The Washington news. (Washington, Ga.) 1821-183?, March 27, 1824, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

V JLUME xj PUBII9IIEH WnF.KI.T liY PHILIP C. GUIRU, IrtT* NEW ARRANGEMENT. Ah experience has <li -rovere l to us the little •Mention paid o print debts, and the g-eat difTirul'v and expense m colljsfctinj? such deb's. St ;s a few nn!v can hr call -cl liberal <n paving punctually what they owe jiutty, to the printer, u’e ‘lave, afi~r due consideration, come to ‘his conclusion, <ha we suoirr sot to give credit ’Ve are compelled, therefore, to adopt anew plan In consequnce of this de'ermina >on, our terms shall in future be,for ‘he paper three ’ .do lars p'M- annum, if paid in advance-lorn- UnMars, i l ' paid within six months—and five Jto'lars if paid only a the end of ‘he year For advertis men's, *hey are to be paid in ad vance sheriff sales excepted u luc h are ;o be paid q-.jar erly Th ■ above mie* shall be strict lv observed and no me need apply who is not rearlv o comply with them Term o*‘ Advertising, 7; cents per square or- I he first insertion, and 62 4-2 cents for ach continuation A I- - RhT RATE .1 UK, ILL stand the Spring season , * at my house in A jlke com. \ ty. at the low price of SIX |)()L , LAR** the season—aod fKN l)OL LA LS to insure. Isham Branham. March 10. 1824 It—- f Ad mini trators Sales ON Saturday the 22d of May next will be sold agreeab yto ®n order of the C iurt of O dinary of Elbert county, at the court hou'e of i said county, Oue tract of La’ and oontaioing 61 3 i acres, in paid coun ty adjoining Samuel illgood and i ther it being the real estate of John C deceased to be fold for the benefit of the heirs and creditors of said deceased Rebecca Taylor, adn/x. ! March 13, 18 24. 12 td ! PURSUANT to an order of the hon nterior court of Greene •ounry, it inga a c urt of -rdinary, will be old in the town of Greenes > * , • r ’ . i i>, wn me us i iue uay in prii next, that va uable tract of land known by he cull hoai tract con Mining 750 acres, with one half of the ferry boar and landing attach and thereto Met chant 6i would do wel- to view he premise*. a< there i-. no situation in the up coun try b tee? ca’culafed to wield a caotta’ to greater advantage and wt h moie sucre f .iso at the same time and place seven iikeiy neg oes Term* made known on the day by Win. C. OoDorn, adm’r Jan 27, tß.t4, to~ tda ( A G :{KK \ Hi.V i a ord rof Honorable C nr* of Ovdi bh I Hubert eouuiy, wdl he *old at Elbert Court House, dm the first Tuesday in April next, within the ; lawful sale hours, the following pro perty to wit: Fwo negro men, Peter, and Ned.‘ sold for the benefit of the heirs and creditors of Job Hammond, sen. de eased, a credit until the 25th December next. Lucy Haramorid. adm’x. Ja< Uarv 16 1824 f AGREE BLE to ano derof the Inferior court, wi be old at Elbert Court House on he fir-t Tue dav in pril next a the c aim and title of the estate of Thomas Gardner, decea-ed, to a tract of land in aid county. lying on the water 0 f ihe B< averdam creek and Ray creek Ann Gardner, aduvx, j January 10. 1824. 3—tds. AtiUEK \BLY to an order -1 ; the court of Ordinary of O glettiorpe county, w 11 he sold at Lexington, in said couoiy, on the first Tuesday in April next, One tract of Land, Ling in the county aforesaid, on the waters ol Long creek, adjoining Yf.json Brooks. Mrs. Bailey, and o- Ihers, und containing 202 i 2 acres, m rn-c or less beieg the real estate f Samuel Ruling, deceased, and to he sold for the benefit of the heirs and creditors. I etuis made known ao tue day f sale. James Huling, adm’r. Jaouacy 27, 1&24. s—ts The Washington News. IViSHINGTON, (GEORGIA) SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1824. ON the first Tue day in May next, wi 1 be <mld at the court house of Wilkes county, Two Negroes, a boy named Jeffrey about t 5 years of age and a g ; rl named Lavina a bout nine y ars o and for the benefit of ‘he heir* and creditors of Patience Crenshaw, decea ed Terms made known on the day of sale. T looms Guest, adin’r. March t, 1824. 10—4 t WILL be sold on Saturday the 24 h of April next ar the late residence of Tabirha Burton, deceas ed iii Eibert county, all the property of said deceased consisting of one gig crop of cotton, corn and fodder, cows and ca ves, stock of hog , ba con one black ma r e and *-und yar tides too tedious to mention Term i made known on the .’ay of ->a!e Leroy Burton, ad rrvr. March 6. f 824 11 - tds I t montns af e date applca tion will be made to the honorable the nferior Court of Wilkes county, while sitting as a Court of Ordinary, * for leave to sell the real estate of Lew is McLendon, decea-.ed, m rhe county aforesaid, for <h? benefi of .he heirs and creditors of said deceased. Nelson Powell, ? . , *;• „ a/t i i faairLrs, r rancisMcLendon, j January 30th 1824. TXfTLLbe so and on the first Tues \ \ dav in May ne .t, a’ the court hou e o Wi kes cou ty, agreeably to an order o the court o Ordinary o;* said county, i wo \egrot*s, a boy named Allen and a woman named Dinah belonging to the es ta?eo aac .alaway dec & robe sold or the benefit o ‘he heirs and creditors - Terms made known on the day of sale Henry Pope, J> |* Absalom Janes, S * Winnifred Callaway, adna’x March i, 1824. 12—tds a Hi© t JBMir- Very fate from England. By the at dl of the old Sinepae ket ship I ‘olumbia Rogers, in the short pass g<* f2l da\s from Liverpool, the E l3lsir of the Madon al 5 dvoeate has received his regu In! files to the 16 ! b of |Fht* olumbia sailed oo the 16th of Fehetiary, after the Nestor, Ro heh Fulton, and New-Yo k. We feel happy to state, that in telligen-e, by this qoi *k passage, w veanls us in iiel-ev* >g, tha>t, at ft mots o*i the part of Spain to rcc m quer the colonies of South America have been abandoned, a id that ar rang<-me is will ne made to acknow ledge THEIR INDEPBND - JfCB, liUS confirmi g forever tue f edo a of the itneriean eontinem from Euro pean control. The Morning Chronicle informs u%, that Great Britain has made di rect overtures to the Spanish g .v ----ernmerit, to recognise the iode pendeoce of the colonies, und in terms so strong and explicit, and aveompanied with such unequivn-al j assurances of opposition, that tak- j ing every tbiog into consideration, it seems the cabinet at Madrid im mediately arquiest-ed, and dispatch ed the Duke of San Carlos to Lon don, on a special mission, t onne t j ed with*this object. Attempts will | be made, no doubt, to get rid of a ; general recognition of the indcpend ! ent governments, until some tie go eiati n is effected,- by wbieh retnu neratMO for losses may be bad, or commercial arrangements and ex clusive privileges conceded ; but these expedients wid not preveot the \ great point of a<*k lowledging tbe independence ofSouth America, and tet-minating the war. /Vie die is c ut. South America is free, a*>d the British journals already remind those republics h vv much they owe So Knglaud. and how strong should be their lies of gratitude Be it so. Our extracts relative to the Greeks will also exhibit a favora ble account of their march towatds independence., which appear* to be ( so rapid, i hat no and oibt cao be enter tai ed f their ultimate success The British squadron, wli*-h left Ma!ta,ftr I'unis, had compelled Bey o give up the Greek captives. Algiers, it is said, has declared war agai st **p in. A Mad ul n*per of January 3t, *ays, ilia* 1 200 I isliyien are to lie eofisted to so m u regiment iti Spain as heretofore, This p; eject, says lie editor, seen.s to realize our wishes, for we havt always snid that if was indispensable to r#- es tablish all the foreign corps which we formerly possessed, ft r* the more necessary to recitr to this mea sure, as the have al ways had it in view t destroy the foreign regiments wiiLh we* had, because of their fidelity Accounts from Madrid, savs the Liverpool Mercury, pfese- i a dread iul picture of the siijjafion of that eou try. V decree of the tyrant has doomed to the gjilleys. for ter, years, all those who were Alcades during the Constitutional 9>stein: the Marquis ol>a*Ma Cruz is inolu tletl in ibis atrocious decree. At PampeluGa the tribunals have been dealing ibeir terrors to women: proceedings were instituted against one liberal ladies, accused of hav i.g sung liberal songs a.td declared against the absoluio system, dur mg the Constitutional Government. A lady, named Sarasa, was accord- | i.-gly banished at her own cost from j 14avai re, and lour years’imprison- j meui to follow a return to the tlis- | irict; another, Josepba Maria Al onso, was sentenced to two years’ imprison.i ent, and 2000 livr-es fine; the widow of Eoherenia, 70 Years “I age, to six years’ exile, ami to ! be • ondu-ied out ol* Navarre at her i wu expense; another of these la- ! dies* Mademoiselle I larigue, was doomed to tour years’ imprisonment, and a fi.ie ol 3,500 francs. At Sar agossa, ten h-lpless individuals were sentenced to imprisonment of from to ten years. It is said iha> these excesses lia* e produced suuh a sensation, that were die frreiM-li troops not in Ferdi uaiid’s tyranny would o.t endure for a week. AS let* the surrender of Pat. peitUia, a nutnler of ladies were arrested under pretence *f at ta hmerit to the -Oiititutinn, and subje ted to trial, piL ipalJy, it is . though', wall a view tr f iunder. I Several were sever eh fined, and to 1 he oieti for Years. The * t General Minp, ah ‘se bus na and w :-i* killed in one of the hatte rses dun-g tiie siege, was still in prison, and her trial was to have come last week* when nothing could avert, denuding to the inform* ion received, tier being sentenced to the hulks at Malaga. The only crime ol ihi ladv was that of being Gen. Mi a’s s sier. A great number of ladies, both old and yi ung, were in tbe prisons of Pampeluna when the letters were dispatched, which was on the 13ih i stsaot, / aßa I u j°* the Spanish Prime minister, died about the middle of January; but no new measures are amicipa*ed from this event, in tbe cabi- et at Madrid The *S iuth American Qiestion —- A French paper (the Journal des lkbatsJ announces that a Viscount had lei I Paris for Madrid, not as an ambassador, but “on an extraordi nary mission to the cabinet of Ferdi nand. ** Che London Courier, on this fact, remarks:— “What the ob ject of this mission may be, we shall not attempt to eoujeefore; but were we calledvupoo to hafird one, we should think it likely that he is the bearer of some important comrnu *i eation respecting South America. We suspect the Presidents Message to Congress, has worked a great change in regard to meditated schemes, not so mu h on account of what the President says, as be cause it is pretty generally believed Mr. Monroe would not have held quite such decisive language, if there had bee * no previous explana tion* between the Cabi ets of Lou don and Washington.’* A late Lisbon Gazette, in a furi ous rhapsody agaios* constitutional government, thu< threa’ens the new governments of South America:— i We are etmviuued of the necessity of extirpating the evil, not only in Europe, but on the other side the Atlantic, where this Hydra now furiously discharges its mortal ve nom. Should it be suffered to ex ist, it will infect Europe in such a manner, that, tearing it to pieces, amidst the fury of cruel artd oppo site parties, it will reduce it to the necessity of interminable wars, and exp -sc it to become one day tbe prey of some adventurer, who shall know bow to take advantages of so many misfortunes. This, there fore, is the object which at prese.it more particularly inse-eet awl oc cupies the attention of the cabinets of Europe. They have, however, some diffi ultie9 to va> quish; some time is necessary to balance the re eiproeal interests of all na ions, which are rnoreor less involved in tbe affairs of \inerica. They have to weigh the means which seem the best calculated to recal to reason a*ol duty their people led astray by the factious, whose only object is, to make themselves the dictators and g *vernors of those whom they have deluded by their impostures. M Four Days later from Europe. We are indeffedUa a passetige who arrived last evening in the steam boat from P evidence, for the Boston Daily Advertiser of Tues day , which contains the arrival of the ship Emerald, Capt. Fox, in the extraordinary short passage of six teen days from Liverpool By this arrival London popers to the even ing of the 18th, and Liverpool to the 20 h February are received, be \ng four days later than received by the C dumbia, Capt Rogers. The most important articles taken from the Boston paper ace ass dlows : The Paris Monfteur of e"eb 16 annouoc.es officially that the king of Spain at the solicitation of France, had signed a decree granting a li berfy of free trade with South A merica to all oat ions, on the footing of an equality of duties A con ve tion had also been signed regu lar i g the occupation of Spain by the French troops, and a treaty re cognizing a debt of 34,000,000 francs to France. lo tbe House of Commons, Feb. 17, Lord Nugent, after a lo.ig speech, moved hat the instructions to Sir W. A. Court, the British Minister in Spain, during tbe Spa nish war, and copies of the corres pondence with the Spanish govern ment relative to the mediation ot (Treat Britain, be laid before the House, nr. Canning, in opposing the motion, declared that iosiruo tions wete given to Sir W. A’Court, which f ‘ibado him to put himself into a blockaded place. An amend ment approving the conduct of min isters, was carried t7l to 30. In the H ome of Commons, Feb. 18, he oavy estimates were voted: 29.000 men, being an increase of 4.000 on last year’s estimates, were granted In the discussion, some allusion having been made to the probable reason for iugtnen iftg the naval force, Mr. Canning said, io explanation of a passage in the Kiug’s Speech, that mere never was a period in which the country might with grea er certainty ex pe t a coo inuan.je of pea>'e; but added, “it must he clearly seen that there never was a period io whi. li there was so mu-h agitation, and it was ne<*essarv not only that we should be ourselves satisfied, but that the conviction should prevail io all parts of the world, that the na tion was ready to maintain its rights.” Io the three great stations, the Med iterranean. the West ludies, and now Sou'b America, it was necessary to have an increased for -e. On the same day the Usury Laws repeal bdl was read a second time on a di vision of 129 to 23. A letter from Greece, without date, bat apparently late, states that was still besieged by a large army. Lord Byron was s ill at Cephalonia. He had pr tfered his service* to the Grte&s, aod mo ney ad arms. IT.e two latter they accepted with gratitude, but declin ed his pe sooal services. Ale ter from Corfu announces that he G eek* with 7 or 8000 men had made a successful deseeni upon the iglandot Mytyleoe, and another letter that the Turk ish garrison at Pstras, had evacuated the and retired to Lepanto. Boilj dies© accounts are doubtful. MEXWO. — As the Minister i now appointed, it is indispensably necessary for the public service, that he should proceed forthwith to his place of destination. A letter received at P'lilvidelphia from Mex ico, dated 7<h January, states:—* “The English (*ouiTiisLmars, Har vey, Ward, and O’Gorman, with a Consul General, ad Consuls for Vera Cruz and Acapulco, are iti this city, ('he second leaves here i a few days for England, and takes vith him such a favorable account f the situation of affairs here, that; “tere is no and ub the independence vill be acknowledged by G eat Bri aiu, and that she will prevent the •tber European powers fiotn med lliog with us. \il they asked was iie ah ‘lition of (he slave trade, •vtiich tias already been dune away; to commercial privileges, or inter • erenee in the form of government; leaving the people of this conntr> at iberty to adopt what they think mast conducive to thotr welfare and property,”—JV*r t. 1 dvoeate. THE UNITED STA VND COLOMBIA, rraosla ed from the . ot.e of Colombia, pub* lisheda Bj*jo a. Dtc. 21, 1823 FOREIGN RELATIONS. Tbe ficst Minister of the United States of Ameri ca to the Repuldio of Colombia.—The Hon. Richard S, arrived in this capital rt the 10th instant: and, after, the u sual ooin nuoi atioo* wuh the De parr memos Foreign Affairs, iho ttith Instant, at half past eleven, A, M. was app tilted for presenting, personally, his credentials of mini ster plenipotentiary to the Execu tive. On that tlay, the Secretary of State and Foreign Affairs, direo ted S *nr. L pez, one of the offi-era of that depart merit, to wait upon Mr. Anderson, anti accompany him to tbe palace. On bis entrance, the guards paid hi the appropriate honors. Mr, Anderson, having reached the of fi *e of Foreign Affairs, Senr. Goal received him, and expressed to him the great pleasure which he experi enced in seeing in this capital a cit izen so distinguished. He imme diately introduced him to many gen tltniea of the High Court, of tho Senate, of the House ot Represen tatives, and other officers of State who were present. Mr Anderson then presented Mr. Bullitt, his pri vate Secretary. At the appointed hour, the Sec retary of S-ate and Foreign Rela tions conducted Mr. Anderson to the principal saloon of the palace, where his excellency the Vine-Pre sident, with the other Seore<aries, was waiting his arrival. In tho outer saloon was the commanding General of the department, with a splendid assemblage of all the offi cers who were in the capital. Im mediately on Mr, A ‘dersnn’s being presented to the Vice President, ha address and him as follows: “Mr. President: the President ok’ the United S ates, animated by an ardent wish to ooutinue the rela tions of perfect harmony and gene rous friendship between our respec tive countries. has commanded mo to give the most satisfactory ex pression to the liberal feeling whicEa he, as well as the people of the U. States, must ever entertain towards the ins'itutioos of freedom io every country. I tender to yon bis anx ious wishes for the restoration of peace to this republic, aod prosper ity to its citizens. My own admira tion of tbe liberal institutions of Colombia, and of the glorious man ner in which they have been creat ed and sustained, affo’ ds tbe surest pledge oft he sincerity of my senti ments. If this mission shall have the happy effect of giving solidity aod duratiou to the harmonious fee, lings of our country wen, it will ba a source of unaffected joy to every friend of free government. It is on this continent, and in this age, Mr. President, that man has * been awakeued to the long lost truth £No. 13*