The Georgia journal. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1809-1847, January 30, 1810, Image 1

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THE GEORGIA JOURNAL. VoL. I. MILLEUGEVILLE, TUESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1810. No. 14. VUBLISHED BY SEATON GRANTLAND,) jDAEIEN. (PRINTER TO THE STATE,) ON JEf'j. • ... . i ergon street, Opposite the™ 6 Subscribers having entered into NORTH END OF THE STATE-H0USE.i CO ^P a ‘ tners ‘ ,, P’ Ruder the ^fiim ol TERMS. THREE DOLLARS PER AN-j^ tVWJl, Dlin!l(UU, O C0. num, ONE half TO be PAID in AD-jwith a view to transact business in the VANCE. ADVERTISEMENTS WILL BE THANK- PULUY RECEIVED, AND PUBLISHED AT THE CUSTOMARY PRICES. &ale. WILL BE SdLD on the first Tues in February next, in Laurens county, between the usual hours, Three Horses, levied on as the property ofi Francis Holton, to satisfy an execution in favour of Thomas M’Griff.—Condi tions Cash. Isaac Kirsey, Sheriff. January 4, 1809. 11—‘ds FAC TOll AGE, COMMISSION LINE; Wanted* A Lad from 14 to 1G years of age as an apprentice to the Carriage Ma king Business.. Apply to H. S* E. GATES, in Milledgcville. January 23. 13—tf strong lor his reason, it often turned .-.gaihst tile latter the strength it oc casionully received from. both. A! ways engaged in the contemplation of mighty objetts, he knew that al though his objects were mighty, his instruments must lie men. In ordci to make the constitution wiut lu- couM approve and the empire what he wished, he united with a parlia mentary party, which appeared the •most respectable and effectual means Notice. The Subscriber will attend at the house of Mr. Samuel Buffingtou on will receive and forward produce to 3d Saturday in ^ February next any reasonable convenient receive on Storage all kind of Goods N. B. The Tax Receiver will at- • < ac instrument of party, and his de and produce, at reduced rates ; they tend there at the same time. ‘reliction of that system upon the new January 23. . 1" iy port in the United States, on .» ortlt ; r to collect the lax m capt-L- accomi ,fishing these ends; but in asonable terms. Having largte and Jan ait s ►- V n ( Mattempring to render party his iustru- mvenient Ware-Houses, they will ^ mux*«■(, i. c.,u. t»[ nK . nt< he buCame himself, for a time intend keeping a general supply of G roceries, and other Merchandise suitable for nothing is more unpleasant tons than hat freedom of censure which the riper;; devoted to the respective par ies seem to consider it as a point of duty to exercise'* on this occasion. Where any paper has connected it- . sell with its peculiar patrons, it very jaturaliy follows and maintains their fortunes with the zeal of advocacy. The public become the judges be- t've.-n the opposite pleadings,and con- id-, ring both of them as mere plea-, ders, it does apply toD strict a rule to their respective statements. A pa per seeking only truth, and maintain ing what it deems to be right, has a more difficult and unpleasant task.— -* turn of affairs in Europe, (die actof it must praise with moderation, and his life which has been the most un- censure without respect of persons. _ r , „. r popular) ought to vindicate his prin- It is considered as an enemy by both the back country, which they willing Negroes, that™ ° tt0n ’ thou S !l thc consequences of parties, and has no other support but For Sale, -■ 5>ate. On the first Tuesday in Fern nary next, in the town of Clinton between the usual hours, WILL BE SOLD, One Lot of Land, No 47, in the 10th district of Bald win; notv Jones County, taken as the property of John Cook to satisfy Alien Pemberton’s execution—Con ditions cash. _ jas. Riley, D. S. January 2,1810. 10—tds ^Ijeriff’d <§nile. WILL BE SOLD, on the 1st Tues day in March next, in Laurens, between the usual hours, - Two Negro Women, iiamed Grace and Kener, levied on as the property of Laban Cason, to satisfy an execution in favour of Wil liam M’Griff.—-Conditions Cash. Isaac Kirsey, Sheriff. January 9. 1 !■—tds barter for produce on liberal terms V. H. Fivioti, IF. A. Dunham, Geo: Street. December 19. 8—I4t it may arraign his judgment. Valuable Lot of Land,j in our imperfect nature the supe- No. 120, fourteenth district Baldwin, riont . v i ol (,1K ' n )™ another is no now Putnam—ALSO Lot, No. 73, w th tlie public. It is now well known from the po lished statement of Mr. Canning, in the 21st district Wilkinson, now Notice. On the Second Monday in Febru ary will be sold to the highest bidder, Twenty-Five Lots or more in the town of Hartford, at the Outche Ford on Ocmulgee river, being the permanent seat for the pub ic buildings of the county of Pulaski. Terms, payable in lour equal annual instalments. Purchasers giving bonds, with approved security and mortgage of the premises. S. c fonts, H. Fulgwn, ) J. T. Thomas, v Comm’rs E. Hogan, V •tds. more than a partial superiority. One that from the evident declining health towering faculty in the composition of the duke of Portland, Mr. Can- 6f an individual, bears down aud iting was anxious to provide an e- casts a shade upon the rest; in con- qual successor to him as the head of reliair. For particulars apply to,duct it obscures their use, as in com-the administration. Marquis Wei-, the subscriber in Milledgcville. Horatio Gates. January 2. 10—tf MISCELLANY, CHARACTER OF EDMUND BURKE, Bij Sir fames JTLt-ios/i, of Bombay parison it extinguishes their lustre, lesley was accordingly proposed, but Burke’s miscarriages in the world of there was a strong party of the ca- politics, tho’ not proportioned to the'iimct against this arrangement. Lord grandeur of his undertakings, havejLivorpuol, as it is stated, feared, been more than proportioned tothosejlest the activity of the inurqnis (for incurred by ordinary men, in the or- active he certainly is) might disturb, (The Character of Mr. Fox, lately published in the Journal, was draw n by tho sumo hand.) dinary level of human character, llis fertile mind nourished every sub ject on which he thought, into a vast creation, multiform, rich in realities, in images, and in conjectures ; much The Elegant Horse, SmYAN O’LYNN (Importedl»j Governor Turner in the fall of 1803, J WILL STAND the ensuing seasonK W. A. Harper. January 9. 11- Burke is dead. He is beyond the reach of public regard and ha tred; and those who persecuted t*nd those Who loved him may weep alike for the loss of a victim and a friend. GEORGIA, J Present their ged in public life ; so long the mo if not totally extinguish, that quiet dependence and tranquil submission which had hitherto but too much characterized the ministry'. It may not be perhaps, unnecessary to add, f it fluctuating, and fugitive, com-that the original constitution of the plex in its materials, boundless in its ministry' belonged, in best part, to dimensions, and new to its author, the last and present earls of Liver- More secure hut far less elevated,[pool, and that as one ministry had aecn dismissed for a contumacious ipposition to the royal pleasure, due care was taken that such should not be the fault of its successors. Thc age of the duke of Portland render* their lot in whom there is little ol invenbou to suggest, and nothing of imagination to delude t whose ideas .. do not multiply into clogs upon their lie was lor so many years ctia.i- • , . , 1 ; , 1 , 11 s judgment, but leave it through an lit. . <• * • , • nistrator to the estate of Benjamin held ; and so Universally though vu- was not a Tomlinson, deceased, hath notified riously, did he touch die passions wced3 of prejudice spruh in one of the public Gazettes of this of manktnid, that all who spoke oi y v,; s opinion state, that he would apply to the In-jhim or heard of him became parties * stltion huifg over him, which ob- ferior court of this county', in termsjtn the decision upon ins character, of the law for leave to sell 202 1-2 and entertained a host of adverse or Acres of Land, lying in Morgan[partial feelings, enemies ut once to thney associated other'subjects widi county, 4th district, No. 305, beingjtrulh, and evidence of the magnitude. ud h[s 2CaI commi j le( i t l K . m , soured important truths, and raised a multitude of illusory forms ; 1 a4 my' stable in Greensborough, at | a p art c f the real estate of Bcnjamin'oi the subject. jsoirftct d to thc world Twenty Seed, for the benit o(| HU private qualities are, .aid tog inence the first of March and end thej^ i-suance thereof it he the most useful, gratify ing Tlic res falsehood be demanded. If a mare insured •should not prove with foal, the mo ney will be returned. Ten Dollars the single leap, to be paid down, ivith liberty to continue the season by the payment of Ten Dollars fnore. Good and extensive pastu rage gratis, and the greatest care shall be taken to prevent escapes or accidents, but I will not be liable for either.—-Wheat lots well enclosed for mares with young colts—servants sent with mares boarded gratis. If requested, mares -will be fed with grain at the market price. Where any r one becomes responsible for five mares, the season will be Sixteen dollars each. Fifty Cent3 to the groom in every case, 1o be paid down (For Peformaiices and Pe digree sec bills.) (j3 c The Sale, Agreeable to the above order, will ous of its influence over every ce- scription of hearers, who had taste or dispositions to be delighted or im- take place on the first Tuesday' in proved. March, at Madison in Morgan coun-j The genius of Burke was full of ty. JOHN TOMLINSON, Adm. January 9. 11—tds^j For Sale, An elegant Fowling Piece. Enquire at this office November 28. 5—tf. The Laws And Concurred Resolutions passed at the late session of the Legislature Are now Published. (fj° A few copies for sale at the Benjamin Weaver, journal Office. (Greens bo rough, J 13—2c Jan. 23, 1809. } from 1st March 12t EAGLETAVUBN January IS. splendor; it was the reflection of lights from every quarter of the ma terial and intellectual universe ; his eyes shot through the depths of sci ence, and ascertained the wander ings or enlarged the limits of conjec ture. His fancy, rich and bright, in finite in its variety, and intoxicating with its beauty, furnished copious and striking images, Bo illustrate and familiarize the operations of a rea soning power, otherwise too pro found for common apprehension, llis eloquence, convincing, persua sive ; terrible when it assaulted ; ir resistible when it soothed ; dignified in its rapidity, polished in its vche- THc Subscriber informs his friends and the public in general, that he has purchased the house formerly occu pied by Major Edwin Mounger, where he intends to continue his ior- mer line of business, and hopes by due attention and industry to merit their patronage. Roger Olmstead.\oi horses. MUledgevilk, Jan. 9,1810. 11—tf January' 23. H. k. E. Gates Respectfully inform their friends and the public generally, that they have taken the shop directly opposite Ma jor John Howard’s in Milledgcville, where they curry on the Blacksmith’s Business. Gentlemen planters and others can be supplied with Axes, Mattocks, Ploughs, &c. of an excellent quality on the shortest notice. Any orders from the country will be gratef ully received and strictlv attended to. 10 Him and ridiculed his intellect for being superior to their own. Sum.: philosophers, also, of that malignant school which affects the absence of feeling to disguise its perversion, joined in a league of abusive contro versy ; and madness and despotism were common themes of invective, a- gainst one ot die wisest and the best of men. Upon the whole, we must impute to Burke some of the evils we h ive suffered, but posterity' may reap un mixed advantages from his works. He combined the greatest talents of th : greatest mem; and his judgment was overmatched, not by the abili ties of others, but his own. He rou std, by a wound, the sleeping ti-rei of democracy, and provoked and al most justified his devastations. Had dj° Their Smith is supposed to be inferior to none for SHOEING 1C—tf rnence, diffuse without being languid, concise, on occasion, without being obscure, never failed to agitate the milder passions. A spirit of divine morality breathed through him ; and however our opinions may differ up on the actual effects of ins words and writings, it is no great exercise of candor to suppose that his intentions were pure. His immense stores of knowledge, were, in general, drawn forth to promote or to resist some practical object, and he forced upon as the necessity of appreciateing all human intelligence^ by the good or evil to which it is directed.—'1 he sen sibility'of his heart was exquisite, and ever alive ; more rapid .hull the flights of h s imagination—.nlinite- ly too rap'd and at t>mvs perhaps too lie lived in the most despicable age, his genius would have exalted it, had lie lived in the most tranquil age, his conduct might have disturb ed it.—He has left a space t ut will not soon he tilled. He described a grand but irregular course : his me ridian was more tolerable than his descending ray ; but thc* heat with which he scorched us w ill soon be no longer left, while the light which he diffused will shine upon us lore ver. .d him a mere nominal head, and if the conscious talent of Mr. Cunning occasionally made him troublesome, there was siill strength enough in the cabinet to reduce him to disci pline. We do not state these points with any purpose to offend ; our ob ject is merely to illustrate in some a mist ol su- small degree, the present state of the cabinet. When Mr. Canning found, that se cretly by some, and openly by others, he was thwarted in all his attempts to introduce the marquis W -llesity in the cabinet—when th; t part qf the cabinet in opposition to him set uj> Mr. Perceval as their man—and another secret coun- forward on the parts ds, Mr. Canning re- gtng things to a coc- cidcdly demanded, aiilly had a righ t to de mand, the dismissal of Lord Castle- rcjgh, and the avowed preference of himself to Mr. Perceval. The duke of Portland, anxious only for petue and tranquility, alter endeavouring in vain to (lissuad; Mr. Canning, and to reconcile the parties, consent ed to Mr. Canning’s proposal ; but as thc notification of it to LordCas* rlereagh must have necessarily led to further divisions and disputes, it was agreed to suspend the execution of u till parliament had been proroug- ed. Mr. Canning and the duke of Portland had still the majority in the cabinet, and therefore were enabled to cany their own measures. Lord Liverpool, we believe, remained neutral, content if he could merely execute his own duty, and keep th;' cabinet together. Alter the failure of the expedition to the Scheldt, and the progressive growth of the dissentions in the cn< hi net, Mr. Canning deemed it ne cessary to demand the abovenfenti- joed notification to lord Castlereagh, and after some difficulty it was at h ngtli made. The immediate con sequences are too well known to re quire a detail. The statements of all the parties have been given to the public, and an unprejudiced judge cannot Lutr condemn them both, and Mr. Canning much moie than lord. From JielPs (London) Weekly Mes senger. , character or the new Ministry. We have hitherto forborne to ex- pr ess any opinion on the composition Castlereagh. As to the effects cj this proceeding on tin* cabinet, to say all in a word, the ministry fell to pie ces, and it became necessary either to niefid it, or to compose it anew. Mr.. Perceval, as the agent f ji the new iidiftiuisuauon, because Lord Liverpool, (we see no re s r