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DARIEN,
MONDAY, MAY 31, 1319.
FROM EAST-FLORIDA.
iVe have conversed with a respectable citizen of Da
rien, who left St. Augustine last Tuesday, and learn,
that the emotions occasioned by the cession of the pro
vince are fast wearing away among the people, excepting
renegade Americans, and individual* in the service of
Spain; and that a memorial is in preparation soliciting
the president to appoint general Jackson as governor
so soon as a transfer shall have been effected, and ano
ther beseeching the general to accept the appointment
should it be offered him. Our informant went as far
south in the peninsula as Moschctto and Indian rivers,
and southwestwardly to Spring Garden, near Lake
George. Ilis reception among the S^niinolies was.civil
and friendly, being always taken by the hand and offer
ed victuals,* which, though none of the best, seemed to
be abundant. The savages, amounting to three or
four hundred, were busily engaged in fishing, hunting,
and planting corn in the old fields opened by the Eng
lish before and during the revolutionary war. Many of
the impetuous young warriors, he understood, had de
clared they would never come upon terms with the
United States, but the greater portion of the nation,
having learnt to bend to circumstances, and knowing the
union of the province with this country would cut oft’
all communication with foreigners, expressed the great
est desire to enter into a treaty with our government.
They were only deterred from sending a deputation for
that purpose to some of the frontier posts, by the ap
prehension that the “ crackers ” (by which term they
mean the provincialists living between the St. John’s
and St. Mary’s as well as the frontier Georgians) v. ould
murder their deputies. Our informant communicated
this intelligence to major Bird, commanding Fort Alert,
Oil the St. Mary’s, who requested him to assure them,
that should any delegates reach his station, they would
be not only protected while they remained, but furnish
ed with an escort on their return; and at the Same time
wished liim to advise them to get some respectable
white person to accompany their ambassadors on the
advance, a measure that would add much to their secu
rity. Our informant, however, finding that liis own bu
siness would not allow him to convey the message in
person, requested several Indian traders to state-to the
Indians the assurances of major Bird, which they no
doubt did.
* Their corn being last year nearly all destroyed by
our troops at Suwaney and elsewhere, they use a root,
called coonty, as a substitute. It is usually about eigh
teen inches long and from three to four in diameter,
and is indigenous in all the southern part of the penin
sula. They beat it in a mortar until the fibrous part is
separated from the farinaceous; when the latter is wash
ed, dried and made into soup, which is said to be very
nutritious, but insipid to the palate of a stranger. Some
of the whites bake the farina into bread, and the'ne
groes often subsist on it for months, bartering their
corn for venison, bear-flesh, etc The Indians have as
much game as they can consume.
FOR THE DARIEN GAZETTE.
PINE BARRENS. ‘
Messrs. Eiiitoiis—That belt of our state, called the
pine-barrens, can never be either productive or popu
lous under the prevalent mode of agriculture. Con
sisting ol ponds, flats and light sand-ridges, the portion
adapted to the cultivation of maize and cotton wears
•ut in so short a time as hardly to recompense the tiller
for clearing it, unless he have cattle enough to manure
it annually and hands to pen them every evening. His
herds and family are however but seldom so numerous
as to render that expedient on an extensive scale practi
cable; and where their number would justify such trial,
the surface of ground necessary to graze four or five
hundred cattle would make the driving them daily in
to a fold not only unprofitable but ruinous, as the pro
duce of the ground so prepared would not pay one third
of the herdsmen’s labor. Accordingly you find a few
milch cows penned in a small enclosure, the trees of
w hich have been girded, to be turned into a sweet po
tato patch the ensuing'spring; and, a few years after-
is together with other exhausted land laid aside
as a pasture, in which state it remains until the fence
rots down, and a young growth of pine, interspersed
with scrubby oaks and percimon bushes, confounds it
with the surrounding wilderness Thus, he is conti
nually invading the forest, while it is as steadily advan
cing in his rear, recovering whut he has wrested from
it. Anu what is the reward of his strenuous and unre
mitting exertions? Barely corn, peas, povnpions and
potatoes to feed liis family, an old lean horse and half
a dozen of hogs—a beggarly equivalent indeed! The
greater part of his supplies must be purchased with
chickens and butter, or by slaughtering his stock,
the increase of w hich is thereby hindered. It may be
answered, that such a state being natural to him, he Is
contented w ith his lot, and any alteration in it would be
but creating in him new w ants that liis scanty resources
could not supply—that it is better that his intellect and
those of liis children snould lie dormant in the shackles
of ignorance than to be with feelings of the keenest sen
sibility brooding over a luckless condition and toilsome
life. Such sentimentalism, how suitable soever to the
orists who prefer the monotonous and dreary seclusion
of the hermit and sluggard to the sorrows, the anxieties,
the bustle, the pleasures and the raptures attendant on
active and useful pursuits, accords but illy with that
philosophy which takes experience as its tutor and the
human heart for its page. Improvement is the child
of knowledge, and a well arranged system of morali
ty can only be framed by an enlightened mind and ex
ist among an intelligent people; for though the savage
and barbarian be not without some exemplary virtues,
these commendable qualities are more than over-ba
lanced by multitudinous vices, and gleam in the mental
horizon like scattering lightning in the midnight cloud.
Knowledge, 1 repeat, is indispensible to a proper for
mation of morals; for, unless the mind be cultivated, the
heart, how benignant soever its pulsations may be, can
not always distinguish rectitude, but must frequently
be duped by appearances and passions, and ultimately
become from habit corrupted. Arguing from induc
tion, it is impossible that the major part of the pine-bar
ren people, while illiterate themselves and unable to
furnish means or spare the time necessary to educate
their children, should present that moral and enlightened
aspect which comports with the dignity that should
characterise the citizens of a free nation. Were there
no expedient by w hich their lands might be made to
yeild to them a decent competence together with its
concomittant blessings, 1 should despair of any melio
ration in their condition ever being accomplished; and
considering their location as prejudicial to mind as
some others are to health, urge their migration to a
soil more genial; but feeling confident, as I do, that
their sandy vein of the continent may easily be convert
ed into flourishing districts, and knowing that as men
nature has given to them all the materials requisite to
fit them for the camp or cabinet, I sincerely hope that
some measures may be devised by the state-government
or philanthropic individuals to introduce improvements
amongst them calculated for their soil, clima'e and phy
sical strength. To merely ag'tate the subject is the in
tention of this number; and if some able pen take it up,
ktlie result may be felt by future ages, fam diffident of
Iby own capacity, but shall not bp deterred on that ac
no other person
roil THE DARIEN GAZETTE.
Riceborovgh, .May 25, 1819.
Messrs. Editors— The answer to the question which
appeared in the Darien Gazette of May 10, furnished
you by Mr. Charles Young, is erroneous. He makes
the length of the side of the equilateral triangle 51.43
perches. The true length of the side of than, triangle
is 51.96 perches; found by the following method;—To
the logarithm of tlje semidiameter of the circle, 30 per
ches, --=1.47712, x supp. Log*. 120=9.93753 — sine
Log. 30.=9.69897 gives you the Log. 1.71568=51.96
perches, the side of the triangle. The area of which is,
I 7 a cres 1 rood 9.12 perches—and, an ellipsis, equal to
this area, with its diameters in the ratio of 12.5 to 7.441
must have a transverse diameter es 50.005—and, a con
jugate diameter of 29.767 perches—and, the periphery
of this oval, will be 1274855 perches: found by the fol
lowing corcct method:— From the half of the ‘.sum of the j
two peripheries, formed upon each of the two diameters J
of an ellipsis; subtract the. penphery of a circle, equal in
area to this ellipsis. The half of the difference thus -found,
added to the mean of the two peripheries, will be the peri
phery of the ellipsis required. The area of the segments
of the circle which is 188.5 perches in circumference,
after the grea'est equilateral trkmgle is taken out, will j
be, 10 acres, 1 rood, 1b.24 perches. j
A simple example VHffl prove the fallacy of J\lr. Hutton's J
rule, for finding the pheriphery of an ellipsis.
Required the periphery of an ellipsis, whose transverse
diameter is SO pevches, and, its conjugate diameter, 10 per
ches? jL
By .Mr. Hutton's method, 50X 10, X 1.5708=94.248 j
perches, for its periphery —it is very obvious that, tile
periphery of every oval, is greater than twice ,its trans
verse diameter: and, consequently, in thi& example,
would be over 100.
Mr, Bonny castle's rule is at war with .Mr. Hutton's-,
and, makes the periphery of this oval as much too great,
as Mr. flutton's, does too little. OLD.
FOR TIIB DARIEN GAZETTE.
For Her own sake I love Her.
I loVe her for .her rolling eye;
l love her for her gentle mien;
I love her for her cherry lips,
Bipe, fit to kiss, at gay thirteen;
1 love her for her rosy ckeek;
I love her for her lilly skin;
But love her fonder, dearer, still
For the pure heart that beats within.
To have my image there imprest,
Warm, in the sunshine of her love,
In rudest cell I’d think me blest,
And fortune’s favors far above.
Yes! T.me would fly qu rapture’s wing,
Misfortune pass unheeded by, *
If to her bosom 1 might cling
Till her dear hand should close mine eve.
ALBERTI.
SUMMARY.
The President of the United States arrived on the
19th instant, in Washington, (Ga.) and left it next mono,
ing for Lexington.
.1 Thin Cabinet. —4’he secretaries of state and of the
treasury, and the attorney-general were the only mem
bers of the cabinet in Washington, on the 17 di nst.
Finances. —The commercial distresses of the nation
appeur to be no detriment to the national treasury.’ 1 he
commissioners of the sinking fund ha’ e directed a re
imbursement of more Ilian on<- half (54 per cent.) of the
Louisiana debt.
Forged and altered .Votes. —Spurious notes of the
Bank of Pennsylvania, Bank ot the State ol Georgia,
and the Louisiana Bank are in extensive circulation from
the St. LawrenCe to the. Sabine. Advices from New
Orleans describe altered notes of the George*. State
Bank, astens converted into hundreds, and fi> dollar
bills of the bank of Pennsylvania changed to m e iuin
hundreds. Those of the Louisiana bank arc counterfeit
hundred dollar notes, dated April Ist, 1818, in fav or of
Julian. Poydrasj, March 4th, 1818, intavoroi J. >i. Shep
pard; and of same date in favor of F. lluplessis.
Mew-Fork election. —Authentic returns had not been
received at our latest dates: various results were of
course anticipated. One statement gave the Clmton
ians 45 members in the assembly, the federalists 40, and
the republicans 41; but another rated the republican.-,
a( a considerable majority over the federalists, and left
the Clintonians in an abject minority. Both statements,
we believe to be partly erroneous. But little doubt
exists however that Dewitt Clinton, after his present
term of service expires, will be eased of his gubernato
rial duties, the federalists having abandoned him on
account of his amidexterity, and that all his brain-sick
fancies end in mortifying and huimiiatiug disappoint
ment. ‘ i
The Season. —About the middle of the present month
the weather in the state ofNew-York was fine and plea
sant. Mild suns and refreshing showers had given to
the vegetable, kingdom the most luxuriant appearance,
and a harvest as abundant as the oldest husbandman re
members to have seen. At Buffalo, on the 4th instant,
the weather was very fine, and more forward than usual.
The ice had been so completely destroyed on Lake
Erie, that the steam-boat \Valk-in-the-\)’alcr, started
from Buffalo on the 30th uit. for Detroit.
.7 Check to Intemperance.— The selectmen of Bed
ford, (Mass.) have posted up,‘ at the taverns in the town
a list of the names of persons notoriously addicted to
drunkenness, and forbidden the sale of liquer to them,
under penalty of the laws of that state against intemper
ate drinking.
Mutineers escaped. —Six of the mutineers belong
ing to the patriot brig General San Martin—Samuel*
Smith, Mich; -1 M'Farrep, John Caster, David Bowers,
John .finny and MiehaelFreeman—effected their escape
from the gaol of Savannah on the night of the 21st inst.
by cutting their way through the wall, and lowering
themselves down by pieces of blanket tied’ together.
Pirates. —Twenty-two of (he mutineers of the priva
teer brig La Irresistible, risen upon by the crew at Mar
garetta, whilst captain Daniels and several of his officers
were on shore, were arrested and committed to gaol in
Baltimore on the 13th instant. They had been plunder
ing'! vessels they met with, robbing
the very trunks of the passengers, and even tearing
rings front the fingers of ladies on board. Twenty-six
had effected their escape to Norfolk, where it was hop
ed, they would he apprehended.
EmftloymAit for Jimiqxdrtana. —The Royal Society of
Sciences, at Gottingen, has proposed, as a prize ques
tion—a new and critical comparison of the ancient mon
uments of every kind that have hitherto been discover
ed in America, with the Asiatic and Egyptian monu
ments—in how far they agree or differ and what are
the grounds for the supposition, that at a very ancient
period a connexion existed between these distant coun
tries and their inhabitants?
Meteorological. —A table of the weather from March,
1811, to March, 1812, at a station called Astoria, lat 46,
15, at the estuary of the Columbia river, has appeared
in the National Intelligencer, giving the following re
sults:—Cloudy, 116; rain, 128; clear, 164; fresh gales
and squally, 18; snow, 4; hail, 5; thunder, 3; and frost,
hail and ice, 8. ‘1 he winds were generally from the
west and southwest. A garden with a variety of seeds,
turnips, radishes clover, timothy, See. was planted in
May, 1811, and such is the fertility of the soil, that a
turnip weighing lbs, and 33 inches in circumfe
rence, was dug up on the 20th December. Salmon,
*ome weighing 45 lbs, each, were plentifully supplied
the crew of the ship Beaver at Astoria throughout the
summer by the Indians, who seemed in general to be
friendly and well disposed. The mild temperature
depends on thewinds passing over a large extent of
ocean. In the middle latitudes in both hemispheres,
the prevalent winds are from the western semicircle,
and the western shore%ofthe two continents are wanner
than the eastern. Liverpool, in latitude 53, is warmer
than Boston in latitude 42.
From Jamaica. —By an arrival at Charleston, King
ston papers to the 48th nit. have been received. They
make no mention of the cession of Cuba, and no report
of that circumstance had reached Jamaica, though it
had been suggested as a speculation that Cuba might
be placed under the protection of England as security
fbr the sum due her by Spain. A schooner under the
Buenos Ayr can flag sailed on a cruise from l’ort-Royal
;on the 15th ult.—if the authorities in England be kind-
Ily disposed towards Ferdinand, the colonial authorities
in the West-Indies are equally so towards the patriots.
From Lima. —A gentleman who came passenger in
the Ontario gives it as liis confident belief, that the time
is far distant when that place will fall into the hands
of the patriots, they not having union, energy, and
strength sufficient for its conquest. This opinion
j agrees with the last accounts, which left the patriot
[ troops returning towards Buenos Ayres. It was also
believed that’Cochrane would injure the patriot cause.
Moravians. —Fifty deputies of the United Brethren
from various parts of the world met hist summer at
Ilernhut, I.usatia, a margravate of Germany, and con
i filmed in conference four months. It is supposed that
’ the Moravian establishment*, particularly in Russia,
North America, and at the Cape ofGood-Hope, will de
rive great benefit from the deliberations of this synod.
.Veiv coloring Matter. —By pressing the leaves of
plants, trees, etc. and then washing the substance in wa
ter, and afterwards treating it in alcohol, the green mat
ter of leaves may be extracted in a crude state. By
evaporation, and purification in hot water, it may be af
terwards entirely separated from extraneous matter,
and then it will appear a deep green resinous substance.
A coho], ether, oils or alkalies entirely dissolves it, but
it undergoes no alteration by exposure to the air. Two
French chemists have lately made the discovery, and
name the matw chlocophyle .
I Corretim. —We mentioned Mr. James Gadsden, who
was murdered in Charleston by Martin Tooliey, as the
brother of the governor elect of South Carolina. Our in
formants, formerly inhabitants of Charleston, could not,
we thought, be mistaken in respect to that particular;
but they have been. The Charleston Times says, that
the deceased “was no brother or relative to the pre
sent governor of South Carolina.”
WHOLESALE PRICES CURRENT.
Darien, J\lay 31, 1819.
Cotton, sea-island, per lb. 45
Do. upland do 13 al4
Rice, - - - - - * 3 50 a 3 75
Corn, per bushel, 75 a 80
Flour, Phil’a, per barrel, - - - - 10 alO 50
Sugar, Georgia, per cwt. - - - -1200a 15 00
Molasses, Georgia, per gallon, - - - - 52 a 56|
Rum, Darien, 4th prooti do. - - - 1 37jt a 1 43^
Ruin New-England, ------- 62£ a 65
Ditto, Jam. 1 45 a 1 50
Brandy, Cognac, per gallon, - - - 175 a 1 87£
Whiskey, per gallon, - -- -- -- 50 a52
Gin, Holland, per gallon, 1 25 a 1 50
Sugar, Muscovado, per cwt. 12 a 15
Coffee, per lb. - - - - - 32 a33
Tea, per lb. -------- -140a 145
Bacon, Georgia, lb. 18 a 20
Pork, per hi. - 22 a2B
Tobacco, leaf, per cwt. none
Soap, per lb. - -- -- -- -- - 12 al3
Candles, northern mould, 19 a 21
Ditto Georgia ditto, - - -- -- - 23 a27
Iron, per cwt. 4a7
Steel, ditto, ------ ----- 9a 10
Lead, bar, - -- -- -- -- -- 10 al2
Powder, keg, - -- -- 8a 10
Shot, cwt. - -- -- -- -- -- 10 all
Ranging Timber, per 1000 feet, - -800a 10 0
Scantling, ----- ditto - - 14 00 a 15 00
F?t nurds, pitch pine - - ditto - - 22 00 a23 00
Ditto, white ditto - - , - ditto - - 25 00 a3O 00
Staves, W. O. per 1000, 20 00
Ditto, R. O. ditto ------ none
Shingles, - - ditto ----- 350a 450
Advance on British Goods.
Woollens, - - - - 50
Cottons, 45 a 50
—— I'. II ■ HI! ■—
so£t£cript.
—— ‘ ‘
BRIDGE BANK OF AUGUSTA.
JVotice. —The evil reports which have been so indus
trioiKslycirculated to the prejudice of the BRIDGE
BANKfhi ngTfad the effect to bring down its issues
upon it In’mass, at a season of pressure unexampled iq
the annals of commerce, leave no alternative to the pro
prietors but to deposit in the Branch of the State Bank
in Augusta, specialties and other securities to a much
larger amount that there are Bridge Bills in circulation;
which will be redeemed at the said bank, with interest
at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum, from this day, as
fast as collections can be made.
And we assure the public of our best and constant ex
ertions to effecttliis desirable object as soon as possi
ble; and our prospects of doing the same speedily are
very favorable from the ample resources provided for
the purpose—under which oikumptance it is hoped
and trusted the holders of these Bills will not be dispos
ed to part with them at any sacrifice, as the wmole
amount bf Bridge Notes in circulation does not exceed
$285,000, and there is property responsible for them
to four times the amount, which is and will be exclu
sively applied to their early redemption.
All those who have deposits in the Bridge Bank, are
requested to call at 12 o’clock to-morrow and receive
payment. JOHN M’KINNE,
HENRY SHULTZ,
BARNA M KINNE.
Augusta, May 24, 1819.
Latest from England-—Bates to the 18th ult. have
been received at Ne.w-York, but the quotations of cot
ton reach no later thap the 6th. On that day, uplands
sold in London at 13LI a 14|d, and new rice brought
46s a 46s 6d. In Glasgow, on the 3d,uplandswent off’ at
12£da 13d. Nothing importanthad transpired, unless we
consider as such an intimation made by the marquis of
Lansdown, in the house of peers on the 6th ultimo,
that he should call at future day for information on any
correspondence that may taken place between Ameri
ca and England, relating to the cession ol the Florida*.
Spanish Cessions. —ls report prove true, Spain has
ceded California to Russia. The news conies by the way
I of Canton, to which it had been brought by an Ameri-
I can captain, who received it at the Sandwich Islands
’ from the commander of a Russian frigate, who had been
on the Californian coast. Florida, Cuba, and California
transferred! it is prudent, however, to sell that winch
we cannot keep.
K* ****## O*# f(W*
Died, on the 17th instant, in Hancock county, at a
, very advanced age, Mathew Ra hum, (father to gover
ucw Jtabun) a gentleman of exemplary piety
I Sly Marine Drtuj. &&
r PORT OF DARIEN.
‘ 1 1 “ “ “ “
ARRIVED
Sloop Sailor’s Fancy, Babcock; Charleston, 2 days—
■ —to ltosewcll King.
—*- Joseph, Nyc, Savannah, 2 days—machinery fot*
• steam saw-mill—to Rosewell King.
Look-Out, Anderson, St. Mary's, 6 days—corn
—to James H. Giekie St Cos.
Ann-Eliza, Payne, St. Simon’s, 2 days—shells
—to William Carnocliam
Citizen, Johnson, Wolf-island, 1 day—shells—
to William Carnochaiu
Boat Regulator, with 121 bales cotton, from Fort-
Hawkins in 10 days.
Boat Willing Maid from Hartford in 5 clays.
V IBAMidXDSSSoT’
N. RY PERMISSION OE^mVXCII.
WLIND EXHIBITION.
The uncrokoned informs the gentlemen
of M'lntosh that he to present them
with a grand superb in Darien,
On ThuiSkty 3 d June .
A temporary seats, sheltered from the
sun, and the inside elegant drapery, beauti
ful colors, garlands, etCi\vill be fitted up in the
, cotton press yard oMMessrs. I HIE Cooke & Cos. fbr the
occasion; and nogpnns nor cxpcnJKsparud for the gra
tification of At h&nteaat 3 o’clock in
the afternoap the discharge of a will announce
the openiuffof the doors for exhibition,
BallJn.Vo. 1, fifteen feet in altitude afflfehirty feet
ii\ will part from its fasteninjMukl soar
f Balloon JVo. 2, twenty-five by fifty feet, beurine^S*
U^rcillumi
*
will majes
ilevated six
ye a variety
if intruders
l a separate
comfits, etc.
: audience,
r—children
f exhibition
circus door.
After the laspflientioned hour, the saleclose, and
entrance hpCbtained by tickets only
Jff JOHN FUAViAIS.
N BcSeparate apartments provided for
may 31 \-31
DARIEN STAGE.
THE proprietor of this stage being desirous to pro
mote the convenience of passengers, the Darien
Stage will, in future, start precisely at 4 o’clock, in the
morning of every Tuesday and Friday, from William B.
Holzendorf’s boarding house. No responsibility on the
proprietor when passengers fail to attend at the hour
stated, and no money returned under any circumstances
whatever. Baggage at the risk of the owners.
WM. B. HOLZENDORF.
may 31 c 32
POST OFFICE REGULATIONS
THE Post-Master finding it very injurious to his
health to be up at all times in the night to make up
and distribute mail papers and letters, informs the public
that he L under the necessity to establish the following
regulations:—
THE NORTHERN MAIL
will close every Monday afternoon at 5 o’clock; all let-®
ters to be sent by that mail, must be pul in the office at 1
half past 4 o’clock, otherwise they will lay over until the *
next mail day.
On the arrival of the northern mail on Thursdays, (if
it arrives by 5 o’clock,) letters and papers will be de
livered; but if at dark no letters delivered until Friday
morning at 8 o’clock, and office kept open until 12,
THE SOUTHERN MAIL,
for St. Mary’s, Jefferson, Tuckersville, Frederica and
Brunswick, will close every Thursday afternoon at
4 o’clock; all letters to be sent to any of those places,
must be in office by 3 o’clock, or lay over until next
mail day.
On the arrival of the southern mail, which is Monday
evenings, letters delivered immediately,
THE WESTERN MAIL
i closes every Sunday evening at 7 o’clock, and leaves
■ this place Monday mornings.
It arrives here every Sunday evening; letters deliv*
i ered on its arrival.
; WM. B. lIOLZENDORF, v. yi.
t mav 31—c 32 ~
cl For sale
jrfMy rpHF, fast sailing sloop CITIZEN, thirty tons
JL burthen, now lying at Mr. Carnochan’a
For terms, apply to the master on board
or to ” JEREMIAH LESTER,
may 31 32
ST. JOHN’S LODGE.
PROPOSALS will be received by either of the sub
scribers in all thismonth, forbuildinga Masonic Hall
in this city, agreeably to the plan which the committee
will produce, on application. Those disposed to under
take, will apply at the store of Charles L. Chamoatne,
where the plan may be seen.
JOHN B. MILLS, *1
CHARLES L. CHAMP AVNE, (
ALLEN B. POWELL, >comrmttee
ARMAND LEFILS. J
may 31 -32
Battalion Orders.
A N election for major of the sixth battalion will be
jrVhekl in Darien, on the 21st day of June next, at IQ
o’clock a . m. to fill the vacancy occasioned by the pro
motion of Jesse H. Harrison.
SAMUEL EIGLE, £ ...
ARMANI) LEFILS,S* e ” ‘
may 31——32
Georgia—jyplntosh county.
B\ James Burnett, clerk of the court of ordinary for
M'lntosh county and state aforesaid.
Whereas Martha Shearwoood and Rotheus Drink
ter have this day made application for letters
ni st rat ion on the estate and effects of James
deceased, late of this county? ‘-"S-i-f.
These are therefore to eitc and ad
guia: the k". ‘■ i V, ! i>
t
.Mfij