Georgia republican. (Savannah, Ga.) 1806-1807, April 04, 1806, Image 2

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NOTICE. To the Citizens of Sa vanuah, and inhabitants ot | the bea-1 (lands, White Liuli, Little Ggechee and Chero k- e Hi 1 Diltr'nfts. The fub feriber is now ready to re ceive the l axe , lor the year one thousand eight hun dred and five, at his Office, the corner of Broughton &l Lincoln-ft ect, late Herfon’s ho use. Office hours, from 9 in the morning until 2 o’clock in the afternoon. Those that do not come forward and pay their tax es by Thursday the 15th day of May next, will have executions iflucd again!! tlwrn as the law alf>, for those taxes unpaid for 1804 PE I Ell DEVEAUX. T. C. C.C. Tax CoUeflor ’/ Office, ) - Monday, 3 \JI, .March, 1806- y * JOHN 801-YoN, sur ) Cjiypiu vj. > Superior WILLIAM NOkRIS, J Court, Manh 7 erm, 18 ,6. UPON the petition of John Bolton, surviving copart n t of Robert & John Bolton prayin j the forrclofure of the E q jityof Redemption on lhe fol lowing premises, mortgaged to thdfaid Robert & John Bolton fur the firm of eleven hundred and forty fix dollais, payable the filth of January 1802, and lo for the further lum of ele ven hundred and forty fix dol lar and inrerdt payable the fifth of Nuvemuer 1802, to wit, the following lots and parts of lots in the town of St. Mary’s.— All that wharf lot containing 150 feet on St. Maiy’s ltreet and running 150 fret welt to Jud fon’swaitr lot, and from St. Ma ry’s llrect to the river 100 feet anti along the river 100 feet.— The fame being the front of lot No. four in the plan of laid town —Alio part of laid lot No. four beginning at Ready ltreet running weft on the St. Mary’s ltreet to Jll Tor’s lot & on Ready ltreet aoo feet north to Divine Young’s lot or line &. 150 well on laid Young’s line to Judion’s lot with the buildings anti imptovements thereon.- Alio lot No. (43) forty three containing four acres then oc cupied by Peter VV. Green, with the buildings end improvements thereon, and on motion of Mr- Stites attorney *or the petitioner, It is oidercd by the court that the principal interdt and costs upon the laid mortgaged premiles be piid into court with in twelve months from this date and unlcfs the fame be lo paid the equity ot redemption lhall thenceforth be forecloled and o ther proceedings take place pur suant to the ad of alfembly in luch case made and provided : AnJ it is fattier ordered in pur! nance of the laid ad that th.s rule be published in one of the public gazettes ot this Rate ai leall once in every month until the time appointed for payment, orferved on the mortgager or his special agent or attorney at lealt fix months previous 10 the time the laid money is ordered to be paid into court as aforelaid* Ex trail from the min utes tbisotb. March, 1806, ISAAC CREIVS, 1.1. c. c.r, lamiiin 60. PUBLIC NO 1 ICE. PUBLIC Nc/.ce is hereby given, ihai at the expiration of sixty days hum this date, to wir, on (he 19 h d<y of Api it next, WILL be SOLD at PUBL IC AUCIION, st me Couri-noule in this Ciiy, be ween the h urs ot 10 and 1 o'clok, ALL that LO r of LAND in Carpenter’s Row, containing gO teet in trorf and 150 feci deep ; be ing the real ettate ot Afaph Tower, fold by order or the 1 dcrior Court, lor the oc.icli/ of the heirs and credi tors. 1 A'-A liOXEY, Adm'tor. k Ecb. ih law 50 - * )SrPON .M F. NT. Wt tie Commissioners, appointed by the Legislature to dispose of tie FRACTIONAL iUß ypys 0 f Wilkinson, Baldwin and iVoynt Counties, have for several reasons Postponed the Sale until the 16 lb June next, at which time -use will 10m mene:. WILKINSON. THOSE of the fir ft difirid on the 16th day of June next, and continue from day to day, between the hours of ten and three, (Sundays excepted) un til the 2}d inclusive. Thole of the 2d diftrid on the 24th day of June, until the 27th inclusive. Those of the 3d diflrid on the 28th day of June, until the id day of J uly inclusive. Those of the 4th diftrid on the 3d day of July until the 7di inclusive. Those of the sth diflrid on the Bth day of July until the 1 ith inclusive. BALDWIN. Those of the ill diflrid on the r2th day of July until the i6rh inclusive. Those of the ad diflrid on the 17th day of July until the 24th inclusive. 1 hole of the 3d diitrid on the 23th day of July until the 29th inclusive. Thole of the 4th diflrid on the 30th day of July until the 4th day of August inclusive. T hole of the yth diflrid on the sth day of Augufl until the 1 2th inclusive. WAYNE. Those of the lft diflrid on the 13111 day of August until the 2111 inclusive. Those of the 2d did rid on the 22d <Uv of August until the 26th inclusive. Those of the 3d diflrid on the 27th day of Augult until the 30th inclusive. Terms of Sale. Os the purchaftrs, bonds for the amount of the purchase mo ney will be required ; at four equal inftalmems to be paid in gold or lilver ; the fiifl payments twelve months after date. In ad dition tc which a mortgage will be required. Moses Steer, 1 Reddick Simms, > Commijftonert. Tatric Jack. 3 Washington, Feb. 17, 52. PiSlMjb. RICE LANDS FOR SALE. ALL that valuable trad of LAND fiiuated and be ing on the foutli fide of the Ala tawiatia river, known by the name of the Broadiacc trad, late the property of General Lachlan M'lntofh, containing 1733 acres, of which 1100 acres are prime Tide Swamp of the firtl quality and very bell pitch of tide ; the balance high (well timbered) PINE LAND, and wrcll calculated for a fetdement or lettlemcnts. This trad is di vided into three parts, through the uppetmofl third runs a large navigable creek, leadmg to a landing, on which may be ered ed (as the Itream is confulerable) a Rice Mill, Saw Mill or Grist Mill. This property is situated immediately oppolire Maj. But lers, Demere’s Illand ; and from its local advantages is the mod delirablc rice ettate in Georgia. Anv perlon who wishes to purchase may apply to Mr. A LEXANDER MEIN, Charles ton; Mr. CHARLES HAR j RIS, attorney at law, Savannah i lor Meilrs. MEIN, MACK AY j y C-o. merchants there. In all of whole hands a plat may be iceu, and thole who may be de sirous to view the premises, by applying to Mr. M'KINNON, St. Simons Ifiand, he will shew them the lines, and give every ocher neccllary information he having resurveyed the trad. February 7 46 NINTH CONGRESS. HOUSE cr REPRESENTATIVES, Monday, March 17. The commute* of claims made an un favorable report on the petition of— —Anfart, in which the house concur red. The fpeaker laid before the house a letter, with various documents, from Wtn. Eaton, relative to the adjullracntj of his coofular accounts, which were , referred to the committee of Claim*. | Mr, Varnum, from the committee to whom was referred the petition of; A. J. Villard, relative to his improved conftrudtion of gun carriages, made a ! report in favor of allowing him 1,000 I dollars for the benefit derived to the pub-: lie from his invention, which was referred 1 to the committee of the whole house on Thurfdsy. Mr. Varnum, from the committee to whom was referred the amendments ol the Senate to the bill clLbiilhing rules and article* of the government of the ar mies of the United States made a re port recommending an agreement to (oane, and a difagrceaient to other amend, meuts. The house took tip an amendment of the Senate to the bill for the relief of Peter Landais—The amendment propo ses the allowance of 4,oc# in Head of 6,c00 dollars, for prize money. To this amendment the house difagreeJ, 38 member* voting for a concurrence, and 52 against it. On motion of Mr. Early, R/folved, That the Poll-mailer gene ral be dirt died to report to the hjufe the (late and condition of the polt route from Athens, Georgia, to New-Orleans, with the difficulties and obftrudtioii* m transmitting the mail on the said route and what will be the expenceof opening a horse path on the said route. The Committee of Commerce and M anufafturt'S, made an unfavorable re port on the petition of Geo. Doge and others ; praying for an extension of the period of their patent right for an im provement in cutting nail*, in which the House concurred* The order of the day to hear general St. Clair in fupportof his claim, was, on the motion of Mr. Early, poltponcd in definitely—aye* 63 Noes 15. The House resolved itfelf into a com mittee of the whole on the Hate of the union, Mr. J C. Smith in the chair. The committee having agreed to take into consideration the resolution offered by Mr. Nicholson. Mr. Sloan declared himfelf opposed to ir, from the opinion that it did not provide a fufficient remedy for the ex ilting evils, Hating at the fame time, that he ftiould unite in its favor, if so modified as to convince him that it will be better than nothing. After a few further pte- Inninary remarks, Mr. Sloan assigned at considerable length his reasons for pre ferring a commercial non-intercourse with Britain. Mr. J. Clay next followed in support of the resolution, in a speech replete with commercial information. He con cluded, however, by oblerving that, tho’ in favor of the resolution, he wished the ilecifion of the house deferred for a short time till the result of the negociation with Britain should be received. He therefore moved that the committee should r fe. Miff s. Eppes and Smilie warmly op posed the riling of the committee, and contended for the early decision of the House. When the question was taken on the riling or the committee, and passed in the negative, only 34 members riling in favor of it. The question was then taken on the resolution, and carried in the affirmative. Ayes 80. The committee rose and reported their agreement, to the resolution, which the house immediately took into confidcra tion ; when the Yeas and Nays were ta ken on agreeing to the resolution, and were yeas 17 —Nays 35. Mr. Early moved that the resolution be referred to the commute, of way* and means to bring in a bill, Meilrs. Aljlon, Smilie, Leib and South ard oppoied this referrence, and advoca ted a referrence, to a feiett committee. The motion of referrence to the com mittee of ways and mean* wa* disagreed to without a division when the refer rence to a felebt committee of five mem bers ccmpofed of Meffr*. Mumford, Bid well, Smilie, Eppes and AlHon, obtain ed. Mr. Early laid a resolution on th ta ble, declaring it expedient, in the opinion of the house, to adjourn on the firlt Mon day in April. Mr. Gregg observed that as it appear ed to be the sense of the house not to go further this session than to carry into effect the resolution juff agreed to, and as it was the wish of tome gentlemen to difeharge the committee of the whole from the resolution which he had the honor to submit, he would move that the committee of the whole should bedifebar ged from that resolution. Mr. Sloan having acquiesced in the fame course with regard to his resolution, the committee were dilcharged without a division from the further consideration of both those proportions. These refolution* having been, by this vote, again brought before the house, Mre Early moved to port pone them in definitely, but withdrew hu motion, on Mr. Gt:*i and Mr. Sloan agreeing to withdraw their rdVcCUvc refolution*, From the Richmond Enquirer. THE EIGHT WEEKS WAR! It was but a momentary confutation that the friends of England and the opponent* of Bonaparte had derived, from the fuppefed misrepresentation of the recent advices from France. It was the lail ray of a setting-sun, hut that ray has now departed for ever ! The very print* to which they have been accullo med to look up as the sacred oracle of truth ; even the moll favorite and dis torting vehicles es the Britiffi miniHry, have now brought out the fame melan choly history of British calamities, There is not a prominent ftalure in which the Engliffi intelligence received at (.harlellon has not confirmed the Bul letins of France : there i* not a lingle fad foreboding, which they have i.ot helped to realize. The difagreeablc truths aa no loag er be concealed, T iat the war of the third coalition has ended in the complete and unparel lelled victories of the French .- That the kmg of Pruffto, so far from becoming an ally in the war, his entered into a co npacl with Bonaparte, to occu py Hanover till the coucluiiju of a peaoe : That the Emperor of Russia embark ed in the war under no other character than as the ally of Auilria, and that, as an ally, Auffria has no further occaiion for hi* services—and That Auitria has been dragooned into filch a treaty of peace with Bonaparte, as the fate of the battle of Auiteriitz and the londuient of the anniffice, had given us every rcafon to anticipate. “ I will only make a peace (said Bo naparte to his troops after the battle ot Aufferlitz) which Hull give us guaran tees and secure rewards to our allies and Bonaparte hat performed his prtt mife. Byway of guarantee to himfelf ', he is said to have ttretched his feeptre into Germany, and to hold in his hands fomc of it* ltrongeil forte and keys on the right bank of the Rhine. Ehrenbreit itein, which Hand* in the Eledoratc of Treves, on the summit of a ffupenduous rock, not less than 800 sett above the level of the river, and wiiicli in 1798-9 refilled a long feige, and a twelve-mouths blockade, by the French ; Caffcl.mthe circle of the lower Rhine, oppolite to Menu and connected to it by a bridge of boats ; Ivehl, a lirong fortrefs of Sua bia, and oppolite to Stvafburg; and old Brifaek, another Hrong town of Suabia, once the capital of Brifgaw, and connected by a bridge of boat* to the weltcrn bank of the Rhine 25 miles S. of Straffiurg ; in fad, the whole chain of Thermopyloe and maHer paffc* of Ger many on the fide of France, are delive red by the treaty of peace into the hands of Bonaparte. It we call our eyes upon the south of Germany, we lhall observe the lame attempt to obtain guarantees, attended by the fame fuccels. The whole of the Venetion provinces, save Iltna and Dalmatia ; the lnnvcrthal or the Innthal, an important portiou of the Tyrol, watered by the river Inn, and whole capital i* lnfpruc ; in fad, every part of that southern frontier which commands the passes of the Alps into the south of Germany, are said to be annexed to the kingdom of Italy. We have only to recoiled that the iron crown of Italy is now fcated on th brow of the emperor of France. —By the peninsula of lilria alone, docs Aus tria Hill preserve its toothold in Italy. Nor has Bonaparte been more unmind ful of guarantees to himfelf under the ipeciouß pretext of fecuri g rewards to his allies. He has forgotten neither his favorite eledors of Baden, of Wirtem berg nor of Bavaria, for their allegiance, nor the emperor of Auilria for his op position. In rewarding and attaching the aff-dion of the one, he pauilhes the contumacy and lop* off the relources of the other. Out of the possessions of the house of Auilria he creates two new kingdoms in the south of Germany, to be the rivals and counterpoise to the house of Brandeaburgh on the north and the house of Auitria on the caff. He can create kings ; but where do we hear of a nation refiortd to her loft li berties by bis influence and generosity ? Austrian Boland, that country which would have been the moll benefited by his labors, that nation for which alone we felt particularly intereffed during the latter part ot the campaign, remains ltill to be the vaflal of the house of Auilria. The emperor of France can show his ieelings for an cledor of Wirtemberg or Bavaria, but he forgets the fuflerings of Kolciuiko and the Foies. Every thing seems then to demon strate that Great Britain is left to fight the emperor of France Jingle handed. She has not been admitted as a party to the treaty ot peace bet ween France and Auilria. What effed may then her dis appointment on the continent be txpec ted to produce ? W hat chaoge will the death of theeelebra cd FITT occaiion in her councils ? who i* to succeed him in the cabinet ? will hi* fuccelfor be the friend of war tr of peace ? on all these points we coniefs ourfelvc* unable to give j any opinion. Even the very intelligent [ writer oi a letter highly iutereftiug to our mercantile triend* which we have extracted irom a Charicttou paper, even he dare* not advance an opinion upou the lubjeCt. We cannot btneve, however, that Great Britain will Hill perievere m her preteut Hruggle*, after having been deprived of the energy of her I\tt and the alfiiVance of her allies.’ should lhe come forward with a propofilion for peace, will Bonaparte Hill adhere to the fame trims of pacification, which regu lated his eondud at the negociation ot Nicholfburg > Will he Hill demand guar antees for himfelf and rewards for hi* allies l ihotild this be hi* policy, we may exped that his propofitio’ns will be of that arrogant nature as to comport neither with the pride nor the interest of G Britain. It will not be enough for him to demand the refioration of the Cape of Good Hope, and of Ceylon to the Dutch and of Trinidad t* Spain. We exped that even the fortrefs ot Gi braltar it (elf may creep infothe negoci ation. If not as a guarantee to himfelf, Bonaparte may rellorc it a* a recompenft to his ally. From tb LITCHFIELD WITNESS. Definitions from WebJltVs Dißitnarj. Republic, A commonwealth or Hate, governed by rcprcfcntativc* eleded by the people. Republican, A favorer of a common* wealth. Republictnifm, A system of republi can government—attachment to that fyilem. Democracy, A popular form ot go vernment. Democrat, An adherent to govern ment by the people. A Democratic Republican mujl then be a favorer of, and adherent to, a common wealth, governed by rept rfentatives, cha fe nby the people. To have been Demo cratic republicans is the great crime of ill zths of the people of the United States, who voted for Mr, JefFerfon a* their Prefidtnt. Os 176 eledors, 162 mull have been of that abandoned des cription, To have been democratic re publicans is the great crime of the ma jorities in Vermont, Rhode Idand and New Hampshire, of one half of the free men in Maffachulett* and of a great body of the freemen in Connecticut! Can it be that after a tedious and ex pensive war, so many of our people thouid have been warped to democratic repwltcanifm ? In this Hate we have had warning* enough againll thia dreadful system. The Courar.t, the Monitor and other paper*, less noted for efFulion* of charity, have for fevcral years called u* Jacobins, infidels, atheilts, liais, adulte rers, iwindlers and murderers ; yet these mild accents of love and heavenly har mony, have had 00 effed on our hard hearts. Once we had a government* headed and ufficiercd by nobles of na ture, who took Hrong and iyftematie grounds acairiit a government by the people ; For four year* we had energetic examples of a government, in which the worfi enemies of the people (themselves) had uo kind es influence. During those four years there was no tack of exertion* to wean the people, from a wicked at tachment to a government of their own, and to attach them to a molt Hupendou* system of balances ; but it wa* all in vain ; the scholars turned their master and all hi* uihrrs adrift, aud have taken the whole school-house into their exclu sive poffdllon. By the winning eloquence of alien and feditionad*, of (lamp and land tax es, army and navy bills, 8 per cent loan* and new judiciaries, vve were invited and urged to quit our attachment to demo cratic republican frn ; but all in vain ; even the unaufwerable logic of chain* and prisons was infufficient to rouse the people to a clear perception of the right* of a natural nobility. Since this glorious chance ha* gone by, it ia doubtful it we lhall ever be fa voted again with an increase of our na tional debt a few million* every year, or with another 8 per cent loan ; perhapa we may never hate the privilege of taking a ten miles airing for a 4 cent Hatnp j perhaps our eyes may never again be greeted with the fight of principal as sessor and town allelfors and and may never agaiu know through how many panes ot glass the tight arrive* in our dwellings; perhaps no future chance may arrive tor gaming a fortune by a government contrad, and perhap* never another chance lor having a few lazy limbs ffiot from our boys, on board a navy ; perhaps we may never have a corps of lupernumtrary judges to answer as Ipare rigging in calc of accidents— What a prolped of glory have the ad herents to democratic republicamlm loft by negletting aud despising the Jiupcnduut monition* ot Adams’ adminiilration. In this country we have many rich and learned men, who would sooner Itarve than live by the fwcat of the brow-; these, Mr. Adam* calls, the no bles of nature -, these are the great friends af the common people ; they will take precious care of the common people’* rights and of their money too ; but de micratie republicans are lo prone to evil that they choose to keep not only the branches, but the root of all evil in their own pollcffion. Our nobles mult starve or emigrate, of the democratic republi cans coutiuue their obftiuacy. We warn the people of Connecticut a. gaiuft democratic t epul Heart ism, becatifc il involves a crime uo less (according to Mr. iWebfltr’g account) than abhs- RKNCS TO A COMMONWEALTH or SI ATX, GOVERNED *r RETKESENTATIVEI, CHO SEN *y thi rsorLi 1 TO KENT. STORES Nos. 7 and 10, in the change. For terms appiy at iny office. THOM,is PITT, Sec’ry. Xivemter 29 if 20.