Newspaper Page Text
Number 19
omit the follow.ng l*ast of Mr F> r-
P viri’>. which might have served i;
purpose considerably 1 ? A-> it was r
tonled in the remarks of the Teh -
which our neighbour* wer
commenting upon we presume they
must have overlooked it, aD<i there
fore take this opportunity of intro
ducing it to their notice.
• B 1" Mr. Forsyth — Charles Cotes
~~ortk Pinckney —The eldest child 0
federalism.'
Extract of a letter f rot" Lima, dated Febrnry 6,
1827.
The revolution which took place
here on the 27th ultimo, has effect
ed a total change in the government,
and entirely subverted the constitu
tion establishments hv Bolivar, and i
is the death blow to his designs in
Peru. This event interrupted busi
ness for a few days, but things are
now running their old courses with
new ministers, and it is not improba
ble but at t'l meeting of the new 1
Congress some change may take
place in the commercial relations of
the country more favorable to lor
reign trade.
The Hon. Rufus King departed this life,
at his residence in Broad Way, New York,
on the 28 u!t in the 73d, year of his age.
From a lengthy memoir of this distinguish
ed individual in the Cpimnercial Advertiser,
we copy the closing paragraph.
It is when m n like him are taken
from among us, that we have cause
for grief. We remember the days
of his fotmer usefulness, and bend
in reverence before the chastening
stroke. We rejoice that he should
so long have been spared—and. that
the blow descended not in the hour
of his prime and bis usefulness. In
manner. Mr King was mild and
dignified; in temper, firm and decid
ed Asa speaker, he was a model
for parliamentary debate- His com
patriots in the Senate will long re
member the respect which he mani
f sted for their opinions, whilst he
firmly maintained his own. Aa#ti
statesman, prudent, penetrating and
comprehensive in his* views; his
country will long have cause for grat
itude, that his talents were devoted
to the promotion of the public good
He was his country’s true fries.d; and
while he did not hesitate to condemi
the policy which placed us in collis -
ion >vit ii Great Britain, he did nol
permit his feelings to operate, when
ins fortune and influence were re
quired, to promote the successful
termination of the war. His privat
character was without blemish. A
a husband, affectionate and sincere;
as a fath r, an object of veneration
to ins children: he has descended
with lamentations to the tomb. As
a patriot, his country mourns his
loss.
.In abridgement of a classical Tour
to Troup and Muscogee Counties-.
Continued.
Chap. V.
ARGUMENT.
Lani] of sleep continued —sciinec of the gr;;ve
—eh. mis ry of human na.ure-—Pla.oni;
Love—Man’s structure betrayed in Ills
composition of Supreme Beings—Blank
verse in prose —immaterial clouds and peo
ple—tleavens of Poetry and their muse .
Plaetaria —p nver of music in Hell—descrip
tion of the immaterial clouds and the fair
clothing’ injurious to virtue —to philoso
phy.
Music, love, and fire are kindr
the arterial blood ol Heaven’s royal
ty; combined sparingly with clay
and material heat, they term the
composition of human nature, whic!
the grave again decomposes, elabo
rating elemental man lor the auih
ence, reception and c mpanionshii
ot the Deity. Look ye with the
mind’s true eye-sight, the grave is
not a mere hole, in the ground, bul a
stupenduous alembic, where tin
ch mic ore of humankind is {’unia
ced back into its simple or primordi
al elements. It is in the union am!
nutritive attraction of caloric and
light of which suns are the genera
ting and illuminating reservoirs, and
ponderable terraneous substance with
this noncorporeal fire, that nature
becomes anthropoietic, that the
race of m o keeps pace with the
weariless flight of time. The pon
derable substance merely iurnishes
organs irorn the decomposed organs
ot inferior file
It was thi<t*fire, nature’s great an
cient, the Bold sons of juvenescent
philosophy ventured to call pysche,
united to Eros, or elemental
love, oozed forth the world’s great
being. It was one of the beautiful
ingredients of Platonic love, whicii
louks to the reproduction and propa
gation ot a fine intellect in the m
struuuiitaiity of charming woman--
•t is a man tailing in luv. with his
understanding, sighing over its ap
pr 'aching decay,and longing to make
its existeuco permanent And it is
because beauty and love are associ
ated that Cupid was in.ide UiO song
ol Tbra i.iii Venus. One remark i
make hi lore quitting this subject —
Mu ir, love and lire, leaving out oth
ers, which are accidental, have, in
d| times, been constituent elements
ideo-chttnical Deity, as he has
hupt IroUi the varying mount o.
tbie human bund, as of Trimarti,
Viuii., Orouiazes.Oros,C'siris, Mitii
’al-, Milhra, Fo, ieseus, Omii, pro
claiming immutability of Man
- aral ol the operation of tin
! uw«, M.smpcd updo it, and detoou-
(rating the qualities, which bis sou!
can adnnre and fear, and which his
■ art can love and adore. Anion,
■ese 1 might have written the 11
'•rew word Jehovah, had jiv pen not
rumbled, as my heart always does
"hen 1 think of this uam ,—a name
.ncient and veuerable in human lan
guage, and intimately associated
w ith the most awful events of our
history and of our world, —a name,
which has ridden unhurt in the revo
lutions of timtf over successive
worlds of systematic, prostrate D i
lies which these revolutions entomb
ed, Deities, that drew nutrition and
lilie form the policy of governmental
society and suffered its fate, —a name
which will reach that day, when, na
ture, mature in parturition and de
sign, will be decomposed, and shrink
back elementally into tiie formless
ness of that energy, whence she
was.
But the Muse’s wing grows weary
!on a theme so dark and steep ol
thought, still panting upward her
flight leads to sickle the harvest of
new ideas iresh blown, and catch
l heir fragrance in the little cups ol
aromatic words, the mind’s cham
paign and festival. Ah! how can
the mind oil the attrition points of
her axle’s wheels, thundering in rota
tion’s viewlessness, to mount beyond
organic vision’s farthest bound of
form and substance material, and
glide into that smooth world of rude
extension and corporeal ruggedness
devoid, —the land of sleep Come
ye, who love voluptuousness of
thought, lend imagination’s strong
big arin to me to pluck ideas from
the womb of naught strong-rooted,
and into being tret nonentity. But
1 am a traveller, and should not thus
strain my mind’s lungs, making for
myself a precipice, down which 1
must tail and bruise the id-ms oozing
irum my mind. And, if in Poetrv
I’ve been ye say, now softly as 1 can
I w ill steal back into tbc square-toed
shoes ol Prose, and tread incorpore
al along the subject of my
feast of the great.
I bad been standing sometime
done absorbed in the profoundest
reflections, philosophising on these
sounds, and their beautiful atmos
pheres, the former of which 1 have"
aid, resembled polished gems and
heir sweet unlanguageable melody
seemed still to be echoing in every
chamber of my soul, when 1 heard
suddenly at a groat distance, this
same music playing on loftier notes,
and which seemed on the approach.
1 raised up my head from the incipi
ent ennui, in which I had been
thrown, starting involuntarily for
ward 1 knew not whither, and saw
•it a great distance, under the milk
water horizon a number of clouds
of the most beautiful aspect, of the
colour and polish of Elgin Marble
all of which appeared to be moving
in convoy. 1 waited upon the spot,
gazed with all my soul's strengt ;
I soon discovered they were evident
ly approaching, and that I should
have a full view. After they ban
come nearer 1 discovered the cause
fthc music, which 1 first heard, and
which now had grown much louder
■ml more distinct. At a short dis
ance behind and on each side of
these convoying clouds, 1 saw n
number of these gemmy looking
-ounds, all of the same colours, but
hogether of a greater magnitud;
than any which I had yet seen
I'hoy were arranged as so many
planetaria, the central ones jjeing
much larger than the rest, some ol
which in colour resembled opn .
some jasper, and some, which bore
no relation to any material erf. ur.--
They all moved rouud their central
radiant sphere, with gentle centripe
tal motion, all burning as they mo
ved in their beautiful phosphorescent
aim* sphere. In none of these plan
etaria of celestial harmony could you
discover any two sounds exactly of
the same size and colour, but, by
comparing those of one planetarium
with those of another, you could
make out an exact coincidence in
th se respects. By a little reflection
I easily discovered the cause of tins}
it was owing to the eternal relation
which exists between the intensity
nd note of sound in the production
of music and which was the govern
ing principle in the organization of
those harmonical planetaria. All of
them forming, as I have said, so
many separate systems different in
their complexity and extent, seemed
to move, similar to what astrono
mers suppose of the starry spher,
round ope grand central paint which
v. >g from where I stood just
under the white rgdiant hnm of th.
horizon, where all their separate
-vmphonics were concentrated and
blended together, constituting the
j highest perfection of melody, and
I whence their symphonies were re
verberated in everjt direction in infi
nitely higher and srmlimerAones.
Thus they formed the astronomi
cal heavens of Poetry. O! t’was here
I exclaimed with transporting rapture
w hich shook loose the fibres of my
Heart, where the faithful lover of
Eurydice, the Thracian Bard caught
those numbers, which tore the snarl
ed Oak from its roots, or moved its
tempest daring boughs in harmo
nic cadence, which metamorphosed
Mountains and Hills into dancing
I Satyrs, and Lions ami Tiger* inti
Ibe moving spectacle ol Poetry—wit!
I winch he shook the realms of tie
{dead, the dreary wastes ol night, su
GEORGIA STAESJMAN, MONDAY, MAY 14, 1827
* ■.»» .. *
pended the tossing ami roaring ol
Styx and fire-bora Pnlegethon,jared
the immortal sceptre of Pluto from
•he throne,.on which it rested and
m Hell and its dread monarch crea
ted the fir-t and onl/ smile of jo
that ever there mantled the cheek
And it was trom here Tasso, m the I
ragings and mad-outgoing of In.-
Fancy perforating the muteTfnl world
drew the grand prototype ofhis poe
tical Cherubim
The clouds had now approached
sufficiently near the astronomical
heavens of Poetry occupying and
moving in their rear, and on each
side, to be distinctly seen, and every
thing connected them Asa
theatre, they were crowded with
vast concourses of people; som
were seated in groups, and appeared .
to be enjoying social conversation,
others were moviug«in regular con
centric circles, and their motions cor
respond ii with the time of the mu
sic. These, 1 said, are the august :
assemblies of the Deities of this 1
country, and this is an anniversary
day; a day of festival and rejoicing
in commemoration of some great
epoch, which is registered in the !
chronology of this world ; so apt are
we to form our notions from prccon- j 1
ceptions and past associations of ,
things.
My attention was now more par
ticularly fixed upon the next cloud
behind, and hose who occupied it,
which differed in many respects from
the one moving in front as did
those whom it conveyed. O! coul.i
I speak in the sublime dialect and
rhetoric of incorporeality which befits
this scene, the description should bo
worthy ol what it embodies forth.—
The language of the organic, mind,
w ith all its tropes a\id similics, must
fail to roar the ideal fabric of that,
whi.'h is exalted far beyond the ut
most bourn of all its perceptions.
.inis cloud was curtained round
with clouds festooned in an endless
variety of the most charming and ro
mantic figures, striped and checked
with the most beautiful and vivid
rainbows, and interspersed and burn
ing with clusters of diamonds. The
diamond and rainbow lights, volup
tuously blended together in the
shades of their glorious ignition, as
the ardent lancies oftwo rival Poets
vie each other ir. the imagery
and beautiful creation of thought.—
The music of the harmonic planeta
ria cbmposing the Uraniologic heav
ens of poetry, seemed to distil thro’
the festooned clouds, and keep up
the glowing corrucsation of the rival
lights, which burnt in them so that
the blaze of the diamonds and rain
bows was music consuming.
You would naturally have suppo
sed that this cloud bore the femah
sex, the lovers of taste and ornament,
and your supposition would hav,
been true. They were the fair mai
dens, if any thing can be called fair,
where every thing is equally so. of
this beautiful land. They were dis
tinguished from those of the first
cloud by general inferiority of sta
ture, and greater rotundity of form,
hut above all, by their beautiful hair,
which hung as avail of congregated
moon-beams upon the ground, repel
ling vision hv tram lucence and daz
hng whiteness. They accompanied
the music with their voices, and like
the others, moved in concentric cir
cles to its time Their feet were
bare, and beside their hair, notiiing
c vi red their bodies, except you may
call a covering, the atmosphere of
beauty and charms, which surround
ed them, and their own symmetry,
1 could but exclaim, responding
in sentiment with Lady Montague,
contemplating the amiable nudity of
the lovely maids she saw in th East,
waiting on their Princess.—O ! ’tis
the covering of the human body,
w hich conceals the forms and attrac
tions of its divine architecture: forms
and attractions denied to all other be
ings of nature beside, the unobstruc
ted contemplation of which, was
meant to be tiie fountain ot moral
virtue and chastity in the human
heart, the publicity of which, custom
‘combating nature, as though she had
sinned in making forms, has entomb
ed, and with tn ir entombment, del
uged the world with licentiousness,
vice and corruption—making absti
nence and outrageous restrain* the
unnatural mother of continence and
virtue
Glance ye at the history of your
species, and listen to its voce. Is
not the human race every where
more virtuous, taking into account
their degraded morality, the natural
fi'spring ot’ the mind unenlighten
ed. * in proportion to the extent of
the uncovered surface of their ho
llies? Do not all voyagers, both hy
sea and land, unite their testimony
in proof of this great fact, and does
not the catalogue of their sins, botn
I physical and moral, fall far short of
those we call civilized ?
Look at the audacious eye, stiimi
lated hy all the torture ofseercy and
condealment, claiming its right and
empire, straining its utmost vision to
rend the silky fibres, or penetrate the
siihstanceles iicss of the lace, which
shuts it out from it’s idolatry t and
i look at the ingenuity and looms of
man in high pay, aspiring to more
delicate textures, rivalling th pure
* In look ini' over wiiat I have writhn, iii
npsaping of tinman inniiiy us prumutive of mo
rality nnd virtue, I jaireeivi I mm liuvi ex
ireswdm} If in 1“
b*i 1 not #•* it regards as influtnce ep n the
mind
nudity of nature, and yet backsliding
agains her, weaving the robes of in
cipient nothingness.
And too, ‘-nice all our : leas come
through the sensi s, and the sense of
touch being seated in every part of
the surface, casing up the body, fen
cing m the broad fields of its sensa
tion, cannot but stint philosophy and
hedge up the path of science.
nan
MONDAY -AY i-1, IS-iT.
Duncan G. Campbell. —We were nor
awar , until within afc weeks, of the great
and increasing popularity of Col. Campbell,
through "i t the State, although we have long
since been acquainted v.itli his ta'rnts and in
tegrity. Uis election to the office of Govern
or, seems inevitable; so much so, that it is
doubled whether lie will have an opponent.
The friends if misrule may, either vote
ag inst him, or not vote at all, but the real
friend- ol coon order and of Georgia, will
give Col. Campbell such an overwiielmihg ma
jo.iiy, that opposition will be folly.
| “Aon Committals.”- —lt excites our sympe
| thy hot a little for th Georgia Vice President,
| when lvc consider how he must have been
pained, on his late visit to some of his friends
in 'his Stale to find them prematurely com
mitted on the question of the next Presidency.
—To find that his old Southern Federalist
presses, after acquiring so many seas in their
reci lit fight against Jockson—in vilifying and
abusing his name and virtues, they should
come out so ala sychophantc in favor of the
chief, before he could polsijdy reach here, To
recommend or to prevent it. But our anxiety
is somewhat abated by th- fact that he always
carries with him • patent remedy for “ prema
ture committals, 1 by whi< ’i the whole |hj lit cal
Constitution ofhis disciples are as easily and
as sudd nly mytauorphos J, as « re the
aforementioned presses, from the abusive ha
tred, to the fawning and faithless love of Gen.
Jackson. Mr. Van Burai, therefore, has
iittle to fear from the unaccommodating nature
of his friend’s policy in this state, lie may
rest assured, both from present circmmst in
ces, no less tin-n from past history, that as
they fee! no inconvehicncc from, so they en
tertain no abhori ence of, premature com
mittals. He will find them ready to despise
ihc shame ot again coalmining themselves for
the support of any candidate against Andrew
Jackson, whom policy or ambition may set
up.
The North American Review, for April,
1827, in speaking of tiie late projects for im
proving certain rivers in this State, veryjtwt
ly admonishes our Board of Public Works to
“ inquire what has been done ai IVUmmgtoK,
in North Carolina, in deepening the Cape
Fear River, before they ftu in any
similar attempt.” Cerbunt sal.
Messrs. Editors— After compliments, I
w ish you to insert in my paper, the number of
Revolutionary Soldiers that have given in, in
tiiis 1 te Land Lottery ; for it is my enndid
opinion that there are rather more than Wash
ington had at the close of the war—and ob
lige yours.
This is a verbatim copy of a letter just re
ceived at this office, hearing date as above;
and the. very reasonable request which it cdh
t iins, would be cheerfully obeyed, could we
“ insert in his paper,” what should not appear
in others of the same edition. Now if it be
considered that a tinker may not cast, a spoon
and a porringer in the same mould, we hope
we shall be excused from the writer’s request
upon similar grounds, promising as we do, to
insert in every man's paper, at the close
of the drawing, th? number of Revolutionary
Soldiers, Idiots, Lunatics, Illigitimates, &c.
Just published, anil for sale, at the office of
the Georgia s' .tesir.an, u Table, shewing the
number of the Distrirt in the corner* of each
County, the boundaries of each County—and
also, the number of the lot in each corner of
every District, in the late acquired Territory.
The intention and use cf thnltjTaMe, is, to
assist those who n : sh to explore the late ac
quired Territory, or to search for, and exam
ine particular lots - The Fortunate Drawer,
the Land Speculator, and tli * Traveller, hy the
aid ol this Table, will be enabled, when he ar
rives at the boundary of any District, with a
very little calculation, to direct his course to
any particular lot.
RELIANCE ON GfiD.
trill trust in Him, tho ’ he slay me.' —Hoi v
Writ,
1 love the man who well can bear
Misfortune’s angry frown ;
I loVr the heart that Spurns despair
" hen all its friends have flown.
I love the soul so sternly proud
That mi.-o 0 annot blight;
The soul that scorns the jeering crowd,
And bravely claims its right.
i prize that fortitude of mind
The tyrant c'umot shake ;
I prize th it strength of si ul, refined,
No earthly power can break.
I love the man who scorns to bend
Beneath affliction’s blast;
'Yho trusts in an Jllmighty friend,
For his reward at last.
(Boston Bard.
MARBiED, ou the evening of the
Bth inst. at Mrs. Nancy Amlrevrs’ in
TaHiitferro Connty, by the Rev. Jess- Mer
cer, Dr Isaac Bowes', of Columbia County,
to Miss Sauati VI. Auoucwi, of the former
place.
CT Notice. 3
F| If I' S ibsrribcr has removed to the store
I : n front ofthc Etucr. llotki., undt r
the office of the CEORGIA STATESMAN,
where he is now receiving, in addition to oili
er late a rivals, n FRESH >CPP|,Y of
DRY GOODS
. hieh will be sold low for C**n os LI.
Isaac Newell.
Milhdgiviilc Mev 14, 1087. ?i-4w
omcuusiß.
Constitution of the Grand Lodge.
it was resolved hv
f* a Convention of Delegates
from the several subordinate L algos,
under the jurisdiction of the Grind
Lodge ofG orgia, assembled in D
- last, at this place, for the
purpose of framing a New Constitu
tion for the government oftbe Grand
Lodge of Georgia, that the under
signed should he a Committee “to
transmit the Constitution framed by
the Convention, together with a co
py ot the proceedings of the same,
to each of the subordinate Lodges
under the jurisdiction of the said
Gr nd Lodge.” And whereas it was
further resolved, That “the said
sev ral suhor finale Lodges should
t ike the vote of their respective
members on the adoption of said
Consj^e!ion, and make a return
said Committee. And
whereas, it was further resolved,
That “ the said Committee, or a ma-
jurity of them, should meet in the
town of Milledgeville, on the first
Monday in May then next, or ns
soon thereafter as practicable, to ex
amine such returns, and if they found
a majority cl’said subordinate Lodg
es in favor of the adoption of said
Constitution, then, and in that case,
it should be the duty of said Commit
tee to declare said Constitution le
gally adopted • —which should be an
nounc'd by a publication in one or
more of the public Gazettes of (Ins
State, and by a Circular to be trans
mitted to all said subordinate Lodg
es, ind to each oftbe officers oft! e
Grand Lodge, declaring -aid Consti
tution to be legally adopted, and in
full force, and requiring them to ob
serve and respect it accordingly, and
to send their representatives to the
communication of the Grind Lodge
under said Constitmion.” And
whereas, said Committee met at the
time and place above specified, and
examined the returns which bail been
received from twenty-three Lodges,
viz: St. Patrick’s Lodge, No" 2,
Stiili Lodge. No 1, Social Lodge,
No 5, Stephen’s Lo 6, Be
nevolent Lodge, No 9, Ri-iiig St ; ,r
Lodge. No 10, St John’s Lodge, No
14, Madison Lodge,No 111, Webb’s
Lodge, No. 19 Fraternal Lodge.
No 20 Sincerity Lodge, No. 23, —
Franklin Lodge. No. 24 Jasper
Lodge, No 27, St Marino Lodge,
No. 28, VV r arren Lodge, No. 29, Far
mer - Lodge No. 33, Macon Lodge.
No. 34, Monroe Lodge, No. 3(i, La
fayette Lodge, No. 37, Lawrence-i
villc Union Lodge. No. 39, and Phil
anthropic Lodge, No. 40.—A1l of
which Lodges were found to have
unanimously adopted said Constitu
tion, and every article and section
•hereof with the exception of St,
Patrick’s Lodge, No 2 which said
approving Lodges compose a major
ity of all the Lodges under the juris
diction ot the Grand Lodge of Geor
gia. “ It
Therefore, By virtue of the au
thority in us vested hy the above re
cited resolutions of the said Conven
tion, w e do hereby declare said Con
stitution, and every article and sf’c
tion thereof, to he i.egally adopted,
and in fuk’ force from the date here
of, as the Constitution of the Grand
Lodge of Georgia. And we do, by
virtue of the authority aforesaid,
hereby charge and require all the
subordinate Lodges under the juris
diction ol the Grand Lodge of G or
gia, and each and every of the offi
cers thereof, and of the said Grand
Lodge, strictly to observe and re
-peot it accordingly, enjoining upon
all the said subordinate Lodges to
s«?nd their accredited Representat
ives to the communication of the
said Grand Lodge, under said Con
stitution. to he held on the first Mon
day in December next *' at the Ma
sonic Hall, at the seat of the State
Government.”
Thomas Stocks, 0
William Y. Mansell, |
Samuel Rockwell, ? |
John Miller, ?
Thomas F. Green. J ’
MHbdgerile, M*j 7. 1 .*27. 71-3 t
IF.FT ray house, bed nod board, my wife
-J Be’.sey, without any just provocation ;
ftus is therefore to forbid any person from har
boring or trusting herjon my account.
A/attliew Smith.
Mitjedgeriitte, May 8, 1827. 71—2 w.
Sheriffs Kale.
ViriLL BE SOLD, in the town ofCoving
v T ton, Newton county, on the fourth
Wednesday in June next, between the lawful
lioirrs of sale, the following property, to wit:
The East part of No.
1)01, in the lGih district of originally Henry,
now the county of Newton, containing 91 1-4
acres.
also,
The West half of Lot
No. 217, in the 101 district of originally
Henry, now Newton County, containg 101
1-4 acres. The above land sold in obedience
to an act ofthe legislature of the State of
(ieorgia, pointing out the inode of disposing of
the State’s inter: st in laud which may have
bet n condemned as fraudulently drawn.
L. F. Mackey, n. s.
May 14, «W. n »<t
GEORGIA— Twiggs Covnty.
W’ H REAS Hannah lit nuers. nhathjthis
* v day applied to me so. Letters of Ad
ministration (with the will annexed) on the
estate of John Henderson, late of said coun
ty dec’d, these are therefore to cite and
admonish all and singular, th>‘ kidred
nd creditors of said deceased, to appear
I my office within the time prescribed by law,
shew cause if any they have why said Ict
r» sliould not lie granted.
<i:veu under my hand this 1 lth May
a*?. PETER SOLOMON, r. c. o.
71-*
C’ontractors Wanted.
r Board ofCo-.imissiontvs for the im-
A provemoni of ihe Oconee river, are rea
dy ti< roteii e sealer) paoposals for the con
struction ofeithi r or both of the locks and
d?ms to be built ii said river near Milledge
viiie, until the firs, of Jane next.
The plans, specifications, and terms ofron
tract will be seen at tiie office of the Stall En
gineer, hy wl.om every information will be af
forded relative to their situation, and in the
absence of .Vr. Pulton, tiie plans &c. wilt be.
shewn at th office ofthe Southern Recorder,
by Seaton Grantlind, Esq. one of tne Com
missioners.
R. A. BLOUNT, Chairman.
MilledgcviHj May 14, 1827. 7l—tft
ir~B rip"
ATTENTION!
The 33d Reg't Geo. Militia.
THE Regimental Stafi, with tiie Battalion
aitd Company officers and priva’es, are
hereby uolifnd lo atten a Regimental Muster
on the usual parade ground in Milledgeville,
oil Saturday the ninth day of June next. —
Th.w officers anil non-commissioned officers
belonging to the Regiment, are renqired to -
iten on th- Jay previous to drill—a prompt
discharge of duty is expected and required
from officers aud privates.
By order of Col. John Bozeman.
JOHN H. WALKER,
.1 ljutant.
Mav 10, 1527. 71—3 w
THE GAZETTEER OF
GEORGIA,
IS FOR SALE at Mr. Gieen’s BOOK
STORE, ami Subscribers are requested
to call for their copies.
Miiledgerille, May 14, 1827.
Wanted,
A pair of match Horses, young, gentle,
and well broke to harness.
VYM MITCHELL.
Jones County, May 14, 1327, 71—2 w
Notice.
AFTER the expiration of the legal time,
application will be m;:de to tiie Honor
able, tiie Court of Ordinary of Franklin Coun
ty, for leave to sell the negroes belonging to
the estate of David Colhoun, dee’ll, for the
benefit of tiie heirs and creditors.
WILLIAM KING, Mm'r.
M. M. COLHOUN, Mm’x.
May 10, 1827. 71—9 w
$ 20 Reward.
RAN At' AY from the subscriber on tbc
night oftbe Btii inst. FOUR NEGROES,
viz : Phil, a man about tbirtv-five years old,
five feet, 10cr 11 inches high, round shoul
dered, bald headed, Sharp nose, caries his
he.ad down, and lias a sly roguish counte
nance. — Mary, his with, about twenty years
old, of common size, her hair extends very
loiv in her forehead, lias a scar on her right
hand, occasioned by a burn, and their two
children, both boys, one about two years, and
the other five mouths old. 1 am apprehen
sive that tiie said negroes acre inveigled away
hy some white person, and may probably lie
otfered for sale, and the public are requested
to be on their guard.
.-...j pciauirui iivenng saiu negroes io in©
subscriber, living near Eortville, Jones Coun
ty, Geo. shall receive the above reward, or
half the amount, iflodged in any safe jail, and
information so that 1 can get them, and all
, necessary expenses paid.
JEREMIAH MULLENS.
Jones County, May 14, 1827. 7l—2w
GEORGIA—Twiggs county.
WHEREAS, Larkin Griffin applies to mo
for letters of administration on the es
tate of Samuel Dirk, late of said county dec’d.
These are therefore to cite and admonish
all and singular, the kindred and creditors of
said dec’d, to file Jieir objections in my office,
to shew cause, if any they can, why said
letters should not be granted.
Given under my hand at my office, this
13th day of April, 1827.
PETER SOLOMON, c. c. o.
April 23,182/', —6t—68.
• < EOHtil. 1 —77176' GS County,
WHEREAS James R. Butts applies to
rue for letters of administration on the
estate of Henry Stokes late of said county
deceased.
And, whereas also, James R. Butts applies
to me for Letters of administration on the es
tate of Thomas Cook late of said county de’e.
These are therefore to cite and and ad
monish, all ard singular the kindred and
creditors of persons sain dec’d, to be& appear
at my office within the time prescribed by
law, to shew cause, if any they have, why
said letters should not be granted.
Given under my hand, this 21st day of
April, 1327.
P. Solomon, c. c. o.
69—Gt
NOTICE. —To nil whom this may con
cern, that 1 have made the following
Survey, on the virtue of a head-wright w arrant,
for Anderson Baker, 350 acres, on the w_ters
of Marberries’ Creek, bounded North, by
Thompson, S. by Butler, S. E. by Ter
rill, and East by Camp ; a platt of wliicli is
recorded in my Office. Those concerned cau
[ have a more minute ilescriniion by examining
the same, and enter their caveats in due time.
DAVID BURSON.
Jan. 1. 1827. *7— 3
rAOUB MONTHS alter date application
n ill be made to the Honorable the In
ferior Court of Green county, when sitting
for ordinary pur|ioses, for leave to sell the real
estate of Enoch Stringfellow, dec’d.
EZEKIEL FEARS, Adm'r.
De bonis non.
March 2d 1827. 62—4 m
•VTINF, months after date application wfll
-Lx be made to the honorable the Inferior
Court of Emanuel county when setting for
Ordinary purposes for leave lo sell two tracts
ol land, one in said county, one in the 13 dis
rici Houston, No. 315 belonging to tiie Es
tate of Griffis 'ohn deceased, for the benefit
of the heirs and Creditors of said deceased.
WILLIAM DANIELS, Adm’r
47—9m
months after date application will
Lx be made to the honorable the inferior
court of Henry county, when sitting for or
dinary purposes, for leave to sell tbe rear
estate of Jacob Maddox, dee.
W ESLEY CAMP, Mmr.
August 2d, 1826.
IVTINE months after dates liereef, applies
ill tion will be made to the honorable the
Inferior Court of Pulaski County, when sit
ting for ordinary purposes, for leave to sell tbs
real estate of Warren and William Sutton,
minor heirs of Moses Sutton, deceased, for
the benefit of s lid heirs.
M ALLAH PERRY, Guardian
djy Ai 31—8 m
3