been known to receive food from any person,
invariably refusing it when ollered at his post He has
been followed hy persons czniuus to ascertain where
he feeds, but by some singular process contrives to de
feat their purpose, by disappearing the moment then
eye is turned to any other object, if fei but oue mo
ment.
In each serces.ive removal of the post offices, he has
always gone along, as tl considering himself a part of
the esiatdishment. In the last case following the first
dray load of movables, and remaining at the new office
ever since.
He attends firemans s parades, military processions,
political mass meetings, and every funeral of note in
the city. At the funeral patreant last year, iu memory
ol Genera! Jackson, be crawled under the hearse, arid
kept under it the whole route, nearly two tndes. altho’ I
considerably exhausted hy the effort, the day being
uricoininoly sulliy and close.
During the whole course of his long fife, he has nev- 1
er been known to have be-n meddled with hy other
doga, or to have taken any notice of hts species, nor to
have received any ill usage from any individual, man
or boy, by wbom he is extenatvely kuown, and regard
ed as a puvi|cged ( rharactrr. Hund eds having business
at the po-t office, who would unhesitatingly kick any
othei dug out of the road, step aside carefully, howev
er great the throng, rather than tread on or insult tbe
noble brute. He may be seen occasionally sunning
himself at the door of the Trust Company or Franklin :
Rank Exchange, but is never guilty of lying at the’
door of a private residence. My Iriend Rabbi Jonas. ‘
who believes tit the transmigration of souls, suggests
tbit the spirit which animates Lear was once that of
a public officer, and an individual of m-ial aristocratic
hearing. Apart from the usual instincts and remark
able segarity of dogs, there is much ti.at is mysterious
and unaccountable in the hi-toiy ami habit* ut Lear, a
part only of which ate here stated,”
The ‘f’d with astonishment afrit of Mr.
Mcl> ‘ aiihliiglnn. Being hi the gallery of
the Ht.li ‘ i a rail of Ilia roll watt ordered on the
7tli mat., and he doors below being i loaeil. he slipped
out of a window, let liunaelf down the outride of the
building, and entered the Hall by another window, in
tnno to auewer to his name. We should like to aee
Foils descend o Inw as to astonish the people m thil
purl of the country.— Ala. Journal.
K very nrh and eoetly silver vaae has been manu
factt and Vet \ “'k for a number of Whig ladiee in
Tenor - -i preaenttng it to Henry t ‘lay.
It te “I ‘ ‘ 1 reuta on an arched pedestal
in ini, lone, having four IJothtc col
umm. a lof each an American eagle.
On the top ol i', >• stands the (ioddeaa of Liberty ;
the bandies are of uh limbs, over the top of which is
thrown the Amrncan flag, banging in diapery ; on the
front of the body is tire ligute of Diogenes with hu
lantern, bolding in bis hand a medalion bust of Henry
Clay ; and on ibn reverse aide the Mill Hoy of the Missi
es with landscape!, Ac. The inacriptiona are appro
priate.
Tut Razos Snor Ma.—'This man seems to be
iharpniinj’ the wits of the l)own-Eainii. A Maine
paper eontaina the following ealrart from one of hie
speechea on Icmpt'ance, made apparently with his bas
ket in hand, and with an eye single to the sale of his
atrops: •
•• When I was a drunkard, not only was my wife
and myself half starved, but mv old cat was elan re
duced to a perfect ekrlelon. And not only that, but
aha grew sn out and out old thief. • Cause why !
Why, hecausr she could not get enough to eat at home,
so slit went prowling and stealing among the neigh
bors.
Every once in a while I'd bear the neighbor* cry
out, • cuss that Month's cat, she's stole my men—cuss
that Mmith'acat, she’s stole mv fish—cuss that Mmith'a
cat, she's drank up atl mv milk.’ Hut why didn’t she
stay at home and ralch mice and live on them, aay*
you : reason enough, says I. for our mice couldn't get
crumb* of meat and bread like a sober man’s mice can,
to they had In live nn the rcccollertion of whst they
used to eat before thei’ maaler became a thurikard and
at last they got so thin and scraggy that fifty ol them
wouldn’t fill the old cal’a hollow tooth.
Hut when I reformed, thinga took a different turn
Smith's table ItaJ plenty of fish and meat on it, and
Smith's rat had plenty of mice and didn't Itavs to steal
the neighbors’ hsb and meat any noire. No, .Sir, luy
mice were tut and plump, and my old cil was spry
and active, an.l it didn't take fifty mire to make a meal
nuther. No, sir-ee. The old cat would just catch two
mice, and these two was as much as she could eat at
one meal, and when she had eat them, she would lie
down and go to sleep, and allur a good night's rest she
would wake up in the morning with the pleasing sat
isfaction of knowing that the nice, fat, plump mice
were not all gone, hut that there were a • few more left
of the a-a-m-e sort.’ ”
THE AMERICAN COLONIZATION SOCIETY.
To the Lditurs of the Sttvunnah Republican •
biNTLKxrx :—The undersigned has recently been
appointed ag-nt of the above named society, for the
State ol Georgia and Florida, and with your kind per
mission, will make a lew brief statements in refetence
to the same.
This Society was formed in Washington City De
cember, 1810, hy a company of benevolent and patri
otic gentlemen, among whom was Judge Washington,
John Randolph, W. 11. Crawford. Amdrew Jaekson,
Henry Clay, Robert Finlay, C. F. Mercer, and others,
upon adoption of its Constitution, Rushmd Washing
ton was elected President, and among its Vice-Presi
dents are found the names of W m, 11. Crawford, An
drew Jackson, Henry Clay and Robert Finlay.
‘I be second article ol the Cuuslttutoin reads as fol
lows, to wit: •• The objects to which its attention is
lu he exclusively din cod is to promote and execute
a plan fur colon zi’i. with their own consent, the free
people of color using in uur country, in Africa, or
such other place us Congress shsll deem expedient.
Anil the Society shall act, to eilecl this object, in eo-!
operation with IheGmeral Government, and such of
the Stales as may adupl regulations on the subject.”
The first small band ut emigrants left this country
in 1820, hut no permanent settlement was made till ü
buut the close ol the year 1822. when the present col
ony nl Liberia was settled ut Caps Mesurudo, and a
town commenced named Monrovia, in honor ol Pres
ident Muuree. who was a firm friend of this noble en
terprise. The colony now numbers about 4.000 emi
grants and their descendants, besides It) uUOto 15,1100
natives, who live on the lauds of the colony and have
become incorporated in its Government. A number
ol the interior tribes and luwns, uumbenng, according
to their own statement, over 100,000, have submitted
to ami come under the Government of the colony.
The great object of the Society, it will be eeen, is to
provide for the colonsling lira free people of color, with
their own consent, on tho Western coast of Africa ;
and it is one of those srhemes ut benevolence which
oiiginuled in the tiro idest philanthropy, and appeals to
the most enlaiged principles of chi Ist. unity sot coun
tenance and support.
flic fiee colored people in this country are in cir
cumstances which challenge for them our sympathies.
They are degraded in the scale of society—they are
eminently in an iriletior condition, and the very Irame
work of society around them (ends to depiess them
still lower. No other sciieme has yet been devised
winch promises as much for them as colonization ! It
proposes to tescue them from their civil, social, and te
ligtous depression, and place them in a country of their
own, where such influence* will be forever removed,
and where they will enjoy the full blessings of eiviltza
tion and Christianity—to invite and call into action all
their powers, to inspire in them laudable motive! of
anibition, to incite to personal aspiration as men and
finally to convert, through them, the wild regions of
Airman barbarism, into a garden of civihzaton, and tu
make it an eminent portion of Christendom; to auhsti
tute the songs of freedstn and true religion, for the
groans and dispatrtng cries of I,e victims of supersti
tion.
Again, colonization promises mere for Africa and
her 150,000,000 ol heathens than any other scheme
of benevolence which has ever yet been dwised, for
it cannot be any longer a question that if ever Africa
is enlightened and redeemed from heathenism and con
heated to Christianity, it must bs darts through the in
strumentality ol colored men. While men cannot live
and labor long, there .’ and yet, it is a* healthy for the
colored man as any other rich new country, of which
w# have any knowledge. Does the friend and patron
of missions seek a field broad aa his benevolence, and
ripe to tbe harvest 1 Here it is!—Africa, with ber
teeming millions! Every company of emigrants sent
<>ut by tbe Society may be regarded as a baud of mis
sionaries ; they go to that country with some knowl
edge of the Gospel; they aie generally accompanied
by Ministers of Christ; they form there as a Chiistian
Society, with their schools and churches, and they be
come a powerful centre of civilization and religion.—
How mighty must be such a congregation, with their
Minister and Sabbath acoool, upon the surrounding
natives and tribes es heathens ? and how rapid must he
the triumphs of the Gospel under such circumstances!
What an immsnse light will go out to dispel the dark
ness which now pervades the interior of that vast con
tinent !
J here is no instance of such unparalleled prosper!-
;ly in the history of any other colony now on record,
and I may add, for the number of emigrants, (many
of whom were slave*, maautr.tted.) no community th
i any newly sottled country can present a greater num
ber of churches and church members, in proportion to
us population, than the colony of Liberia. Up to the
clo.c ot last year, there were 23 churches, among Meth
odist*, Ilaptiats, and Preahyteriana. and 1474 church
members, 353 of the number being converted heathens.
The Hon. H. Clay is tbe President, and there are 62
Vice Presidents, among whom are the names of Joa.
O. Andrews, I). D„ Bishop of the M. E. Church Soutu,
and Hubert Campbell, both of Georgia.
Any communication to me upon this subject, may
he addressed to this city.
T. C. BENNING.
Savannah, Georgia,
A Live 54 40.—The Galena Jeff'raonian. (I.oco)
lashes itself into a petted rage in regard to the action
of the President, Benton, Calhoun and other* of ns
party in relation to (lie O , goo Ten bury,.. may delight
cowards and slaves, ‘oil tr urii can led no joy at such
an exhibition. Ia it that I. •• land—whose skirls drip
w ith the goar of slum, Ur ed int uits—has stolen a lout
! hold Oil the Pacific coast! White livcied serfs may
throw up their caps aud make the welkin ring, hut pat
riots sec no <auae ol rejoicing.”
Thu Jeffersonian aaya of those who aided with tho
President on this question, that •• their graves are dug
i —sod Ihe gravel already rattle, on their coffins—end
■they will sink tu an infamy so profound (ksl the res-
I urrectinn trump will never reach them.”
COURTING ABOLISHED
Heigho I for (lie ranting generations. The great te
larrn broom whieh has swept and to ing swept down so
ff Cely throughout the world- brushing down old cob
wch notions, and kicking up such a dust tit every r|uar
j ter—prescribing eatables, drinkable*, warablra, sleep-
I ablet, and all kind of blesaables, ha. got tnto •* Love's
j Own Bower.” Courting has been seriously voted
down to solemn conclave! A resolution discusacd in
a Free Will Baptist Convention: sitting in Boaton,
and passed unanimously, A reverend elder lifted up
Ilia voice again-t (he irreverand practice of courting.
“ the custom of keeping coinpxny in the night alter the
! usual hour ol rslnemeot ia corrupting.” Nine o'clock
‘is the usual hour of rsttrenu nL No if wo understand
the elder, a “fellow” may keep company with a gal
until the bell rings, hut evety moment h remains af
terwards he ia guilty of .in. But let ua hear the rev
erend gentleman's objestions in full. Heie they are.
•• My ohjtctiwns are aa follows:
I. It luwer. the matrimanial Institution.
3. It subjects to great temptation.
3 It disqualifies ihe mind for discriminate action.
What merchant could you induce to ctoae a bargain
after the the fat’guc and excitement of a night's watch
ing ! Were ha to purchase a horse, he would say he
was not filing to dose the bargain till he had taken some
rest. And if sll buaineas tnen are to cautious aa to a
trifling engagement, how foolish and wicked ia the cua
tom of nightly watching to negotiate engagements im
portant a* life itself,”
The elder reasons like a hook. We don’t like this
id-a altogether of making courtship a business trans
action. however. It takes away a huge olios frmn the
romantic of (he thing. Nme we don’t feney this ne
gotiation lor a wife aa we would for a horse or a quarter
of beef. In our courting days wa did not think if so
“ very foolish and wicked’ a habit we had o’ silting up
nights. It depends rnuc t however, on Ihe tempera
ment and motives—the morel stamina of a man; and
our alder may have felt“ very looltah and wicked” m
certain situations, while we placed ir, similar anca,
would have felt uncommonly sensible and innocent.- I
It depends on one’s bringing up. Major Noah
•ml we lull eoiuctde with him. that a man'* courtin ’
days are hts happiest days—and we will ptM , h# M *
jor against the Elder any day in the matter oVam,
ship.— Portland Transcript.
“Sir Ror.SßTExtract of a letter front a prom,
mem sugar planter in Cuba, dated Havana Julv da’
184 G : ’ ’
•• The weather continues very favorable here for th
next crop, which promises to be very abundant [
j pruy God that we may enjoy the benefit of the mark
et of the United States, in view of the modification of
[ til* Tariff proposed by Mi. Walker, to whom we ara
> going to etect a stalue of gold.”
1 ffj’The planters of Cuba may well afford this tri.
bute to “ Sir Robert”—and, if the manufacturers and
miners of Great Britain do not follow their example
they will evince the most reprehensible ingratitude.—
Hut in wltat manner ahull tbe American sugar planter
and hemp grower, and coal and iron miners exhibit’
Mar gratitude to this American champion of foreign
industry ? We shall see. That specie*of legislation
it strikes us, must he of baneful tendency which elicit*
tlieie demonstrations of joy in alien bosoms, and ti||,
the hearts of our own people with despondency a o( |
gloian! —Richmond Whig,
CITY IVIILL.
Corn iVJs’sil :nat) Brils.
HJV. ha*>- pm op a Mill an,or ntakli.haunt, sad vill
gruol three daj. in ih, wnh-Taeaday, Ttinridir
and Friday. Wi wilt at.o keep on hand, Meal, Gnu am .
< raokt il i 'urn, fcc. Prruftti* Bunding their Turn. %ii| k*
proirtptly attended to. ( HAS. f>. LKV* &CO
Ocinulge t uundry, Cut ton Avenue, July 29 24
IK<>V,V\1 K<>V,V\lI.S, 1ke.—25,000 lb.. Swerdc. Iroi^m’rot
Ca.t and German Steel,
| Received aud for sale by GRAVES, \VOOD &CO
! _ Colton Yarns mul Osnaburcg. ~
BALKS Cotton Yrn#aborted number*, “
f 10 bale* OmtttburgM, ju*t received and for Male hv
U GRAVES, WOOD k CO,
LARD.
I1 ( Uin P ri,n ® *- eaf ‘' urii ’ i usl feceived and
s'*t/t ‘ for sule bv
WHEELER k. 11ARROl.l)
July 22. 23
Coinmert’inl Bank It ill s.
r t' , HE loeliesl rates will he paid tor Commercial Caoli
J Bills, hy the subscriber.
jYlacon, J lily 22, 22 GEO. W. PRICE.
NOTICE.
| HAVE nppointed mv brother Kttntii 11. Whitz,
P nty ngeat and attorney in fuel, during mv ahurnce”
from Moron, who is fully authorized to represent me
anil attend to any business I may lie interested in. ’
Macon, July 20,1846. 22y A. J. WHITE.
FOR SALE.
I-IKELY NEGRO WOMAN 15 year, old, ,
il. good cook, washer and ironrr; a!o Hi r ia. ehildrra a
mil’ tin year, old, ands girl five year. old. Apply t u Thom'ir
11. lilomit, at Meast uger Office.
July 24 £4
Paints, OH’S, liass stud Putty.
KEGS No. 1 YVtrite Lead,
|fj 2* “ extra db. do.
300 gall*. Linseed Oil,
150 do. fine Sperm Oil,
200 do. bleached Oil for factory tine,
5 bbis. Tram OH,
75 boxes H by 17, 10 by 12, 8 hv 10 filana,
1 barrel Putty, jtat received ’and for ulr by
July 29 24 __ GRAVES, WOOD k C 6.
GEORGIA- BIRR COIjNTI\
rjIHK Petition of KLAM ALEXANDER shewed*
I that the Monroe Kail UomJ and Ban It inf Com
pany. on tl.e second day of August, 1842, entered into •
j contract with John D. Gray &l Cos , Daniel Mc!)ougtl r
Arthur B Davis, Robert Colima, and Elam Alexander",
to make and complete tire Kail Rondos raid Company
from Gridin to it junction will* the JSiale Road in lie-
Kalb county, in said State, and to furnish engines, can,
timi all other appurtenances therefor, and for which said
{Company hound themselves to pay three hundred
thousand dollars.
Which contract under the hand and seals of the said
parties, among its other provisions, stipulated and pro
vided as follows, in substance: that the payment for
said work, machinery and materials, and other things,is
j be done mid furnished,should be by said Company mads
to the ether party in the following times und manner,
viz: that from and after the first ilay of October then
next, seventy-five per cent, of the net receipt* sf the
road alter deducting the yearly expenses, shall be paid
to the said other party: said payments to he made
monthly, when there should be nny excess of receipts.
And the said Monroe Rail-Road and Banking Comp-
I ny thereby guaranteed expressly to the said othei parly
that the payments thus arising should amount fur th
| year ending'on the first day of October, 1843, r* the puiiy
of twenty-five thousand dollars with interest thereon—
for the year 1844, ending Ist of October of that’year, ta
I ihe sum of thirtv-five thousand dollars with interest
thereon, and for each of the lour succeeding: years, sixty
i thousand dollars per annum with interest thereon. The
amount paid at any lime not to exceed the estimates
and certificates of the engineer.
And it was further agreed hy the parties thereto,that
the whole of the said Monroe Ruil-Koad from Macon to
the point of junction with the Western and Atlantic
Rail Road, and all and every part thereof, and all of the
appurtenunces, eugines, tenders, tars, shop tools, im
plement* of every kind therewith connected, or tobs
connected,and all real estate to the same appertaining,
und all other effects to the same appertaining, slionld be
mid was hv *md contract convexed and vested in the
said party of the second part, in lull title and estate un
til uil the due* and payments to which they should be
come entitled under said contract should liavt leen ful
ly vested mid satisfied, with n proviso thul the manage
inent, superintendence und keeping up said rood, aod
the use of property, Stc. in said contract named and
conveyed, und all transportation thereon should contin
ue to he conducted hy the said Monroe Rail-Uoad and
Bunking Company, their officers and agents.
Your petitioner further shows, that in pursuance of
said contract, the said John I). Gray performed work,
and furnished materials on and lor said rood to the i
mount and of the value of sixty-five hundred dollars,
the better to witness and secure the puvnient ofwhirh
Him with interest, the paid Monroe Rail Rond and Bank
ing Company, on the first day of July, 1844, made nod
delivered to the said John D.Gray their several nerrn
contracts and certificates writing, ready to he bliowb,
whereby by six of said c ontracts said Company ron
traded as follows, and which is a true copy of etch of
said six:
“This is to rortifv, that the Monroe Rail-Read nnd
Bunking Company acknowledge to owe to John I). (inf
or hearer, oue thousand dollars for work and material!
on the road. Twenty per rent, of which, with thr inle*
eat from date, shall he payable on the first day of Octo
ber, eighteen hundred and forty-four, and twentv per
cent, with interest, on the first day of October, each nd
everv v car thereafter until the whole ia paid. And to
secure ihesf payments, the übove road and appurfensn
, cea me speciallv mortgaged as per contract, dated sec
ond August, 1842, duly executed ami recorded* Aw*
videdf that the failure to pay any one of these install*
merits ut maturity ahull not render the succeeding “lie*
demundahlti before thev respectively fall due an above
expressed. Macon, Julv l,Jß4fi.
Signed A. COCHRAN, Tm\>
M. L. Ghat bill, Cashier/’
And the other contract and ccrtificato was and ii in
reaptctP like and peculiar to rhe six aforeariid.cicepfb*
amount, it being to secura the payment of five Inindrnf
| dollars to the said John D. Gr*) or beartr, by ih
Company. .
Your fietitiawor further shows, tlml'he ia lh bo*
hearer of said av< n contracts ami certificate* ft** l Jr
same were for valuable consideration, nid *n tmwt
course of trade on the first day of July, eighteen hundred
and forty-four, transferred to your p*tiiioo®f V *■*
said John If. Gray ; and lie further shews that there are
due and owing on encll of said certificate*,!••
menu, viz: llint due on the liist day of October, Mghtvej
hundred mid lorty-four with interest, and also (W
on the first day of October, eighteen hundred end f (M ')’
five with interest; wherefore your peiitioner * *
a Rule Nisi may lie granted, requiring the smd M° n
Knil-Road and Bunking Con*panv, now efW ,n
known a* the Macon and Western Itail-Rmid CenjP •
to pay into this Court on or before the next term y* ,/
the principal and interest due on the said two
rnrnie in each of said seven contract* and cmtijafii'y
have their equity of re|mption in and to said
sll its engine*, car*, tool*, implements, fixture*,
cr appurtenunces foiever buried and foreclosed.
8. T. BAILfcG
T. P. 8Tt T
Atlorne/iforl’''''*’"*'’
GEORGIA — Bibh I'otm/y. , iu
Wimn.As Elam Aleaandsr lisa r T r, ".® n [*’ u al |.
lorrroin prlilion, that ih. Macon and _ - y.
- Hoad Contpao,. formerly known n tha Mor
llnad anil Hanking Company, aro imlchlcd 10 i Ki
ll six linmlrod dollars hr,idea interest hv two “7',. rl heil
alollincnta doc on tllOaaldae.cn cerlifiicate. “ „„
in said petition, and which uro secured hy , n '°'* A a ih
said road a. ia also represented in said pfll|' , >o>
prayed a rule may he (lanled requtrieg the **
party to pay said inatallmenta with iatereal. L a j|.ffo.J
lore on motion ordered, that the said Monroe |t
and Itanking Company aliaa Ihe Mac*a*®
Uail-Rord Company pa into Court ‘£• e|7*Z,,
internal due on airid mortgage, on or hefare in ‘
of tha next term of lltia Court, or the eq""Tf (ir ~r
lion in and to said Mortgaged property ‘ . .^i
barred and foracloaed; and Ilia further uro
aervice lie perfected according to law. Otrfl,
A lure cop, from the rninutaaof Hibh Nup ( .|,
June 12, 1846. H. O.
June 17 ———^
GEORGIA FLOIJW- M
1.118. #f superior Family r
Otf till trhitl whe.it, for -ale hv R 0
WHEELER &
July 32. 33