Savannah daily republican. (Savannah, Ga.) 1818-1824, February 19, 1824, Image 2

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icpob SA'WAWtAM $ *W B ^ rr '. 1 ' 1 SBWWMItfaaB, -fni PH'nukBirtNt;* iN'iMrrH:. From the Eastern Argus, Feb, #L As it was intended that; none but R . ftcan Members of the Le^iSVatufe should take a part in the proceedings of this meet ing, no public notice of the meeting was given. Still, hotocVcf, several of ffie Fed era! Members repaired to the Hall, and a considerable number of citizens. After the meeting as organized by anpbinting Dr. Small, of the Senate, Chairman, and Mr. \Vhite, of the House, Secretary— tftne and passed. The bill to secure the account. Mr. Wilkins, of the Senate, rose, and, after stating What he considered to he the tfHUUfsHAY EVENING, Farm v ah t 19, l«24. CONGttESS—In the Senate on the I0i> * t. the bill’ autforfisising fh6 building of an addition, ai number of sloops of war, was read a third ability -of nfioers and others was then taken up, & afieftfome debate it was ordered to be engross, edfo/ tf third raiding. . tntheHor.se,- Mr Thompson; of Georgia, gave bntice that oh' the'nett day, he should more for leave to'introduce a Bill oh the subject of the Georgia militia claims. The consideration of the rfntefrtal Tfhprovethent bill Was resumed» and ar. ter Unsuccessful attempts to postpone indrfi. PilelV, to' recommit,- and to amend, it waa' or. <fttro to be engrossed far a third rending by a Vote of one hundred and fifteen to eighty aix — Sfr Tod then moved that the House go into' com- mitteeoftbe whole, with a view to take Up the bilt for - the revision of the' Tariff, upon which Mr. Randolph rose and said •'sufficient for the day ia the evil thereof—! hope the house will do «t> such thing." Mr Hamilton proceeded to make dome remirkron the merits of the bill, but wts declared tb be out of order; andon the qiiestinn being put, the motion to take up the bill prevail dd,93 to 82, hilt after some progress hating been fhnde in the reading, on motion of Mr Webster the Committee rose. The'editor of the Washington City Gicette, Speaking of the conduct of those (tiembers of Congress who have determined not to go into s cancuV sty's: " we have heard that, already two Of the' signers of the juggled subsetiotion.ps->er bave repented—and tint on* of them has deeUr* grt that hbifiU go into Caucus. No doubt some 6f INetn subscribed without due consideration i add, oil better thoughts, they may conclude to set With'm6'*e Consistency ** SUMMARY'. It ia stated in the New York Gazette that the lion. Mr. Rrowjt', Minister to France, who ia about to sd'iI from’that port itfthe U S*. 'hip Cy'nne, L the bea er of a letter from the President if the United StateV addressed to Gen f4 l VtTvrn\ in viting him fb visit thtt country) a n d that should he make up his mind to sail in the -nurse of the spring,-the 11. S. frigate, Comtitutioni (6)0 Iron •ides) will' receive orders to proceed to any port In France where the general may wish to embark The R- publicSm of Rhode Island have nomina- ttd James Fstfit n, of Providence, for governor, And Caiiu.sfi Collikc, of Newpor, for Lieut go. (ernof of that Slate. The Senate of Maasachuartts have passed a bill (blessing towns in that State of less th -n 5000 in habitants from the obligation to be provided with instructors competent to teach the Latin and Greek languages. It appears that while hesitating to tend a Minis* ter of Observation to Greece, w -are credited a- brotd, with having sent a Minister Pienipotentia. (y to Turkey. Sr. English, of Boston, known for the versatility of his genius, his character; his frith and his pursuits, recently a General in the Mus sulman army, ha. arri.ed at Constantinople from this country, as it is said, to conclude a treaty be tween the Sublime Porte and the United States. Mr. Thomas Wells, author of the Price Poem at the opening of fhe.New American Theatre at New Orleans, and Mr. Sprague, author of snot he Price Po»-m, for the Shakspeare Jubilee, at the Boston Theatre, are both natives of Boston, were bred merchants, and only had the benefit of an educa tion obtained at the common free schools of th town. A schooner belonging to Cttrrscoa, was lately c*mured near that place by a piratical vessc bearing the tri colored Hag, and all on board mtir dered except a boy, who escaped by swimming r. pnbli<- meeting was to have been he Id at 8» Jem, (Mass.) on the 6th inst. to remonstrate'against the proposed Tariff There were imported Into Boston from foreign places, in the year 1823,733,146 lbs ot wool; value 95,649 dollars A bill is before the Virginia House of Delegate^ which goes to abolish all the existing laws, or>i-’. sag for the training of the militia, and requiring but one company and one regimental muster in each year, fur the Sole purpose of enrolment, and attending to the public arms, A petition his beeti presented to Congress by Ira Hifl. Rsq for a grant of 10 acres of land at Washington, to make a world, with its mountains and valleys, -oceans and lakes, kingdoms and re. publics. ' Mr. R P. Page is about to petition Congress for • gran* of land in Florida, oh whidh to found a Bci-o'ific CohSnfonWeahh. On the Stiff inst at sunrise the thermometer in Boston stood at 11 deg below 0; and at noon was only two above. In Portland, on the 2d inst the Thermometer tvU 10 (leg. below 0 During the week tiding the 7th >h. there Was 142 deaths in H. icb were by uauiral small pox. The Chesapeake and Ohio Canal bill, passed the Senate of Maryland on th- fib inst. by a vote of 10 to S. The House of Representatives of Pennsylvania, bas postponed indefinitely the further considers, tion of. 'he proposition, for an amendment of >he constitution of the United States so as to author. Up the general government to make roads and canals ft is in contemplation in Londori, to construct Wih'errsnetnl* rmids, or ■«' ..trrets, resembling the Roman' Cloaca Marina, beneath the broad otreeta of that metropolis, for the arrangement of ga* and Wafer pipes. Baron B-rgatfti, who has become so well known From the proceedings against the late Queen of. T5ng ”nr1, has stopped some rime st Giemowirz— and is said frt '«: e purchased an -estate in Ressa. fat's |*,4T It i« sf -ded In In'e .English papers, 'hat the Arc' due' es? Wnria Louisar-ifr-'akput to marry a« Aus vrian General, object of the rheeting. offered the preamble and resolutions,(which »ve have, already published as the "Republican Voice of M atPe,’*) fol* the consideration of the Con. venlion. After they had been twice read, a motion was made that they be accepted. Mr Ames, President ofthe Senate, hop. ed the questions would not be taken imme diately. It was by accident that he had heard of the meeting; he had but just come in, and he believdd it wab yet hardly seven o’clock, and as others were expected in soon, he hoped the resolutions might be suffered to lie on the table, at least for the ■pace of fifteen minutes. Mr. Anderson-made a hahdsohve reply, in which he staled explicitly the objects of the meeting; that it was intended exclusive ly, lor the Republican Members of the Le gislature, of which'they had been duly no lifted, and were there resent’, and he he lieved ready j-» act on the res'diitinns He referred to the distracted state of parties •on the subject of the Presidency, and spoke of a Congressional Caucus as the Only prac ticable mo'*e of concentraliltg public senti- nent on any individual'. Mr Dunlap cafletT for the question 1 he Reptthllcun Members were pretty gen erally present. Th<* hull was engaged for them exclusively, and'as nb others bad any right to take part in the proceeding, why should they wtiit for "thers to come in ? Mr Ames wished to know hnW it was to be ascertained who wete the Republican Members of the L>- islature, and had there- I re a right to act. By what criterion were the sentiments ot the rnemherf to be tried? Were the tenet* of Mr Dunlaps, or some other man, to he the standard; and If they were to take Mr. Dunlap at t e standard, he would inquire whether they were to be squared bv his sentiments as they were * wo or three years ago, or at the present time? Mr. Dunlap said, if the gentleman was cady to throw th t, he was ready to meet him on that ground. And lie would in S uite,1f they were to go to that gentleman *r a standard of political princip es, wheth er they should seek for his sentiment? at the present time, or for those he evinced during the late war, when he carried pro visions t<> B -rmuda, and other places, t traffic with the enemies of his country— (Here a simultaneous and he <ny clapping ping went briskly round the Hall ) Mr Hutchinsonn,,nf Hurt bid, said he understood that the Hall was engaged foi the use of those who were particularly I vited to attend. They had come there for ttie purpose of consulting together, as t ei had a -ight to do, and of expressing their sentiments on an important subject; and he conceived that no one had a right (o intrude upon them and interrup their proceedings They lived in a land of lib- rty, where the press is free, and where speech and though; are tree, and he rejoiced at it. If thirty, or forty, oj fifty members of the Legisla tore saw fit to meet to express their own views and sentiments on any subject of public interest, they had a perfect right to doit, and to put their names to their senti menu if they’pleased, and if they could get a printer to publish them, they had a right m do that too and no one had any right to sav, Why do ye so ? Mr. Green, Speaker of the House, wish r*d to know who were considered as having a right to act in the meeting. It it was true, as intimated by the gentleman last up, that the hall had been engaged for a select few who had been specially invited to attend there, and who wis ed to -oeet in order to have a little sweet communion together, he was sure he had no business there, and Heaven forbid that he should stay to interrupt them But if, as others had intimated, this was a meeting for the Republican Members of the Legislature to attend, he then had a right there, for he had always professed to be a Republican Democrat. He had accidentally heard of the meeting, and believing there were many who Were not prepared to act on the sub ject'at the present time, and that the Mem bers fad not' been Sufficiently notified ^t thetneeting, if he were allowed to act at all he should tfvbve Chat the meeting be ad journed till' Monday evening, that there might be time to consider he subject as its importance rr.tftiired, and that there might be a more general attendance of the Members; Mr. Ames, ih sofne further remarks, re ferred to the select few who had had been picked for the meeting according to the direction of oneo* two individuals. Mr Dunn, of the Senate, repelled the insinuation. He said the meeting Was agreed upon K y a general consultation a mong the Republican members, mbre thW one hundred ot whom were invited to at tend. Mr. Chandler, ofth'- Senate, made some observations on the merits of the proposed resolution^. He spoke of the propriety of a congressional caucus It was such a cancus that gave us a Jeff-rson, a Madison, and a Mohrofe. And why should we now lorsake a system that has been the strength and supp rt of the republican cause for more than twenty years? Shall we unite with the other sta’es in support of the can didate who shall receive a national nomina tion, or shall we, at all events, stittk to out man? Shall we say that Mr Adams, and > one else, is fit for President of these U States, and that we will have him or non ? •Vhere is your faction, sahl Mr C. whtr ' > vour facti'itr that -dares avow this?. The q e8tibn on the motion for adjour tent till Monday evening was called for. Sty Alai gdhtlemen rtiade obsefvafibns, amine tailing foi* an adjournment, antisomBSpeak ing against it. The meeting became, At times, considerably confused and turbulent. A vote was finally passed 1 , that a list of the Republican members' of the Legisla ttrro should b6 c'alfed over, and that such as approved of the resqhUiohS.. should come forward and sign them. Several of the fuends of the resolutions, wearied with the noise and confusion occasioned by thdunex peeled intrusion of a. mixed company, had retired from thd half. As the names were called, however, upwards of sixty of the Republican members came forward and signed the resolutions, and a vote was pas sed, that thjse Republican members who were not present, should be invited to sign them. The signing sbon put an end to the op position. It was in vain to contend against facts which were in black and white, and those who had evidently come in to disturb, and if possible to break up, the meeting, having been perfectly defeated, began to withdraw. . , Mr Ames, before he left this hall, rose and gave his reasons fbr not signing the resolutions. He would not say, that he either approved or disapproved of the teo timents contained in the resolutions; but, as they related to the subject of Congres- sional capeus, and that subject was now be fore a committee of the Legislature t<> whom had been referred the Tennessee re solutions, and as the.members would short* ly be called upon to act on the subject in their tegislative capacity, he thought it im proper at the present time to express any opinion. Mr Anderson slaied, that the gentleman who had just addressed the meeting, had given his reasohs for not signing these re solutions, viz. that he was unwilling to com mil himself on a subject on which he ex pected to be required to act in his legisla tive capacity. He would not question the gentleman's motives; but when he recoliec* ed, that this same gentleman, whil* a member of the Legislature last winter, act ed ai counsel for the petitioners for a divi sion ot Lincoln cuomy, and afterwards gave his vote in the Legislature on the same question, he could not but admire that he should be so sensitive now, lest he should commit himself After those who had* obtruded them selves upon the meeting had withdrawn, the Republican members remained a while and continued th- r proceedings with per feet harmony and unanimity. W ASHINGTON, Feb. II Letters Irom Washington state, that the friends of Mr. Crawford have had the “mo dest assurance" to sound the friends of Mr Adams arid Mr. Clay to know it either would accept of a nomination -f Fi’ce.Pres idetu in the contemplated Caucus «>f Sautr Hay night next. To which. NO ! was 'he j ist and indignant reply —*Balt. Patriot. First as to the fact: we doubt it as to mu- *f the persons said to have been thus in sulted, because we have not heard Mr. Clay’s natne spoken of in connection with •he Vice Presidency. Secondly—if a disposition has been ma lifesicri, by the friend*, of Mr. Crawford, io n operate with their Republican brethren d the East, by selecting for the scarcely sec ond office n the government one of the most distinguished of the sons ol N -w En gland, we do not conceive that they have done any thing to call for the appalling de nu notation of the Baltimore Patriot, whose shrinking modesty revolts at the bare sug gestion ol the fact. On the contrary, we applaud the spirit of friendliness, of conci liation; ol a regard to harmony between the different sections ot the Union, in whief; such disposition most have originated. We wish to Heaven it were more general in this our day. Thirdly—We do not know that indigna tion is precisely the sentiment, which t sincere desire to .elevate a citizen to the second office in this government would na turally excite in the bnsom of that citizen or of his friends. We are pretty sure therefore, that, if, as the Patriot asserts, any of the friends of Mr. Crawford have shewn a disposition to elevate Mr. Adams to the second (and eventually, probably, to the first) office in this government, indigna tion was not the sentiment, we venture to assert, with which the Negative was pro nounced. It is singular, by the way, that all the J\ev>s of this sort should reach us by way of New Y»rk, or even Baltimore, as this and most of the NeWs ol what is going on here in the way of electioneering has lately done.. Be on yoiir Guard.—A fire was discov ered last evening between 8 and 9 o'clock, in a stable attached to a lot of Mr. Fla.<g, on East Bay, between Hasell and Pinckney sts. It was no doubt the work of an incen diary, as a pat cel of old boards and other combustibles were found heaped together. It was fortunately discovered and extin gtmhed in tiirie, otherwise the most serious consequenees would have followed—the surrounding buildings being entirely of viood.—CKPatriat. On TufeAflAy last, a dieting of the old batchelors was held in Greensburg; and among other resolutions, passed one to pro vide a three cocked hat and a wooden gun for General Ogle, as a mark of distinction. . Pennsylvania paper. »■* tUa , There is moffc wisdom in the foollowing short article from a Portsmouth paper than is oftentimes lound in a larger one FIRE 1 FIRE 1 Is your'house insured, friend? If it is burnt are you willing to g> round among your friends and beg relief, when by paying . little pittance every year, you may de mand an ..indemnity? Drink one glass of <r»g the less, or save one cigar every day, nd pay for insuring your house, and at the nd of the year, you will find yourself a otter, a richer, and a happier mau. , SHORT, ttb 1* *34 Gas Light Establishment,—Mr. Timo iby Dewey, .Agent Ibr the Gas Light Com pany in New York, chartered by the Le gislature, has returned from his trjp to Eu rope, Where he was sent by the directors, to obtain information relative to the .state of, and the progress made in the gas eatab lishments there, and we understand the re salt has been so satisfactory,that we may ex pect to see a portion of our city lighted in a few momlVs, With' gjas on the most improved principles.' vV Y Ev. Post, A young man having entertained a ten der passion for a young; Woman, felt such insurmountable diffidence Us to prevent his ever disclosing the same to the fair empress of his heart, resolved on an expedient which would bring the business to an issue. He went to the clergyman and requested the banns of marriage might be published, ac cording to law. When the publication was brought to her ears, she was filled with as* toniahment, and went to him to vent her resentment, he bore the sally with fortitude, observing that if she did aot think proper to have him, he could go to the cergyman and forbid the banhs. After a moment’s pause, she took wit in her anger and said • as it has been done, it is a pity that the shilling should be thrown o way* The following remedy for a soreness or infis motion of the inside of the throat is copied from a Bermuda paper.-. Mix a wine glass foil of good Cal. ciitcd Magnesia and Honey, to the consistence of paste, or jelly, and take a tea spoonful about once on hour through the day, for a day or two. It is cooling, healing, and very gently'cathartic. Mr Cooper, in his Dictionary of Surgery, gives the following recipe as infallible for the cure of corns. Take two ounees of gum ammoniac, two ounces of yellow wax, six drachms of Verdlgrii, melt them together, and spread the composition on a piece of sort leather or linen i cut away as much of the corns as you can with a knife, before you apply the plaster, which must be renewed in a fortnight, if the cum is not by that time gone. ON SLANDERERS. O, may the wretch, to Scandal given, B<- still the most accura'd of He.aven, From every social circle driven, In warm disdain; His envious rotten bosom riven With keenest pain. The fiend who could, in spiteful jest, The fame of lovely maid molest,' And fill with grief her virtuous breast— Where’er he goes, Be still considered frend-'up** r»e**, The writ of foes f > For Liverpool. ’• '• ."ar.lt • • VliJn OOUSIHOHPS, t-’Npt. li, Jayne. Of 300 boles of cotton or passage huvim? comfortable accommodations, apply ^ BUKRodqJ • whwf; or to feb 19 <u40 BENJ. CROC&KHT. ^kO 5 rat 1* troclt< ; r )* ‘'Sotted and ii tw” der, just received and for sale hi feb 19 40 for sale by 1 B. HERBERT^ Co | GIM*. 50 feb 19. b40 CALV,N &EGAH8 wharf, the owner can have them b y °ap feb 19 CALVIN T H? Copartnership "fj. Hrnfield& ■ dissolved on the 16th nst. bvmutmi. **l —Persons indebted to the late fowL M ed to settle with J. Penfield. ’ * re l PENHEI.D, feb 19 >40 ■ MAKQU AN». Tie Subscriber C ONTINUES business and has conitiutbul sale an extensive supply of sm vWI Jewelry, Watches, Silver and plated Ware, Cutlery, Military Goods. Fine Guns, Pistols, Brass Fenders, Fire Does Brittania and Japun Wares’ I J PENFIED. feb 19 >40 i ,: »-'l)—This mm-ujni; niter a shun illness, Gen, William Bvxs,oi Burk County in tlii* stite The friends and acquaintance! of the deceased, are invited to attend his funeral at half past four o'clock, THIS .FTF.RNOON from the house ot Mr* Ra*ty, Jihnntin« Sq-.mre, ' I'O’TT OK SAVANNAH acc i van. Ship Julius Csesar, French, New York, ’5 days in ballast to Wm Gia'oo Schr Emeline, Hatfield, 1 day from 8t Mary’s, vi'h cotton to J Hi kman and Wm 8c H Hose. Passengers, Messrs. Shearman, Hickman and Rose. Sloop Three Brothers, Howland, Darien, via S' Catherines, S l Cotton, to J M'Nish, R & J Hab ersham, and Johnston, Hills & co. Passengers, Messrs Allen, Harris and Sherman. CLB/BCD, »Ship Milton, Webb, Liverpool, Wm Gaston. Came up from Quarantine this forenoon P. L. ship Cliff';rd Wayne, White, and ship Georgian, Bailey, both from New York Went to sea y-sterday, E L ship Louisa Mat'd, da, Wood, for New York; ship Malabar, Orne, for Port nu Prince, and ahip Franklin, —, for Liv emool. The E L. ship William Wallace, Wood, for this port, while beatln;; out of the east river at New York on the 8th inst. came in contact with theshi Com Perry, bound to Charleston, and carried uwav her h -ad, cut water and head rails, and was obliged to put back to repair The schr Julia, Nobleborough, Joshua Bray, master, from Matanzas for Baltimore, with a car.ro of coffee sugar and molasses, was cast away on the 19th ult in a snow storm, near Cape Hatteras Lighthouse.—'The vessel totally lost—crew and part of the cargo saved - A sale of the cargo wa* to take place on the 3d inot. The sloop Harriet, from Newport, for Savannah with a valuable cargo, was caA away the same day on the outward Shoal of Cape Hatterass. The crew left her and stated that she was entirely lost, with tbr cargo. On the 20th Jan. the brig Frank lin, (at Newcastle,) fell in with the Harriet, iq lat 35, tong 69, under her jib, and apparently no one on board—stood across her stern and hailed her repeatedly—had no boat on deck, and seeing a seaman's cheat, concluded she had been abandon, ed. The sails and rigging were in good order and no water apparently in her. The wind blowing fresh could not board her The achr Sampson, Powell from Matancas, of and for Baltimore, ran ashore 26th ult. at 2 a. u near the mouth of Occahannock Creek, Eastern shore of Virginia —The vessel and most of the cargo consisting of coffee, sugar, molasses, &c ex. pected to be saved. Pbovibkcce, Feb 7.—No arrivals nor clearan ces. An ice embargo prevents all ingress or egrecs. AnnivKD rnoM this pobt, — At Charleston 16th sloop John Chevatierc, Che* valier, 8 hours At Holmes* Hole, 2d inst. brig Roils, Hairing, ton, 5 days, for Boston. CLCABSD >0B THIS PORT, At Newbern, N. C. 7th inst schr Gideon Spar row, Morris. ve won THIS POBT, At New York, 8th ship Savannah, Beebe, to sail 14th For Sale. R ECEIVED pr ship Emiiy, from Liverpool I quantity of six fold Sewing Cotton, siratd numbers, feb 19 Wortod | PETERSEN. HAMMOND h CO m40 Savannah Volunteer Guards A TTE * TION! 4 PPEAU on vour parade ground an Me-vi» next the 23d inst -t J past 8 o,clock, 1.1 precisely, in full uniform a d completely com, , J and prepared to fire for a White Plume, an' «iih thirteen rounds of blank cartridges to fire a s lute I Commemorative of the birth of WASHINGTON By Order. Dw rat, Tht loss libe Co pri« Ir con fact II and Stor I thei; 1 of A Th I exte gem w 34 H froir ♦heii ticul ICLC P | LAI • PI |FKC I m |DR1 at ICO/ PAI bl so IVF.I Hi X n si L lite Sloe Pel T vhii Ihis Pric Julif fab 18 HF.INEM ANN, 1st Senrt s. v < 39 Office of tie Marine and hire h- aurance (ompany, Savahhah, 4th February, 1824, A LL persons are hereby cautioned again*' it- OlkAoeiving ornegociating 8 J. Bryan it Bnnh. cceptance, of P M Stone's Draft, in favor «f I Bryan, pa> able in sixty days from 23d No- vember, 1823, tor four hundred and fifty dollars, »s the said acceptance is the property of thb com pany and baa been either loat or improperly taken (way GEO. 9CHLKY, President. feb 5 28 Office of the Marine and hire In surance Cuwpuny f Savannah, 5th K -b. 1824. 'TlHIS Office will insure cotton between Angus. J. ta and Savannah, in boats of the Steam M Company, at one quarter of one per cent premi um, and merchandise at one quarter, to one half percent according to .circumstances On pile boats plying between said places, one half percent, and upwards will be charged, agreeable to the condition of the boat and the character of the patroon. GEO. SCHLEY, Pr> sident. fab 5 cb28 Urn < pftici Bl * Sheriff Sales. On the frit 'Juesday in April next W ILL be sold before the Court Houle in Chatham County, between the u-usl bouts, the following Negroes, t . Isaac, Sophia, Jim, George, Jesse, Tenar, Mir)', Celia, Rose and Monday, levied on as thr proper, ty of David E. Adams, to satisfy an execution is sued on the fort closure of a mortgage, in favor of Amos Scudder, assigned. I. D'LYON, soo, feb 4 27 Apply to HAH k HOYT. Salt and Wine. "I AAA Bushels Salt afloat ■ 'AM/ 20 Pipes Fayal Wine—for cale low if taken from the vessel. feb 18 39 ' Castor Oil and SweeTOil. 5 ‘0 Bottles'F^iius it Talbots superior Cas- ^00 bottles American Cold Expressed do do 200 do do second quality do do 200 do West India do do for plantation use 20 doc do Sweet Oil in Boxes o' one dor. reed and for sale by ' P. I. LAY, Druggist, Bbed’e bailding. •T. Jjjfg? f ? Sheriff 's Sale. On the fnt ’Pueiday in March next, W ILL be sold at the Court House, in tne county of Effingham, between the legal hours of sale ..*•< - A negro man named Ralph, levied on as the property of William Stephens, of Green county, to satisfy an execution in favor of Russel Steph ens, of Warren county Georgia, property pointed out and delivered by the plaintiff. S. NE1DLINGEB, n ssc. jan 30 23 Sheriff's Sales, On the first Tuesday in March next. W ILL fie sold at the Court House in Ki«b°. rough, Liberty county, between the honn of 10 and 3 o’clock, the following property, to.. Witt One negro named Affey, levied on as the pro* perty of Thomas S. Well, to satisfy two execu tions in favor of Wm. H Edwards, and turned o- ver to me by a Constable. Also, one tract of land containing ►three-W®’ dred 8ml fifty acres, more or less, wi'ha l ar 6 e dwelling bouse and other out buildings tbereoujO lying on the main road that leads from , 8un " urY V, to Milledgeville, bounded by lands of John Woody and others, levied on as the property Nathan Williamson to satisfy an execution m vor of Alex. M. M'lver. , Also, one hundred acres of Pine Land more less, levied on as the property of Wm - satisfy an execution in favor of Joseph rio w and turned over to me by a Constable, EDWARD WAV, st o. jan 31 24 Georgia- -Chatham County. To all whom it may concern— . W IEREAS Mary Bruce, administratrix w the estate of Victor Dohet, deceased, petitioned the court of ordinary of Chatham ty Now th^MMe^therefore to cite and all and singular the kindred and credttori o suid deceased, to file their objections, (it g f have) in my office, on or before February next i otherwise letters dtsmtsso y be granted to the applicant. 0(l( . < Witness the honorable George L. Cop ■> ° ^ of the Justices of the said Court 4ugust, A. D. 1823. aug n 173 * 8. M. BOND, o.o bW'. ■'A* »i ‘i hip s fA-'-. ' >> <*